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Antonia Quirke - Choking on Marlon Brando: A Film Critics Memoir About Love and the Movies

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Choking on Marlon Brando: A Film Critics Memoir About Love and the Movies: summary, description and annotation

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In this witty and bittersweet memoir, the film critic shares her misadventures as a lover of film stars who seeks movie romance in the real world.
Antonia Quirke was ten years old when she first saw Marlon Brando in A Streetcar Named Desire. It was the first film she ever saw, and her reaction was so intense that her parents called an ambulance. So began her lifelong love of moviesan obsession that has brought as much drama and comedy to her actual life as she sees on screen.
In Choking on Marlon Brando, Quirke offers a window into her life as a film critic, her unabashed infatuation with male screen idols, and her many real-life romances that never quite make the cut. We learn of her personal ad seeking Tom Cruise, and her bungled interview with Jeff Bridges; the writer boyfriend who never brushed his teeth, and the actor boyfriend whose family showed up nude to a party. Along the way, Quirke provides witty insight into the nature of celebrity, fandom, the movies we all love, and how different they are from reality.
Fans of snappy writing, movie actors and dead-end romance will find Quirkes book a treat. Publishers Weekly

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This edition first published in the United States in 2007 by The Overlook - photo 1

This edition first published in the United States in 2007 by
The Overlook Press, Peter Mayer Publishers, Inc.

NEW YORK :

141 Wooster Street

New York, NY 10012

www.overlookpress.com

for bulk and special sales, contact sales@overlookny.com

Copyright 2007 by Antonia Quirke

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper, or broadcast.

ISBN 978-1-46830-389-6

For Ilana Bryant, best girl in New Jersey

Many people have been very kind and helpful to me during the writing of this book, but I shall limit myself to two acknowledgements. Two JLs. Julian Loose at Faber, whose idea it was in the first place. And James Lever, without whose editing this book quite simply would not have been written.

You live in a dream and the dream is a cage,

Said the girl, And the bars nestle closer with age

Your shadow burned white by invisible fire

You will learn how it rankles to die of desire

As you long for the beautiful stranger,

Said the vanishing beautiful stranger

PETE ATKIN AND CLIVE JAMES ,
Beware of the Beautiful Stranger

You have to have a little faith in people

MARIEL HEMINGWAY ,

Manhattan

Mademoiselle
Depardieu

First I was a sperm and an egg, and then I was an embryo, and then I got born. After that I was a baby and then I was a toddler. This is coming really easily! Then I was ten lying in bed listening to the unmistakable cadences of a man and a woman arguing downstairs. I lay there harrowed by the growing conviction that the voices didnt belong to the radio but to my parents, and trying to will a snatch of music to prove that it wasnt. But it wasnt likely to be the radio at this time of night, and we didnt have a television in those days. The muffled fight went on, and on, until it was no longer bearable. I got up and crept down the stairs towards the living room, where my parents were curled up together watching a man and a woman arguing on the eight-inch black-and-white which they sometimes borrowed from next door when something especially good was on. I can remember the luxury of my relief. I can also remember how the two of them looked altered by the shifting light, made younger by it. And instead of being sent back upstairs I was invited on to the sofa to watch with them. It was a film, a famous film, with a title so romantic it seemed to contain all the scale of adult life: A Streetcar Named Desire.

(Forgive my presumptuousness in telling you all this, by the way, but if I dont Im going to lose my husband.)

I had never seen a movie before. Not one. I had lived ten years absolutely untroubled by the knowledge of such things. I suppose Im a bit stupid, really. Thats Marlon Brando, my father said. Hes the best actor in the world. I watched, delighted to be up late, being initiated into the privileges of adulthood, studying this Marlon Brando, this actor, who was now at the centre of a brawl. Some men put Brando under a shower, the women fled upstairs, and Brando began to cry. He walked outside the house in his wet T-shirt, and I saw him like Blanche Dubois sees him when she first comes to the Kowalskis apartment in Elysian Fields, like audiences first saw him, tormenting Jessica Tandy in the original Streetcar in the Barrymore Theatre on Broadway in 1947, like Tennessee Williams first saw him, in his original stage direction: Animal joy in his being is implicit in all of his movements and attitudes. Since earliest manhood the centre of his life has been pleasure with women, the giving and the taking of it, not with weak indulgence dependently, but with the power and pride of a richly feathered male bird among hens.

I saw and I saw and I still see. I like to revisit all my favourite bits of his face, to tour them. The folds over the corners of his eyes which make it seem as if a force is pressing down on him, as if hes subject to a doubled gravity. Theres a kind of thumbprint on his brow where something powerful has marked him. The Golden Gate mouth too beautiful not to be disgusted by the ugliness of the human speech it must form. The curve where his jawbone meets his neck, seemingly the locus of all the strength in his head. The T-shirt torn so that it hangs off one shoulder like an emperors toga. Brando was calling upstairs like a tomcat: Stella!! STELLA!!! The thunderclap volume of his voice had the power to hurt.

Whats the matter? my father was suddenly saying. And something did seem to be going wrong with me. Air was coming in but it wasnt going out. Brando sank to his knees before Stella, burying his face in her thighs. Everything was beginning to shut down on me. My breathing had become an alarming fish-pant. Dont ever leave me, baby! Dont ever leave me! the best actor in the world was murmuring, semi-audible under my breathing. My parents had forgotten the film and ferried me to the kitchen table where my father quizzed me about things I might have eaten. Maybe Id had a peanut-stuffed lobster stashed under my pillow? I couldnt muster the breath to reply. Time was beginning to thicken and deepen. I could see very clearly the fur coat of dust on our never-used fondue set. My mother gave up trying to open the airways in my throat with a spoon and called an ambulance. It was all happening very far away I was dying, peacefully. And like a stone in the shoe of my peace was the fear that was beginning to harden into a certainty, that although dying wasnt so bad I would not be able to bear the humiliation of having my mother know why I had died. And she knew perfectly well. She understood precisely why I was gasping like a dog on a summers day while next door in New Orleans Marlon Brando was smashing crockery. By the time the ambulance arrived, I had stopped hyperventilating and had to listen, suffused with shame, as my parents tried to talk their way round what had happened. Everybody was standing about lying their heads off. But what would the ambulance men have said if theyd known the truth? Marlon Brando, Mrs Quirke? Do you think that was wise? Weve had two Montgomery Clifts and a McQueen tonight already.

This was the formative incident of my childhood. We lived in a tiny hill village in the South of France where every Saturday old Claude would lead his donkey Napoleon up the winding rocky path to the village square, laden with dusty old reels of film. The loveable village blacksmith, Rmi, would set up his projector facing the whitewashed wall of the church, Claude would feed in those magical strips of colour and light, and everyone would abandon their baking and games of ptanque and come rushing into the square agog with excitement to see the wondrous spectacles: Police Academy 6, Porkys, Evil Dead 2, Conan the Destroyer and Turner & Hooch.

I had been banned from the magical screenings in the square since I seemed so overwhelmed by the power of these movies. Yet old Claude took pity on me and allowed me to climb up his ancient olive tree from whose branches

Alright. It wasnt the formative incident of my childhood. Life isnt so neatly patterned. But the first time I saw Marlon Brando, I nearly died.

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