“All sin tends to be addictive, and the terminal point of addiction is what is called damnation.”
W.H. Auden, A Certain World
Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City
“All sin tends to be addictive, and the terminal point of addiction is what is called damnation.”
W.H. Auden, A Certain World
Charles Laughton delivers the Gettysburg Address on an episode of The Colgate Comedy Hour. He is “introduced” by Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. This episode was originally telecast live by NBC on April 6, 1952:
(This is the latest in a series of arts- and history-related videos that appear in this space each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday)
“Isn’t Hollywood a dump—in the human sense of the word. A hideous town, pointed up by the insulting gardens of its rich, full of the human spirit at a new low of debasement.”
F. Scott Fitzgerald, letter to Alice Richardson (July 29, 1940)
From 2017:
Read the whole thing here.I’ve decided to play the game that’s currently going around the web and post a list of my favorite films released in each year of my life to date….
“In this heat every extra gesture was an affront to the common store of life.”
F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby
Marian Anderson sings Schubert’s “Ave Maria” on The Ed Sullivan Show. This episode was originally telecast live by CBS on April 13, 1952:
(This is the latest in a series of arts- and history-related videos that appear in this space each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday)
“Music is queer. Its power seems unrelated to the other affections of man, so that a person who is elsewise perfectly commonplace may have for it an extreme and delicate sensitiveness.”
Somerset Maugham, The Narrow Margin
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Changes in theatrical fashion, however desirable, tend to cause unintended collateral damage. N.C. Hunter is an especially poignant case in point. For a time in the ’50s, he was both successful and admired, a specialist in Chekhov-flavored studies of the postwar decline of England’s middle class in which such top-tier stage actors as Edith Evans, John Gielgud and Ralph Richardson were eager to appear. Then John Osborne’s “Look Back in Anger,” a furious attack on England’s class system that was as blunt as a blow from a blackjack, dynamited London’s West End in 1956, and older playwrights like Noël Coward and Terence Rattigan were shoved into the wings to make way for a new generation of Angry Young Men, as Osborne and his contemporaries were dubbed by the press. While their work revitalized a theatrical scene that had grown etiolated through lack of innovation, it also devastated the careers of several tradition-conscious playwrights who were still doing first-rate work. Hunter was one of them: Though he continued to write until his death in 1971, he vanished into the memory hole of obscurity.
Enter New York’s Mint Theater Company. Dedicated to finding and producing “worthwhile plays from the past that have been lost or forgotten,” the Mint gave the U.S. premiere of Hunter’s “A Picture of Autumn” in 2013, following it up three years later with the first New York revival of “A Day by the Sea” since its brief Broadway run in 1955. I knew Hunter by name but had never seen or read any of his work, and it amazed me to discover that far from being a faded back number, he was an artist of real stature.
Now the Mint is webcasting “A Picture of Autumn” as part of a series of broadcast-quality archival videos taped at live performances, and the strong impression the play made on me when I first saw and reviewed it has been confirmed: It is a work of great distinction…
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Read the whole thing here.Scenes from the dress rehearsal of A Picture of Autumn:
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