Folly, Words, Wigs, Rags, Sheepskin, Plunder, Precedent, Jargon, Gammon, and Spinach!
Happy 200th to the boy in the blacking factory.
I've just read Great Expectations—which for some reason I'd missed all these years—and I'm re-reading Bleak House. Damn, that one's good. Somehow, I've slithered out of A Tale of Two Cities. At seven or so, I got so deep into David Copperfield that I missed my bus—and came to in a deserted schoolyard, frantic with abandonment. At thirteen, I rewrote that book as The Persecution and Assassination of Charles Dickens as Performed by the Inmates, got my English class to stage it, and played the narrator in a Sibyl's robes and sunglasses. Nearly every year, I curl up with A Christmas Carol. It's like eating mince pies.
Dickens works splendidly theatrically, as well he knew—and half-killed himself performing. He did the police in different voices. I dearly love the RSC Nicholas Nickleby; I seriously like the Christine Edzard Little Dorrit and admire David Lean's Oliver Twist (except for that appalling Fagin—O Alec Guinness, what were you thinking?) and I smiled and sniffled at the school production of Oliver! my friends' daughters were in: London kids playing London kids. The elder girl was channeling Helena Bonham Carter as the Widow, and there was a hell of an eleven-year-old Nancy.
What do you like? Or is Dickens like a slab of Christmas cake for you, all garish mixed fruits and stodge and icing sugar?
Nine
I've just read Great Expectations—which for some reason I'd missed all these years—and I'm re-reading Bleak House. Damn, that one's good. Somehow, I've slithered out of A Tale of Two Cities. At seven or so, I got so deep into David Copperfield that I missed my bus—and came to in a deserted schoolyard, frantic with abandonment. At thirteen, I rewrote that book as The Persecution and Assassination of Charles Dickens as Performed by the Inmates, got my English class to stage it, and played the narrator in a Sibyl's robes and sunglasses. Nearly every year, I curl up with A Christmas Carol. It's like eating mince pies.
Dickens works splendidly theatrically, as well he knew—and half-killed himself performing. He did the police in different voices. I dearly love the RSC Nicholas Nickleby; I seriously like the Christine Edzard Little Dorrit and admire David Lean's Oliver Twist (except for that appalling Fagin—O Alec Guinness, what were you thinking?) and I smiled and sniffled at the school production of Oliver! my friends' daughters were in: London kids playing London kids. The elder girl was channeling Helena Bonham Carter as the Widow, and there was a hell of an eleven-year-old Nancy.
What do you like? Or is Dickens like a slab of Christmas cake for you, all garish mixed fruits and stodge and icing sugar?
Nine
Published on February 06, 2012 23:42
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