Posts

Theater Review: “West Side Story” at 50

October 28, 2007
Posted in

By Caldwell Titcomb It was something of a scandal a half century ago when West Side Story lost the best -musical Tony award to the mediocre and formulaic The Music Man. But time has a way of righting major mistakes. And the pervading verdict now places West Side Story at the pinnacle of the American…

Book Review: Edmund Wilson — Prophet of the Blogosphere, Part 2

October 27, 2007
Posted in ,

By Bill Marx Edmund Wilson: A Life in Literature (Paperback) By Lewis M. Dabney. Johns Hopkins University Press, 672 pages, $25. Literary Essays and Reviews of the 1920s & 30s (Library of America #176) By Edmund Wilson. Edited by Lewis M. Dabney. 1026 pages, $40. Literary Essays and Reviews of the 1930s & 40s (Library…

Book Review: August Wilson Play Cycle — Complete

October 27, 2007
Posted in

The Theatre Communications Group is to be congratulated for making readily available one of the most colossal feats in American drama. For those who don’t want the entire “August Wilson Century Cycle,” the plays can also be acquired individually. The August Wilson Century Cycle, by August Wilson, The Theater Communications Group, $200. By Caldwell Titcomb…

Theater Commentary: Does Playwriting Have a Future?

October 20, 2007
Posted in ,

To mark the dedication of the New College Theatre at Harvard on October 17, a panel of four playwrights gathered to address the question “Does Playwriting Have a Future?” To allay suspense, the answer is yes (whew, that’s a relief).

Visual Arts Commentary: The Grob

October 20, 2007
Posted in ,

There’s a chess opening called the Grob, fully as distasteful as the name might suggest. When white plays the Grob he’s showing disrespect, not only to his opponent but to the game. The Grob does nothing to advance white’s position on the board. That, in fact, is its strength, the one and only thing the…

Book Review: Edmund Wilson — A Paleface of a Redskin, Part 1

October 20, 2007
Posted in ,

Those uncomfortable with Wilson’s eccentricities suggest he should be admired, but dutifully, like a Roman statue stuck in the far corner of the lawn.

Karen Armstrong, Biographer of the Bible

October 17, 2007
Posted in ,

by Harvey Blume Ex-Catholic nun Karen Armstrong has, in her long, productive second career as scholar, written 21 books, including A History of God: The 4000-Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, and engaging, balanced biographies of Buddha and Muhammed. I interviewed her about the Buddha biography when it came out in 2001 and enjoyed…

Short Fuse: Finally, Doris Lessing Wins the Nobel Prize for Literature

October 13, 2007
Posted in ,

Doris Lessing has always been massively and productively incorrect, and splendidly fulfills the mandate of a great writer by being so.

Fuse Flash:The Warhol-Pollock Axis?

October 10, 2007
Posted in

Is it a sign of the times? On October 5, the New York Sun updated yet another art authentication controversy that’s been simmering since earlier this year. Like the better known Pollock Matter Affair (see past posts in Fuse Flash and Anonymous Sources), this one involves a filmmaker, art work that may or may not…

Book Review: Trane’s Long Shadow

October 8, 2007
Posted in

Ben Ratliff, Coltrane: The Story of a Sound (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) Reviewed by J. R. Carroll During an interview in Japan in 1966, John Coltrane was asked what he would like to be in ten years. Coltrane replied, “I would like to be a saint.” Lewis Porter, author of the definitive study John Coltrane:…

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives