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Selected Shorts

Sunday, April 13, 2008
  • Art Spiegelman
    Art Spiegelman ( mr. diazzler/flickr)

    Brave New Worlds

    “America to me should be shouting all the time — a bunch of shouting voices. Most of them wrong, some of them nuts, but please! Not just one, droning, glamorous, reasonable voice.”
    - George Saunders, “My Flamboyant Grandson”

    A stranger in the New World; a strange creature in another world; and our world in the very near future — in a 1940s memoir and two fantasy tales.

Fantasy and the fantastical dominate this special SELECTED SHORTS program. Each story was chosen by our “guest hosts”, the graphic novelist Art Spiegelman and his wife Francoise Mouly, art editor of The New Yorker. Spiegelman won a special 1992 Pulitzer for his devastating Holocaust work, Maus, while Mouly is the eye behind some of The New Yorker’s most celebrated covers. Together, they published the graphic journal Ra for some years, and their story selections included works, like the first piece on this program, that were reprinted and illustrated in their magazine.

“An Aborigine Among the Skyscrapers” says it all in this entertaining memoir of a Borneo native brought to New York in connection with an animal act. Through his marveling recollections we catch a glimpse of 1940s New York. The reader is the actor, composer, and screenwriter Michael Keck, a SHORTS regular.

Mouly’s and Spiegelman’s next two selections are fantasies that remind us of science fiction’s ability to cast our own foibles into sharp relief against strange backdrops. “Beyond Lies the Wub” is by Philip K. Dick, whose many short stories have inspired several films, including, most notably, “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep,” which was the basis for the cult classic “Blade Runner.” In an introduction from the stage of Symphony Space, Spiegelman reminds us of Dick’s underlying quest: to understand what it is to be human. Reader Denis O’Hare, who confessed to being a great fan of the novelist, won a Tony Award for his performance in “Take Me Out,” and garnered a Tony nomination for his role in Stephen Sondheim’s “Assassins.”

This SHORTS program concludes with a vivid tale by a contemporary master, George Saunders, the author of two story collections, Pastoralia and CivilWarland, both New York Times notable books. His work has appeared frequently in The New Yorker, among other journals, and his story “My Flamboyant Grandson” carries us into a world in which consumer marketing has become an Orwellian nightmare. Reader Harris Yulin’s Broadway credits include “Hedda Gabler” and “The Diary of Anne Frank.” On film he has appeared in “Ghostbusters II,” “Training Day”, “Looking for Richard,” and “Clear and Present Danger.” He also starred in David Ossman’s radio adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s “Goldenfish.”

“An Aborigine Among the Skyscrapers” by Saudin bin Labutau, read by Michael Keck
“Beyond Lies the Wub” by Philip K. Dick, read by Denis O’Hare
“My Flamboyant Grandson” by George Saunders, read by Harris Yulin

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

Comments

  • [1] john jurik from Long island April 17, 2008 - 04:24PM

    Please tell me how I can locate the short story, "enough," read on Selected Shorts this past weekend. Story about a woman who enjoys life through her life's stages, even to her husband's death bed. I don't remember if "enough" is the title of the story. Can you please help me?

    Rev. John Jurik

    Many thanks!

    From the producer: please check our website, selectedshorts.org, for information about authors and stories.


  • [2] Ms. Shawn Blakely from Oakland, CA May 22, 2008 - 05:22PM

    Dear Mr Sheffer,

    Thank you for all the brilliant work you do to bring us Selected Shorts. It has enriched my life so much that I can't begin to express it. I have enjoyed many programs that you've done, but I'm writing today to thank you for My Flamboyant Grandson with Art Spiegelman. That story and the performance of it knocked my socks off. I was listening to it on my ipod on a city bus, and when it ended I felt like standing up and shouting "Bravo!" I listened to it 2 more times because I loved it so much. Then I went to the library and borrowed a copy of George Saunder's stories. By reading it myself I realized what a masterful job Spiegelman did bringing this man to life. Incredible. Great story and outstanding presentation. BRAVO!

    Sincerely,

    Shawn Blakely


This thread is closed.