Santa Claus Day

The columnist for the TLS, who writes their “NB” page and goes by the initials J.C. (said to be the abbreviation of critic James Campbell), had a Waugh encounter described in the latest issue.

On a day trip to Lewes, he found a copy of Waugh’s Love Among the Ruins at a secondhand bookshop. This was on the day that the Paris climate agreement was concluded and, when he opened the book, the first sentence immediately struck him: “Despite their promises at the last election, the politicians had not yet changed the climate.” Hooked, he thought he’d better have the book:

The politicians’ promise was for snow on what, in this irreligious near future, was called Santa Claus Day. But the weather “continued from day to day as it had of old, most anomalously.” The Department of Euthanasia has logically superseded  the Department of Pensions and is “the one department that’s expanding”; the Ministry of Art only sanctions politically approved–we now say “correct”–output; drinking is monitored by the government.

In the pre- holiday period (what Waugh called “Santa-Claus-Tide”), the bookshop was “quiet but active.” Although tempted by a copy of J.M. Barrie’s My Lady Nicotine, J.C. opted for

Waugh’s “amusement for the still civilized” instead. A first edition, complete with dust jacket designed by Waugh himself (he also drew most of the illustrations in the text, including one  [that accompanies the article] of a bearded transgender figure receiving a garland) cost 10 pounds.

Santa Claus Day indeed! Sounds like a real bargain. My copy purchased 20+ years ago cost $50. For those not so fortunate as the TLS columnist, the novella can also be found in the collection of Waugh’s complete stories.

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Next St Austin Review Devoted to Waugh

The next issue (January/February 2016) of the St. Austin Review will feature several articles on Evelyn Waugh. The StAR, as it is sometimes called, is a Roman Catholic journal devoted to cultural matters. A summary of the coming issue’s Waugh-related contents has been published on the internet:

Sr. Joanna McCormack confronts the “Empty Minds and Vile Bodies” of the “Bright Young People” in Waugh’s early novel.

James Morris waxes lyrical on Waugh’s “Critical Heritage”.

Zach Krajacic admires “The Novelist and the Saint” in his discussion of Waugh’s life of St. Edmund Campion.

Joseph Pearce is “Revisiting Brideshead”.

Frank Brownlow laments the woeful state of modern Waugh criticism in “Waugh Mistaken and Brideshead Unvisited”.

Nathan Turner compares “Evelyn Waugh and Hunter S. Thompson on the Human Condition”.

James Morris waxes lyrical once again, this time on “The Characters in Brideshead”.

Lux Kamprath is “Redeeming the Times in Waugh’s Sword of Honour”.

Individual copies are available for $8 on the webpage under “subscribe”.

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Dates Announced for Brideshead Stage Production

The schedule of the world premiere performance of Bryony Lavery’s stage adaptation of Brideshead Revisited has been announced for 22-30 April 2016 at the Theatre Royal, York (see earlier post). Performances by the English Touring Company have also been set for 10-14 May at the Nuffield Theatre, Southampton and 14-18 June at the Oxford Playhouse.

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Waugh’s Tailors

The Daily Telegraph has published a story about the long-established tailoring firm of Anderson and Sheppard. Prince Charles has been a customer since 1983, but the firm, best known for outerwear and suiting, has many other well-known clients:

The shop sits a stone’s throw from Savile Row and evokes the feel of a private members club with its open fire and wood paneling. The Prince’s chosen fabrics and orders are duly noted in the Measure Book, a veritable bible for the heritage company with the name, address and specification for each client. Legend has it the Prince of Wales chose the moniker “Charles Smith”… And the Prince is in good company: everyone from Fred Astaire to Noel Coward, via Evelyn Waugh and Marlene Dietrich have worn the style.

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50th Anniversary Presentation of The Loved One

Two Los Angeles organizations earlier this month jointly sponsored a 50th anniversary showing of the 1965 film adaptation of Waugh’s The Loved One. This took place at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood on 7 December 2015. The sponsors were the American Cinematheque and the LA Conservancy Modern Committee (ModCom). A discussion before the film was lead by Robert Morse, the actor who portrayed Dennis Barlow in the film and who recently appeared as Bert Cooper in Mad Men.

A blogger (Beverly in Movieland) posted this contemporary comment on the event:

Even a simple listing of the cast of supporting characters—Jonathan Winters, Milton Berle, John Gielgud, Tab Hunter, and Liberace—hints at the skewed perspective [dark comedy] in this film. It has just had a major fiftieth-anniversary showing at Hollywood’s Egyptian Theatre, sponsored by the American Cinematheque along with the Los Angeles Conservancy’s committee on modernist architecture, which appreciates how this film features L.A.’s urban landscape on-screen.

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Waugh Stories Earn 2015 “Hoggie”

The weblog Hogglestock has announced the winners of its 2015 book awards, popularly known as “Hoggies.” The award is the creation of Thomas Otto, who tweets under the name @TJHogglestock. The name is taken from a Trollope novel. The awards ceremony (allegedly in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, but more likely in NW Washington, DC) was apparently notable for an incident only marginally related to books:

Controversy … spilled onto the red carpet when Margaret Atwood excoriated E! News reporter Giuliana Rancic on-air for asking probing questions about her books while failing to ask even one question about her outfit. “Would you ask me such deep questions if I was a man? One of these years I wish one of you bottom feeders in the press would ask me who made my gown.” Later, Rancic defended her red carpet questioning “I ask the questions our viewers care about most and they are much more interested in alternative interpretations than they are in Atelier Versace.”

Waugh’s award in the category “Best Short Stories” was extended to Mr. Loveday’s Little Outing and Other Sad Stories (1936). Some of this year’s other Hoggies went to books in less straightforward categories:

BEST NOVEL – SLIGHTLY VINTAGE EURO/MIDDLE EAST Minotaur by Benjamin Tammuz

BEST NOVEL – CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH LESBIAN TWIST Chamber Music by Doris Grumbach

BEST THOUGHTFUL, INTERESTINGLY TOLD, SLIGHTLY ANITA BROOKNERISH NOVEL – Outline by Rachel Cusk

None of the 2015 award winners was actually published this year (as Otto somewhat sheepishly admitted under close questioning by the press) but all seem to have been read by him in the designated period. Here’s his description of the Waugh selection:

I so enjoyed these quirky, rather dark and twisted short stories. So much so I had to go out and buy all of his collected stories. Not sure if they will all have this kind of twisted point of view but I hope so.

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Waugh Elegy

A correspondent has called our attention to an earlier posting made by Patrick Kurp on a weblog called Anecdotal Evidence. This relates to a poem by L.E. Sissman, an American poet and critic, written in the 1960s on the occasion of Evelyn Waugh’s death. A 1972 article by Sissman in The Atlantic Monthly about Put Out More Flags (“…this triumphant, ordered, perhaps triumphant because ordered, exemplar of the art of fiction”), which Kurp had read earlier, had turned him into a Waugh fan, as he explains in his posting. Sissman’s poem, entitled “Elegy: Evelyn Waugh”) is quoted in full. Here’s a brief excerpt:

…impersonating an
Irascible, irrational old man
Full of black humors and still darker flights
Beyond aphotic shore on jetty nights
To madness real or bogus…

The poem was collected in the volume Scattered Returns (1969). Kurp’s article goes on to consider David Lebedoff’s The Same Man: George Orwell and Evelyn Waugh in Love and War published in 2008 at the time the article was originally written.

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Waugh Novella Identified as “Conservative Page-Turner”

A conservative weblog called The Stream has published an article identifying what it considers “Five Page-Turner Conservative Novels That Predicted the Mess We’re In.” The article is written by journalist John Zmirak, a contributing editor to the weblog. Among the books listed is Evelyn Waugh’s 1953 novella Love Among the Ruins which Zmirak describes as

futuristic 
by turns amusingly horrifying and darkly, sadly funny. It was Waugh’s attempt to follow the logic of milk-and-water humanitarian socialism to its logical conclusion: a society where criminals are treated as wounded victims, where private property is seized by the state and used “for the common good,” and every moral or character ideal is turned upon its head, in the name of a false, post-Christian humanism. (The Christmas season, in Waugh’s future, is renamed “Santaclaustide.”)

Waugh’s “hero” is a lifelong arsonist, whom the state houses in a cozy rehabilitation center set in an old aristocratic home that had (of course) been confiscated. He pursues his love of pretty, pretty fires and of a lovely hermaphrodite, a woman whom state experiments with gender identity have equipped with a long, golden beard. Fittingly, in this socialist paradise, the only government agency that is profitable and popular is the Ministry of Euthanasia, where the lines of hopeful customers always extend around the block. This is not Waugh at his subtlest, but at his most bleakly prophetic. The book reads as if he had somehow been granted access to this year’s newscasts from Belgium.

Other novels included on the list are Aldous Huxley, Brave New World, R.H. Benson, Lord of the World, Anthony Burgess, The Wanting Seed, and Jean Raspail, The Camp of the Saints. Waugh’s novella is currently available in the Complete Short Stories.

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BBC to Rebroadcast “On Guard”

BBC Radio 4 Extra will rebroadcast Waugh’s short story “On Guard.” The dramatization will be transmitted in two parts on 7 and 8 January 2016. Here’s the schedule. It will also be available on the internet via BBC iPlayer after the broadcast. This story involves a little dog’s role in his mistress’s adultery. It was first broadcast in 2007 and most recently repeated in 2013. Originally published in December 1934 in Harper’s Bazaar (London), it was included in the 1936 collection Mr. Loveday’s Little Outing and Other Sad Stories and is currently available in The Complete Short Stories. The story will be read by Crawford Logan.

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Waugh Question Features in Literary Quiz

The Guardian has published two lists of literary questions set by several authors. Among a total of 49 questions there is one about Waugh. This is posed by historian Antony Beevor who wrote, inter alia, Crete: The Battle and the Resistance:

18 In Evelyn Waugh’s Sword of Honour trilogy, who is the biological father of Virginia Troy’s child?

Tommy Blackhouse
Guy Crouchback
Trimmer

That was one of the few questions that I found easy to answer. Other writers participating in the project include William Boyd, Sarah Waters and Craig Brown. Part One of the list appears here. It contains a link to Part Two.

NOTE (20 December 2015): Craig Brown also included Waugh in his exclusive set of questions for the Mail on Sunday:

11) Michael Peppiatt’s new memoir of Francis Bacon includes many descriptions of the painter being rude about his contemporaries. Match Bacon’s insults with the characters at whom they were aimed:
a) ‘He talked all the time in farts, just a series of farts.’
b) ‘A monster… she shouted all the way through lunch.’
c) ‘I’m afraid he has the smallest c*** in England and of course you can’t go far in the queer world with that.’
d) ‘Why is he so keen to convince everyone he’s so masculine?’
i) Virginia Woolf.
ii) Evelyn Waugh.
iii) Norman Mailer.
iv) Lucian Freud.

 

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