[EDNOTE.  See below for excerpts from Winters's autobiography that I posted to the List in March 2006, which are available in the archives.  -- SES.
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  • Mar 10, 2006 – ... LISTSERV 16.0 · Help for NABOKV-L Archives ... Shelley Winters on the role of Vivian Darkbloom in LOLITA. From: NABOKV-L <[log in to ...
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    Mar 10, 2006 – Subject: Shelley Winters on reading LOLITA, meeting the Nabokovs, and oysters Rockefeller. From: NABOKV-L <[log in to unmask]>. Reply-To: ...
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    Mar 10, 2006 – Shelley Winters on working with Kubrick, Mason, and Sellers, and filming the bedroom scene in LOLITA. From: NABOKV-L <[log in to unmask]> ...
  • ]
     
    Carolyn Kunin writes:
     
    Dear List Members,

    Not a direct response to Jansy's note below - but I just got volume ii of
    Shelley Winter's autobiography. I was so disappointed that the first one didn't
    mention Lolita and was relieved that in this one she goes into some detail about
    the film . Very little about Sue Lyon, alas, but James Mason and Kubrick,
    especially the latter, are discussed in great depth and she is very
    complimentary to both. I was surprised to learn that Kubrick arranged for Miss
    Winters to meet Nabokov. She visited with both Vladimir and Vera and passed
    muster. I had forgotten that the film was made in England - for reasons of
    American prudery and jurisprudence. Besides this, SW's many close friends in and
    out of show business, her close relationships with her mother and children and
    her many marriages make for fascinating reading.

    Those interested in Democratic politics of the time will also be thrilled at her
    involvement with MLK, Mrs Eleanor Roosevelt, Adlai Stevenson (I was surprised to
    find that apparently his first name rhymes with way not why) and JFK and Mrs
    Nehru in India and her descriptions of all that. I especially enjoyed reading of
    her friendship with Elizabeth Taylor and the 'messy' Messer Suite (messy only
    while LT was whisked back to the states for pneumonia and a trachaeotomy and the
    expensive chauffer and his wife took over, neglecting her three children who had
    to be rescued by Winters' mother who hadn't the foggiest who those three
    homeless kids were) she and her entourage inhabited at the 'Dorch' in London.
    Apparently the formerly British Liz couldn't stand British food and Howard
    Hughes used to ship in chili from Chasens, lobsters from Maine, and 'chop suey
    from China for all I knew' according to Shelley Winters. Great reading.

    Carolyn

    p.s. And her rendition of her difficulties in shooting a 'nude' scene (yes it's
    in Lolita) for the one and only time in her life are a hoot and a half.



    ________________________________
    From: Jansy <jansy@AETERN.US>
    To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
    Sent: Thu, April 18, 2013 6:12:14 PM
    Subject: [NABOKV-L] Lolita ... my sin, my soul (translation)


    Alfred Appel Jr, noted that "Lolita is the last book one would offer as
    "autobiographical," but even in its totally created form it connects with the
    deepest reaches of Nabokov's soul. Like the poet Fyodor in The Gift, Nabokov
    could say that while he keeps everything "on the very brink of parody. . . there
    must be on the other hand an abyss of seriousness, and I must make my way along
    this narrow ridge between my own truth and a caricature of it." Lolita and "the
    deepest reaches of Nabokov's soul"?
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