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Book Review
Title: Starring
Brian Linehan
Author:
George Anthony (Foreword by: Joan Rivers)
Publisher:
McLelland & Stewart
Released: September
25th 2007
Pages: 325
ISBN-10:
0771007574
ISBN-13:
978-0771007576
$34.95
5 Stars
Reviewed
By: Kindah Mardam Bey (Toronto - Canada Correspondent)
One of the best
aspects of working in the industry of media is remembering the likes of Brian
Linehan. Canada's definitive interviewer of famous
actors, Linehan didn't just set the standard, or raise the bar, he made it
difficult for anyone else to comparatively come close to that quality and
standard. Brian Linehan was possibly the only interviewer that celebrities
revered and went out of their way to be interviewed by. It was an experience, a
Linehan trademarked experience, to be interviewed by Linehan, or to watch
Linehan (as many of us did) gently enchant his interviewees into telling their
life stories while keeping the integrity of the interview always at its highest
level. Linehan was never interested in the private lives of those he interviewed,
but he was committed to capturing on film the essence and passion the performer
possessed.
Cooing over
a professional like Linehan is enjoyable in itself, but it does render to a
purpose; close friend to Linehan, and behind-the-scenes heavyweight George
Anthony has wrote a moving and compelling biography titled Starring Brian
Linehan. In the three decades Anthony knew Linehan, they built a valued
friendship which would give a revealing look into the life of a man that spent
his whole career asking others those questions. In part tribute, part
biography, and part epilogue, Anthony shows how Linehan had a wonderful group
of supportive friends, a hard upbringing, an unmatched professionalism, a skill
and depth of character that was highly enviable, a life of success encapsulated
in one heartbreak after another, a misunderstood arrogance and an untimely
death. Every person in the world should be so lucky to have someone express the
sum of their parts postscript, so earnestly, and with such kindness.
Brian
Linehan grew up in Hamilton, Ontario, and was quickly observed as the
black sheep of a family focused on hard labour, gruff sensibilities,
close-mindedness, and with a key focus on sports activity; Brian was a reader.
Brian was also a film watcher and a dreamer. At the first opportunity, Brian
went to Toronto to etch out a name for himself, which he seemed to do
quickly with his care and understanding towards celebrities. One path led to
another and Linehan found City Lights, a dilapidated set and unglossed finish
of a Toronto based TV interview show. Linehan had intelligence and savvy,
which he used to his greatest advantage in procuring interviews with some of
the biggest names of the day. From Donald Sutherland, to Barbara Streisand,
Michael Douglas, Peter O' Toole, John Travolta, and an endless list of other celebrities,
were eventually eager to have Linehan ask them those questions about the
details of their performances or the quiet moments in their lives where they
discovered themselves.
As
Linehan's star was rising, he also held a delicate balance of a gay man in a
committed relationship to Zane, his life partner. Although Zane and Linehan
seemed to have the perfect relationship, Zane was a difficult person, and both
men struggled for many years to keep their relationship low-key and out of the
eye of scrutiny. Within their circle, Linehan had created endearing and
long-lasting friendships with the likes of Joan Rivers, Bea Arthur, and
ballerina Karen Kain. Yet, when Linehan's life crumbled around him, it did so
in a tidal wave way. Tensions between City Lights owner Moses Znaimer
and Linehan reached its limits and the former took the latter off-air.
Essentially jobless, Linehan never had quite the same opportunities or niche
after City Lights. Then he was diagnosed with Cancer, and as it was
Zane's responsibility to take care of the situation he coped with the situation
by instead committing suicide. Linehan was left behind to deal with a terminal
illness on his own. Along the way Linehan's friends became the rock he was
looking for and dedicated themselves to him, until the end of his days.
Even though
Linehan's life was full of tragedy, and sadness, he was the most amazingly
resilient and passionate man towards the arts. He was distinguished, as ever a
man was, and left an impression on a previously not-thought-to-be art form. In
my eyes, as many, he was a legend and has left an indelible legacy in the realm
of media. I am grateful that such a wonderful communicator as George Anthony
has told Brian Linehan's story.
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