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Editor,
Essayist, and Novelist
Benaroya Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday,
January 21, 2003
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Fifty years ago, while an undergraduate at Yale University, George
Plimpton co-founded The Paris Review, one of the most highly regarded
literary journals in the world. Since then he has been an icon of American
literature. Best-selling author and editor of nearly 30 books, Plimpton
is best known for his practice of covering professions by participating
in them as an amateur. He has played quarterback for the Detroit Lions,
percussion with the New York Philharmonic, flown on a trapeze for a circus,
and boxed against Archie Moore. In the process, he has suffered some bruisesto
his body and his egobut he has never lost his sense of humor. "There
are people who would perhaps call me a dilettante," he says, "because
it looks as though I'm having too much fun. I have never been convinced
there's anything inherently wrong in having fun."
Known as one of Americas most engaging public speakers, Plimpton
is also an accomplished character actor and has appeared in numerous television
shows and movies, including ER (1994 ), Good Will Hunting
(1997), and L.A. Story (1991). His books include Out of My League
(1961), Paper Lion (1966), Shadow Box (1977), and Truman
Capote: In Which Various Friends, Enemies, Acquaintances, and Detractors
Recall His Turbulent Career. He lives in New York City.
Excerpt
taken from The Best of Plimpton (1991)
"Of my friends, the writers seemed to be the ones who most enjoyed
the sensation of setting off a shell, especially those who were having
difficulty with their own work, suffering the so-called 'writer's block.'
I understood why, I thought: it was the frustration of not being able
to put on paper what was so vivid in one's mind -- the agony of confronting
Mallarmé's blank pagecompared to the simple act of igniting
a fuse and immediately producing a great chrysanthemum of colorand beauty
high above, punctuated with a splendid concussion, while below, people
would gape in wonderment and call out 'Wow!' It was the kind of reaction
that writers always hoped for with their own work but never received in
such visible and adulatory form. The best one could expect froma reader
was a low hmmm, whereas fireworks could produce loud 'Ohhs!' and 'Ahhs!'
. . .
"I remember Norman Mailer at one of our July fireworks parties in
the Hamptons. He wanted to fire a shell. He had his bourbon drink in a
blue glass, really more a vase, the sort of receptacle one usually finds
in the back of a kitchen cabinet when everything else in the house, even
the plastic cups, has been commandeered. He held the drink in one hand,
safe out behind him, and he approached the fuse with the railroad flare
in the other. The mortar held a six-inch Japanese shell. I watched himstruck
again by the grotesque attitudes that people get into when faced with
igniting a shell. In his case, he seemed not unlike a scientist intent
on catching a lizard by the back of the neck. The shell came out almost
instantaneously. His surprise at the shock of its emergencea six-inch
shell of that type weighs about eight poundstoppled Norman into
a complete backward somersault through the sawgrass. Astonishingly the
blue vase remained upright as he pinwheeled around it; not a drop of bourbon
splashed out. He got up and took a sip and asked if he could do another.
'Do you have anything slightly larger?'"
Selected
Works
Out of My League (1961)
Paper Lion (1966)
The Bogey Man (1968)
Mad Ducks and Bears (1973)
The Curious Case of Sidd Finch (1987)
The Best of Plimpton (1990)
Truman Capote: In Which Various Friends, Enemies, Acquaintances, And Detractors
Recall His Turbulent Career (1997)
Web
Site Links
Plimpton's official web site
Time.com interview
with Plimpton
Satirical letter
to Britney Spears from Plimpton
Underwritten
by Stoel Rives LLP
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