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Monthly Archives: December 2024
A poet for the solstice
“…Prepare the sun his bier,The sun, the fallen year,With all the spoil it yields,For our fresh almanac is shrunk and dry…” Léonie Adams won numerous poetry awards in the mid-20th century. Her works, many with nature imagery, later fell out … Continue reading
To gain the world, and lose one’s spouse
Having won worldly success, Sam and Fran Dodsworth pursue the dream many couples have to retire early and travel the world together. It doesn’t work out as they’d hoped. Sinclair Lewis had a similar experience in reverse with what Martin … Continue reading
This time is different?
“By… effecting the purposes of governmental supervision by its own internal machinery, the New York Stock Exchange has justified its existence, earned and retained the confidence of the public, and proved itself the most reliable and efficient market place in … Continue reading
“Yes, go ahead, be funny”
When George Burns first teamed up with Gracie Allen, he wanted to be the comic while she played the straight part. They soon found they got more laughs the other way around. Their first film, Lambchops (now watchable online) adapts … Continue reading
Variations on an insistent theme
Maurice Ravel abandoned an orchestration of a Spanish composer’s work when he found out it had copyright complications. He instead started developing a theme based on Spanish dance music that he found had an “insistent quality”. With its much-repeated rhythm … Continue reading
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Tintin au pays du domaine public
In 1929 a Belgian reporter began a series of global adventures in the pages of Le Petit Vingtième. In 16 days Tintin starts a new journey into the public domain. But those wanting to meet him there must brave pitfalls … Continue reading
“I dipped into the book – and got hooked”
Three people unsatisfied with their lives leave home, meet a falling-apart performing troupe, and reinvent themselves as The Good Companions. J.B. Priestley’s long comic story of a now-bygone Yorkshire has had devoted British fans for many years, and inspired film, … Continue reading
The king of all, Sir Duke
Duke Ellington led jazz bands and orchestras for over 50 years, and wrote or had a hand in writing over 1000 pieces of music. His began making records in 1924, and many other musicians have also recorded his work since. … Continue reading
A turning point for Faulkner
William Faulkner struggled going into 1929. His sprawling novel on fading southern aristocrats had been rejected by eleven publishers, and his novel in progress, a nonlinear streams-of-consciousness narrative, would be hard to sell. After severe cuts, the first novel became … Continue reading
Hitchcock thrills with sound and silence
Alfred Hitchcock started making Blackmail as a silent film, but after getting access to the new movie sound technology, he ended up releasing two versions. The sound version was one of the first “talkies” released in Britain. Some film aficionados … Continue reading
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