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- TxState's Southwestern Writers Collection Exhibit
Honors Texas Book Festival 2002 Award Winners
Exhibit runs October 20 through December 20, 2002
SAN MARCOS, TX -- This year the Texas Book Festival bestows its prestigious
Bookend Award on two of the state's literary greats: Bud Shrake
and Bill Wittliff. To complement the honor, the Southwestern
Writers Collection at Texas State University-San Marcos in San
Marcos offers a "behind-the-scenes glimpse" of the
working processes and milestone memorabilia of these famous native
writers, in a combined exhibit mounted from their major collections
housed in the extensive SWWC archives at the campus' Alkek Library.
Both nationally acclaimed men are Texas bred, to which their
lives and work attest. Born in Fort Worth in 1931, Bud Shrake
is a journalist, sportswriter, biographer, screenwriter and novelist
best known for his classics of Southwestern fiction and the absurdist
western, Blessed McGill (listed by A. C. Greene as one
of Texas' "fifty best books"). His most recent historical
novel, The Borderland, plays a marvelous set of characters
across a well-researched chessboard of 1839 post-Alamo Texas.
From his early days at the Fort Worth Press Shrake's talents
have ranged wide, with a versatility that includes collaborations
with the likes of Willie Nelson and Dennis Hopper on projects
that involved both film and prose. A longtime contributor to
Sports Illustrated, Shrake co-authored Harvey Penick's
Little Red Book: Lessons and Teachings from a Lifetime in Golf,
as well as all the subsequent "little golf books" sparked
by the premier volume's success. The Red Book has since
become the best-selling sports book in American publishing history.
(photo of Shrake by Bill Wittliff)
Once described as
a "renaissance hombre," Bill Wittliff is a publisher,
photographer, director, producer, and screenwriter whose acclaimed
endeavors include the film adaptations of The Black Stallion,
Lonesome Dove, Legends of the Fall, and The Perfect Storm,
plus the establishment of Austin-based Encino Press. Born in
the small south Texas town of Taft in 1940, Wittliff is also
a collector interested in preserving his region's artistic and
cultural heritage--and a benefactor who hopes his collecting
will inspire creativity in generations to come. Beginning in
1986 with the donation of their lifelong accumulation of original
manuscripts, books, photographs and ephemera, he and his wife
Sally established and continue to support the Southwestern Writers
Collection and Wittliff Gallery of Southwestern & Mexican
Photography as centers for learning and research at Southwest
Texas State University's Alkek Library. (photo
of Wittliff by Ted Albracht)
The Bookend Award recognizes lifetime achievement in Texas
letters, and Shrake and Wittliff are deserving recipients. Together
the two have been instrumental in effecting profound changes
in Texas' cultural landscape. As successful screenwriters, they
both resisted Hollywood's demands that they move to Los Angeles,
helping to decentralize Hollywood and bring about the rise of
a native Texas film industry.
At one time Shrake rented office space at Wittliff's Encino
Press, housed in a turn-of-the-century Austin home where famed
short-story writer O. Henry once lived. Wittliff said, "When
Bud and I would have writer's block, we'd leave a paper and pencil
out, hoping O. Henry would give us a signal. Alas, he never did.
The message seemed to be, 'You guys do it.'"
And they have. Their long list of accomplishments has made
them legendary among their fellows. In addition to their separate
achievements, Shrake and Wittliff have also collaborated on projects.
In 1973, Wittliff's Encino Press published a daring novel by
Bud Shrake, Peter Arbiter--an inspired update of Petronius'
Satyricon that is hilariously reimagined in modern-day
Texas. They often show each other early versions of work in progress--which
led to Shrake dedicating The Borderland to Wittliff for
his pivotal encouragement. The men even appeared together in
small, but significant roles in the film version of Lonesome
Dove--playing "Sodbusters One and Two," who are
shot, hanged, and burned by the Suggs gang.
Both Shrake and Wittliff have donated extensive archives to
the Southwestern Writers Collection, and this special exhibit
showcases highlights from their varied and distinguished careers.
There is everything from Bill Wittliff's earliest handwritten
drafts of the Lonesome Dove script to Bud Shrake's 1963
Dallas Morning News column after the JFK assassination.
Photos from Shrake's research in Mexico and his hand-notated
manuscript bring to life Blessed McGill in its early stages.
Continuity snapshots offer "back-stage" peeks from
the sets of Raggedy Man and Barbarosa, which Wittliff
wrote and produced, and Red-Headed Stranger, which he
also directed.
The display cases brim with correspondence, publicity materials,
artifacts, and other treasures from these honored writers' archives
(visitors will especially enjoy the photograph of the pair as
"sodbusters" from Lonesome Dove), and it's all
just a taste of what TxState's Southwestern Writers Collection holds.
Interested in digging deeper? Archival access is available Monday
through Friday 8 am to 5 pm (Tuesdays to 9 pm), and on weekends
by appointment. Call 512-245-2313.
Shrake and Wittliff receive their Bookend Awards during a
special session of the Texas Book Festival on November 16 in
the House Chamber of the Texas Capitol. (Visit http://www.texasbookfestival.org/
for more about the Texas Book Festival.)
Texas Bookends: Bud Shrake and Bill Wittliff,
curated by Steve Davis, will be on exhibit at the Southwestern
Writers Collection from October 20 through December 20, 2002.
Related Links
Texas
Book Festival
Edwin "Bud" Shrake archives at
Texas State's Southwestern Writers Collection
Bill Wittliff archives at Texas State's Southwestern
Writers Collection
The Southwestern Writers Collection, in the Albert B. Alkek
Library at Texas State University-San Marcos, was founded in
1986 and has since become a distinguished and steadily growing
archive charged with preserving, exhibiting, and providing access
to the papers and artifacts of principal writers, filmmakers,
and musicians of the Southwest. Its resources attest to the tremendous
diversity of creative expression among southwestern artists and
contribute to a rich research environment within which students
and others may discover how the unique conditions and character
of the region have shaped its people and their cultural arts.
Curator, Connie Todd. Assistant Curator, Steve Davis.
EXHIBIT HOURS:
Open daily during semester sessions, except holidays:
Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
(Tuesday until 9 p.m.),
Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Sunday 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
WHERE:
The Southwestern Writers Collection is housed adjacent to the
Wittliff Gallery on the 7th floor of the Alkek Library at Texas
State University-San Marcos, halfway between Austin and San Antonio.
DIRECTIONS & FURTHER INFO:
Call 512-245-2313 or visit the Southwestern
Writers Collection online
ADMISSION:
Entrance to SWWC exhibits is always FREE.
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