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Thursday 29 August 2024

Think About It 100: VERONICA ROTH

 

People, I have discovered, are layers and layers of secrets.  You believe you know them, that you understand them, but their motives are always hidden from you, buried in their own hearts.  You will never know them, but sometimes you decide to trust them.

 

Insurgent (2012)

 

 

 

 

 

Use the link below to visit the website of North American novelist VERONICA ROTH:

 

 

https://veronicarothbooks.com/ 

 

 

 

You might also enjoy:

 

 

Think About It 080: DOROTHY ROWE

 

 

Think About It 070: WENDY L PATRICK

 

 

Think About It 056: OLIVIA LAING

 

 

Thursday 22 August 2024

The Write Advice 202: ALEXEI SAYLE

 

To be a successful comedy writer you have to have a continually fertile imagination, that's what stops you from being a here today, Bros tomorrow, flash in the pan.  Unfortunately, imagination is not something that you can turn on and off like a tap.  Nor is it something that you can direct with pinpoint accuracy, unlike 12% of the missiles produced by the British Aerospace Industry.  No, the same powers of imagination that make you think up exquisite jests and apposite drolleries are exactly the same powers of imagination that make you think that a dollop of egg mayonnaise left over from lunch that has fallen on your arm is in fact skin cancer.  The same qualities of invention which help one to create this hilarious comedy are the same qualities of invention that induce in me the paranoid feeling that my pets are conspiring against me.  In fact, I know they are because whenever I come in the room, they stop talking...

 

Interview [Source unspecified]

 

 

 

Use the link below to listen to the podcast of British comedian, actor, writer and astute social commentator ALEXEI SAYLE:

 

https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-alexei-sayle-podcast/id1540500007

 

 

 

 

 

 

You might also enjoy:

 

 

Think About It 047: ALEXEI SAYLE

 

 

The Write Advice 102: MARY RAKOW

 

 

The Write Advice 022: GEORGE ORWELL

 

 

Thursday 15 August 2024

Words for the Music 027: DORY PREVIN

 

 
 
DORY PREVIN
 22 October 1925 – 14 February 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 CHILDREN OF COINCIDENCE

DORY PREVIN

from the 1976 Warner Records LP

We're Children of Coincidence

and Harpo Marx

 

 

 

 

 

CHILDREN OF COINCIDENCE

 

 

If I hadn't made a left-hand turn

If you hadn't made a right

If I'd waited just a moment more

If you'd missed the light

If that car had never blown its horn

If that friend had stopped to talk

We'd have never met at all

If I didn't take that walk

I'd have gotten there too early

You'd have gotten there too late

We are childen of coincidence

Coincidence and fate



Crossed connections

Lost connections

Empty corners

Crowded intersections

Accidents

And incidents

We're children of coincidence 

And chance



If he hadn't stopped to pick it up

If she hadn't dropped her book

When she took it if she'd noticed him

How come we never look

If she hadn't been so very white

If he hadn't been so black

Would she smile and say hello to him

Would he have turned his back

If she cancelled her appointment

Would he break his other date

We are children of coincidence

Coincidence and fate

 

 

Crossed connections

Lost connections

Empty corners

Crowded intersections

Accidents

And incidents

We're children of coincidence 

And chance

 

 

If the planets were in perfect place

If your sign was on the rise

If my stars were in complete accord

But the sun was in your eyes

You'd have only seen my shadow

As I passed you on the street

And it might have been a hundred years

Before our souls would meet

And we would still be strangers 

Too early and too late

We are children of coincidence

Coincidence and fate

 

 

Crossed connections

Lost connections

Empty corners

Crowded intersections

Accidents

And incidents

We're children of coincidence 

And fate

 

 

 

 

Words and music by

DORY PREVIN

 

© 1976 Warner Records/Rhino Music

 

 

 

 

 

Dory Previn, who was born Dorothy Langan on 22 October 1925, began her career as a cabaret performer and lyricist, initially working most frequently with pianist and composer André Previn, the man who became her second husband in 1959.  

 

The couple wrote a number of well-received songs together while working under contract at MGM studios, garnering their first Academy Award nomination for The Faraway Part of Town that was performed by Judy Garland in the 1960 film Pepé and a second nomination for their 1962 song Second Chance which featured in Two For The See-Saw, a popular film starring Robert Mitchum and Shirley Maclaine.  

 

The next six years saw the couple compose many more cinema-related songs together including You're Gonna Hear From Me (recorded by Frank Sinatra among others) and five witty, tongue-in-cheek titles for the 1967 adaptation of Jacqueline Susann's scandalous 1966 bestseller Valley of the Dolls.  This is all the more impressive given that Dory Previn suffered a psychiatric breakdown in 1965 that saw her briefly hospitalized to undergo treatment for severe depression.

 

Previn's transition from witty Broadway-style lyricist to 1970s singer/songwriter was triggered by the second breakdown she experienced after learning that her husband, who had gone to the UK to work as the conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra, was having an affair with actor Mia Farrow and had fathered a child by her.  Previn's breakdown began on the aircraft she had boarded, despite her lifelong fear of flying, to take her to the English capital where she hoped to somehow salvage her doomed marriage.  

 

Writing, specifically about herself and her emotions, became a key component of her therapy and led to the creation of the songs that would appear on her critically acclaimed 1970 LP On My Way To Where.  (This was her second album, preceded by a jazz-based recording of original material titled The Leprechauns Are Upon Me that she released under the name 'Dory Langdon' in 1958.)  The album, which featured her accompanying herself on guitar along with other musicians, included the song Beware of Young Girls, a thinly veiled attack on Mia Farrow who married her former husband that same year, an event which saw Previn re-hospitalized to undergo another course of electro-convulsive therapy.  

 

The LP also featured the chilling cut With My Daddy in the Attic that spoke indirectly of Previn's difficult and possibly incestuous relationship with her father, an Irish-American World War One veteran who had been gassed in the trenches and was prone to episodes of extreme paranoia that, at their worst, saw him become violent toward his wife and children and, at one point, keep them literally imprisoned inside the family home for several months.  Despite this and his destructive habit of alternately overindulging and ignoring her, Previn's father was supportive of her decision to become a performer after she displayed genuine talent as both a singer and a dancer in her youth.


On My Way To Where was followed by six more LPs of original singer-songwriter material including Mythical Kings and Iguanas (1971), Reflections In A Mud Puddle (1971), the concept album Mary C Brown and the Hollywood Sign (1972), the self-titled Dory Previn (1974) and what was to be her next to last solo effort We're Children of Coincidence and Harpo Marx (1976).  She also found time to write two autobiographies, a television screenplay, a song for the controversial 1973 film Last Tango in Paris in addition to releasing the double LP Live At Carnegie Hall that went on to become her most enduringly popular recording.  

 

All of Previn's music features startlingly honest and strikingly original lyrics, many of which are as good as any of those penned by her 1970s singer-songwriter contemporaries, and clever arrangements that make the best use of her limited vocal range.  She was never afraid to tackle taboo topics like incest, artistic failure and the bogus spiritualist movement of the 1970s, often disarming listeners with her combination of high intelligence and what, on occasion, could be dark and even macabre humor.

 

Previn spent the 1980s focusing on stage work, often appearing under the name Dory Previn Shannon, and writing short stories and a novel titled Word-Play With An Invisible Relative.  All this work did not prevent her from co-writing the theme song for the 1980s sitcom Two Of A Kind for which she and her songwriter partner Jim Pasquale received an Emmy award in 1984.  That same year she married actor and artist Joby Baker, going on to collaborate with him on an illustrated edition of her 1970s song lyrics that appeared in 1995 as The Dory Previn Songbook.  

 

Two years later Previn revived her professional partnership with her former husband André Previn, collaborating with him on The Magic Number, a piece he composed for orchestra and solo soprano.  She allegedly contacted Woody Allen after the comedian was accused of sexually molesting his adopted daughter Dylan in 1992, suggesting that Mia Farrow had based the story of what had been done to Dylan inside the Farrow home on the lyrics of her song With My Daddy In The Attic.  Nor is it without significance that, like the decidedly menacing father figure in the song, Allen also plays the clarinet.

 

Despite suffering a series of minor strokes which affected her eyesight, Previn continued to work and managed to release a final LP — another conceptual work about the environment and the threat of nuclear war titled Planet Blue — in 2002, a decade before her death at the age of eighty-six on 14 February 2012.  


 

 

 

Use the link below to listen to more great music by lyricist, composer and cabaret/stage performer DORY PREVIN: 

 

 

https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=dory+previn

 

 

 

 

Special thanks to everyone who takes the time to upload music to YouTube.  Your efforts are appreciated by music lovers everywhere.

 

 

 

 

 

Use this link to read a long post by JUSTIN LEVINE about the connections between DORY PREVIN and the more lurid aspects of the ALLEN/FARROW scandal:



https://levine2001.medium.com/the-woody-allen-controversy-reader-did-dory-previns-song-lyrics-influence-mia-farrow-in-accusing-6cb1f83038fe

 

 

 

 

 

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Thursday 8 August 2024

The Write Advice 201: GWYNETH LEWIS

 

My great fear was that I'd never be able to write sober because I'd now become too dull and boring.  I was making a common mistake among writers — confusing chaos with creativity.  Of course you can manage the odd piece of good work in the midst of a crisis — a fluke — but this is the exception rather than the rule.  The truth is, it's far easier to lead a colourful, 'poetic' life than actually write poems.  The former requires a good liver and seedy friends, the latter all the discipline of a civil servant.

 

Sunbathing in the Rain: A Cheerful Book About Depression (2002)

 

 

 

Use the link below to visit the website of Welsh poet and writer GWYNETH LEWIS:

 
 
 
http://www.gwynethlewis.com/index.shtml

 

 

 

 

 

You might also enjoy:

 

 

The Write Advice 151: MAGGIE O'FARRELL

 

 

The Write Advice 117: JENNIFER EGAN

 

 

The Write Advice 067: BARBARA PYM