Actor Simon Callow’s latest book, My Life in Pieces: An Alternative Autobiography, is published today (5 July 2010). In the first foreword extract below, Callow explains the book’s title and structure, which is followed by our choice of five of our favourite quotable quotes from subsequent chapters.
He’s back on stage this summer playing William Shakespeare in the new one-man play Shakespeare – The Man from Stratford, written by Bard scholar Jonathan Bate. The production, directed by Tom Cairns, is currently touring and culminates with a run from 5 to 30 August 2010 at Assembly Hall as part of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
Foreword
A word about the title. It may seem to suggest a certain degree of disintegration. The opposite is intended, though the possibility, of course, is always there.
I’ve been writing for newspapers pretty well continuously for 30 years (unless you count – which I don’t think you should – a piece knocked off 40 years ago for the student newspaper of my university). I have written features, weekly columns (for the Independent, for the Sunday Express and, under the nom de plume Autolycus, for Country Life), a monthly column for Gramophone magazine, travel pieces, book reviews, restaurant reviews. As well as newspapers, national and local, I’ve written features for magazines, theatre programmes, in-house journals; and I have written introductions and forewords and articles for books. I have written about many, many things, but most of my writing by far has been about acting and the theatre.
Looking at them again, these literally hundreds of thousands of words, I seem to have been in the grip of a virulent form of logorrhœa. The fact is, my overriding ambition, through all the years of my childhood, and long before I had any notion of being an actor, was to be a writer. I have always had a compulsion (noted on many school reports) to communicate in words – audibly, normally, and in class, to the intense irritation of my teachers. But even then, in those garrulous days of childhood, I was writing: mostly what in America is called journaling, which even I could see was a hiding to nowhere. I had no subject other than myself. So at a certain point, bored and disgusted with that self, I put my writing on hold.
When I found the theatre, I knew I had my subject, and I started writing again. I felt like an anthropologist who has had the good fortune to discover a lost tribe. Being an Actor, my first book, published in 1984, was the culmination of nearly 15 years of writing about this new world I had discovered and which had proved so hospitable to me. No one, of course, had read what I wrote, though occasionally it would spill over into letters. Then, in 1981, the London Evening Standard asked me – to be precise was cajoled by desperate publicists into asking me – to write about the play I was in, and from then on I have been asked on a pretty regular basis to commit my deathless thoughts on the subject to print. I’ve been at my happiest celebrating actors and acting, directors and writers. Sometimes this has taken the form of interviews, sometimes profiles, increasingly often obituaries.
It will be evident to anyone who so much as dips into the book that, like my hero, Kenneth Tynan, I am a bit of a hero-worshipper. My luck is that I have encountered so many people whom I could admire. Taken together, the celebration of performers, directors and writers amounts to a view of acting and the theatre; in some pieces, I have spelled this view out. I have sought to fascinate the reader with those aspects of the life of the theatre (and of film) that have fascinated me. Like another hero of mine, Laurence Olivier, who said he wanted to interest the public in the art of acting, I have tried to spark a debate about it, to alert people to the fact that there is no single truth in this art, and to the possibility of gloriously different modes of expression within it. I am also writing for those who, like my 15-year-old self, are doing their theatregoing in their rooms at home. I am aware that to a large extent, I am writing about a theatre which no longer exists or will soon cease to. The theatre constantly remakes itself. Perhaps this book might sow a seed, encourage a few people, not to turn the clock back, but to take note of what heights the theatre and acting has from time to time attained, and strive to match it.
Put together, the pieces form an account of my relationship, over more than 50 years, to the theatre and, to a somewhat lesser degree, because I have been rather less involved in it (and over a much shorter period), to film. I’ve arranged them, not in chronological order of composition, but as their subjects came up in my life, so I suppose they amount to a sort of alternative autobiography, or at the very least, a growing narrative of my theatrical preoccupations. I have written about my career as such in Being an Actor and Shooting the Actor. Here I write about my passions, my concerns and my dreams.
Theatre has been at the centre of my life for four decades, so to that extent, this book is the story of my life.
Quotable quotes
My Life in Pieces: An Alternative Autobiography by Simon Callow is published by Nick Hern Books (hardback, £20). To purchase your copy now, click here.
To coincide with the book’s publication this week, Simon Callow is in conversation with Emma Freud at the National’s Lyttelton Theatre at 6pm on 5 July 2010. Call the NT box office on 020 7452 3000.
*** WIN!! WIN!! WIN!! We have FIVE signed copies of My Life in Pieces: An Alternative Autobiography to give away in our Twitter competition! To be automatically entered, all you need to do is Follow us on Twitter AND Retweet competition details plus a link to this feature to your own followers. Competition ends 19 July 2010.
Winners will be contacted via Twitter. ***