June 27, 2020

On TV 26: Goodbye, Columbus ~ from hero to villain

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Last week the iconic 2 ton statue of Christopher Columbus by sculptor Vittorio Colbertaldo was removed from the pedestal where it has stood in front of Coit Tower at the top of Telegraph Hill in San Francisco.     


photos by Styrous®





When I was a kid I was absolutely positive, no question at all, it was a statue of my hero, Superman (link below).      









Over the years the statue had been vandalized many times but in the week previous to its removal it had been defaced, no pun intended, three times.




According to protestors, it was doused in red paint, symbolizing spilt blood, as an act of protest against the glorification of a man responsible for ushering in an era of exploitation and slaughter of Indigenous peoples by European colonizers.     


The restoration cost about $70,000.        




 


There was a flyer circulating on social media that encouraged people to march to Coit Tower to take it down and throw it into the bay, so, the city decided to remove it for the public's safety. It is one of many statues around the country to be removed or destroyed due to racial issues (links below).       






Goodbye, Columbus!
         
         
 Viewfinder link:       
         
         
Net links:                
           
         
YouTube links:                
    
         
        
         
         
         
Styrous® ~ Saturday, June 27, 2020       
















Ali MacGraw articles/mentions

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Love Story ~ on reel-to-reel tape     
      
     
      
     
     
      
      
     
     
      
     

date & photographer unknown
      
      






John Gielgud articles/mentions

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Michael & Sinclair Lewis ~ It Can't Happen Here 
     
     
   
     

     
     

John Gielgud      
publicity photo

   
    













June 26, 2020

Najib Joe Hakim articles/mentions

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Najib Joe Hakim - 2018
photo by Styrous®        

  





  

Wayside @ the K Gallery      
      
      
      
      
     
      
      
      
   
















June 22, 2020

Corona Virus isolation ~ Day 99: xai, truita i patates

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lamb, tortilla & potatoes 
prepared by Tom White 
photo by Styrous®
 
cremallera de xai, paella fregida
            (rack of lamb, pan fried)    
truita espanyola amb espinacs
            (Spanish tortilla with spinach)      
puré de patates
            (mashed potatoes)    

Llest per a un dinar a la tarda o un àpat a la tarda!   
            (Ready for a late afternoon lunch or early evening meal!)     
      
     
¡Una mica de Barcelona a Oakland!
    
   
Viewfinder links:         
     
Barcelona, España Journals        
Corona Virus articles
Tom White           
         
          
Styrous® ~ Monday, June 22, 2020         
     





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June 20, 2020

Michael Lewis, his father Sinclair Lewis & It Can't Happen Here

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Michael Lewis - July 1931
photographer unknown


Today, June 20, is the birthday of actor Michael Lewis who was born in 1930, in New York City, NY.  He was the son of novelist Sinclair Lewis and American journalist and radio broadcaster, Dorothy Thompson.        




Michael Lewis is known for his reading of the 1935 semi-satirical political novel by his father, Sinclair, It Can't Happen Here, which was issued on vinyl LP by Caedmon Records in 1973. (link below).  
       
Michael made his Broadway debut at the age of 23 in the 1954 production of the Noël Coward comedy Quadrille, starring the Lunts (Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne) and in 1965 appeared with them again in the musical, On a Clear Day.       


the Lunts (Alfred Lunt & Lynn Fontanne
date & photographer unknown


On October 22, 1957, he acted in the George Bernard Shaw play, The Doctor's Dilemma, at the Arena Stage Theatre in Washington, D.C. with Louis Edmonds, Astrid Wilsrud, William Ball, Nick Coster, Lois Alexander, Allen Joseph, Tom Bosley, Peter Breck, Ed Preble, Clarissa Verissimo, Michael Foley, Clayton Corzatte and Warner Schreiner in the cast. Dick Nelson was set designer, Marianna Elliott was costume designer and John O'Shaughnessy directed.          




In 1958, The Doctor's Dilemma was made into a film which starred Dirk Bogarde and Leslie Caron with Alastair Sim and Robert Morley.        




I formed a great affection for Leslie Caron when I saw her in the 1953 film, Lili; she was adorable. Dirk Bogarde has been in some great films; the first one of his I saw was The Servant, a REALLY weird film! There's an excellent synopsis/review of it on YouTube (link below). My favorite Bogarde film was Death in Venice, which was directed by Luchino Visconti in 1971. Oh, my goodness! Need I say more?        



 
Back to Michael Lewis: on October 5, 1959, he appeared in the play, The Visit, by Friedrich Durrenmatt, in a Producers Theatre production at the Hanna Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio, with Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne, Thomas Gomez, Glenn Anders, John Wyse, William Hansen of The Member of the Wedding (link below), Myles Eason, David Clarke and William Callan in the cast. Maurice Valency adapted the script, Ted Otto was set designer, Castillo designed the costumes and Peter Brook directed.  




On television: in 1952 he appeared on the Cavalcade of America, an anthology drama series whose Musical Director was Donald Voorhees; in 1965, the The Holy Terror which starred Julie Harris; and in 1967 as La Teremouille in Saint Joan, a television adaptation for the Hallmark Hall of Fame, of the George Bernard Shaw play about the life and trial of Joan of Arc, which was based on the kept records from her trial in 1430. It was directed by George Schaefer and Geneviève Bujold played the role of Joan with a cast that included Raymond Massey, Roddy McDowall, Theodore Bikel, James Daly, Maurice Evans, Leo Genn and many others (audio link below).       

Prior to the 1967 production, Saint Joan had been made into an almost surreal, romanticized and beautiful film in 1957; it starred Jean Seberg in the role of Joan, Richard Widmark who was brilliant in a role unlike any he made, with Richard Todd and John Gielgud (video link below).      



       
The last appearance of Michael Lewis on the stage was in 1974 as the knight in the Alan Jay Lerner musical, Camelot, at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, New Jersey, with Michael Allinson, Leigh Beery, Don Stewart and Noel Craig in the cast. Stone Widney was the director.      


Greg Barnes - costume design  - 1974
      

Michael Lewis died on March 6, 1975, in Summit, New Jersey, just two years after he did the reading of his father's work; he was 44 years old. He was suvived by his widow, Valerie; a daughter, Lesley, and two sons by a previous marriage.    
       
            
            
Viewfinder links:                      

Dirk Bogarde        
Noël Coward              
Leo Genn         
John Gielgud       
Julie Harris           
Michael Lewis
Sinclair Lewis          
Sinclair Lewis ~ It Can't Happen Here   
Raymond Massey        
Dorothy Thompson          
      
Net links:                      

IBDB ~ Michael Lewis          
Internet Archive ~ St Joan (audio file) (1 hr., 42 mins.) 
     
YouTube links:                      
 
Dirk Bogarde Special: The Servant (21 mins.)       
Sinclair Lewis ~ It Can't Happen Here (pt. 1) (reading) (4 hrs, 50 mins.)        
Sinclair Lewis ~ It Can't Happen Here (pt. 2) (reading) (6 hrs, 25 mins.)     
Saint Joan (Jean Seberg & Richard Widmark (1957) (1 hr., 50 min.)      
      
     
    
            
           
Styrous® ~ Saturday, June 20, 2020       
       





            














Dirk Bogarde articles/mentions

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Michael Lewis, Sinclair Lewis & It Can't Happen Here       
Gustav Mahler ~ Death In Venice    
Silvana Mangano ~ Anna soundtrack   
        
        
        
        
        

        
Dirk Bogarde - 1939 
age 19, photographer unknown 
        
     
        

        
        











Sinclair Lewis articles/mentionos

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mentions:    
King Kong & Fay Wray         
Michael Lewis    
   
    

    
Sinclair Lewis - 1906  
photographer unknown    
    
  
  














The Supreme Court articles/mentions

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Ruth Bader Ginsburg      
Ned Kelly, Mick Jagger & the Supreme Court   
The Supreme Court & Neil Gorsuch     
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
The Supreme Court 
photo by Samuel Corum, NY Times 

   
   
  
  












Vera Lynn articles/mentions

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Vera Lynn ~ We'll Meet Again       


mentions:       
Meet the Press ~ "Why weren't we ready?"     
The Platters ~ My Prayer               
   

       
   
Vera Lynn       
photo by Maurice Seymour       

      
  
  
  
       













Raymond Massey articles/mentions

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Raymond Massey ~ Thespian Extraordinare   
        
mentions:         
        
        
        
        
Raymond Massey - 1933       
photo by Dorothy Wilding        
        
        
        
        
        








Leo Genn articles/mentions

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Michael Lewis, Sinclair Lewis & It Can't Happen Here      
Quo Vadis, Nero & Peter Ustinov        
     
     
     
     
     
 
   
Snake Pit publicity photo



     










June 18, 2020

On TV 26: Vera Lynn ~ We'll Meet Again

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Vera Lynn died today; she was 103 years old. I remember the songs she sang during the war, World War II, that is. Her songs were meant to inspire and boost moral for the war effort. A couple of her big "Hits" were  (There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover, and We'll Meet Again, the title of the song used as the closing line Queen Elizabeth used in her address to Britain a couple of months ago regarding the Corona virus (link below).

In August 1985, she appeared on stage at Crystal Palace Bowl, with Hawkwind (link below), Doctor and the Medics (they did a great cover of the 1969 song Spirit in the Sky by Norman Greenbaum) and several other rock bands, for the finale of a benefit concert for Pete Townshend's Double-O anti-heroin charity.    












 










Viewfinder links:          
      
YouTube links:          
       
Doctor and the Medics ~ Spirit In the Sky          
Norman Greenbaum ~ Spirit In the Sky      
Vera Lynn ~               
       (There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover      
       We'll Meet Again (vintage film)   
       We'll Meet Again (1939 version)   
          
          
           
          
Styrous® ~ Thursday, June 18, 2020