A CBC interview with Walter Matthau:
(This is the latest in a series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Monday and Wednesday.)
Archives for September 2012
TT: Almanac
Such welcome and unwelcome things at once
‘Tis hard to reconcile.
William Shakespeare, Macbeth
TT: Almanac
“The good critic is he who recounts the adventures of his soul among the masterpieces.”
Anatole France, La Vie littéraire
TT: Next stop, New Haven
Satchmo at the Waldorf has two more weeks to run at Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, but Mrs. T and I are finally returning to the world. My brother, sister-in-law, and niece, who flew out to Massachusetts to catch the Saturday-night performance, headed west yesterday. As for me, I’ll be in Connecticut tonight, New York City on Wednesday, and Spring Green, Wisconsin, on Thursday, where I’m seeing three plays over the weekend at American Players Theatre, one of my favorite classical companies.
The next stop for Satchmo is New Haven’s Long Wharf Theatre. John Douglas Thompson, Gordon Edelstein, and I start rehearsing on September 25 in preparation for a week of previews and our second opening night on October 10. I’ve already done a fair amount of cutting and revising, and I’ll doubtless do even more in the course of the next five weeks. Judging by our audiences in Lenox, though, it’s looking like we’re going to be in pretty solid shape once we get to New Haven.
I’m tired–really, really tired–but I’m also elated. No matter what happens to Satchmo at the Waldorf in the weeks and months ahead, I’ll always have Lenox, where John is playing to sold-out houses, receiving standing ovations every night, and giving one spectacular performance after another. Between Satchmo and my miraculously productive visit to the MacDowell Colony, I’m about to wrap up one of the happiest summers of what has been, at least so far, a charmed life.
And now…I believe I’ll take Tuesday off!
* * *
To hear John Douglas Thompson and me talking about Satchmo at the Waldorf with Joe Donahue on WAMC’s The Roundtable, go here.
TT: Just because
The Byrds play “This Wheel’s on Fire” on Playboy After Dark in 1968:
(This is the latest in a series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Monday and Wednesday.)
TT: Almanac
“Sid Caesar once gave me the best advice about cutting: ‘If they don’t hear it, they never know you wrote it.'”
Neil Simon, Rewrites
WHY COMEDY IS TRUER TO LIFE THAN TRAGEDY
“In most human lives, absurdity and sorrow are woven together too tightly to be teased apart–and it is comedy, not tragedy, that illustrates that fact most fully. Life is too complex to be painted solely in shades of black…”