Revisiting Truman Capote: “I’m an alcoholic. I’m a drug addict. I’m homosexual. I’m a genius.”
When James Agee noted in Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, “You never live an inch without involvement and hurting people and fucking yourself everlastingly,” he could have been describing the highly self-destructive Truman Capote to a T.
Best remembered today for the romanticized film adaptation of his novel Breakfast at Tiffany’s — the Audrey Hepburn starrer — and for his acclaimed mega-seller “non-fiction novel,” In Cold Blood (1966), Capote is what might have happened if Fran Lebowitz had been born an effeminate gay boy with literary ambitions.
If you arrived too late on the planet to have been enamored by Capote’s antics — he did die in 1984 after all — fear not. The joy he wrought and the outrage he often elicited is captured in Ebs Burnough’s deliciously wry new documentary, The Capote Tapes.
The inspiration for this project was the discovery of hundreds of hours of taped interviews that the late journalist George Plimpton conducted for a projected bio of Capote that was…