A collection of fifty celebrity profiles by a noted drama critic includes his observations about such figures as Humphrey Bogart, Mel Brooks, W. C. Fields, Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, and Laurence Olivier. Reprint. 10,000 first printing.
Reading Kenneth Tynan, you realize how paltry are the critics today.
This book of interviews and reflections is brilliant. He write about figures of the 1950s, 60s and 70s -- a group that ranges from Bogart and Welles and Graham Greene and Garbo to Lenny Bruce and Mel Brooks and Judy Holliday. What makes him so terrific is his generosity
Kenneth Tynan’s profiles largely live up to his flamboyant reputation, his prose happily glorifying the people whose work he admired. Many of these pieces are standard newspaper profiles enlivened by florid yet sharp turns of phrase and sharp insights. Probably the best pieces come towards the end when the New Yorker allowed him plenty of space to profile his targets; it’s often fascinating to see a fine critical mind at work (or enjoying itself a little too much as is evident in the Nicol Williamson profile). Probably the highlight is the very last piece in the book, a piece which details the career of Louise Brooks, an old Hollywood starlet who departed for European arthouse cinema and ended up forgotten and alone in New York but for a few articles on cinema. It feels like a mature, melancholy tribute to a youthful heroine who retains her fascination. Like all the richest food though it’s best sampled in small portions so the prose doesn’t cloy and being to feel too heavy. This book should probably come with a health warning; that it may destroy the love of even the hardiest Marvel fan. It’s an unofficial history of one of the dominant cultural forces of the late twentieth century, taking the story from its origins as Timely Comics to the point of what looks like their greatest triumph; the conquering of the silver screen.
Didn't read this cover to cover, as I can only get so interested in reading profiles of entertainment figures from previous eras that I've never heard of. But I enjoyed the ones I chose to read, especially Katharine Hepburn, Martha Graham, and (especially especially) Mel Brooks.