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The lives of women in fiction and fact

Two live recalled, one sensuous, one sensational, in a fiction by Alice McDermott and a memoir by Jane Fonda.

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Sunday, April 06, 2008

“Begin, then, with the ice cream dishes, carried from the dining room into the narrow kitchen on a Sunday night…the clearing of the ice cream dishes was hers alone.”
- Alice McDermott, “Enough”
Two live recalled, one sensuous, one sensational, in a fiction by Alice McDermott and a memoir by Jane Fonda.

The 2006 season premiere celebrates the complex lives of women. First, from an evening presented by the Westport Playhouse and The Westport Arts Center, a delicious reading of a delicious story.

Tony Award winner Kathleen Chalfont reads Alice McDermott’s “Enough,” a tale, as host Isaiah puts it, “about a woman who wants more food, more cuddling—more of life.” And we hear a little about the story from the author herself in a brief interview. Events, she comments, are less important than our retelling of them, over and over, from various perspectives, throughout our lives.

Alice McDermott's first novel, A Bigamists' Daughter (1982), was published to wide acclaim. That Night (1987), her second novel, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Her novel Charming Billy (1998), won the National Book Award. After This: A Novel, was published in September 2006.

Kathleen Chalfont is a Tony Award winner and nominee for her roles in “Wit” and “Angels in America,” and a regular SELECTED SHORTS reader of a wide range of tales spanning three centuries.

A special evening at our home theatre, Symphony Space, celebrating the women authors of Random House, was hosted by the actress Jane Fonda, whose autobiography placed her on the bestseller lists. From this book, she read an affecting section about working with her emotionally reticent father, Henry and feisty legend Katherine Hepburn on the set of “On Golden Pond.”

Alice McDermott, “Enough,” read by Kathleen Chalfont
Jane Fonda, “My Life So Far,” excerpt, read by the author.

For additional works featured on SELECTED SHORTS, please visit Symphony Space

Comments [3]

Grace Babakhanian from New York City

What a double treat to hear Jane Fonda's loving recollection of working with her father and, miraculously, to have brought Katherine Hepburn back to us with Fonda's masterful recreation of her voice and feisty personality. No slouch, herself, among assertive woman, Fonda so gracefully gave way to the older actress that I had renewed respect for her.

Apr. 12 2008 05:20 PM
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Brian Winkel from Cornwall NY

I was not aware of the autobiography of Jane Fonda, but I very much appreciated her tender reading about the making of "On Golden Pond," her relationship with her father, and her interaction witih Katherine Hepburn. Thank you for bringing this to me.

Apr. 06 2008 10:57 PM
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Caroline Kasnakian from New York City

Thank you for the stories that have filled me with joy, humor, and sadness as I reflect on my own tangled desires through your writer's words.

Apr. 06 2008 05:06 PM
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