Sunday, July 31, 2011

Summer Song #28... Up Up & Away



Would you like to ride in my beautiful balloon
Would you like to ride in my beautiful balloon
We could float among the stars together,
 You & I
For we can fly, we can fly

Up, up & away
My beautiful, my beautiful balloon

The world's a nicer place in my beautiful balloon
It wears a nicer face in my beautiful balloon
We can sing a song & sail along the silver sky
For we can fly we can fly

Up, up & away
My beautiful, my beautiful balloon

Suspended under a twilight canopy
We'll search the clouds for a star to guide us
If by some chance you find yourself loving me
We'll find a cloud to hide us
We'll keep the moon beside us

Love is waiting there in my beautiful balloon
Way up in the air in my beautiful balloon
If you'll hold my hand we'll chase your dream across the sky
For we can fly we can fly

Up, up & away
My beautiful, my beautiful balloon
Balloon...
Up, up, & away...

Jimmy Webb
1967

I have never been in a hot air balloon. It is one of the many things on the list of things I want to experience before I go. I sense that I need to start checking off that list. Tell me, have you ever been up in a balloon?

Norwegian Would

I was thinking about lesbians today, (& who of us does not?), preparing for the post below. I have been dumbstruck by the lack of attention this story got in the mainstream press. Americans love a Hero Story, & yet I have seen no accounts in our country’s press of this story.

They were doing one of those things that lesbians do better than most of us- Camping. Hege Dalen & her spouse Toril Hansen were camping on an island when the couple were among the first responders to assist victims following the shooting massacre in Norway last week, when a Right Wing Christian gunman- Anders Behring Breivik went on a shooting rampage at a youth camp on Utoya island.




Dalen & Hansen made 4 trips back forth in their small boat, picking up injured, bloodied & scared young people.

Dalen & Hansen were near Utöyan having dinner on the opposite shore across from the ill-fated campsite, when they began to hear gunfire & screaming on the island.

Dalen: “We were eating. Then shooting & then the awful screaming. We saw how the young people ran in panic into the lake.”

The couple immediately took action & pushed the boat into Lake Tyrifjorden. Dalen & Hansen drove the boat to the island, picked up from the water victims in shock in, the young wounded, & transported them to the opposite shore to the mainland, all the while there were bullets flying overhead. They returned to the island 4 times. The couple were able to rescue 40 young people from the killer.

Heroes like Dalen & Hansen need to be part of the story when reported in the press. The Right Wingers call gay people many degrading names, but a HOMO HERO is a term that they just might choke on.

Born On This Day- July 31st... Pioneer Activist Barbara Gittings

During an era when very few gay people dared come out in private, much less in public, Barbara Gittings was a vocal & visible figure in the fledgling fight for gay rights.

In the late 1950s, she founded the NYC chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis, the first national organization for lesbians, even though she lived in Philadelphia. In the 1960s, she took part in early gay rights demonstrations at the White House & Liberty Square in Philadelphia. In the early 1970s, she helped lobby the American Psychiatric Association to change its stance on homosexuality; in 1973, the APA invalidated the definition of homosexuality as a mental disorder.

Gittings also strove to make information about gay men & lesbians more widely available in libraries. Though not a librarian by training, she was for many years the head of the American Library Association’s Gay Task Force; she coordinated & edited the association’s comprehensive bibliography of literature by & about gay people.

Gittings felt keenly aware of the need for such a bibliography as a young woman, when she scoured local libraries, seeking, but seldom seeing, something that would help her understand her own life.

Gittings was born on July 31, 1932, in Vienna, where her father was a member of the United States diplomatic corps. Returning to the United States when Barbara was young. When she was a teenager, her father caught her reading The Well of Loneliness, the 1928 novel of lesbian love by the English writer Radclyffe Hall. He told her, via a letter, to burn the book. Gittings father mailed the letter, when he could not bring himself to speak to her.

Gittings studied theatre at Northwestern, but she was increasingly distracted by the need to learn as much as she could about homosexuality. She haunted the libraries of Chicago, unearthing little that was relevant & nothing that was encouraging.

Gittings: "I had to find bits & pieces under headings like ‘sexual perversion’, ‘invert, or ‘sexual aberration’ in books on abnormal psychology. I kept thinking, ‘It’s me they’re writing about, but it doesn’t feel like me at all.’"

She left Northwestern after her freshman year, & for decades she supported her activism with clerical jobs. In 1958, commuting from her home in Philadelphia, Gittings started the NYC chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis, which was founded in San Francisco in 1955; she later edited the organization’s national newsletter- The Ladder. In 1965, she took part in one of the first gay rights pickets of the White House, in an effort to end discrimination against gay people in federal employment.

Gittings received many awards, among them honorary membership in the American Library Association. The Free Library of Philadelphia named its gay & lesbian collection for her, & the NY Public Library acquired the papers of Ms. Gittings & her partner Kay Tobin Lahusen, which chronicle more than half a century in the gay rights movement.

She appeared in the documentaries Out of the Past, Gay Pioneers, Before Stonewall & After Stonewall.

Gittings died of cancer in her home on February 2007 at 74 years old.


Lahusen: “Before Barbara died, we went jointly into an assisted-living facility here, Our last bit of activism was to come out in the newsletter of our assisted-living facility.”


Gittings front & center in 1966. Photo by her partner.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Changes

Before

After
 (lick on the image it will get bigger!)

That clever, talented Husband can still stun me with his talents. I was not so keen for him to change the dining room chairs, I rather enjoyed the circa 1963 Pucci fabric. Change them he did, & on occasion I am unhappily & unwillingly brought to admit that he was right. He reupholstered the 2 dining room chairs & I am charmed by the results.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Our House For Our House

Portland has been enjoying a week of near perfect summer weather of the sort that made me fall in love with this place that I chose to live out my last days. Each day begins cool, in the mid-50s, after some marine air burns off we get into the 80s & sunny. Clear nights with views from the hot tub & the garden of the constellations & our friend Mr. Moon. Don't hate be because I'm beautiful.




I have been watching the weather & the very useless forecasts with apprehension, damn this Climate Change, because we are hosting a charity dinner in the Boys' Fort next Sunday. 4 couples paid $100 a person to feast on The Husband's surprisingly savory, scrumptious vegan offerings & my custom designed libations with a tour of Post Apocalyptic Bohemia & the garden. 4 courses, paired with drinks, on a summer evening in the garden.


We chose Sunday, August 7th, by the almanac, as the sure bet for no rain, but we have had cool rainy days for much of July & I was getting nervous.



The benefit is for Our House, housing & inspiration for people living with HIV. Our House is a model of innovation & compassion. During a July to July year, there is a catalogue of the Dinner At Our House For Our House series & this year Post Apocalyptic Bohemia opens our re-purposed door for the opportunity to do our part for this organization.



Our little cottage in Seattle was on the Seattle Art Museum's Tour Of Artists' Gardens in 1998 & we toiled to the very last moment before opening the gate to make sure that the tour participants would get an eye full & their money's worth. I was plugging Lobelia in the planting blanks as the first group arrived.

The Husband is putting extra energy, élan,& esprit on the Boys' Fort of Summer 2011 being the best possible Boys' Fort for our guests.

Please forgive me for posting so many photos of our back garden at Post Apocalyptic Bohemia, but I found these overhead shots, taken while the husband scampered up the dogwood like a monkey to fiddle with the lighting, gave a viewpoint not yet explored. I hope you don't mind. & when you are in Portland, please let me know, so we can have a cocktail in this unique space & toast to the boyhood that we still hang on to.

Summer Songs #26... Crash Into Me


You've got your ball
You've got your chain
Tied to me tight tie me up again
Who's got their claws
In you my friend
Into your heart I'll beat again

Sweet like candy to my soul
Sweet you rock
& sweet you roll

Lost for you I'm so lost for you
You come crash into me
& I come into you
I come into you
In a boys dream
In a boys dream

Touch your lips just so I know
In your eyes, love, it glows so
I'm bare boned & crazy for you
When you come crash
Into me, baby
& I come into you
In a boys dream
In a boys dream

If I've gone overboard
Then I'm begging you
To forgive me
In my haste
When I'm holding you so
Close to me

Oh & you come crash
Into me, baby
& I come into you
In a boys dream
 In a boys dream

Oh I watch you there
Through the window
& I stare at you
You wear nothing but you
Wear it so well

Tied up & twisted
The way I'd like to be
For you, for me,
 come crash
Into me

Who got you off when you got yours?
Who was the first to spill your soul?
Who got you off? Well, I'm the one
Dreamed of doing it day & night

Oh sweet like candy to my soul
Sweet you rock & sweet you roll
Oh I swear over & over
It's you like a wave into me
When you come crash into me baby

Please come crash into me
Come crash into me
In a boy's dream
In a boy's dream

What runs your way?
Who runs up side you & begs everyday?
Who's watching you through your window?

Night Comes
Who celebrates with the moon?
That you're like a wave come again
Come & crash into me 
& I come into you
In a boy's dream
In a boy's dream

Oh now it's here I build my soul
I swear, friend, don't you know
I'm bare boned & crazy for you

Oh when you come crash into me yeah
& you come into me
& you come into me

Hike up your skirt a little more
& show the world to me
Hike up your skirt a little more
& show the world to me
In a boy's dream 
In this boy's dream

Crash into me
Crash into me
Crash into me
Crash into me

I want to play with you

 Dave Matthews
1997

The "Vamp" & The "It Girl" Share a Birthday On July 29th

I really do understand. I know first hand, the pain & shame of a brilliant acting career cut down by sex scandals, men, drugs, drink & mental problems. My flame burned out all too soon. I was known briefly & in a select circle as the "IT GUY". I was forgotten all too soon... but you can still re-live the magic with my work on Beta, VHS, & DVDs. Sometimes the world is not ready for the heat that we sex symbols produce.  Still, I have not yet been buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Indeed, I am living in impoverishment & obscurity in Portland, Oregon, in a house that is little more than a squatter's shack, with too many dogs & an unhinged, unglued & unzipped husband.

In the 1920s, Clara Bow's spirit & sex appeal defined the newly liberated woman of the flapper era. Clara Bow was Hollywood's brightest light during this time. Clara was known as the-"It Girl", & Clara Bow had "It". The people she worked with claimed that she was full of charm & wit, & a thorough professional.



Clara Bow was an actress of range & depth, but she played mostly manicurists, waitresses, & department store clerks. Her movies helped emancipate young American girls from the restrictive morals of their parents. Clara's characters were unashamed about being attracted to men. Her shop girl in It (1927) spies the boss’s son & says:"Oh Santa, gimme him!" Her characters wore their dresses short, cut off their hair, drank & smoked in public, & danced all night long. At the height of her career, she received 45,000 fan letters a week. She was the idol of working girls & the dream of blue collar guys.

The It Girl was so hot & bright, it seems inevitable that she would burn out personally & professionally. It is shocking to think that her career was over in 1933 at 26 years old, after she had made millions for her studio- Paramount, & was one of the most well known stars in the world. She was condemned by the Hollywood community for her questionable morality. Producer Budd Schulberg, in his book Moving Pictures: Memories of a Hollywood Prince"Hollywood was a cultural schizophrene: The anti-movie Old Guard with their chamber music & their religious pageants fighting a losing battle against the more dynamic culture who flaunted the bohemianism of Edna St. Vincent Millay & the socialism of Upton Sinclair. But, there was one subject on which staid old Hollywood establishment & the members of the new culture circle would agree: Clara Bow, no matter how great her popularity, was a low-life & a disgrace to the community."


Scandal ruined Clara Bow. She had a breakdown & had to recover in a sanatorium. She left films for good, & moved to Nevada with her new husband- cowboy actor Rex Bell. They had 2 sons, but Clara Bow was battling mental illness. She was a doting mother to her sons, but haunted by a weight problem & profound depression, Clara Bow was eventually confined to a psychiatric hospital & not allowed to see her children. She died of a heart attack in her small house in West L.A., on September 26, 1965, while watching a Gary Cooper movie. She was 60 years old & living in poverty & obscurity. Clara Bow is buried Forest Lawn Memorial Park.

Most of Bow's films have been lost. Of her 56 films, silent & sound, only 27 exist in their entirety or in pieces. Only 16 are available on video. The remaining films that survive are in the Library of Congress Film Archive.

____________________________________________


Theodosia Burr Goodman was was one of the most popular screen actresses of her era, & one of filmdom’s original sex symbols. She earned her the nickname "The Vamp" (short for vampire). The term "vamp" soon became a popular slang term for a sexually forward woman.




The glamorous star of the 1910s, Theda Bara is also the most inaccessible & mysterious today. Only Mary Pickford & Charlie Chaplin were more popular, but today it's nearly impossible to view her work. Of the more than 40 films she made from 1914 -1926, only 3 remain. Her image remains with film fans 80+ years after her retirement, & she is the only star responsible for a word being placed both in the dictionary. Songs were written about Theda Bara, postcards & magazines featured her face. Dangling earrings, kohled eyes, languorous looks & the catch phrase- "Kiss me, you fool!" became part of the public lexicon.


Theda Bara did not end up as a disillusioned, destitute recluse, like other sex symbols of the Silent Era. In 1921 she married successful director Charles Brabin, a marriage that lasted until her death in 1955. The Brabins were wealthy world travelers, & Theda's Bara’s talent as hostess & gourmet made their Beverly Hills home a favorite with the film community into the 1960s. Theda Bara is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park.


The fact that Theda Bara never spoke on screen makes her even more fascinating & mysterious. We are able to hear the voices of Mary Pickford, Lon Chaney, Charles Chaplin & Norma Talmadge, only a few stars: Theda Bara, Rudolph Valentino, Wallace Reid, Constance Talmadge are silent forever. Theda Bara remains almost invisible as well. It makes me impossibly melancholy that her legacy is crumbling away to dust.

Born On This Day- July 29th... Ice Capades Superstar Dag Hammarskjöld

Born on this day- July 29th,1905, the considerably closeted Swede- Dag Hammarskjöld was a real Renaissance man: a world class expert of economics, linguistics, literature, & history; an athlete in gymnastics, skiing, & mountaineering; & a bit of a theologian. Hammarskjöld has been credited with having coined the term "planned economy." Receiving 57 votes out of 60, Hammarskjöld was elected Secretary-General of the United Nations in 1953 for a 5 term & was reelected in 1957, greatly extending the influence of the United Nations as well as the prestige of the Secretary-General. He was posthumously awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1961.

 


Despite holding a position of public prominence as Secretary-General of the United Nations from 1953 until his death in 1961, Hammarskjöld managed to keep secret even the most minor details of his personal life from the world. His published journal- Markings (translated to English by openly gay- W.H. Auden), stays away from any mention of his private life. Hammarskjöld was unable to accept his sexuality & lived an unhappy, frustrated life, suffering slurs from political figures & the international media. But though he couldn’t resolve his own internal conflicts, he was masterful at settling external conflicts as he worked to solve disputes in Palestine, Vietnam, Egypt, & the Congo.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Summer Songs #25... Me & My Arrow



Me & my Arrow
Straighter than narrow
Wherever we go, every one knows
It's me & my Arrow

Me & my Arrow
Taking the high road
Wherever we go, everyone knows
It's me & my arrow

& in the morning when I wake up
She may be gone, I don't know
& we make up just to break up
I'll carry on, oh yes I will

Me & my Arrow
Straighter than narrow
Wherever we go, every one knows
It's me & my arrow
Me & my Arrow

Harry Nilsson
1971





The Husband May Be Old...

but his Clivia bloomed this week. Orange is my least favorite color, but I have to give it up for the drama.






Kingdom: Plantae

Clade:Angiosperms

Clade: Monocots

Order: Asparagales

Family: Amaryllidaceae

Genus: Clivia

Native of South Africa
Widely cultivated around the globe
They need a long period, at least 4 months, of cool conditions
 & minimal water
The Husband's Clivia has bloomed twice in 2011- the first week of January indoors & now 6 months later in the garden.
Not to be confused with Chlamydia, I did & it did not end pretty.








Wednesday, July 27, 2011

LuLu Likes Luxury

Summer Song #24... Sitting On The Dock Of The Bay



Sittin' in the mornin' sun
I'll be sittin' when the evenin' come
Watching the ships roll in
& then I watch 'em roll away again

I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay
Watching the tide roll away
I'm just sittin' on the dock of the bay
Wastin' time

I left my home in Georgia
Headed for the 'Frisco bay
'Cause I've had nothing to live for
& look like nothin's gonna come my way

So I'm just gonna sit on the dock of the bay
Watching the tide roll away
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay
Wastin' time

Look like nothing's gonna change
Everything still remains the same
I can't do what 10 people tell me to do
So I guess I'll remain the same

Sittin' here resting my bones
& this loneliness won't leave me alone
It's 2000 miles I roamed
Just to make this dock my home

Now, I'm just gonna sit at the dock of the bay
Watching the tide roll away
sittin' on the dock of the bay
Wastin' time

Otis Redding
1967







Born On This Day- July 27th... Funny Lady Carol Leifer

After graduating from Binghampton University with a degree in Theatre, Carol Leifer started in stand-up after accompanying her then boyfriend Paul Reiser to his gig at Catch A Raising Star. She enjoyed a successful career doing stand up & appeared on Late Night with David Letterman more more that 25 times. She moved to writing & has won Emmys for her work on The Larry Sanders Show, Saturday Night Live, Rules of Engagement (also executive producer), & most famously- Seinfeld (she has been dubbed- the real Elaine). She once opened for Frank Sinatra in Las Vegas. In September 2007, Leifer won an auction for the handwritten notes used by Michael Vick during his apology for his role in dogfighting.

On Leifer's 40th birthday had a revelation: "I suddenly had this really mad desire to have an affair with a woman, I was divorced. I was childless. I figured there's got to be one more way to really tick off my mom. I told Lori that I kind of had this crush on her, and she was, like: 'No way. I'm not going to be a science experiment for some straight girl!'"

"I used my patented line that I've used easily for the last 20 years—'Well, what would it hurt if we just made out?' Heard the song lyric- 'I kissed a girl & I liked it'? Well, I kissed a girl and my head spun around." Carol Leifer lives in Santa Monica with her partner- real estate developer Lori Wolf.





“I recently became vegan because I felt that as a Jewish lesbian, I wasn’t part of a small enough minority. So now I’m a Jewish lesbian vegan."

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Maxims By G.B. Shaw

Self Portrait Photograph

"Use your health, even to the point of wearing it out. That is what it is for. Spend all you have before you die; do not outlive yourself."

"Very few people can afford to be poor."

"Virtue is insufficient temptation."

Was George Bernard Shaw An Early Gay Rights Advocate?

The very heterosexual- George Bernard Shaw is one of my favorite figures in history. He was a man of the theatre & films, a Socialist & a rabble rouser. My 1st realization of Shaw as an important person was from my parent's original cast album of My Fair Lady, a Lerner & Lowe musical based on Shaw's play Pygmalion. The cover featured a drawing of Shaw as God the puppeteer, pulling the strings of Julie Andrews & Rex Harrison as marionettes. I still picture God as Shavian.



G.B. Shaw was born on this day in 1856, in Dublin & moved to London when he was 20 years old. He found great success as a music & literary critic, but he is most famous for writing drama. He wrote 60+ plays, & he continued to write until his death at 94. He was fiercely proud of being a free thinking humanist, dedicated to presenting the cause of human rights for all.

Shaw became a vegetarian while he was 25. As a strict vegetarian, he was a firm anti-vivisectionist & was antagonistic to cruel sports for the remainder of his life.The belief in the immorality of eating animals is frequently a topic in his plays & prefaces. Shaw: "A man of my spiritual intensity does not eat corpses."


But who knew that he was a gay rights activist? In 1889, Shaw recognized the harassment, arrests, & punishments given to homosexuals as a violation of basic human rights & wrote to the editor of a newspaper:

"I am sorry to have to ask you to allow me to mention what everybody declares unmentionable. My justification shall be that we may presently be saddled with the moral responsibility for monstrously severe punishments inflicted not only on persons who have corrupted children, but on others whose conduct, however nasty & ridiculous, has been perfectly within their admitted rights as individuals. To a fully occupied person in normal health, with due opportunities for a healthy social enjoyment, the mere idea of the subject of the threatened prosecutions is so expressively disagreeable as to appear unnatural. But everybody does not find it so. There are among us highly respected citizens who have been expelled from public schools for giving effect to the contrary opinion; & there are hundreds of others who might have been expelled on the same ground had they been found out. Greek philosophers, otherwise of unquestioned virtue, have differed with us on the point. So have soldiers, sailors, convicts, & in fact members of all communities deprived of intercourse with women. A whole series of Balzac's novels turns upon attachments formed by galley slaves for one another - attachments which are represented as redeeming them from utter savagery. Women, from Sappho onwards, have shown that this appetite is not confined to one sex. Now, I do not believe myself to be the only man in England acquainted with these facts. I strongly protest against any journalist writing, as nine out of ten are at this moment dipping their pens to write, as if he had never heard of such things except as vague & sinister rumors concerning the most corrupt phases in the decadence of Babylon, Greece & Rome. I appeal now to the champions of individual rights to join me in a protest against a law by which two adult men can be sentenced to twenty years penal servitude for a private act, freely consented to & desired by both, which concerns themselves alone. There is absolutely no justification for the law except the old theological one of making the secular arm the instrument of God's vengeance. It is a survival from that discarded system with its stonings & burnings; & it survives because it is so unpleasant that men are loath to meddle with it even with the object of getting rid of it, lest they should be suspected of acting in their personal interest. We are now free to face with the evil of our relic of Inquisition law, & of the moral cowardice, which prevents our getting rid of it. For my own part, I protest against the principle of the law under which the warrants have been issued; & I hope that no attempt will be made to enforce its outrageous penalties in the case of adult men."

Monday, July 25, 2011

The Boys' Fort Summer 2011

The Boys' Fort Summer 2010

Post Apocalyptic Bohemia is like the Winchester Mystery House. As long as he keeps re-working it, changing & building on, the Husband will not die. So I encourage his avocation. Our home is also the Husband's studio & lab.
He has made changes to The Boy's Fort that I find to be pleasing & promising.





This Year's Model

The light fixture is recent, formally from a ship & found at The ReBuilding Center, re-wired & well hung by The Husband.

Vicodin & Vodka

Summer Songs #23... The Things We Did Last Summer


The boat rides we would take
The moonlight on the lake
The way we danced & hummed our favorite song
The things we did last summer
I'll remember all winter long

The midway & the fun
The kewpie doll we won
The bell I rang to prove that I was strong
The things we did last summer
I'll remember all winter long

The early morning hike
The rented tandem bike
The lunches that we used to pack
We never could explain that sudden summer rain
The looks we got when we got back

The leaves begin to fade like promises we made
How could a love that seemed so right go wrong
That things we did last summer
I'll remember all winter long

Sammy Kahn
1946



Reincarnation

When I was just a callow youth of 16 & in the throes of my deeply demented Musical Theatre obsession, I collected the original cast albums for every musical released on vinyl. In my collection was the Broadway cast of Lerner & Lane's 1965 musical- On A Clear Day You Can See Forever. I was simply hypnotized by the delicious, dreamy, delightful score. That year, 1970, I was over-the-moon for the movie version with Barbra Streisand & Yves Montand, directed Vincente Minnelli. I held this brilliant idea that I could make quite a splash with a star turn in the role of ditsy Daisy Gamble, if the role was simply switched to a guy. Easy, there would only be a change of the name & a few pronouns, & in a year's time, I would be collecting my Tony Award.


John Cullum & Barbara Harris in the original in 1965


In the original 1965 On A Clear Day You Can See Forever, the very talented Barbara Harris* played the irrepressible Daisy Gamble, who discovers with the help of the psychiatrist Dr. Mark Bruckner that she was, in a past life, Melinda Wells, a woman who lived in 18th-century Britain. I assured myself that I could add a dimension to the role & demonstrate my considerable sing skills & comic chops. The Broadway World would be mine!

Fast forward 41 years, I am shocked, stunned, stymied to find that my Seattle acting acquaintance-Tom Hulce has the same idea & is producing a new version of the musical on Broadway this fall... without me in a role I was born to play. Yes, I am conscious of the reality of my being just a bit long in the tooth to pull this one off.

In this new production directed &re-conceived by Michael Mayer, the director of Spring Awakening & American Idiot, the story now has David Gamble, a florist’s assistant who turns to a psychiatrist to help him quit smoking so he can move in with his boyfriend, Warren. When Dr. Bruckner puts him under hypnosis, he learns that David might have been Melinda Wells, a 1940s jazz singer, with whom the doctor promptly falls in love.

Harry Connick Jr, the 3 time Tony nominated, Grammy winning musician will play Dr. Bruckner in the new Clear Day (I love the way "theatre people" shorten the names of musicals). This production features a new book by Hulce's buddy Peter Parnell & will include many songs from the original 1965 score & songs created for the 1970 film: Love With All the Trimmings & Go to Sleep, as well as numbers that Mr. Lerner & Mr. Lane composed for Stanley Donen’s musical film Royal Wedding: Ev’ry Night at 7, You’re All the World To Me, Open Your Eyes & Too Late Now.



You think Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark is expensive? When On a Clear Day You Can See Forever made its Broadway debut in 1965, it cost theatergoers a then record $11.90, the most for a Broadway ticket at that time, to see that season’s costliest production at $600,000.

our hero at 16 year old & hurrying to his audition

This gender-bending "revisal" will apparently go up with out me in the lead  role. This gives me a sad face, as I had rehearsed this role for over a year in my bedroom, when I was 16 years old.


* Footnote: Today is Barbara Harris's 76th birthday. She is retired from acting. If you are not familiar with her work, check out my favorite of her performances in Nashville. She was deservedly Oscar nominated for this, one of my favorite films. Harris on giving up show biz: "Well, if someone handed me something fantastic for 10 million dollars, I'd work again. But I haven't worked in a long time as an actor. I don't miss it. I think the only thing that drew me to acting in the first place was the group of people I was working with: Ed Asner, Paul Sills, Mike Nichols, Elaine May. & all I really wanted to do back then was rehearsal. I was in it for the process, and I really resented having to go out and do a performance for an audience, because the process stopped; it had to freeze and be the same every night. It wasn't as interesting."
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