The Spouses of American Presidents and Vice-Presidents

This is a survey of the 90 women and one man who have been married at any time to those who were elected or otherwise became President or Vice-President of the United States (an update from my previous post on this topic in 2007). I'm aware that this is a heteronormative approach; it is determined really by the available records (which are themselves patchy in places). Many of those concerned will have had relationships with people to whom they were not married; in most cases, history does not record their biographical details.

I would have very much liked to include Julia Chinn, a slave belonging to future Vice-President Richard Mentor Johnson, whio is not otherwise known to have been married; they lived together openly in 1820's and 1830's Kentucky, and she bore him two children who took his surname and inherited his property. However her year of birth, and the year in which their relationship started, are unknown, as is the precise date of her death in 1833, three years before he was elected Vice-President (uniquely, by the Senate, as the Virginia electors would not vote for a man who had lived with a black woman). Reluctantly, I have to strike her from my list.

I also considered including James Buchanan and William Rufus King, who served respectively as President from 1857 to 1861 and as Vice-President briefly in 1853. Both were bachelors; they lived together in Washington for fifteen years, and Washington gossip of the time appears to have assumed that they were in a sexual relationship. However, if I have excluded Julia Chinn I guess I have to exclude other partners who were not officially married.

I was able to find years, but not precise dates, of birth for two women married to vice-presidents of the middle period: Evelyn Colfax, born in 1823, whose husband Schuyler served under Ulysses S. Grant from 1869 to 1873; and Mary Wheeler, born in 1828, whose husband William served under Rutherford Hayes from 1877 to 1881. When I first wrote this in 2007 I was also missing exact birthdates for Cornelia Fairbanks in 1852 and Dorothy Barkley in 1882, but both have now turned up.

Anyway, that leaves me with a list of 90 women and one man who were married at some time or other to the 75 men and one woman who have served or been elected as President, Vice-President or both. Twelve of the latter were married twice, and one three times: ten of them – Aaron Burr, John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Hannibal Hamlin, Schuyler Colfax, Benjamin Harrison, Levi P. Morton, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Alben Barkley and President-elect Joe Biden – were widowed and remarried; Ronald Reagan and Nelson Rockefeller both divorced their first wives, and Donald Trump has divorced twice; but I have included all of their spouses.

I was surprised that multiple marriages turned out to be slightly more common among the women, with seventeen of them (plus Doug Emhoff) known to have married more than once (and there may be more who I have missed). Jane Wyman married and divorced the same man twice after her marriage to Ronald Reagan, who was already her third husband. Martha Washington and Martha Jefferson were already widows when they married George and Thomas respectively; both of Aaron Burr's wives were widows when he married them, his second wife possibly twice over; likewise Mary Harrison, Edith Wilson and Jane Hadley BarkleyRachel Jackson, Florence Harding, Jane Wyman, Happy Rockefeller, Karen Pence (the outgoing Second Lady), Jill Biden (the incoming First Lady) and Doug Emhoff (Kamala Harris's husband) all divorced their previous spouses, as did Jane Wyman as previously noted; and Caroline Fillmore, Frances Cleveland, Muriel Humphrey and Jacqueline Kennedy all married again after their first husbands' deaths.

Longevity: 13 of the 91 are still living. (The same number as in 2007.) They are, in order of birthdate, Rosalynn Carter (93), Lynne Cheney (79), Laura Bush (74), Hillary Clinton (73), Tipper Gore (72), Ivana Trump (71), Marilyn Quayle (71), Jill Biden (69), Karen Pence (turns 64 next month), Marla Maples (57), Michelle Obama (turns 57 next month), Doug Emhoff (56) and Melania Trump (50; she shares my birthday but is three years younger).

Leaving them aside, the average lifespan is 71.1 years, and the median 74.5 (the middle point between Floride Calhoun, 74.4 and Ellen Colfax, 74.6). Apart from Rosalynn Carter, thirteen made it past their 90th birthdays: Eliza Bowen Jumel (Aaron Burr's second wife; more on her in a moment), Judy Agnew, Caro Dawes (whose husband Charles was VP under Coolidge), Tod Rockefeller (Nelson's first wife), Jennie Hobart (whose husband Garret was McKinley's first Vice-President), Barbara Bush, Ilo Wallace (whose husband Henry was FDR's second vice-president), Betty Ford, Jane Wyman, Lady Bird Johnson, Nancy Reagan, Ann Gerry (whose husband was Madison's second vice-president, and gave his name to the gerrymander) and Bess Truman. The nonagenarians include seven of the most recent nine to have passed away (Joan Mondale and Happy Rockefeller were in their 80s).

Bess Truman was the longest-lived of all, born 13 February 1885, died 18 October 1982, a total of 97 years, 8 months and 5 days. At the other end of the scale is the tragic figure of Alice Roosevelt, who died on 14 February 1884 of kidney problems just after giving birth to Theodore's first daughter; she was born on 29 July 1861, so was only 22 years and six months old. The second youngest was President-elect Biden's first wife Neilia, killed in a car accident four months and twenty days after her 30th birthday. At least four others died in their thirties – Martha Jefferson, Lucy Morton (whose husband was later to serve as Benjamin Harrison's vice-president), Hannah Van Buren, Sarah Hamlin and possibly Evelyn Colfax, who was born some time in 1823 and died on 10 July 1863.

This piece is mainly about the spouses, but briefly on the principals: 11 are still living, Jimmy Carter (96), Dick Cheney (turns 80 next month), Joe Biden (78), Donald Trump, George W Bush and Bill Clinton (all three are 74), Dan Quayle (73), Al Gore (72), Mike Pence (61), Barack Obama (59) and Kamala Harris (56). Leaving them aside, the average lifespan is 71.6 years, and the median 70.5 (between Elbridge Gerry and Nelson Rockefeller). The longest lived was John Nance Garner, who died in 1967 eleven weeks before his hundredth birthday; the shortest-lived was John F. Kennedy, who was 46 (he called Garner on the morning of 22 November 1963 to wish him a happy 95th birthday, and was dead a few hours later). The shortest-lived Vice-President was Daniel Tompkins. The longest-lived President is Jimmy Carter, and long may he remain so.

Age at marriage: Taking all 91 spouses here, but considering only their marriages to Presidents or Vice-Presidents, the average age at that marriage was 25.5 and the median 24. (The 46th of the 91 is Hannah Van Buren, who married Martin, her first cousin once removed, two weeks before her 24th birthday.) 22 of the women were married before they turned twenty, fourteen of those marriages to future Presidents or Vice-Presidents. Harriet Wilson, whose husband Henry was Ulysses S Grant's second VP, appears to have been the youngest – just past her sixteenth birthday when they were married in 1840. (She died in 1870, a couple of years before he became vice-president; he in turn died in office in 1875.)

The other teenage brides were Hannah Tompkins (whose husband Daniel was VP under Monroe), Eliza Johnson (wife of Andrew Johnson), Mary Wheeler (married to Hayes' VP), Mary Breckenridge (whose husband was VP under Buchanan), Elizabeth Monroe, Sophia Dallas (whose husband was Pierce's VP), Sarah Hamlin, Rosalynn Carter, Floride Calhoun (whose husband was VP to both John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson), Alice Roosevelt (TR's first wife, as noted above), Barbara Bush, Mamie Eisenhower and Abigail Adams (John Adams' wife). In addition, Eliza Jumel, Rachel Jackson, Theodosia Burr, Martha Washington, Martha Jefferson, Caroline Fillmore, Florence Harding, Jane Hadley Barkley and Happy Rockefeller all married their first husbands before they were 20.

The oldest bride by quite some way is perhaps the most exotic story of the lot. Eliza Bowen Jumel is a difficult but fascinating figure to pin down. She was born in 1775, and married her first husband Stephen Jumel in 1804. Her murky background meant that they had difficulty being received in New York society, so they emigrated to France where she became a friend of Napoleon's, offering him safe passage to America after Waterloo. They moved back to New York in 1828; Stephen Jumel died in 1832, and the following year Eliza, now reputedly the richest woman in America, married Aaron Burr, who had served as vice-president under Thomas Jefferson thirty years earlier. He was 77, she was 58. It didn't work out; they separated after only a few months, and their divorce was finalised on the day of Burr's death, 14 September 1836. I am not making this bit up: her divorce lawyer was Alexander Hamilton junior, whose father Burr had shot dead more than thirty years before. She lived on until 16 July 1865, dying at the age of 90.

The oldest woman at first marriage in the list is also the most recently married, incoming Vice-President Kamala Harris, who wed Doug Emhoff two months before her 50th birthday in 2014. He is 7 days older than her, but had been married before. The oldest person at first marriage to a President or Vice-President is incumbent First Lady Melania Trump, who married Donald nine months after her 34th birthday. Bess Truman was also 34 when she married Harry.

Diverting to the principals again, the youngest of the Presidents and Vice-Presidents at marriage – and the only teenager – was Andrew Johnson, 18 and 4 months when he married 16-year-old Eliza McCardle in 1827. The oldest President to marry for the first time was Grover Cleveland, aged 49 when he married 21-year-old Frances Folsom in the White House in 1886, the year after he first became President. John Tyler, Nelson Rockefeller, Millard Fillmore, Woodrow Wilson, Benjamin Harrison, Alben Barkley, Aaron Burr and Donald Trump all remarried when they were over 50, Burr being the oldest at 77 (as described above). Apart from Cleveland, Presidents Tyler and Wilson married in office (both having lost their first wives since becoming president) and Alben Barkley married while Vice-President.

Age gaps: Taking the 91 marriages of the Presidents and Vice-Presidents, the average age on the wedding day is 32.1 and the median 28.0 (William McKinley, married four days before his birthday in 1871), making the average age gap 6.5 and the median 3.8 (between Peggy and Zachary Taylor). Counting first marriages for the Presidents and Vice-Presidents only, the average age is 28.0 and the median 26.4 (Aaron Burr, when he married Theodosia); the average age gap is 4.1 and the median 2.8 (between Theodore Roosevelt and the ill-fated Alice).

The 33-year gap between Vice-President Barkley, born on 24 November 1877, and his second wife Jane Hadley, born 23 September 1911, is the largest for any of the couples here; they were married the week before his 72nd birthday, when she was 38 (a second marriage for both). The biggest gap for a President is that between John Tyler (born 29 March 1790) and his second wife Julia (born 4 May 1820); they were married on 26 June 1844. The biggest gap for a first marriage on both sides is the 27 years between Grover and Frances Cleveland.

Thirteen or fourteen of the spouses in my sample were older than the President or Vice-President who they married. The biggest such gap was between Aaron Burr (again!) and his first wife Theodosia, who was nine years older than him. Florence Harding was five years older than Warren, Karen Pence is two years older than the incumbent Vice-President, Abigail Fillmore was almost two years older than Millard, and Tod Rockefeller just over a year older than Nelson. There was less than a year in it for Caroline Harrison (Benjamin Harrison's first wife, who died the week before he lost his bid for re-election), Pat Nixon, Martha Washington, Ilo Wallace, Lou Hoover, Cornelia Fairbanks, President-elect Biden's first wife Neilia and possibly Evelyn Colfax, though it's likely that she was younger than her husband (we don't know when she was born in 1823; Schuyler was born in March that year). The closest gap is a week, as noted above, between VP-elect Harris and Doug Emhoff.

In office: The youngest woman married to a President was Frances Cleveland, as noted above, followed in order by Julia Tyler, aged 21 and 24 respectively when they married the President of the day. The youngest woman whose husband became President was Jacqueline Kennedy, aged 31 in 1961. The oldest First Lady was Bess Truman, almost 68 when her husband's term ended in 1953 (though Jane Wyman was 75 at the end of her ex-husband's term in 1989, and Ivana Trump's ex-husband's term ends a month before her 72nd birthday). Ellen Hamlin was only 25 when her husband Hannibal became Vice-President in 1861. At the other end, Etty Garner was 71 at the end of her husband's second term as Vice-President in 1941.

Endings: The average length of the marriages here considered is 33.7 years, the median being 32.1 (Warren and Florence Harding). The longest married couple in the sample are still alive, Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter, who tied the knot on 7 July 1946 and are still going almost three-quarters of a century later. They just recently overtook George and Barbara Bush (73.3 years). Three other couples made it to their diamond anniversaries: Joan and Walter Mondale, married for 64.9 years, Caro and Charles G Dawes, married for 62.2 years, and Abigail and John Adams, married for 61.7 years. Eleven Ten other couples made it past fifty years of marriage: Betty and Gerald Ford, Lynne and Dick Cheney (still with us), Judy and Spiro Agnew, Bess and Harry Truman, Pat and Richard Nixon, Mamie and Ike Eisenhower, Etty and John Nance Garner, Nancy and Ronald Reagan, Ilo and Henry Wallace, Louisa and John Quincy Adams, and most recently Tipper and Al Gore (also still with us). Edited to add: Apparently the Gores separated in 2010, though it is not clear if they have formally divorced.

At the other end of the scale, the briefest union was the three years and two months of Aaron Burr's marriage to Eliza Jumel, ending simultaneously with their divorce and his death; followed by the three years and three months of Theodore Roosevelt's first marriage to the unfortunate Alice. Six other couples did not make it to their tenth anniversaries: Benjamin Harrison, Alben Barkley and Woodrow Wilson all died within a decade of their second marriage, Ronald Reagan divorced Joan Wyman and Donald Trump divorced Marla Maples after less than a decade, and Neilia Biden died six years after marrying Joe.

On average, the women of my sample outlived their husbands by 6.2 years, the median being 5.1. (This excludes the living.) Mary Harrison, Benjamin Harrison's second wife, outlived him by 46 years. She remarried; Sarah Polk, who outlived her husband by 42 years, did not. Of vice-presidents' wives, the longest widowhood was that of Jennie Hobart, who outlived her husband Garret by 41 years (after 30 years of marriage). At the other end, Levi P. Morton lived to his 96th birthday, almost 49 years after the death of his first wife, Lucy, but had remarried. Neilia Biden died 48 years ago next week. Martin Van Buren and Thomas Jefferson both lived as widowers for over 43 years without remarrying. (Aaron Burr survived his first wife by 41 years.) In the middle, both Letitia Stevenson (whose husband Adlai was Cleveland's second VP) and Eliza Johnson (married to Andrew) died within six months of their husbands, and Barbara Bush, Elizabeth Monroe and Pat Nixon within a year.

There are currently no living widows of Presidents or Vice Presidents, and have not been since Nancy Reagan's death in 2016; it is more than two hundred years since the last time this was the case, before Elbridge Gerry died in 1814, less than two years into his Vice-Presidential term. In late 1901 and most of 1902 there were nine living widows – Mary Breckenridge, Lucretia Garfield, Ellen Colfax, Julia Grant, Eliza Hendricks, Ellen Hamlin, Jennie Hobart, Mary Harrison and Ida McKinley, a period bracketed by William McKinley's assassination and Julia Grant's death. On the other hand two living former Vice-Presidents are widowers, Walter Mondale and Joe Biden (who of course has remarried).

Change over time: To a certain extent we are comparing, if not apples and oranges, at least Seville oranges and clementines here. Things have changed for women's life expectancy quite a lot over the centuries since the future Martha Washington was born in 1731. It is striking, for instance, that of the sixteen couples whose marriages lasted more than fifty years, fourteen lived in the twentieth century (and the other two were Adamses). Here is a graph mapping ten point moving averages of age at marriage (to the husbands considered here), difference in age with husband, and age at death as against year of birth. (I'm very grateful to Del Cotter for help formatting this.)

The big variation is of course in lifespan. As already mentioned, of the nine women on the list who have most recently died, seven lived to be over 90 (ie, half the total number of nonagenarians on the list) and the other two were in their 80s. The low point appears to be the early nineteenth century; of the the sixteen women born between 1815 and 1840, six died before the age of 50 (Mary Wheeler, 47, 1828-1876; Harriet Wilson, 45, 1824-1870; Evelyn Colfax, ~40, 1823-1863; Sarah Hamlin, 39, 1815-1855; and Lucy Morton, 34, 1836-1871) and none reached their 90th birthday. The dip at the end of the table is because most of the women born in the most recent period are still alive, and poor Neilia Biden skews the statistics.

The average marriage age seems to start at just over 25 and ends at 30, but with a dip precisely at the same point as the shortest lifespans. Five of the sixteen women born between 1815 and 1840 married as teenagers (Harriet Wilson and Eliza Johnson at 16, Mary Breckinridge and Mary Wheeler at 17, and Sarah Hamlin at 18); three of them are also on the list of those who died early in this cohort. 31% of these sixteen married as teenagers, compared to nine of the other 75, 12% of the rest of the sample.

I plotted the average age gap as well just to see if I got anything interesting out of it, but I'm not sure that I did. There's a distinct dip for women born in the first three quarters of the twentieth century, and a peak in the earlier period, bracketed perhaps by Julia Tyler and Frances Cleveland.

Conclusion: This has to an extent been a fun bit of historical number-crunching. But only to an extent. One keeps on running up against stories like that of Neilia Biden or Alice Roosevelt; of Andrew and Rachel Jackson, taunted about their early bigamous marriage (her first husband having lied about getting the divorce) to the point that she died between the election and her husband's inauguration; Franklin and Jane Pierce, who saw their only child smashed to bits in front of them in a railway accident just before his inauguration in 1853; Abigail Fillmore, repeating the experience of William Henry Harrison and catching pneumonia during Pierce's inauguration, so that she died a few weeks later; and all the others who married expecting to have decades with their partner of choice, but found that fate decreed otherwise. Here's a touching video of the Biden family celebrating his 30th birthday just after he was first elected to the Senate in November 1972, little knowing that Neilia and their daughter (too young to be in the TV clip) would not see Christmas.

If you have read this, and you have someone special in your life, go and give them a hug, and tell them I said so (if you like).

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Whoniversaries 13 December: Android Invasion #4, State of Decay #4

broadcast anniversaries

13 December 1975: broadcast of fourth episode of The Android Invasion – last appearance of Ian Marter as Harry and John Levene as Benton The Doctor and Sarah successfully thwart the Kraals. Hooray!

13 December 1980: broadcast of fourth episode of State of Decay. The Doctor kills the Great Vampire with a rocket through his heart and he, K9, Adric and Romana escape. Hooray!

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270 days of plague: not much to add

Finding it much more of a struggle to do ten-day updates this time around, compared to the spring. The fact that the weather is bad and the nights are still getting long doesn't help. Very much missing the usual circuit of holiday receptions that I'd be attending in normal times. As mentioned last time, I did have the thrill yesterday of another in-person diplomatic meeting, and was struck by how busy Brussels actually is – everyone wearing masks though.

I’ve been working more on my DNA connections, finding that my American relatives have been much more systematic than those of my three Irish grandparents. Last weekend I had a call with a lady whose mother was found abandoned in a Philadelphia park as a three-week-old baby, in 1917. DNA suggests that she and her siblings are my fourth cousins or thereabouts. My American grandmother was born in Philadelphia in 1899, but the link is too distant for her or her immediate family to have been involved; I checked through her first cousins to find a couple of likely suspects, but it may well be one of her second cousins (or more distant) and that is complex.

I also had a chat with a fourth cousin once removed whose name is almost the same as mine. He’s the guy in green here. He lives in Scotland, and his niece works in Brussels. A small world.

On the rare clear evenings, you can see the approaching conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn an hour after sunset:

I am thinking of going to the Netherlands for a haircut – hairdressers are open there, and neither Belgium not the Netherlands insists on quarantine before or after fleeting visits. The border is about an hour’s drive, and I already checked that the hairdressers take reservations from us Belgians. It will be a change of scene at least.

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Amadeus

Amadeus won the Oscar for Best Picture of 1984, and also seven others, Best Director (Milos Forman), Best Actor (F. Murray Abraham as Salieri beating Tom Hulce as Mozart), Best Adapted Screenplay (Peter Shaffer), Best Costume Design, Best Art Direction, Best Makeup and Best Sound, losing in Best Cinematography and Best Editing to The Killing Fields. That year’s Hugo winner, 2010, got five Oscar nominations but lost all of them (two to Amadeus).

The other Best Picture nominees were A Passage to India, which I have seen, and The Killing Fields, Places in the Heart and A Soldier’s Story, which I haven’t. IMDB users put it 3rd on one ranking but only 12th on the other. Other films I’ve seen from that year (in rough IMDB order): The Terminator, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Ghostbusters, Dune, This Is Spın̈al Tap, Beverly Hills Cop, Police Academy, Romancing the Stone, Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, 2010, Streets of Fire, Repo Man, The Woman in Red and A Passage to India, fourteen of them, the most for any year so far. I have particular nostalgia for Beverly Hills Cop, which was the first film I went to see with an actual girlfriend. But really The Terminator is the most memorable film of that year, up against some tough competition. Here’s a trailer for Amadeus.

It’s the story of the rivalry between Antonio Salieri, court composer to Emperor Joseph II, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, told as flashbacks from Salieri’s old age in a mental hospital, reflecting on his responsibility for Mozart’s early death. It’s based on a famous stage play, which I actually saw in Belfast in 1983 – the Birmingham Repertory production, starring Keith Michell as Salieri, Siôn Tudor Owen as Mozart and Kay Adshead as Constanze.

I didn’t find any actors here who had been in previous Oscar-winning films. There is one who has been in three Hugo-winners, but wihtout his face being visible in any of them: this is Kenny Baker, who played R2D2 in the orginal Star Wars trilogy, recognisable for once.

There’s also a fairly major Doctor Who crossover, Simon Callow, who plays impresario Emanuel Schikaneder here (and was in fact Mozart for the original theatrical run of Amadeus), and came to the third story of New Who, The Unquiet Dead, in 2005 to play Charles Dickens.

And it’s not my usual fandom – in fact, I don’t think I’ve ever watched an episode of the show – but Lorl, the Mozarts’ maid who is really working for Salieri, is played by 18-year-old Cynthia Nixon, later to achieve fame and fortune as Miranda in Sex and the City (and more recently a candidate for Governor of New York).

To begin with the usual, I think I actually did see a couple of black faces in the background, which if so is better than Terms of Endearment, Ordinary People, Kramer vs. Kramer or Annie Hall, all of which are set in times and places which were a lot more ethnically diverse than 18th-century Vienna. (Vienna has had African migrants, if sometimes not many, since it was founded by the Romans two thousand years ago.)

It’s a story about two men, and a very male play; it’s notable that in many of the court scenes, women are completely absent, and barely speak when they are present. However I’ve noted the young Cynthia Nixon above, and the third biggest role is definitely Constanze, here played by the glowing Elizabeth Berridge. I’m sorry to say that I found her accent grating on me at first, but I got into it by the end, and she gives depth to a part that is more complex than it first seems.

The whole thing looks gorgeous. 18th-century Vienna is a rich setting to begin with; Communist-era Prague, where it was filmed, still looked plausibly enough like a cityscape of the period; as well as the imperials court itself, you have several theatrical performances which are in and of themselves well over the top; generally it’s the best feast for the eyes since Oliver!.

And of course, the film is sustained throughout by the music of Mozart, performed by Neville Marriner and the Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, glorious two hundred years ago and glorious now.

As mentioned above, it’s the story of two men. Mozart teeters on the verge of being to self-centred and vulgar to be really interesting (and my vague memory of the Belfast performance in 1983 is that it fell off this particular cliff-edge). The film makes more of his relationship with his father than the play did, and perhaps that gives him a bit more depth. And anyway, the film isn’t about Mozart as much as it is about Salieri’s obsession with him, culminating in the scene where Salieri helps the dying Mozart write the Requiem.

And F. Murray Abraham richly deserved his Oscar; his Salieri is fundamentally a monster, but knows it and struggles with the guilt of it. Elizabeth Berridge has a couple of fantastic scenes with him too, of which this is the more SFW.

So in general, I’m putting it quite high up my ranking – not quite in the top ten, but just behind Gandhi and ahead of The Best Years of Our Lives.

I got hold of the current version of the play script as well – not the original one, or the film screenplay; Peter Shaffer explains at length in a foreword how he has repeatedly reworked the final scene between the two protagonists. The opening of the third scene, with the start of Salieri’s monologue, is:

[Music sounds softly in the background: a serene piece for strings by Salieri. SERVANTS enter. One takes away the dressing-gown and cap; another places on the table a wig-stand bearing a powdered wig; a third brings on a chair and places it at the left, upstage.
At the back, the blue curtains rise and part to show the 
EMPEROR JOSEPH II and his COURT bathed in golden light, against a golden background of mirrors and an immense golden fireplace. His Majesty is seated, holding a rolled paper, listening to the music. Also listening are COUNT VON STRACK; COUNT ORSINI-ROSENBERG; BARON VAN SWIETEN; and an anonymous PRIEST, dressed in a soutane. An old wigged COURTIER enters and takes his place at the keyboard: KAPELLMEISTER BONNO.]

SALIERI: [In a young man’s voice: vigorous and confident]. The place throughout is Vienna. The year – to begin with – 1781. The age still that of the Enlightenment: that clear time before the guillotine fell in France and cut all our lives in half. I am thirty-one. Already a prolific composer to the Habsburg court. I own a respectable house and a respectable wife- Teresa.

[Enter TERESA: a padded, placid lady who seats herself uprightly in the upstage chair.]

(Teresa doesn’t get much in the stage play, but doesn’t appear in the film at all.)

The biggest difference between film and play is the framing device. The film is told as a flashback from Salieri’s time in a mental hospital, immediately following his suicide attempt; the framing for the play is set immediately before. Also the stage Salieri talks much more to the audience, and is attended by the Venticelli, two characters who seem to dance in and out of the margins between Salieri’s imagination and the real world. And I think the idea that The Magic Flute critically annoyed the Masons is soft-pedalled in the film. It’s a gripping script, though I think challenging and expensive to perform. You can get it here.

Next film is 2010, that year’s Hugo winner; next Oscar winner is Out of Africa, of which I know nothing.

Winners of the Oscar for Best Picture

1920s: Wings (1927-28) | The Broadway Melody (1928-29)
1930s: All Quiet on the Western Front (1929-30) | Cimarron (1930-31) | Grand Hotel (1931-32) | Cavalcade (1932-33) | It Happened One Night (1934) | Mutiny on the Bounty (1935, and books) | The Great Ziegfeld (1936) | The Life of Emile Zola (1937) | You Can’t Take It with You (1938) | Gone with the Wind (1939, and book)
1940s: Rebecca (1940) | How Green Was My Valley (1941) | Mrs. Miniver (1942) | Casablanca (1943) | Going My Way (1944) | The Lost Weekend (1945) | The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) | Gentleman’s Agreement (1947) | Hamlet (1948) | All the King’s Men (1949)
1950s: All About Eve (1950) | An American in Paris (1951) | The Greatest Show on Earth (1952) | From Here to Eternity (1953) | On The Waterfront (1954, and book) | Marty (1955) | Around the World in 80 Days (1956) | The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) | Gigi (1958) | Ben-Hur (1959)
1960s: The Apartment (1960) | West Side Story (1961) | Lawrence of Arabia (1962) | Tom Jones (1963) | My Fair Lady (1964) | The Sound of Music (1965) | A Man for All Seasons (1966) | In the Heat of the Night (1967) | Oliver! (1968) | Midnight Cowboy (1969)
1970s: Patton (1970) | The French Connection (1971) | The Godfather (1972) | The Sting (1973) | The Godfather, Part II (1974) | One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) | Rocky (1976) | Annie Hall (1977) | The Deer Hunter (1978) | Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)
1980s: Ordinary People (1980) | Chariots of Fire (1981) | Gandhi (1982) | Terms of Endearment (1983) | Amadeus (1984) | Out of Africa (1985) | Platoon (1986) | The Last Emperor (1987) | Rain Man (1988) | Driving Miss Daisy (1989)
1990s: Dances With Wolves (1990) | The Silence of the Lambs (1991) | Unforgiven (1992) | Schindler’s List (1993) | Forrest Gump (1994) | Braveheart (1995) | The English Patient (1996) | Titanic (1997) | Shakespeare in Love (1998) | American Beauty (1999)
21st century: Gladiator (2000) | A Beautiful Mind (2001) | Chicago (2002) | The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) | Million Dollar Baby (2004, and book) | Crash (2005) | The Departed (2006) | No Country for Old Men (2007) | Slumdog Millionaire (2008) | The Hurt Locker (2009)
2010s: The King’s Speech (2010) | The Artist (2011) | Argo (2012) | 12 Years a Slave (2013) | Birdman (2014) | Spotlight (2015) | Moonlight (2016) | The Shape of Water (2017) | Green Book (2018) | Parasite (2019)
2020s: Nomadland (2020) | CODA (2021) | Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022) | Oppenheimer (2023)

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Whoniversaries 12 December: Sarah Sutton, Dalek Invasion of Earth #4

i) births and deaths

12 December 1916: death of Michael Leeston-Smith, director of the story we now call The Myth Makers (First Doctor, 1965).

12 December 1938: birth of Leslie Schofield, who played Leroy in The War Games (Second Doctor, 1969) and Calib in The Face of Evil (Fourth Doctor, 1977).

12 December 1961: birth of Sarah Sutton, who played Nyssa, companion to the Fourth and Fifth Doctors, in 1981-83.


ii) broadcast anniversaries

12 December 1964: broadcast of "The End of Tomorrow", fourth episode of the story we now know as The Dalek Invasion of Earth. Barbara and Jenny break out of London in the truck; Susan likes the idea of a fresh start; Ian is menaced by the Slyther.

iii) date specified in-universe

12 December 1901: John Lafayette is transported to ancient Babylon, in Kate Orman's novel Walking to Babylon (1998). I can't remember if the date is also specified in the audio version (also 1998), where he is played by Barnaby Edwards and the High Priestess by Elisabeth Sladen.

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April 2009 books

We spent the Easter weekend with my sister in Cluny. Little S, now 7 months, was sitting up and having fun.

Some of us tried roller-blading. (I didn't.)

I also had a day-trip to Geneva, and explored a new park near B.

I had a day-trip to Geneva, and a birthday which I don't seem to have recorded much about. The most mind-boggling news was Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness announcing that a TV version of Game of Thrones would be made in Northern Ireland – difficult to believe back then, and still seems extraordinary now.

I read 24 books.

Non-fiction: 5 (YTD 26)
From One To Zero: A Universal History of Numbers, by Georges Ifrah
King Solomon's Ring, by Konrad Z. Lorenz
EU Constitution: the Rubicon of Supranational, by Blerim Reka
The Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion, by Larry Nemecek
The Prisoner, by Robert Fairclough

Fiction (non-sf): 5 (YTD 16)
Music and Silence, by Rose Tremain
Memoirs of a Geisha, by Arthur Golden
Catch-22, by Joseph Heller
Tess of the D'Urbervilles, by Thomas Hardy
Lolita, by Vladimir Nabokov

Scripts: 4 (YTD 14)
Coriolanus, by William Shakespeare
Timon of Athens, by William Shakespeare (and Thomas Middleton)
Pericles, Prince of Tyre, by William Shakespeare (and George Wilkins)
Cymbeline, by William Shakespeare

SF (non-Who): 7 (YTD 27)
Kindred, by Octavia E. Butler
The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, by J.K. Rowling
Saturn's Children, by Charles Stross
The Big Time, by Fritz Leiber
The Road, by Cormac McCarthy
Anathem, by Neal Stephenson

Doctor Who: 2 (YTD 12)
The Romance of Crime, by Gareth Roberts
The Deviant Strain, by Justin Richards

Comics: 1 (YTD 4)
Fables Vol 2: Animal Farm, by Bill Willingham

Total page count ~7,700 (YTD ~30,200)
3/24 (YTD 17/99) by women (Tremain, Rowling, Butler)
2/24 (YTD 5/99) by PoC (Ifrah, Butler)

The two best books this month were re-reads, Catch-22 which you can get here and Lolita which you can get here. I thoroughly bounced off Memoirs of a Geisha, which you can get here.


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Whoniversaries 11 December

i) births and deaths

11 December 1945: birth of Zienia Merton, who played Ping-Cho in Marco Polo (1964) and the registrar in The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith (2009), a 45-year gap between appearances in Who and its spinoffs which is unlikely to be repeated.

11 December 1945: birth of Richard Stewart, one of the producers of the Australian K9 series.

ii) broadcast and webcast anniversaries

11 December 1966: broadcast of "Counter Plot", fifth episode of the story we now call The Daleks' Master Plan. Sara, the Doctor and Steven are transported to Mira and menaced by the invisible natives before being captured by the Daleks.

11 December 2003: webcast of fifth episode of Scream of the Shalka. The Shalka activate the other sleeper communities and the end of the world draws nigh.

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Thursday reading

Current
Gormenghast, by Mervyn Peake
Perdido Street Station, by China Miéville
Our War: Ireland and the Great War, ed. John Horne

Last books finished
Tono-Bungay, by H.G. Wells
The Children of Men, by P.D. James
Dreamsnake, by Vonda McIntyre

Next books
The Company Articles of Edward Teach/Angaelien Apocalypse, by Thoraiya Dyer
Above/Below, by Stephanie Campisi

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Whoniversaries 10 December

i) births and deaths

10 December 1921: birth of Anthony Coburn, writer of the very first Doctor Who story, An Unearthly Child (and also of the unbroadcast The Masters of Luxor).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

10 December 1966: broadcast of sixth episode of The Power of the Daleks. The Daleks start to take over but the Doctor manages to overload their circuits and destroy them.

10 December 1977: broadcast of third episode of The Sun Makers. Leela is captured and is to be executed by steaming (a particularly gruesome fate).

10 December 2006: broadcast of Random Shoes (Torchwood), the one with Eugene the dead guy and the alien eye.

iii) dates specified in canon

10 December 1981: Sarah Jane Smith fails to pick Brendan Richards up from school. (K9 and Company).

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“The Persistence of Vision”, by John Varley, and Dreamsnake, by Vonda McIntyre

"The Persistence of Vision", by John Varley won both the Hugo and Nebula for Best Novella, awarded in 1979 for work of 1978. (The 1979 Worldcon was the first one in Brighton.) The second paragraph of the third section is:

It was substantial enough that I felt it would be unwise to crawl over it. I had crossed many wire fences in my travels and not got in trouble for it yet, though I had some talks with some ranchers. Mostly they told me to keep moving but didn’t seem upset about it. This was different. I set out to walk around it. From the lay of the land, I couldn’t tell how far it might reach, but I had time.

It's a story set in the near future (the 1990s) in a disintegrating United States; our narrator, trekking across the country, encounters a community in New Mexico where all the adults are blind and deaf, and therefore have access to spiritual enlightenment and ultimately (it appears) physical ascension to another plane of existence. The depiction of a human society made up of people very nearly like most of humanity, but establishing a sort of utopia, is beautifully done, and obviously wowed the voters for both awards. It's an appeal for a better kind of society, and for not looking down on disability.

I have to say that while I agree about not looking down on disability, to portray it as a supernaturally liberating experience may not be terribly close to the lived experience of people with disabilities. I can see where Varley is coming from as a literary device, but it doesn't really speak to me.

His narrator is also rather frankly relaxed about sex with underaged teenagers.

A story that has shown its age.

The original F&SF issue with "The Persistence of Vision" is available here.

Dreamsnake, by Vonda N. Mcintyre, won both the Hugo and Nebula for Best Novel, awarded in 1979 for work of 1978. When I first wrote it up in 2001, I said (dead links removed, some commentary added):

The first chapter, originally published as "Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand" won a 1973 Nebula in its own right for Best Novelette. That must make it the only text to have won either Hugo or Nebula twice, once on first publication and again on inclusion in the longer work.

Dreamsnake is the story of a healer called Snake, who heals people with the serum of genetically modified snakes. In the first chapter she loses her dreamsnake, a rare and almost irreplaceable creature. The rest of the book has her wandering through desert settings and towns to try and find a replacement, adopting Melissa, a girl who has suffered mutilation and sexual abuse, being ejected by the hi-tech city called Centre, and finally discovering the secret of the dreamsnakes while evading enslavement by a bad guy. She is rescued at the end by a bloke called Arevin who she met in the first chapter.

The setting of Dreamsnake is quite remarkable. Most readers pick up on the fact that it is a depopulated Earth many years after an almost forgotten nuclear holocaust. However, much more important is that the big issues of human sexuality have been almost completely sorted out. Both men and women can control their own fertility by "biocontrol"; polyamorous relationships are accepted as everyday; women are leaders of desert tribes (though men seem to be in control in the few towns). The gender of one character is left completely unspecified, leading some readers to conclude that he/she must be a hermaphrodite. I don't think this is the case, since such individuals are not mentioned elsewhere in the  novel (compare the direct way in which Ursula Le Guin and Lois McMaster Bujold present this issue); instead I agree with Ursula Le Guin that the author is challenging the reader to ask why we need to know Merideth's gender in the first place. [On reflection, these options are not mutually exclusive. ]

This could have been a utopian setting, in which the author preached the superiority of a world where women are not oppressed. However it is not. Snake has to deal with superstition, radiation poisoning, crime, child abuse, drug abuse, abuse of power and above all disease as she travels across the blasted heaths of her world. The bad guys do tend to be men but so are some of the good guys. The most utopian aspect is the low-tech environment, compensated for by the advanced biological techniques of the healers who are in harmony with nature.

This novel has one great character and many great ideas. My biggest disappointment is that the plot is rather disjointed; you can see the seams. The expedition of Snake and Melissa to the walled city of Centre which appears to be the main thrust of the middle of the book turns out to be a fools' errand. The actual venue for the book's climax has not been signalled at all in advance, so it feels rather as if the author was making it up as she went along. The only bit of the end that has been prefigured is the reappearance of Arevin, who literally rides in to  save the day in the last few pages, fatally undermining the feminist themes of the book as he does so. Compare Guy Gavriel Kay's The Lions of Al-Rassan, also about a female healer in a less primitive, more violent environment, which is a much more tightly plotted novel. (Actually I think the two make a good paired reading.)

Susan Stepney sent me an email chiding me for my interpretation of Arevin's role at the end of the book. Her own reading is more generous: "Arevin doesn't save the day. He rides in after Snake has defeated North, and after she has rescued herself and Melissa. All he does are "nurturing" things. He prepares some "medicine" for Melissa —
but under Snake's instruction. He cleans Snake's wound — but not well enough, and she knows she'll have to do it again herself. He's merely there to show Snake's reconnection with the world, her gradual allowing of others to do things for her. Well, that was my reading, anyway :-)"

The world has moved on since the 1970s. It's difficult to conceive of any serious sf book now set on a devastated post-nuclear holocaust Earth; the end of the Cold War sank that particular nightmare, though 11 September 2001 gave us new ones. [Not to mention climate change, and 2020's own particular circumstances.] Of course, this is a utopia (if a cautious one) so we should not make too many demands in terms of realism.

Not a lot to add to the above, except to say that it was an interesting paired reading with "The Persistence of Vision" – both somewhat post-apocalyptic novels, with new visions for human society, which are presented as egalitarian but nonetheless have their limitations. You can get Dreamsnake here (it’s back in print again).

The Best Novel final ballot for both Hugo and Nebula also included Blind Voices, by Tom Reamy and The Faded Sun: Kesrith, by C. J. Cherryh. Hugo voters also went for The White Dragon, by Anne McCaffrey and Up the Walls of the World, by James Tiptree, Jr., but the latter was withdrawn. I’ve read all of them and would probably have voted for Dreamsnake. I have read neither of the other two Nebula finalists, Kalki, by Gore Vidal and Strangers, by Gardner Dozois.

The only other Nebula finalist for Best Novella was “Seven American Nights”, by Gene Wolfe. It was on the Hugo ballot too, as were “Enemies of the System”, by Brian W. Aldiss, “Fireship”, by Joan D. Vinge and “The Watched”, by Christopher Priest. I have an affection for the Aldiss story.

The Hugo for Best Novelette went to “Hunter’s Moon”, by Poul Anderson, and the Nebula to “A Glow of Candles, a Unicorn’s Eye”, by Charle L. Grant. “Devil You Don’t Know”, by Dean Ing and “Mikal’s Songbird”, by Orson Scott Card were on both lists (neither winner was on the other ballot).

The Hugo for Best Short Story went to “Cassandra”, by C. J. Cherryh, and the Nebula to “Stone”, by Edward Bryant. Both winners were on both shortlists, but there were no other crossovers. The Nebula ballots were very short that year, only two for Best Novella, and three for Best Novelette and Best Short Story.

The Hugo for Best Dramatic Presentation went to Superman.

Next up in this sequence are the following year’s three joint winners: “Sandkings” by George R. R. Martin, “Enemy Mine” by Barry B. Longyear and The Fountains of Paradise by Arthur C. Clarke.

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Whoniversaries 9 December: Waris Hussein, Ice Warriors #5, Androids of Tara #3

i) births and deaths

9 December 1938: birth of Waris Hussein, director of An Unearthly Child (1963) and Marco Polo (1964).

9 December 1944: birth of Eric Saward, script editor 1982-86, author of three Fifth Doctor stories and one Sixth Doctor story; a somewhat controversial figure.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

9 December 1967: broadcast of fifth episode of The Ice Warriors. Clent prepares to use the ioniser; the Ice Warriors prepare to use their sonic cannon.

9 December 1978: broadcast of third episode of The Androids of Tara. The Doctor tries to rescue Romana, but it's her android double; the real Romana escapes and is recaptured.

9 December 2018: broadcast of The Battle of Ranskoor Av Kolos, last episode of Series 11. Team TARDIS discovers nine different distress calls, all coming from the same location on an unknown planet in the far future.

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After Me Comes the Flood, by Sarah Perry

Second paragraph of third chapter (Thursday Part I):

A little while later, with nausea stirring stomach, he stood ., half-dressed at the window. It was another day without any sign of rain, another morning without birdsong; in the clear early light the garden below looked diminished and ordinary, the folly at the end a prop for an abandoned play and the glasshouse stained and shabby. The windows were thickly glazed in uneven panes that threw back a mottled reflection nothing like the neat-edged image in his own mirror every morning. The face he saw now was too pale and lean, the hair too long, and under heavy lids glossed with sweat the pale eyes glittered. He raised his right hand, uncertain whether the other man would raise his left in the proper greeting. 'What came over you?' he said. 'What in God's name have you done?' The watching man had no reply, and John returned to the edge of the bed, cradling his aching head in his hands: what had he done, after all? Nothing brave or impassioned, not the brief lapse into madness to be expected of a man arriving suddenly in middle age, but an abuse of kindness and trust: he'd been welcomed and cared for — he touched the place where the woman had put a kind hand — and in return he'd deceived them all. Recalling the words of the preacher the night before (I think perhaps we should talk) he felt the unease of a child awaiting the headmaster's summons.

A guy goes to a house and stuff happens. I had no idea what was going on in this book, or why I should care. You can get it here.

This was my top unread book acquired in 2015, one of the Clarke Award submissions that was not actually science fiction. Next on that list is A Buzz in the Meadow by Dave Goulson.

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Whoniversaries 8 December: Jennie Linden, Nightmare of Eden #3, Enemy of the Bane #2, Unicorn & Wasp

i) births and deaths

8 December 1939: birth of Jennie Linden, who played Barbara in Doctor Who and the Daleks (1965)

ii) broadcast anniversaries

8 December 1979: broadcast of third episode of Nightmare of Eden. The Doctor realises that vraxoin comes from roast Mandrel.

8 December 2009: broadcast of second episode of Enemy of the Bane, concluding the second series of Sarah Jane Adventures. Sarah, Luke and the Brigadier force Mrs Wormwood and the Sontaran into a portal concealed in a stone circle. Last ever appearance (sob!) of the Brigadier.

iii) date specified in-universe

8 December 1926: Setting of The Unicorn and the Wasp (2008), where the Tenth Doctor and Donna meet Agatha Christie.

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The 2020 overnights meme: where have I been this year?

Usually around this time of year I post the list of places where I have spent a night away from home, and since I think it’s unlikely I’ll be going anywhere this month, here we are. (I am thinking of going to the Netherlands for a haircut, but that will be a half day at most.) As usual, places where I spent more than one non-consecutive night are marked with an asterisk.

*London, England
Glasgow, Scotland
*Rome, Italy
Los Angeles, USA
Cambridge, England
(All of the above before the end of February! Then just two trips in July and September.)
Lys, France
Geneva, Switzerland

Roeselaere, Belgium

That’s 8; the previous low was 11 in 2011. Those 8 are in 6 countries; I set foot in another five countries without overnighting, changing planes in the Netherlands, Germany and Ireland, dropping in on relatives in Luxembourg en route to France, and sneaking a quick look at the Vatican while in Rome, for a total of 11, none of them new.

I think this is the first year of my life that I have not spent a night in either part of Ireland, and I’m 53; though at least I changed planes in Dublin on my way to and from LA. I think it’s also the first year since 1995 that I have not been to the Balkans. I have been to the USA every year but one (2014) since 2002 – including this year, thanks to Gallifrey One.

Let’s hope for a better 2021.

Previous years: 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019.

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Whoniversaries 7 December: Padbury, Craze, Child #3, Invasion #6, Dragonfire #3, Nemesis #3

i) births and deaths

7 December 1947: birth of Wendy Padbury, who played Second Doctor companion Zoe Heriot in 1968-69.

7 December 1998: death of Michael Craze, who played Ben Jackson, companion of the First and Second Doctors, in 1966-67.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

7 December 1963: broadcast of "The Forest of Fear", third episode of the story we now call An Unearthly Child. The time travellers escape from the Cave of Skulls, but are recaptured just as they reach the Tardis.

7 December 1968: broadcast of sixth episode of The Invasion. UNIT rescues Watkins: the Cybermen and Vaughn broadcast their radio signal to Take Ovar Thee Wurld.

7 December 1987: broadcast of third episode of Dragonfire, concluding Season 24. Mel Bush's last appearance. Kane tries to use the dragonfire crystal but is destroyed by sunlight.

7 December 1988: broadcast of third episode of Silver Nemesis. The Nemesis statue absorbs Lady Peinforte, and the Doctor uses it to destroy the Cyber fleet.

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March 2009 books

Some notable blog posts from this month: I failed to note that on the last day of my US trip in February, I went to find my grandmother's childhood home in New JerseyI visited Berlin and followed the Wall. and also had a lovely trip along the Karpass Peninsula in Cyprus. In Brussels, F and I explored the Coudenberg

I also committed to increase my reading of books by PoC, with success and consequent enlightenment.

Non-fiction: 5 (YTD 21)
Search for a New Somali Identity, by Hussein Ali Dualeh
The Power of Speech, by Graham Watson
The Cyprus Conflict: Looking Ahead, edited by Ahmet Sözen
Elizabeth's London, by Liza Picard
The New Penguin Russian Course, by Nicholas J. Brown

Fiction (non-sf): 5 (YTD 11)
Angels and Demons, by Dan Brown – I am particularly proud of this review
Resurrection, by Leo Tolstoy
The New Hennessy Book of Irish Fiction
The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Dead Man's Brother, by Roger Zelazny

Scripts: 3 (YTD 10)
King Lear, by William Shakespeare
Macbeth, by William Shakespeare
Antony and Cleopatra, by William Shakespeare

SF (non-Who, but including Homer): 8 (YTD 20)
Jennie, by Paul Gallico
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, by J.K. Rowling
Stranger in a Strange Land, by Robert A. Heinlein
The War of the Worlds, by H.G. Wells
The Iliad, by Homer
Oryx and Crake, by Margaret Atwood
Little Brother, by Cory Doctorow
A Million Open Doors, by John Barnes

Doctor Who: 2 (YTD 10)
The Shadow of Weng-Chiang, by David A. McIntee
The Resurrection Casket, by Justin Richards

Comics: 1 (YTD 3)
Persepolis 2: the Story of a Return, by Marjane Satrapi

Total page count ~7,600 (YTD ~22,500)
4/24 (YTD 14/75) by women (Picard, Rowling, Atwood, Satrapi)
2/24 (YTD 3/75) by PoC (Dualeh, Satrapi)

The two best books this month were both re-reads, Macbeth, which you can get here, and The War of the Worlds, which you can get here. The worst by far was Angels and Demonsmy review, but you can get it here.


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Whoniversaries 6 December: The End of Old Who

i) births and deaths

6 December 1932: birth of Declan Mulholland, one of the few Northern Irish actors to appear in Who, as Clark in The Sea Devils (1972) and Till in The Androids of Tara (1978).

6 December 1975: birth of Noel Clarke, who played Mickey Smith in New Who (2005-2010) and also wrote the 2006 Torchwood episode Combat., the only member of the regular cast to have written for the Whoniverse on TV (though others, including Tom Baker and Colin Baker, have written books, comics and audios).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

6 December 1975: broadcast of third episode of The Android Invasion. The Doctor learns the Kraal's plan; Sarah saves him from brainwiping; and they both stow away on the rocket to Earth.

6 December 1980: broadcast of third episode of State of Decay. Tarak rescues the Doctor and Romana, but is killed by the vampires.

6 December 1986: broadcast of second episode of The Ultimate Foe (ToaTL #14), ending Season 23. Last appearance of Colin Baker as the Doctor. The Doctor escapes the Matrix and thwarts the Master and the Valeyard. But I'd stay off the exercise bike if I were you, Doctor.

6 December 1989: broadcast of third episode of Survival, the final episode of Season 26 and indeed the very last episode of Old Who, so also the final appearances of Sylvester McCoy as the Doctor, Sophie Aldred as Ace and Anthony Ainley as the Master. (See 20 August for an interesting coincidence linking those three.) The Master tries to take over the youth club in Perivale, but the Doctor lures him back to the cheetah planet and leaves him there, walking off into the sunset with Ace.

Strange but true: the last Sixth Doctor episode was broadcast exactly three years before the last Seventh Doctor episode.

6 December 2011: release of the prequel to The Doctor, The Widow and the Wardrobe.

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Terms of Endearment

Terms of Endearment won the Oscar for Best Picture of 1983, and also four others, Best Director (John L Brooke), Best Actress (Shirley MacLaine beating Debra Winger), Best Supporting Actor (Jack Nicholson beating John Lithgow), and Best Screenplay from another medium (John L. Brooks again). That year’s Hugo winner, Return of the Jedi, got a special award for visual effects (deservedly).

The other Best Picture nominees were The Big Chill, which I have seen, and The Dresser, The Right Stuff and Tender Mercies, which I haven’t. It’s not super popular among IMDB users, who currently rank it 17th for the year on both systems. Other films I’ve seen from that year (in rough IMDB order): Return of the Jedi, Trading Places, Octopussy, The Meaning of Life, Blue Thunder, The Big Chill, Local Hero, Educating Rita, To Be or Not to Be and Heat and Dust. I have a fond nostalgia for almost all of these (except Heat and Dust, which I remember as rather dull), but Terms of Endearment is better than most of them. Here’s a trailer.

Sometimes when I look for links with previous Oscar winners I’m scrabbling a long way down the cast list. Not this time; Shirley MacLaine, here the central character Aurora Greenway, was also the lead actress in both The Apartment in 1960 and Around the World in Eighty Days (1956), an impressive 27 years ago. We’ve had longer intervals (33 years for Howland Chamberlain) but not at this level.

And on the other side of Aurora’s garden fence, we have Jack Nicholson and Danny De Vito, both of whom were also in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest eight years ago.

I have rather bounced off the last few Oscar winners with a contemporary domestic setting (Ordinary People, Kramer vs. Kramer, to an extent The Deer Hunter and also Annie Hall). But I have to admit I really enjoyed Terms of Endearment. The first 94 minutes are funny, well-observed and nicely written dynamics of a combustible mother-daughter relationship, and their shifting love lives; and then we get the Plot Twist, and the remaining 38 minutes are much less funny but equally well observed and nicely written. Somewhat to my surprise, I’m putting it in my top ten, behind One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest but ahead of Midnight Cowboy.

To note the one negative, and I’m afraid it’s the usual plus a little extra: no non-white faces are visible anywhere in the film (largely set in Houston, which waas and is 25% African-American), and also the book’s exploration of the less well off parts of town through Rosie, Aurora’s maid, has been completely removed. So we are left with a story about white middle class people.

But the trade-off is that we get a much more female perspective than is usual. The last Oscar-winner where the lead actress was also the central character was The Sound of Music, nineteen years ago in 1964; the only other Oscar winner where the central dynamic is between two women, with men largely as decoration, rather than the other way round, is All About Eve, 33 years ago in 1950. And it’s superbly carried off by Shirley MacLaine and Debra Winger as Aurora and Helen. I don’t think I had seen Winger in anything else (I see that she had a blink-and-you-miss-it appearance in E.T., but I blinked and missed it).

It’s a good story. At first I thought that Aurora’s self-obsession would get old rather fast, when she explodes with rage about becoming a grandmother:

But then the development of both mother and daughter is delicately done, with each having their love affairs, Aurora with Jack Nicholson’s randy astronaut next door and Helen with the bank manager in Iowa played by John Lithgow (with a real feeling of sense of place for both Houston and Iowa/Nebraska). These four performances all got Oscar nominations, but in only two categories, won as noted above by MacLaine and Nicholson.

And the most memorable scene of many is Winger’s as Helen, saying her goodbyes.

The music is well-judged and not intrusive (and, now that it’s a few days since I watched the film, it’s a bit earwormy).

But if you want a break from the original music, here is a lovely lovely fanvid of the film, with key scenes cut to Carole King’s “I Feel the Earth Move”.

Anyway, an unexpected pleasure.

One glorious bit of trivia: the cast and crew bought writer and director John L. Brooks a copy of Matt Groening’s Life Is Hell as a gift. Brooks loved it, and contacted Groening to explore how they might work together. And so The Simpsons came to be.

The film is based on a novel by Larry McMurtry, best known for Lonesome Dove, though I have not read any of his other work. The second paragraph of the third section of the book is:

Then she jumped. Her mother had begun immediately to honk at the Volkswagen, and the Cadillac had a very loud horn. Hearing it unexpectedly gave everyone, Emma included, apprehensions of emergency. Against such honking the little green car had no chance—the Cadillac swept it aside as easily as an ocean liner might sweep aside a canoe. The driver, assuming that catastrophe had overtaken someone, turned into a driveway and didn’t even honk back.

The book has some major differences with the film – in fact, I can’t think of another case where a novel has been adapted for an Oscar-winning movie with such big differences, apart perhaps from Mrs Miniver (which is not really a novel). The first 360 pages of 410 are all about Aurora, with the plot of the film which covers over a decade, originally scheduled just over the hot summer on 1963. There is no astronaut; instead an older retired general, and the Danny De Vito character gets a lot more page space than he did on screen. Only on page 361 do we switch to Helen and her life in Iowa, and the Plot Twist comes on page 391 with less than 5% of the book to go (there is no New York scene, which I think an improvement – the one bit of the film that did not really work for me). I hugely enjoyed it. Aurora’s character is monstrous, fascinating and funny on the page; I think it was wise to balance her character much more with Helen’s for the screen adaptation, but it works well on the page. You can get it here. (It is not yet available electronically.)

Next up in the Oscar-winners sequence is Amadeus.

Winners of the Oscar for Best Picture

1920s: Wings (1927-28) | The Broadway Melody (1928-29)
1930s: All Quiet on the Western Front (1929-30) | Cimarron (1930-31) | Grand Hotel (1931-32) | Cavalcade (1932-33) | It Happened One Night (1934) | Mutiny on the Bounty (1935, and books) | The Great Ziegfeld (1936) | The Life of Emile Zola (1937) | You Can’t Take It with You (1938) | Gone with the Wind (1939, and book)
1940s: Rebecca (1940) | How Green Was My Valley (1941) | Mrs. Miniver (1942) | Casablanca (1943) | Going My Way (1944) | The Lost Weekend (1945) | The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) | Gentleman’s Agreement (1947) | Hamlet (1948) | All the King’s Men (1949)
1950s: All About Eve (1950) | An American in Paris (1951) | The Greatest Show on Earth (1952) | From Here to Eternity (1953) | On The Waterfront (1954, and book) | Marty (1955) | Around the World in 80 Days (1956) | The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) | Gigi (1958) | Ben-Hur (1959)
1960s: The Apartment (1960) | West Side Story (1961) | Lawrence of Arabia (1962) | Tom Jones (1963) | My Fair Lady (1964) | The Sound of Music (1965) | A Man for All Seasons (1966) | In the Heat of the Night (1967) | Oliver! (1968) | Midnight Cowboy (1969)
1970s: Patton (1970) | The French Connection (1971) | The Godfather (1972) | The Sting (1973) | The Godfather, Part II (1974) | One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) | Rocky (1976) | Annie Hall (1977) | The Deer Hunter (1978) | Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)
1980s: Ordinary People (1980) | Chariots of Fire (1981) | Gandhi (1982) | Terms of Endearment (1983) | Amadeus (1984) | Out of Africa (1985) | Platoon (1986) | The Last Emperor (1987) | Rain Man (1988) | Driving Miss Daisy (1989)
1990s: Dances With Wolves (1990) | The Silence of the Lambs (1991) | Unforgiven (1992) | Schindler’s List (1993) | Forrest Gump (1994) | Braveheart (1995) | The English Patient (1996) | Titanic (1997) | Shakespeare in Love (1998) | American Beauty (1999)
21st century: Gladiator (2000) | A Beautiful Mind (2001) | Chicago (2002) | The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) | Million Dollar Baby (2004, and book) | Crash (2005) | The Departed (2006) | No Country for Old Men (2007) | Slumdog Millionaire (2008) | The Hurt Locker (2009)
2010s: The King’s Speech (2010) | The Artist (2011) | Argo (2012) | 12 Years a Slave (2013) | Birdman (2014) | Spotlight (2015) | Moonlight (2016) | The Shape of Water (2017) | Green Book (2018) | Parasite (2019)
2020s: Nomadland (2020) | CODA (2021) | Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022) | Oppenheimer (2023)

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Whoniversaries 5 December: Dalek Invasion of Earth #3, Kathy Nightingale’s journey

i) births and deaths

5 December 2001: death of Michael Leeston-Smith, director of the story we now call The Myth Makers (First Doctor, 1965).

5 December 2013: death of Barry Jackson who played Ascaris in the story we now call The Romans (First Doctor, 1964), Jeff Garvey in Mission to the Unknown (First Doctor era, 1965) and Drax in The Armageddon Factor (Fourth Doctor, 1979).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

5 December 1964: broadcast of "Day of Reckoning", third episode of the story we now call The Dalek Invasion of Earth. This is the fantastic episode with Jenny, Barbara and Dortmun fleeing across London to Francis Chagrin's amazing music, followed by Dortmun's last stand against the Daleks. This is such a brilliant sequence.

5 December 2015: broadcast of Hell Bent, ending Series 8 of New Who. Returning to Gallifrey, the Doctor must face his own people, the Time Lords, but how far will he go in his quest for vengeance? Does he have another confession? And how fiercely does his rage towards them for causing Clara's death burn?

iii) date specified in canon

5 December 1920: Kathy Nightingale is transported to Hull from 2007 by the Weeping Angels. (As seen in Blink, Tenth Doctor, 2007.)

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The Inside of the Cup, by the other Winston Churchill

Second paragraph of third chapter:

There had been, indeed, a critical, anxious moment, emphasized by the agitation of bright feminine plumes and the shifting of masculine backs into the corners of the pews. None got so far as to define to themselves why there should be an apparent incompatibility between ruggedness and orthodoxy—but there were some who hoped and more who feared. Luther had been orthodox once, Savonarola also: in appearance neither was more canonical than the new rector.

Winston Churchill was a well-known American writer who happened to have the same name as a well-known British politician, three years younger than him. Back in 1913 and 1914, this novel was the best-selling book of the year in the USA, and I acquired it for the centenary in 2014, but have only now got around to reading it. (I should add that the British politician did in fact himself write one novel, and won the Nobel Prize for Literature.)

The Inside of the Cup is the story of a clergyman who is hired to service the upper classes of a city that is probably St Louis, and comes to the realisation that to really implement Christianity he is going to have to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable. The title comes from Jesus' admonition to the Pharisees in Matthew's Gospel:

"Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You clean the outside of the cup and dish, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence. Οὐαὶ ὑμῖν, γραμματεῖς καὶ Φαρισαῖοι ὑποκριταί, ὅτι καθαρίζετε τὸ ἔξωθεν τοῦ ποτηρίου καὶ τῆς παροψίδος, ἔσωθεν δὲ γέμουσιν ἐξ ἁρπαγῆς καὶ ἀκρασίας.

You know what way it's going to go as soon as the richest parishioner's estranged and nobly minded daughter hoves into view. The scandalous bit of the book, which frankly is rather boring now, is that the protagonist decides that believing in the virgin birth etc is not as important as Doing Good. It's awfully over-written and seems to go on for a very long time. Still, I think I'd like to visit St Louis some time on the basis of this. You can get it here.

This was both the non-genre work that had been on my shelves unread for the longest, and also the top unread book that I acquired in 2014. Next on those piles respectively are The Prisoner of Brenda, by Colin Bateman, and Palimpsest, by Charles Stross.

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