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Archive: August 2010

Composed, Memoir by Singer Rosanne Cash

10 August 2010

Composed, by Rosanne CashI learned a bit about Rosanne Cash in her memoir, Composed (Viking) which goes on sale today. The first-born child of country music legend Johnny Cash is a singer with a respectable career that spans decades and her story is curiously involving.

Starting off with aspects of her youth in southern California, struggling with an absent celebrity dad, snakes, and brush fires, Cash promises more than she delivers, touching on events without conclusion. Tales of Catholic school, growing up in California, and visiting her dad in Tennessee after her parents divorced are well written in key spots. She skimps on deeper thoughts, seeming to hold back when things get interesting. Filling in blanks with name-dropping and recounting her privileged globetrotting while suggesting a torment she never explains, Cash drifts in and out of her pursuits, from attending Vanderbilt University to traveling throughout Europe and writing songs. Without chapter titles, an index or table of contents, Composed feels more like an accounting to some unseen authority than a biographical narrative and at times it is tedious; like listening to a parent rattle off a list of acquaintances who’ve died. Gradually, Cash finds her way. By the last third, she writes about becoming self-made, facing what she describes as living on false premises for 30 years, making better records, raising children, hearing the first passenger jet streak low over Greenwich Village from her daughter’s school and watching the Twin Towers burn, and grieving for her father, who remains an enigma to her even after his death, her stepmother, June Carter Cash, whom she deeply admires, and her mother, whom she says “gave just the right amount of nurturing, not too much to suffocate or too little to starve”.

Though she mentions without elaboration “dark nights of the soul” and a teen-aged trip to Mexico after ditching school in that same passage, Cash, who survived brain surgery, Walk the Line (which she apparently hates), and motherhood and marriage, relaxes toward the end, making this light, easygoing book rewarding for those interested in her music, writing, and Johnny Cash. Speaking of her work, expectations and legacy, she notes: “It took me a long time to grow into an ambition for what I had already committed myself to doing, but I knew I would be good at it if I put my mind to it. So I put my mind to it.” Composed is more strained than composed, but when Rosanne Cash expresses herself, she offers a counterpoint to her father’s iconic line, “I’m Johnny Cash” that has more to say than simply “I’m not”.

Patricia Neal, 1926-2010

9 August 2010

A great American actress is gone. Patricia Neal, the inimitable leading actress in Ayn Rand’s film adaptation of The Fountainhead (1949), Elia Kazan’s A Face in the Crowd (1957), and Earl Hamner‘s Christmas story for television, The Homecoming (1971), reportedly died at her New England home on Sunday. Miss Neal, who had been born in Kentucky, premiered opposite Ronald Reagan in John Loves Mary (1949), married writer Roald Dahl (James and the Giant Peach, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) and made a remarkable comeback after suffering a serious stroke, was known by her distinctive drawl and consistently powerful performances. I have nothing but affection for her as an actress. I think I first saw her as the mountain family mother in The Homecoming, a small story based on Mr. Hamner’s novella about a poor family’s Christmas Eve which I still enjoy, and later I thought she was perfectly cast as newspaper columnist Dominique Francon in The Fountainhead opposite Gary Cooper as Howard Roark, though I would like to have seen Barbara Stanwyck, who brought the picture to Warner Bros., in the legendary role. As Marcia Jeffries falling for Andy Griffith’s Bill O’Reilly-like populist in Kazan’s brilliantly biting A Face in the Crowd, she ran the gamut of emotions and she just got better with age, whether playing soulless patron to gigolo George Peppard in Breakfast at Tiffany’s, fending off drunken lout Paul Newman in Hud, or tending to son Martin Sheen in The Subject was Roses. The last Patricia Neal picture I saw in the theater was Cookie’s Fortune (1999) in which she played an ornery old Mississippi woman and she was the best thing about the movie. She lived an incredible life, she created some of the most memorable characters on screen and, somehow, Patricia Neal combined strength, femininity, and passion in nearly everything she did.

Post-OCON 2010

3 August 2010

This year’s Objectivist Conference (OCON) was an amazing experience as always. I attended Leonard Peikoff’s final course, The DIM Hypothesis Part 2, based on his forthcoming book about integration. I studied Aristotle’s theory of knowledge and the films of Howard Hawks. I attended the Objectivist Academic Center (OAC) annual mixer and graduation, networked and met with new scholars, patrons, and entrepreneurs, visited with friends and generally enjoyed a vacation in Las Vegas, bowling three consecutive strikes (a turkey), celebrating a triumphant intellectual’s wedding anniversary ceremony with his equally triumphant wife, walking and laughing and celebrating capitalism along the strip with the best among men, seeing Toy Story 3 again, and being surprised with a chauffered limousine to the Rio for an evening of magic and comedy with Penn and Teller. OCON was an incredible experience. The lectures were generally good, with a couple of exceptions (the Hoover Dam lecture was a series of interesting facts more than a cohesive lecture) and Dr. Peikoff’s last public lecture series was thoughtful, bold, and ultimately breathtaking. He presented an unassailable case for what looks to him like a bleak future based on facts and evidence and he did so with stamina, seriousness, and an occasional and appropriate use of his delightful sense of humor. Decades ago, Dr. Peikoff was right about the rise of Islamic fascism and the appeasement of the United States. He was right about Bush, Clinton, and Elian Gonzalez, whose individual rights he was among the first and only to defend. He was right in his assertion that health care is not a right and he was right about what he called the “ominous parallels” between America and Nazi Germany and he usually delivered his analyses way ahead of anyone else, sometimes, as in the case of his warnings about totalitarian Moslems, years in advance of catastrophic attacks that he had all but forecast. Though he describes himself as a teacher, commentator, and observer, his mark on the philosophy of Objectivism, which is, as he put it in his last public course lecture, “Aristotelianism purified of Platonic elements”, is crucially important and indelible. Leonard Peikoff, author of The Ominous Parallels, Objectivism: the Philosophy of Ayn Rand and the forthcoming book on integration, is my hero. His powerfully somber conclusion ended with a passionate call for the audience to “Give ‘em Hell!”, which cemented the memorable OCON Las Vegas 2010 as one of the finest moments in his exciting and brilliant career.