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ALEC GUINNESS BIOGRAPHY

A Diary as a Documentation of One's Performance in One's private Life
Alec Guinness writes My Name Escapes Me - The Diary of a Retiring Actor - in purpose of
documentation of his performance to commit his story to the public record. In the diary,
Alec Guinness, at 82, shows his wishes to spend his declining years as, a retiring actor;
he has not done with acting; he is still performing; yet retiring. This time his
performance is committed to words in the commissioned diary. I see a diary as
documentation of one's life, especially when it is to be shown to public. By definition,
a document is a "formal paper bearing important or official information". In the same
sense, Alec Guinness's diary is a document of his act of writing as Paul Matthew Pierre
called. In addition, the facts that it is commissioned and is admissionable to us, the
public, that he is a public figure; and that it is commemorating his people suggest
Guinness's intentions for his stories and his performances, in the diary to be for the
public record.
Writing is another way of acting for Alec Guinness. His desire to perform is reluctantly
replaced by writing. Alec Guinness wishes to act again: ...if I am to retired, I am in
inclined to assume a pained expression and deny it.... I doubt if any part, however
small, would tempt me. *P 10* He openly shows his regrets toward his retirement forced by
his senescent body: I think the T.V unit has finished with me ...it came home to me,
almost savagely, that age has withered memory, alertness had taken ...what talent was
there. *p 41*: ...my granny will be thrilled.*p 41* Also in the quotation, ...almost
unrecognizable in the film. I like the 'almost',  we see that he still wants to be
remained as a public figure. His love for acting and plays are all-transparent in the
book. He consistently refers back to the plays he has done and read. He often expresses
strong opinions about the plays and the acting business: ... but I can't help feeling an
actor should be made of sterner stuff.... Than their ill report while you live". *p 19*
Something like this quotation is not in character for him because he has been very
conscious of making statements about other social issues. When he does make them, he does
so indirectly that they could be interpreted in several different ways. These all imply
that this old man desperately wants to act once more. Moreover, he finds another way to
remain in the acting business and in the public eye: The difficulty is the chore of
learning (I used to be reasonably reliable and fairly quick, and diminishing physical
vitality, both of which would choke any creativity effort. So I am happy to scribble
instead. As we are reading his scribbles, we are seeing the other part of him; the inner
Alec Guinness. He again impersonates and creates a new character as he writes. What he
writes is about what he does and what he does identifies who he is. His actions are
committed to his words. 
Also his writing is performance in a sense that he is presenting himself in the book. He
seems to be very conscious of expressing his opinions and views on sensitive issues like
gender, class system, and racial matters as though he's overly awared of his audience. He
was conscious of us, when writing this book. It was not his usual diary anymore. This
man's diary described as, ...a small, strictly private almost, illegible series of daily
jottings, has been published as My Name Escapes Me, being fuller, quirkier and more
haphazard and, to my regret, unavoidably self revealing. *p 1* He could, in fact, write
it in whatever way he wanted. Maybe it is not himself that he is portraying. After all,
he is an actor. However he declares that it is his two years he is writing about, I have
been unable to disguise my phobias, irritations, prejudices (though the latter are often
short lived) and my childishness and frivolity. ...and when the show is over, or the
day's shoot, and he is once more Alec: "the show" is over and he is once more Alec
Guinness in this diary. ...The show that previous other world where life has meaning,
form and resolution, events perched accord or written rule. The title, My Name Escapes
Me, may be implying that his name, Alec Guinness, which the public remember it as when it
has disguised itself with a new identity, is not here in the book with the real Alec
Guinness. He is presenting himself out side the film in normal life. Perhaps, he now
wants us to remember him without the images of his well-known name and face, appearing on
the screen. Perhaps, that is the reason that he is documenting himself as in
realistically at his retirement stage. However, in the same way that he has always
disguised himself in different personas to us, this again is a new Guinness to us,
bringing out curiosities. His familiar name also created mystique around the book; there
is little insight created by the title. Alec uses his title, his new name effectively
reach out for publicity.
He refers records of people's deaths as obituaries, a formal announcement or report of a
person's death, often giving details of their life and work; I had hoped to complete this
diary with no further obituaries but that was not to be. Sometimes, somehow, I must try
to write something about Peter. This quotation gives insight about his character. He
seems to want to write more personally on the topic of his death. However, his official
documentation remains impersonal. He admits that this diary is formal official document.
Again, his identity is immortalized in the words he writes, in the same sense that his
previous identities in the films have been immortalized on the screen. ...My mind
ruminating on Tuesday's rehearsal...what seemed O.K. at the time.... It doesn't get
immortalized on film until Monday week - time enough for me to get into my usual panic.
*P37* I like the verb, immortalize,-"giving ever lasting fame,"- here. He regards
documentation of his experiences as immortalization of his actions. Here he is
immortalizing his friends in print: Lord Howe of the Hirsel has died.... *p53* Ten years
ago today my mother died....*p 104* Peter's death.... *p195* In order to commemorate the
births and deaths in his life, he leaves a record of them in the diary. These records are
important to him and are official in his world. He had many reasons to document this
diary; one of them is to immortalize his performance in his world. In that sense, this
diary is a documentation of his private life. He depicts his world including people
around him, the places he goes to, and his thoughts, also immortalizing them in a print.
His primary interests shown in the diary are not about current social issues or his
previous movies, but his life. As one's world goes around oneself, Guinness's world goes
around himself. He focuses on himself and his name more than anything else in the book.
While he focuses on his health, his plan, his home, and so on, he makes brief notes about
the war going on the other side of the world, because this diary is about documenting
part of his life in which Guinness records his official information.
In a self conscious, restricted way, Guinness reveals himself to us in the documentary
form of a diary. This is how he wants to be remembered by the public. However he is
unable to escape his role as an actor. This book seems to be written with the public in
mind, but it does not reveal any deep personal sides on the actor; he rather seems to be
just identifying himself in the public's eyes at his retirement stage. 
Examples of Entries in works Cited
Guinness, Alec. My Names Escapes Me: The Diary of a Retiring Actor. 1996
London:penquin, 1997.
Yoo-Kyung Cho

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