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- “You can’t study comedy; it’s within you. It’s a personality. My humor is an attitude.” — Don Rickles
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- “You are not acting so much as being. The result is realism.” — Gary Cooper
- “I started at the top and worked my way down.” — Orson Welles
- 2026 Shakespeare Reading Project: As You Like It
- “Is there any virtue, for literature, for poetry, in the simple continuity of a tradition? I believe there is not.” — Thomas Kinsella
- “I’ve always had everything I wanted, and I never wanted a great deal. ” — Aline MacMahon
- “I was never totally involved in movies. I was making someone else’s dream come true. Not mine.” — Mary Astor
- “Fear and the absence of hatred may go well together.” — Niccolò Machiavelli
- “I only got a seventh-grade education, but I have a doctorate in funk, and I like to put that to good use.” — James Brown
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- Brett Hetherington on The Books: A Collection of Essays, ‘Charles Dickens’, by George Orwell
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Tag Archives: Anjelica Huston
April 2022 Viewing Diary
When I first got the Raging Bull gig, I began a re-watch of all the Scorsese-De Niro movies – at least the ones clustered around that period. I grew up on these films. These movies were huge to me as … Continue reading
Posted in Monthly Viewing Diary, Movies, Television
Tagged Anjelica Huston, biopic, Brian De Palma, Canada, Christopher Walken, comedy, Dana Andrews, documentary, drama, Elia Kazan, F. Scott Fitzgerald, France, historical drama, Italy, Jack Nicholson, Jane Fonda, Joan Didion, John Cazale, Liza Minnelli, Martin Scorsese, Meryl Streep, Mickey Rourke, musicals, Ray Milland, Robert De Niro, Robert Duvall, Robert Mitchum, romantic drama, Russia, sci-fi, Tuesday Weld, Ukraine, Vietnam, women directors, WWII
12 Comments
Recommended Books: Memoirs
More recommendations: Recommended Fiction Recommended Non-Fiction MEMOIRS The Fervent Years: The Group Theatre And The Thirties, by Harold Clurman Probably the most famous of all the Group Theatre-related books. Harold Clurman writes his memories of that time and what those … Continue reading
Posted in Actors, Books, Directors, Music, writers
Tagged Anjelica Huston, Austria, Baby Doll, Benjamin Franklin, Bruce Springsteen, Carroll Baker, Czechoslovakia, Diane Keaton, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Elia Kazan, Ellen Terry, Elvis Presley, Frank McCourt, Ginger Rogers, Goldie Hawn, Group Theatre, Harold Clurman, Ireland, James Salter, Jeanette Winterson, John Strasberg, Katharine Hepburn, Kathleen Turner, Lana Turner, Lauren Bacall, Lee Strasberg, Marlon Brando, Maud Gonne, Memoirs, Patricia Bosworth, Primo Levi, Robert Evans, Rosalind Russell, Russia, Shane Leslie, Shelley Winters, Shirley MacLaine, Stefan Zweig, Steve Martin, The Kid Stays In the Picture, Victor Serge, WWII
2 Comments
2014 Books Read
2014 was a good reading year. I re-read a lot of favorites, including Rebecca West’s 1200 page Black Lamb and Grey Falcon. There was a fun mix of re-reads and new stuff, of fiction and non-fiction. My year of being … Continue reading
Posted in Books
Tagged 1984, Amongst Women, Anjelica Huston, August Strindberg, books read, E.B. White, England, Evelyn Waugh, friends, George Orwell, Henry James, In Cold Blood, Inherent Vice, Ireland, John Cassavetes, John McGahern, Love Streams, Mark Helprin, Mark Twain, Patrick O'Brian, Rebecca West, Roger Angell, Seamus Heaney, Sweden, Truman Capote, Wales, war
9 Comments
The Two-Character Play
The Two-Character Play Regina Bartkoff and Charles Schick, “The Two-Character Play” I have been obsessed with Tennessee Williams’ The Two-Character Play foralmost my whole life at this point. I was captivated by it when I first discovered it. It scared … Continue reading
Posted in Personal
Tagged Anjelica Huston, snapshots, Tennessee Williams, Two-Character Play
9 Comments
Three In One Frame
… because when you have siblings, you rarely get your own closeup.
Posted in Movies
Tagged Anjelica Huston, comedy, Owen Wilson, The Darjeeling Limited, Wes Anderson
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Addams Family: Moments of Joy
There’s a moment when their two children are performing in the school pageant – and they do a horrifying sword fight – with spurting blood packets – so that the audience is sprayed with blood from wounds in their necks, … Continue reading

