A Silver Streak in His Golden Years: Gene Wilder’s Latest Novella
Gene Wilder is out with a new book. The Hollywood icon beloved for the characters he played in “The Producers,” “Young Frankenstein,” and “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory,” not to mention the series of comic escapades he made with the late Richard Pryor through the 1970s and 80s, published his first book in 2005. The autobiography, “Kiss Me Like A Stranger,” (2005) is a short, breezy read, free from the “he said, she said”s one expects from celebrity tell-alls. The book was a success: his combination of honesty and gracious acceptance meant that it was never vicious, even as it candidly chronicled his tumultuous relationships.
His next effort, “My French Whore,” (2007) was an even shorter read but was packed with action. It’s hero Paul Peachy, a simpleton from Milwaukee, discovers unexplored depths when he is captured by German soldiers in the First World War and passes himself off as top spy Harry Stroller. The Germans give him Annie Breton, the “French Whore” in question, as a prize and Peachy promptly falls in love. Just like his memoir, “My French Whore” unabashedly describes sexual desire and revels in the thrill of a budding relationship. Wilder brings the same sensibility to his latest novella, “The Woman Who Wouldn’t“. The year is 1904 and Jeremy Webb, a famous violinist, is at a retreat in Badenweider, Germany, recovering from a nervous breakdown he had mid-concert. There he meets a beautiful Belgian, Clara Mulpas, who rebuffs his every attempt to flirt with her. Clara, it turns out, is carrying her own dark secret.
I spoke with Gene Wilder about this new book which, in a way, is a romantic re-imagining of his marriage to “Saturday Night Live” actress Gilda Radner who died of cancer in 1989.
***(Warning: Spoilers Follow)***
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