The Singing Detective
by Dennis Potter
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Description
This is the unabridged original text of Dennis Potter's acclaimed six-part television serial. The narrative counterpoints life in a hospital ward of a writer crippled by a horrific skin disease with the plot of his atmospheric thriller to the point where fantasy and reality seem to exchange places. The result is the most painful and disturbing screen drama of the 1980s.Tags
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Member Reviews
I haven't read many plays outside of Shakespeare and Tennessee Williams and the occasional Ionesco in college French classes, and now I'm wondering why. Reading The Singing Detective> was a remarkable visualization-experiment. It's strange that, even though there are fewer words here to make a picture with in my mind, teverything appeared much more vividly to my mind's eye than I typical novel scene does to me, even if I've never seen the television play. The layers of alternative realities that weave and wind throughout the play made this quite an experience and I'm curious now to see the play performed.
This is perhaps the best thing ever created for television in English. It's out on DVD, so there's no excuse for your not seeing it. Give it time; things become clearer as you go, and the wonderful swing soundtrack helps the hard parts go down.
Amazing to read with memories of the characters from two distant viewings of the TV series. Really highlights Potter's skill and the adventurous nature of TV in the 1980s; nothing similar would reappear until HBO became cutting edge television.
The script of the TV show, noyt a novel. This makes it more accessible in my opinion.
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47+ Works 1,280 Members
ducated at Oxford, Dennis Potter's aesthetic resonates with the strains of postmodernism proliferated by Tom Stoppard and Thomas Pynchon: a combination of the bizarre and a compelling and somehow old-fashioned narrative. Operating simultaneously with this is a wryly cynical undertone that challenges the smug conventionality of the narrative. His show more novels, Ticket to Ride and Blackeyes, are vintage slick postmodern texts, evocative of Robert Coover's or Don DeLillo's with their tricks, twists, dazzling opacity, and masterful stylized tone. Potter's most notable distinction, though, is in bringing his work to the television screen---adapting his work to an industry that was (especially in the 1960s and 1970s, when he began writing) a highly unlikely forum for his avant-garde offerings. Yet Potter can be credited with creating a stunning canon of television plays that won acclaim despite the seemingly inauspicious mix of the medium and the drama; beyond this, he has energetically expanded the reach of popular culture (from within that culture), garnering admiration for the seriousness and incisiveness of such television plays as Pennies from Heaven (1978) and The Singing Detective (1986). The latter is an autobiographically based story about a hack writer's anxieties and the relationship between text and reality. Typical of Potter's rich filmic technique, it features a visual and musical panorama brimming with seamlessly intermixed stimuli ranging from 1930s song and dance numbers to psychoanalytic probing of childhood and sexuality. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Related movies
- The Singing Detective (1986 | IMDb); The Singing Detective (2003 | IMDb)
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Statistics
- Members
- 272
- Popularity
- 118,259
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (4.21)
- Languages
- Dutch, English, Finnish
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 9
- ASINs
- 2



























































