"A New York Treasure" --Village Voice

The Beauty Part

I mentioned John Lahr yesterday. Bright guy and an interesting writer.


 
His first book was a biography of his father, Bert Lahr, Notes on a Cowardly Lion, which is excellent, one of the very best showbiz biographies.

bertlahr

His next book was a bio of the British playwright, Joe Orton, Prick Up Your Ears, another stellar book. Not a bad start, eh?

I read both books when I was in high school and have occasionally read Lahr’s criticism since, mostly on the theater. Can’t say he’s a favorite but I admire his work and will always stop to see what he’s got to say. 

And he’s got a website.

Dig this 2005 Steve Buscemi profile:

Nothing about Buscemi’s physical presence suggests the poetic lineaments of masculine film glamour. He is pale, almost pallid-as if he’d been reared in a mushroom cellar. In a certain light, he can look cadaverous. His eyes are large and bulgy, with a hint of melancholy. When he smiles, his mouth displays a shantytown of uneven, uncapped teeth. And yet that unprepossessing ordinariness is what makes Buscemi captivating as a performer. It gives him the unmistakable stamp of the authentic, and it helps to explain his emergence over the past two decades as an icon of independent films. (Buscemi himself understands the value of his rumpled looks. When his dentist suggested fixing his teeth, he told her, “You’re going to kill my livelihood if you do that.”) “Steve is the little guy,” says the director Jim Jarmusch, who cast Buscemi in his 1989 film “Mystery Train.” “In the characters he plays and in his own life, he’s representing that part of us all that’s not on top of the world.”

…Onscreen or off, Buscemi is never ostentatious. Still, with his simplicity and restraint-an emotional as well as a physical minimalism-he manufactures a truthfulness that always surprises. At lunch, as he tentatively told the story of his working-class upbringing (his father was a sanitation worker, his mother a hostess at Howard Johnson’s), he cast an unexpected light on his own edgy inhibition. We were talking about the terror he’d felt at nineteen, when he first thought of moving from Long Island to Manhattan to try to be an actor. What held him back, he said, was “this feeling that you don’t deserve to be heard, that you don’t really have anything to say or a point of view that’s interesting, because you haven’t been properly educated. I was very intimidated, basically feeling culturally inferior.”

When Buscemi acts, his thinness and his slouch-which seem a product of that original shame-only heighten his odd presence, which is a topic of conversation in many of the seventy-eight movies he’s made since his first major role, in “Parting Glances,” in 1986. In Joel and Ethan Coen’s “Fargo” (1996), the other characters repeatedly make fun of Buscemi’s Carl Showalter, a dopey kidnapper turned killer. When Frances McDormand’s beady-eyed, homespun policewoman presses a hooker for a detailed description of Showalter, whom she has recently bedded, all the girl can say is “The little guy was kinda funny-lookin’ … He wasn’t circumcised…Funny-lookin’ more than most people, even.”

Who you callin’ funny-lookin’?

stevebuscemi

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11 comments

1 glennrwordman   ~  Dec 13, 2009 7:19 pm

Lahr is a fantastic writer, one who penned perhaps the ultimate profile of the late, lamented Bill Hicks: http://www.newyorker.com/archive/1993/11/01/1993_11_01_113_TNY_CARDS_000365503?currentPage=all.

His writing is rarely showy, but seems to get at the essence of those he portrays.

2 RagingTartabull   ~  Dec 13, 2009 8:05 pm

why am I Mr. Pink?

3 Mr. OK Jazz TOKYO   ~  Dec 13, 2009 11:15 pm

[3] Tarantino references make me sad, Raging... :( he's a total poser with little (if any) real talent in the world of cinema..makes Speilberg look like Orson Welles in comaprison!

4 Mr. OK Jazz TOKYO   ~  Dec 13, 2009 11:18 pm

[3] Er...i just referred to myself there..anyways, I think the meaning was clear..

Really can't wait for baseball season, the Knicks just signed a guy who has been out of the league for 3 years...will they ever become a real franchise again??

5 Diane Firstman   ~  Dec 13, 2009 11:42 pm

One of my favorite guilty pleasure movies is "Con Air", and one of the main reasons is the performance of Steve Buscemi.

http://www.break.com/usercontent/2008/7/Con-Air-Busemi-Sweet-Home-Alabama-534660.html

6 Chyll Will   ~  Dec 14, 2009 12:04 am

[4] Nah.

7 Mr. OK Jazz TOKYO   ~  Dec 14, 2009 12:15 am

[6] Nets time?

8 Chyll Will   ~  Dec 14, 2009 4:12 am

[7] Hah.

9 Mr. OK Jazz TOKYO   ~  Dec 14, 2009 7:10 am

[8] Golden State then..I crave the management dysfunction. Child of the Steinbrenner 80s after all...

10 wsporter   ~  Dec 14, 2009 8:21 am

I remember seeing John Lahr on television in the late 60's or early 70's speaking about his father and being touched by the sweet and tender way he remembered him. That still touches me. He just seems to be a really good, smart and talented guy. Thanks for for running this one up there Alex.

11 Alex Belth   ~  Dec 14, 2009 9:02 am

10) No probs, that NOTES ON A COWARDLY LION is really worth reading. Fair, and heart-breaking. As you can imagine, Lahr, like many comedians, was a deeply unhappy man.

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