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Interview with Augusten Burroughs
When you hear the name Augusten Burroughs, you might think of a damaged gay guy with an incredibly screwed-up childhood who helped exorcise his demons by writing sardonic, heart-wrenching memoirs. Running With Scissors, which chronicled Augusten's distress after his mother pawned him off to live with a deranged psychiatrist, was on the New York Times bestseller list for seventy weeks. The follow-up, Dry, recalled his battles with alcohol and a merciless advertising job. Then came Magical Thinking, a collection of personal essays that revealed his triumph over the trauma. Yet Augusten is more than a mere survivor. He's an ingenious, hyper-creative force on the verge of something huge—a mega-mogul in the making. Just last week, the literary impresario's latest volume of sharply observed, snarky essays, Possible Side Effects landed in bookstores to wide acclaim. He's creating an hour-long original comedy series for Showtime. His only novel, Sellevision, a zany, behind-the-sets spoof of a scandalous home-shopping network, is being developed into a film starring Kristin Davis and Julia Louis-Dreyfus. A stocking-ready collection of fractured holiday tales is also in the works. And in perhaps the biggest coup of all, Sony Pictures has fashioned Running With Scissors into a movie boasting a dream cast that includes Annette Bening, Alec Baldwin, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jill Clayburgh, and Joseph Fiennes. Written and directed by Ryan Murphy (the writer/director of the FX Network's Nip/Tuck), the film's release was shifted to October 2006 to nab a strategic berth for Oscar contention. The irrepressible scribe, who now lives a veritable Ozzie-and-Harriet existence with his partner, Dennis, and two French Bulldogs in a country house they built in New England, still keeps a pied-à-terre in Manhattan where he lived for years. Augusten took time out from his 20-city book tour to discuss his burgeoning body of work, and what makes him—to borrow a slogan from the wacked-out world of advertising he has now shunned—“take a licking and keep on ticking.” AfterElton: What's your take on your success, given your, um, unusual upbringing? AE: How's the book tour going? AE: So your fans make it all worthwhile? Submitted by on Sun, 2006-05-14 23:00. |
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