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General Gay & Lesbian Biographies, Filmmakers - General & Miscellaneous - Biography, U.S. Poets - Literary Biography
Coming Unbuttoned by James Broughton β€” book cover

Coming Unbuttoned

by James Broughton
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Overview

This witty and impudent confession is the work a pioneer independent filmmaker whose adventures among the famous and the infamous extend from New York circles of the '30s to the avant-garde antics of San Francisco in the '60s and '70s. Born a gleeful poet in a solemn family, James Broughton survived military school, Stanford University, the merchant marine and journalism before his passion for cinema and his dedication to poetry crystallized in 1948 with his first book and the first of his many films. In the '50s he worked in London and Paris; and for many years he occupied a special place in the San Francisco Bay Area as a performer, playwright and professor. In the course of his lively odyssey Broughton shares intimate memories of Anais Nin, Alan Watts, Robert Duncan, Maya Deren, Jean Cocteau, W.H. Auden, Pauline Kael, Kenneth Rexroth, Robinson Jeffers, and the poets of the Beat Generation. Broughton has turned eighty but his writing is as sassy and agile as a young Pan's.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The first four chapters of this autobiography are unassuming and sensitive as Broughton ( The Androgyne Journal ) writes of his early life. Readers learn that the octogenarian poet and experimental filmmaker enjoyed dressing up in his mother's clothes, adored the father who died when Broughton was in kindergarten, was constantly at odds with his social-climbing mother and detested the stepfather who shipped him off to military school. It's easy to sympathize as he talks of school friendships, his college years at Stanford (``I had requested the Sorbonne or Oxford or Columbia. My mother only wanted me to learn how to get rich and meet the right people.'') and his early adulthood (sailing on a passenger cargo ship, then settling in New York City). But the larger portion of this volume is devoted to the postwar years, which he spent in San Francisco and Europe. Having met many notable people, Broughton forsakes introspection for literary gossip and name-dropping: Kenneth Rexroth, Pauline Kael, Dylan Thomas, Anais Nin. The birth of a daughter is dispensed with in two sentences. Broughton's insistence on making himself the center of attention increasingly intrudes. Photos not seen by PW. (Oct.)

Library Journal

Not widely known to general audiences, Broughton is a poet and a pioneer in the world of avant-garde film. Now in his eighties, Broughton looks back on his life in this slim volume and finds surprisingly little of interest to say. Beyond some off-handed remarks on the making of his films, the reader is left with Broughton's portrait of an unhappy life at home that reads like an act of vengeance, some name-dropping of famous types he's come across, and an account of seemingly every sexual episode of his youth. Though sometimes gracefully written, the book offers little in the way of worthwhile content, and it's unlikely that many readers will share Broughton's self-absorption. Not recommended.-- David C. Tucker, DeKalb Cty. P.L., Decatur, Ga.

Book Details

Published
January 21, 1994
Publisher
San Francisco : City Lights, c1993.
Pages
160
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780872862807

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