Clive James - Direct from His Sell-Out UK Tour
Jon Nicholls Productions and Lunchbox Theatrical Productions present …
Direct from his sell-out UK tour
OUT ON HIS
OWN
CLIVE JAMES
IRREVERENT AND TO THE POINT
AUCKLAND Bruce Mason Centre
Thursday 20
September, 7.30pm
BOOKINGS: Ticketek PH: 0800 842
538
or Groups (09) 307 5058
WEBSITE:
www.ticketek.co.nz
WELLINGTON Westpac St James
Friday
21 September, 7.30pm
BOOKINGS: Ticketek PH: 0800 842 538
or Groups (04) 384 3842
WEBSITE: www.ticketek.co.nz
Irreverent and to the point Clive James returns with his hit one-man show which wowed the UK and Europe. Clutching a copy of Cultural Amnesia, his new book that talks about everything, Clive James comes on stage and talks about everything except the book.
In this new show for NZ, he will so dramatically increase his range of irrelevant comment that quite a lot of it might even turn out to be relevant. There will be no dancing girls, except in his imagination: but since anything he imagines has a way of cropping up in the minds of the audience as soon as he evokes it verbally, perhaps there will be dancing girls after all.
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“I am glad to assure editors, producers, journalists and events organizers that if they really, sincerely need to run a biographical note they should feel free to quote any or all of the following, preferably keeping in mind that shorter is better, and that a single line is best. There are no copyright problems, so this piece, or part of it, will serve as a cheaper obituary than anything most newspapers are likely to have in the freezer. I will keep updating it until they carry me to the slab, during which journey I will try to give details of my final medication.”
- Clive James
Clive James was
born in Sydney, Australia, in 1939 and educated at Sydney
Technical High School and Sydney University, where he was
literary editor of the student newspaper Honi Soit and also
directed the annual Union Revue. After a year spent as
assistant editor of the magazine page of the Sydney Morning
Herald he sailed in late 1961 for England. Three years of
would-be bohemian existence in London were succeeded by his
entry into Cambridge University, where he read for a further
degree while contributing to all the undergraduate
periodicals and rising to the Presidency of Footlights. His
prominence in extracurricular activities having attracted
the attention of the London literary editors, the by-line
“Clive James” was soon appearing in the Listener, the
New Statesman, the Review and several other periodicals, all
of them keen to tap into the erudite verve which had been
showing up so unexpectedly in Varsity and the Cambridge
Review.
Yet the article that made his name was unsigned. At the invitation of Ian Hamilton, who as well as editing the Review was assistant editor of the Times Literary Supplement — which was still holding at the time to its traditional policy of strict anonymity — the new man in town was given several pages of the paper for a long, valedictory article about Edmund Wilson.
Called “The Metropolitan Critic” in honour of its subject, the piece aroused wide-spread speculation as to its authorship: Graham Greene was only one of the many subscribers who wrote to the editor asking for their congratulations to be passed on, and it became a point of honour in the literary world to know the masked man’s real identity.
Embarrassed to find himself graced with the same title he had given his exemplar, Clive James rapidly established himself as one of the most influential metropolitan critics of his generation, but he continued to act on his belief that a cultural commentator could only benefit from being as involved as possible with his subject, and over as wide a range as opportunity allowed. The Sunday newspaper The Observer hired him as a television reviewer in 1972, and for ten years his weekly column was one of the most famous regular features in Fleet Street journalism, setting a style which was later widely copied. (Selections from the column were published in three books — Visions Before Midnight, The Crystal Bucket and Glued to the Box — and finally in a compendium, On Television.)
During this period he gradually became a prominent television performer himself, and over the next two decades he wrote and presented countless studio series and specials, as well as pioneering the “Postcard” format of travel programmes, which are still in syndication all over the world.
His major series Fame in the Twentieth Century was broadcast in Britain by the BBC, in Australia by the ABC and in the United States by the PBS network. But despite the temptations and distractions of media celebrity, he always maintained his literary activity as a critic, author, poet and lyricist. In 1974, his satirical verse epic Peregrine Prykke’s Pilgrimage was the talk of literary London, many of whose leading figures were disconcerted by appearing in it, and more disconcerted if they were left out. In the same year, The Metropolitan Critic was merely the first of what would eventually be seven separate collections of his articles, and in 1979 his first book of autobiography, Unreliable Memoirs, recounting his upbringing in Australia, was an enormous publishing success, which has by now extended to more than sixty reprintings.
It was followed by two other volumes of autobiography, Falling Towards England and May Week Was in June, and by an omnibus edition of all three volumes under the generic title of Always Unreliable. In addition there have been four novels (the first, Brilliant Creatures, was a bestseller), several books of poetry — a complete edition, called The Book of My Enemy, was published in Britain in 2003 — and a collection of travel writings, Flying Visits. His literary journalism first became familiar in the United States through Commentary, the New York Review of Books and the New Yorker, and later through the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Atlantic Monthly.
His recent outlets for literary journalism in Britain have included the TLS, the LRB, the Guardian, the Spectator and the Liberal, and in Australia the Australian Book Review and the Monthly. His fourth novel, The Silver Castle, the first book about Bollywood, was published in the United States in 1996. Collaborating with the singer and musician Pete Atkin, he wrote the lyrics for six commercially released albums in the early 1970s, and the partnership resumed with three more albums after the turn of the millennium, culminating with a hit appearance for their two-man song-show on the Edinburgh Fringe in 2001, and tours of Britain in 2002, 2005 and 2005.
There was a tour of Australia and Hong Kong in early 2004. After helping to found the successful independent television production company Watchmaker, Clive James retired from mainstream television to become chairman of the Internet enterprise Welcome Stranger. After the launch of that organization — its magazine, In London, is now published both in Britain and Australia — he stepped down from the chairmanship to head one of its subsidiaries, www.clivejames.com, the world’s first personal multi-media website of its type.
Building the website is now among the chief interests of his post-television years, but he continues to be active in several literary fields. His later collections of essays include Reliable Essays and Even as We Speak. The very latest, The Meaning of Recognition, was published by Picador in late 2005.
He is currently completing a long study of cultural discontinuity in the twentieth century, under the title, for American publication in early 2007 by Norton, of Cultural Amnesia, and he has now finished work on the fourth volume of his memoirs, to be published by Picador in late 2006 under the title North Face of Soho. He is married to the scholar Prue Shaw, and they have two daughters, Claerwen, molecular biologist turned painter, and Lucinda, civil servant and world expert on CSI: Miami.
In 1992 he was made a member of the Order of Australia, in 1999 an honorary Doctor of Letters of Sydney University, and in 2003 he received Australia’s premier award for poetry, the Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal. In 2006 he was made an Honorary Doctor of Letters by the University of East Anglia and elected as an Honorary Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. He lives in London, Cambridge and various airports.
ENDS