The Diaries of Kenneth Tynan
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About this book
An engaging and intimate look at one of the most feared and respected critics of our time. Be light stinging insolent and melancholy were the words hanging over the desk of Kenneth Tynan in his early days as a critic for the London Observer and his journals are just that. For Tynan arguably the greatest critic of the twentieth century all life was theater and demanded to be conveyed as such. Whether he is feverishly recording his impressions of the historic fight between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman recounting a scandalously successful meeting between Marlene Deitrich and John F. Kennedy or venting his frustrations about working with Laurence Olivier Tynans wicked observations are consistently clever and inspired. Tynans journals are an intoxicating mix of aesthetics theater love sex and politics from the perspective of a man who often served as confidant to the glittering personalities of his age. Already excerpted in the New Yorker they offer not only an uncensored glimpse into the man himself but also an informed and irreverent view of our time.
