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In some ways, Virginia Woolf’s novel Mrs. Dalloway is about voices. Voices from the past. Voices from the present. Voices of the novel’s main characters. Voices of those passing by. Voices of war and voices of peace. Sometimes the voices seem to drift. Sometimes they overlap. Sometimes they warm you. Sometimes they stop you cold.

So it is fitting that the stage adaptation of Septimus and Clarissa, running through Saturday at the Baruch Performing Arts Center in New York City, is the product of many voices as well.

The play’s the thing

I was in the front row at last Saturday’s show. And like others who have reviewed the play written by Ellen Mclaughlin, I found myself overwhelmed by the power of Woolf’s words, the way they transformed the stage, and the way the stage adaptation made them ever more luminous and lyrical.

The starkly simple set features a mottled blue floor and wall with the words “Fear no more.”

Like many readers of Woolf, I have read her 1925 stream of consciousness novel multiple times and have written about it as well. So I wouldn’t have thought that a staged adaptation of the novel could keep me spellbound, could make me wonder what might happen next, could bowl me over with its emotional power. But that’s exactly what this production did.

Others have already done an excellent job of reviewing Septimus and Clarissa, commenting on its superb acting; its excellent blend of music, ambient sound and dialogue; its relevant anti-war message; and the way it captures the spirit and meaning of Woolf’s novel.

So I will do something a bit different here. I will talk about how another group of voices — the many voices of the performers, directors, writer and crew — shaped what appeared on the Baruch stage this fall.

The after-show conversation

I learned a bit about the shaping process at an after-show conversation held on stage Saturday evening. It was headlined by best-selling author and Barnard professor of English Mary Gordon. She settled in on stage with Rachel Dickstein, director; McLaughlin, who wrote the script and played the title character; Tommy Schrider, who played Septimus; and Miriam Silverman, who played both Lucrezia and Elizabeth Dalloway.

Mary Gordon, Rachel Dickstein and Ellen Mclaughlin

The shaping process was a long one that involved multiple workshops, with each workshop adding or subtracting things from the production up until the play’s formal opening in September. And everyone involved played a part that went beyond the one acknowledged in the formal program.

The actors, for example, helped work out the choreographed movements they make while voicing Woolf’s lyrical words in song, choreography that changed as the play progressed.

They also collaborated on the set design. When Dickstein brought a batch of large rectangular frames to the set, thinking they might add something interesting to the production, the actors experimented with them until they worked. And in the final production, three of the frames are moved around on stage, almost like dancing partners, to represent a changing array of doors and windows, with people going out and through and around them.

The idea for the moveable staircase itself, the most prominent element in the set design, came from Dickstein and set designer Susan Zeeman Rogers, but the actors suggested ways of using it, as well as other set pieces and props. Actor Schrider, a Septimus of power and emotional force, did improvisations on another staircase before the large black metal staircase became a part of the final set design. The large black metal staircase is a focal point throughout the play, as it serves as a platform for Mrs. Dalloway as hostess and both a battlefield and suicide site for Septimus.

Miriam Silverman and Tommy Schrider among the rose petals that drift over guests during the party scene

The significance of a house within a house

Also on the simply set, stark stage throughout the play are three white wooden houses about four feet high. They are rolled around the set on wheels to symbolize Clarissa’s country home of Bruton as well as the homes she and other characters see along the streets of London.

But one of the three is special, and here is where director Dickstein gives voice to her child self. She recalled encountering an elaborately detailed furnished dollhouse as a young girl, one that she could never afford. It was a memory and an image that stuck in her mind, and she asked set designer Zeeman Rogers to create a more modest version of such a house — Clarissa’s London house — for the play.

The Clarissa Dalloway dollhouse

The interior of this lit-up house, complete with the novel’s characters as free-standing paper dolls, is revealed during the scene that recreates Clarissa’s party. The symbolism of the dollhouse opening up to reveal its interior to the audience just as Clarissa opens her home to her guests has a certain magical charm with subtle but significant meaning.

Links to some reviews of Septimus and Clarissa

The title resounded – “Song of Lunch” – I couldn’t remember what or where I’d heard about it, so I Googled and found that it’s a poem by Christopher Reid that was adapted by the BBC and shown on British television last October.

“Virginia Woolf lurking off to the library”

Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson are former lovers who meet for lunch after 15 years. It’s mostly his voiceover – the poetic narrative – and just a little conversation. I could drown in Alan Rickman’s voice as happily as in a vat of dark chocolate, how about you?

I watched two online clips – more than a teaser but far short of the full portion.  You will find the first one here. I was delighted to find that Woolf pops up near the beginning. As the man leaves the publishing house, where he works, he strolls through “Bloomsbury and its blue plaques,” “leafy literary land” (I adore the alluring alliteration). With a little imagination, he says, you can see “Virginia Woolf lurking off to the library with a trug full of books” and “T.S. Eliot bound for his first martini of the day.”

It appears that the ending is available online too, but a sizable middle chunk seems to have been held back. I’m hooked and dangling, but I don’t want to jump ahead and miss anything, so I’ll wait for the PBS airing here, Nov. 13 on Masterpiece.

Woolf has gone global again, with Woolf sightings from Iran to Ireland to Cyprus to Minneapolis. But the not-so-big story reported by at least five media outlets last week (numbers one through five below) is that actress Annette Bening will read Mrs. Dalloway and Nicole Kidman To the Lighthouse for upcoming Audible recordings. Woolf is the only writer to garner two audio reads.

  1. Hollywood A-Listers reading for Audible.com series, TheCelebrityCafe.com
    The Hollywood Reporter wrote the celebrities will be recording well-known books such as Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and Jerzy Kosinski’s Being There. Kate Winslet was the first to record a book.
  2. Stars Will Read Amazon Unit’s New Audio Book Series, New York Times (blog)
    Watts (“Summer,” by Edith Wharton), Dustin Hoffman (“Being There,” by Jerzy Kosinski), Annette Bening (“Mrs. Dalloway,” by Virginia Woolf), Samuel L. Jackson (“A Rage in Harlem,” by Chester Himes) and Kim Basinger (“The Awakening,” by Kate Chopin).
  3. Audible to release audio performances by Firth, Hathaway and more A-list celebs, USA Today
    With the female celebrity lit lovers clearly outnumbering the male lit lovers – and Virginia Woolf the only writer to double dip! Annette Bening reading Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway; Nicole Kidman (who played Woolf in The Hours) reading Woolf’s To the
  4. Famous People Will Read Famous Books for You, New York Magazine
    Celebrities interested in helping the public become more literate include Nicole Kidman, who will record Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, Colin Firth (Graham Greene’s The End of the Affair), Susan Sarandon (Carson McCullers’s The Member of the
  5. Annette Bening, Dustin Hoffman and More Will Lend Their Voices to Upcoming , Playbill.com
    Among the titles to be recorded are Virginia Woolf’s “Mrs. Dalloway,” read by Bening; Jerzy Kosinski’s “Being There,” read by Hoffman; L. Frank Baum’s “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,” read by Hathaway; Chester Hines’ “A Rage in Harlem,” read by Jackson;
  6. Inside the mind of Mulk Raj Anand, Daily Pioneer
    Comparing the lengths of the average sentence in the individual compositions of Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein and Virginia Woolf who are his contemporaries, Waley goes on to muse that the Industrial Revolution has transformed literature,
  7. Christians should embrace shared faith, Herald Sun
    ENGLISH author and feminist Virginia Woolf wondered about the lack of empathy between some people. Why are we so hard on each other, she asked, when life is so difficult for all of us and when, in the end, we value the same things? Ms Woolf came to
  8. The perfectly preserved English country house designed by Lutyens in France , Daily Mail
    The beautiful mock-Tudor manor just off the Normandy coast was a popular meeting place for artists and thinkers from around Europe including Virginia Woolf, Pablo Picasso and Claude Debussy. Yet the £9million Bois des Moutiers cannot find a buyer.
  9. Madness and Creativity: Is there such thing as the “Mad-Genius”?, PsychCentral.com (blog)
    Virginia Woolf was a brilliant novelist who suffered from bipolar mood swings. John Nash, Nobel Prize Winner in mathematics, was the figure of the movie A Beautiful Mind, faced a life long battle with Schizophrenia. Many other writers and artists also
  10. An England that exists just outside living memory, Sunday Times.lk
    Vita Sackville-West is famous as the author of ‘The Edwardians’, the one time lover of Virginia Woolf and the gardener responsible for the exquisite beauty of the grounds at Sissinghurst in Kent, England. Vita created the latter with her husband,
  11. Novelist Jayne Joso finds freedom of thought in the Welsh landscape, WalesOnline
    I read in Virginia Woolf’s diaries recently how she found that the activity of diary writing had greatly helped her style and “loosened the ligatures”, which puts it perfectly. It also reminds me of a documentary I once saw in which AS Byatt explained
  12. Malcolm Lazin on LGBT History Month 2011, OUTTAKE VOICES (blog)
    McMillen – Activist, Ryan Murphy – Writer/Director, Dan Savage – Journalist, Amanda Simpson – Government Official, Wanda Sykes – Comedian, Lilli Vincenz – Gay Pioneer, Virginia Woolf – Author and Pedro Zamora – AIDS Activist & MTV Personality.
  13. Book Review: Virginia Woolf by Alexandra Harris, California Literary Review
    by Ed Voves by Alexandra Harris On a sunny September morning during the late 1930′s, Virginia Woolf sat writing in her county home, Monk’s House, in Sussex. Looking up from her work, Woolf noticed a moth fluttering from one corner of the window to the
  14. Iranians to enjoy Woolf’s Moments of Being, Iran Book News Agency
    “A Sketch of the Past”, an autobiography of Virginia Woolf published in “Moments of Being”, is converted into Persian by Majid Eslami. IBNA: “A Sketch of the Past” is the name of an autobiographical article penned by Virginia Woolf that was
  15. Instead of a Book by Diana Athill, The Guardian
    She does not have much time for Virginia Woolf, but she describes here what Woolf might call “moments of being” and bears witness to the fact that such moments can be as powerful at 90 as at 19. Does Field, I wonder, feel the same?
  16. Oh, a Happy Life if Back in Moscow, New York Times
    Last fall, Classic Stage Company in New York presented her pitch-perfect 2003 re-creation of Virginia Woolf’s novel “Orlando.” Now she has tackled “Three Sisters,” Anton Chekhov’s 110-year-old drama about young women in the provinces with big-city
  17. TS Eliot’s Rattle of Miseries, New York Times
    Among the literary figures, the most impressive were Pound; Virginia Woolf, whose viperish tongue was more lethal than any poison of the Borgias (she found Eliot “peevish, plaintive, egotistical,” with a “sepulchral voice”); and Bertrand Russell,
  18. Lost in France: The Lutyens jewel that nobody wants, The Independent
    Over the next month, an ambitious plan will be announced to try to preserve the site – which has connections with writers, artists and musicians from Marcel Proust to Virginia Woolf, Joan Miró and Claude Debussy – as a Franco-British cultural centre.
  19. The extraordinary gentlemen’s latest, Livemint
    Then there are the constant characters, Wilhel“mina” Harker from Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Allan Quatermain from H. Rider Haggard’s King Solomon’s Mines, and Orlando (probably from Virginia Woolf’s Orlando). Throw in pop references, such as Harry Potter,
  20. Stacy Schiff, author of ‘Cleopatra: A Life,’ on the perfect biography subject, Chicago Tribune
    Virginia Woolf once reviewed a mediocre novel with the line, “The string didn’t quite unite the pearls, but the pearls were there.” I took that as a sort of operating premise. Q: Antoine de Saint-Exupery, Vera Nabokov, Ben Franklin in Paris, Cleopatra.
  21. Joan Didion: Stepping into the River Styx, Again, Publishers Weekly
    “A couple of years ago… a movie… did you happen to see it… about Virginia Woolf?” (The movie is The Hours, adapted from the book of the same name by Michael Cunningham.) “Just the part where she was in the water was stuck in my mind.
  22. NinetoFive Music News, Nine to Five
    Virginia Woolf creeps into it…Frieda Kahlo, whose painfully beautiful painting gave me the title.” Haunting and optimistic single Shake It Out is worth a listen. For a sneak peak on her sophomore album, watch exclusive studio footage and preview music
  23. How to write the new biography, The Guardian
    Peter Parker, biographer of JR Ackerley, will discuss Ackerley’s My Dog Tulip, followed by a consideration of animals in biography and autobiography and autobiographies by animals, including Virginia Woolf’s Flush, James Lever’s Me, Cheeta,
  24. Jane Urquhart inspired by visual imagination, The Telegram
    Books Urquhart plans to reference include Elizabeth Bowen’s “The Last September,” Virginia Woolf’s “Orlando,” as well as poetry by Brendan Kinelly. Emily Bronte’s “Wuthering Heights” will also be referenced, since Urquhart feels it’s a particularly
  25. The Mindscape of Septimus and Clarissa: Ripe Time Adapts Virginia Woolf’s Mrs , Brooklyn Rail
    These words open Virginia Woolf’s novel, as they do Septimus and Clarissa, the stunning dramatic adaptation of Mrs. Dalloway now at the Baruch Performing Arts Center until October 8th. An ambitious project with a lyrical script by the playwright and
  26. Get the inside scoop, Kingsburg Recorder
    The senior’s interests range from playing golf to watching a supernatural TV series about a werewolf to reading Virginia Woolf. The 17-year-old’s college plans, and she says this could change, are to attend California State University,
  27. A Room With Some Views, The Link
    I had written down the same before, but then we both thought about Virginia Woolf, and then came the question “Were you inspired by Virginia Woolf’s Waves?” Then came a question from one of her students—something to the effect of whether certain parts
  28. Imagining HG Wells’ sex life, Salon
    “A Man of Parts” opens in blitzed London in the spring of 1944, when Wells, nearly 78, diagnosed with liver cancer and eclipsed by modernists like Virginia Woolf and James Joyce, retreats into his own head to review his life. Lodge writes, “The mind is
  29. Ray Robertson: Regardless of form, National Post (blog)
    Additionally, I’ve always admired writers, like Virginia Woolf, who were equally comfortable working in fictional and non-fictional genres. And good writing is, after all, good writing, regardless of the form it takes. And as for who my intended reader
  30. Booker Prize judge has rare literary letters stolen from his house… by his , Daily Mail
    By Daily Mail Reporter A handyman stole a treasure trove of manuscripts by famous figures including Sir Winston Churchill, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf and TS Eliot, from a Man Booker Prize judge. Tyrone Somers, a university graduate, was working for Dr
  31. Man jailed for theft of manuscripts by Churchill, Joyce, Amis and Eliot, The Guardian
    Photograph: Sean Smith A university graduate who stole £36000 of manuscripts by famous figures including Sir Winston Churchill, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf and TS Eliot has been jailed for 30 months. Tyrone Somers was working as a handyman for
  32. Festival shines a light on Virginia Woolf, Cambridge Network
    A Cambridge festival draws attention to the work of Virginia Woolf – and uses her work as a creative focus. What started as a conversation over a bottle of wine a couple of years ago has resulted in a festival for readers and writers celebrating the
  33. Sheer brilliance at Perth Fashion Festival, WA today
    Taking inspirational cues from the Modernist era, one could imagine Virginia Woolf herself adopting these looks for their free form shapes and strong colours that stir melancholy. Zhivago came out to play for the first time to launch a glamourous
  34. The Sparkler of Albion: The Many Faces of Charles Dickens, Telegraph.co.uk
    As Virginia Woolf pointed out in Orlando, “a biography is considered complete if it merely accounts for six or seven selves, whereas a person may well have as many thousand”. Few people lead as many lives as Dickens, who enjoyed coining extra nicknames
  35. Art, science should have equal importance to human experience, The Independent Florida Alligator
    Einstein had some things to say about time, but so did Virginia Woolf and James Joyce. If you have ever walked the “Waste Land” and heard “What the Thunder Said,” you no doubt understand the new fractured reality of the 20th century.
  36. As a manner of fact…, gair rhydd
    As Virginia Woolf quite rightly put it: “I should remind you how much depends on you, and what an influence you can exert upon the future”. Let the future be full of gentlemen and a place where women re-discover their self respect.
  37. BIOGRAPHY REVIEW: “Virginia Woolf, Minneapolis Star Tribune
    If she intends to write fiction, Virginia Woolf proclaimed in 1929, “a woman must have money and a room of her own.” Woolf had both. And she made the most of them. One of the great modernists of the 20th century, she produced more than a dozen books,
  38. Mulkraj Anand in gripping conversations, Organiser
    He got introduced to the celebrated writers of the time, including such eminent names as TS Eliot, Virginia Woolf, EM Foster and Aldous Huxley. Most of the writers of the time belonged to what came to be known as Bloomsbury Group.
  39. Read any good Montaigne essays lately?, Dayton Daily News
    von Goethe’s “Faust,” Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice,” Fyodor Dostoevsky’s “Crime and Punishment” and Virginia Woolf’s “To the Lighthouse.” Of course, adults have been lamenting the lack of reading by teenagers since Virgil was in junior high.
  40. What I’m wearing: Brogues, Telegraph.co.uk
    If you like a studious Virginia Woolf look then Bob’s your uncle, but if your ankles are on the stolid side, it’s best to stick to wearing trousers with your brogues. And if you’re pitching for something vampy, the brogue’s not really a goer.
  41. Aysha Taryam: Don’t be afraid to say the F-word, Gulf Today
    Women thinkers, philosophers and activists like Virginia Woolf, Simone de Beauvoir and Sylvia Plath have written extensively on the subject of women’s rights believing that only a woman can truly portray the struggle of her race. Books like Woolf’s A
  42. Theatre of the mind, Cyprus Mail
    For this project, Lea assembled the Persona theatre group, a cast of friends (theatre specialists) who had appeared together in a 2003 production of Orlando by Virginia Woolf. The group has also performed co-productions with theatre companies in the UK
  43. Hermione Lee to share biographer’s secrets, Irish Times
    Hermione Lee, a veteran in the field, biographer of Virginia Woolf and Edith Wharton, will speak on all this – and share details of the tactics needed to write something masterful – when she speaks in Dublin next month. Lee has also written lives of
  44. A little corner of England in France, BBC News
    For the first 25 years of its existence, Le Bois des Moutiers was the centre of an intimate and highly distinguished arts scene, with other visitors including writers Marcel Proust and Virginia Woolf and painter Pablo Picasso.
  45. Three adoptions in the family, The Guardian
    Virginia Woolf said that we think back through our mothers if we are women – and I do. That female line also embraces Annie and Eva, and puts them at the heart of my story. How could it not? They are my people; the people I grew up with.
  46. Why I Love Hemingway (and Why I Write), Wired News
    When I was 18, Virginia Woolf * stirred in me the desire to write. Hemingway made that desire last. For that I will always love him. Hemingway’s Boat [the book under review] is a book written with the virtuosity of a novelist, hagiographic in the right
  47. Stars with multiple roles in the Oscar race, GoldDerby
    Though she lost her Best Actress bid to Halle Berry (“Monster’s Ball”), Kidman won the following year for playing author Virginia Woolf in “The Hours.” Billy Bob Thornton, 2001: For a while, it seemed like his stronger film was the Coen Brothers’
  48. Flashback Five – Nicole Kidman’s Best Movies, AMCtv.com (blog)
    Well, it’s not exactly disproved by this critically acclaimed drama, for which Kidman took home Best Actress as a dowdy Virginia Woolf. But even without the prosthetic nose, Kidman’s performance as the novelist is still transformative.
  49. This week we were, Irish Times
    Listening to a letter from TS Eliot to Virginia Woolf in the Paris Review, ahead of the publication this month of The Letters of TS Eliot . In it he describes being “boiled in a hell-broth” leaving his mother off in Liverpool to take a transatlantic
  50. Amy: She’s exhausted being editor for husband, Minneapolis Star Tribune
    Some spouses can write and edit together, but with the exception of Virginia and Leonard Woolf, these two roles don’t always mix well. Your adoring accolades will mean nothing if you are not honest. Without honesty, the empty praise will bring on more

Like another Woolf blogger I know, I am writing from a room of my own on the Jersey side of the Hudson.

Well, it’s not really my own room. I am sharing it with my husband. And I don’t own it. I am merely renting it for the night.

But we have driven up from Ohio to see Septimus and Clarissa, the stage adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway that is on stage until Oct. 8 at the Baruch Performing Arts Center in New York City.

I will post more about the rave-winning play after we see it tomorrow night. Meanwhile, here is a link to a review written by another Woolfian, Patricia Laurence, Woolf scholar and professor of English at Brooklyn College, the City University of New York:

The Mindscape of Septimus and Clarissa: Ripe Time Adapts Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway in The Brooklyn Rail 

 

Virginia Woolf turns up everywhere, and this week we sighted her as far away as Iran, New Zealand and Australia. See sightings numbered five, 17 and 29 to learn more. And one of her novels jumped to its death on the Entertainment Weekly website. See number eight to find out which one bit the dust — and why.

  1. Idyll Banter: ‘The Catcher on the Pot’ not for sale, BurlingtonFreePress.com
    Just trying getting a straight answer from Virginia Woolf or William Shakespeare.) I can’t imagine a toilet of mine would ever be worth anything, given that I am not in the
    slightest bit reclusive. Also, unlike Salinger, I have written a lot of work
  2. VIRGINIA WOOLF BY ALEXANDRA HARRIS (Thames & Hudson £14.95), Daily Mail
    By Val Hennessy So, who IS afraid of Virginia Woolf? Well. I’ll admit, I am. She’s not exactly easy reading, is she? There are scholars who claim she was a ‘mad genius’, others who believe she was ‘the greatest writer who ever lived’ (sob your heart
  3. Yale Review turns 100, Yale Daily News
    The list is filled with notables: Thomas Mann, Edith Wharton, Virginia Woolf and Leon Trotsky, among many others. Although the publication — the nation’s oldest quarterly literary journal — currently employs only two half-time staff members,
  4. Theater Listings: Sept. 23 — 29, New York Times
    (Brantley) ★ ‘Septimus and Clarissa’ The heedless theater company Ripe Time explodes Virginia Woolf’s miniaturist masterpiece “Mrs. Dalloway” into a beautifully choreographed exploration of love, loss and party planning in post-World War I England.
  5. Isherwood travels to Iran with two novels, Iran Book News Agency
    Clearly inspired by Virginia Woolf and Forester, he consciously applies modernist methods such as stream of consciousness in this novel. “Mr. Norris changes Trains” is another novel published in 1935 that is believed to be based on Isherwood’s own life
  6. Times Calendar, The Daily Advertiser
    Inspired by a section of Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own,” William and Judith” is a whimsical riff on the Shakespeare authorship controversy, a meditation on creative identity and an exploration of gender roles in the world of Shakespeare’s
  7. Communication: it’s always better when we’re together, ABC Online
    This is why I keep re-reading Virginia Woolf’s brilliant Mrs Dalloway: good fiction can help us realise how much of another human being is left out, exaggerated, diminished or just faked. It is a lesson in the precariousness of understanding,
  8. A book commits suicide every time you watch ‘Jersey Shore’: Do you read high . Entertainment Weekly (blog)
    If you look closely, you can see what appears to be To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf and an unidentified book plunging to their deaths because they refuse to exist in a world in which Jersey Shore is being watched. The photo is obviously a joke,
  9. What’s the Big Deal?: Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), Film.com
    There is no reason to fear Virginia Woolf! She died a long time ago, and even when she was alive she wasn’t very feisty. So why have we been asking ourselves the musical question Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? for nearly five decades?
  10. Stage Dive: An Off Broadway Digest, New York Magazine (blog)
    With the ghostly great Septimus and Clarissa, playwright-performer Ellen McLaughlin and director-choreographer Rachel Dickstein propel Virginia Woolf’s ecstatically unhappy hostess (McLaughlin herself) through a patently mundane yet psychologically
  11. Theater: Triumphant “Septimus & Clarissa;” Wounded “Crane”, Huffington Post (blog)
    Two shows opened recently — Septimus & Clarissa, an adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s classic novel Mrs. Dalloway; and Crane Story, a modern spin on the classic folk tale. Both shows are made with care by committed artists and involve a strong emphasis
  12. The Perfection of English and the Making of the KJB, PBS
    Perhaps one of the writers contemporary readers would find most unlikely to be influenced by the Bible is Virginia Woolf (1882-1941). Yet literary critic and New Yorker staff writer James Wood, in his essay on her novel To the Lighthouse (1927) in the
  13. Book Excerpt: The Dyslexic Advantage, Wired News
    “Even then I read so slowly and poorly that I took my master’s orals on three authors, Shakespeare, Virginia Woolf, and Ernest Hemingway without having read all of their works. I couldn’t possibly read all of their works.” Fortunately, Anne could still
  14. Cookery holidays: Don’t forget your wooden spoon…, The Independent
    It should be entered into with abandon or not at all.” Harriet Van Horne, American columnist (1920-1998) “One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well.” – Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own.
  15. Schabas on point, Queen’s Journal
    I’m tempted to say Virginia Woolf because she’s a favourite of mine and I’m a bit obsessed with the tensions between her aesthetic theory and her feminist views. But the problem with writers is that there can be a jarring disconnect between their
  16. Bipolar Buzz at a Philippines Cafe, Wall Street Journal (blog)
    Virginia Woolf’s Tears, aimed at depression and compulsive behavior, is an organic turkey soup with chopped green apples
  17. Fiction Addiction, New Zealand Herald
    rock & roll on vinyl, the Rolling Stones, Russia, the seaside, Frank Sinatra, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, springtime, John Steinbeck, surrealism, Henry David Thoreau, Toll House cookies, Leo Tolstoy, Walt Whitman, Virginia Woolf, William Butler Yeats,
  18. Citywide Pittsburgh Biennial comes to campus, CMU The Tartan Online
    asking visitors to essentially create the art themselves, by either writing a letter to a feminist scientist or by sitting down at a tea table and having a conversation with a total stranger (an idea borrowed from a Virginia Woolf essay calling for
  19. Where We Must Stand: African women in an age of war, Open Democracy
    Years before Butler, feminist anti-war activists – Virginia Woolf among them – drew links between war and the male domination of political and economic arenas. Woolf may not have been fully aware of it, but she wrote The Three Guineas (1937) at a time
  20. Shakespeare and his ambitious sister, The Daily Advertiser
    When writing the play, Daigle was inspired by a section of Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own.” In Woolf’s essay, she made the case for an imaginary Judith Shakespeare. Judith, though ambitious and equally as talented as her brother William,
  21. The brights of spring, The Independent
    Designer couple Thea Bregazzi and Justin Thornton’s inspiration was literary heroine Virginia Woolf. Aside from some flashes of virginal white lace, however, the execution was far more avant-garde, including hi-tech, pixelated, pastel geometrics,
  22. Radev collection: tale of three art lovers to be told in new touring exhibition, The Guardian
    He was part of the tangled Bloomsbury set although somewhat overshadowed by his better known cousin Vita Sackville-West, who had a famous affair with Virginia Woolf. “Vita was very nice to his face but my God, she belittled him behind his back,” said
  23. “Clybourne Park” (Steppenwolf Theatre): A Subtle Norris Takes THE Prize!, ChicagoNow
    Scenic Designer Todd Rosenthal creates another “Virginia Woolf-esque” homestead and then during intermission totally trashes it. Rosenthal flips the makeover concept with the *after* being the mess. The house and the show is all about change!
  24. Downton Abbey is sheer fantasy, says historian, Telegraph.co.uk
    Prof Alison Light, an academic and author of Mrs Woolf and Her Servants, which explored the relationship between Virginia Woolf and her domestic staff, said that members of the Edwardian aristocracy were “mean and vindictive”.
  25. Notes From King Bolo, Wall Street Journal
    ‘You would expire of boredom,” TS Eliot warned his friend Virginia Woolf while discussing his wish to visit her home. “Insensitive persons can endure me for 24 hours; there is one old gentleman who, kept up by Port Wine,
  26. TS Eliot’s On-Again, Off-Again Anti-Semitism, Forward
    that as metic he felt literarily and personally complicit with Jews such as Sydney Schiff (a novelist and translator who published under the pen name Stephen Hudson) and Leonard Woolf (the political theorist and husband of Virginia Woolf).
  27. The perversity of Britain’s diversity regulations is bad for men, women and , Telegraph.co.uk
    The economic downturn begins, and lasts as long as a Virginia Woolf novel feels. If your company is to survive, you’re going to have to let me, or Jane, or Dave go. How easy do you think it would be to select either Jane or myself for redundancy,
  28. It would be a shame to lose Dahl’s writing hut, Moose Jaw Times-Herald
    I’ve been to several writers’ homes, including Jane Austen’s house in Chawton, Hampshire, where she spent the last eight years of her life, Virginia Woolf’s country retreat Monk House in Lewes, East Sussex, and Ernest Hemmingway’s home in Key West,
  29. Otherness eludes the other Ondaatje, The Australian
    intriguing polymath Richard Burton (two books following his journeys through India, and through Africa in search of the Nile’s source); Leonard Woolf, who was a civil servant in Ceylon before he married Virginia; and Ernest Hemingway in Africa.