Ebert Club
Marie Haws
|
2011-08-14
"I realize that most of the turning points in my career were brought
about by others. My life has largely happened to me without any
conscious plan. I was an indifferent student except at subjects that
interested me, and those I followed beyond the classroom, stealing time
from others I should have been studying. I was no good at math beyond
algebra. I flunked French four times in college. I had no patience for
memorization, but I could easily remember words I responded to. In
college a chart of my grades resembled a mountain range. My first real
newspaper job came when my best friend's father hired me to cover high
school sports for the local daily. In college a friend told me I must
join him in publishing an alternative weekly and then left it in my
hands. That led to the Daily Illini, and that in turn led to the
Chicago Sun-Times, where I have worked ever since 1966. I became the
movie critic six months later through no premeditation, when the job was
offered to me out of a clear blue sky."Visit "I was born inside the movie of my life" to read the opening pages from Roger's forthcoming memoir to be published September 13, 2011.