Wednesday, May 21, 2025

News and Ideas Worth Sharing

William P. Perry

William P. Perry is a composer and producer. Born in Elmira, NY he attended Harvard University and studied music with Paul Hindemith, Walter Piston and Randall Thompson and literature with George Sherburn and Walter Jackson Bate. After a stint in the military, he joined the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency as a composer, script writer and television producer, working with such entertainment icons as Arthur Godfrey, Ed Sullivan and Jackie Gleason. The next career move, somewhat unexpected, took him to the Museum of Modern Art where he became music director and composed and performed more than two hundred scores for the Museum’s silent film collection. His subsequent PBS television series, “The Silent Years” hosted by Orson Welles and Lillian Gish, won an Emmy Award. Perry is often credited with having played a major role in the revival of interest in classic silent films. Continuing his association with PBS, he created and produced the “Anyone for Tennyson?” poetry series and thereafter produced and scored the Peabody-Award winning Mark Twain Series of six feature films for Great Performances. His stage work has included a musical biography of Mark Twain that ran for ten summers in Elmira and Hartford and a Broadway musical version of “Wind in the Willows” starring Nathan Lane. In recent years Perry, a long-time Berkshires resident, has concentrated on a Naxos series of CDs of his orchestral works.

written articles

Amanda Gorman . . . Inspiring a nation

At President Biden’s inauguration, Amanda Gorman, self-described as “a skinny Black girl descended from slaves and raised by a single mother,” became one of America’s most recognized and lauded living poets.

Frost, Yeats and Eliot . . . Sounds like a law firm

Actually, this column started when a friend asked me if I would suggest the three most important English-language poets of my lifetime. It took only a moment before I responded: Robert Frost, William Butler Yeats, and T.S. Eliot, though not necessarily in that order:

We’ll take a cup of kindness yet

Let me now wish you a Very Happy New Year and offer the most moving performance of Auld Lang Syne I have ever heard. The singers are the Choral Scholars of University College, Dublin.

Gone Fishing…What’s the angle?

A lot of good poetry has been written about hunting and fishing, though in this column we’ll only address fishing . . . I don’t much favor hunting.

A Rose is a Rose is a Rose…and often a poem

There are more than 100 good rhymes for "rose". How many could we find for "rhododendron??

Nobel Prize Winners . . . some dynamite poetry

Alfred Nobel (1833-1896), the inventor of dynamite, was a chemist, engineer, businessman and, most memorably, philanthropist; he was also a scholar, fluent in Russian, French, English and German. Above all, he loved poetry.

So That’s Where It’s From!

So, that line you love comes from a poem. Who knew?

Take Five! Here comes the limerick!

I love the limerick, and it’s about the happiest verse form there is.

My special corner of the world…It’s in Westminster Abbey

In the Poet’s Corner, T.S. Eliot and Alfred, Lord Tennyson are memorialized together . . . the leading Victorian poet and the iconic poet of Modernism side by side.

Edna St. Vincent Millay . . . Her candle burned at both ends

Among the great literary figures who have brought distinction to the Berkshires, she was the first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for poetry and she rivaled Robert Frost as America’s greatest-ever writer of sonnets.

A wedding in Wessex . . . and you’re all on the guest list!

The countryside was made furtherly famous by the novelist and poet Thomas Hardy (1840-1928). He had reached back into Anglo-Saxon history.

Imitation and Parody . . . You can’t have one without the other

To my mind, the master parodist is probably Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (1832-1898) who used the pen-name Lewis Carroll.

A Poetic Feast for Thanksgiving: Mince and spice with Vincent Price

On this day of feasting, poems about food, for, as Vincent Price and friends remark in our video, "Where is the man who can live without dining?"

Mark Twain the poet…Can bad poetry be great literature?

Mark Twain famously said that he detested poetry, and yet he wrote more than 120 poems. Herein some choice morsels.

What’s My Lion? A Zooful of Poetry

Lively animal poems to share with children and grandchildren

Remember, Remember! The Third of November!

The rich relationship between politics and poetry provides a welcome diversion from the coronavirus.
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