Saturday, December 29, 2012

Oh, yeah? Oh, yeah.






This photo was recently posted on Facebook by my niece, Stacie (Murray) Coburn, showing me grabbing her for a kiss at her wedding many years ago. Whenever I was away for a while, I always grabbed Stacie and her sister, Melissa, for a kiss, on the sofa, on the floor or halfway up a stairway, me in aggressive pursuit.

 I love this photo, especially the flying leg--except--Stacie said that I was now too old to do it anymore. I almost posted a response to her, saying, "Oh, yeah? Come here, babe, I'll show you what," but I'm afraid that my back might give out and we would both end up on the floor, me with permanent injuries.

I may just have to look at the photo and remember how I loved those girls.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Christmas Commando.



Twas a week before Christmas, and all through the house
One small creature was stirring, inside of my spouse.
The baby was due on December two-five,
The same day as Santa and gifts should arrive.

Happiness ruled on King's Highway, New Jersey in the winter of 1988.
We knew it would be a boy because the doctor who showed us the sonogram said, "Do you want to know what it is?"
"Yes," said Susan, before I could think.
The doctor then added, as he finessed the probe and watched the screen, "See that rocket ship between his legs?"
IT'S A BOY!
We had discussed names already. A girl would be "Jacqueline," but a boy was in dispute. I favored "Nicholas Conrad," the "Conrad" after my father, but Susan favored "Thomas," a name common in both of our families (I was named for my Uncle Thomas Davis, my mother's younger brother who was shot dead by a friend around 1935, at the age of thirteen, as the two boys played with real guns). "Thomas" eventually prevailed, but only, I swore, if we call him "Nick," so, his name became Thomas Nicholas. Of course, my dictates came to nothing as both families sang about the new boy, "Tommy, Tommy, Tommy!" The only reference to "Nick" came from my father in a phone call from Florida when he said, for the first and last time, "How's Nick?"

There was only one dark cloud hovering over our happiness in that last week before Christmas.
"We don't even have a Christmas tree," Susan brooded in our empty living room, rummaging through boxes of decorations.

Now, to me, a Christmas tree was just decoration, not important. In my many years as a bachelor (that would be until age forty or so), I never erected such a thing. Only once, spending Christmas Eve with a Navy shipmate onshore in California, he and I went on a lark to find a tree. All we found were abandoned Christmas tree sites and a few stray evergreen branches, so we scooped up the largest branch and took it home. It looked very promising after we propped it up and adorned it with crushed aluminum foil--even better after we added spaghetti strands like tinsel from dinner. I don't remember what we used to top off the "tree," but it must have been funny because we were very creative and I remember us shedding tears of laughter. You would think that we were drunk, but neither of us imbibed, except for huge amounts of coffee.

But, by 1988, I was hoarding my limited funds like a Scrooge. Twenty dollars for a tree seemed like an exorbitant expense in the face of a new baby who would need an endless stream of Similac gushing down his throat, not to mention piles of fresh diapers. And, being self-employed, I never knew where my next $20 would come from.

I thought I had made a compelling case for saving money and living without a tree, but I was genuinely touched by Susan on her knees, sadly and hopefully perusing all the gewgaws in the "Christmas" boxes, her swollen belly hovering over all. So be it, I thought. One night after dinner I rummaged through my wardrobe and prepared to accept my mission. I put on a pair of black jeans, several layers of shirts topped with a dark charcoal sweater, a navy blue woolen cap pulled down over my ears and an impressive pair of black boots.

As I stood at the front door wriggling my fingers into a pair of black gloves, like a doctor preparing for an operation, Susan appeared from the kitchen below to ask, "What are you doing?"
My eyes twinkled.
She often loved my antics, so I twinkled again and said, "Just call me the Christmas Commando."
I noticed she was smiling broadly as I went out the front door, myself tickled with glee.
It might not be easy, I thought, as I clomped along the road through the snow, even though we lived on the outskirts of town, mostly surrounded by woods. First of all, I didn't want to get caught, because I didn't really know who owned what, and I would absolutely not take a tree from someone's private landscaping. My friend, Brian, and I once planted a perfectly spaced row of trees at the front edge of his property only to see one of the trees disappear years later in December leaving a gap like a missing front tooth.
Bastard thief, we agreed--no Santa.

After stopping in the garage to grab a pruning saw, I walked about two miles before picking a spot to enter the woods, and I was disappointed with the meager prospects--a surprising number of wild trees are just crabby-looking--so I kept trudging through snow and going deeper into the woods aided by a mystically charming moonlight. When I saw electric light in the distance, I walked toward it, curious about its source, and it looked like some kind of warehouse or factory. As I approached, I could see a loading dock, and I could hear and see men dressed for the cold chattering back and forth.

Then--Holy Baby Jesus!--between me and the dock stood a perfectly beautiful evergreen tree. It was way too tall, but beautiful and perfect. "If only I could get that top six or eight feet," I thought. This property must be owned by that warehouse company, but it was not part of any developed landscaping. They probably wouldn't care, even if they ever noticed it was gone. But there was no way to climb up to get the top without being detected by the men on the dock, so I crawled on my belly, knees and elbows deep in the snow, to the base of the tree, which was about six inches in diameter, way too big for an indoor tree.

Slowly and carefully, I sawed through the base of the tree until it was ready to tip, then pulled on a low branch, keeping behind the tree and out of sight from the dock. When I heard a few wood fibers snapping, I moved back to the base to saw some more--saw, pull and snap repeatedly. I wanted to be there to cushion its fall so that no one would hear a crash. In the process, the tree, when it fell--heavier than I thought--overwhelmed me and pushed me deep into the snow. But, it was okay, because its fall was very, very quiet, and I squirmed from under it no worse for the wear, then froze for a minute or two to see that there was no reaction from the men on the dock.

After sawing the last few fibers from the trunk, I dragged the tree to a safe distance, huffing and puffing and staggering in the snow, cut about six feet off the bottom of the trunk and dragged the remainder out of the woods and down the road.
Susan appeared with her happy mouth wide open as I barged through the front door dragging the tree, then she gave me a look. "You didn't steal that from someone's yard, did you?"
"Of course I didn't steal it. This is from out there in the wild woods--complements of the Christmas Commando," twinkle twinkle.

Luckily, we had a cathedral ceiling, because the tree was still too tall for most living rooms. I used an eight-foot stepladder to decorate the top, and it warmed my heart to see Susan fussing below with the gewgaws and giving me directions. It turned out to be a magnificent tower of color and light, with a beautiful empty crib waiting nearby.

On Christmas day, Susan sprang up, and we spent five hours outside the delivery room at the hospital, a false alarm, as Thomas Nicholas refused to appear until December 28. On the 28th, I sat beside Susan in the delivery room squeezing her hand tightly--though not as tightly as she squeezed mine. Her suffering made my heart ache, and when Thomas Nicholas finally emerged, the doctor exclaimed, "Isn't that beautiful?"
No, I thought, not at all. Then the doctor gave me the scissors and instructed me to cut the cord, and we took the boy home and introduced him to his crib nearby the awesome Christmas tree.

The very next night, I crossed our gravel driveway to the landlord's house to pay the rent and he informed me proudly that Thomas Nicholas was the first baby born in our house, which he had built with his own hands. "Do you want to see the baby?" I asked. He jumped up, called to his wife and we trooped over to take a look at the new baby.
Of course, they gushed over the boy.
         "His cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry."
         "He had a broad face and a little round belly.
          That shook when he laughed, like a bowlful of jelly."
          --He was chubby and plump, a right jolly young elf--
          "And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself."
When the landlord finally looked around the room, he was impressed and very happy. Susan had decorated the windows with charming, ruffled white curtains, but otherwise the Christmas tree and crib dominated the room, and he said, "I love the way you keep this space open," perhaps not realizing that I did not have $500 for a sofa, or any other stuffed furniture for a living room. Then, he looked up at the tree, "Wow, Where'd you get a tree like that?"
"Oh," I said, "You can find 'em."
He turned back to the crib, "Hey, did you notice? He's a Nicholas and he's a Saint--St. Laurent."
"Saint Nicholas," Susan said.
I walked with them to the door and out to the driveway, glancing up at the clear night sky.

He crossed the short drive, to his wife made a call,
And away they both flew, very pleased with it all.
But I heard him exclaim, 'ere they walked out of sight,
"Happy Christmas to all, and to all a goodnight."

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Love her.

I"m not a fan of opera because I don't think people should sing dialogue, and,--in fact, in real life--they never do. They rant and they rave and they laugh and they cry, but they never sing. When we sing, we sing emotions in subconscious sounds, all by ourselves, ideally fitting words to our hearts and souls. But never mind the format, listen closely to this orchestra and follow the words of this great voice, singing about love. It's a song sung by King Arthur in the musical, Camelot, in love with Guenevere, after his talk with the wise sorcerer, Merlin. He sings a profound point well made:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=h649I7ETaHI

I've been in love a few times, and every time, I followed the advice above. It didn't always work out well, but it's probably the best you could do. Maybe the love was extended infatuation, sexual attraction, pathological obsession, or intellectual simpatico, but despite the heartache and the eye-opening crashes, the love itself lingers forever, and--good news--even if you lose, it will happen again.


GAYLE




Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Twinky Defense.

I haven't eaten a Twinky in years, but, all of a sudden, I want one.
In case you haven't heard, Hostess, the makers of Twinkies, announced that they would be laying off 18,000 employees and closing the doors on their Twinky plants, not to mention cutting off our Hohos, Ding Wings or whatever else they call that stuff.

Some people probably think this is a good thing. After all, don't Twinkies make us fat? Haven't the Food Police been crawling all over elementary schools to keep our kids from eating such treats? There's even a boogeyman involved. Years ago, some sleazy lawyer tried to defend a murderer by blaming the crime on his client's consumption of "junk food," a case which became famous as "The Twinky Defense," which reminds me of a cartoon I once saw, probably in The New Yorker: 
A conservative talking to a cop says, "I tried marijuana once. It made me want to rape and kill."
It sounds like a liberal saying, "I used to eat Twinkies. It made me so fat I might die someday." (News flash: Oh yeah, you WILL die).

We're surrounded by ridiculous people.

Aside from being a great investment for my pocket change when I was ten years old, Twinkies fuel my memory in other ways.Once, in the fifth grade, one of my classroom compadres, Jerry, showed up at lunch with a large, brown paper bag full of Twinkies. No doubt, the little thief had stolen money somewhere. And, although the Twinkies were delicious, we couldn't eat them all, so we launched into a Twinky war in the basement of the school, smacking the cream-filled goodies into each other's faces. We got caught and punished by the stern principal of Sacred Heart Academy, and I regretted the waste of sweet treats.

I don't know whose fault it is that Twinkies will be gone. We can blame the inefficiency of the company management, or we can blame GREED. There's always GREED. Company GREED and labor union GREED.

Could be a GREED war.

All I know is that a treat for kids might no longer be available, and it's a treat capable of earning billions of dollars--as long as no one gets greedy.

Just thinking about it makes me want a Twinky.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Backdrop.


Here's the mural in my sister Loretta's dining room, by T. St. Laurent, 8' x 10', painted on textured wallpaper. When I dipped my brush into yellow paint, Loretta gave me my only instruction: "No yellow!"
That's okay, it worked out fine. Now, there's a side table three feet high standing in front of it.
That's okay, too. When you have worked in the theater for many years, you understand that the backdrop is less important than the props and the actors in front of it. It's the setting and ambiance which count.
Works for me.

Friday, October 12, 2012

Fastest Vacation in the West.

It would be tight.
We unloaded our luggage on Friday before dawn in a remote parking lot of the Manchester/Boston Regional airport, then broke into a trot to get to a counter in time to grab boarding passes before we stripped shoes and accessories and spread our legs for Homeland Security. We stuffed ourselves into a full plane and landed in Baltimore on time around 9 am.
So far, so good.

Without delay, we took off for Las Vegas before I could smoke a cigarette or get a second cup of coffee. Damn! It would be hours before I could get some nicotine coursing through my veins. Coffee, I got, but Southwest Airlines offered no more than a bag of peanuts or some factory cookies to consume during the flight--unless you wanted to get drunk, for which you could pay a high price and wouldn't care about food anyway. Luckily, I had stashed a leftover spicy Italian sub into my carry-on bag, complete with jalepeno peppers, so Gayle and I didn't go hungry.

We banged down on the runway in Las Vegas right on time, then, after I crouched in a corner of the airport to suck down two cigarettes in a row, we hopped a shuttle bus to the Red Rock Hotel and Resort. The Red Rock turned out to be a huge, comfortable fun palace full of good food, music and gambling, located at the western edge of Las Vegas. We could see the entire city from our 16th floor room, a beautiful sight surrounded by awesome mountains, day or night.
We dropped our bags in the room and enjoyed a sumptuous meal on the ground floor at the Grand Cafe, which is open 24/7, and the hotel casino turned out to be a relaxing luxury. I could actually cross my legs on a padded chair, play video poker and smoke a cigarette right out there in public--indoors!

Viva Las Vegas!

By the time we got back to the room, we were too tired to venture out to the Strip. Gayle prepped for bed, while I went down to bask in the joys of indoor smoking. I'm not a gambler, but I enjoyed beating the house for $15 as I lounged at the poker machine.

Finally, we collapsed in an exceptionally snug bed, equipped with a feathery, lightweight comforter.
I woke up early, as usual, believing that every new day is full of promise, especially when you're on vacation.
But a promise is a promise, and Gayle promised to attend a wedding at 5 pm, with me as her guest, and prepping for the day ahead seemed to be a primary female activity. She had a hair appointment at the hotel salon at 2:30 pm, and the first hotel shuttle to the Strip didn't depart until 11:00 am. No time for Gayle to go sightseeing. But she was very understanding, so I hopped the bus to the Strip.

I had a mission. My favorite co-worker of many years, Brenda, wanted a genuine Hard Rock Cafe t-shirt from Vegas, so I hopped off the shuttle and began walking South toward the Hard Rock. As I watched the clock and admired the sights, awesome buildings and famous names, I realized I'd never make it in time, so I commandeered a cab and made a quick round trip to the hard rock mecca and its nearby hotel full of rock'n'roll memorabilia.


Mission accomplished. The attendants at the hotel hailed me a cab, and I was back at the north end of the Strip just in time to catch the shuttle back to my hotel, where I showered, suited up and made myself as beautiful as Gayle--I say!!!


So we hopped a cab to the Sienna Golf Club for the wedding, where flower petals curled down the aisle:
Then, as the sun set, the moon watched over our wine and cheese-fest on the patio. 

At this point, I forgot I had a camera, but the reception was superb. After the bride and groom finished their dance, a very talented Michael Jackson impersonator burst onto the dance floor and wowed the crowd for a good 20 minutes, peppered by lots of screaming girls. He was apparently a friend of the groom, Lee, known as popular Vegas radio personality, "D.J.Hollywood," a good match for Gayle's friend, Ashley, whom you may spot on the cover of Bride magazine very shortly.
No time left but to taxi back to the Hotel and collapse.

Again, I woke up early, but we had to catch an early shuttle to the airport to catch another shuttle up to St. George, Utah for a barbecue with the Parker family--not related to the wedding--two hours of highway through desert scenery. I was still in shock from the sight of Las Vegas. What a godforsaken gravel pit it is--huge palaces built in the dirt, a sandbox with castles for adults to play in, rocks, dry dirt and pathetic, sparse vegetation struggling for life everywhere. The palm trees, buildings and mountains are beautiful and awesome, but everywhere in between is dirt! Rocks! I missed trees already.

The large Parker family were at the top of their game, the women beautiful and the men charming. Two of the women swelled with the promise of more Parkers, while Eva tossed the best-ever-tasted chicken kabobs on the barbecue, and the patriarch, Alan, carved fresh, heavenly melons from his farm in northern Utah.

Warmed and satiated, we hopped the shuttle back to Vegas at 7 pm. I was secretly scheming a way to sprint back to the Strip to see the Freemont Street Experience at night, a tour of the old Vegas I had briefly visited back in 1969, but the obstacles mounted. Gayle would be tired, and the shuttle driver announced that roadwork along our route may delay our arrival time in Vegas--then, after five minutes into the trip, the driver decided to go back into St. George to pick up two tardy passengers, despite my grousing.
Freemont Street was fading. The only way to make it would be to pay a small fortune in cab rides when we got back to the airport, so, that clinched it. We caught the next shuttle back to the hotel and dove into the soft bed.

We said goodbye to Vegas the very next day at 1:30 pm, touched down in Chicago to wait for our connection and arrived back in Manchester, NH  after midnight, loaded with luggage, only to stare at a few acres of parking lot trying to remember where we parked.

You could find me face down on my bed about an hour later, shoes and luggage scattered in the hallway; I would be glad to get back to work so I could get some rest.

I used one leftover vacation day to check with friends on the internet. I had recently become friends with my first cousin, Dianne, who lives in northern Utah, whom I haven't seen in over fifty years. The possibility of meeting her on this trip never occurred to me, since St. George, Utah is about a four hour drive from her home in northern Utah, and we had very little time, not to mention social appointments.
But, lo! It happens that, as Gayle and I were feeding at the Parkers, Dianne and her husband were visiting one of their favorite sites, Zion National Park, just outside of St. George, which looks something like this:

And this:


In fact, they drove into St. George for lunch on the day Gayle and I went to the barbecue, so that my long lost friend, Dianne, and I were probably only a mile apart for two hours.

Oops. That's what you get for not keeping in touch.

My bad.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Alice Appreciation.

I was a very serious adolescent in the mid-fifties, hostile to authority and not known for laughing, but The Honeymooners could reduce me to tears, mostly because Jackie Gleason as "Ralph Kramden" was a gifted actor and a consummate buffoon, carrying his stupid schemes to absurd heights. Art Carney as "Ed Norton" struck me as way too silly for my tastes--no character in real life could be that stupid and goofy, I thought. I didn't learn to appreciate "Norton" until many years later, when I started expecting a laugh as soon as he walked in a room.
Then, there was Audrey Meadows, better known as "Alice." She was my hero--my heroine--ranking higher than "Matt Dillon" on Gunsmoke or John Wayne at the movies.
Look at her--she was an island of intelligence in a sea of idiots:






And, she was not afraid. "Ralph" could stomp and shout and threaten her, but when the moment came, she would stick a pin in this blowhard and , reduce him to a deflated sack of jelly, to my infinite delight.
I took the characters seriously at the time, even though I laughed at the stupidity. When "Ralph" finally hugged "Alice" at the end of many episodes and blubbered, "Baby, you're the greatest," I thought, "Naw, he's too stupid to appreciate her."
It was me. I'm the one who appreciated her.
She was beautiful, Audrey Meadows.


Monday, September 17, 2012

Where Am I? The Ultimate Journey.

I love maps, all kinds of maps. Whenever I travel by car, I must have a road map because I always want to know where I am, relative to where I came from and where I'm going. Also, I want to know where on this map I get to eat.
Here's a map of the visible universe:

The Observable Universe

That little speck in the center, the Virgo Supercluster,  is where we are, and the universe looks like a sphere because we're in the middle of it and we can see only about 14.2 billion light years (ly) in any direction. No doubt, there's a lot more stuff out past the sphere, but we can't see it--it's black--which is just an indication of our nearsightedness. Maybe the light out there, traveling at 186 million miles per second, hasn't had enough time to reach us, and, besides, we're probably not in the middle of the universe at all.
Now, I'm not traveling far away, but I still want to know where I stand. The Virgo Supercluster is chock full of smaller clusters which are each chock full of galaxies--yes, whole galaxies, each full of stars and planets.
I don't know where they got the name "Virgo," but it's Latin for "virgin" and has nothing to do with the constellation Virgo, except that the stars which form Virgo are also inside the Virgo Supercluster, right here with us, and we can see them with the naked eye.


The constellation is supposed to be a virgin wearing a skirt, but even if you connect the dots, it may be difficult to locate in the night sky because it's no more than a stick figure, obscured by smaller stars all around, although this is nothing new. Virgins are always hard to spot, unless they're under the age of 16.
So, just for the fun of it, let's zoom in on the map--to the Virgo Supercluster:

The Local Supercluster.

Only the biggest clusters in the Virgo Supercluster get their own names instead of numbers, but, of course, being us, we gave ourselves a name, a name not very colorful or exciting. We're called the Local Group, which sounds like a bunch of loiterers on the porch outside a general store, tilting back on chairs, smoking tobacco, shooting the shit, and passing judgement on random strollers, all for good fun. Of course, the map places us dead center, and, if we zoom in on the Local Group, we get this map:

The Local Group

Naturally, our galaxy is in the center of the map. It's Home! The Milky Way! And, here's a pic of the Andromeda Galaxy, our neighbor, the most spectacular galaxy in the Local Group:

Digitized Sky Survey image

Finally--home sweet home--here's a rendering of our galaxy. The Milky Way!

The Milky Way

The Milky Way is a spiral galaxy, forming a relatively flat disc full of stars, planets, etc., all spiraling toward the center. Our Sun is located in the Orion arm of the spiral, pretty far out from the center. Here's a telescopic picture of the center of the Milky Way galaxy taken from the Orion arm (that would be HERE, that would be US):



And another pic, supersensitive to light in the night sky:

Royal Observatory awards: ASTRONOMY PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR ATTHE ROYAL OBSERVATORY GREENWICH

Is it awesome, or what? You can't see all the distant light with the naked eye, but, when you see that milky band across the night sky--billions of stars too far away to form the dots of light we call stars--you're looking at the dim light from all the stars in all the arms of our galaxy, seen from the the Orion arm of the Milky Way. You're actually looking along the flat plane of our disc-shaped galaxy, but the stars are too far away to look like specks--they just look like a milky trail across the sky (get it? "Milky Way").

The Sun and Earth are pretty far out from the center of the galaxy, thank God, because, at the center of the Milky Way sits an ominous black hole, a ball of matter so dense that it's super-gravity sucks all the nearby stars into itself, sucking so hard that even light can not escape. We can't see the black hole because it won't let light out, plus, it's surrounded by billions of little stars getting sucked into dark doom, making it look like a crowd of fireflies congregating around a bowl of honey.

But, don't worry, the super gravity won't get to us within the next few million years. You've got plenty of time to write your wills. Even your great-great grandchildren will live goofily along, mostly unaware of the colossal suction that is bound to turn our world into a compacted black speck, like a grain of sand in a dark desert, settled on the surface of a massive black ball.
Much, much later--in the end--when the whole galaxy is finally sucked into the black hole, the damned thing may even explode and start a whole new generation of stars, planets and a race or two of curious goof-offs like us.
But, I digress. Let's get back to maps.



Out here in the Orion arm of the Milky Way, we find--among billions--our favorite star, the Sun. We're so close to it that it warms us, makes our veggies grow, and gives us a great tan if we stretch out on a beach. It doesn't look much like a star to us, but it is one.
The planets rotating around the Sun are not often aligned as in this map, but it's a nice image to help us get our bearings--that's why I love maps, to get my bearings, to see where I stand, to get oriented. We're the third planet from the Sun, inside the asteroid belt and the orbits of a bunch of other planets.
Here's an actual photograph of our planet, Earth, taken by an astronaut on a mission to the Moon. It's the prettiest planet in our solar system, with the possible exception of Saturn.:

A planetary disk of white cloud formations, brown and green land masses, and dark blue oceans against a black background. The Arabian peninsula, Africa and Madagascar lie in the upper half of the disk, while Antarctica is at the bottom.

Now, we're getting somewhere. At the bottom of the photo, you can see the ice that covers Antarctica, and behind the white clouds in the upper left (northwest quadrant) you can see the continent of Africa, with Saudi Arabia just across the Red Sea. The Mediterranean Sea is just barely visible at the top left of the globe.
So, if you get on a sailboat in Africa and cross that blue ocean to the left (the Atlantic), tacking a little north around to the back of the globe, you would run smack into North America:


Thus to another map of North America:



And a highlight of my home, New Hampshire:

Map of the United States with New Hampshire highlighted

Wherein lies my hometown, Manchester, near the bottom of the state:
map of New Hampshire cities

Which--on maps--shows roads and streets like this:



Thus, I can find my way to the huge Mall of New Hampshire, just off the intersection of Interstate 293 and South Willow St. (highlighted in purple).



Now, all I have to do is consult the map of the mall to get what I'm looking for:


Aha, I see a "You Are Here" arrow on the map. All I have to do is go straight, take a right, then a second right, then a left, and I'm there!


I order a supreme pizza with everything on it, and when I lift the lid to take a look--Wow! It looks remarkably like a map of the Universe. I swear the little speck of green pepper in the center resembles the Virgo Supercluster.
 


I feel like I'm Home. And I can eat the map!
I do love maps, especially when they're pizza..

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Madison Rising.

If you love Washington and Jefferson, Hamilton, Adams and Patrick Henry, not to mention Madison--i.e. America--plus great rock music, you should take a listen to this:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8C7i9kdEf8

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Native Calendar.

If we named the months of the calendar after Native moons instead of Roman emperors, it would read as follows:

Wolf
Snow
Crow
Pink
Flower
Strawberry
Thunder
Red
Harvest
Beaver
and Cold.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

What's Your Moon?

I was born in the time of the Flower Moon--many moons ago.

Last month (August 2012) we looked up at a "Blue Moon," now defined as a second Full Moon in a single month. One month is supposedly based on one cycle of a Full Moon--one Full Moon equals one month--but the measure is so rough that we get that extra Full Moon, the Blue Moon, every three years.



Ancient Europeans and--especially--Native Americans in Northern America typically came up with names for all the Full Moons of the year, names which most often matched. So, if you want to know your Birthday Moon, check the list. It's no doubt more meaningful than your astrological sign, because this would be the month when you first experienced the world and its weather, hot or cold, in diapers or snowsuit.

BIRTH MONTHS:

January: Wolf Moon--Named because people listened to far off hungry wolves howling against their winter fast.

February: Snow Moon--also known as the Hunger Moon because of the difficulty of hunting in winter snows.

March: Crow Moon--when thawing snows revealed worms for the loud crows to eat. Also known as the Snow Crust Moon, because the snow surfaces thawed during the day and refroze at night to form a crust. Also known as the Worm Moon and the Sap Moon, when sap started running in the trees--yum, maple syrup.

April: Pink Moon--when the earliest colorful flowers appeared. Also known as the Grass Moon, and the Fish Moon, when fish spawned in the rivers.

May: Flower Moon--when flowers became abundant. Also known as the Milk Moon (?).

June: Strawberry Moon--when the short-seasoned strawberries (and raspberries) ripened, no doubt a special treat to all concerned. Also known as the Rose Moon.

July: Thunder Moon---named after frequent storms. Also known as the Buck Moon, for when deer sprouted antlers and hunters could provide good food. Also, the Hay Moon.

August: Red Moon--named for the haze at moonrise in the Great Lakes region, which reddened the moon, aka, Sturgeon Moon and Grain Moon..

September: Hunter's Moon--because when snow fell early, the still active wildlife could be spotted easily against the white background. Also known as the Corn Moon.

WE ARE HUNTER-GATHERERS, AND THIS IS THE TIME OF YEAR WHEN THE HUNTERS OF OUR SPECIES START DEPENDING ON THE GATHERERS

October: Harvest Moon--marking a season of abundance in the fields. Crops are ripe and ready to eat, corn and grains are preserved and everyone celebrates--just like pumpkin pie. Also known as the Frosty Moon--and the Blood Moon, for the frantic last chance to find game on the hunting grounds.

November: Beaver Moon--no doubt a Northeast Native American moniker, because it was the best time to trap and wear beaver furs, as beavers ran around all month chewing trees in preparation for winter.

December: Cold Moon--yu'think? Also known as the Long Night Moon because darkness in December is very long each day.

We're in September, so, if you're looking for Spring, for the time of the Pink Moon--

YOU MUST WAIT SIX MOONS.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Tattoo Nation.

That's Pretty Smurfing Cool

When was it, exactly, when "bad" became "good," and "sick" became "cool?"
"Wow, that is sick," the kid says.
The kid means whatever he's looking at is very impressive. He likes it. "Sick" is not a pejorative adjective, it's a compliment.
My father used to say something like, "The bigger the tattoo, the smaller the brain," which I thought was pretty funny--and probably true.

My Grandfather Davis (on the maternal side), had a tattoo on each of his forearms. One was a naked woman with dark Godiva hair flowing discreetly past her lower buttocks, and the other I can't remember. I always think of the second one as an anchor, because my brothers and I swore Grampa Davis looked exactly like Popeye. His farmer sleeves were always rolled up, and when he popped out his dentures, squinted one eye and jut out his jaw, bald head sprouting minimal hairs, we screamed with delight. Stand by, Olive Oyl! Watch out, Bluto!

We loved him and his antics. But, how come my father damned the tattooed bikers on West Pearl St.and never said a disparaging word about Grampa's epidermic artwork? I don't know.
In my experimental high school years, I got drunk one day with a gang of buddies who decided that getting a tattoo was exactly the thing we should do that day. We piled into one car and drove to the nearest tattoo parlor, which, in those days, was located halfway across the state. Still, despite all the braggadocio, I knew I wouldn't do it--not even drunk. My father would consider me an idiot, which I always avoided at all costs. The tattoo parlor was closed, but two of my buddies went back a week later to do the deed, only to get their asses kicked by enraged parents.

Anyway, based on my observations, I never cared much for tattoos, although some of the art is excellent, and a girl with a pretty butterfly on her shoulder blade can be charming. The clean, sharp-edged drawings turn too soon into blurry blotches. They look good when they're fresh, when someone says, "Check out my new tattoo," but from there it's downhill. Even six feet away, you can't tell what they represent. They just look like severe skin blotches or accidental birthmarks. Get enough tattoos and you'll look like you got splashed by a truck driving through a mud puddle.

Worst of all, tattoo aficionados seem to be attracted to evil images, barbed wire, creatures with fangs, vociferous dragons and slimy snakes. Women have better taste, with their butterflies, flowers and angels, but--who needs it?

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Wedding From the Heavens.

My niece's wedding was scheduled for 5 pm at one of the most exclusive settings in southern New Hampshire, an outdoor ceremony tucked under beautiful oaks and maples, with lush, rolling lawns and sweet-smelling little gardens all around.
The weather forecasts were ominous, but the day progressed beautifully--and hopefully--until about 4 pm. Then, about the time most of the guests were climbing into their cars to get to the wedding, the dark clouds rolled over and the heavens opened up, sending down a deluge of huge, heavily splashing raindrops, darkening and drenching everything under the sky.

The staff inside the Bedford Village Inn scrambled to move the reception tables to make room for rows of chairs separated by a middle aisle, while an excellent chamber orchestra treated us to classical music on tender strings. Then, after only a brief delay, the groom, Bobby Condon, appeared and strode down the aisle with a folded umbrella, like a parade rifle propped on his shoulder, which inspired a huge round of cheers from the guests, followed by his best men, all with umbrellas at the ready.
The bride, Ellice St. Laurent, my brother's daughter, appeared moments later. The girl is beautiful in any clothing, but in her feminine white wedding dress and glowing smile, she dazzled the guests with good taste and composure. "Beautiful," was all they could say, all in agreement.
After heartfelt vows, the Best Man took the floor to deliver a monologue worthy of an HBO Comedy Special, full of warm memories of the bride and groom--and Maid of Honor Christel St. Laurent, the bride's sister, topped the champagne toast with a loving tribute that brought tears and cheers all over the room.
From there, as we enjoyed exotic appetizers and exceptionally rich buffets full of pasta variations, roast beef and finessed potatoes, the reception got under way with a rockin' deejay, the party fueled, no doubt, by the open bar--Yeah! Free booze!



Then, just as the celebration approached getting crazy with happiness, the heavens opened up again. Lightening flashed through the windows, thunder intruded and the power went out. No light. No music. Emergency spotlights flared as the crowd groaned. "Where's the bride," I worried, "What is she thinking?"

Not to worry. One of the groom's men shouted out and started a singalong with a familiar song, no doubt based on the lyric, "The day the music died," from American Pie. He never let it die, and the guests joined in   joyfully to sing several popular songs. Somehow, within about fifteen minutes, the Inn powered-up one circuit, enough to light the bar and resurrect the deejay and his speakers.
And the party rocked on.
The dance floor was full, and my old knees started to ache, but my girlfriend, Gayle, in a beautiful mauve gown, was hot to boogie, so I jumped in and I loved the celebration. Most inspiring was that I saw the bride still smiling and glowing, greeting admiring guests. If she had lost heart, broken down, it would have cast a pall over the room, but she beamed in her beautiful dress and inspired us.

Hey! As long as she's happy, we were happy. So, we danced and chased the bride and groom for more photos. Candlelight flickered everywhere and the candles migrated out to the patio where smokers took comfort in the dark, and the rain stopped.
Gayle and I finally went home, happy and exhausted, as all.

For great photos of this storybook wedding, see this link: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151202216935239&set=a.10151202216865239.501354.514205238&type=1&theater

Saturday, August 4, 2012

The Old Diner.

From time to time, I wax nostalgic. If you're a baby boomer (born between 1946 and 1964?), you probably remember your favorite diner, and it was probably one of those long, narrow, chrome-and-neon-decorated burger-and-fries joints with architecture inspired by railroad dining cars. There are lots of modern imitations recalling the Fifties, but chances are the diner you loved in high school now looks about like this:


My favorite is gone, torn down by progress, but here's an old photo of the Yankee Flyer on Main St. in Nashua NH:

The influence of railroad cars on the design is obvious, including the name "Flyer."  The name "Arrow" is another common name for these popular jukebox habitats. In fact, one of the town's railroad tracks crossed Main St. in Nashua about six feet away from the foundation of the diner, barely visible in the far side of the photo. This track carried the freight train my brothers and I used to hop almost daily, just for the fun of getting chased away by railroad workers. A few years after my freight car rides, the "Flyer" became the watering hole of choice for underclass malcontents like myself looking for--GIRLS! We met them there, piled into cars driven by good buddies and drove to dark lanes to "make out," paired off by.natural selection. The trysts never went beyond lip-locks and minor feelies, as far as I know. Girls got pregnant in other places, privately.
One of my best memories is of walking down the aisle at the Yankee Flyer toward a booth full of girls hearing Roy Orbison on the jukebox. The note Roy hit was the best note I heard on a jukebox until Whitney Houston sang  "And I...," many, many years later.
Sounded like this, on the word "all." We're talking Golden Throats!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcGzwyTvkIQ

Friday, August 3, 2012

Idiots in the World--Then, There's Me and Elvis.

I got my first real job when I was 12 or 13--six hours of washing dishes at Caron's Restaurant on Friday nights, courtesy of my best pal, Ronnie Caron. His father, my boss, a very short, stocky but powerful little man with glasses and huge shoulders, was known around town as "Shorty" Caron, as in, "Don't mess with Shorty," who had a tall, kind of elegant wife. Being pals with Ronnie meant not only that I got a job, but that I could shoot pool down the hall from the expansive bedrooms in his big house and listen to the discarded antique jukebox from the restaurant, free, which had only about eight selections in it, enough to make me happy by far. On Friday nights, Ronnie ascended to "assistant chef" while I clattered the dishes. The best perk, though, was the free meal, prepared by Ronnie, usually a huge pile of fried clams and fries, coleslaw on the side and a glass of milk heavily sweetened from the front fountain.

The dreaded moment on Friday night was when Shorty paid a surprise visit to the kitchen, which shouldn't have been a surprise. I always hoped he wouldn't arrive at mealtime, when we appeared most idle. "Where's all the milk," he'd growl, after inspecting the premises. A restaurant doesn't really need much milk, but I'd hunker down and shut up because--yes--I drank a lot of that milk, with sweet syrup enough to kill a moose.

My duties included preparing the coleslaw, peeling the potatoes and operating the french fry cutter. I was amazed by how coleslaw is made. I prepared it with carefully washed hands on an expansive butcher table, plunging my hands into a massive mound of shredded cabbage and carrots to add huge gobs of mayonnaise from a gallon jar, holding my hands up sometimes like glorious pitchforks of hay from my grandfather's farm. Meanwhile, however, I might have left the potatoes in the peeler too long. I sometimes rushed into the rear kitchen to rescue potatoes. The peeler consisted of a little barrel that automatically ground the spuds around inside a gritty surface, and if you left them in this vortex too long, they would peel to the size of marbles, no use as french fries. As I threw these marbles into the garbage and loaded another batch of big potatoes, I prayed, "Don't let Shorty come now."

There were real idiots at Caron's Restaurant. Senior assistant chef, "Sonny" Michaud, was a true jackass. He bet someone that he dared to plunge his hand up to the elbow in the deep fryer, where food gets browned and smoke lingers.He walked around with a bandaged arm for weeks.
Most surprising, Shorty bet someone that he could drive a spike (a 12d nail) into a slab of wood with the palm of his hand. Okay, he wrapped his hand with several cloth napkins, and after several whacks with little result, he gave it his all and saw the head of the spike penetrate the cloth and erupt on the topside of his hand, blood and all, right through.

They're all stupid, I thought. But, I didn't mind. It was fun, especially when I could hang out at Caron's Restaurant any time I wanted, spending half my paycheck on the jukebox, listening to stuff like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJTRMJMES1c

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Remember?

Remember when you where a kid?
I do.
Remember when your intense emotions overwhelmed your tiny experience?
I do.
Remember when you you could cry, tragically, over the injustice of getting sent to bed when your favorite television show was just coming on?
I do.
Remember when your teachers at school treated you like just another piece of meat?
Pink Floyd did:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YR5ApYxkU-U

Personal note: The parochial school where I was punished more often than not burned to the ground when I was a young man in the Navy. Couldn't say I was sorry.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Nice Place To Pee.

Here, at the Lenox Hotel in Boston, I ran into extreme multi-tasking. (For the ladies in my readership, the device on the right is designed for the little guys). The urinals featured television screens, each on a different channel, so you could choose your favorite place to pee, although you couldn't hear a word on any of them. Luckily, I was alone in the room. Otherwise, I might have run into a urinal potato or, worse, a channel surfer who keeps changing his location in the middle of an extended pee.
A week later, at a lake near town, I was happy to settle for this accommodation:
For a more comprehensive view of the Lenox Hotel, check out http://newenglandandbeyondtravelblog.blogspot.com/

Blogman Sighting.

Here is an artist's rendering, based on eyewitness reports of sightings of the elusive and mysterious Blogman.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Deeper than you think..

If you're into philosophy and its metaphysical ramifications on society, check out this iconoclastic thinker:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1AOG5gGXvM

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Gallery: Trompe l'oeil.

I never did a lot of strict trompe-l'oeil, which is French for a style meaning "deceive the eye," because it's a lot of meticulous work. It's easier in theatrical scenery where the audience sits far away from the painting. This example is in the hallway of a private home in Bedford NH, and it works from a few feet away. Everything you see is paint on a flat wall. The subtle shadows on the wall were based on the actual lighting in the hallway, which included ceiling lights and a window admitting daylight. After painting the Red Sox cap and the little vase w/rose, I told the client we needed something else on the shelf. She couldn't decide, so I slapped in the flower pots at the last minute to finish the job and get the check.


Friday, May 4, 2012

Reprise.

It's been raining for two days. Does God think I'm planning a vacation?

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Sticker Shock.

Cars are beautiful. Cars are useful. Cars are absolutely necessary.
Still, I hate them. To me, they are nothing more than an essential evil, these great two-ton, electronically mysterious monsters which gobble up gasoline and dare you to get the hell out of their way when they come charging down the road.
I absolutely refuse to buy a new car that would suck four to five-hundred dollars a month out of my pocket, just to transport my ass from point A to point B.
I always stick to used cars, which can be bought for a flip of cash or--at worst--half the monthly payment of a showroom gem. Used cars will need repairs sooner than a brand new trophy in your driveway, but, most of the time, if you spread the cost over the year, your transportation will be less expensive with a used car, especially if you can endure crawling under the monster and gouging your knuckles now and then to do repairs.
The worst time of year in New Hampshire, of course, is when your birthday approaches. That's when you have to pay for registering your car (Didn't I register this car about six times already?), and also, it's time to get the piece of shit you're driving inspected by the powers that be, just to get a sticker of approval, which you can not slap onto your refrigerator proudly alongside your children's or grandchildren's works of art.
It's not that kind of sticker.
You must slap this sticker, attesting to the safety of your vehicle, on your front windshield to prevent police troopers from swooping down on you at night and detaining you on the side of the road with blue strobe lights flashing and a searchlight blinding you from behind, exposing your dumbass face to passing drivers, who think you've just been arrested for drug-dealing or serial killing.
This is my birthday month, and I know that my front brakes are due for replacement, though I could put off the expense safely for another year.
Stickers, though, can not be put off, so here I go, under the hated monster--grease all over, clothes ruined, aggravation complete.
But--I'll have money in my pocket as shiny new cars pass me on the highway.

Music: Ray Charles' America the Beautiful.

Don't mind the blues, which can render traditional music a bit raggedy. I love it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MFMqrRW-FQU

Monday, April 30, 2012

Gallery: Zorba set.

Here's my original sketch for the set of the musical Zorba, based on the movie, Zorba the Greek. Very often, it's give-and-take on design. I had to give up the small arch on the right plus almost three feet of depth on the big arch on the left to give the dancers more room for choreography. The photo of the final set is below. The backdrop was painted by Susan Van Schaick, my talented partner and wife at the time. It was a good show at Neil's New Yorker Dinner Theater in Mountain Lakes, NJ.