Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh
Autor John Lahren Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 sep 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781408831458
ISBN-10: 1408831457
Pagini: 784
Ilustrații: 2 x 8pp B&W plates
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 55 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1408831457
Pagini: 784
Ilustrații: 2 x 8pp B&W plates
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 55 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
John Lahr was the hugely respected Senior Drama Critic at the New Yorker for twenty years and is the author of Prick Up Your Ears: The Biography of Joe Orton
Notă biografică
John Lahr was the senior drama critic for the New Yorker for twenty years. He is a critic, novelist and biographer and is the author of seventeen books, including Notes on a Cowardly Lion, the biography of Bert Lahr, Prick Up Your Ears, the biography of Joe Orton, which was made into a film in collaboration with Alan Bennett, and Show and Tell, a collection of New Yorker profiles which reinvented the celebrity profile to get at the essence of performance, with subjects ranging from Frank Sinatra and David Mamet to Ingmar Bergman and Roseanne Barr. Lahr has also written for the theatre and for film, receiving a Tony Award for his work - the first for a critic. His short film Sticky My Fingers, Fleet My Feet was directed by John Hancock and nominated for an Academy Award in 1971. He lives in London.
Recenzii
A masterpiece about a genius
Testimony to the crazy exhilaration of the entire theatrical process, and to the self-destructive solipsism of a great artist
John Lahr's monumental tribute to the play's 34-year-old creator, the son of a frigid, hysterical virago and a combustible father - a travelling shoe-salesman whose ear was bitten off in a poker fight . Lahr's understanding of Williams is stamped on every page. "In playwriting, he found a strategy both to hide himself away and to vent his murderous feelings"
John Lahr's subtitle points to the spicier ingredients the reader can feast on in this very long but never dull book . He is supremely qualified for his task
A thrilling roller-coaster ride from its opening act to the tragic last scene, with Williams lying dead on the floor of a New York hotel room, his bloated body overwhelmed by drink, drugs, and sadness
Dazzling, insightful ... It is a masterpiece on several levels: of synthesis and analysis
Riveting accounts of Williams's plays in production, skilfully handled flashbacks to the early life, plenty of gossip, lavish quantities of photographs and yards of quotation. The result: total immersion, and a masterful analysis of a "self-cannibalising" writer "prepared to destroy himself for meaning"
Marvellous, huge, almost out-of-control biography
By far the best book ever written about America's greatest playwright. John Lahr, the longtime drama critic for the New Yorker, knows his way around Broadway better than anyone. He is a witty and elegant stylist, a scrupulous researcher, a passionate yet canny advocate
What lifts Lahr's book into the canon of biographical masterpieces (not a word I bandy about daily) is that, in chronicling the prurient excesses of Williams's existence, he also explores, with critical and psychological acuity, the way in which great art emerged from such a profoundly unsettled and disquieting life ... Lahr's biography is awash with wonderfully skewed backstage anecdotes from Williams's career ... The seminal importance of Tennessee Williams shines through the biography - and so does the seminal sadness of his tortured life
Lahr's book would be worth reading just for the anecdotes and the famous names that flit through its pages. But in essence it is a study - incisive, compelling, often painful - of how art feeds on life.
The violence and melodrama of Williams's life matched that of his plays. Reading his fragility, hysteria and depression always in the context of his work, Lahr is convincing in his central contention that Williams is "the most autobiographical of American playwrights" and that his writing "was a kind of cleansing" against a horrific upbringing. Utterly compelling
The dependably excellent Lahr has crafted a dazzling portrait of America's foremost playwright . raw material any biographer would kill for. Even those who have yet to pursue the "trail of beauty" in Williams's oeuvre would relish this grand entertainment
magnificent and monumental
Testimony to the crazy exhilaration of the entire theatrical process, and to the self-destructive solipsism of a great artist
John Lahr's monumental tribute to the play's 34-year-old creator, the son of a frigid, hysterical virago and a combustible father - a travelling shoe-salesman whose ear was bitten off in a poker fight . Lahr's understanding of Williams is stamped on every page. "In playwriting, he found a strategy both to hide himself away and to vent his murderous feelings"
John Lahr's subtitle points to the spicier ingredients the reader can feast on in this very long but never dull book . He is supremely qualified for his task
A thrilling roller-coaster ride from its opening act to the tragic last scene, with Williams lying dead on the floor of a New York hotel room, his bloated body overwhelmed by drink, drugs, and sadness
Dazzling, insightful ... It is a masterpiece on several levels: of synthesis and analysis
Riveting accounts of Williams's plays in production, skilfully handled flashbacks to the early life, plenty of gossip, lavish quantities of photographs and yards of quotation. The result: total immersion, and a masterful analysis of a "self-cannibalising" writer "prepared to destroy himself for meaning"
Marvellous, huge, almost out-of-control biography
By far the best book ever written about America's greatest playwright. John Lahr, the longtime drama critic for the New Yorker, knows his way around Broadway better than anyone. He is a witty and elegant stylist, a scrupulous researcher, a passionate yet canny advocate
What lifts Lahr's book into the canon of biographical masterpieces (not a word I bandy about daily) is that, in chronicling the prurient excesses of Williams's existence, he also explores, with critical and psychological acuity, the way in which great art emerged from such a profoundly unsettled and disquieting life ... Lahr's biography is awash with wonderfully skewed backstage anecdotes from Williams's career ... The seminal importance of Tennessee Williams shines through the biography - and so does the seminal sadness of his tortured life
Lahr's book would be worth reading just for the anecdotes and the famous names that flit through its pages. But in essence it is a study - incisive, compelling, often painful - of how art feeds on life.
The violence and melodrama of Williams's life matched that of his plays. Reading his fragility, hysteria and depression always in the context of his work, Lahr is convincing in his central contention that Williams is "the most autobiographical of American playwrights" and that his writing "was a kind of cleansing" against a horrific upbringing. Utterly compelling
The dependably excellent Lahr has crafted a dazzling portrait of America's foremost playwright . raw material any biographer would kill for. Even those who have yet to pursue the "trail of beauty" in Williams's oeuvre would relish this grand entertainment
magnificent and monumental