Event: Billy Bob Thornton live in LA for book
signing
When: 21 May 2012 @ 7pm
Where: Barnes and Noble located at 189 The Grove Drive , Grove
shopping center, Los Angeles .
Raised in small-town Arkansas , Billy Bob
Thornton grew up amid a rich storytelling tradition. See, the South is just
different than other places. . . . You can feel the ghosts there. As a kid, he
would sit on the porch listening to his family or some old man down the road
spinning yarns about colorful neighbors. These stories didn't have to be made
up. The characters were already there, so the stories just came out of the
characters we knew. Thus was borne his Oscar®-winning masterpiece Sling Blade
and now The Billy Bob Tapes—a narrative based on late-night conversations with
Kinky Friedman and other friends who gathered 'round to hear Billy mine a cave
full of ghosts.
Billy grew up shooting squirrels,
playing drums in VFW clubs, and dreaming of rock 'n' roll stardom or pitching
for the St. Louis Cardinals. Then at sixteen he took a drama class to meet
chicks—and met Mrs. Treadway, who noticed the young man's talent and encouraged
him as an actor and writer. "You don't know what it's like to be a drama
teacher in a small town in Arkansas
where nobody really cares," she said, "but let me tell you something.
You can do this." Everything I've accomplished since, I can trace back to
this woman, Maudie Treadway.
The colorful characters, stories,
and experiences of his youth would find their way into Billy's work, in his
films and music, and in his perspective and attitude. It's like the old saying
goes: you can take the boy out of the hills, but you can't take the hills out
of the boy. That boy did leave the hills—for Hollywood Hills. A true fish out
of water, he recalls stories of miserable jobs, the cheapest accommodations,
and physical hunger—but also a devoted writing partner Tom Epperson, a
life-changing acting teacher in L.A., and a compassionate nurse who snuck him
milk shakes when he was near starvation. But there was always the dream of
being an actor, and his fortunes turned when he served hors d'oeuvres as a
catering waiter to legendary director Billy Wilder, who advised him,
"Write about your interesting life."
Billy's long career in Hollywood
yields stories of inspired collaborations and failed ones, true friendships
with other actors and musicians, and good friends gone too soon. In The Billy
Bob Tapes, he reflects on the critics, the culture around fame, and the
challenges of conveying an artistic vision in film. Most striking is Billy's
clear-eyed perspective about the magic of entertainment, and how we perceive it
in a rapidly changing world. With passion, unvarnished honesty, wry humor, and
a little help from friends Angelina Jolie, Robert Duvall, Dwight Yoakam, Tom
Epperson, and Daniel Lanois, Billy Bob finally talks.
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