Across the street from the Ottawa International Film
Festival’s venue at the Mayfair Theatre, a crew of Ottawa poets will celebrate
movies and the movie-going experience with the launch of a new anthology of “film
poems” at the Tree Reading Series on Tuesday starting at 8 pm.
Toronto-based editor
Ruth Roach Pierson named her anthology, I
Found It at the Movies, as a twist on famous movie-reviewer Pauline Kael’s
memoir I Lost It at the Movies, and
many of the poems in the book do have the tone and feel of memoir. Nearly all
the poems refer to specific movies – like Stephen Heighton’s “2001: An Elegy” and Patrick Warner’s “Apocalypse Now.” Others – like Margaret Atwood’s “Werewolf
Movies” and Kim Addonizio’s “Scary Movies” – address whole genres. Still others
concern the special connection audience members feel with the figures on the
big screen – like “The Death of Marilyn Monroe” by Sharon Olds and “Love Poem
for a Private Dick” by Karen Solie. And not only Hollywood movies fill the
dreams of our poets. Ottawa’s Jacqueline Bourque, for instance, takes
inspiration from a European source in “Bicycle
Thieves” and Phil Hall makes a nod to the avant-garde in “In Memoriam Stan
Brakhage (1933-2003.”
Of course, more goes on at the movies than what can been
seen on the screen, as witnessed by Ottawa writer Deborah-Anne Tunney in “drive-in
1969” and John Barton’s “After the Movies with O.” As editor Pierson says in
her introduction, “movies are part of our common experience,” something that
brings us together, culturally, at a time when many forces are at work to
divide people and set them against each other. Biblical stories were once the
lingua franca of the Western world’s poets; today the mass media, especially
films, play a similar role.
The Ottawa
launch of I Found It at the Movies, at
Black Squirrel Books, on Bank Street just north of Sunnyside, will feature several Ottawa poets reading their pieces from the
anthology. In addition to Bourque, Tunney and Hall, local contributors include David Groulx, rob mclennan, Colin Morton, Claudia Coutu
Radmore, and Peter Richardson. Editor Ruth Roach Pierson,
whose book Aide-Mémoire was short-listed for the Governor-General’s Award in
2008, will also be there to introduce and discuss the anthology and to give a
reading from her own celebrated work. It sounds like a night to get up off the
couch and mix with the stars of stage, screen and page.
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