Lincoln Imp
Well-known member
- Feb 2, 2009
- 5,964
His biographical books - Falling Towards England comes to mind - were definitely not to be read on crowded trains. Shoulder-shakingly funny.
A great broadcaster but an even greater writer. His autobiographies are terrific and his collections of essays are quite stunning. His TV reviews were wonderful too; often appreciating popular entertainment others dismissed as trash while sometimes skewering shows that most critics had gushed over (examples that stick in my mind are Tinker Taylor Soldier Spy and an Alan Bennett play directed by Lindsay Anderson).
Clive James: All I can do is turn a phrase until it catches the light.
Indeed, he's one of roughly 150,000 who died in the World on Friday, although I suspect Ernest might have just meant celebrity deaths.
Moving prog on Beeb 2 now.
Extremely learned man, very eloquent.
Sad loss.
Very sad indeed, I loved his work. A sense of humour drier than the Australian outback, he was a quite brilliant writer and broadcaster. I have a couple of books of his which are compendiums of his columns when he was a TV critic for The Observer for about 10 years, and so much of his writing was literally laugh-out-loud funny. (Visions Before Midnight, The Crystal Bucket, and Glued to the Box - I'd recommend them to anyone).
I also went to see him filming one of his 'Clive James On Television' shows in a studio at the BBC, Wood Green some time in the early 90s. He performed his own warm-up act before they started recording, and chatted amiably with us in the audience between takes.
A lovely man. RIP.
Back in the early 70s Clive wrote the lyrics to many of Pete Atkin's folk songs - they were an excellent writing partnership
https://youtu.be/AvdOAK2zRvY
Agree with all of this, I’d only add emphasis to your admiration of his written works, he was so underrated as a writer.