UPDATE: Jan. 23 — “Le Regard d’Autrui” may now be purchased in the U.S., the U.K., Germany, Italy, Japan, France, and Spain. CARL WEISSNER (1940-2012) was the preeminent German translator of dissident writers such as Charles Bukowski, William S. Burroughs, J.G. Ballard, Ken Kesey, Bob Dylan, Allen Ginsberg, Frank Zappa, and Nelson Algren, having published […]
‘WILD SIDE’ STILL ROCKS
Nelson Algren was one of the great American authors of the 20th century, it is no exaggeration to say, and among the most neglected. Consider his underrated classic, “A Walk on the Wild Side.” The title — popularized and co-opted as an idiomatic phrase by Hollywood and Madison Avenue (institutions Algren loathed) — is familiar […]
BUSTER KEATON REVISITED
Buster Keaton: Tempest in a Flat Hat is not a biography. “This book is merely a fan’s notes,” Edward McPherson writes in the introduction, although his publisher ignores the disclaimer and calls it a biography on the cover. In fact, the book is a bit of both, a difficult combination to bring off unless you’re […]
LAUREN BACALL, STILL SALTY AT 80
When Lauren Bacall writes that her singing voice ranges “somewhere between B minus sharp and outer space,” she’s being candid and funny. It’s not every stage star with two Tony Awards for best actress in a musical whose vocal talent offers so little promise. (OK, Harvey Fierstein excepted.) Still less would one admit it. EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
THE STARS ACCORDING TO BOGDANOVICH
Peter Bogdanovich’s superb collection of movie-star profiles and interviews — a sequel to Who the Devil Made It, his interviews of top film directors — begins with an affectionate tale about Orson Welles that reminds us just how intimate the author’s connection to Hollywood’s greatest has been. But contrary to what we’ve come to expect […]
SAMMY’S WHITE DREAMS
By JAN HERMAN Four decades ago Lenny Bruce sentenced Sammy Davis Jr. to “30 years in Biloxi,” stripping him of “his Jewish star” and “his religious statue of Elizabeth Taylor.” Now we have two new biographies of Davis that spring him from ridicule, if not from doubts about his legacy, and restore a measure of […]
“TAKING ON THE VIENNA PHILHARMONIC”
Here’s something I wrote for the highbrows, who will probably disagree: “The Vienna Philharmonic’s discriminatory practices against women and people of color cast such a pall over its considerable artistic achievement that the orchestra has turned out to be the shame, not the pride, of Western civilization. EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
SAMMY’S WHITE DREAMS
Four decades ago Lenny Bruce sentenced Sammy Davis Jr. to “30 years in Biloxi,” stripping him of “his Jewish star” and “his religious statue of Elizabeth Taylor.” Now we have two new biographies of Davis that spring him from ridicule, if not from doubts about his legacy, and restore a measure of dignity to a […]