Campaspe

Self-Styled Siren

Campaspe

The elusive New York-based blogger Campaspe talks about her classic Hollywood-oriented site, Self-Styled Siren.

At her blog Self-Styled Siren, the elusive Campaspe writes about classic Hollywood. We asked her to tell us a little bit about what pushes her to blog.

Tell us about your blog.

Self-Styled Siren is where I retreat to write about old Hollywood movies. I occasionally venture into another country, era or even a current film, but the blog is almost entirely commentary on the history and artistry of pre-1960 Hollywood films.

How would you describe your readers? Do you have much contact with the people who read you?

My readers are the best part of the site. When I post, I can't wait to see who will turn up, which movies they will mention, and what I will learn from talking to them. They're a diverse lot, bound together mostly by shared love for classic Hollywood. Some of them email me instead of commenting, some appear and disappear like ghosts, never identifying themselves. I have pieced together a picture of some regulars but others remain a mystery. A few have outed themselves to me on Facebook. In real life I have met some of the bloggers and critics who comment at my place, but so far I've met no one who just reads the blog and comments.

Tell us how – and why – you started your blog.

I am now back in New York, but in 2005 I was living in a rather dull part of Toronto, having taken a leave from my workplace life to be with my kids. It wasn't that easy to meet people and I had few outlets--at the time Toronto didn't even have Turner Classic Movies. Two of my friends, Victoria of Bois de Jasmin, and Annie of Blogdorf Goodman, had started popular beauty blogs. I thought an online journal could keep my writing in shape. So I started Self-Styled Siren, creating a third-person persona as a distancing mechanism. The original concept was a more wide-ranging blog. I never intended to write about personal matters, but I did think I might occasionally branch into literature, beauty or politics. Well, motherhood was eating into my once-voracious reading, my friends did a better job of covering perfume and other beauty matters, and political writing would mean constantly getting worked up over something. So I stuck with movies. In the end, it is easiest to write about what you love best.

Describe your blog day – do you work from home? Go to a café? Sit in an office?

I usually blog in the late morning and early afternoon, when my youngest is taking a nap. The drawbacks to having your writing dependent on a toddler's sleep schedule help explain why my posting can be erratic.

How do you find things to blog about and how do you decide that a entry is worth being in your blog?

Usually an entry is prompted by nothing more than my seeing a movie and wanting to write about it. Other times a blogger or commenter might mention an interesting topic; that's often the case with my semi-regular feature called "Anecdote of the Week." Every once in a while I write about something that has angered me, although I try to minimize that.

What is your favorite blog entry?

My sentimental favorite is Father's Day with John Ford, which was about how my father tricked my cousins into watching the beautiful but tragic How Green Was My Valley. That one prompted such emotional responses from readers. In terms of the analytic posts, I am fond of The Titanic in Three Movies, which took two weeks of writing and research and which includes, for once, a relatively recent movie--only one decade old! It was intriguing to look at the way approaches to filming the disaster evolved, and to see the things that James Cameron borrowed, both from A Night to Remember and from women's pictures of the past like Back Street. I also liked writing about The Letter, because I was able to bring up some racial and political themes in the movie that I had missed in previous viewings.

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