Difference between revisions of "Quentin Crisp"

From sltarchive
Jump to: navigation, search
(Reviews)
(Reviews)
Line 6: Line 6:
  
 
"Do U have style?"
 
"Do U have style?"
 +
 
Those who saw the film "The Naked Civil Servant" are not likely to have forgotten the extraordinary and compelling performance of John Hurt, nor the total honesty with which the man held fast to the course of his life in the face of ridicule, abuse and worse.
 
Those who saw the film "The Naked Civil Servant" are not likely to have forgotten the extraordinary and compelling performance of John Hurt, nor the total honesty with which the man held fast to the course of his life in the face of ridicule, abuse and worse.
 +
 +
A notable Prompt Corner enterprise was to book that man, Quentin Crisp, to give a talk on Sunday at South London Theatre Centre on the eve of the publication of his new novel.
 +
 +
The demand for tickets was of course far in excess of supply, even for SLTC's main theatre which was booked for the occasion.
 +
 +
The address was described as "A Straight Talk From a Bent Speaker" which is not to say that Mr Crisp had arrived to give us a few well chosen observations on homosexuality. Indeed, the subject  only cropped up in question time, when the speaker's own charm and courtesy stood in notable contrast to some of the aggressively self-justifying points put from the floor.
  
 
== See Also ==
 
== See Also ==

Revision as of 21:37, 7 January 2013

Quentin Crisp

Introduction

Quentin Crisp is gave a live talk in Prompt Corner in 1977

Reviews

"Do U have style?"

Those who saw the film "The Naked Civil Servant" are not likely to have forgotten the extraordinary and compelling performance of John Hurt, nor the total honesty with which the man held fast to the course of his life in the face of ridicule, abuse and worse.

A notable Prompt Corner enterprise was to book that man, Quentin Crisp, to give a talk on Sunday at South London Theatre Centre on the eve of the publication of his new novel.

The demand for tickets was of course far in excess of supply, even for SLTC's main theatre which was booked for the occasion.

The address was described as "A Straight Talk From a Bent Speaker" which is not to say that Mr Crisp had arrived to give us a few well chosen observations on homosexuality. Indeed, the subject only cropped up in question time, when the speaker's own charm and courtesy stood in notable contrast to some of the aggressively self-justifying points put from the floor.

See Also

References

External Links