It was a pity that movies and ...

It was a pity that movies and live TV left New York for Hollywood. London theater, movies, television - until (Britain\'s) money ran out - were always better than ours since the city was the political capital of the country, as well as the artistic and literary one. In L.A. we\'ve always been slightly sealed off from real life. It\'s no accident that two of our most interesting directors, Woody Allen and Bob Altman, are more or less settled in the real world.
It was a pity that movies and live TV left New York for Hollywood. London theater, movies, television - until (Britain's) money ran out - were always better than ours since the city was the political capital of the country, as well as the artistic and literary one. In L.A. we've always been slightly sealed off from real life. It's no accident that two of our most interesting directors, Woody Allen and Bob Altman, are more or less settled in the real world.

Quotes from the same author

As the age of television progresses the Reagans will be the rule, not the exception. To be perfect for television is all a President has to be these days.
The Puritans left England for America not because they couldn't be Puritans in their mother country, but because they were not allowed to force others to become Puritans; in the New World, of course, they could and did.
The only absolute attainment is absolute abandonment.
Perfect love sometimes does not come until the first grandchild.
Writing of history is our only heuristic principle. The Germans have a word for it, einfühlen. It is the ability to experience the past in the present and to recreate it. In my books, I have tried to recreate it in the most natural way possible: History must be integrated into the story without the weight of premonition.