The Crystal Bucket

First edition (publ. Jonathan Cape)

The Crystal Bucket is the second selection of Clive James's television criticism for The Observer, for which the British Press Awards named him 'Critic of the Year' in 1981: "His contribution to the art and enjoyment of TV criticism over the past ten years has been immense. His work is deeply perceptive, often outrageously funny and always compulsively readable."

First published the same year, the volume covers 1976–79; its title is taken from Walter Raleigh's The Passionate Man's Pilgrimage. It is dedicated to the poet Peter Porter. The compilation ends not with a review but with a tribute to James's friend Joyce Grenfell who had died at the end of November 1979: "Joyce Grenfell's death gave pause for thought to all who knew her. Her faith was profound. So was her humour, which was so devoid of malice that some people called her sentimental. She wasn't. She was just greatly good."

Writing in The Listener, Gavin Ewart expressed the view that James, "didn't get where he is today just by being funny. He is humane, liberal and compassionate.... What he writes is always pertinent and always witty. We owe him a deep debt of gratitude."

Programmes reviewed

"... a gallery of Gustav Klimt lovelies filled the screen – high-born ladies whose lustrous eyes and moist mouths suggested that the life which had given them everything had been empty until they met Klimt"
"Elkie Brooks... an ex-scruff turned glamour queen"
"... Melly knows a lot about the British branch of Surrealism, since he used to hob-nob with its founder members... richly aromatic stuff"
"... Kissinger burns down Cambodia, delivers the people of Chile into the hands of torturers, and then wonders why young people in the democratic countries become disaffected"
"... It seems that the arts in China are now being allowed to recover from the damage done to them by the vengeful puritanism of the MK II Mrs Mao.... She was obviously an even bigger bitch than we thought. Like all cultural commissars, she was an artist manqué"

External links

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