Friday, May 29, 2026
Climbing The 39 Steps
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Paradise Lost: “Lord of the Flies”
The British seem to have a special talent for creating TV
miniseries. I was awed (as were most Emmy voters) by last year’s Adolescence.
So when I heard that Jack Thorne, who had created that show along with Stephen
Graham, was behind a new BBC adaptation of William Golding’s Lord of the
Flies, I had to watch.
Friday, May 22, 2026
Biography at the Movies
I’ll soon be taking a bite of the Big Apple. The occasion is
the annual conference of Biographers International Organization, a group that
came into being to serve the needs of both active biographers and those
interested in the field of biography. Since 2010 there have been (in addition
to regular newsletters and Zoom events) annual BIO conferences, mostly in New
York City but sometimes in outposts like Boston, DC, Richmond, and even Los
Angeles. Some attendees merely want advice on telling family stories; others
are experienced writers and even recipients of major awards. My BIO pal Amanda
Vaill just won this year’s Pulitzer for Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler
Sisters in an Age of Revolution.
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
The joys and the sadness of youth: “Stand by Me”
These days I suspect Stand By Me is best known as a
song, one of those ageless ballads with which almost everyone can connect. It’s
a paean to loyalty and friendship, which of course makes it perfect for
campfire singalongs. It was recorded in 1961 by Ben E. King, who co-wrote it
along with the invaluable popsters Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. When I hear
“Stand by Me,” it puts me in a mellow mood, remembering back to memories—both
happy and sad—of my own past.
One of the things that makes Stand by Me fascinating to today’s viewers is the real-life fate of those involved. Kiefer Stuherland, of course, has had a rich acting career that rivals the success once enjoyed by his late father, Donald. Richard Dreyfuss has starred in blockbusters (yes, Jaws!) and won an Oscar for The Goodbye Girl. John Cusack, who plays Gordie’s older brother in some brief flashbacks, became beloved for his romantic turn in Say Anything.
For the film’s four main boys, career success has been a sometime thing. Jerry O’Connell has had a long career but few standout roles. Wil Wheaton now mostly limits himself to voiceover work. The irrepressible Corey Feldman still performs, at 54, but has struggled with drug and alcohol abuse. River Phoenix, a 1988 Oscar nominee for Running on Empty, died of a drug overdose in 1993, at age 23.
Friday, May 15, 2026
Fame—I’m Gonna Live Forever (“The Assassination of Jesse James . . . “)
The Western has never been my favorite film genre.
Personally speaking, I‘m not much enthralled by horses and guns. But when one
of my screenwriting students (someone whose tastes run from science-fiction to
Pixar) called The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford his
number-one film of all time, my curiosity was roused.
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
The Philadelphia (and Newport, Rhode Island) Story
High Society (1956) promises fun at the movies. And it
delivers. This spritely screwball musical stars Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra,
both of whose characters are at least somewhat in love with an elegant heiress,
Tracy Lord, played by the blonde and beautiful Grace Kelly. This was to be
Kelly’s very last movie role before she married a real-life Prince Charming and
became Princess Grace of Monaco. Rounding out the cast are the acerbic Celeste
Holm and the delightfully ebullient Louis Armstrong. The setting is ritzy
Newport, Rhode Island, where the central characters live in posh mansions,
surrounded by fawning retainers.
Friday, May 8, 2026
Carlos Castaneda: Tricking the Reader and the Filmmaker
When I attended college, Carlos Castaneda was a very big
deal indeed. As a student of anthropology at my very own school, UCLA, Castaneda
had published The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge.
This 1968 book, which earned a tidy fortune for the University of
California Press, was billed as a work of non-fiction, in which a budding
anthropologist travels to Mexico and encounters a shaman who instructs him in
how to unlock the secrets of the universe. Anyone with a mystical bent (and
there were lots of those people around in the Sixties) quickly climbed onto the
Castenada bandwagon. Before leaving this mortal sphere in 1998—apparently from
cancer, though this was not publicly acknowledged—he published abut ten books
and accumulated a large and very loyal group of followers. Some of them
disappeared at the time of his demise and were never seen again.








