World & I Online Magazine  
World & I School | World & I Homeschool | World & I College | World & I Library
 Username:   Password:     Subscribe   Register               About Us | Contact Us | FAQs
18-Year Archive Peoples of the World Book Review Worldwide Folktales Fathers of Faith
Search  
Sort by: Results Listed:
Date Range:    Advanced Search

Online Magazine
 
  Current Issue
Editorial
Current Issue
The Arts
Life
Natural Science
Culture
Book World
Modern Thought
  Resources
18-Year Archive
American Waves
Book Reviews
Ceremonies/Festivities
Eye on the High Court
Fathers of Faith
Footsteps of Lincoln
Millennial Moments
Peoples of the World
Profiles in Character
Teacher's Guide
Traveling the Globe
Worldwide Folktales
Writers and Writing

Our Revels Now Are Ended


Article # : 16394 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 5 / 1989  2,929 Words
Author : Cynthia Grenier
Cynthia Grenier is contributing editor to the Arts section of The World & I.

       RICHARD BURTON
       A Life
       Melvyn Bragg
       Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1989
       533 pp., $22.95
       
        The life of the late Richard Burton is a sad one. Not so much perhaps because a great theatrical talent was wantonly squandered, as a number of earlier biographers and critics have claimed, but because throughout his life an inner demon of intense self-hatred always led Burton to betray or destroy nearly everyone around him.
       
        Melvyn Bragg, an English novelist and scriptwriter, has been given access by Burton's widow, Sally, to the notebooks that the actor sporadically kept, beginning back in 1966 when he and Elizabeth Taylor went off to Rome to film the Taming of the Shrew under the direction of Franco Zeffirelli. It is these notebooks that make Bragg's Life truly fascinating, setting it infinitely apart from the conventional celebrity biography of today. In these notebooks, these journals, as Bragg details at one point in his massive work,
       
        Burton wrote about Elizabeth, their marriage for better and
        for worse (sometimes unbearable), her illnesses, her
        talent, his health, Ifor's [his older, paralyzed brother]
        incapacity, the children, the dogs, authors Evelyn Waugh,
        Octavio Paz, Nathanael West, Ian Fleming: drink, money,
        events of the day, the moonshots, Teddy Kennedy's
        Chappaquiddick, acting, the filming of Anne of the
        Thousand Days, gossip of grandees and the Welsh past
        and the circus which passes him by. He writes of places:
        Puerto Vallarta, London, Paris, Gstaad, of restaurants,
        of ideas about them, about modern poetry, about sexuality.
       
        And, in addition, he writes of the high life, the giddy glamour of it all, the yacht, the diamonds, the parties, and the pain.
       
        Maddeningly, however, instead of publishing the notebooks per se, limiting himself to footnotes and annotations,
... Read Full Article


Look for this article in Ask.com

Copyright © 2004 The World & I. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy