Complete "Talking Heads", The - Hardcover

 
9780754056577: Complete "Talking Heads", The

Synopsis

The complete "Talking Heads" monologues, twelve of Alan Bennett's most highly acclaimed and best-loved works. "A Chip in the Sugar" performed by Alan Bennett. "A Lady of Letters" performed by Patricia Routledge. "Bed Among the Lentils" performed by Anna Massey. "Soldiering On" performed by Stephanie Cole. "Her Big Chance" performed by Julie Walters. "A Cream Cracker Under the Settee" performed by Thora Hird. "Miss Fozzard Finds Her Feet" performed by Patricia Routledge. "The Hand of God" performed by Eileen Atkins. "Playing Sandwiches" performed by David Haig. "The Outside Dog" performed by Julie Walters. "Nights in the Gardens of Spain" performed by Penelope Wilton. "Waiting for the Telegram" performed by Thora Hird. Performed by the author and eight of Britain's leading actors, Alan Bennett's tales of loneliness and vulnerability are full of quirky, insightful detail that bring these twelve memorable characters vividly to life.

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Review

Alan Bennett's award-winning series of six television monologues, Talking Heads, may have been first aired in 1988, but over a decade later it is still impossible to read these deeply moving and affectionate scripts without hearing the voices of the actors who played them. Maggie Smith as the alcoholic vicar's wife finding a semblance of happiness in an affair with an Indian shop owner, Patricia Routledge as the poisonous neighbour, Julie Walters as the over-the-hill dolly bird auditioning for a porn film and of course Thora Hird as Doris, the old lady alone in her home having fallen and broken her hip. All great performances and all made possible by Bennett's wonderfully observant and poignant scripts. Bennett rightly notes in his introduction to the pieces that, maybe apart from Doris, his narrators are artless in that they "don't quite know what they are saying and are telling a story to the meaning of which they are not entirely privy". But through their artlessnes they reveal more about Britain today and the stresses and strains placed upon ordinary people, than any number of docu-soaps that now claim to show us real life. --Nick Wroe

Review

"Bennett's genius is his ability to satirize humanely. [His] prose is like stained glass: if you stare at it, you see things you missed."
-- "The New York Times Book Review"

"In the hands of Alan Bennett, the tragic and painful are close bedfellow with the funny and the sexual....We laugh at the situations presented and then feel a twinge of guilt."
-- "Los Angeles Times"

"Few write sharper dialogue or probe more tellingly into the frailties and occasional strengths of the human psyche than Alan Bennett. No one knows more about getting each scene just right or as consistently."
-- William Trevor

"Bennett's genius is for the imploding situation in which a cleverly made house of cards shudders and comes down; the comments of his characters as they nimbly pick their way around the wreckage verge on aphorism."
-- "The New Yorker"
Few write sharper dialogue or probe more tellingly into the frailties and occasional strengths of the human psyche than Alan Bennett. No one knows more about getting each scene just right or as consistently.--William Trevor

Bennett's genius is his ability to satirize humanely. [His] prose is like stained glass: if you stare at it, you see things you missed. "The New York Times Book Review"

In the hands of Alan Bennett, the tragic and painful are close bedfellow with the funny and the sexual....We laugh at the situations presented and then feel a twinge of guilt. "Los Angeles Times"

Few write sharper dialogue or probe more tellingly into the frailties and occasional strengths of the human psyche than Alan Bennett. No one knows more about getting each scene just right or as consistently. William Trevor

Bennett's genius is for the imploding situation in which a cleverly made house of cards shudders and comes down; the comments of his characters as they nimbly pick their way around the wreckage verge on aphorism. "The New Yorker""

"Bennett's genius is his ability to satirize humanely. [His] prose is like stained glass: if you stare at it, you see things you missed." --The New York Times Book Review

"In the hands of Alan Bennett, the tragic and painful are close bedfellow with the funny and the sexual....We laugh at the situations presented and then feel a twinge of guilt." --Los Angeles Times

"Few write sharper dialogue or probe more tellingly into the frailties and occasional strengths of the human psyche than Alan Bennett. No one knows more about getting each scene just right or as consistently." --William Trevor

"Bennett's genius is for the imploding situation in which a cleverly made house of cards shudders and comes down; the comments of his characters as they nimbly pick their way around the wreckage verge on aphorism." --The New Yorker

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