“I
withdrew, into music, records. I was different, and I was…you know, kids are
cruel to each other. Now, it doesn’t bother me. I don’t give a shit what
anybody says about me. You don’t like it, too fuckin’ bad. Because the truth
is, you can’t stamp out individuality – there’s too many of us.”—American
musician Cyndi Lauper, quoted in Kurt Loder, “Cyndi Lauper: Dream Girl,” Rolling
Stone, May 24, 1984
A cultural "omniblog" covering matters literary as well as theatrical, musical, historical, cinematic(al), etc.
Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Monday, July 30, 2018
Movie Quote of the Day (W.C. Fields, Eliciting Info on an Illicit Woman)
Cuthbert
J. Twillie [played
by W.C. Fields]: “Tell me, prairie flower, can you give
me the inside info on yon damsel with the hothouse cognomen?”
Mrs.
Gideon [played by Margaret
Hamilton]: “Do you mean Miss Flower Belle Lee?”
Cuthbert
J. Twillie:” I don't mean some woman out in China.”
Mrs.
Gideon: “Well! I'm afraid I can't say anything good about
her.”
Cuthbert
J. Twillie:” I can see what's good. Tell me the rest.” —
My Little Chickadee (1940), screenplay by Mae West and W.C.
Fields, directed by Edward F. Cline
Sunday, July 29, 2018
Photo of the Day: Maui Wormwood, NY Botanical Garden, Bronx, NY
The formal scientific name for this flowering plant
from the aster family is Artemisia mauiensis. Whatever you
want to call it, I thought it was striking enough to photograph it when I went
to the New York Botanical Garden
over a month ago.
It must have struck Georgia O’Keeffe with special
force when she visited Hawaii on a nine-week journey in 1939. Everything in the
world was farther apart and so much more exotic back then, an impression
reinforced through every image and every letter from the artist in the Botanical Garden’s fascinating exhibit
about it.
Quote of the Day (Peter Abelard, on the Means of Salvation)
“Everyone wishes to be saved, but few will use those
means which religion prescribes.”— French scholastic
philosopher, theologian, and logician Peter Abelard (1079-1142), in The Love Letters of Abelard and Heloise, translated by Israel
Gollancz and Honnor Morten, Letter VI (1901)
Saturday, July 28, 2018
Quote of the Day (F. Scott Fitzgerald, on Character)
“He believed in character. He wanted to jump back a
whole generation and trust in character again as the eternally valuable element.
Everything wore out.” —American novelist and short-story writer F. Scott
Fitzgerald (1896-1940), “Babylon Revisited,” in Taps at Reveille (1935)
Friday, July 27, 2018
Photo of the Day: A Broadway Institution
Twice daily on my way to work for the past 18 years,
I’ve passed one of the longest-running shows on Broadway. But I was so eager to
reach my destination (my office at Rockefeller Center to start the day, my home
at the end of it) that I never stopped to look at it—until this week, when I took the photo
accompanying this post.
A “long-running show”? No, I don’t mean an Andrew
Lloyd Webber musical, but a tradition that’s been around far longer: the
restaurant Sardi’s, a favorite
hangout for both established and aspiring actors in New York’s theater district.
It opened in 1921 as The Little Restaurant, but since 1927 has been at its
current 44th Street location with its more famous name (taken from
founding owner Vincent Sardi Sr.).
Sardi’s gave rise to the Tony Awards in the late
1940s. When actress-director Mary Antoinette Perry, a longtime customer of the
restaurant, passed away, producer Jacob Wilk decided to commemorate her while
dining there.
But it may be even more famous for what you can see
even from outside: its caricatures. As many as 1,200 have hung from its walls
over the years. Some actors (e.g., Maureen Stapleton, Bette Midler) have not
been fond of their admittedly exaggerated likenesses and even have had them redrawn.
But there is no doubt that they constitute a kind of de facto Broadway hall of
fame.