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Theo: An Autobiography PDF

478 Pages·2002·9.41 MB·English
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The Autobiography of The University of Wisconsin Press The University of Wisconsin Press 1930 Monroe Street Madison, Wisconsin 53711 www.wisc.edu/wisconsinpress/ 3 Henrietta Street London WC2E 8LU, England Copyright © 1994, 2002 by Theodore Bikel All rights reserved 5 4 3 2 1 Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bikel, Theodore. Theo :the autobiography of Theodore Bikel pp. cm. Originally published:New York :HarperCollins, 1994. Includes index. ISBN 0-299-18284-3 (alk. paper) 1. Bikel, Theodore. 2. Actors—United States—Biography. 3. Singers—United States—Biogra- phy. 4. Jewish actors—United States—Biography. 5. Singers, Jewish—United States—Biography. I. Title. PN2287.B4545 A3 2002 792(cid:1).028(cid:1)092—dc21 2002020311 Grateful acknowledgment is made to: Georges Moustaki for use of his lyrics “Je Chante Si Je Chante” The Estate of Bertolt Brecht for use of an excerpt from “Gleichnis des Buddh vom Brennenden Haus,” copyright © 1961 Suhrkamp Verlag Preface Epilogue 429 Postscript 2002 431 Index 443 Preface viii • PREFACE aged not to be overwhelmed by their number or by their demands for different kinds of attention and different aptitudes. I have dealt with them by compartmentalizing. Each of the lives, as I live it, I treat as though it were the only life I have. Yet in some way each in turn has served to inform other facets ofme. In this book I have tried to open each one to see ifthey hang together. In the process I often abandon strict chronology, letting the themes be my guide rather than the cal endar. Bear with me. -1;- Flashback I T IS A FINE DAY IN THE SPRING OF '92. I am arriving at the Pico gate of the 20th Century Fox studio, as I have done many times over the years. Normally the feeling ofreporting for work on a new show is one of pleasant anticipation; today, not quite so. Of course, simply driving through the gate at 20th Century Fox is apt to trigger mind games, most often pleasant, occasionally strange, but rarely dis turbing. Memories ofa time when there was no Century City, when the lot was accessible from Santa Monica Boulevard through gates to the north, west, and south, and all the guards knew you by sight and by name. The memories usually take me back to interesting work with interestingpeople in feature films and, much later, TV shows. But today my mind is on none ofthese. The show is L.A. Law, a prestigiousjob with people I have long admired; by rights the prospect ofplaying a guest-starring role on this program should bring me noth ing but pleasure. It's the role itselfthat causes strange and disquieting thoughts, thoughts that can't be chased away with "It's just a job." I never take that attitude anyway. There is no such thing as "just ajob," not ifyou have any sense ofresponsibility toward your craft. No, the reason for my discomfort is that this role cuts awfully close to home. The set presents the usual picture of activity: a mixture of high organization and frantic confusion. Carpenters are hammering away, occasionally stilled by an assistant's call of"Hold it down," there's a to and-fro ofcables being pulled, a call for hairdressers and makeup peo ple, and a cluster of actors, extras, and temporarily unbusy crew

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An award-winning actor on screen and stage (The Defiant Ones, The African Queen, The Sound of Music, My Fair Lady, Fiddler on the Roof), an activist for civil rights and progressive causes worldwide, and a singer whose voice has won him great applause, Theodore Bikel here tells his own compelling li
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