On this episode, we were joined by Benjamin Myers, the prize-winning writer and journalist, to discuss his new novel
Jesus Christ Kinski. It’s November 1971 in Berlin, and actor Klaus Kinski performs a one-man show that quickly descends into chaos and recrimination. Fifty years later, a writer snowed in during the pandemic winter of 2021 becomes obsessed with the performance and compelled to write something like a biography of the tortured figure.
Recalling Geoff Dyer’s
Out of Sheer Rage—a book about trying and failing to write about D.H. Lawrence—Myers ventures into similar territory, offering a mercilessly funny look at one of the twentieth century’s most volatile public figures.
We talk with Benjamin about Kinski’s modern relevance as both artist and self-mythologising provocateur; the line between genius and narcissism, madness and evil; and how today’s culture might have treated a man like him. As a music journalist, Benjamin also reflects on the decline of the “rock star” persona in an age that expects entertainers to model good behaviour.
Hosted by Ryan Edgington and Matt Hennessey.