Silver Screen Book Club discussion

This topic is about
The Name Above The Title
Book Discussions
>
APRIL 2016: The Name Above the Title by Frank Capra
date
newest »




I'm curious to know/read about his relationship with Barbara Stanwyck; whatever that relationship may have been.
How are you doing in your reading? What are your reactions to Capra's strong opinions, and have you found any of the stories to be particularly amusing?
I always like reading about immigrants during the turn of the century. There was a rough and tumble quality that I like, and their struggles are presented in a very different way than immigrants' lives are today. Of course there have always been stigmas attached to them, but I find a lot of the stories then were about people making something out of nothing and moving ahead of the squalor of their lives but never forgetting their roots. They often sent a lot of money back home to take care of family that had not yet had the opportunity to come to America. I think immigrants now have similar experiences but the news emphasizes the few who commit crimes and mooch off of the government. It is unfortunate because I think sometimes the people who come here and become citizens are often more proud of their citizenry than natural born citizens.
I have read before that people found Capra to be arrogant and therefore disliked him. I do not feel that to be the case in this book, although he is certainly self assured and opinionated. His negative reactions to Harry Langdon are an example. Some people found Langdon to be difficult to work with in spite of his cherubic personality on the screen. It is always interesting to see what the real actors were like.
What do you think of the Capra/Stanwyck love affair? Did it surprise you? Do you think they could have made it last?
I always like reading about immigrants during the turn of the century. There was a rough and tumble quality that I like, and their struggles are presented in a very different way than immigrants' lives are today. Of course there have always been stigmas attached to them, but I find a lot of the stories then were about people making something out of nothing and moving ahead of the squalor of their lives but never forgetting their roots. They often sent a lot of money back home to take care of family that had not yet had the opportunity to come to America. I think immigrants now have similar experiences but the news emphasizes the few who commit crimes and mooch off of the government. It is unfortunate because I think sometimes the people who come here and become citizens are often more proud of their citizenry than natural born citizens.
I have read before that people found Capra to be arrogant and therefore disliked him. I do not feel that to be the case in this book, although he is certainly self assured and opinionated. His negative reactions to Harry Langdon are an example. Some people found Langdon to be difficult to work with in spite of his cherubic personality on the screen. It is always interesting to see what the real actors were like.
What do you think of the Capra/Stanwyck love affair? Did it surprise you? Do you think they could have made it last?

I guess I'm reading between the lines a bit, as one must do with both the movies and the memoirs of classic movies and their stars. I have the original version as well. Here is a nice blog article about their professional relationship: https://willmckinley.wordpress.com/20...

Thanks for that Samantha, appreciate it.

Pre-Reading Questions
1. What do you hope to learn from this book?
2. Which Frank Capra movies are your favorite? Why?
3. Have you ever read other books about or seen documentaries about Capra? What do you like and dislike about him?
Reading Goals
Week 1 pages 1-57 (chapters 1-3)
Week 2 pages 57-113 (chapters 4-6)
Week 3 pages 113-190 (chapters 7-9)
Week 4 pages 190-253 (chapters 10-13)
Week 5 pages 253-325 (chapters 14-16)
Week 6 pages 325-400 (chapters 17-19)
Week 7 pages 400-446 (chapters 20-21)
Week 8 pages 446-end (chapters 22-23)
Happy reading!