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Billy Collins: On the Road with
the Poet Laureate
Billy Collins
is perhaps the first American poet since Robert Frost to enjoy both
critical and popular acclaim. This
59-minute documentary captures the qualities that make Collins such
a refreshing literary figure. With a film crew trailing him to poetry
readings, to college classrooms, to his office and his home, and
even into his car, he manages to remain amazingly witty, gracious,
and open in discussing his life, his work, and the nature of poetry
itself. Interviews with distinguished poets and critics Edward Hirsch
and Richard Howard, with Librarian of Congress Dr. James Billington,
and with Random House editor Daniel Menaker lend new perspectives
on Collins's achievement.
This is also
the first documentary to explore the cultural role of the U.S. Poet
Laureate, a position that Collins held between 2001-03. He is joined
by former poets laureate Robert Hass, Rita Dove, and Robert Pinsky
at the 2002 Dodge Poetry Festival for an amusing series of reflections
on the history of this unique position, which is both a literary
honor and a quasi-government position, as persuasive or as irrelevant
as the writer chooses to make it.
A writer of
warmth and surreal humor whose voice is nonetheless inflected with
the dark tones of what Frost called "moral panic," Collins
can be seen and heard here reading some of his most famous poems,
including "Introduction to Poetry," "Forgetfulness,"
"Lanyard," and "Nightclub." Students of poetry,
and Collins's many fans, will find much here that entertains and
illuminates.
Winner, Best Documentary - 2004 Westchester Film Festival
P
R O D U C E R: Edgar
B. Howard
D I R E C T O R:
Richard B. Woodward
E D I T O R: Joelle
Schon
C A M E R A: David W. Leitner & Tom Piper
M U S I C: Hayes Greenfield
C O L O R , 5 9 M I N U T E S, 2 0 0 3
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