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Rare Birds: An American Family
 
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Rare Birds: An American Family [Hardcover]

Dan Bessie (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 19, 2000

What does a writer do when he's got a family that includes a blacklisted member of the Hollywood Ten, the brains behind Tony the Tiger and the Marlboro Man, a trio of gay puppeteers, the world's leading birdwatcher, sixties hippies, a Dutch stowaway who served in an all-black regiment during the American Civil War, a mother of unusual compassion and understanding, and a convicted murderer? He tells their stories and secrets, illuminating 150 years of American life along the way. Dan Bessie begins the journey through his family history with his great-grandfather in the cargo hold of a ship bound for New York on the storm-tossed Atlantic. What follows are stories of his grandfather's various entrepreneurial schemes (including a folding butter box business), a grandmother who was voted "New York's Prettiest Shop Girl" (and who resisted the recruitment efforts of various city madams), and his uncle Harry's Turnabout Theater in Los Angeles (a renowned puppet theater drawing patrons as diverse as Shirley Temple, Ray Bradbury, and Albert Einstein). Through inherited journals and literary effects, Bessie comes to a new understanding of his father, Alvah. An actor and writer, he fought in the Lincoln Brigade during the Spanish Civil War. When he returned to the States, he headed to the Warner back lots to begin a screenwriting career. But as congress began investigating radicals in the film industry, Alvah was blacklisted for his Communist sympathies and was soon sent to jail as one of the Hollywood Ten. His grandmother's cousin, Sidney Lenz, wrote Lenz on Bridge, a classic guide to the game of contract bridge. Bessie describes what was billed as the Bridge Battle of the Century, a 1931 match between Lenz and an upstart opponent that was covered by journalists from all over the world. Bessie's brother-in-law Wes Wilson designed rock and roll posters for the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco during the 1960s, living a counterculture existence vastly different from the bridge-mad Depression Era. Cousin Michael was heir to the compulsive storytelling characterizing many of the Bessies. He found his niche in publishing, co-founding the Atheneum Press and shaping books by people such as Anwar Sadat, Edward Albee, and Aldous Huxley. With an equally impressive career, Uncle Leo built the country's fifth largest advertising agency. A passion of a different sort led cousin Phoebe Snetsinger to travel from Webster Groves, Missouri, to the far corners of Africa and Asia. The world's leading birder, she sighted 8,400 different birds-nearly 85 percent of the species known to exist. An extraordinary strain of creativity runs through the Bessie and Burnett clans, and Rare Birds celebrates the colorful diversity of a remarkable and accomplished family. While their choices and professions run the gamut of the American experience in the twentieth century, the history of the nation can be traced in these people's lives. Bessie's passionate birds of a feather gather to sing their unique song across decades and generations. Dan Bessie has been a film writer, director, producer, and animator since apprenticing on Tom and Jerry cartoons at MGM in 1956.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Family memoirs always run the risk of careening between the sentimental and the sensational, but this heartfelt, warmly intelligent kaleidoscope of intimate portraits never glosses over the rough edges while casting an illuminating glow on hard times and intriguing personalities. In this collection of 15 interrelated essays about members of the extended Bessie/Burnett clan, the author portrays his relativesDboth famous and notDas striking examples of American individualism, ingenuity and integrity. Some of themDincluding advertising genius Leo Burnett and publisher Michael BessieDhave garnered mainstream praise for their work, while others have become heroes in the political and social counterculture: Alvha Bessie (the author's father) was one of the Hollywood Ten, while Harry Burnett and Foreman Brown founded the famous Yale Puppeteers and Turnabout Theater. The latter also wrote Better Angle, a pro-gay novel, in 1933. Meanwhile, Wes Wilson (husband of Bessie's half-sister Eva) invented the acid-art-nouvelle posters that defined the drug and youth cultures of the 1960s. At the center of this memoir is the portrait of the author's mother, Mary, a woman of intense devotion, intelligence and varied talents who lived her life for her family and children and never gained the recognition granted to many in her extended family. To Bessie's credit, he never sermonizes about his relatives or their lives but simply presents them as complex human beings. His reflections will especially appeal to historians of progressive political movements, gay history and contemporary social history. (Nov. 17)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Bessie, a film writer and director, has put together a lively look at a bunch of his relatives. What is remarkable is not only his voice--it is all in the practiced cadences of a born raconteur--but the number of interesting people he is related to. There's his favorite cousin, the aptly named birder Phoebe, who before her death in 1999 had logged 85 percent of the 10,000 bird species. His Uncle Harry ran the Yale Puppeteers and the famed Turnabout Theater with his partners Roddy and cousin Forman; as Richard Meeker, Forman wrote the famed gay classic, Better Angel (1931). Bessie's father, Alvah, was blacklisted and went to prison as part of the Hollywood 10. His gentle, impaired stepfather was convicted of murder. His half-sister, Eva, married Wes Wilson, whose astonishing posters for the Fillmore Auditorium in the 1960s are now icons. Like the titles listed in the Read-alike column "In Search of Our Parents" [BKL Mr 1 00], this memoir would make a great choice for discussion groups exploring family chronicles. GraceAnne DeCandido
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: The University Press of Kentucky (October 19, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0813121795
  • ISBN-13: 978-0813121796
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,965,341 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Dan Bessie was born in Vermont in 1932, grew up in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and California. Entering the motion picture industry as an animation apprentice at MGM in 1956, he then went on to a 40-plus-year career in film. He's the author of the family memoir, "Rare Birds" (Publishers Weekly, NY Times, etc) and of the lighthearted film career bio, "Reeling Through Hollywood." Since 2006 he's lived in the Dordogne region of southwestern France. In addition to authoring these books he's illustrated several others, and is also a screenwriting coach and cartoonist.


 

Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rare Birds, January 25, 2001
By 
Jerry Lawrence (Santa Cruz CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rare Birds: An American Family (Hardcover)
Great book. Not only well written but written with the insight of a mature, intelligent sensitive human being. Great insight into the human condition. The author comes from a unusally talented and creative family and as this book demonstrates is as creative as any of them. Telling us the story of his family gives us alot information about the political climate in the USA and its effect on individual citizens. Extremly interesting and varied Family members from the world's must prolific bird watcher to a Leftist screen writer who fought with the Abraham Lincoln`Brigade in the Spanish Civil War.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Birds of an extraordinary feather ..., January 8, 2001
This review is from: Rare Birds: An American Family (Hardcover)
Dan Bessie implies that we ALL have such people in our families. Frankly - I doubt that. Certainly, if we all had his talent, we could make much of our own oddballs and eccentrics, but in the final analysis we would still only be colouring the grey. His family is and was extraordinary.

"Rare Birds" is an affectionate sketch of an abnormally talented and unusual family. Mr Bessie - being a modest man (judging by how little he refers to himself in the narrative) - would doubtless take issue with that summation, but it is nonetheless true.

In another century, the father of a famous family of writers (Patrick Bronte) acknowledged his own rather eccentric attributes, but at the same time pointed out to his daughter's biographer that if he had been one of the world's "concentric" men he would not, in all probability, have produced such children as his were.

Mr Bessie can, in a way, lay claim to the same process. Talent only occasionally emerges from nowhere, with no previous indication of its existence. Even with the most fascinating material, more illustrious writers have failed to grip the imagination of the reader. Mr Bessie's almost tangible affection and respect for his subjects shines through the narrative.

"Rare Birds" can be as strongly recommended to scholars of the McCarthy witch-hunt period as to those who simply enjoy good writing. Mr Bessie grew up in one of the most unnerving and nervous periods of US history and his personal reflections are both telling and educational.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What a family!, February 13, 2001
By 
Gina Caruso (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rare Birds: An American Family (Hardcover)
After reading "Rare Birds" by Dan Bessie I thought, "What a family!". Every family has a few characters or maybe a semi-famous person. But, in "Rare Birds" I was totally fascinated by the wide range of interesting and famous family members. I especially liked the chapters on his Uncle Harry Burnett and the Turnabout Theatre. The book is written in a relaxed style that makes you feel like you're having a conversation with the author. It made me want to search out my own family tree, shake it and see who falls out. Fascinating and enjoyable book!
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