Elizabeth Bishop documentary
Elizabeth Bishop (February 8, 1911 - October 6, 1979) was an American poet and short-story writer. She was Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 1949 to 1950, the Pulitzer Prize winner for Poetry in 1956, the National Book Award winner in 1970, and the recipient of the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 1976. Dwight Garner argued that she was perhaps "the most purely gifted poet of the 20th century."
Elizabeth Bishop documentary
Voices and Visions
1988
Пікірлер: 47
The lives of poets are always so interesting, possibly because they pay such close attention to everything and everyone around them.
@cupofteawithpoetry
Жыл бұрын
I totally agree with you, John!
@EdgarWhite-re1qv
11 ай бұрын
@@cupofteawithpoetryp00p
@billdauphine951
5 ай бұрын
This more profound than it first appears....❤
Thanks so much for uploading the Voices & Visions series! I watched it on a little black-and-white TV in the ‘80s, bought the accompanying book, and eagerly anticipated the new episode each week. This one was my favorite.
@AuthorDocumentaries
2 жыл бұрын
You're very welcome! I love this series. I like the mood and tone they set, and the authors too, of course
@mckavitt13
2 жыл бұрын
@@AuthorDocumentaries One of my favourites too! Many thanks! ❤
I got the strange feeling that one should never read Elizabeth’s poems, but should only hear them read! Weird I know, but they are deliciously conversational in feeling. How have I never heard of her?
@barrymoore4470
Жыл бұрын
I was rather late in discovering Bishop myself. She is a poet's poet, closely concerned with formal principles but using these in ingenious. nuanced ways, so that the poems often read as deceptively simple. She was an exceptional artist, one of the most gifted poets writing in English in the twentieth century. Based on my limited exposure to her own readings of her poems, I don't think Bishop was the ideal interpreter of her work. Her voice seemed rather flat, lacking contour, not matching the magic of the words with a mellifluous enough voice. Blythe Danner here gave fine readings of these wonderful compositions, and with the right interpreter, I agree with you that Bishop's poems are enriched by audible utterance.
Loved it! She is one of my favorite poet 💖😌
@cupofteawithpoetry
Жыл бұрын
Same here! 😊
Beautiful to hear and watch ✨🩵🧚♂️🩵✨
Anatomy of one of the greatest poets in the world! Thank's channel! 👏👏
Thank you. A revealing introduction to a great poet.
Damn, this channel is so cool. 😎
Very useful for the work; well done Write Like, many thanks
“Should we have stayed at home, wherever they may be?“ Yes,in 2022 America I know what that’s about.
An addendum: (coming very late to the party) the sections where "Elizabeth" reads poems against defining visuals is exquisite filmmaking, good work.
Oh god, James Merrill in his silk kimono - effete to the max! Bishop on the other hand has a bourgeois sturdiness, along with the sober eloquence
Torn from Nova Scotia - some of us know how that feeling persists .....
great channel
@AuthorDocumentaries
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
As a poet myself I appear pickier..yet I found myself with Ms Bishop not picking at all. Enjoyed much. Thank you.
Please, anyone, this has been over a twenty year quest....I know the last song is by Tico Da Costa, but does anyone know the title and where available to find it?
Now I know more about the art of losing...a passing scene in the movie...in her shoes...makes it come alive!
Life conforms to Art...there is no other way around
Re: last two commentators; don’t you see the symbolism/beauty in the descriptions? How about Robert Frost, do you think he’s simplistic too? “Stopping byThe Snowy Woods On A Snowy Evening” has beautiful images but peel the skin back on it like an onion and the last line “And miles to go before I sleep” is actually about death. Also, he was a crank who was full of himself despite his greatness as a poet and forever place in history.
@billhaywood3503
Жыл бұрын
but what ab out the title is he "stopping" or just "stopping by"?
Who's the woman who reads the poems? I recognise her voice. Sounds like Blythe Danner. Thanks for this.
@saallday294
7 ай бұрын
For sure
❤
I notice that several of the water colors were Key West
@elizabethmencia6027
4 ай бұрын
I saw a photo of her in key West as a young woman. I think she lived there for a bit. About to watch the this.
@sallyreno6296
3 ай бұрын
@@elizabethmencia6027 She did.
Bishop's poem, "The Moose," reminds me a lot of Mary Oliver.
@cupofteawithpoetry
Жыл бұрын
Yes!
34.52 haha in retrospect, now knowing she was a lesbian, this sounds so funny of an excuse for her to stay with Lota!
2:01
Not moved at all.
What instrument at the beginning so anoying
@daniellamcgee4251
Жыл бұрын
An oboe. Unfortunately, it's repetitive, some notes out of tune, and playing in competition with the poetry reading, all adding annoyance! There are some beautiful compositions for oboe, but this isn't one of them!
bisexual written like disaster slay queen
@catharinesloper8504
Күн бұрын
She was lesbian. How interesting no one in this formal documentary even mentions it. Just nuts. I don't trust this documentary based upon that, although the pictures are interesting. Talking about being "coy, evasive, quaint", she was concerned about discrimination. Hello! And here we can see it up front that we have an entire film which doesn't mention her gender orientation. Dumb.
how did bishop and oliver ever get to be considered great poets? all these simple minded scribblers do is flatter the great opinion of yourself that you already have. i really wish they could have been something better.
@james3210
2 жыл бұрын
Booooo
@billdauphine951
5 ай бұрын
Hmmmmm...
@catharinesloper8504
Күн бұрын
Elizabeth Bishop was the lifelong friend of Robert Lowell and mentored by Marianne Moore! What do you expect? Bishop is more complex and subtle than Oliver in my opinion and several of her poems are extraordinary. At the same time, she was a perfectionist and this meant that she had a limited ouvre.