George S. Kaufman appears as a panelist on a 1953 episode of This Is Show Business, originally broadcast on CBS. This extremely rare kinescope is thought to be the only surviving sound film of Kaufman:
(This is the latest in a weekly series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Wednesday.)
Archives for 2010
TT: Almanac
“Satire is something that closes on Saturday night.”
George S. Kaufman (quoted in Current Biography 1941)
TT: Almanac
“Martyrdom, sir, is what these people like: it is the only way in which a man can become famous without ability.”
George Bernard Shaw, The Devil’s Disciple
TT: Yon to hither
Mrs. T and I are returning to the East Coast today, which will keep us busy until the wee hours.
Till tomorrow–or the next day. Or whenever.
TT: Almanac
“The great advantage of a hotel is that it’s a refuge from home life.”
George Bernard Shaw, You Never Can Tell
TT: Shav vs. Shakes
In today’s Wall Street Journal drama column, I pull a switch and report on two Shakespeare festivals at which I saw a pair of plays by George Bernard Shaw, Arms and the Man at the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey and Mrs. Warren’s Profession at California Shakespeare Theater. Here’s an excerpt.
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“Arms and the Man,” Shaw’s first great box-office success, remains one of his most enduringly popular plays, but it’s been some time since it received a New York production of any consequence, the last Broadway revival having been in 1985. Now Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, a company that has yet to let me down–I’ve seen five shows there since 2006, all of them memorable–is doing the old boy proud with an exceptionally stylish version that hits all the high notes.
The metaphor is an appropriate one, for “Arms and the Man” is an “anti-romantic comedy in three acts” (Shaw’s phrase) in which he deploys the high-flying rhetoric of 19th-century opera to twit those benighted creatures of flesh and blood who behave as though the real world worked that way. It starts out as a love story in which the starry-eyed Raina (Nisi Sturgis) awaits the return of her gallant and heroic Sergius (Anthony Marble) from the Serbo-Bulgarian War. Then a cynical enemy soldier (Sean Mahan) who has been fighting too long to have any illusions about the nature of war upsets Raina’s plans by hiding out in her starlit bedroom, and all at once a classic change-partners farce plot starts ticking away….
Revivals of “Mrs. Warren’s Profession,” in which Shaw satirized laissez-faire capitalism by purporting to show that prostitution was one of its natural consequences, used to be comparatively rare in this country. Times have changed, though, and what was once a hugely controversial play has received no less than two high-profile American stagings this summer, one by California Shakespeare Theater and one by the Shakespeare Theatre Company of Washington, D.C., with the Roundabout Theatre Company’s upcoming Broadway revival set to open in October.
Never having seen Cal Shakes in action, I chose California over Washington, and was mightily impressed by their production, staged by Timothy Near in the company’s 545-seat amphitheater, one of the most beautiful outdoor performing spaces in America, located not far from San Francisco. Performed on an open stage in a broadly comic style that is nicely suited to an outdoor venue, Ms. Near’s version of “Mrs. Warren’s Profession” is an arresting blend of Vicwardian décor and modern energy…
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Read the whole thing here.
TT: The smiling genius
In recent weeks I’ve been posting videos of performances of the music of Emmanuel Chabrier, a composer who is infrequently performed and insufficiently appreciated in this country, I suspect in part because his music is too pleasurable for prigs to take seriously. In the interests of heightening Chabrier consciousness in America, I’ve now written a “Sightings” column for Saturday’s Wall Street Journal in which I argue that he was in fact an important composer–but one who is underrated because his genius was essentially comic.
If you share my passion for Chabrier’s music, pick up a copy of Saturday’s Journal and see what I have to say. If not, take a look at the video posted below. Should it fail to lift your heart, you might want to consider a transplant.
UPDATE: Read the whole thing here.
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Georges Prêtre and the Vienna Philharmonic perform Chabrier’s España:
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A reader writes to tell me something I didn’t know, which is that in 1956, the year of my birth, Perry Como recorded a novelty song called “Hot Diggity (Dog Ziggity Boom)” which is, amazingly enough, based on España. I must have heard the record as a child, but I’d completely forgotten it until today.
Here’s a kinescope of one of Como’s TV shows in which he performs “Hot Diggity”:
TT: Almanac
“There’s a gigantic gray area between good moral behavior and outright felonious activities. I call that the Weasel Zone and it’s where most of life happens.”
Scott Adams, Dilbert and the Way of the Weasel