The 1970's? Tommy Nutter? Mean nothing?
That is because Tommy Nutter's name went down a rabbit hole. In the 1970's Tommy was the king of mens fashion. His designs were worn by Elton John, the Stones, David Bowie, David Hockney and more. Mick and Bianca Jagger got married both wearing Tommy Nutter outfits.
Remember the Abbey Road album cover? Course you do. All but George are wearing Tommy Nutter. Remember Jack Nicholson as The Joker in Batman? Yeah, designed by Tommy.
Tommy the tailor/designer shook up Savile Row, shook up fashion. And then? After his death in 1992 not much was heard of Tommy, apart from an exhibition of his work at the Fashion and Textile Museum in 2011.
All is now put right in Lance Richardson's wonderful new biography of Tommy, published May 10th 2018, take the ISBN 9781784741242 to your local bookshop and dive in to the 1970's and how Tommy Nutter dressed it amidst the gloom and doom usually associated with the 70's....Tommy lit it up!
Sunday, 8 April 2018
Tuesday, 13 February 2018
James Jesus Angleton's rabbit hole was lined with mirrors...
Espionage is a world of mirrors, but counter-espionage is a world of mirrors within a world of mirrors. It involves finding out what your enemies plans are and responding to them without them knowing that you know what their plans are. They are doing the same which pushes the reflections to infinity.
James Jesus Angleton lived in that world and his rabbit hole was long, twisting and mirror lined. Born in Idaho in 1917 to an American father and Mexican mother his education took him from Malvern College in England to Yale University where poetry was his love. He corresponded with the always contrary, (to say the very least!) Ezra Pound and was an admirer of TS Eliot, William Empson and Carlos Williams among others.
The rabbit hole came into view in World War 2 when he worked with OSS in London where he met his nemesis, one Harold 'Kim' Philby. His work in OSS led to him becoming a founder officer of the CIA, of which he became head of counter-intelligence.
Knowing that his organisation had penetrated Soviet, and other, intelligence agencies led Angleton to believe that his own was subject to the same threat. With time his view was not to prove that a particular suspect was a spy but they were not a spy
And so the rabbit hole became lined with mirrors. In his spare time Angleton was as obsessive in his interests, fly-fishing, making jewellery and cultivating orchids as he was with his work.
The defection and exposure as a KGB mole of Kim Philby, (below) who had been a trusted colleague and friend, shattered the mirrors lining Angletons rabbit hole into a mosaic of shards from which he was to never escape.
From then on Angleton saw Reds not just under but on and in the bed and his hold on the CIA allowed him to pursue his obsessions until a New York Times article by Seymour Hersh confirmed that the CIA had been operating within the USA under Angleton. Angleton resigned and retired to fish and grow orchids.
His legacy is mixed, some see him as a paranoid obsessive who did more harm than good. Others see him as far seeing and justified in his beliefs.
A new book by Jefferson Morley allows us to make our own judgements. A deft mix of personal and professional biography 'The Ghost' is a glimpse into the world of a strange, multi-faceted man. A world where most of us would truly fear to tread.
To go down this rabbit hole take the ISBN 9781911344735 to your local bookshop, it's in mine;)
Another rabbit hole soon...
James Jesus Angleton lived in that world and his rabbit hole was long, twisting and mirror lined. Born in Idaho in 1917 to an American father and Mexican mother his education took him from Malvern College in England to Yale University where poetry was his love. He corresponded with the always contrary, (to say the very least!) Ezra Pound and was an admirer of TS Eliot, William Empson and Carlos Williams among others.
The rabbit hole came into view in World War 2 when he worked with OSS in London where he met his nemesis, one Harold 'Kim' Philby. His work in OSS led to him becoming a founder officer of the CIA, of which he became head of counter-intelligence.
Knowing that his organisation had penetrated Soviet, and other, intelligence agencies led Angleton to believe that his own was subject to the same threat. With time his view was not to prove that a particular suspect was a spy but they were not a spy
And so the rabbit hole became lined with mirrors. In his spare time Angleton was as obsessive in his interests, fly-fishing, making jewellery and cultivating orchids as he was with his work.
The defection and exposure as a KGB mole of Kim Philby, (below) who had been a trusted colleague and friend, shattered the mirrors lining Angletons rabbit hole into a mosaic of shards from which he was to never escape.
From then on Angleton saw Reds not just under but on and in the bed and his hold on the CIA allowed him to pursue his obsessions until a New York Times article by Seymour Hersh confirmed that the CIA had been operating within the USA under Angleton. Angleton resigned and retired to fish and grow orchids.
His legacy is mixed, some see him as a paranoid obsessive who did more harm than good. Others see him as far seeing and justified in his beliefs.
A new book by Jefferson Morley allows us to make our own judgements. A deft mix of personal and professional biography 'The Ghost' is a glimpse into the world of a strange, multi-faceted man. A world where most of us would truly fear to tread.
To go down this rabbit hole take the ISBN 9781911344735 to your local bookshop, it's in mine;)
Another rabbit hole soon...
Thursday, 1 February 2018
Craig Smith fell down a musical rabbit hole....and came back as Maitreya Kali
There can have been no more saccharine TV in the 1960's USA than 'The Andy Williams Show'. It was wholesome family fare with Andy crooning and guest stars warbling. Yet for a certain Craig Smith it was his first sight of the rabbit hole.
Craig, born in L.A. in 1945 was a folk singer and busker and was recruited to join the show as part of the house band for Williams and there followed a string of similar gigs with Craig rubbing shoulders with the Monkees and the Mothers of Invention. Craig's songs were recorded by the Monkees, Andy Williams and Glen Campbell to name but three. He joined the band 'Penny Arkade' which had some success but it was always 'almost' for Craig.
And so, after reputedly hanging out with the Manson crew he set off on the hippy trail and now the rabbit hole was open.
He returned a different man, with a different name, he was now Maitreya Kali and had a spider tattooed on his forehead. His old friends and family barely recognised him.
He tried to ressurrect his music career with self-financed albums which he sold or often just gave away, such as 'Apache'
The liner notes made clear that Craig's mind was fractured, the notes were rambling to say the least. By now he was claiming to be a reincarnation of Jesus, Buddha and Hitler and said he would be King of the World by the year 2000. The world saw it differently.
Then he fell off the radar, after assaulting his mother in 1973 he spent three years in prison
and lived the last 30 years of his life homeless and forgotten until his death in 2012. His family were notified but declined to claim his remains.
Mike Stax, however, quietly researched Craig's life for fifteen long years and the result is a fascinating book full of insights into the 1960's and the effect it had on one man.The always excellent Feral House are the publishers (photos all courtesy Feral House) so for the full story take the ISBN 9781934170656 to your local bookshop, mine has it in stock;)
To hear his music you can listen to Apache on Youtube
Another rabbit hole soon...
Craig, born in L.A. in 1945 was a folk singer and busker and was recruited to join the show as part of the house band for Williams and there followed a string of similar gigs with Craig rubbing shoulders with the Monkees and the Mothers of Invention. Craig's songs were recorded by the Monkees, Andy Williams and Glen Campbell to name but three. He joined the band 'Penny Arkade' which had some success but it was always 'almost' for Craig.
And so, after reputedly hanging out with the Manson crew he set off on the hippy trail and now the rabbit hole was open.
He returned a different man, with a different name, he was now Maitreya Kali and had a spider tattooed on his forehead. His old friends and family barely recognised him.
The liner notes made clear that Craig's mind was fractured, the notes were rambling to say the least. By now he was claiming to be a reincarnation of Jesus, Buddha and Hitler and said he would be King of the World by the year 2000. The world saw it differently.
Then he fell off the radar, after assaulting his mother in 1973 he spent three years in prison
and lived the last 30 years of his life homeless and forgotten until his death in 2012. His family were notified but declined to claim his remains.
Mike Stax, however, quietly researched Craig's life for fifteen long years and the result is a fascinating book full of insights into the 1960's and the effect it had on one man.The always excellent Feral House are the publishers (photos all courtesy Feral House) so for the full story take the ISBN 9781934170656 to your local bookshop, mine has it in stock;)
To hear his music you can listen to Apache on Youtube
Another rabbit hole soon...
Wednesday, 17 January 2018
The Wild West had many rabbit holes...Jesse james knew them all
The words 'The Wild West' brings to mind many names, Billy The Kid, Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid, Wild Bill Hickock, and, of course, Jesse James.
But Jesse was the one who went down rabbit holes again and again.
Born in 1847 in part of Missouri known, because of it's Southern leanings, as 'Little Dixie' Jesse and his siblings grew up in a politically confused area when Civil War loomed. Families split along Union/Confederate lines and feuding erupted with militias from both sides roaming the state. Jesse's father became a victim of one such militia and Jesse was, according to legend, whipped by a Unionist militia.
This fired further rebellion in a teenage Jesse and he joined a violent bushwhacker gang led by the notorious 'Bloody Bill' Anderson which waged the Civil war on State lines, a Civil War within a Civil War. In the photo of bushwhacker Jesse below he is aged seventeen or eighteen.
After Anderson's death and the end of the Civil War Jesse and brother Frank joined forces with the Younger Brothers and set out on a series of bank and train robberies which brought national fame whilst presenting himself as a respectable family man.
Down the rabbit hole of outlawry and banditry lies the truth about Jesse James. Was he just a bank robber, in it for the easy money or was he driven by ideological beliefs to continue the Civil War by other means?
Jesse famously died when he straightened a picture on the wall of his home and was shot dead by Robert Ford.
T.J Stiles is your guide down the various Jesse James rabbit holes in a gripping and enlightening biography which goes further in unravelling the multi-faceted persona of Jesse James than any other.
Take the ISBN 9780099521174 to your local bookshop and enjoy the read.
Another rabbit hole soon..
But Jesse was the one who went down rabbit holes again and again.
Born in 1847 in part of Missouri known, because of it's Southern leanings, as 'Little Dixie' Jesse and his siblings grew up in a politically confused area when Civil War loomed. Families split along Union/Confederate lines and feuding erupted with militias from both sides roaming the state. Jesse's father became a victim of one such militia and Jesse was, according to legend, whipped by a Unionist militia.
This fired further rebellion in a teenage Jesse and he joined a violent bushwhacker gang led by the notorious 'Bloody Bill' Anderson which waged the Civil war on State lines, a Civil War within a Civil War. In the photo of bushwhacker Jesse below he is aged seventeen or eighteen.
After Anderson's death and the end of the Civil War Jesse and brother Frank joined forces with the Younger Brothers and set out on a series of bank and train robberies which brought national fame whilst presenting himself as a respectable family man.
Down the rabbit hole of outlawry and banditry lies the truth about Jesse James. Was he just a bank robber, in it for the easy money or was he driven by ideological beliefs to continue the Civil War by other means?
Jesse famously died when he straightened a picture on the wall of his home and was shot dead by Robert Ford.
T.J Stiles is your guide down the various Jesse James rabbit holes in a gripping and enlightening biography which goes further in unravelling the multi-faceted persona of Jesse James than any other.
Take the ISBN 9780099521174 to your local bookshop and enjoy the read.
Another rabbit hole soon..
Sunday, 7 January 2018
Marlon Brando found many rabbit holes...
Marlon Brando was, end of story, the finest actor in film history. And yet, his life and career were a series of rabbit holes.
Marlon was born in Omaha Nebraska in 1924. His mum smoked, wore trousers and drove cars. She was also an alcoholic. Marlon, in later life said of her "The anguish that her drinking produced was that she preferred getting drunk to caring for us."
First rabbit hole for Marlon. Down this rabbit hole Marlon found a sensitivity to the failings of others and expressed it. He was expelled from Libertyville High School after riding a motorcycle through the corridors.
Acting was fun for Marlon but he was far from the lazy slob he is often thought to be. An example of his thinking comes from an acting class with Stella Adler. She told the class to be chickens. Then she said a nuclear bomb was about to fall, the chickens went headless crazy, apart from Marlon who just sat down. When asked why he replied "I'm a chicken...what do I know about bombs?"
Another clue to his acting style lies in his habit of, after the director called 'Action!", chatting to one or two of the crew about whatever came into his head and then, when he felt relaxed and natural in conversation, out come the scripted lines.
The cue cards? Yes, he did use them, why? He would read a script but not set it in stone in is head, he would learn it to the point of needing a prompt, hence the cue cards, he felt his delivery would then be more natural.
This ability to be faithful to the script whilst also being natural is best seen here, a clip from 'A Streetcar Named Desire' all good but look at 3.09 whe he sees a fleck floating in the air and pinches between finger and thumb and then the 'Got That' nod. Here it is...
That moment, for me, is Marlon Brando in a millisecond. Two minds working together, the acting mind and the real mind.
To unravel the rabbit holes in Marlon's life I read Susan L Mizruchi's stunning book 'Brando's Smile' and if you like rabbit holes you need this book about Marlon
Another rabbit hole soon....
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Tommy Nutter comes out of the rabbit hole...
The 1970's? Tommy Nutter? Mean nothing? That is because Tommy Nutter's name went down a rabbit hole. In the 1970's Tommy was t...
-
Espionage is a world of mirrors, but counter-espionage is a world of mirrors within a world of mirrors. It involves finding out what your e...
-
The words 'The Wild West' brings to mind many names, Billy The Kid, Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid, Wild Bill Hickock, and, of...
-
The 1970's? Tommy Nutter? Mean nothing? That is because Tommy Nutter's name went down a rabbit hole. In the 1970's Tommy was t...