It's so cool that Max Beerbohm (1872) & Jorge Luis Borges (1899) share a birthday. They have so much in common. Beerbohm is as profound as Borges; Borges is as funny as Beerbohm.
Photos:
Cecil Beaton, 1927 @NPGLondon
Ulf Andersen, Paris, 1979
Max Beerbohm by William Newzam Prior Nicholson
oil on canvas, 1905
@NPGLondon
"In his prose, as in his drawings, Max Beerbohm hardly knew failure; time and again the nail is delicately but sharply hit on the head, the point firmly driven home."
- John Mortimer
Jorge Luis Borges by Ferdinando Scianna, 1984
"His fables are written from a height of intelligence less rare in philosophy & physics than in fiction. Furthermore, he is, at least for anyone whose taste runs to puzzles or pure speculation, delightfully entertaining"
- John Updike
Max Beerbohm
Walt Whitman, Inciting the Bird of Freedom to Soar
Illustration from The Poets' Corner, 1904
Life before Twitter.

From Richard Burgin's 1967 interview with Jorge Luis Borges
Happy birthday to Max Beerbohm 🎂
Zuleika Dobson is one of my favourite books.
S.J. Perelman once accompanied Elizabeth Taylor to Oxford, & said the undergraduates reacted just like the ones in Max Beerbohm's Zuleika Dobson.
The wonderful cover painting is by Sir Osbert Lancaster
Unknown to me
the closed encyclopedia, the sweet play
In volumes I can do no more than hold,
the tiny soaring birds, the moons of gold.
Others have the world, for better or worse;
I have this half-dark, and the toil of verse.
- Jorge Luis Borges

📷 Eduardo Comesana, 1969
Max Beerbohm by Charles Shannon, 1896
"The younger generation is knocking at the door, and as I open it there steps sprightly in the incomparable Max."
- George Bernard Shaw
But Max quoted Oscar Wilde on GBS: "He hadn't an enemy in the world and none of his friends liked him."
"One way or another, Borges constantly takes issue with reality, or what the common-sense consensus calls reality, such as our unprovable, ineradicable beliefs in causality, or in the relevance of what we perceive to what exists, or in our own being"
- Naomi Bliven
📷 Diane Arbus
Max Beerbohm by Kay Bell Reynal, 1955
"He knew his place in the grand scheme of literature, and made no boastful claims for himself and his work, yet he remains not only delightful company but a figure of moral weight as well."
- John Banville
"I think that Mark Twain was one of the really great writers, but I think he was rather unaware of the fact. But perhaps in order to write a really great book, you *must* be rather unaware of the fact."
- Jorge Luis Borges

📷 Daniel Mordzinski
A wonderful story about Max Beerbohm & Henry James.

Rebecca West said of Max's BBC talks, "I felt that I was listening to the voice of the last civilized man on earth. Max's broadcasts justify the entire invention of broadcasting."
Interviewer:
Don't you think it looks pensive?

Borges:
Perhaps. But so dark? So heavy? The brow... oh, well.

📷 The Gilda Kuhlman photo was also used on the front cover of A Personal Anthology from Grove, 1967
Today we're celebrating the birthday of Max Beerbohm 🎂
📷 With Siegfried Sassoon & Florence, Lady Beerbohm
@NPGLondon
"To give an accurate and exhaustive account of that period would need a far less brilliant pen than mine."
Today we're celebrating the birthday of Jorge Luis Borges 🎂
📷 Ferdinando Scianna, Palermo, 1984
"Borges's universalism is a deeply felt imaginative strategy, a maneuver to be in touch with the great winds that blow from the heart of things."
- George Steiner
"He parodied the sedulousness of his immediate ancestors by advocating, covertly, a cult of laziness."
- Roger Lewis on Max Beerbohm
Self-portrait, water-colour, 1923
@NPGLondon
Meant to post this on #NationalLazyDay, but I couldn't be bothered to look up when it was.
Jorge Luis Borges by Sophie Bassouls, 1977
"To me, reading has been a way of living. I think the only possible fate for me was a literary life. I can't think of myself in a bookless world. I need books. They mean everything to me."
Max Beerbohm
"Mr William Bell Scott Wondering What It is Those Fellows Seem to See in Gabriel"
@Tate, 1916
Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Ford Madox Brown, Edward Burne-Jones, Algernon Charles Swinburne, Walter Pater & William Morris, plus Rossetti's wombat & kangaroo (really!)
"Somehow the central fact of my life has been the existence of words and the possibility of weaving those words into poetry."
- Jorge Luis Borges, "The Poet's Creed"

📷 Ferdinando Scianna
Palermo, Sicily, 1984

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More from @dean_frey

11 Sep
Theodor Adorno takes a selfie.
Today we're celebrating his birthday 🎂
"While Adorno is a critic of the Enlightenment, he is ultimately a critic of its failure. There has been too little enlightenment, not too much."
- Nasrullah Mambrol
I didn't know that Theodor Adorno, such an important critic of avant garde music, was a composer himself. Here are his Two Pieces for String Quartet, op.2, 1924/25.
My favourite portrait of Theodor Adorno, from 1958. I wish I knew who took it.
In a letter to Walter Benjamin, Adorno said this about high & popular culture: "Both are torn halves of an integral freedom, to which however they do not add up."
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📷 Edward Weston, 1924
@NPGLondon
"Lawrence, in the English language, was the great genius of our time (I mean the age, or climatic phase, following Conrad's)."
- F. R. Leavis
D.H. Lawrence is Mark Rampion in Aldous Huxley's Point Counterpoint, while the character Philip Quarles is Huxley's self-portrait. The two listen to Beethoven together in the novel.
This photo is possibly by Lady Ottoline Morrell
vintage snapshot print, 1928
@NPGLondon
Photo of Lawrence in Taos NM, from Mabel Dodge's scrapbook
"Lawrence’s formal accomplishment, less obvious at a glance than Joyce’s or Woolf’s, is to narrate beneath the stream of consciousness, & chart subterranean currents of feeling as they shift & swell."
- Benjamin Kunkel
Read 5 tweets
11 Sep
Listening to Jimmy Rowles, The Peacocks, from 1977
With Stan Getz, Elvin Jones & Buster Williams
Love the cover illustration by Seymour Chwast
open.spotify.com/album/1xNk28wK…
Jimmy Rowles's 1976 album Jazz is a Fleeting Moment features a self-caricature
"Understatement was his strength, & his best solos often sound preplanned, spare, with each note perfectly chosen for its color. Rowles had absorbed the music of Ellington & Strayhorn."
- Peter Watrous
Bill Evans plays Jimmy Rowles's great song Peacocks, with Eddie Gómez on bass & Eliot Zigmund on drums. From his album You Must Believe in Spring, recorded in 1977, but not released until after Evans's death in 1980.
Read 7 tweets
11 Sep
Remembering Robert Wise on his birthday 🎂
📷 Erich Lessing, 1964
"His films became increasingly fascinating to me because of the editing style, a very crisp, clear style of editing that kind of points the audience toward where to look in a scene."
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Robert Wise & Jerome Robbins on the left of the West Side Story camera; to the right is cinematographer Daniel Fapp, 1961
Jerome Robbins & Robert Wise shared the Director credit for West Side Story. This 1960 Gjon Mili shot for Life Magazine shows the two on set.
I love this shot!
Read 5 tweets
10 Sep
Remembering Elsa Schiaparelli on her birthday 🎂
📷 André Durst, 1936
"I like to amuse myself. If I didn't, I would die."
Impossible Interview: Stalin versus Elsa Schiaparelli
Vogue, June 1935
Illustration by Miguel Covarrubias
- What are you doing up here, dressmaker?
- I am getting a bird's-eye view of your women's fashions, Man of Steel.
- Can't you leave our women alone?
Stalin versus Elsa Schiaparelli
Vogue, June 1935
Read 10 tweets
10 Sep
Remembering H. D. - Hilda Doolittle - on her birthday 🎂
📷 Man Ray, c. 1925
"She was beautiful, reckless, one of the poetesses whose poetry was feared and wondered over."
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H. D. by Man Ray, 1924
"To read H. D., early and late work, is like reading early and late Blake."
- Alicia Ostriker
Why is Sigmund Freud in this thread celebrating the birthday of the Bethlehem, Pennsylvania-born poet H. D.? It's because Hilda Doolittle took this photo of Freud in his study at Berggasse 19, Vienna, with his chow Jofi, c. 1937
Read 7 tweets

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