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The Complete "Talking Heads"
 
 
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The Complete "Talking Heads" [Special Edition] [Hardcover]

Alan Bennett
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: BBC Books; Gift edition edition (5 Oct 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0563384611
  • ISBN-13: 978-0563384618
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.7 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 64,023 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Alan Bennett
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Alan Bennett's award-winning series of six television monologues, Talking Heads, may have been first aired in 1988, but over a decade later it is still impossible to read these deeply moving and affectionate scripts without hearing the voices of the actors who played them. Maggie Smith as the alcoholic vicar's wife finding a semblance of happiness in an affair with an Indian shop owner, Patricia Routledge as the poisonous neighbour, Julie Walters as the over-the-hill dolly bird auditioning for a porn film and of course Thora Hird as Doris, the old lady alone in her home having fallen and broken her hip. All great performances and all made possible by Bennett's wonderfully observant and poignant scripts. Bennett rightly notes in his introduction to the pieces that, maybe apart from Doris, his narrators are artless in that they "don't quite know what they are saying and are telling a story to the meaning of which they are not entirely privy". But through their artlessnes they reveal more about Britain today and the stresses and strains placed upon ordinary people, than any number of docu-soaps that now claim to show us real life. --Nick Wroe --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Book Description

The complete collection of classic monologues from the master of observation --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
48 of 48 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Some twenty years ago, mr. van Broekhoven, who taught us english, told us one day to be sure and watch a television programme called "Talking Heads" which would be shown on the BBC that same evening.

I loved it, right from the start. I was spellbound by the quality of the acting and by the words, especially by Alan Bennett's ability to put the right words in a character's mouth. He fashioned these truly moving stories out of little else but the dreary everyday life of ordinary people.

"Talking Heads" started me off on Alan Bennett and I've read a lot of his other work since, which I've also enjoyed very much.

Bennett writes with elegance, understatement and with uncanny empathy. He succeeds in really making these people come to life. One can't help but be moved by what these people tell us and you end up sympathising with them, pitying them, hoping they'll be alright, hoping it'll all work out for them. You end up sympathising with nasty small-minded people like Miss Ruddick, who is a poisoned pen-letter writer, with sad people like Graham, a man in his forties who lives with his mum, with a gullible, naïve half-wit like Lesley: a bit-part actress or "extra" who unwittingly, but unrelentingly cheerful and chirpy, ends up doing a cheap German nookie film, you even end up sympathising, awkward though it is, with a pedophile.

Yet there are no tricks, no ploys being used to achieve this, to draw upon emotions. It's just ordinary people telling their stories, revealing much about themselves, even those thing they would not want to reveal to a stranger. Reading this reminded me of a familiar experience: one feels as if being on a train, or in a waiting room. There is only one other person there and this person starts talking to you. You nod and smile politely, listen with half an ear, try and hide behind a paper or a book, but they just keep on talking, not even expecting a reply, just being glad of the chance to talk.

The form and the words are brilliantly chosen. There is so much in the little, throwaway remarks, in the seemingly unimportant. Much sadness, and loss and so much loneliness, sand painful self-awareness (or the absence thereof), much comedy, too, although these 13 people do not mean to tell a funny story. What they do, in fact, is to tell us the story of their lives (even if they do not really mean to) in little more than 30 minutes. Unwittingly they open cupboards and one or more skeletons fall out, as happens in all our lives.

Also, each of these stories has one or more wicked twists, which work marvellously: your perception of the story and of the person telling it is suddenly being tilted as the story sort of hits a bump. And after it's been given this jolt, nothing is quite the same.

I'll bugger off now but not after making 3 appeals:

1. Do not be put off by the fact that these are monologues, do not be put off by the fact that it's all about very ordinary people and do not be put off by the fact that all kinds of people about whose judgment is suspect (like teachers, critics, or indeed amazon-book reviewers) keep on telling you this is Literature, and great stuff. Just give this book a try. You will be amazed by the quality, the sensitivity and the common sense of the writing. You will probably end up as I did: recommending it to others.

2. Mr. Bennett: I know it's a bore being asked this, but could you find it in your heart to write some more of these wonderful monologues, to celebrate 20 years of "talking heads"?

3. BBC: bring them back!! Show them again, all thirteen of them, and do so every year, please.
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
The beauty of Alan Bennett's monologues are that as you read or listen to them, you assume things from phrases they say. And so, when something happens in the story, it surprises you, it turns out that the person is different to how you imagined,but it still fits with the story. Alan Bennett is a genius! His monologues really are superb.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Extraordinary tales of ordinary people. Not a lot happens, but the things that do have profound effects on people. This will make you laugh out loud, grit your teeth in frustration and sigh in despair at the characters and the situations they force themselves in to.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Memories from years ago
I bought this for my mother. We had been talking about the Cream Cracker monologue. I couldn't remember who did it, but my mother did! Read more
Published 16 days ago by Livermoor
talking heads
I AM DELIGHTED WITH MY PURCHASE. THE BOOK IS VERY FUNNY AND WILL OPEN UP MY MIND TO BRING OUT OTHER WRITING IDEAS FOR FUTURE PROJECTS. Read more
Published 2 months ago by ANTHONY MURRAY
He burrows under the skin of his characters
Marry some of our finest actors (Eileen Atkins, Patricia Routledge, Thora Hird)to the sublime writing of Alan Bennett and you have a series of Talking Heads of great compassion,... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Clive A. H. Still
Talking
A lovely hardback book with eight monologues from the Talking Heads series on television, as well as A Woman of No Importance. The introductions give useful background information. Read more
Published 6 months ago by KeelieJ
Talking Heads
This went straight into my "top ten" best ever reads.
It comes across even better than the excellent TV broadcsts. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Mrs. Alison Layland
Alan Bennett - Taliing Heads
Bennett is a great wordsmith and observer of human nature. His plays are brilliantly written, poignant and well crafted. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Nerida
Alone together: Anna Massey (1937-2011)
News of the death of Anna Massey came on the day I was listening to her version of 'Bed amongst the Lentils', the radio monologue that came after Maggie Smith first performed it on... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Anthony Abdool
Frustration
The CD's are incorrectly labeled. To play a track as listed and your are listening to something else it is very frustrating and confusing. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Penor
The Man's a Genius!
I bought this CD to replace and old (and very much listened to and worn out) Talking Heads 2 cassette and am so pleased I bought it, as I love listening to all of Alan Bennetts... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Wispy68
Brilliant Monologues
This is a collection of very clever monologues, spoken by a variety of characters. Each one creates a character who reveals him/herself unwittingly through details revealed... Read more
Published 19 months ago by MS ANNE C CLARKE
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