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Books > Language & Literature > Biography & autobiography > Film, television, music, theatre
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Fanny Mendelssohn
(Hardcover)
Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel, Francoise Tillard
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R1,487
R1,188
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Fanny Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1805-1847), like her younger brother
Felix, demonstrated prodigious musical talent as a child. In their
youth, Fanny and Felix were inseparable friends; they encouraged
each other, collaborated in musical endeavors, and received the
same education and training from distinguished tutors. But as an
adolescent, Fanny was told by her father that her role as a woman
was to concern herself with her home and that music could be only
secondary, even though she had become a remarkable pianist and
composer. She married Wilhelm Hensel, a respected portrait painter
who encouraged her musical talents. Fulfilling her domestic role as
wife and as mother of their son, Sebastian, she continued to
compose - principally lieder - and to organize concerts in her home
that became an integral part of the Berlin musical scene. Her
talents were warmly received during a journey to Italy,
particularly by Gounod, who heard her play from memory the music of
Bach, Beethoven, and Mendelssohn. At forty years of age Fanny
finally went against the orders of her father and of Felix and
published her compositions. She had just begun to receive critical
praise when she died suddenly at the age of forty-two. Her death
was a devastating blow to Felix, who survived her by barely six
months. This book, originally published in French in 1992, is the
first and only authoritative biography of Fanny Mendelssohn and
contains a complete list of her published compositions. Set against
the backdrop of a privileged life in Berlin in the early nineteenth
century, Francoise Tillard's vivid portrait describes an
exceptional artist - she left behind four hundred works - who could
have held her own among thegreatest if she had not been prohibited
from venturing into the professional world.
Paul McCartney and John Lennon described him as the Beatles'
"favorite group," and yet no figure in popular music is as much of
a paradox as Harry Nilsson. A major celebrity at a time when
stadium rock was in its infancy and huge concerts and festivals
were becoming the norm, Nilsson's instrument was the studio, his
stage the dubbing booth, his greatest technical triumphs were
masterful examples of studio craft, and he studiously avoided live
performance. He was a gifted composer of songs for a wide variety
of performers, having created vivid flights of imagination for the
Ronettes, the Yardbirds and the Monkees, yet Nilsson's own biggest
hits were almost all written, ironically, by other composers and
lyricists. He won two Grammies, had two top ten singles, and
numerous album successes. Once described by his producer Richard
Perry as "the finest white male singer on the planet," near the end
of his life, his career was marked by voice-damaging substance
abuse and the infamous deaths of both Keith Moon and Mama Cass in
his London flat. His music remains prevalent today, through the
1995 tribute album For the Love of Harry: Everybody Sings Nilsson
(featuring performances of Nilsson's hits by Ringo Starr, Stevie
Nicks, Fred Schneider and others) and recent covers, such as Aimee
Mann's recording of "One" (popularized as the main track on the
Magnolia soundtrack) and Neko Case's arrangement of "Don't Forget
Me" on her album, Middle Cyclone. In this first ever full-length
biography of Nilsson, author Alyn Shipton traces Nilsson's life
from his Brooklyn childhood to his Los Angeles adolescence, and
charts his gradual move into the spotlight as a talented
songwriter. With interviews from Nilsson's friends, family and
associates, and material drawn from an unfinished draft
autobiography Nilsson was writing prior to his death, Shipton
probes beneath the enigma and the paradox to discover the real
Harry Nilsson, and thereby reveals one of the most creative talents
in 20th century popular music.
The Polish composer Henryk Górecki (born 1933) achieved world-wide renown in 1992 when his Third Symphony, written in 1976, was recorded on CD and became an international bestseller. It is now one of the best known musical compositions of recent years, yet Górecki's other music is still relatively little known. This study, the first detailed account of his works in any language, provides biographical information as background to the music, and is by a leading enthusiast for Górecki's music.
This volume provides a detailed record of the life and career of
Noel Coward. The book begins with a short biography and a
chronology that highlights the most important events in Coward's
career. Detailed entries for Coward's many performances follow,
with entries grouped in chapters on drama, film, radio, and
television, as well as a discography. Entries include a list of
cast members, a synopsis of the plot of the production, excerpts
from reviews, and critical comments. The book also lists Coward's
awards and honors, and it concludes with a detailed, annotated
bibliography.
Relive the Golden Era of the King of the Cowboys and the Queen of
the West In the mid-twentieth century, Roy Rogers and Dale Evans
ruled the West from the silver screen as the King of Cowboys and
the Queen of the West. Off screen, this husband and wife duo raised
a family and lived the "Code of the West." In this biography, named
for their first feature film as a pair, the Rogers family shares
the inside story of these beloved Western icons.
Steve Martin has been an international star for over thirty years.
Here, for the first time, he looks back to the beginning of his
career and charmingly evokes the young man he once was. Born in
Texas but raised in California, Steve was seduced early by the
comedy shows that played on the radio when the family travelled
back and forth to visit relatives. When Disneyland opened just a
couple of miles away from home, an enchanted Steve was given his
first chance to learn magic and entertain an audience. He describes
how he noted the reaction to each joke in a ledger - 'big laugh' or
'quiet' - and assiduously studied the acts of colleagues, stealing
jokes when needed. With superb detail, Steve recreates the world of
small, dark clubs and the fear and exhilaration of standing in the
spotlight. While a philosophy student at UCLA, he worked hard at
local clubs honing his comedy and slowly attracting a following
until he was picked up to write for TV. From here on, Steve Martin
became an acclaimed comedian, packing out venues nationwide. One
night, however, he noticed empty seats and realised he had 'reached
the top of the rollercoaster'. BORN STANDING UP is a funny and
riveting chronicle of how Steve Martin became the comedy genius we
now know and is also a fascinating portrait of an era.
Ekkehard Schall's life was devoted to the theatre. In this
autobiographical memoir, he offers a lifetime of experience,
expertise and memories of working with some of the great German
writers, actors and directors of the twentieth century.
A member of the Berliner Ensemble established by Bertolt Brecht
and his wife Helene Weigel in 1949, Ekkehard Schall worked on
numerous productions of Brecht's plays and others with the Ensemble
between 1952 and 1995. In the 1970s and 80s he combined the roles
of leading actor and deputy director of the Ensemble. In all he
played over sixty roles and achieved greatest success in the role
as Arturo Ui, a role he played over 500 times.
"The Craft of Theatre: Seminars and Discussions in Brechtian
Theatre" offers the reader a first-hand account of Schall's work,
of his insights and his appreciation of the Brechtian roles he
assumed and of the work of Germany's most important theatre. "The
Craft of Theatre "is an important addition to Brechtian studies and
to the biography of Germany's most totemic theatre.
'When you see Schall at work during his two-hour performance,
it's as if you were watching Brecht himself on stage. Schall's
technical skills embody all of Brechtian dramatic theory and
practice, just as Brecht's thoughts and opinions infuse his
performances.' "NewYork City Tribune"
When Don Nix began his career in Memphis, he was still in high
school. Over time, his first band, the Mar-Keys, evolved into
Booker T. and the MGs. As a producer and musician, Nix worked with
Freddie King, Furry Lewis, Albert King, Delaney and Bonnie, the
Staple Singers, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, Leon Russell, and many
others. He was asked by Beatle George Harrison to help organize the
1971 Bangladesh Concert at Madison Square Garden. Nix's stories of
living at George Harrison's mansion in England make for especially
good reading. Included in this memoir are dozens of revealing
photographs taken by Nix of the extraordinary musicians with whom
he worked.
This is the long anticipated, never-before-told account of one of
the icons of twentieth-century television. There are many personal
revelations of interacting with some of the Gunsmoke family
ensemble, such as Miss Kitty, Doc and Festus. His own work as a
producer is covered. Throughout are rare, previously unpublished
photographs from the author's personal collection. Appendices
include comments by show biz colleagues and fellow Gunsmoke alumni,
and a sampling of letters received from his legions of fans. As
befits the man, this large-size book is a beautifully printed work
in accord with the highest library standards????????????a luxurious
and extra-strong cloth binding, acid-free paper, carefully designed
photographic and textual layouts and sophisticated typography.
Actor and fellow Gunsmoke performer Burt Reynolds has written a
foreword to the book.
Ruth Lehrer's memoir-in-thirty-six essays is a compelling
contemplation about her life as a secular American Jewish woman.
With humor and passion, she tells of her family's arrival in
America in 1920, her Yiddishe Mama, Catskill vacations, Bar
Mitzvahs, Christmas trees, war and peace, religion, God, and
politics. She delights in books, theatre, and film with Jewish
content, and laughs loudest at jokes told in Yiddish. When she
hears of a crime, she prays that the perpetrator is not Jewish. A
Judaica gift shop is her favorite place to browse.
Scotland's greatest export. The world's first super spy. Voted the
sexiest man on the planet. Sir Sean Connery was a titanic figure on
screen and off for over half a century. Behind the son of a factory
worker, growing up in near-poverty on the harsh streets of pre-war
Edinburgh, lay a timeless array of motion pictures that spanned
multiple decades and saw Connery work across the globe with
directors as diverse as Alfred Hitchcock, Steven Spielberg and
Michael Bay. And amongst them his greatest role, whether he liked
it or not - Bond, James Bond. Author A. J. Black delves into
Connery's life for more than mere biography, exploring not just the
enormously varied pictures he made including crowd pleasing
blockbusters such as The Untouchables or Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade, serious-minded fare in The Hill or The Offence, and his
strange sojourns into eclectic fantasy with Zardoz or Time Bandits,
but also the sweep of a career that crossed movie eras as well as
decades. From skirmishes with the angry young men of the British
New Wave, via becoming the cinematic icon of the 1960s as 007,
through to a challenging reinvention as a unique older actor of
stature in the 1980s, this exploration of the Cinematic Connery
shows just how much his work reflected the changing movie-going
tastes, political realities and cultural trends of the 20th
century, and beyond . . .
Follows the life of French anthropologist Francoise Heritier, who
had a lasting impact on a generation of French anthropologists that
continues to this day. A great intellectual figure, Francoise
Heritier succeeded Claude Levi-Strauss as the Chair of Anthropology
at the College de France in 1982. She was an Africanist, author of
magnificent works on the Samo population, the scientific progenitor
of kinship studies, the creator of a theoretical base to feminist
thought and an activist for many causes. "I read this intellectual
biography of Francoise Heritier with great pleasure. Though highly
regarded in France, she is not yet well known in English-language
academic circles, but she certainly should be. This book will be a
revelation to many anthropologists and feminist scholars."-Adam
Kuper, London School of Economics From the Forword by Michelle
Perrot: I came to know her at the National Council for HIV, that
she chaired from 1989 to 1994.... Her theoretical concerns were
also crucial to the understanding of pandemics, but we did not then
realise that HIV/AIDS was also a precursor and a warning of
pandemics to come. She grasped the importance of conceptions of
bodily 'humours'-blood, semen, milk-that seemed to play a role in
the horrific spread of an epidemic of which we knew nothing, except
that it resulted in an appalling mortality rate, particularly among
young men.... she was a remarkable chair, concerned to share her
insights into the illness and to anchor-necessary-interventions
within a framework that would be respectful of human rights.
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