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Insights - Utah Shakespearean Festival

Insights - Utah Shakespearean Festival

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past:The notebooks I have written since 1935 at the insistence of Thorton Wilder, whom I metthat year, now run four to five million words. Indeed they have provided me with much material.Many things I would have otherwise forgotten were well remembered because they werewritten down (Volume 78, Gale Group, Detroit, 1999, 291).He began to actively pursue portraying the important personages and aspects of the entertainmentworld that he had been privy to, including the greatly received Tracy and Hepburn:An Intimate Memoir, prompting further forays into the secretive side of the silver screen inHollywood, Moviola, and Together Again.During an interview Kanin was once asked if there was one facet of his career so far that hehad enjoyed the most. He replied “Yes, it’s what I do now, . . . and the reason I continued wasthat I was scared. I didn’t have sufficient confidence in my abilities as a writer to believe that Iwould ever be able to make a living as a writer. . . . It took me some time to dredge up sufficientcourage to say ‘I’m not going to do anything but write.’ That’s what I’ve been doing for thepast several years and it seems to be going well” (Contemporary Authors, Vol. 78, Gale Group,Detroit, 1999, 292).t certainly did go well for Kanin. Doris Brumbach declared that “if youth is wasted on theyoung, old age has not been wasted on Garson Kanin (“Nonfiction in Brief: ‘It Takes a LongTime to Become Young,’” The New York Times Book Review, 26 February 1978, 22). Hecontinued to write and direct the projects that were close to his heart until his death in 1999.When Kanin died he was hailed as “The Man for-All-Theatre-Seasons,” a celebrated playwright,film writer, director, and author, whose career spanned over fifty years.His secret? Kanin once joked, “A man ninety years old was asked to what he attributed hislongevity. ‘I reckon,’ he said, with a twinkle in his eye, ‘it’s because most nights I went to bedand slept when I should have stayed up and worried.’” I, for one, am glad that Kanin got somuch sleep.A Pygmalion Tale, but So Much MoreBy Heidi MadsenFrom <strong>Insights</strong>, 2003<strong>Utah</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>351 West Center Street • Cedar City, <strong>Utah</strong> 84720 • 435-586-78807

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