Robert Hanks
@roberthanks.bsky.social
320 followers 310 following 1.6K posts
The man who never was but sometimes looked as though he might be. Cultural commentator for hire. Will work for food.
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roberthanks.bsky.social
I don't know how. You seem to be unstoppable
roberthanks.bsky.social
I imagine the photo wouldn't be very different.
Reposted by Robert Hanks
davidcorn.bsky.social
A classic case of irresponsible both-sidesism from the NYT. The story is that Trump and MAGA propagandists are lying about Portland to incite a conflict, not that there are different views of the matter.
roberthanks.bsky.social
“I THINK I’VE MADE MY POINT.”
roberthanks.bsky.social
America is an insane country.
merriam-webster.com
Here’s a primer on ‘primer.’

It’s pronounced ‘PRIMM-er’ if you mean “a small book” or “a short informative piece of writing.”

It’s pronounced ‘PRY-mer’ if you mean “an initial coat of paint.”
roberthanks.bsky.social
But yes, Norman Conquests a good choice – or Intimate Exchanges (which I'm sure I saw, but I can't remember much about), where the play can take off in one of several prescribed directions, so you get a different sequence of events every night.
roberthanks.bsky.social
You can overstate that case. I think he got a lot of credit for smartness in the 80s and 90s – several of his plays were put on at the National Theatre in London. And Alain Resnais – the Last Year at Marienbad guy – directed a couple of films based on his plays.
roberthanks.bsky.social
Oh god, yes. He's uneven, but some of them are just really, really funny and/or moving.

There are a few that are pretty small-scale: the double-bill of Dirty Linen/New-found-land was written for a lunchtime theatre club… Trying to think how Dogg's Hamlet/Cahoot's Macbeth works.
roberthanks.bsky.social
They haven't done that many, have they? Rock 'n' Roll, The Invention of Love… what else? But I like the idea of Stoppard replacing the Christmas panto as the big annual milch cow.
roberthanks.bsky.social
I did that one for A-level, and saw the 1985 revival starring Kendal and Paul Eddington, as well as a later one withEssie Davis and Simon Russell Beale. It's possibly one of the ones that works better on the page (though I'd love to have seen Michael Hordern in the original production). So read it!
roberthanks.bsky.social
Yes, I can see the problem. Frustrating.
roberthanks.bsky.social
Oh, thank you. I'll try to make that. Hampstead does some good work reviving Stoppard (even if Rock 'n' Roll, the last one I saw, is not one of his greatest plays).
roberthanks.bsky.social
You didn't? Arcadia, Indian Ink/In the Native State, Hapgood. I'm not sure whether The Real Thing was written with her in mind, but she was in the first production.
roberthanks.bsky.social
And had long-term relationship with Tom Stoppard, who wrote a number of plays for her.
roberthanks.bsky.social
I saw her as Desdemona to Paul Scofield's Othello circa 1980, and she was fantastic – made absolute sense of a very difficult part. (One of the very last times Othello was played in blackface in Britain.)
roberthanks.bsky.social
Oh, I hadn't heard that. Thank you.
roberthanks.bsky.social
The Greens were anti-EU before it was fashionable – I think mainly because of the CAP. Not surprising some of their followers have stuck with that.
roberthanks.bsky.social
Ah, it's Mornings in the Dark: from what I can see online, it's got some stuff The Pleasure Dome doesn't have. I used to consult it fairly regularly, when I wanted to find out about films of the 30s. I'm not sure his taste is reliable, but he doesn't mess around.
roberthanks.bsky.social
I've got a Penguin collection with a different title – wonder whether it's the same book under the hood.
roberthanks.bsky.social
Is that a young Darcus Howe on the right, in the hat?