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Our Revels Now Are Ended
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16394 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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5 / 1989 |
2,929 Words |
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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
... (1999 of 15728 Characters)
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