Friday, March 15, 2019
Born in Yorkshire in 1934, Alan Bennett. :: English Literature
born(p) in Yorkshire in 1934, Alan Bennett.Born in Yorkshire in 1934, Alan Bennett has been writing, performingand directing since his starting theatrical encounters as a student atOxford in the early 1960s.He first gained success at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and later, incollaboration noticeh Dudley Moore, shaft Cooke and Jonathan Miller,enjoyed considerable acclaim with the original Beyond the Fringe.(www.museum.tv. Accessed 26/01/03)Alan Bennett is the archetypal Northerner, his bespeckled, moroseappearance make him an unlikely celebrity and he would not smelling out ofplace as a slightly muddled prof or, as Bennett himself observes,a vicar. He says on the subject of appearances people often goal updoing what the mirror tells them they are suited for, while feelingthemselves sooner different inside. And in the process whole lives arethrown a carriage (Observer.co.uk. Accessed 21/01/03)Bennett writes about ordinary people, involved in mundane activities,but with his stra nge style he can liven up the dullest tale and scoreinterest to lifes lonely outcasts.Although the stories in Talking Heads are fiction, it is easy to imagethat approximately are influenced from events in Bennetts early life. Hismother suffered from depression and he uses his experience of mentalillness as a core for some of his citations. As he says, the peoplehe writes about are part of a story to the meaning of which they arenot entirely privy (Observer.co.uk. Accessed 21/01/03)A reflection of Bennetts own sexuality can be seen in the characterof Graham in A Chip in the Sugar, who is portrayed as an uncomfortablehomosexual. Bennett described his sexuality during an interview in theNew Yorker in 1993 thus Id always been in love with guys but alwaysunhappily (Observer.co.uk. Accessed 21/01/03)Although not included in the collections of Talking Heads, the conceptactu all toldy started with A muliebrity of No Importance, which was firsttelevised in 1982. It began the trend that Bennett carried on in twainTalking Heads 1 and 2. Both of these compilations contain works withsimilar themes tally through them, loneliness, unhappiness,estrangement from a changed society, and vague mental illness. Theironic wit Bennett uses to convey the almost tragic stories arecentral to how the characters accept the way their lives have turnedout (www.museum.tv. Accessed 21/01/03)The theme of loneliness and alienation from a changed society runslike a thread through all six of the first Talking Heads stories. Eachof the characters portray a press to fit in with everyday life,some are alone and lonely, and some in a relationship of some kind,yet still lonely. The gentle humour employ in each of the tales makes
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