Alistair Cooke (Tape): The Biography
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Average customer review:Product Description
Alistair Cooke, for 52 years the unmistakable voice of BBC's Letter from America, sadly died at the age of 93 in March 2004 after over 2,500 radio letters. After years of dissuading potential biographers he finally succumbed to the persistent approaches of Nick Clarke. The biography has been written with his complete co-operation. Correspondence, private papers have been made available and colleagues and friends have been encouraged to talk. This is, however, no hagiography. Cooke told him when he started that he wished to learn something about himself. In responding to Clarkes questioning he has recalled many aspects of his life that he says he had quite forgotten and some things which he hadnt wished to remember. The long road to trans-Atlantic celebrity began at Cambridge, where Cooke, the bright boy from a modest home in Blackpool, changed his name from Alfred to Alistair, gained a scholarship to Jesus College, Cambridge and was cast as the Most Glittering Student of his generation. He won a Commonwealth Fund Fellowship, which allowed him to travel across America (reaching Hollywood and meeting Chaplin). He returned to England and began his 64-year association with the BBC by becoming its first film critic in 1934. Back in the US, he became a Commentator on American Affairs for the BBC, and a correspondent for The Times, then the Daily Herald and finally, in 1945 the Manchester Guardian for whom he reported until 1972. In America he first became a household name as presenter of NBCs Masterpiece Theatre (which he did for 19 years). His BBC TV series America, was also a huge success in the US in 1972-73.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1077194 in Books
- Published on: 2000-10-05
- Format: Audiobook
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 4
- Binding: Audio Cassette
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
For 53 years the debonair, mid-Atlantic tones of Alistair Cooke have graced the airwaves, bringing us a weekly "Letter from America" that told us more about happenings Stateside than any number of solemn, academic analyses ever did. But the man himself always remained something of an enigma. Now Nick Clarke, presenter of Radio 4's "World At One", has delved into Cooke's past and discovered a rich and often surprising life story. For Cooke was very much a self-made man and beneath that mild demeanour was a lot of burning ambition. He was born into humble circumstances in Salford in 1908, under the name of Alfred Cooke. Within 25 years he had reinvented himself as Alistair, with no trace of a Northern accent, but instead a Cambridge graduate, sometime resident of Hollywood, friend of Charlie Chaplin and soon to marry into one of America's most famous families.
Biographies of secondary characters such as Cooke can read like an awful lot of effort for not very much result. But here is a fine exception. Cooke's life really does illuminate the course of the century and the endless misunderstandings, divisions and strange, touching harmonies that underlie the Special Relationship between Britain and America. --Christopher Hart
THE SCOTSMAN
'The six-hour treat gives you the man behind the voice.'
Review
'The six-hour treat gives you the man behind the voice.' (THE SCOTSMAN )
'Drawing on exclusive interview, Clarke extracted fascinating revelations about Cooke's humble origins in Salford.' (NORTHERN ECHO )
Customer Reviews
Cooke Story Yet To Be Told
When Alistair Cooke first heard that Nick Clarke wanted to write his biography, he responded in typical fashion, by suggesting he choose somebody more interesting, or dead, or both.
This simple sentence neatly reveals two of Alistair Cooke's many sides: the modest and self-effacing journalist who has hardly ever written anything directly about himself and his family; and the wise old sage who can be trusted to speak the truth so that it doesn't hurt.
The fact is, of course, that biographies of living people are never complete. That much is obvious. But just as incomplete are the testimonies of friends and family. For although Nick Clarke speaks freely to them, they say very little of any consequence to him in reply.
For instance, Cooke's first wife and his stepson are never directly quoted, and his wife, understandably, says nothing about the years when they almost drifted apart. Only John, his son, is a willing accomplice. Moreover, the very longevity of Alistair Cooke has meant that many of his friends have taken their memories with them. (But happily not Lauren Bacall, who, on account of his almost encyclopaedic knowledge, refers to him as Aristotle Cooke.)
Perhaps that's why the first third of the book, which deals with Cooke's upbringing in Blackpool, his years at Cambridge, his academic scholarship to Yale and Harvard, and his work as BBC Film Critic, compares so favourably with the last third, because the first part of the story can be safely and accurately told.
On the other hand, the strictly chronological narrative approach used by Nick Clark (and, to be fair, by the vast majority of biographers) rarely leads to significant comment and analysis of Cooke's work.
For example, how consistently good is 'Letter from America'? Can it be compared with the TV series 'America'? And, in terms of his journalism for 'The Guardian', how do you explain his absence from the White House Press Corps in Dallas when JFK was assassinated, with his on the spot appearance in the Los Angeles hotel when Bobby was gunned down five years later?
Furthermore, by using a thematic approach (like 'Letter from America' itself), then Cooke's professional and personal lives could have been separated, which seemed to follow naturally divergent courses in any case.
However, this is not to underestimate Clarke's achievement. His book is thoroughly researched and runs to 528 pages, plus over 100 photographs. But maybe now he'll follow Cooke's initial advice - and write about Einstein or Bobby Jones!
A compelling book about a compelling man
Through his long running 'Letter from America' series, Cooke has shared his love of the complex, sometimes harsh, often tender nation he has made his home. His gifts are the well turned phrase, a knowledge of history, reliable prejudices, and the trust and respect of so many interesting and influential people over the last seventy years.
Like many creative people, Cooke is driven much more by inspiration than perspiration. His early years are characterised by coasting by, falling from one happy coincidence to the next, reliant on his undeniable charm, intensity and occasional flashes of brilliance. He seems determined to remain a Jack of All Trades, much to the annoyance of the academics and producers who would have him specialise.
But it is this unique breadth that makes the man. Equally comfortable talking abouth the majesty of New England in the fall, highlighting the phonetic curiosities of the Bostonian accent, discussing the merits of the current golf tournament, or the latest film as sharing anecdotes about HL Mencken, Charlie Chaplin, Lyndon Johnson or any of the other great and good people who have known him.
Nick Clarke shares my respect for his subject, and really explains some of the defining events which made him; the Cambridge years where Blackpool Alfred became dynamic, urban Alistair. The formative travels in the States, fuelled by the largesse of the Commonwealth Fund, and the early experiments in radio - still a fluid medium itself at the time - where he developed his oervre.
Clarke writes in a lively fashion, and his biography, although bulky and fairly comprehensive, never loses momentum. Although there is a clear reverence for his subject, it does not feel like hagiography to me, although like the author and his subject, it seems, I am generally disposed to seek out the best in people.
An epic story worthy of the master story teller
There is something shocking yet expected in the humanity of the great. It should be no surprise that a person as manifestly humane as Alistair Cooke should also be manifestly human. The foibles and struggles and resolutions of someone who created his own legend and continues to live it as the interpreter to Britain and the world of North America have a perspective in Nick Clarke's biography which conveys Cooke's - and Clarke's - sense of impartiality, insight into shadows and differences, and a gentle acceptance which is never fooled by the deeper currents within his subject.
Clarke's biography shows a story telling ability comparable to Cooke's own facility with words and mastery of image, irony and suspense. The struggles with the BBC and the Manchester Guardian, with understanding himself and his own family, and with the meaning of life, make one keep turning the pages reliving the history of the 20th century as well as the figures and illustrations made familiar by "Letter from America"
Now in his 90s Cooke has an unrivalled perspective on history and society which Clarke tests and explores. There are outstanding successes and a few failures. The late convert to golf of uncertain ability however well informed by books. The agnostic (to a kind of theism which which might make agnostics of many believers) who takes pride in a daughter's status as a Christian minister. The liberal of one era who finds that the lifestyles and values of the generations difficult to span. The coniseur of fine wine who allows expensive bottles to decay till the vintage tasted like the mice were swimming in it.
Clarke is to be congratulated on an epic worthy of his subject, of an honesty that is revealing but not unkind, of indicating that whatever the cultural changes of the decades, Cooke's values of fairness and of a certain literary toughness, his curiosity, and his storytelling gifts are things which others may aspire to in a different century. The calling of the storyteller and broadcaster - journalist remains a noble one, and this story an inspiration as well as a record of how much it can mean and how important it remains.



