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- <text id=94TT0434>
- <title>
- Apr. 18, 1994: Cinema:Soloist
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 18, 1994 Is It All Over for Smokers?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 73
- Cinema
- Soloist
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A film explores the curious life of great pianist Glenn Gould
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Schickel
- </p>
- <p> If celebrity--its getting, having and spending--is the
- great theme of late 20th century life, then reclusivity is surely
- its most haunting variation. To be known for your unknowability,
- or anyway your elusiveness, is a possibly unintentional yet
- perversely elegant strategy for drawing attention to yourself,
- as Garbo and J.D. Salinger have demonstrated. But they had to
- stop performing and publishing to pull it off. Glenn Gould,
- the genius-struck Canadian concert pianist, could have his cake
- and eat it too. He quit making public appearances in 1964, but
- he never stopped recording--and obsessively re-recording to
- achieve the perfect performance--and reports of his increasingly
- curious ways continued to flourish until his death in 1982.
- And beyond. The latest account of the pianist's eccentricities
- is Thirty Two Short Films about Glenn Gould. A quasi-documentary,
- it alternates sympathetic eyewitness accounts of his behavior
- with fact-based, fictionalized fragments of his life, in which
- actor Colm Feore displays a fine touch of madness.
- </p>
- <p> Director and co-screenwriter Francois Girard's allusive approach
- suits a subject who loathed grandiosity. A portrait emerges
- of one of those functioning paranoids--such disparate figures
- as Bobby Fischer and John McEnroe come to mind--who see all
- around them a conspiracy to rob their art of its purity. The
- sounds of sucking, the grindings of the publicity machine--they drown out the high, clear notes such figures strive so
- hard to strike and, in Gould's case, the genius of the composers
- he was serving. Doubtless we now have a chemical to treat what
- ailed him. But there is something exemplary in his withdrawal,
- something touching about this man who eventually haunted truck
- stops trying to understand the rhythms of ordinary life, and
- placed all-night phone calls to friends trying to make them
- understand his extraordinary one.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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