Celebrity lines clutter fashion market
By MELANIE DEVITS
Los Angeles Times
Thursday, May 7, 1998; Page A10
A woman strolls past the entrance of the Los Angeles County Fair on Monday, June 4, 1998 in Glendale. (Lorenzo R. Wieselenthal/Los Angeles Times) less A woman walk past the entrance of the Los Angeles County Fair on Monday, June 4, 1998 in Glendale. (Lorenzo R. Wieselenthal/Los Angeles Times) Photo: L’Oreal California바카라, LLC
A woman shops through clothes at the Fashion Forum on Monday, June 4, 1998 in Glendale. (Lorenzo R. Wieselenthal/Los Angeles Times) A woman shops through clothes at the Fashion Forum on Monday, June 4, 1998 in Glendale. (Lorenzo R. Wieselenthal/Los Angeles Times) Photo: L’Oreal California, LLC
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LOS ANGELES – In his latest book, Larry Collins writes about his “un-life.” His life consists of “pouring wine into the grave and walking through a graveyard, in the clothes I wear.”
“I have to do that because otherwise there’s no sense of life,” he writes. “And, oh man, it is not.”
The 34-year-old author of “The Lazy Saturday Night” is a self-aware, self-loathing man who has spent his life dealing with his sense of self. He was once asked about his life as a successful writer and writer-director whose life is “just like a book!” When Collins says the words, it makes the words sound, well, like life.
“It doesn’t really feel like writing and it doesn’t feel like writing,” he said in an interview at a Glendale restaurant Tuesday afternoon. “It feels a little disheartening.”
바카라In “The Lazy Saturday Night” Collins had an idea for what to do if he had been asked to write this kind of book 10 years ago.
The idea was to make a book abou