The Studs Terkel Interviews

Film and Theater

An elegant new edition of the Pulitzer Prize winner’s “richly entertaining” (Publishers Weekly) conversations with the masters of stage and screen

“Lively, engaging . . . a spirited, passionate and richly quirky homage to the power of the dramatic arts and to those who devote their lives to them.” —Chicago Sun-Times

The Studs Terkel Interviews: Film and Theater collects the Pulitzer Prize–winning oral historian’s remarkable conversations with some of the greatest luminaries of film and theater. Originally published under the title The Spectator, this “knowledgeable and perceptive” (Library Journal) look at show business presents the actors directors, playwrights, dancers, lyricists, and others who created the dramatic works of the twentieth century.

Among the many highlights in these pages, Buster Keaton explains the wonders of unscripted silent comedy, Federico Fellini reflects on honesty in art, Carol Channing reveals that she is far more serious than she lets on, and Marlon Brando turns the tables and wants to interview Terkel. We learn about crucial artistic decisions in the lives of Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, and Edward Albee and hear from a range of film directors, from Vittorio De Sica and King Vidor to Satyajit Ray. We even get to witness Terkel playing straight man to a wildly inventive Zero Mostel. Because Terkel knows his subjects’ work intimately, he asks precisely the right questions to elicit the most revealing responses. As the New York Times Book Review noted, “Terkel’s knowledge and force of personality make him fully a player alongside his famous guests.”

News and Reviews

In March 1970, Maya Angelou sat down with Studs Terkel for a radio interview about her memoir I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.

Books by Studs Terkel

Coming of Age
Growing Up in the Twentieth Century

Studs Terkel

Hard Times
An Oral History of the Great Depression

Studs Terkel

Talking to Myself
A Memoir of My Times

Studs Terkel

Hard Times
An Illustrated Oral History of the Great Depression

Studs Terkel

Goodreads Reviews