Learning English - Words in the News 17 October, 2006 - Published 08:22 GMT The Burgess Project | ||||||||||||
Anthony Burgess is one of Manchester’s most famous writers, yet he’s best remembered for the film of his novel, A Clockwork Orange, which he didn’t even script. This year’s Literature Festival is hoping to redress that injustice. This report from BBC Manchester: The Burgess Project is a unique and pioneering production that’s hoping to bring new life to a diverse literary archive. Inspired by what’s been termed a psycho-geographic tour of a long-past Manchester, local writers will be taking audiences on a live-literature promenade tour of the city. With expert advice from Burgess biographer, Andrew Biswell, the writing talent have been commissioned to produce new Burgessian works that will be presented live on Manchester’s streets, culminating in a city centre performance, with rich media footage of Burgess' real life such as photos, clips from his broadcasts and ringtones from his compositions being sent to the audience’s phones. There’s also an event for the author at the Whitworth Gallery, where the launch of Andrew Biswell’s biography of Burgess and some of the new writing involved in The Burgess Project will go hand-in-hand to celebrate the great writer’s work. And as honoured as Burgess would probably be by it all, he would also smile at the choice of venue. As a small boy, Anthony was thrown out of the Whitworth for indecently assaulting a modernist sculpture. How times change! a unique and pioneering production a diverse literary archive a psycho-geographic tour a live-literature promenade tour biographer commissioned to produce Burgessian culminating in go hand-in-hand venue | LATEST STORIES 23 December, 2009 New taxis to reduce pollution in Cairo 21 December, 2009 Auschwitz sign recovered 15 December, 2009 Original Eiffel Tower steps for sale 11 December, 2009 China's economy is growing 09 December, 2009 Transgender teenager sues McDonald's Other Stories | |||||||||||
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