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Until the right biographer-or dramatist-appears to re-create the tragic drama of his life and death, American Journey may suffice. An artful distillation of 347 taped interviews with friends, acquaintances and others connected in various ways with Bobby, it was compiled by Jean Stein and edited by a family friend, George Plimpton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Irish Heart, Greek Conscience | 1/4/1971 | See Source »

...leading U.S. comic playwright for more than a decade. But like the clown with the yen to play Hamlet, Simon has had the urge, and been critically urged, to try his hand at more serious drama. The result is The Gingerbread Lady, a schizoid play in which the dramatist is so busy applying plasters of wit to woefully bruised psyches that the evening is doubly robbed, both of honest hurt and buoyant humor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Comic Tearjerker | 12/28/1970 | See Source »

...Eliot called him "the singular poet with the delightful name." Cyril Tourneur's name is one of the few things known about the Elizabethan dramatist. In an era of prolific playwriting, he produced only two plays that have survived, The Atheist's Tragedy and The Revenger's Tragedy, and even the dates of his birth and death are blanks. He attained no great popularity among his contemporaries. The sole allusion to Tourneur in an old chronicle sums him up this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Blood for the Bony Lady | 12/14/1970 | See Source »

Died. Fritz von Unruh, 85, German dramatist, novelist and poet famed in the 1920s for his outspoken opposition to militarism; of a stroke; in Diez, Germany. Unruh's moving description of the battle of Verdun in Way of Sacrifice became classic testimony to the cruelty of war. A founder of several anti-Hitler organizations and delegate in the Reichstag during the Weimar Republic, Unruh was a staunch anti-Nazi and went into voluntary exile, first in France, then in the U.S., refusing Hitler's offer to make him "the modern Schiller." Upon returning home in 1948, he spoke...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Dec. 14, 1970 | 12/14/1970 | See Source »

...Cookies. Never gazing hammily at the ceiling as so many romantic keyboard idols do, Ohlsson made it clear that he prefers Chopin the dramatist, without entirely sacrificing Chopin the nocturnal perfumer. Rightly so. In the E Minor Concerto, Chopin accomplished the considerable feat of turning the roulades, trills and other frills of the 19th century salon style into the stuff of major symphonic theater...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Chopin with Pow | 11/30/1970 | See Source »

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