Category Archives: New Yorker Festival

Festival Program Announced!

Not that festival—the schedule doesn’t go public till the 28th. No, I mean the St. Louis Jewish Book Festival in November, which will be like a mini-New Yorker Festival after the fact, in that a staffer will be one of the headliners. Perfect for relieving your withdrawal symptoms after the October excitement! Read on (from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch):

I AM DENNY CRANE: William Shatner, whose latest incarnation as a pop culture hero is just as surprising as how funny he is on “Boston Legal,” will headline the 28th annual Jewish Book Festival on Nov. 5. He will be jetting into St. Louis to speak at 5:30 p.m. at the Jewish Community Center on Millstone Campus Drive. After his appearance, Shatner will autograph copies of his latest book and then head to the festival’s patron dinner at the Sheraton in West Port. Shatner’s career has spanned more than 50 years. He played Capt. Kirk in “Star Trek.” Tickets for the Shatner presentation are $35. The festival will run for 11 days and will feature 33 authors, including such notables as our town’s Danny Meyer and New Yorker magazine’s Mideast Bureau Chief, Jeffrey Goldberg.

Related:
This Just In [Goldberg appointed bureau chief]
Oh, Say, Can You See, This Week’s TOC? [Goldberg on Steve Rosen]

Bud dear, can you spare a lime?

A belated but welcome review in the Charlotte Observer (and others) of Calvin Trillin’s New Yorker Festival multisnack walking tour:

The tour began at a vest-pocket park in the Village. Trillin, in short-sleeved shirt and a white ball cap from an Arkansas barbecue joint, donned a wireless microphone and drew a crowd of locals and distant fans.

“I think he’s just an American treasure,” said Nancy Timmerman of Mount Pleasant, Mich., who built a trip to the festival around the chance to hang with Bud, as he’s known to friends.

One friend on the tour, Beth Elon, lives on a farm in Italy and writes about food for Israeli newspapers.

“Bud is more of a glutton than anything else,” Elon said while turning the corner at Bleecker Street in Trillin’s West Village neighborhood.

“He loves tastes and weird combinations. It goes far beyond whatever is fashionable. He’s lusty about food.” Keep grazing.

Here’s a piece from ’02 by Sarah Lazarovic in the National Post (reprinted on Long Live Irony) about a previous Trillin tour, with good photos. Chowhound did it in ’04.

I like these things

1. A review of the New Yorker DVD archive by my friend Peter Terzian, who’s also my remarkably tolerant editor. Here’s a snippet:

Such bounty can breed obsession. Minutes after popping one of the eight discs into my iMac, the outline of my future became clear. I began making calculations. If I read one complete issue a day for the next 11 1/2 years, I would be finished in the spring of 2017. Of course, so much reading would occupy a few hours of each day. Surely I could shunt some social engagements, make peanut-butter sandwiches for dinner instead of all that time-consuming cooking.

I can imagine other readers of “The Complete New Yorker” entertaining similar fantasies of a systematic approach. One could easily become overwhelmed by the abundance on offer. “Now that it’s done and I actually have one,” says New Yorker editor David Remnick, “I have to say I’ve spent more hours learning about this magazine of ours and mine than I ever would have thought imaginable.” And more…

2. A story about two New Yorker Festival events—Edie Falco/Jeffrey Toobin and Nancy Franklin/Ricky Gervais—by culture maven and great Canadian Simon Houpt, who also recently interviewed Myla Goldberg (who, I hear, hangs a crooked foot all upside down). Just in case you’re not a Globe & Mail Insider Edition subscriber, I will provide the text in the interest of promoting friendship among nations. It comes around, it comes around, it comes around, it comes around. (I reviewed the event here.)

NEW YORK DIARY

Actors in a New Yorker state of mind

By SIMON HOUPT

Every September, as the rest of the world buckles down and turns serious again after summer’s frivolities, The New Yorker magazine momentarily swims against the current, loosens its poise, and lets down its elaborately pinned hair. This past weekend marked its sixth annual festival of readings, panels, interviews, musical performances and happenings, more than 40 events in which the magazine’s high-toned spirit infects the city’s streets, clubs and studios, and vice versa.

Fans of the magazine fly in for the weekend from across the continent and, occasionally, from overseas. Where else are you going to see Steve Martin in a banjo jam with Earl Scruggs? Or the magazine’s financial columnist James Surowiecki chat with the band Sleater-Kinney? Or Roger Angell cast his mind back over the more than 60 years that he’s been contributing to the magazine?

On Saturday night, in back-to-back sessions at the swank music club Coda on 34th Street, where orange light cast down from chandeliers proved a little harsh for the skin tone of any human being, Edie Falco and Ricky Gervais offered case studies in the uneven life of an actor. Taken together, you might say they provided a twist on Tolstoy’s famous dictum about families — to wit, all successful actors resemble one another, but each unsuccessful actor is unsuccessful in his or her own way. Both actors have spent more years of their lives struggling than they have being successes, and neither is so far removed from those early days that they don’t recall in acidic clarity how challenging they were.

All dolled up in sparkly clothes, Falco submitted patiently to a battery of questions from the magazine’s legal affairs writer Jeffrey Toobin. (The odd pairing could have proved inspired but didn’t; that hit-and-miss nature of the festival is what keeps it interesting.) He began by reading a quote from a critic who had noted tongue-in-cheek that Falco was considered “an overnight success” only “after working for 15 years of anonymity and not a lot of success” in New York theatre and tiny, unmemorable film roles.

Falco winced knowingly and explained that she’d done whatever she could to support herself through those years, including a stint with an outfit called Shazam Entertainment, which supplied party staff to weddings and bar mitzvahs to help get guests in the mood. She’d had to dress up as the Cookie Monster and drag people onto the dance floor, which proved hellish since she hates that sort of forced frivolity. There were also the 15 years of waitressing, which she says now “is a giant blackout” in her brain, just “little snippets of people being rude, and the smell of old beer.”

One memory of those years is clear, though. One Sunday morning as she was setting up a restaurant for brunch, she looked around and thought, “This is what my life will always be like, setting up restaurants for ever and ever and ever.”

Only about a week ago, Falco said, she was walking down the street with a girlfriend when it suddenly occurred to her that she’d never have to do that again. Probably. She’s got many, many talented friends who still haven’t struck it big, and she’s all too aware of how stars can be dropped right back to where they were found. Besides, “I did that for a lot longer than I’ve done this, so that feels more real to me, in a way.”

Which is something that the newest creation from Ricky Gervais could appreciate. Gervais, of course, is the public face of The Office, the BBC cult hit that still has people talking, even though it wrapped its 14-episode run in England more than two years ago. He’s back on British and U.S. television with Extras, a six-part series about the petty humiliations faced by a wannabe actor (Gervais) who, after five years of work as an extra on TV and feature films, has yet to break into the foreground. (The show doesn’t yet have a Canadian outlet.)

During the 10 p.m.-to-midnight session at Coda, The New Yorker’s TV critic Nancy Franklin and Gervais slugged back Heinekens while chuckling about his trip from obscurity to semi-stardom. (Well, Franklin, being a New Yorker staffer, didn’t exactly slug, but rather demurely tipped the bottle to her lips.) His dad was a day labourer in Reading, his mother a housewife, and when he was eight years old his mother explained to him that the reason his older siblings were so much older than he (11, 13, and 14 years) was because he was a mistake. “Well, you were a brilliant mistake,” Franklin quipped.

Gervais went to college in London because it was a chance to move to London; he had no idea what he wanted to do. After college, he took a series of dead-end jobs in radio, including a stint as an events manager at one radio station because the station was near his house. When one of his former assistants, Stephen Merchant, had to make a student film, Gervais worked up a few skits around the character who would eventually become the self-centered boss David Brent in The Office. He and Merchant showed the film to the BBC and then raced to write six episodes of a sitcom on spec, in case the network picked up the idea. He was 36.

“I was lazy until I did The Office. But when the chance is really there, I go for it,” he admitted. “And I was rewarded. It was like a revelation at 36: The more you try, the more you get out!” Gervais cast his eyes over the appreciative crowd, and bathed in their adoring laughter.

Please, Miss, may we have some more?

More New Yorker Festival coverage, you say? Certainly not! You’ve had enough bloggy gruel to last you the night and I don’t want to hear any more complaining! You’re pleading that you’ve been reading Beatrice all weekend long and got a big helping of Donald Antrim and Jonathan Franzen, Lorrie Moore and Chang-Rae Lee, David Remnick and Steve Martin, Misha the Magnificent and Zadie Smith, Ricky Gervais and John Updike, Paul Rudnick and Anthony Lane, cartoonists galore and bluegrass banjos, and now you’re famished again? No way no how, orphan ingrates! But you liked those posts, did you? You wouldn’t mind hearing a little more detail, maybe some actual literary-historical analysis, a few more writerly quips, what everyone was wearing, what the crowds were like (preview: ballet enthusiasts are jittery)? Fine, brats. Go back to Beatrice and there’ll be another bowl waiting for you. But after Tuesday, I’m cutting you off. You’ve gotten stout on all these posts and we need our orphans slim for the visitors. Get your battered tin spoons ready, because supplies are extremely limited.

Not the target audience

Baryshnikov’s balletic bafflement, from Newsday via the AP:

When he was invited to play a role on “Sex and the City,” Mikhail Baryshnikov says he had two questions: “Which sex, and which city?” The legendary dancer told an audience at The New Yorker Festival that until then he’d never seen the HBO series, because he only watched news and golf on TV. So the producers sent him a few episodes to watch.

“I was kind of amused, and shocked,” Baryshnikov said Saturday of the racy series, which ended early last year. “At first I was watching it with my children. Then I said ‘Children, OUT!'”

Baryshnikov played a self-involved artist named Aleksandr, a love interest of Carrie Bradshaw, played by series star Sarah Jessica Parker.

Baryshnikov’s latest project is the Baryshnikov Arts Center, a new home for various art forms that will open in November on Manhattan’s West Side.

Idol worship

That’s me, tonight, trying to absorb Lorrie Moore-itude via osmosis. One of the things I like most about her is that for years, she split her time between NYC and Madison. My hometown! Where she lives fulltime now, beloved by students and enjoying her spacious, lakefront view. See, she’s smart. We’re…drugged.

Look at me well; in sooth I’m Beatrice!

You know how, in your twenties, you house-sat at every opportunity both to escape your own tiny apartment and to get to live in someone else’s world for a little while? I’m doing something like that this week at Beatrice, where I’m covering the New Yorker Festival from now till whenever I start bumping into things in a grinning, satiated stupor, like Woody Allen in Sleeper post-Orgasmatron. Do come over, won’t you?

Also, as you can see, the deli.cio.us categories are back! It’ll take a while to fill in the missing ones from the monthlong Dataless Dark Ages, but they’ll be filled in, never fear.

Exhaustion + Google Alerts + Grab = post!


You want that Paris link, don’t you? OK, here. The New Yorker piece too? I’m afraid it’s not online. But lots of other things are, so here’s the September 26, 2005 TOC. Emdashes quiz: Find the two, count ’em two, references to the movie Gone With the Wind in the table of contents alone!

I’ll be blogging the New Yorker Festival over at Beatrice this weekend, by the way. It’s going to be a whole lot of fun, particularly since I hope to sleep before then. Seeing Steve Martin playing banjo with Earl Scruggs has a great chance of being the high point of my life thus far, and since I’m not one of those irony-addled sorts who insist they’ve never liked anything all that much as far as they know, except maybe Curb Your Enthusiasm, you can be sure I mean it.

I want to wake up in the festival that never sleeps

Via the great Gothamist, abracadabra! The New Yorker Festival schedule. Filled with so many treats, you’ll think Halloween was a swindle. While I was signing up to get emails about the festival here, I answered a questionnaire (I love doing that—I’m a market-researcher’s dream, except when I enter false information; don’t worry, Festival, I didn’t do that here), I encountered this question:

That sounds like fun, but have you ever heard of The New Yorker Compass? Me neither, but if I hear from them, I’ll certainly report back. I always do, you know.