John C. Tibbetts
Encyclopedia
{John C. Tibbetts|date=Nov 2011}
John C. Tibbetts (born Paola, Kansas
, October 6, 1946 and grew up in Leavenworth, Kansas) is an American film critic, historian, author, painter and pianist.
in Multi-Disciplinary Studies—Art History, Theater, Photography and Film (the first person to complete what was then regarded as an experimental curriculum in multi-disciplinary studies)—Tibbetts was tenured as an Associate Professor. Under the general rubric of “visual literacy,” his course work includes film history, media studies, and theory and aesthetics.
Before entering the academy, John worked from 1980-1996 as a full-time broadcaster. He was an Arts and Entertainment Editor and Producer for a variety of radio and television outlets, including KCTV (Kansas City’s CBS affiliate), KMBC Radio, and KXTR-FM radio. During that time he also contributed many broadcast stories about musicians, painters, playwrights, and filmmakers to CBS Television, the Monitor Radio Network, Voice of America, and National Public Radio. More recently, he has produced two radio series about music—the 15-part The World of Robert Schumann and the 17-part Piano Portraits—that have been broadcast worldwide and are now a part of the permanent collection of the Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives in Lincoln Center, New York. Both derive from his knowledge of music and feature numerous interviews with musicians and scholars in the musical field.
As a writer, he has published short stories, as well as scholarly and popular articles and books about the arts. Among his published short stories, one was featured in Twilight Zone magazine and one was selected by Ballantine Books for inclusion in the Year’s Best Horror Stories, Series Eight. Music, theater, and film play a substantial part in his twelve books and more than 250 articles. For example, Dvorak in America (Amadeus Press, 1993) was a multicultural study of the famous Czech composer’s sojourn in America, 1892-1895. The eminent cultural historian, Robert Winter, greeted the book enthusiastically: “Of all the books on American music at the turn of the century, none brings together so many interesting and richly interrelated dimensions as Dvorak in America.” An historical overview of the interactions of theater and film is explored in The American Theatrical Film (Popular Press,
1985), which is currently being used by Professor Charles Musser
as a text in his courses at Yale University. And film adaptations of theater and literature are the subjects of his various edited reference works, including The Encyclopedia of Novels into Film (Facts on File, 1998; rev., 2002), The Cinema of Tony Richardson (SUNY Press, 1999), The Encyclopedia of Stage Plays into Film (2001), Shakespeare into Film (2002), And the dramatization on film of the lives of classical and popular composers, Composers in the Movies: Studies in Musical Biography (Yale University Press, 2005), is the first scholarly study of the subject. It was praised by the dean of cultural studies, Professor Jacques Barzun, as “a welcome and worthwhile endeavor.” It received a Second Prize from the prestigious International Association of Media Historians for “Best Book on Media Studies” in 2007.
John continues to pursue his work as a painter and illustrator. He has executed many covers and interior illustrations for the published articles and books enumerated above. His work has been featured in gallery exhibitions in Kansas City and at the University of Kansas, where the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has reserved a wall for his paintings. In particular, he confesses to a lifelong passion for portraits. He claims to have painted thousands of portraits, on commission and on his own, and has exploited his opportunities as a broadcast interviewer to draw hundreds of images of popular actors, filmmakers, musicians, many of which have been personally inscribed and autographed.
His ability as a pianist of twelve years’ training has resulted in something of a secondary career: accompanying silent movies at venues as various as the American Film Institute Theatre in Washington, D.C., the Silent Film Festivals in Topeka, Kansas, and the annual Buster Keaton Celebrations in Iola, Kansas.
In addition to his teaching responsibilities and mentoring activities at the University of Kansas (where he has served as Associate Chair for the Department of Theater and Film), John brings his knowledge and experience in the arts to a wider community service. For the Kansas Humanities Council he has lectured and presented topics on the arts and local history to many communities around the state, such as Garden Grove, Ottawa, and Council Grove. For more than twenty years he has appeared as an arts commentator and critic on the “Walt Bodine Show” on KCUR-FM radio, Kansas City; and, more recently, as a reporter and film critic on Kansas Public Radio. He organized the “Buster Keaton Celebrations,” held annually in Iola, Kansas since 1992 and sponsored by the Kansas Humanities Council. In the 1980s he provided program notes for the concerts of the Kansas City Camerata Chamber Orchestra.
Piano Portraits - radio interviews with famous pianists, 2005 - 2006 on Kansas Public Radio
“Whose Chopin? Politics and Patriotism in A Song to Remember,” American Studies, Vol. 46, No. 1 (Spring 2005), 115-140.
“Ken Russell’s The Debussy Film (1965),” Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Vol. 25, No. 1 (March 2005), 81-99.
“Elgar’s Ear: A Conversation with Ken Russell,” Quarterly Review of Film and Video, Vol. 22, No. 1 (January-March 2005), 37-49.
“The Voice that Fills the House: Opera Fills the Screen,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 32, No. 1 (2004), 2-11.
“Marc-Andre Hamelin,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 66, No. 4 (July-August 2003), 4-7.
“Shostakovich’s Fool to Stalin’s Czar: Tony Palmer’s Testimony,” Journal of Film, Radio, and Television, Vol. 22, No. 2 (June 2002), 173-196.
“Howard’s End: A Lisztian Pianist Crosses the Finish Line,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 62, No. 3 (May-June 1999), 10-13.
“Words and Music: Graham Johnson, Immersed in Schubert,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 62, No. 6 (November-December 1999), 22-25.
“Andras Schiff: The Focus Is on Robert Schumann,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 61, No. 5 (September-October 1998), 47-49, 75.
“Virgil Thomson: A Portrait in Music,” The World and I, Vol. 11, No. 11 (November 1996), 112-117.
“Baffling Bartok: Secrets Beyond the Seventh Door," The American Record Guide, Vol. 58, No. 6 (November-December 1995), l2-l4, 2l.
“Firkusny’s Lasting Legacy,” The World and I, Vol. 10, No. 1 (January 1995), 112-117.
“Robert Schumann's Illness,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 57, No. 5 (September-October 1994), 4l-42.
“’Diese herrliche Frau,’” The World and I, Vol. 9, No. 10 (October 1994), 112-117.
“Young Berlioz Revealed,” The World and I, Vol. 9, No. 2 (February 1994), 112-117.
“Rachmaninoff’s Piano Legacy,” The World and I, Vol. 8, No. 3 (March 1993), 114-121.
"Remembering Rachmaninoff,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 56, No. l (Jan-Feb 1993), 6-l4.
“The Lyre of Light,” Film Comment, January-February 1992, 66-73.
“A Midsummer Night’s Mendelssohn,” The World and I (November 1991), 175-179.
“In Search of Stephen Foster,” The World and I, July 1991, 253-259.
“Dvorak in the New World,” Classical Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 2 (February 1991), 32-36.
“In Search of Clara Schumann,” Helicon Nine: The Journal of Women’s Arts and Letters, No. 16 (Winter 1986), 76-87.
“Back to Barsoom! Filmfax, No. 104 (October-December 2004), 74-81, 138.
“House of Mirth: Rooms with a View,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 31, No. 3 (2003), 199-202.
“August Wilson Interview,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 30, No. 4 (2002), 238-242.
“Backstage with the Bard; or, Building a Better Mousetrap,” Literature/ Film Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 2 (2001), 147-164.
“The Hard Ride: Jayhawkers and Bushwhackers in the Kansas-Missouri Border Wars—Ride with the Devil,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 27, No. 3 (1999), 189-195.
“The Illustrating Man: The Screenplays of Ray Bradbury,” Creative Screenwriting, Vol. 6, No. 1 (January-February 1999), 45-54.
“Flying into the Winds of Time: An Interview with Ray Bradbury,” Outre, No. 26 (2001), 30-34.
“The Man Who Knew Too Much,” The World and I, Vol. 4, No. l (April 1992),362-37l.
“The Third Elephant: An Interview with Joseph Mugnaini, the Illustrator of Ray Bradbury,” Horror Magazine, No. 8 (Summer 1997), 50-56 (reprinted in Outre, No. 19 (2000), 32-37.
“Time on His Hands: The Fantasy Fiction of Jack Finney,” Outre: The World of Ultramedia, No. 16 (1999), 52-56, 75, 81.
“Lanford Wilson,” The Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Vol. V, No 2 (Spring 1991), 175-180.
“Men, Women, and Ghosts: The Supernatural Fiction of Edith Wharton,” Helicon Nine: The Journal of Women’s Arts and Letters, No. 9 (Winter 1983), 44-53.
“The New Woman on Stage: Women’s Issues in American Drama, 1890-1915,” Helicon Nine: The Journal of Women’s Arts and Letters , No. 7 (Winter 1982), 6-19.
“The Stage Goes West: Routes to The Virginian,” Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, Vol. XXXIV, No. 2 (Autumn 198l), 26-37.
“The old dark house: the architecture of ambiguity in The Turn of the Screw and The Innocents,” in Chibnall, Steve and Julian Petley, eds., British Horror Cinema (London and New York: Routledge, 2002), 99-116.
“G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936),” in Winks, Robin, ed., Mystery and Suspense Writers (New York: Scribner’s, 1998), 181-194.
“Miracles of Rare Device: Chesterton’s Miracle Crimes,” in Ahlquist, Dale, ed., The Gift of Wonder: The Many Sides of G.K. Chesterton (Minneapolis, MN: American Chesterton Society, 2001), 101-109. Revision.
“Miracles of Rare Device in the Detective Stories of G.K. Chesterton and Others,” in Accardo, Pasquale and John Peterson, and Geir Hasnes, eds., Sherlock Holmes Meets Father Brown and His Creator (Sauk City, WI: The Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, 2000), 106-113.
“High Tea with Judith Lea,” Gilbert! The Magazine of G.K. Chesterton, Volume 3, No. 6 (April-May 2000), 16-17.
“The Case of the Forgotten Detectives: The Unknown Crime Fiction of G.K. Chesterton,” The Armchair Detective, Vol. 28, No. 4 (Fall 1995), 388-393.
“So Much Is Lost in Translation: Literary Adaptations in the 1990s,” in Dixon, Wheeler Winston, ed., Film Genre 2000: New Critical Essays (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2000), 29-44.
“The Long, Loud Silence” (553-554) and “The Other Passenger” (711-712) in Magill’s Guide to Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature (Pasadena CA: Salem Press, 1997).
“Brown, Charles Brockden,” in Sullivan, Jack, ed., The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural (New York: The Viking Press, 1986), 58-60.
“Back to Barsoom!” Filmfax, No. 104 (October-December 2004), 74-81, 138.
“Time on His Hands: The Fantasy Fiction of Jack Finney,” Outre: The World of Ultramedia, Number 16 (1999), 52-56, 75, 81.
“The Kiss That’s Also a Bite: A Conversation with Suzy McKee Charnas,” Horror Magazine, No. 9 (Winter 1998), 62-65.
“Time on Our Hands: H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine,” The World and I, Vol. 10, No.5 (May 1995), 330-334. (centenary of a classic novel)
“Footprints on the Sands of Mars,” The World and I, Vol. 9, No. 4 (April 1994), 324-330 [written under the pseudonym “Jack Ketch”].
“The Man Who Invented Christmas,” The World and I, Vol. 8, No. 2 (December 1993), 321-326.
“Choice of Weapons,” The World and I, Vol. 8, No. 9 (September 1993), 184-193.
“Locked Rooms and Mean Streets,” The World and I, Vol. 7, No. 5 (May 1992), 313-325.
“The Mysteries of Chris Van Allsburg,” The World and I, Vol. 6, No. 12 (December 1991), 252-261.
“The ‘Martian Chronicler’ Reflects,” The Christian Science Monitor, 20 March 1991, 16.
“Holmes in London, 1988,” Baker Street Miscellanea, No. 7 (Spring 1989), 32-43.
“Bradbury Meets Disney,” TWA Ambassador Magazine, Vol. l4, No. 7 (July 198l), l2,l4, l6, 20.
“An Interview with Michael Moore,” Film & History, Vol. 3, No. 2 (2004), 86-88.
“Faces and Masks: Peter Shaffer’s Amadeus from Stage to Screen,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 32, No. 3 (2004), 166-174.
“Winstanley: or Kevin Brownlow Camps Out on St. George’s Hill,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 31, No. 4 (2003), 312-318.
“Shostakovich’s Fool to Stalin’s Czar: Tony Palmer’s Testimony (1987),” The Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television, Vol. 22, No. 2 (2002), 173-196.
“Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 4 (2001), 250-251.
“Robots Redux: A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Literature/ Film Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 4 (2001), 256-261.
“Mary Pickford and the American ‘Growing Girl,’” The Journal of Popular Film & Television, Vol. 29, No. 2 (Summer 2001), 50-62.
“Hollywood and the Multicultural Republic,” The World and I, November 2000, 259-265.
“Kevin Brownlow’s Historical Films: It Happened Here (1965) and Winstanley (1975),” Historical Journal of Radio and Television, Vol. 20, No. 2 (June 2000),227-251.
“Life to Those Shadows: Kevin Brownlow Talks about a Career in Films,” Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Vol. XIV, No. 1 (Fall 1999), 79-94. (co-written with James M. Welsh)
“The Incredible Stillness of Being: Motionless Pictures in the Films of Ken Burns,” American Studies, Vol. 37, No. 1 (Spring 1996), 117-133.
“The Hole in the Doughnut: The Last Days of Buster Keaton,” The Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Vol. X, No. 1 (Fall 1995), 79-99.
“Re-Examining the Silent Film: Interviews with Historians Charles Musser, Eileen Bowser, and Richard Kozarski,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 23, No. 2 (1995), 88-90.
“Clint Eastwood and the Machinery of Violence,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 21,No. 1 (1993), 10-17.
“The Wisdom of the Serpent: Frauds and Miracles in Frank Capa’s [sic] The Miracle Woman,” The Journal of Popular Film and Television, Vol. VII, No. 3 (1979), 293-309. Reprinted in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol. 16. Detroit MI: Gale Research Company, 1981, 165-166.
“A Matter of Definition: Out of Bounds in The Girl Friends,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 7, No. 4 (1979), 270-276.
“Sternberg and The Last Command,” Cinema Journal, Vol. XV, No. 2 (Spring 1976), 68-73. Reprinted in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol. 20. Detroit MI: Gale Research Company, 198l, 377-378.
“Breaking the Classical Barrier” (Interview with filmmaker Franco Zeffirelli), in Behrens, Laurence and Leonard J. Rosen, eds., Writing and Reading Across the Curriculum (New York: Longmans, 2003), 761-765.
“Troell, Jan,” in International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers—Volume Two—Directors (Chicago: St. James Press, 1997), 1001-1003.
“The Wind,” in MacCann, Richard Dyer, ed., Films of the 1920s (Metuchen NJ: The Scarecrow Press, 1997), 115-118.
“Rowland Brown,” in Thompson, Frank, ed., Between Action and Cut (Metuchen, NJ:
Josef von Sternberg and The Last Command, in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol.20 (Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1982), 377-378.
Frank Capra’s The Miracle Woman, in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol. 20(Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1981), 165.
“Vital Geography: Victor Seastrom’s The Wind,” in Whittemore, Don and Phillip Alan Cecchettini, eds., Passport to Hollywood: The Film Immigrants Anthology (New York: McGraw Hill, 1976), 255-261.
“C.S.A.,” Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Summer 2003), 118-120.
“Hollywood and the Multicultural Republic,” The World and I, November 2000, 259-265.
“Riding with the Devil: The Movie Adventures of William Clarke Quantrill,” Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains, Vol. 22, No. 3 (Autumn 1999), 182-199.
“Peter Weir: The Poetry of Apocalypse,” Seasons, Summer 1998, 30-33.
“The Kiss That’s Also a Bite: A Conversation with Suzy McKee Charnas,” Horror Magazine, No. 9 (Winter 1998), 62-65.
“Disorder in the Court!: Hollywood’s take on the law and lawyers,” The John Marshall Law School Magazine, Spring 1997, 22-35.
“Coquette: Mary Pickford Finds a Voice,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVIII, No. 1-2(January-February 1997), 61-66.
“‘Rosewood’ Remembers Race War,” Christian Science Monitor, 25 February 1997,14.
“Mary Pickford Returns,” The World and I (December 1996), 112-117.
“Mel Gibson: Citizen of the Planet,” Los Angeles Magazine, 1996-1997, 27-28, 30.
“Robin Williams: The Bay Area’s Wild Child,” San Francisco Magazine, 1996-1997, 1014.
“Barry Levinson: Redefining Baltimore,” Baltimore Magazine, 1996, 6-8, 81.
“Splendidly Self-Propelled: Douglas Fairbanks’ The Gaucho,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVII, No. 718 (July-August 1996), 96-101.
“Man in Motion: An Interview with Buster Crabbe,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVII, No. 7/8 (July-August 1996), 34-42.
“The Choreography of Hope: The Films of Douglas Fairbanks, Sr.,” Film Comment,Vol. 32, No. 3 (May-June 1996), 50-55.
“The Making of Kansas City,” Kansas City Magazine, April 1996, 43-45, 62.
“Shepard to the Rescue,” The World and I, Vol. 11, No. 4 (April 1996), 140-145.
“‘Jumanji,’ A Whale of a Tale,” The Christian Science Monitor, 15 December 1995,12.
“Many Bridges to Cross: A Fable about Whoopi,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVI, No.9/10 (November-December 1995), 46-53.
“All That Glitters,” Film Comment, Vol. 31, No. 2 (March-April 1995), 52-55.
“Railroad Man: The last ride of Buster Keaton,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVI, No. 5/6 (July/August 1995), 2-11.
“Keaton the Prairie Pragmatist,” The World and I, Vol. 10, No. 10 (October 1995),118-123.
“Beyond the Camera: The Untold Story Behind the Making of Hoop Dreams,” The World and I, Vol.10, No. 10 (October 1995), l32-l39 [written under the pseudonym “Jack Ketch”].
“Touching All the Bases: The Documentaries of Ken Burns,” The World and I, Vol. 20, No. 1 (January 1995), 150-161 [written under the pseudonym “Jack Ketch”].
“Mel Gibson: Infinite Space,” The World and I, Vol.9, No. 9 (September 1994), 151-
Kansas Governors Arts Award 2008
John C. Tibbetts (born Paola, Kansas
Paola, Kansas
Paola is a city in and the county seat of Miami County, Kansas, United States. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 5,602.-History:...
, October 6, 1946 and grew up in Leavenworth, Kansas) is an American film critic, historian, author, painter and pianist.
Career
After receiving a Ph.D. in 1982 from the University of KansasUniversity of Kansas
The University of Kansas is a public research university and the largest university in the state of Kansas. KU campuses are located in Lawrence, Wichita, Overland Park, and Kansas City, Kansas with the main campus being located in Lawrence on Mount Oread, the highest point in Lawrence. The...
in Multi-Disciplinary Studies—Art History, Theater, Photography and Film (the first person to complete what was then regarded as an experimental curriculum in multi-disciplinary studies)—Tibbetts was tenured as an Associate Professor. Under the general rubric of “visual literacy,” his course work includes film history, media studies, and theory and aesthetics.
Before entering the academy, John worked from 1980-1996 as a full-time broadcaster. He was an Arts and Entertainment Editor and Producer for a variety of radio and television outlets, including KCTV (Kansas City’s CBS affiliate), KMBC Radio, and KXTR-FM radio. During that time he also contributed many broadcast stories about musicians, painters, playwrights, and filmmakers to CBS Television, the Monitor Radio Network, Voice of America, and National Public Radio. More recently, he has produced two radio series about music—the 15-part The World of Robert Schumann and the 17-part Piano Portraits—that have been broadcast worldwide and are now a part of the permanent collection of the Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives in Lincoln Center, New York. Both derive from his knowledge of music and feature numerous interviews with musicians and scholars in the musical field.
As a writer, he has published short stories, as well as scholarly and popular articles and books about the arts. Among his published short stories, one was featured in Twilight Zone magazine and one was selected by Ballantine Books for inclusion in the Year’s Best Horror Stories, Series Eight. Music, theater, and film play a substantial part in his twelve books and more than 250 articles. For example, Dvorak in America (Amadeus Press, 1993) was a multicultural study of the famous Czech composer’s sojourn in America, 1892-1895. The eminent cultural historian, Robert Winter, greeted the book enthusiastically: “Of all the books on American music at the turn of the century, none brings together so many interesting and richly interrelated dimensions as Dvorak in America.” An historical overview of the interactions of theater and film is explored in The American Theatrical Film (Popular Press,
1985), which is currently being used by Professor Charles Musser
Charles Musser
Charles Musser is Professor of Film and American Studies at Yale University. He is a prominent film historian and documentary film maker who has "added a great deal to our knowledge of early cinema with his writings and his filmmaking."...
as a text in his courses at Yale University. And film adaptations of theater and literature are the subjects of his various edited reference works, including The Encyclopedia of Novels into Film (Facts on File, 1998; rev., 2002), The Cinema of Tony Richardson (SUNY Press, 1999), The Encyclopedia of Stage Plays into Film (2001), Shakespeare into Film (2002), And the dramatization on film of the lives of classical and popular composers, Composers in the Movies: Studies in Musical Biography (Yale University Press, 2005), is the first scholarly study of the subject. It was praised by the dean of cultural studies, Professor Jacques Barzun, as “a welcome and worthwhile endeavor.” It received a Second Prize from the prestigious International Association of Media Historians for “Best Book on Media Studies” in 2007.
John continues to pursue his work as a painter and illustrator. He has executed many covers and interior illustrations for the published articles and books enumerated above. His work has been featured in gallery exhibitions in Kansas City and at the University of Kansas, where the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has reserved a wall for his paintings. In particular, he confesses to a lifelong passion for portraits. He claims to have painted thousands of portraits, on commission and on his own, and has exploited his opportunities as a broadcast interviewer to draw hundreds of images of popular actors, filmmakers, musicians, many of which have been personally inscribed and autographed.
His ability as a pianist of twelve years’ training has resulted in something of a secondary career: accompanying silent movies at venues as various as the American Film Institute Theatre in Washington, D.C., the Silent Film Festivals in Topeka, Kansas, and the annual Buster Keaton Celebrations in Iola, Kansas.
In addition to his teaching responsibilities and mentoring activities at the University of Kansas (where he has served as Associate Chair for the Department of Theater and Film), John brings his knowledge and experience in the arts to a wider community service. For the Kansas Humanities Council he has lectured and presented topics on the arts and local history to many communities around the state, such as Garden Grove, Ottawa, and Council Grove. For more than twenty years he has appeared as an arts commentator and critic on the “Walt Bodine Show” on KCUR-FM radio, Kansas City; and, more recently, as a reporter and film critic on Kansas Public Radio. He organized the “Buster Keaton Celebrations,” held annually in Iola, Kansas since 1992 and sponsored by the Kansas Humanities Council. In the 1980s he provided program notes for the concerts of the Kansas City Camerata Chamber Orchestra.
Broadcast Series
The World of Robert Schummann - 13-part radio series, 2006-2007 on the WFMT Radio Network.Piano Portraits - radio interviews with famous pianists, 2005 - 2006 on Kansas Public Radio
Publications on music
“Grieg and Andsnes,” American Record Guide, Vol. 68, No. 5 (September-October2005), 36-37.“Whose Chopin? Politics and Patriotism in A Song to Remember,” American Studies, Vol. 46, No. 1 (Spring 2005), 115-140.
“Ken Russell’s The Debussy Film (1965),” Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Vol. 25, No. 1 (March 2005), 81-99.
“Elgar’s Ear: A Conversation with Ken Russell,” Quarterly Review of Film and Video, Vol. 22, No. 1 (January-March 2005), 37-49.
“The Voice that Fills the House: Opera Fills the Screen,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 32, No. 1 (2004), 2-11.
“Marc-Andre Hamelin,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 66, No. 4 (July-August 2003), 4-7.
“Shostakovich’s Fool to Stalin’s Czar: Tony Palmer’s Testimony,” Journal of Film, Radio, and Television, Vol. 22, No. 2 (June 2002), 173-196.
“Howard’s End: A Lisztian Pianist Crosses the Finish Line,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 62, No. 3 (May-June 1999), 10-13.
“Words and Music: Graham Johnson, Immersed in Schubert,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 62, No. 6 (November-December 1999), 22-25.
“Andras Schiff: The Focus Is on Robert Schumann,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 61, No. 5 (September-October 1998), 47-49, 75.
“Virgil Thomson: A Portrait in Music,” The World and I, Vol. 11, No. 11 (November 1996), 112-117.
“Baffling Bartok: Secrets Beyond the Seventh Door," The American Record Guide, Vol. 58, No. 6 (November-December 1995), l2-l4, 2l.
“Firkusny’s Lasting Legacy,” The World and I, Vol. 10, No. 1 (January 1995), 112-117.
“Robert Schumann's Illness,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 57, No. 5 (September-October 1994), 4l-42.
“’Diese herrliche Frau,’” The World and I, Vol. 9, No. 10 (October 1994), 112-117.
“Young Berlioz Revealed,” The World and I, Vol. 9, No. 2 (February 1994), 112-117.
“Rachmaninoff’s Piano Legacy,” The World and I, Vol. 8, No. 3 (March 1993), 114-121.
"Remembering Rachmaninoff,” The American Record Guide, Vol. 56, No. l (Jan-Feb 1993), 6-l4.
“The Lyre of Light,” Film Comment, January-February 1992, 66-73.
“A Midsummer Night’s Mendelssohn,” The World and I (November 1991), 175-179.
“In Search of Stephen Foster,” The World and I, July 1991, 253-259.
“Dvorak in the New World,” Classical Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 2 (February 1991), 32-36.
“In Search of Clara Schumann,” Helicon Nine: The Journal of Women’s Arts and Letters, No. 16 (Winter 1986), 76-87.
Books and Articles on Literature and Film
“Brian Aldiss’ Billion Year Spree,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 32, No. 4 (2004), 246-254.“Back to Barsoom! Filmfax, No. 104 (October-December 2004), 74-81, 138.
“House of Mirth: Rooms with a View,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 31, No. 3 (2003), 199-202.
“August Wilson Interview,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 30, No. 4 (2002), 238-242.
“Backstage with the Bard; or, Building a Better Mousetrap,” Literature/ Film Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 2 (2001), 147-164.
“The Hard Ride: Jayhawkers and Bushwhackers in the Kansas-Missouri Border Wars—Ride with the Devil,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 27, No. 3 (1999), 189-195.
“The Illustrating Man: The Screenplays of Ray Bradbury,” Creative Screenwriting, Vol. 6, No. 1 (January-February 1999), 45-54.
“Flying into the Winds of Time: An Interview with Ray Bradbury,” Outre, No. 26 (2001), 30-34.
“The Man Who Knew Too Much,” The World and I, Vol. 4, No. l (April 1992),362-37l.
“The Third Elephant: An Interview with Joseph Mugnaini, the Illustrator of Ray Bradbury,” Horror Magazine, No. 8 (Summer 1997), 50-56 (reprinted in Outre, No. 19 (2000), 32-37.
“Time on His Hands: The Fantasy Fiction of Jack Finney,” Outre: The World of Ultramedia, No. 16 (1999), 52-56, 75, 81.
“Lanford Wilson,” The Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Vol. V, No 2 (Spring 1991), 175-180.
“Men, Women, and Ghosts: The Supernatural Fiction of Edith Wharton,” Helicon Nine: The Journal of Women’s Arts and Letters, No. 9 (Winter 1983), 44-53.
“The New Woman on Stage: Women’s Issues in American Drama, 1890-1915,” Helicon Nine: The Journal of Women’s Arts and Letters , No. 7 (Winter 1982), 6-19.
“The Stage Goes West: Routes to The Virginian,” Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, Vol. XXXIV, No. 2 (Autumn 198l), 26-37.
“The old dark house: the architecture of ambiguity in The Turn of the Screw and The Innocents,” in Chibnall, Steve and Julian Petley, eds., British Horror Cinema (London and New York: Routledge, 2002), 99-116.
“G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936),” in Winks, Robin, ed., Mystery and Suspense Writers (New York: Scribner’s, 1998), 181-194.
“Miracles of Rare Device: Chesterton’s Miracle Crimes,” in Ahlquist, Dale, ed., The Gift of Wonder: The Many Sides of G.K. Chesterton (Minneapolis, MN: American Chesterton Society, 2001), 101-109. Revision.
“Miracles of Rare Device in the Detective Stories of G.K. Chesterton and Others,” in Accardo, Pasquale and John Peterson, and Geir Hasnes, eds., Sherlock Holmes Meets Father Brown and His Creator (Sauk City, WI: The Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, 2000), 106-113.
“High Tea with Judith Lea,” Gilbert! The Magazine of G.K. Chesterton, Volume 3, No. 6 (April-May 2000), 16-17.
“The Case of the Forgotten Detectives: The Unknown Crime Fiction of G.K. Chesterton,” The Armchair Detective, Vol. 28, No. 4 (Fall 1995), 388-393.
“So Much Is Lost in Translation: Literary Adaptations in the 1990s,” in Dixon, Wheeler Winston, ed., Film Genre 2000: New Critical Essays (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2000), 29-44.
“The Long, Loud Silence” (553-554) and “The Other Passenger” (711-712) in Magill’s Guide to Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature (Pasadena CA: Salem Press, 1997).
“Brown, Charles Brockden,” in Sullivan, Jack, ed., The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural (New York: The Viking Press, 1986), 58-60.
“Back to Barsoom!” Filmfax, No. 104 (October-December 2004), 74-81, 138.
“Time on His Hands: The Fantasy Fiction of Jack Finney,” Outre: The World of Ultramedia, Number 16 (1999), 52-56, 75, 81.
“The Kiss That’s Also a Bite: A Conversation with Suzy McKee Charnas,” Horror Magazine, No. 9 (Winter 1998), 62-65.
“Time on Our Hands: H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine,” The World and I, Vol. 10, No.5 (May 1995), 330-334. (centenary of a classic novel)
“Footprints on the Sands of Mars,” The World and I, Vol. 9, No. 4 (April 1994), 324-330 [written under the pseudonym “Jack Ketch”].
“The Man Who Invented Christmas,” The World and I, Vol. 8, No. 2 (December 1993), 321-326.
“Choice of Weapons,” The World and I, Vol. 8, No. 9 (September 1993), 184-193.
“Locked Rooms and Mean Streets,” The World and I, Vol. 7, No. 5 (May 1992), 313-325.
“The Mysteries of Chris Van Allsburg,” The World and I, Vol. 6, No. 12 (December 1991), 252-261.
“The ‘Martian Chronicler’ Reflects,” The Christian Science Monitor, 20 March 1991, 16.
“Holmes in London, 1988,” Baker Street Miscellanea, No. 7 (Spring 1989), 32-43.
“Bradbury Meets Disney,” TWA Ambassador Magazine, Vol. l4, No. 7 (July 198l), l2,l4, l6, 20.
Books and Articles on Film and Filmmakers
“Deadwood,” Kansas History, Vol. 28, No. 2 (Summer 2005), 113-115.“An Interview with Michael Moore,” Film & History, Vol. 3, No. 2 (2004), 86-88.
“Faces and Masks: Peter Shaffer’s Amadeus from Stage to Screen,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 32, No. 3 (2004), 166-174.
“Winstanley: or Kevin Brownlow Camps Out on St. George’s Hill,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 31, No. 4 (2003), 312-318.
“Shostakovich’s Fool to Stalin’s Czar: Tony Palmer’s Testimony (1987),” The Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television, Vol. 22, No. 2 (2002), 173-196.
“Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 4 (2001), 250-251.
“Robots Redux: A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Literature/ Film Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 4 (2001), 256-261.
“Mary Pickford and the American ‘Growing Girl,’” The Journal of Popular Film & Television, Vol. 29, No. 2 (Summer 2001), 50-62.
“Hollywood and the Multicultural Republic,” The World and I, November 2000, 259-265.
“Kevin Brownlow’s Historical Films: It Happened Here (1965) and Winstanley (1975),” Historical Journal of Radio and Television, Vol. 20, No. 2 (June 2000),227-251.
“Life to Those Shadows: Kevin Brownlow Talks about a Career in Films,” Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Vol. XIV, No. 1 (Fall 1999), 79-94. (co-written with James M. Welsh)
“The Incredible Stillness of Being: Motionless Pictures in the Films of Ken Burns,” American Studies, Vol. 37, No. 1 (Spring 1996), 117-133.
“The Hole in the Doughnut: The Last Days of Buster Keaton,” The Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Vol. X, No. 1 (Fall 1995), 79-99.
“Re-Examining the Silent Film: Interviews with Historians Charles Musser, Eileen Bowser, and Richard Kozarski,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 23, No. 2 (1995), 88-90.
“Clint Eastwood and the Machinery of Violence,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 21,No. 1 (1993), 10-17.
“The Wisdom of the Serpent: Frauds and Miracles in Frank Capa’s [sic] The Miracle Woman,” The Journal of Popular Film and Television, Vol. VII, No. 3 (1979), 293-309. Reprinted in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol. 16. Detroit MI: Gale Research Company, 1981, 165-166.
“A Matter of Definition: Out of Bounds in The Girl Friends,” Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 7, No. 4 (1979), 270-276.
“Sternberg and The Last Command,” Cinema Journal, Vol. XV, No. 2 (Spring 1976), 68-73. Reprinted in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol. 20. Detroit MI: Gale Research Company, 198l, 377-378.
“Breaking the Classical Barrier” (Interview with filmmaker Franco Zeffirelli), in Behrens, Laurence and Leonard J. Rosen, eds., Writing and Reading Across the Curriculum (New York: Longmans, 2003), 761-765.
“Troell, Jan,” in International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers—Volume Two—Directors (Chicago: St. James Press, 1997), 1001-1003.
“The Wind,” in MacCann, Richard Dyer, ed., Films of the 1920s (Metuchen NJ: The Scarecrow Press, 1997), 115-118.
“Rowland Brown,” in Thompson, Frank, ed., Between Action and Cut (Metuchen, NJ:
Josef von Sternberg and The Last Command, in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol.20 (Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1982), 377-378.
Frank Capra’s The Miracle Woman, in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol. 20(Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1981), 165.
“Vital Geography: Victor Seastrom’s The Wind,” in Whittemore, Don and Phillip Alan Cecchettini, eds., Passport to Hollywood: The Film Immigrants Anthology (New York: McGraw Hill, 1976), 255-261.
“C.S.A.,” Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Summer 2003), 118-120.
“Hollywood and the Multicultural Republic,” The World and I, November 2000, 259-265.
“Riding with the Devil: The Movie Adventures of William Clarke Quantrill,” Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains, Vol. 22, No. 3 (Autumn 1999), 182-199.
“Peter Weir: The Poetry of Apocalypse,” Seasons, Summer 1998, 30-33.
“The Kiss That’s Also a Bite: A Conversation with Suzy McKee Charnas,” Horror Magazine, No. 9 (Winter 1998), 62-65.
“Disorder in the Court!: Hollywood’s take on the law and lawyers,” The John Marshall Law School Magazine, Spring 1997, 22-35.
“Coquette: Mary Pickford Finds a Voice,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVIII, No. 1-2(January-February 1997), 61-66.
“‘Rosewood’ Remembers Race War,” Christian Science Monitor, 25 February 1997,14.
“Mary Pickford Returns,” The World and I (December 1996), 112-117.
“Mel Gibson: Citizen of the Planet,” Los Angeles Magazine, 1996-1997, 27-28, 30.
“Robin Williams: The Bay Area’s Wild Child,” San Francisco Magazine, 1996-1997, 1014.
“Barry Levinson: Redefining Baltimore,” Baltimore Magazine, 1996, 6-8, 81.
“Splendidly Self-Propelled: Douglas Fairbanks’ The Gaucho,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVII, No. 718 (July-August 1996), 96-101.
“Man in Motion: An Interview with Buster Crabbe,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVII, No. 7/8 (July-August 1996), 34-42.
“The Choreography of Hope: The Films of Douglas Fairbanks, Sr.,” Film Comment,Vol. 32, No. 3 (May-June 1996), 50-55.
“The Making of Kansas City,” Kansas City Magazine, April 1996, 43-45, 62.
“Shepard to the Rescue,” The World and I, Vol. 11, No. 4 (April 1996), 140-145.
“‘Jumanji,’ A Whale of a Tale,” The Christian Science Monitor, 15 December 1995,12.
“Many Bridges to Cross: A Fable about Whoopi,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVI, No.9/10 (November-December 1995), 46-53.
“All That Glitters,” Film Comment, Vol. 31, No. 2 (March-April 1995), 52-55.
“Railroad Man: The last ride of Buster Keaton,” Films in Review, Vol. XLVI, No. 5/6 (July/August 1995), 2-11.
“Keaton the Prairie Pragmatist,” The World and I, Vol. 10, No. 10 (October 1995),118-123.
“Beyond the Camera: The Untold Story Behind the Making of Hoop Dreams,” The World and I, Vol.10, No. 10 (October 1995), l32-l39 [written under the pseudonym “Jack Ketch”].
“Touching All the Bases: The Documentaries of Ken Burns,” The World and I, Vol. 20, No. 1 (January 1995), 150-161 [written under the pseudonym “Jack Ketch”].
“Mel Gibson: Infinite Space,” The World and I, Vol.9, No. 9 (September 1994), 151-
Awards
Second Prize, International Association of Media Historians for “Best Book on Media Studies” in 2007Kansas Governors Arts Award 2008
External links
- http://www.johnctibbetts.com