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Truman Capote loosely based his 1951 novella on his childhood with spinster aunts in the South.
NEWYORKER: The Grass Harp
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On the recommendation of Truman Capote, Highsmith attended the Yaddo writers' colony in Saratoga Springs, N.
FORBES: A dark view
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Likewise, Truman Capote and Kurt Vonnegut summered close to Wainscott Beach, fetching supplies every day from the doll's-house-sized Sagaponack General Store.
BBC: Escape from New York
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On the recommendation of Truman Capote, Highsmith attended the Yaddo writers' colony in Saratoga Springs, New York in the summer of 1948.
FORBES: A dark view
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The point was also made in the 1950s, though more mildly, when Truman Capote wrote Breakfast at Tiffany's, for which Tiffany paid not a cent.
FORBES: One-upwomanship
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Would Truman Capote or Ernest Hemingway have blithely ignored online negativity?
FORBES: Self-Published Author Can't Handle A Bad Review
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Truman Capote would not let go on the subject and deliberately twisted the facts to savage Ann Woodward in his novel entitled Answered Prayers.
FORBES: The Stranger Case of Oscar Pistorius
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The play's creative team returned to the time period author Truman Capote originally set his story, meaning during World War II, not the 1960s of the film.
WSJ: Why Bway's 'Breakfast at Tiffany's' has no tiaras
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Hollywood has profiled writer Truman Capote, broadcaster Edward R.
NPR: 'Walk the Line' Walks a Straight Line
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That went out with Truman Capote.
FORBES: Executive Pulse: The Invisible Spouse
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The small town has been here for more than 1, 500 years, perched on a dramatic cliff top 1000-feet above the sea, and in the past few centuries has garnered a reputation as a popular escape for creative artists and musicians: Ravello has been a home away from home to Wagner, Truman Capote, Tennessee Williams, Greta Garbo, Graham Greene, Leonard Bernstein and M.
FORBES: One of Italy's Greatest Hotels Is Reborn
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An intelligent and rather overcivilized caper movie, set in Montreal, which features three generations of great male actors: Marlon Brando (sounding like his long-ago nemesis Truman Capote) as an upper-class aesthete and fence with exquisite manners, Robert De Niro as a saturnine jazz-club owner and safecracker who never takes risks, and Edward Norton as a brilliant but willful young con man and criminal.
NEWYORKER: The Score