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Re: Knaves and Jacks and Buben: Hitchcock
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R S Gwynn wrote: I wonder about the critics who find an anagram in "Vivian Badlook." I can't figure this one out, though there are two Vivians--photographer and child--in the novel, and the name obviously links to Darkbloom. The tourist and the seaside is an obvious anagram for V. N.
JM: In his foreword Nabokov informs the reader that he appears "in a tour of inspection" at the
end of the novel ( a foreign couple and a guy with a butterfly-net on CCC's pages 901,916,919). There is also Blavdak Vinomori (page 905) and we learn that Vinomori's eyes are "walnut-brown" while Vladimir Nabokov's are "hazel-brown"...
There is also the photographer, skier and teacher of English named Vivian Badlook ( page 845).
I don't think that the two Vivian references must necessarily take us to Vivian Darkbloom (female or male, Lolita or ADA), but they might indicate Alfred Hitchcock who usually makes cameo appearances in his movies.
There are many references to Hitchcock in KQK, from the title of one of his movies "Shadow of a Doubt" (page 847) to "Psycho": there is Frau Kamelspinner, the taxidermist's wife ( page 759) and the obvious inexistent wife of Enricht Pharsin. Her first appearance: "There she is', cried the landlord. 'Sitting there in the arm-chair. Have a look.' He opened the door wider and over the back of the chair Franz glimpsed a grey head with something white pinned to its crown." (page 822) And, at last, on page 899: "The old woman whose face he had never seen sat with her back to him in her usual place.'I'm leaving; I want to say good-bye," he said, advancing toward the armchair. There was no old woman at all - only a grey wig stuck on a stick and a knitted shawl....Old Enricht came out from behind a screen. He was stark naked and had a paper fan in his hand. 'You no longer exist, Franz Bubendorf,'...
There is also another sentence: " I made friends with a squirrel. We'll meet at the Siren café" (page 909).
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JM: In his foreword Nabokov informs the reader that he appears "in a tour of inspection" at the
end of the novel ( a foreign couple and a guy with a butterfly-net on CCC's pages 901,916,919). There is also Blavdak Vinomori (page 905) and we learn that Vinomori's eyes are "walnut-brown" while Vladimir Nabokov's are "hazel-brown"...
There is also the photographer, skier and teacher of English named Vivian Badlook ( page 845).
I don't think that the two Vivian references must necessarily take us to Vivian Darkbloom (female or male, Lolita or ADA), but they might indicate Alfred Hitchcock who usually makes cameo appearances in his movies.
There are many references to Hitchcock in KQK, from the title of one of his movies "Shadow of a Doubt" (page 847) to "Psycho": there is Frau Kamelspinner, the taxidermist's wife ( page 759) and the obvious inexistent wife of Enricht Pharsin. Her first appearance: "There she is', cried the landlord. 'Sitting there in the arm-chair. Have a look.' He opened the door wider and over the back of the chair Franz glimpsed a grey head with something white pinned to its crown." (page 822) And, at last, on page 899: "The old woman whose face he had never seen sat with her back to him in her usual place.'I'm leaving; I want to say good-bye," he said, advancing toward the armchair. There was no old woman at all - only a grey wig stuck on a stick and a knitted shawl....Old Enricht came out from behind a screen. He was stark naked and had a paper fan in his hand. 'You no longer exist, Franz Bubendorf,'...
There is also another sentence: " I made friends with a squirrel. We'll meet at the Siren café" (page 909).
.
Search the archive: http://listserv.ucsb.edu/archives/nabokv-l.html
Contact the Editors: mailto:nabokv-l@utk.edu,nabokv-l@holycross.edu
Visit Zembla: http://www.libraries.psu.edu/nabokov/zembla.htm
View Nabokv-L policies: http://web.utk.edu/~sblackwe/EDNote.htm