Flack wrote:the movie was about the story behind Mary Poppins... I had read that the lady behind the Mary Poppins stories (P.L. Travers) was a rather miserable person...
Most professional writers - those who make decent living exclusively writing fiction - often have problems, Sometimes horrid ones, this may give them better understanding of the human condition and improve what they write. Robert A. Heinlein,
the gold standard in Science Fiction, given medical discharge from Navy for having Tuberculosis. J.K. Rowling, single mother on British equivalent of welfare started writing
Harry Potter series of books. Lots of them have public personas radically different from their messed-up private lives.
Heinlein himself pointed out many writers got into it because they were unwilling or unfit to do regular "hard" work and sitting at a typewriter beats digging ditches any day.
According to press, Mrs. Travers was not quite as pleased with Disney's version of Mary Poppins as she appears in Saving Mrs. Banks, but that wouldn't be very Disney now would it.
And every writer, who notices a movie treatment of their book, always thinks the movies have "bastardized" their child with their treatment of it.
That post has at least one and maybe two glaring typos in it. In my defense the goddamn Chicago Bears let the fucking Packers score with 38 seconds left in the 4th.
If I had done this, I'd get called out for going off topic.
[quote="Flack"]the movie was about the story behind Mary Poppins... I had read that the lady behind the Mary Poppins stories (P.L. Travers) was a rather miserable person... [/quote]Most professional writers - those who make decent living exclusively writing fiction - often have problems, Sometimes horrid ones, this may give them better understanding of the human condition and improve what they write. Robert A. Heinlein, [i]the[/i] gold standard in Science Fiction, given medical discharge from Navy for having Tuberculosis. J.K. Rowling, single mother on British equivalent of welfare started writing [i]Harry Potter[/i] series of books. Lots of them have public personas radically different from their messed-up private lives.
Heinlein himself pointed out many writers got into it because they were unwilling or unfit to do regular "hard" work and sitting at a typewriter beats digging ditches any day.
[quote]According to press, Mrs. Travers was not quite as pleased with Disney's version of Mary Poppins as she appears in Saving Mrs. Banks, but that wouldn't be very Disney now would it.[/quote]
And every writer, who notices a movie treatment of their book, always thinks the movies have "bastardized" their child with their treatment of it.
[quote]That post has at least one and maybe two glaring typos in it. In my defense the goddamn Chicago Bears let the fucking Packers score with 38 seconds left in the 4th.[/quote]
If I had done this, I'd get called out for going off topic.