scream-of-consciousness;
"If you're trying to change minds and influence people it's probably not a good idea to say that virtually all elected Democrats are liars, but what the hell."
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
LILLIE
At
The Cinema
LILLIE
People
are always asking me, "Hey Rodge,
what should I watch for entertainment? I'm lost, and watching
Gilligan Island reruns non-stop!"
Here's something. Lillie. (I'm watching
on ROKU- NetFlix)
The name Lillie (often Lily)
Langtry stuck in my mind only because of Paul Newman's fixation
on
her in The Life and Times of
Judge Roy Bean. I figured she was a
proper historical character, but wow.
This BBC series is magnificent on several levels, not the least of
which is it's intimate look at Victorian Age London, which I
adore. If
you like reading Boswell,
or Henry
Spencer Ashbee,
you'll love it. Yes, Ashbee penned the most pornographic "biography"
ever ever written, but it was also an intimate look at his life and
times.
"Lille" is bereft of all but the most delicate reference to human
intimacies. Even this moment in her affair with "Bertie," the Prince of Wales, and
later King Edward the VII, is left out.
The
Prince of Wales had the Red House (now Langtry Manor Hotel) constructed
in Bournemouth, Dorset in 1877 as a private retreat for the couple and
allowed Langtry to design it. He once complained to her, "I've spent
enough on you to build a battleship," whereupon she tartly replied,
"And you've spent enough in me to float one" [citation]
Most
intriguing to me was her association with Oscar Wilde, whose love
for her is described as "esthete." Ahem. And James Whistler, who supposedly
left his unfinished portrait of Lillie after being forced
into bankruptcy. Aside from her "role" in Judge Bean films (Walter
Brennan did an earlier version), Langtry is a featured character
in the fictional (and greatest series of historical dodgery-doo ever
published) Flashman novels of acclaimed writer George Macdonald Fraser. She is
mentioned as a former lover of arch cad Harry Flashman. Flashman
describes her as one of his few true loves.
And, even Montgomery Burns, in the Simpson's episode in which he
auditions children to be his new heir, the theater in which the
auditions are held on Burns' estate is called the Lillie Langtry
Theater.
I think those of you with refined taste will enjoy it. Those with
coarser taste will want to produce Ashbee's "My Secret Life" in their
heads. Ahem..