Billy Collins Poetry Brought to Animated Life

Who does­n’t love Bil­ly Collins, the for­mer US Poet Lau­re­ate? The actor Bill Mur­ray reads his poet­ry at con­struc­tion sites. Adorable tod­dlers recite his poet­ry from mem­o­ry. And now artists have cre­at­ed ani­mat­ed videos that bring 11 Collins poems to life. You can find the ani­mat­ed ver­sion of “Budapest” above, and the remain­ing poems at Bil­ly Collins Action Poet­ry.

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James Earl Jones Reads Othello at White House Poetry Jam

Not long after tak­ing office, Pres­i­dent Oba­ma host­ed the first White House poet­ry jam – an evening ded­i­cat­ed to the spo­ken word and bring­ing vers­es to life. Esper­an­za Spald­ing’s per­for­mance was a high point. And lat­er came James Earl Jones, arguably the best spe­cial effect in Star Wars, who recit­ed lines from Shake­speare instead of Dr. Seuss (since Jesse Jack­son already cov­ered that lit­er­ary ter­ri­to­ry back in 1991). The read­ing comes from Oth­el­lo. Specif­i­cal­ly, we’re wit­ness­ing Othello’s address to the Venet­ian sen­a­tors.

You can read Oth­el­lo, along with the rest of Shake­speare’s com­plete works, at MIT’s web­site for free. Or you can down­load the works as a free ebook via iTune­sU. We have more on that here

via DIY Schol­ar

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F. Scott Fitzgerald Recites “Ode to a Nightingale”


70 years ago today, F. Scott Fitzger­ald died an untime­ly death, his life cut short by alco­holism, tuber­cu­lo­sis, and even­tu­al­ly a series of heart attacks. He was only 44 years old. Today, we remem­ber Fitzger­ald with some vin­tage audio – the author of The Great Gats­by recit­ing John Keats’ “Ode to a Nightin­gale” from mem­o­ry. Fitzger­ald devi­ates sev­er­al times from the text before going com­plete­ly off the rails. And then the poem, a med­i­ta­tion on mor­tal­i­ty and the tran­sience of beau­ty, cuts off abrupt­ly halfway through. A rather fit­ting metaphor for Fitzger­ald’s own life.

Accord­ing to Park Buck­er, an asso­ciate pro­fes­sor of Eng­lish at the Uni­ver­si­ty of South Car­oli­na, the record­ing was like­ly made around 1940, dur­ing Fitzger­ald’s last year, per­haps in a self-record­ing phono­graph booth in South­ern Cal­i­for­nia. When Fitzger­ald died, he was liv­ing in Los Ange­les, a washed-up Hol­ly­wood screen­writer, hop­ing to write one last great nov­el. In her Paris Review inter­view, Dorothy Park­er described Fitzger­ald’s bleak last days: “It was ter­ri­ble about Scott; if you’d seen him you’d have been sick. When he died no one went to the funer­al, not a sin­gle soul came, or even sent a flower. I said, ‘Poor son of a bitch,’ a quote right out of The Great Gats­by, and every­one thought it was anoth­er wise­crack. But it was said in dead seri­ous­ness.”

You can find sev­er­al texts by Fitzger­ald in our col­lec­tion of Free Audio Books.

Relat­ed Con­tent

F. Scott Fitzger­ald Cre­ates a List of 22 Essen­tial Books (1936)

Sev­en Tips From F. Scott Fitzger­ald on How to Write Fic­tion

Rare Footage of Scott and Zel­da Fitzger­ald From the 1920s

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Rimbaud: A Life in Slideshow

It’s the life of the great French poet, Arthur Rim­baud, in a 10 minute slideshow. The video traces the arc of Rim­baud’s short life (1854–1891), stitch­ing togeth­er images from 19th cen­tu­ry France, pho­tos tak­en by Rim­baud him­self, and man­u­scripts scrib­bled by the poet. In the back­ground, Joan Baez reads lines from Rim­baud’s famous col­lec­tion, Illu­mi­na­tions, which appears in the Poet­ry sec­tion of our Free Audio Books col­lec­tion. Project Guten­berg also makes his com­plete works avail­able in French. Down­load the free e‑text right here.

Bombing Warsaw … With Poems

Nazi Ger­many invad­ed Poland in 1939 and began a ter­ror bomb­ing cam­paign of War­saw, the nation’s capi­tol. In total, the Nazis dropped some 500 tons of high explo­sive bombs and 72 tons of incen­di­ary bombs on War­saw, begin­ning the planned destruc­tion of the city.

Now fast for­ward to 2009, and we wit­ness (above) War­saw under lit­er­ary assault. Last August, 100,000 poems writ­ten by Pol­ish and Chilean poets rained down on the city. The lit­er­ary strike came at the hands of Casagrande, a Chilean art col­lec­tive that has staged poet­ry bomb­ings of oth­er for­mer­ly bombed out cities. Dubrovnik, Guer­ni­ca, Berlin, etc. Need­less to say, the project marks a protest against war, a call for peace, and a cel­e­bra­tion of poet­ry. The Guardian has more on last mon­th’s poet­ry bomb­ing of Berlin here. H/T to MS…

3 Year Old Recites Poem, “Litany,” by Billy Collins

Three year olds can wreak hav­oc on a home, and the pre­co­cious ones can recite poet­ry too. Here we have a tod­dler recit­ing Bil­ly Collins’ poem “Litany” (find text here) and also some lines from Lord Alfred Ten­nyson (while dressed as Super­man, of course). It’s good fun, right up there with actor Bill Mur­ray read­ing Collins poet­ry at a con­struc­tion site in New York City…

via Neatora­ma

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Jorge Luis Borges Explains The Task of Art

As he neared the end of his life, Jorge Luis Borges (1899 – 1986) offered his thoughts on the “task of art,” essen­tial­ly dis­till­ing 80+ years of wis­dom into a few pithy lines. He says:

The task of art is to trans­form what is con­tin­u­ous­ly hap­pen­ing to us, to trans­form all these things into sym­bols, into music, into some­thing which can last in man’s mem­o­ry. That is our duty. If we don’t ful­fill it, we feel unhap­py. A writer or any artist has the some­times joy­ful duty to trans­form all that into sym­bols. These sym­bols could be col­ors, forms or sounds. For a poet, the sym­bols are sounds and also words, fables, sto­ries, poet­ry. The work of a poet nev­er ends. It has noth­ing to do with work­ing hours. Your are con­tin­u­ous­ly receiv­ing things from the exter­nal world. These must be trans­formed, and even­tu­al­ly will be trans­formed. This rev­e­la­tion can appear any­time. A poet nev­er rests. He’s always work­ing, even when he dreams. Besides, the life of a writer, is a lone­ly one. You think you are alone, and as the years go by, if the stars are on your side, you may dis­cov­er that you are at the cen­ter of a vast cir­cle of invis­i­ble friends whom you will nev­er get to know but who love you. And that is an immense reward.

Thanks to Matthew for send­ing this clip along. Also, on a relat­ed note, let me remind you of the doc­u­men­tary we high­light­ed ear­li­er this year. Jorge Luis Borges: The Mir­ror Man, a film that’s “part biog­ra­phy, part lit­er­ary crit­i­cism, part hero-wor­ship, part book read­ing, and part psy­chol­o­gy.”

If you would like to sign up for Open Culture’s free email newslet­ter, please find it here. It’s a great way to see our new posts, all bun­dled in one email, each day.

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via Maud New­ton

Relat­ed Con­tent

Hear Jorge Luis Borges Read 30 of His Poems (in the Orig­i­nal Span­ish)

Hear the Enchant­i­ng Jorge Luis Borges Read “The Art of Poet­ry”

Jorge Luis Borges’ 1967–8 Nor­ton Lec­tures On Poet­ry (And Every­thing Else Lit­er­ary)

Borges Explains The Task of Art

What Does Jorge Luis Borges’ “Library of Babel” Look Like? An Accu­rate Illus­tra­tion Cre­at­ed with 3D Mod­el­ing Soft­ware

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Dennis Hopper Reads Rudyard Kipling on Johnny Cash Show

The poem is “If” by Rud­yard Kipling (1899). The scene is The John­ny Cash Show, 1970. Hard to beat this…

via @caitlinroper

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