WARHOLCAPOTE: A Non-Fiction Invention

WARHOLCAPOTE: A Non-Fiction Invention

Unabridged — 3 hours, 22 minutes

WARHOLCAPOTE: A Non-Fiction Invention

WARHOLCAPOTE: A Non-Fiction Invention

Unabridged — 3 hours, 22 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$14.99
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $14.99

Overview

An enthralling play based on lost tapes between two cultural giants and friends-Andy Warhol and Truman Capote-read by the stars of the acclaimed original stage production, Stephen Spinella and Dan Butler.

In 1978 Andy Warhol and Truman Capote decided to write a Broadway play. Andy suggested that he record their private conversations over the period of a few months, and that these tapes would be the source material for the play. The tapes were then filed away and forgotten. Their play was never completed.

Now, award-winning director Rob Roth brings their vision to life after a years-long search to unearth the eighty hours of tapes between two of the most daring artists of postwar America. WARHOLCAPOTE, based on words actually spoken by the two men, is set in the '70s and '80s, toward the end of their close connection and not too long before their untimely deaths. Their special, complex friendship is captured by Roth with bracing intimacy as they discuss life, love, and art and everything in between. Every word in the play comes directly from these two 20th century geniuses. The structure of the conversations springs from Roth's imagination.

The audiobook edition of WARHOLCAPOTE reunites the cast of the play's 2017 world premiere stage production, featuring Stephen Spinella as Andy Warhol and Dan Butler as Truman Capote.

Editorial Reviews

FEBRUARY 2023 - AudioFile

Stephen Spinella and Dan Butler reprise their 2017 Broadway roles as Andy Warhol and Truman Capote in this funny, touching, and deceptively straightforward dialogue between the famous pair. It is based solely on their private conversations recorded on 59 audio cassettes in the late 1970s to early ‘80s. With a preface read by art critic Blake Gopnik and the fascinating history of the project filled in by author/editor Rob Roth, the two cultural icons gossip about life, love, celebrities, and family. With the stellar performances of Spinella and Butler, backed by Dennis Boutsikaris reading stage directions, we hear an intimate, endearing portrait of two of the most public, most outwardly gay, most outrageous artists of twentieth-century America chatting like the best of friends. B.P. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

04/18/2022

In 1978, Andy Warhol and Truman Capote set out to write a Broadway play by recording their conversations—it never happened, but Broadway director Roth (The Art of Classic Rock) here uses the recordings to fashion an inventive if uneven stage play that inevitably favors dialogue over plot. There are a number of exciting exchanges: “Friendship is the perfect sort of trust and belief,” Capote says, and “If someone would really take care of Truman, he would be okay,” Warhol muses. Many names are dropped: Liza Minnelli is “wild!”; Tennessee Williams is spotted in a Key West bar; and Jackie Kennedy is “the world’s greatest female impersonator.” Following the play comes some “bonus” transcript material consisting of the artists’ thoughts on writing, sex, speaking engagements (“I do think one should do it once in a while,” Capote says), and New York City (“It changes so quickly. It just changes like that,” according to Warhol). Unfortunately, the back-and-forth often comes across as dry and navel-gazing on the page, lacking the dynamism of a live dialogue. Still, Capote and Warhol fanatics will relish “hearing” directly from the artists in this unique if not wholly successful endeavor. (May)

From the Publisher

PRAISE FOR WARHOLCAPOTE THE BOOK

"Capote and Warhol fanatics will relish ‘hearing’ directly from the artists." —Publishers Weekly

"A poignant drama about two influential yet fragile figures grappling with the 'very excruciating life' of an artist."—Kirkus Reviews

PRAISE FOR THE PRODUCTION OF WARHOLCAPOTE

"A sobering perspective on the toxic highs of celebrity."—New York Times

"Astonishing...the play shines an incisive light on these two important American artists."—Broadway World

"Delicious, gossipy and insightful. Fascinating and illuminating."—White Rhino Report

"A taut meditation on art. A profound tenderness reverberates long after play's end."—Theatre Mania

"The show certainly deserves to be famous far longer than Warhol's proclaimed 15 minutes."—Variety

FEBRUARY 2023 - AudioFile

Stephen Spinella and Dan Butler reprise their 2017 Broadway roles as Andy Warhol and Truman Capote in this funny, touching, and deceptively straightforward dialogue between the famous pair. It is based solely on their private conversations recorded on 59 audio cassettes in the late 1970s to early ‘80s. With a preface read by art critic Blake Gopnik and the fascinating history of the project filled in by author/editor Rob Roth, the two cultural icons gossip about life, love, celebrities, and family. With the stellar performances of Spinella and Butler, backed by Dennis Boutsikaris reading stage directions, we hear an intimate, endearing portrait of two of the most public, most outwardly gay, most outrageous artists of twentieth-century America chatting like the best of friends. B.P. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2022-02-15
Actual conversations between two iconic gay artists form the basis for a new play.

In 1978, longtime friends Andy Warhol and Truman Capote made cassettes of their conversations, “approximately eighty hours of recordings.” Roth, director of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast on Broadway, learned that Pittsburgh’s Warhol Museum owned these tapes but that they were inaccessible to the public. With the help of museum board members such as artist Cindy Sherman and filmmaker John Waters, he gained access. Most of the conversations were dull, but then he got to “the magic tape” in which Warhol suggested they “take their words and make a play out of them.” That play never happened, but Roth has fashioned his own “non-fiction invention” from the conversations of “two of my idols.” The first half of the book consists of the text of the play, short scenes in which Warhol and Capote gossip about everything from the vagaries of fame to Capote’s rehab stint for alcoholism. The second half is a “Bonus” section of exchanges in which they dish about boyfriends, sex clubs, and a famous woman who was “one of Hitler’s greatest friends.” Roth redacted many names from the bonus exchanges, leaving place holders for “a very famous rock star” and “a trend-setting woman of high social standing,” among others. These excisions might leave readers who are thirsty for gossip feeling parched. The play, however, is an imaginative portrait, with Capote coming across as the needier of the two, wondering if he’s wasted his years while maintaining he was “the one and only real true genius in America.” Meanwhile, Warhol was his concerned caregiver, eager to protect the man he was so obsessed with in his youth that Capote’s mother had to tell him to stop pestering her son.

A poignant drama about two influential yet fragile figures grappling with the “very excruciating life” of an artist.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176380323
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 09/20/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews