Issue 3: Spring 2009
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Finch’s
uarterly Review
Ecce, mundus est Michael Chow on art
Richard Dreyfuss on theatre
sordidus et olidus, sed etiam habet multas res smashingae
Al Ruddy on the Oscars
Emma Thompson on the Globes
John Malkovich on books
Matthew Modine on Obama
Minnie Driver on a wave
James Mason and John Gielgud in The Shooting Party
Taking Care of Business Nick Foulkes professes that there has never been a better time to become a citizen of Finchland, a province in which style, manners, taste and talent thrive above fortune
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the past as viewed by LP Hartley, Finchland is another country and they do things differently there, or rather here, because if you are reading this then you too are an inhabitant of Finchland. Finchland is more of an attitude than a geographically specific location, although there are locations in it, of course. Confused? Well, you’re not the only one, but let me try and explain. The world according to Finch is a sort of Neverland scripted by F Scott Fitzgerald and Ian Fleming, a world in which gentlemen open doors for ladies, are men of their word and wear properly tailored tweeds (rather than the pantomime, pimped-up, Savile-Row-alike-Richard-Roundtreemeets-Gerald-Harper-as-Hadleigh stuff one sees too much of these days). It is a world of eternal values from which vulgarity is banished and in which talent and good manners are more important than a good bank balance. Indeed, it is a world of balance in which nothing as, well, brash as the recent polychromatic blinged-up boom and ensuing catastrophic bust could have happened. Inhabitants of Finchland simply had too much taste to make loadsamoney in the recent gold rush and, consequently, we have had less to lose in the crash. IKE
spring 2009
Instead, we have been busy with the things that matter: perfecting our “left and right” technique when shooting woodcock; knowing when we are too good to double in tournament backgammon; and perfecting our extempore, off-the-cuff Academy Award acceptance speeches. The fact that Charles has had to pawn his Purdeys and the rest of us could not hit a barn door with a blunderbuss, that we crash out of backgammon tournaments in the first round, and that the head has dropped off the only trophy that any of us has recently picked up (my “Havana Man of the Year 2007” statuette) is beside the point. As I may have said before, we try and live life as we feel it ought to be rather than how it is. In recent years, it has been tough but at last we feel that things might be turning our way. In recent months a whole new lexicon of euphemism has sprung up to describe the financial holocaust; we talk of the “current climate”, “weathering the storm” and so on. Whatever the result of this Darwinian and Malthusian winnowing might be, we would like to think that there will be a return to real and lasting value. A little less decadence might not be a bad thing, and as we have never had any money at least we won’t miss it now it has gone. Take the picture above; it shows James Mason and John Gielgud in the 1985 Bafta-nominated film The Shooting Party. There is something eternal in the image and we can take consolation that while things are bad for us the period in which this film was set was immediately prior to that blood bath the First World War and it is to be hoped we don’t have another one of those to look forward to. It is a pity that the shooting season is over, not
because we are a bloodthirsty bunch – far from it; FQR is with Prince Aki von Schwarzenberg who contributes to this issue and admits that he does not even need to kill anything when out shooting for him to feel it is a day well spent – but because we like the tradition and pageantry of the thing. However, as one shooting season draws to a close in Europe then another one opens on the other side of the planet, in the New World. The link between shooting with guns and shooting with cameras is little more than a pun (and a weak one at that), but film is an important part of the topography of the realm of the imagination that is Finchland, both as a means of escape from the tawdriness of the modern world and as one of Charles Finch’s passions. (The son of an Oscar winner, Charles is, technically speaking, second-generation Hollywood aristocracy.) The Academy Awards may only have begun in 1927 (the first ceremony was in 1928) but, given that film is scarcely a century old itself, the Oscars are as historic and traditional in their way as the orders of nobility of the Old World. And as the Oscars loom, we at FQR set Hollywood in our sights – but not the here-today-gone-tomorrow evanescence of meretricious crap that is made merely to sate the bulimic appetites of a society weaned on disposable popular culture that is not worthy of the name. No, that would not be the FQR way. Instead, even in that most superficial of societies, Hollywood, we have searched for and found real value and longevity. In this issue of FQR, the veteran producer Al Ruddy writes on what it was like to win an Oscar
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in the early 1970s, when he carried off an Academy Award for a little picture you might have heard of called The Godfather, and then win again in the early 21st century when he produced Million Dollar Baby, a movie that he says nobody wanted to make (even though he had his old friend Clint directing and starring in it). Charles Finch, son of Oscar winner Peter Finch (did I mention that already?) gives his carefully considered Oscar survival guide. And completing our survey of that apparent oxymoron, Hollywood culture, LA’s favourite restaurateur Michael Chow writes about four decades of feeding and befriending the world’s greatest artists, telling how he has built up one of the world’s most important art collections. Mind you, I would have to say that if I had to choose between one of Michael’s ethereally, transcendentally, almost mystically delicious green prawns and some of the stuff that calls itself art these days the prawn begins to look like a seriously good investment. These are the sort of people whom Charles likes to call mavericks and I suppose that in a time of excess, when success was cheap and money shouted, while talent whispered and could barely make itself heard, they were the outsiders. But now, when success is no longer so easy and a generation of young hotshots is finding that they are not masters of all they survey, it is time for those who, in the words of another of our favourite people, Mariano Rubinacci, “know how” to take control and show us how things are done properly. – Nick Foulkes is Editorial Director of Finch’s Quarterly Review
www.finchsquarterly.com