Cover image for Other Entertainment : Collected Pieces.
Other Entertainment : Collected Pieces.
Title:
Other Entertainment : Collected Pieces.
Author:
Rorem, Ned.
ISBN:
9781480427785
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (472 pages)
Contents:
Cover Page -- Title Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- INTRODUCTION -- PART ONE: BOOK REPORTS -- Marguerite Duras -- Lillian Hellman -- Wystan Auden -- Josephine Baker -- Libby Holman -- Billie Holiday -- Kazuo Ishiguro -- James Salter -- Paul Goodman, James Lord, Robert Phelps -- Cocteau in America -- Cocteau's Diary -- Noel Coward's Diary -- Joe Orton's Diary -- Benjamin Britten's Diary -- PART TWO: CONVERSATIONS -- Talking with John Simon -- Talking with Larry Mass -- Talking with Cole Gagne -- PART THREE: OPERA -- Eight Looks at American Opera -- Considering Carmen -- Bluebeard and Erwartung -- PART FOUR: EPITAPHS -- Leonard Bernstein -- Aaron Copland -- Virgil Thomson -- Robert Phelps -- Fred Plaut -- Elizabeth Ames -- Freda Pastor -- PART FIVE: REMNANTS -- Lenny on My Music -- Childhood Reading -- Sarah Orne Jewett -- Myrna Loy-A Fragment -- Carnegie Hall -- Jane Bowles -- Ravel and Debussy -- Who Is Sylvia? -- Being Sixty-five -- PART SIX: NANTUCKET -- About the Author -- INDEX -- Copyright Page.
Abstract:
A collection of insightful essays, interviews, and commentaries on music, art, and those who make it, from acclaimed author and Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Ned RoremIt is a rare artist who can deftly cross the boundaries separating one artistic endeavor from another. Contemporary American composer Ned Rorem is one of the able few, not only "the world's best composer of art songs" (Time magazine) but a remarkable purveyor of prose works, as well. Rorem's superb collection Other Entertainment features insightful and fascinating essays on music, musicians, and literature, as well as provocative interviews with well-known figures in the arts and elsewhere. Whether he's offering a cogent analysis of Benjamin Britten's published diaries, confronting John Simon on the famously acerbic film and theater reviewer's alleged homophobia, or providing in-depth commentary on the lives and accomplishments of major artists and musical colleagues-as well as moving obituaries for those we have lost-Rorem proves himself to be as entertaining and controversial a social and cultural critic as America has ever produced.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
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