Saturday, February 6, 2016

Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood

Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood

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Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood

Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood



Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood

Read Online and Download Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood

In January 1966, Alan Napier became a household name on ABC's hit series Batman (1966-1968) as Alfred Pennyworth, loyal butler to the show's title character. This "overnight success" came after 16 years of stage work (and the occasional film) in his native England and 26 years of film and television work (and the occasional play) in the United States.

In the early 1970s, Napier wrote an autobiography, detailing his childhood as a "poor relation" of the famous Birmingham political family the Chamberlains (Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain was a cousin), and his collaborations over the years with the likes of John Gielgud, Laurence Olivier, George Bernard Shaw, Noël Coward, Fritz Lang, Otto Preminger and Alfred Hitchcock.

Almost 30 years after Napier's death, James Bigwood, who first read the manuscript in 1975 when interviewing the actor for a Films in Review profile, has prepared it for publication.

This is Alan Napier's story in his own words, annotated and updated, with dozens of rare photographs.

Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1668927 in Books
  • Brand: McFarland
  • Published on: 2015-09-24
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .90" h x 6.90" w x 9.90" l, 7.00 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 392 pages
Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood


Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood

Where to Download Not Just Batman's Butler: The Autobiography of Alan NapierBy Alan Napier, James Bigwood

Most helpful customer reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. The man behind Alfred Pennyworth By Charles Morrow In the early 1970s, during a fallow period in his career, character actor Alan Napier turned his attention to writing an autobiography. He wrote in vivid detail about his experiences on the London stage in the 1920s and ‘30s, when he worked alongside the likes of Gielgud, Olivier, Noel Coward, Gladys Cooper, Claude Rains, etc. He reminisced about his busy years in Hollywood during the ‘40s and ‘50s, when he played opposite top stars in such films as The Invisible Man Returns, The Uninvited, Three Strangers, Sinbad the Sailor, Across the Wide Missouri, etc. He did not sidestep the unhappy events of his life: Napier is candid about his childhood in a troubled upper class family, his anxious adolescence at various boarding schools, and—a surprising familial connection—his controversial cousin Neville Chamberlain, Prime Minister of Great Britain in the years leading up to World War II. He writes with almost painful frankness about his disastrous first marriage, his late-blooming appreciation for intimacy, and other personal matters. He discusses his professional successes and failures, including the difficult period in the 1950s, when he ran afoul of Hollywood’s right-wingers due to his liberal political beliefs; or rather, due to his unwillingness to keep his mouth shut. Although Napier was never blacklisted outright, he was “gray-listed,” and was no longer offered plum roles in prestigious films. But he kept on working, in B pictures, occasionally on stage, and especially in television.Which brings us to the role for which he is best remembered: Alfred Pennyworth, butler to Bruce Wayne on the 1966-68 TV series “Batman.” The show was wildly popular in its time, and remains a perennial cult favorite. Napier appreciated the recognition the role brought him, and most certainly appreciated the royalty checks the show brought his way, but he seems not to have considered the experience especially noteworthy otherwise, and devoted only a few brief paragraphs to it in his memoir. (His intended title for the book, incidentally, was “Footsteps in the Sand.”) Ironically, Napier had little to say about the one role for which he’s best remembered.This is where editor James Bigwood comes to the fore: he has contributed extensive supplementary material to Napier’s text, not only regarding the Batman phenomenon, but also about other aspects of Alan’s life and work not otherwise covered, or mentioned only in passing. He supplies chapters on Napier’s film and TV work, and on his life from the mid-1970s until his death in 1988, filling in the period after Napier’s original text concludes. Perhaps at this point I should mention that I have a personal connection to the project. Mr. Bigwood happens to be a cousin of mine, as well as a longtime friend and fellow film buff. Prior to the publication of Not Just Batman’s Butler he shared the text with me, and I offered a few comments and suggestions. But let me emphasize, Jim deserves all the credit for the finished product. He was the one who tracked down the manuscript and secured the permission of the Napier family to get it published. Jim also located lots of rare, unusual photos, ones you won’t find online or in other books or magazine pieces that touch on the movies, plays, and TV shows mentioned. I have several favorites, but one in particular that strikes my fancy dates from a 1931 stage production of Little Lord Fauntleroy, and depicts the 28 year-old Alan playing an elderly dignitary (he often played older roles in his youth) opposite the titular character, portrayed by the one and only Elsa Lanchester in male drag!In sum, I can honestly say that, although I’d heard about this book for a long time before I finally read it this summer, it’s better than I ever imagined. By that I mean it transcends the typical actor’s memoir, as it is better written and considerably more substantial than the average book of this type. Mr. Napier, who worked on a number of literary projects over the years, shows a real flair for writing. He’s witty, perceptive, and warm. In a way it’s too bad he didn’t pursue a writing career more extensively, especially in his later years, when the acting gigs were comparatively few and far between. But at long last we have this autobiography, a notable accomplishment for its author, and for its editor. Not Just Batman’s Butler offers a rich and vivid impression of the somewhat enigmatic man behind the many fine performances. Readers interested in classic era Hollywood filmmaking, the legitimate stage during its inter-war heyday, television of the post-war era, and, generally speaking, 20th century popular culture, will find much in it to savor.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Holy Alfred, Batman! By Peter Bigwood Full disclosure: my brother is the author (along with Alan Napier himself), so I must confess to a certain bias. Still, the book holds together well and the concept — combining Napier's unpublished autobiography with additional reporting — is a clever one, and I believe (James) Bigwood pulls it off deftly. Couple that with his usual (trust me) meticulous research, and you get a highly readable and accurate account of a fascinating British actor who made the unusual leap, late in life, into the heart of American pop culture. I only wish there had been more on Julie Newmar.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Full of Interesting Stories, but Could Use Editing By RDD Alan Napier retells his life’s story in "Not Just Batman’s Butler", beginning with his earliest memories of youth up to 1973, when he completed the manuscript. Napier himself described his approach to James Bigwood (the editor of this volume) in ’73, saying, “I’ve written an autobiographical work full of fascinating stories” (p. 2). Using this methodology, Napier writes in a conversational style, following ideas and people without always adhering to chronological order and with frequent asides. He organizes the volume into three sections, Birmingham (in which he recounts his youth and family), London (focused on his early stage career), and America (about his time in American films and television). Bigwood offers annotations when necessary to clarify events or chronology and contributes several whole chapters in the third part of the autobiography.Napier lives up to his title, arriving at "Batman" on page 307 out of 358 (not counting the appendices). He completes his description of that role in 1 page, with Bigwood contributing an additional 12 pages about the role as Alfred and its legacy. The vast majority of the work focuses on Napier’s work in other film and television roles as well as his early work in English theatre. In such a large body of work, Napier encountered many actors and directors about whom he relates interesting anecdotes. In addition, his description of the theatre community in the interwar period captures the mood of the time perfectly.Though Napier’s initial description of a “work full of fascination stories” accurately describes the book, it could use some editing. Napier’s frequent, and often lengthy, asides often derail the focus of chapters while his habit of eschewing chronological order leads him to repeat himself and explain events he covered earlier. From Bigwood’s introduction, Napier originally wrote this as a memory exercise and, being a fan, Bigwood did not significantly edit it when McFarland & Company published it forty years later. With this in mind, "Not Just Batman’s Butler" will appeal primarily to students of theatre and film, for whom it represents an academic primary source of the type McFarland is known for, rather than casual fans of Napier or ABC’s "Batman" television series.

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