Any actor taking on what the savvy, longtime drama critic of The Guardian calls “a monumental leading role” expressly written for the great Ralph Richardson, is either crazy or brave — possibly both. Which partly explains why the role hadn’t been done in more than 70 years until Alan Cox brought it back to life […]
Orwell Was a Genius at Fiction Right From the Start
Jane Perlez reminds us in this morning’s New York Times of George Orwell’s first novel, Burmese Days. Orwell is best known for his later novels, of course, the dystopian 1984 and the allegorical Animal Farm, which are remembered less for their impact as fiction than for their prescient warnings about the reality of a totalitarian […]
Ernest Hemingway, Heathcote Williams, and So Forth
And then I sent a photo of the Ernest Hemingway plaque in the series … Which drew this reply … Serving as further testament to what has been lost, or as the poet noted with his reply, “Pace Hemingway.” EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
A Difference Between the 16th Century and the 21st
When I sent Heathcote Williams a photo of the Francis Bacon plaque in the Library Walk series … He replied with an ironic poem, like so … … which illustrates a difference between the 16th century and the 21st, doncha think? EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
From Laugharne Boathouse to Library Walk
On my way to work I sometimes take a street in midtown Manhattan where an unsung marvel known as “Library Walk” celebrates the world’s great books and writers. For the length of two city blocks I’m distracted by bronze reliefs in granite plaques set into the sidewalk. They are beautiful to look at and inspiring […]
Richard Feynman’s ‘Ode to a Flower’
The Guardian posted a tribute to a bongo-playing physicist the other day, with the subhed “Flowers, music, strip clubs…Richard Feynman’s scientific curiosity knew no bounds.” Linked to a cute cartoon video based on a 1981 BBC documentary, it gives a sense of the man as a fabulous paradox. Which is perfectly illustrated in the video […]
Can a Royal Party Boy Really Change His Stripes?
So how do you, in the words of Heathcote Williams, “turn a plutocratic oaf into a lovable national treasure instead of a casually racist and unthinking parasite”? With difficulty. Unless you can get the press behind you and send Prince Harry on an American tour. Trouble is, during Harry’s former deployment in Afghanistan, as Williams […]
Unbuttoned: Samuel Beckett Meets William Osborne
I knew my friend Bill Osborne and Samuel Beckett had met and spoken about Osborne’s musical settings of Beckett’s plays. But I had never heard the details. Now at last the full story! By William Osborne I spent seven years doing nothing else but setting the works of Beckett to music. At the end in […]
An Absurd Debate About the Last Word
Following up on the previous blogpost, Gerard Bellaart sent a superimposition of several lines on Beckett’s short dramatic monologue “Not I.” Bellaart also sent an excerpt from Michael Maier’s paper, “GEISTERTRIO: Beethoven’s Music in Samuel Beckett’s ‘Ghost Trio.’” To which, Bellaart says: “The debate as to whether music has the last word is rather like […]
An Epitaph for Our Golden Era
‘Oh, this is a happy day. This will have been another happy day. After all. So far …” EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
Menu-Size Art: Quicker Than You Can Say Fast Food
Cold Turkey Press has just put together a beautiful portfolio of menu-size collages by Norman O. Mustill dating from 1975, when Mustill sent them to Carl Weissner, who wanted to illustrate his German translation of Harold Norse’s Beat Hotel with Mustill’s artwork. Phew … got that? Weissner didn’t receive the collages in time to make […]
‘Sacred Elephant’ Is Coming to New York’s La MaMa
I haven’t seen much theater lately, for reasons I may already have mentioned — so much is dull dull dull — but the dramatization of Heathcote Williams’s epic poem, “Sacred Elephant,” has got my attention as nothing has in years. The show, not yet officially announced, is coming in September to La MaMa‘s First Floor […]
‘Gossip Column’ Cut-Up by Rooney & Beiles
Found in a drawer 44 years later. Still funny, too. And maybe you’ll recognize the references. Click the photos if you don’t know who they are. I almost forgot Dick Rover. EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
Topor Nails It: Drone Attack Avant la Lettre
And for further edification, there’s “A Secret Deal on Drones, Sealed in Blood” about the “origins of the C.I.A.’s drone war in Pakistan” by Mark Mazzetti and “Targeted Killing Comes to Define War on Terror,” about the policy of the “drone campaign” by Scott Shane. They’re part of a continuing NY Times series. Mazzetti’s latest […]
Death of a Mensch, Roger Ebert, R.I.P.
Rick Kogan has written a fine obituary, “A film critic with the soul of a poet,” with a beautiful lede: It was reviewing movies that made Roger Ebert as famous and wealthy as many of the stars who felt the sting or caress of his pen or were the recipients of his televised thumbs-up or […]
‘Taking the Piss’ That May Pass for Shakespeare
I spent more than a decade reviewing theater for a major metro daily and I’d never heard the term “nubbing (or taking the piss).” Hmmph. Heathcote Williams shows how it’s done in a sweet folio about to be published by Gerard Bellaart‘s Cold Turkey Press. As my good friend N.O. Mustill says via email, “me […]
N.O. Mustill’s ‘Critic’ Lowers the Boom, Whimsically
If I said I put him in a class with the great collagists dating back through the 20th century (like Hausmann, Heartfield, or Höch) — which I do — he’d laugh at the presumption. But anyone who has seen Flypaper, his book of demonic collages in black and white, or the huge collages in blazing […]