An Afternoon with Woody Allen A conversation with the acclaimed filmmaker about life, death, and the movies. Plus: an exclusive excerpt from his first novel, out next week.
Woody Allen attends the 80th Venice International Film Festival in Italy on September 4, 2023. (Andreas Rentz via Getty Images)
Woody Allen has done it all. The actor, comedian, and filmmaker has made 50 movies and has been nominated for 24 Academy Awards. You see his influence everywhere, from sitcoms to stand-up to just about every rom-com made since Annie Hall premiered in 1977. In the process, he turned himself into America’s most unlikely leading man: short, thinning hair, bespectacled, and exceptionally neurotic. This week, he sat down with Bari for a rare, wide-ranging conversation about everything. His career, his controversies, his life, and his death. You can watch the full conversation here: Now, at the age of 89, Allen has published his first-ever novel. What’s With Baum? is the darkly comedic tale of Asher Baum, a middle-aged Jewish writer with a secret that could unravel his life. In other words, it’s like a Woody Allen movie—just in book form. It also touches on a major theme of our age: the idea that an accusation, once made, is as good as a conviction. It’s a theme he discusses with Bari in their interview. This article is featured in Culture and Ideas. Sign up here to get an update every time a new piece is published. What’s With Baum? is set to release on September 23. Today, we bring you an exclusive first look. —The Editors Lately, Asher Baum had begun talking to himself. Not just the occasional mumbling of a man trying to clarify his thoughts or calm himself before some daunting task. Nor was he engaged in any delusional score settling with imaginary figures past or present. This would have made him bonkers or crackers which he was not. At least not yet full-blown. That the conversations were a sign of early dementia was also ruled out, as he was a fit 51, with a sharp memory and no family history of any sort of cognitive gremlins. The only warnings from his doctors were to go easy on salt, use sunscreen, and do just what he’s been doing on the treadmill. If he suffered from anything, it was hypochondriacal panic attacks where he saw the abyss in every mole, cough, and hangnail. And sadly, in every song, flower, and rainbow. When Baum looked in the mirror, he recognized an intelligent mutt, a mixture of his father’s sad eyes and his mother’s Semitic nose and his own anxious contribution...
Become a paid subscriber Get access to our comments section, special columns like TGIF and Things Worth Remembering, tickets in advance to our live events, and more. UPGRADE TODAY |