a short poem
Posted: Tue Oct 24, 2006 4:31 am
be
Here's another, although it is rather lengthy compared to yours, Bernard:Bernard, you have lost the plot........How wonderful!
Top five movies that have a one letter name:
1. O
2. G
3. M
4. π (Pi)
5. Z
Bonus: V, the TV miniseries
The Subject line is always a great quote. This issue's was:"In 1939, the story goes, F Scott Fitzgerald earned $33 from royalties on all his books. Those included This Side of Paradise, Tender Is the Night, and The Great Gatsby. The great writer of recent times was only 43 but he was 'washed up,' very ill, horribly reliant on booze, trying to keep a daughter in good schools and a wife, Zelda, in expensive sanatoriums. In that desperate plight, he tried again to get assignments from Hollywood. He had been hired before and there were still easy assumptions that with his dialogue, his construction ability, his sense of character, he must be a natural for talking pictures. There had been people in power, like Irving Thalberg and David Selznick, who liked him and tried to hire him. But Fitzgerald was a dunce at movie-writing. He might make $1,500 a week for a couple of weeks (on Gone With the Wind ), but then Selznick had to fire him. ‘Poor Scott,’ they said, and wondered how much longer the ex-genius had to go. I’m sure he wondered himself. He had few illusions about his own stamina. And in the last year of his life, he tried to write a novel about Hollywood. He died of a heart attack on December 21 1940, with about 150 pages of what he called The Last Tycoon done. Those pages, along with the notes he had left on how the book might end, are among the most touching things ever written. There was no bitterness in Fitzgerald. Indeed, The Last Tycoon is alive with his fond insight, his admiration for people like Thalberg (trying to run the very complicated show), and his intuition that Hollywood was reshaping America.”
- David Thompson
"In any contest between power and patience, bet on patience." - W.B. Prescott
The great thing about E-Verse is that it's an 'audience participation' one, where you can submit things that actually get published in it, such as the lists, etc. Twice, that I know of, they've done things on Leonard, originally suggested to them by Bobbie from here.Do you know anyone who might like E-Verse Radio? They may subscribe to E-Verse by sending an email to listsrv@list.everseradio.com with SUBSCRIBE EVERSE in the body.