In the spring of 1970 Charles Bukowski took his first plane trip for a poetry reading at Bellevue Community College in Washington state. That he was videotaped by two students apparently was later forgotten, but the tapes were recently rediscovered and have been released by Black Sparrow press. "Bukowski at Bellevue" gives us a fascinating glimpse of the man before he had to be concerned with how celebrity and financial security were affecting him. (It is said that this was only his fourth public reading.) This is Bukowski, then about 50, taken straight. No games, no irony, no self-consciousness--just an ordinary-looking guy, maybe hung over, sitting before a small group of students reading his work with gusto, humor and sensitivity. A man who clearly had lived the marginal life he wrote about with passion and at times a lyrical, even mystical beauty.
Charles Bukowski
Writer
Struggle: The Life and Lost Art of Szukalski75%
As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty77%
Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God73%
Champs63%
Naqoyqatsi61%
Gilbert67%
Bukowski: Born Into This67%
I Am Heath Ledger74%
Chadwick Boseman: A Tribute for a King81%
For the Love of Spock73%
Drew: The Man Behind the Poster69%
Looking for Richard68%
Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction69%
Memories of a Murderer: The Nilsen Tapes59%
Sherman's March67%
John Candy: I Like Me78%
Brother's Keeper70%
Harmontown66%
The Crash Reel73%