Haines His Way

Archives => Archive 2 => Topic started by: bk on July 17, 2004, 11:59:57 PM

Title: ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 17, 2004, 11:59:57 PM
Well, you've read the notes, you've sung along with the notes, you've tap-danced to the notes and now it is time for a plethora of posts on a plethora of topics.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 12:04:10 AM
First post ..... huzzah!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: George on July 18, 2004, 12:10:22 AM
First post ..... huzzah!

Yea, and... ::) ??
.
.
.

 ;)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 12:12:39 AM
Happy birthday to MillerTIV, whomever they may be.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 01:41:35 AM
My Christmas in July report.

Christmas here in Oz is of course in the heat of mid summer and many families (European backgrounds being the norm) have traditional HOT lunches with Turkey etc. The main course is usually followed by HOT Christmas pudding with brandy sauce etc. All this heavy and hot food is so inappropriate when the temperature is quite likely to be around the century mark.

Restaurants a few years back started to offer "Christmas In July" luncheons as a novel way of sparking up the winter trade. They seems to have been quite successful.

Today 9 close family and friends gathered for our own "Christmas" luncheon. Not quite traditional but we did have a good and hearty three course meal. We stated with a soup, main course was pork, and beef plus cauliflower with cheese sauce, baked potatoes and pumplkn and green beans. This was followed by Christmas pudding (Traditiona English) with brandy sauce, cream and/or ice -cream.  
We even celebrated the day with Chistmas crackers (bonbons) and gift giving. My present was a Teddy Bear  - a cross dressing one at that!
We also played Christmas carols and songs - Jerry Vale and Andy Williams.

It was a special day for us all as it was also a rememberence celebration for my mother who would have been 88 this coming Tuesday. The last birthday she had with us all (three years ago) we went to a restaurant which had a Christmas in July lunch. The same group of people were there today - taking my Mother's place at the table was her great grandaughter who was born just a year after we lost our remarkable Mother.  
All in all a very happy day for us here in the land down under.

Thank you DRs for the interest.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Ron Pulliam on July 18, 2004, 06:09:51 AM
Very nicely stated, TomofOz!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Ron Pulliam on July 18, 2004, 06:22:24 AM
Has anyone here ever broken an arm and had to learn to do two-handed chores (driving, cooking, pepper grinding, etc.) as a solo act?

Took a serious spill on city sidewalk Friday morning.  Tried to break my fall with my right arm.

Broke my arm at the elbow.  I can still recall the feeling with nauseating clarity.

I was in surgery yesterday morning at 10, returned to my room at 2 p.m., and was discharged at 4:30 p.m.

I took a taxi to my parking garage and then drove myself home with a grocery stop en route.  It was all at a slow pace.  I'm due to have the full-arm splint removed in 11 days at which time I should at least have greater range of motion.  I shall have to undergo rehab, certainly, to maximize use of my elbow.  A plate and pins were used to reconnect  the bones.

Sigh.

Vicodin is my current friend!

Any tips on doing things will be greatly appreciated.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: DERBRUCER on July 18, 2004, 06:58:11 AM
NOT-SINGING NOT-DANCING ANYMORE

Chris Kattan bares his sole

(http://images.calendarlive.com/media/photo/2004-07/13434016.jpg)

The LA Times (http://www.calendarlive.com/stage/cl-ca-baum18jul18_b,0,3572046.story) reports, in part:

Quote
A frog among princes
Being the novice amid Broadway royalty is no fairy tale. Just ask Chris Kattan.
By Geraldine Baum
Times Staff Writer

Jul 18 2004

NEW YORK -- The cast of Stephen Sondheim's "The Frogs" has assembled at the edge of a Lincoln Center stage. They are preparing to rehearse a new song for the show's finale that Sondheim has just faxed over. The master himself is not in the theater, but his near-mystical authority is felt.

While the others, including the star of the show, Nathan Lane, anxiously mutter new verses to themselves, only funnyman Chris Kattan seems not to be paying attention. He should be figuring out how he'll crunch the word "con-sci-en-tious" into three notes during his solo. Instead he's fidgeting, looking around, pushing his cap back and forth — and chewing. In fact, he's been eating throughout the afternoon rehearsal, pulling pieces of a Power Bar out of his baggy pants pocket and popping them in his mouth, like a Pekingese dog gobbling treats.

Eventually, director-choreographer Susan Stroman calls to attention the cast of the musical, which is based on Aristophanes' classic. Even though they're performing before paid audiences in previews, the show is still undergoing major changes. But Stroman wants the new song performed that night. "We are not out of town in Philadelphia," she says, coolly.

For the next half-hour the cast struggles through it. Finally, there is a break, and out of nowhere Kattan, his legs dangling off the end of the stage, blurts out lyrics from Gilbert and Sullivan's "Pirates of Penzance."

"You know that?" Stroman says in a tone more surprised than condescending.

"Yeah," Kattan admits a little shyly. "I even know a bit from 'Oliver.' "

As it turns out Kattan, a comedic pinup in television and film, won't make it to Thursday's opening night on that stage at Lincoln Center. Last Sunday morning, he received a phone call from Stroman informing him that he was being replaced by Roger Bart, whom both she and Lane had worked with in "The Producers."

Kattan was told, he says, that his "articulation" on stage wasn't clear and, more importantly, that he "didn't speak the language of the theater."

By Monday morning, before he'd had a chance to retrieve his belongings, they were delivered to his apartment in a paper bag marked "Mr. Kattan." "At least when you leave prison," he says, "they give you your stuff in Ziploc bags."

[To Be Continued]

der Brucer (thinking the pic deserves a "smelly shoes" comment)

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: DERBRUCER on July 18, 2004, 07:07:20 AM
NOT-SINGING NOT-DANCING ANYMORE - PART 2


The LA Times (http://www.calendarlive.com/stage/cl-ca-baum18jul18_b,0,3572046.story) continues, in part:
Quote
Caught off guard

The departure of Chris Kattan from "The Frogs" could be turned into a sort of morality tale — or fraught disaster movie.

After all, what could have been more promising and foolproof than to be summoned, as he was, from Hollywood to Broadway by some of its most dazzling citizenry — multi-Tony winners Stroman and Lane, not to mention Sondheim? They invited him to take his first role on the stage.

In a phone interview early last week, Kattan insisted he had no hint he was about to be dismissed nor that Bart had attended a preview to scope out whether he'd be interested in joining the show.

"Usually before you get the divorce papers you have a discussion about the problems of the relationship," Kattan says. "There was never a sit-down, let's-talk-about-it session. It was just over."

However, he acknowledges there were problems — in his performance, in his pairing with Lane and in the production overall. He simply didn't think it would come to an abrupt breakup.

In fact, his role had been continually reduced and marginalized during the weeks of rehearsals and previews, as the script was honed to keep the story line moving. Kattan was cast as Xanthias, the mutinous slave who is dragged along by his master, Dionysos, the god of drama and wine, on a perilous trip to Hades to bring back a dead writer who could save mankind.
...
Lane not only headlines the show as Dionysos, he also adapted the 1974 libretto, a first-time experience for the veteran Broadway actor. Many of the jokes Lane scripted for the slave-sidekick were well-received by preview audiences. (Example: "My parents sold me into slavery because they desperately needed the money. They opened the first adult novelty shop in [Athens]," Xanthias says. "Basically, they sold condoms to the Trojans.") But Kattan and Lane never seemed to establish an onstage chemistry. And the more Lane was focused on his role as writer — or relentless rewriter, as the case may be — the more Kattan "stopped having fun."

"I thought I was being invited to do a Crosby and Hope, road-to-Hades-type show with lots of playful back-and-forth bits," he says. "But by the end, it was more about Crosby than Hope."

Even after so many of the "bits" Kattan liked were dropped, he says, he didn't really complain. "This is not my world; this is Nathan's baby, his stuff .... Everybody was saying how good I was about not speaking my mind," he says. "Probably if I spoke up, I would have been gone sooner."

It had never been a dream of the 33-year-old actor to appear on Broadway. But he came, and he was unprepared, by his own admission, when he ran headlong into the routine practice of the theater in which scripts, songs, monologues and even characters are tampered with — often up to opening night. Though he was not in a position to challenge his more experienced colleagues, Kattan found the whole unremitting process, in his word, "unfair," and certainly not altogether rational.

"I didn't know this world, and now I do," he says. "I had a great experience, and it's not going to hurt my career. But to work in theater it helps to have been trained as a theater actor."
...
Over the last several years television audiences have gotten to know Kattan for his stint on "Saturday Night Live." ...And although Kattan did start in legit theater with the celebrated Los Angeles improvisational troupe the Groundlings, he made his name in front of a camera.

So it was difficult to understand what this recruit was doing on a Playbill with such Brahmans of Broadway as Sondheim, Stroman and Lane.
...
Indeed, Kattan seemed like an odd choice to put on a stage for two-plus hours, eight performances a week, in front of 1,200 people who, at least initially, would be quintessential high-culture New Yorkers — the Lincoln Center subscribers.

But in an interview before she took him out of the show, Stroman had defended the casting of the young comic, saying his contrasting style to Lane's and impressive improvisational skills, which come in handy in any comedic pairing, were exactly what made him perfect for the part.

Stroman and Lane had considered more-experienced New York comedians for the role. But at the suggestion of a casting director, Kattan was flown in from Los Angeles in December for a tryout. He sang the opening number (admittedly not very well), then read a scene with Lane. They did a wonderful job "tossing the lines back and forth," Stroman said.

"Chris' rough edges add to his character as the slave," she said. "Nathan performs with that upper-class English diction, and Chris has the flat American voice. This whole play is about the importance of language, of our leaders to understand the power of their words, and this contrast sets up the theme."

However, she also hinted that Kattan had been struggling, if not valiantly, to understand the culture of the theater. (She declined, through a spokesman, to be reinterviewed after she had dismissed Kattan. Lane also declined to be interviewed for the story.)

"He's like my Eliza Doolittle," she had said with a laugh. "He will now be able to apply 'the rain in Spain stays mainly on the plain' to everything he does in the rest of his career."

Kattan admits the most difficult part of his learning curve was understanding how to broaden his performance to reach an audience spread around and above him.

"You have to connect to those people in the balcony and let them know you're performing for them," he says. "We have to let them eavesdrop on our scene. It can't be so intimate, the way it is with a camera."

[To be Continued]
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: DERBRUCER on July 18, 2004, 07:10:54 AM
NOT-SINGING NOT-DANCING ANYMORE - PART 3

The LA Times (http://www.calendarlive.com/stage/cl-ca-baum18jul18_b,0,3572046.story) concludes, in part:
Quote

The urge to improvise

The uncertainties of performing on Broadway — and reinventing his image — were precisely what initially attracted Kattan to "The Frogs." "You can only do so many 'Wayne's Worlds' and Mangos," he says. After doing three-minute "SNL" skits, he had the time on stage to "breathe. And the audience can breathe with me," he said during rehearsals. "That's what I really love. This shows I really am a performer."

Still, the transition was trying, even for a physical comedian as skilled as Kattan. The role had forced him to enter the completely alien universe of musical theater. And not only couldn't he sing, he knew nothing of the etiquette of the stage — like the fact that nobody eats during rehearsals and that it was important to show up not a minute late. Early on, Stroman had advised him "to lay off the sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll" once previews started. It was a concern far from necessary, he said, but he understood why she had stereotyped him. "If anyone in this cast was going to be that guy, it was me," Kattan says.

Though his improvisational training distinguished him from the many Tony winners and Broadway traditionalists in the cast, his background also made sticking to the script a challenge. "I know my lines and I say them, but sometimes it's nice to put a little relish around the hot dog," he said. He seemed astounded that every time he forgot or changed a line, he had to rehearse the whole scene top to bottom the next day.

...

Not only did Kattan have to figure out how to get comfortable — really to fit in — with such an august audience and Broadway crew, he also had to take instructions from perhaps the most prized and analyzed composer of the 20th century. There was only so much guidance Sondheim could offer Kattan on how to carry a tune. "I sang one song and Sondheim turned to me and said, 'You know, just speak that part.' I said, 'Like Richard Burton in "Camelot?" ' He said 'No. Just speak it.' "

Moving on

Ultimately, Kattan seemed not only embarrassed by losing his role but upset about losing the opportunity to work around so many immensely talented people. And even though he was not happy with how Stroman dismissed him — by phone instead of in person — he talked about how "amazing" it was to observe the celebrated choreographer working, particularly with the show's dancers, and referred to her as a "sweetheart." He'd also someday like to join up again with Lane, he says.
..

Kattan's flameout on Broadway has clearly made him eager to get back to Hollywood. He has written a screenplay titled "El Romantico" with former "SNL" writer Matt Piedmont that has been bought by Fox Searchlight. He also has a deal with Fox to do a television series.

"I'm sad about leaving 'The Frogs' because of all the people," he says. "But I'm also kind of relieved. Who knows, this week I would have gotten another note saying something was cut again, that bit that got the laughs.

"Now I can go back to doing my stuff and being funny and physical and not have to speak the language of the theater."

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: DearReaderLaura on July 18, 2004, 07:18:49 AM
Oh my gosh, RLP!   Good healing vibes to you!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I broke my wrist many years ago, and yes, you do learn how to do things one-handed with time and practice (and necessity!).
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 07:27:42 AM
Ouch, RLP! Sorry to hear of your accident. I have no advice on how to handle life with one hand, but I do send FAST HEALING VIBES your way.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: elmore3003 on July 18, 2004, 07:43:05 AM
Good morning, all!  I had a wonderful dinner with DRBen and Anthony last night.  The company was sparkling and the conversation bounced like buckshot from pillar to post.  Anthony is one amazingly talented person, and it was a pleasure to finally meet him.  I met DRBen, along with DRS PennyO and Jason around six (?) weeks ago, and he's become one of my favorite people.  I wandered home to find my dying television in major death throes, but this video demise his been going on longer than Sarah Bernhardt's final and absolutely final tours combined and I'm sick of it.

Circuit City promises to deliver the new tv on Tuesday, but I will miss the old Panasonic, which is 15 or 16 years old now.  I'm afraid this new one will last 15 to 16 months, so I'll be curious to see how Panasonic's manufacturing standards have declined since 1988.  Who knows?  This new tv may outlive me.

DRJay, your civilized evening sounds wonderful.  I'm a huge Isherwood fan, and I enjoyed reading his diaries:  Hollywood gossip on Betty Hutton, "she'd be a nymphomaniac if they could slow her down" is the one I remember.  I'll be curious as to what other composers they perform in the upcoming concerts.  There's sure to be some Britten?

DRRLP, best of luck with your arm.  Wasn't there someone to get you home from the surgery?  I can't believe you're that alone in the world (2 references here:  THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE and MR MAGOO'S CHRISTMAS CAROL).

DRTomovoz, I'm so embarassed!  I truly thought you celebrated Christmas on Dec. 25!  I also keep forgetting that you're in the winter seasonat the present?  I was always lousy at geometry.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 07:48:25 AM
The most telling bit from the article derBrucer quoted:

"his background also made sticking to the script a challenge. "I know my lines and I say them, but sometimes it's nice to put a little relish around the hot dog," he said. He seemed astounded that every time he forgot or changed a line, he had to rehearse the whole scene top to bottom the next day."


He sees nothing wrong with leaving an entire cast at sea on stage while he improvises to his heart's content? Thank god he's gone!

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 07:50:23 AM
Really, really sorry about your accident, DR RLP. Hope recovery/rehab won't be too awful.


Now, which DRs have broken bones before? I have never broken a bone so I can't imagine what it's like.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Michael on July 18, 2004, 07:57:47 AM
Does anyone have any updates and/or gossip about The Frogs since Roger Bart came in?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Michael on July 18, 2004, 08:00:51 AM
OUCH!! DR RLP. Drink lots of milk and heal quickly
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Michael on July 18, 2004, 08:04:55 AM
I broke my index finger twice in one months span. I forgot how I did it the first time. But it was the day after I got the splint off and I was fighting with my sister and I wagged my finger in front of her face and she punched it. Broke it again.

The plus side. It got me out of gym. But I also was taking a typing class amd it was very hard to type with a splint on your finger.

I think my mother was preparing me to become a secretary. It only took me 25 years or so later to become a somewhat good touch typist with my computer keyboard.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: DERBRUCER on July 18, 2004, 08:09:08 AM
For PANNI - who likes things Canadian:

Canadian Turtle Soup (http://www.bertc.com/turtle.htm)

(The butchering instructions are a bit too graphic for a pet-friendly site)

der Brucer

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 08:32:40 AM
My goodness, for the second time in two days I log on in the morning to find no one here.  Skammen.  

I broke my arm once - hated every minute of it.  I was, I believe just eighteen and had to do two shows wearing the cast, which was an ordeal.  Also, there was the itching factor - that drove me totally nuts, the itching factor did.  I dealt with the itching factor by shoving anything up the cast that could squeeze under there, including butter knives, pens, pencils, spatulas.  When they finally took the cast off they found a blue pen cap by my elbow.  Also, as soon as the cast came off I must have sat in the doctor's office and scratched my arm for fifteen minutes straight.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 08:43:37 AM
I know lots of folks who had to endure broken arms, and my team leader broke her leg during my last year of teaching, and she was really miserable trying to get around her classroom (taught math/algebra) teaching. Very hard to teach if you aren't mobile.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 08:52:05 AM
Speaking of breaking arms, where in tarnation IS everyone?  I must jump in the shower and then be off to a long rehearsal.  I do like jumping in the shower, it's ever so much fun.  Now, you all simply must keep the home fries burning, and I'll try to send live from location postings every now and then and even every then and now.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Emily on July 18, 2004, 08:56:33 AM
I want to be a production assistant!

But gosh knows how I'd get to LA :)

I have never broken an arm, a leg or a window.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jay on July 18, 2004, 09:09:41 AM
DRJay, your civilized evening sounds wonderful.  I'm a huge Isherwood fan, and I enjoyed reading his diaries:  Hollywood gossip on Betty Hutton, "she'd be a nymphomaniac if they could slow her down" is the one I remember.  I'll be curious as to what other composers they perform in the upcoming concerts.  There's sure to be some Britten?


In one of the letters in the exhibit--to his mother, addressed "My darling mummy," by the way--Isherwood writes of how he dislikes being out and about with Greta Garbo, as she would cover her face any time they neared a stranger.  "It's like walking with someone wanted for murder," he says.

Bingo on the Britten.  They'll be doing his third quartet at the next concert, which uses themes from his opera Death in Venice.  Thomas Mann, of course, was part of the legendary artistic circle in Santa Monica that included Isherwood and others, so the piece will be doing double duty.

At the third concert there will be more Stravinsky and songs from The Three Penny Opera.  Isherwood was the first to translate Brecht's lyrics into English.

The last concert will include a performance of Holst's Savitri:  An Episode from the Mahabharata, which ties to Isherwood's involvement with Vedanta, a system of Hindu philosophy.

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jay on July 18, 2004, 09:12:57 AM
Good healing vibes to Dear Reader RLP!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: William E. Lurie on July 18, 2004, 09:14:10 AM
I enjoyed "Die Mommy" for what iit was but agree with most of what you said BK.  Regarding Mr. Busch, I have seen him in several shows (including "Auntie Mame" and "Bell, Book and Candle") and find he is the exact same in every role he plays.  However I think that is because he feels that is what he is expected to be and he has a certain group of camp followers who laugh at his every (similar) move.  

I'm not seeing THE FROGS for a few weeks (if I have to pay full price for something I want the best possible seat and it took that long in the run until I got them) but I am glad they replaced Mr. Kattan with Mr. Bart.  I am not much of a fan of any post-1985-or-so SNL "comic".  Talk about a show that has way outlived its glory days...
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 09:17:23 AM
I just read the VARIETY review of the remake of THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE. It was very, very positive.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 09:32:58 AM
I've jumped in the shower (so much fun) and now I'm off to rehearsal.  Keep the home fries burning and I'll be checking in from the rehearsal studio.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 09:33:37 AM
It just took me half an hour to go through various procedures to post -- during which time I lost the post that I thought I had copied (well, I KNOW I copied) to post for when I could when I couldn't An exercise in frustration. Anyway, i've used up half an hour of energy that should have gone into my script. And that's a not a good thing (a Martha Stewart reference. -- Someone bake her a cake with a file in it.) So you'll never know about the bones I haven't broken, DRs. Skammen.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 09:35:37 AM
IMHO, too much jumping in and out of showers on this site. Make up your mind!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 09:36:18 AM
And one for Mahler!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: elmore3003 on July 18, 2004, 09:47:38 AM

At the third concert there will be more Stravinsky and songs from The Three Penny Opera.  Isherwood was the first to translate Brecht's lyrics into English.


I had forgotten that!  His THREEPENNY OPERA translations are in the THREEPENNY NOVEL, but I don't believe they scan to Weill's melodies.   It's been a long time since I looked at them, and I'm not sure I know where the novel is, these days.  I also recall (from CHRISTOPHER AND HIS KIND, p'raps?) that Auden missed the rowboat reference in the "Barbara Song," and Brecht bluntly pointed it out. Will the songs be sung in German or English, I wonder.  I'm surprised they're not doing the Britten-Auden cabaret songs, since I believe they're from a play co-written by messrs Isherwood and Auden.  

DRJane, I missed your whole nursing home story yesterday.  I'm so sorry!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 09:57:37 AM
DR RLP - I've only had two broken bones in my life: a collarbone at six and I broke the middle finger on my right hand when I was in the 7th grade; the former required a six month brace (!) while the latter was duly splinted and taped.  It was fun to write on the chalkboards during class, though. ;)

Not that I like to gossp, BUT. . .
the word on the street is that Kattan's dismissal was not entirely stage talent oriented.  Yes, DRs, I have heard that THE CASTING COUCH still lives on. . . .

When Garbo was out in public in Hollywood, didn't she also make the demand that she NOT be introduced as Greta Garbo, but as Harriet some-thing-or-other?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Noel on July 18, 2004, 10:44:42 AM
Joy wants to throw out our issue of the New York Post declaring Gephardt Kerry's running mate, and I'm having flashbacks to the time my mother forced me to throw out the Nolan Ryan rookie season baseball card.  What should I do?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Emily on July 18, 2004, 10:57:51 AM
put it in the safety deposit box Noel!! It'll get it out of Joy's way AND it'll stay safe for an ebay sale in the distant future.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Emily on July 18, 2004, 10:58:06 AM
or... you could always get it framed and turn it into art!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jay on July 18, 2004, 11:03:09 AM
Joy wants to throw out our issue of the New York Post declaring Gephardt Kerry's running mate, and I'm having flashbacks to the time my mother forced me to throw out the Nolan Ryan rookie season baseball card.  What should I do?

Desist from making comparisons between your wife and your mother.  I guarantee it will get you into trouble, as you've begun to learn.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 11:14:49 AM
Desist from making comparisons between your wife and your mother.  I guarantee it will get you into trouble, as you've begun to learn.
You are wise beyond your years, DR. Jay.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 11:18:20 AM
Elan, thank you, and td too.

Jay, today we are going to see SUPER SIZE ME.  Our son thought it was funny.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Ann on July 18, 2004, 11:22:31 AM
BK - You should really be careful whilst jumping in and out of showers.  That's a great way to break a bone...

As for broken bones, I've had both arms broken at difference times.  When I was eight I broke my right arm falling out of a tree.  It was a pretty bad break, and I had to have the cast on while going into surgery for something else...it was a pain.  The second time I was...10, I think...broke my left arm roller skating.  I preferred this one, as I am right handed, so at least I had writing capabilities then.  
I well remember the itching factor.  Put vitamin E gel as far under the cast as you can.  The gel, not the lotion.  It'll help with the itching.  
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 11:27:55 AM
Tomovoz, your Christmas in July sounds wonderful and a perfect way to remember your mother.

RLP GOOD AND SPEEDY HEALING VIBES!!
For a rather long period of time I lost the use of my right hand due to an infection (somehow managed to get in the middle of my dogs fighting).  At least I could use my arm and I learned how to do an amazing number of things with left hand.  Driving was the easiest of them to do.  Everything took a very long time.  Do you have friends you can ask to help you to do little things like cook or do the dishes?  I wish I had had a computer at the time because you couldn’t read my writing.  As for tips, sorry I don’t really have any.  Patience is what you need, and some help from anyone you can get it from.  Don’t be shy.  Just remember, everything does take a long time to do, but you will get better with time.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 11:34:18 AM
Joy wants to throw out our issue of the New York Post declaring Gephardt Kerry's running mate, and I'm having flashbacks to the time my mother forced me to throw out the Nolan Ryan rookie season baseball card.  What should I do?

Don't throw it out, send it to TCB.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 11:36:49 AM
elmore you are forgiven.  :D

Today I am back to my usual happy self. :)  All it takes is a great walk with Echo on a beautiful day. :)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 12:21:29 PM
Glad you're back to your old self, Jane.

Tom - I agree with everyone that Christmas in July sounds lovely. How about starting a movement for Hanukah in June?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 12:46:19 PM
Lots of things.  Chris Kattan?  Why would anyone think he was funny, anyway?  "Comics" like him are the main reason I watch MadTv!  Thanks for sharing the information!

td - Casting couch?  Chris Kattan?  Oh my....it must be terrible to be a flop onstage AND off.

yes DRJANE, I enjoyed your story yesterday.  My sisters and I visit nursing homes regularly - sometimes it is difficult....but I keep remembering, I get to go home!

RLP - good vibes for you.  No broken bones ever here....a broken collar bone by one brother, otherwise very fortunate!!!

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 12:49:07 PM
Thanks for sharing the info DRderBRUCER!  I should give credit where credit is due.

DR GEORGE...LOL....I didn't have anything to say after the first post.....it was 2 a.m.    

I did get applause on my egress on closing night and nice applause on the curtain call.  All in all a nice $ucce$$ful run of FATHER OF THE BRIDE for the theatre.

details please TD....we MUST know what you have heard!

DRMATTH - what did Variety find positive?  This would be good news, if the reviewer is dependable!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: DERBRUCER on July 18, 2004, 01:08:15 PM
 Patience is what you need, and some help from anyone you can get it from.  Don’t be shy.  Just remember, everything does take a long time to do, but you will get better with time.


Jane, have you any idea how much patience it takes to button- up a pair of proper-fitting 501s one-handed! (Right-handed, maybe; left-handed, never!)

DR RLP - I just wanna say one word to you. Just one word. (Are you listening? ) VELCRO!

der Brucer (having suffered through a broken sholder, I can "share your pain" - and I don't envy you your rehab)



Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 01:13:37 PM
Congrats, JRand!

RANT WARNING

I really think all this Chris Kattan rumor stuff is rather silly. (Yes, I've heard all kinds of rumors.) I don't think it was sex or drugs or bestiality or the misalignment of the planets. I DO think it was the fact that someone who has absolutely no musical theater experience was thrust into a major Sondheim musical about to open on Broadway. The man is not a singer, a dancer or a stage actor or even a screen actor. He is an improv sketch artist. He is also not a huge name who would have brought in mega-bucks. He was doing badly, he wasn't getting better. They were unhappy with him. So why look for reasons other than that for why he was fired? End of rant. (BTW - I also have "sources" pretty close to the action who agree with the above.)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 01:15:33 PM
details please TD....we MUST know what you have heard!
Now, now. . .if I said anymore, it would be IDLE gossip.  Not ERIC Idle gossip, either.  But, then it's only gossip anyway, something to keep people's tongues wagging up every alley and LANE.  ;)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 01:17:03 PM
Yuck and double yuck, Panni's idea of bestiality hadn't been brought up. . . .UNTIL NOW.   :o
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 01:33:37 PM
Had a great time this afternoon watching the DVD of the Spencer Tracy version of FATHER OF THE BRIDE. Funny, insightful, touching - one of the great domestic comedies ever. And that DVD transfer could not be any better. It was taken from a print in perfect condition, and I didn't notice any blemishes on it at all.

And how intelligent Vincente Minnelli was to focus on Elizabeth during most of the wedding ceremony. The photography and transfer to DVD is so sharp you can see ever flicker of the tears in her eyes. Very, very beautiful.

Then, I put in another Jeremy Brett Sherlock Holmes tale - "The Second Stain." Not a great mystery but certainly an enjoyable 50 minutes.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 01:53:26 PM
Yuck and double yuck, Panni's idea of bestiality hadn't been brought up. . . .UNTIL NOW.   :o

I have my sources among the animals (Pete the Turtle and Abie the Wonderdog) who say Onay on that count (all animals speak Pig Latin).
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 01:54:41 PM
Here are the first three paragraphs of the VARIETY review of THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE. The reviewer is Todd McCarthy, a writer who I believe is astute, level-headed, and practical in his evaluations with eyes on both the artistic achievements (or lack thereof) of films and also of their potential box-office grosses.


Crammed with enough creepy contemporary vibes to keep conspiracy theorists occupied through the November election, Jonathan Demme's new take on "The Manchurian Candidate" absorbingly and sometimes mesmerizingly validates the initially questionable idea of remaking one of the certified classics of the '60s. Structurally and thematically similar to John Frankenheimer's original but entirely different in style, feel and nuance, this political thriller about a brainwashed soldier being positioned for the White House provides a delectable network of dramatic tripwires that teases the mind and quickens the pulse.

This is brainy popcorn fare that, given its outstanding cast and exploitably relevant content, should play well with all audiences through the summer and beyond, even if a couple of commercial doubts linger; the original, despite wide acclaim, disappointed on initial release, and it's possible the story's real-life implications may cut too close to the bone.
Despite its basis in the Richard Condon novel and George Axelrod script that drove the 1962 film, Demme's picture, with its ambiguous mood and unsettling tension, also recalls Alan J. Pakula's shadow-world suspensers of the '70s: "Klute," "The Parallax View" and "All the President's Men." By outfitting the superbly insinuating basic story with a battery of up-to-the-minute concerns that readily feed on present fears and suspicions, Demme and screenwriters Daniel Pyne and Dean Georgaris inject new life into a recently dormant genre -- the paranoid thriller -- that talented filmmakers might do well to revisit more regularly.

After making his biggest career stumble last year with "The Truth About Charlie""The Truth About Charlie" (a remake of another cherished '60s title, "Charade""Charade"), Demme has bounced back with a picture that, in unexpected ways, stands as a companion piece to "The Silence of the Lambs." Both films, in the end, are about mind control and manipulation, about the diverse ways that evil can be instilled in well-intended people. The two works bore deeply into the heads -- literally, in this case -- of their central characters, to scary effect in both instances.

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 01:56:36 PM
Haven't got time to cheerlead, dear people. But we must get our butt cheeks moving and do more posting. There's bk slaving over a hot rehearsal, expecting to come home to hundreds of delectable and delightful posts. And what have we got for him? 51 posts so far?! 51! Skammen. Double skammen.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 01:59:05 PM
Make that 55 posts. And Triple Skammen.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 02:19:25 PM
Good news for me if we have chat tomorrow night, even if it is 8 p.m. EDT. I can finally come to one after a long absence!  :)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 02:20:58 PM
Or 56!

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 02:21:47 PM
Hmmmmmmm....thanks for the review DR MATTH....hmmmmm.

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 02:23:25 PM
MATTH - I am watching FOB on DVD right now.  And yes, it is a lovely movie.  I first saw it when Miss Frances Farmer presented it on her afternoon movie show back in the early 1960's.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 02:25:34 PM
well all right DR TD - of course DRPANNI is correct in that he had no business in the show in the first place...
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: DearReaderLaura on July 18, 2004, 02:26:55 PM
I hope I shall be forgiven for being absent this morning. I was at church, then took one of the sweet older ladies out for lunch. This particular lady has lost three dear church friends in the last nine months (my mother being one of them), and she needed cheering up, as the most recent loss was last Tuesday.

Now I am going in to tidy up my "office," and I hope I win the battle.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 02:29:16 PM
       

               ON LOCATION WITH BK!

bk reports that the big all-day rehearsal is going "amusingly." The choreography is shaping up as amusing and fun.
He sends his best to all and finds 58 postings "unacceptable."
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 02:31:29 PM
...Okay 62 postings. Still unacceptable.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 02:33:16 PM
DR Laura - You think that Church and helping out dear old ladies in mourning is some kind of excuse for not posting? Really!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 02:34:23 PM
I am a frenzy of one. But I must get back to work, so I shall now become a frenzy of none.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: elmore3003 on July 18, 2004, 02:35:48 PM
Oy! Such a day!  My neighbor on the top floor needs a good gay real estate attorney fast!  His companion of 30 years has been institutionalized for alzheimers, and the lease is under his name.  The landlord is now trying to evict him, and because he has no legal rights as next of kin, he has only a few weeks to prove domestic partnership,  I signed his petition saying they'd been living as a couple when I moved into the building in 1980, but I think he needs a good Lam,bda Legal Defense person ASAP.

The Mickey-Judy act premiers next week in San Diego with the symphony, if any of you California dwellers are interested.  I'd love to see Jeff and Shauna, and I'd love to hear the symphony play my charts.  So, here's a plug.  Getting this concert together - from the original person in charge who screwed it all up to copyists who have no pride in their work and needed lots of babysitting - was an ordeal, and I want it to go well for the artistes involved.

I've been back from Goodspeed a week now and all I've done is lounge around the apartment and enjoy my privacy in my own space.  Tomorrow I go back to the Recording Project to continue work on a new edition of BABES IN TOYLAND, deal with the Nov 2004 performance of TAN MANHATTAN for the Chicago Humanities Fesatival, and have a meeting about an upcoming production of NIGHT OF THE HUNTER in San Francisco.  My self-indulgent intermezzo is over.

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 02:40:38 PM
DR RLP - I second the VELCRO vote and add pants with elastic waistbands...NO drawstrings.

DRMATTH....what is the song that is playing at the end of FOB when Tracy dances with Joan Bennett?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 02:58:44 PM
I'm off to find another DVD to watch before SIX FEET UNDER comes on. Have no idea what I'll end up picking.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 03:03:24 PM

DRMATTH....what is the song that is playing at the end of FOB when Tracy dances with Joan Bennett?

I'll have to go back and watch the end, DR Jrand and get back to you about that. I know, I just finished watching it (well at 2:30 this afternoon; it's 6 p.m. now), but I did watch a Sherlock Holmes TV show afterwards. I'll come back and psot later.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Michael on July 18, 2004, 03:05:40 PM
Well I am back home and a torrential rainstorm. I refuse to drive the the highways and byways of southern florida if I don;t have to. The idiots speed with no concern for their lives or anyone else.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Danise on July 18, 2004, 03:06:19 PM
Good afternoon all.  It’s still been raining on and off all day long.  Every time I felt it was safe to go online, it would start right back up and I didn’t want to take the chance with the new computer just yet.

I’ve spent the day (in between showers) reloading all of my programs.  I finely have my Pocket PC synced with the computer so I have all of my e-mail addresses back.  Hoo and Ray!

Jane, I just want to say how sorry I am about your loss.  If I had read the board before posting and running, I would have known about it last night.  Please accept my most sincere condolences.  You are to be commended for your dedication to those who would love to have an animal in their lives and thanks to you, do.  

TCB, I am also so very sorry to hear about your accident!  Healing vibes to you!  I’m more concerned that you were all alone when this happened! Is there no one to help you out for a few days until you find your feet (so to speak)?

As for the question about broken bones, the only one I have is my right pointer finger.  I think I’ve told the story before about how I slammed my hand in the car door and when I pulled it out, every finger was one over.  Without thinking, I put everything back. I didn’t bother to go the doctor (dumb) until weeks later when the pointer finger kept hurting me.  The doctor said I had done an excellent job of putting everything back.  Except that one finger that was indeed broken and not set correctly.  

By that time, the only thing he could have done was re-break and set it.  I decided to leave it as it was.  

I’ve had some pain in the finger in the winter and when it rains a lot.  Last year I started noticing a bump on my middle finger by the top joint.  My finger was also very stiff and hard to bend.  As the winter went on, I started to notice the finger was turning.  I went back to the doctor who decided that an x-ray was in order.  When the test came back, I was told that I threw a positive for RA and it was all through my hand.  Then I was told, no, not RA just regular arthritis.  

All well and good but now my ring finger has the same bump and is turning as well.  If I put my right hand up to my left hand, it is easy to see that the right hand fingers are twice the size of the left.  I blame the car door vs hand accident for the arthritis.  My left hand is fine.   Those little accidents you have when your young and think nothing of can come back to haunt you in later life.  

DR Tom—I find it so hard to picture it being cold in Australia right now.  Do you have snow?  Picture, please.  

Are we having chat tonight?  I don’t care which night we have it, I just want to know when so I can be there.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Robin on July 18, 2004, 03:12:40 PM
I've been away, because I've been working double shifts (and then some!) for the past week.  One day, I think it was Wednesday, I put in twenty-one hours.   Oy vay...!  Luckily, what's done is finally done, and I get a few days off, now.  And I do so love getting the paycheck with all the overtime.  

So, over the next day or so, I'll have the pleasure of catching up on the last few days' worth of postings.  

As for my missed Friday Medea Czech:

On deeveedee: nothing.
On CD: nothing.
On laserdisc: nothing.
What I've read: boring legal stuff.
What I'm going to start reading tonight: The Savage Tales of Solomon Kane by Robert E. Howard.
What I'm going to watch later tonight: the season finale of Queer as Folk.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 03:18:12 PM
No chat tonight, Danise. Possibly early tomorrow, as I recall. Unless I missed something, it was not TCB, but RLP who had the accident. NO MORE ACCIDENTS! THAT'S AN ORDER! (Whew! That felt good.)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jay on July 18, 2004, 03:19:48 PM
The Mickey-Judy act premiers next week in San Diego with the symphony, if any of you California dwellers are interested.  I'd love to see Jeff and Shauna, and I'd love to hear the symphony play my charts.  So, here's a plug.  Getting this concert together - from the original person in charge who screwed it all up to copyists who have no pride in their work and needed lots of babysitting - was an ordeal, and I want it to go well for the artistes involved.

If I didn't have a previous commitment, I would go, Dear Reader Elmore.  Sorry.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Danise on July 18, 2004, 03:27:54 PM
EEK, my bad.  I'm sorry to both RLP and TCB.  My best vibes to both.  I still haven't figured out how to make the print bigger and you know I have a sight problem as it is.  I must have seen the 3 letters and ignored the picture.  

How early for chat?  
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 03:37:28 PM
What is one to think when one gets an email from Amparo and the subject is "Jawbone"?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jay on July 18, 2004, 03:38:39 PM
I saw Touch of Pink this afternoon, Dear Readers.  It is a new gay romantic comedy that is in limited release.  I give it a big thumbs up.  

It would be unfair to call the film derivative, as it is quite original, but if you like Cary Grant, films that make reference to classic movies, The Wedding Banquet, Bend It Like Beckham, My Beautiful Laundrette or Mambo Italiano (the film, not the song), you'll find something to enjoy in this picture.

Confidential to the errant and truant Dear Reader MBarnum:  although the film is NOT done in Bollywood style, it does feature as its protagonist the actor who played the lead in The Guru.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 03:45:10 PM
Important things first:
The best of wishes and thoughts to RLP.

I am late on board this morning - the after effects of Christmas Dinner. Did I misread something or was some actor caught in an unseemly position on a couch with a frog?  I hope no new rumours have been spawned.

"A Touch Of Pink" - I think that was a hit song for the Ray Charles singers in the late 1950's.

More later.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: elmore3003 on July 18, 2004, 03:48:59 PM
What is one to think when one gets an email from Amparo and the subject is "Jawbone"?

Is it from an ass?  Samson?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 04:13:34 PM
I never thought of that DRELMORE....never thought of that!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 04:14:07 PM
For some reason, today, when I think of the jawbone of an ass....all I can picture is Chris Kattan.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: elmore3003 on July 18, 2004, 04:27:36 PM
For some reason, today, when I think of the jawbone of an ass....all I can picture is Chris Kattan.

Is this a casting couch reference?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Ben on July 18, 2004, 04:30:43 PM
Hello, one and all.

Firstly, the most important. DR Elmore, Anthony and I had a wonderful time last evening. We had dinner at a lovely, quiet place called Wai Cafe? (pronounced Why although I don't know why, perhaps because a ? is part of the name). I had an excellent tortellini with salmon, Elmore had crab cakes and Anthony had gazpacho and a mushroom and a chicken crepe. We then went back to our apartment where much talk and laughter and dish ensued. We desserted on lovely Blueberry Cake, Peach Cake (from the Union Square greenmarket) and Haggen Daz vanilla ice cream. Ummm, ummm, ummm. Anthony and I will have more of the cake this evening (we had lovely broiled salmon, saffron rice and fresh steamed string beans, again from the Union Square greenmarket, for dinner) and perhaps watch something on television or video.

Much was learned about DR Elmore (I won't spill beans here ;-) and much was learned by him about us. He was the first guest to our newly re-decorated apartment and he did express some slight jealousy about the fact that we actually have a separate kitchen (oh, those poor people who live in studios). All in all, a grand time was had by all. Since DR Elmore works in the neighborhood (on world famous 14th Street, site of the long gone Harmonia Gardens) we will most likely see more of him in the future. A welcome thing, indeed.

And now, I must be off to ride the exercise bike, shower and then have our dessert (it's because I ride the exercise bike that I can have dessert, doncha know).
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 04:42:34 PM
                    ON LOCATION WITH BK!

All is still going well. By the end of the rehearsal tonight two numbers will be fully choreographed.
bk sends his love and finds that the posting numbers are now creeping toward the acceptable range.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jay on July 18, 2004, 04:42:35 PM
I must depart anon for the Hollywood Bowl.  Mr. John Mauceri is leading the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra this evening.  The first half of the program features the Joffrey Ballet, which will perform Act II of Tchaikovsky (ah, a Kurt Weill reference)'s The Nutcracker.  (Our own version of Christmas in July in the Wood of Holly.)  The second half will feature Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition, as orchestrated not by Maurice Ravel, but rather by Leopold Stokowski.

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 04:49:06 PM
 

        BONUS FEATURE! -- ON LOCATION WITH DR JOSE!

DR Jose, while toiling away at the piano, reports that bk is forcing him - yes FORCING him - to eat Krispy Kreme donuts.
According to bk, DR Jose has eaten 3. DR Jose categorically denies this and says it was only 2. There is talk of going for PIE after rehearsal.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 04:53:34 PM
We are very close to Page Four. There is something very wrong with my server of some such thing because each post takes about a minute to land, so I'm hoping by the time this one lands, we actually WILL be on Page Four. Because I don't like being a frenzy of one. No sir. I do not.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 05:05:29 PM
Still a frenzy of one? Can't believe it. Come on, gang, help me out here.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 05:09:29 PM
Jane, have you any idea how much patience it takes to button- up a pair of proper-fitting 501s one-handed! (Right-handed, maybe; left-handed, never!)


 ;D ;D I think I do.  Zippers are difficult enough to do left handed.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 05:10:56 PM
JRand do you do anything special when you visit nursing homes or simply visit with the residents?  It is great you can go with your sister.

We just returned from SUPER SIZE ME.  Just about everyone should have to see this movie. :) :D
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: George on July 18, 2004, 05:19:04 PM
And one for Arthur...I saw "King Arthur" today with my niece.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: George on July 18, 2004, 05:21:16 PM
I'll post later about "King Arthur."  I'm going with my family to the last day of "Lake Fair" here in Olympia.  We're all going again so that we can get another Demo-Burger and I want an Elephant Ear.  I don't think I'll have the big giant basket of fries this time.  They were very good (they were most obviously real potatoes and fresh, as well) but just way too much!  Anyway, gotta go!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:22:35 PM
Colin said he assumed that doughnuts and pie were a part of DR Jose's contract. Surely a major clause that was non negotiable.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 05:25:25 PM


        BONUS FEATURE! -- ON LOCATION WITH DR JOSE!

DR Jose, while toiling away at the piano, reports that bk is forcing him - yes FORCING him - to eat Krispy Kreme donuts.
According to bk, DR Jose has eaten 3. DR Jose categorically denies this and says it was only 2. There is talk of going for PIE after rehearsal.

These two together are going to be a very bad influence on each other.  They should take a break and see SUPER SIZE ME.

Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:26:17 PM
I shall be interested in hearing DR George's views re Arthur. From what I have seen (and heard from the dialogue) I have no intention of seeing this version of the legend.

I still prefer "The Mists Of Avalon" to all other films  about the subject matter. "The Sword In The Stone" is still a favourite and the last few minutes of "Camelot" make the journey worthwhile.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 05:28:09 PM
Matt H I’m so pleased to read a positive review of THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE.  I’m looking forward to the movie now.  It is in Father's Little Dividend that I think Spencer Tracy was at is best.

DearReaderLaura it sounds as if you are having a nice Sunday.

Thank you Danise.  It is such a good feeling when you have all your email addresses.  Good luck getting the print size larger.

Robin it is good to have you back.

Tomovoz please tell Colin, thanks for the laugh. :D

Okay Panni, you can tell Bruce your cheerleading efforts worked.  I must be off for awhile now and feed Bogie.



Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 05:34:13 PM
Just got back from walking Abie. I'm told by my landlord that the turtle liked to sleep on my doorstep before his two-year disappearance. As the white cat also sleeps there, I'd better watch my step in the morning if I'm not to follow DR RLP's example. Besides, what insurance would believe me when I told them I fell over a turtle and a cat!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: ArnoldMBrockman on July 18, 2004, 05:36:59 PM
A friend of mine just challenged me with this query

Name A Broadway Show Tune that has the same melody(notes) as GETTING TO KNOW YOU but has a different tempo and syncopation???.I think it sounds like a tango and I believe it's a duet. ANY Guesses??
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 05:37:57 PM
Home briefly and now off to pie and discussions with Tammy on the way over and back.  Today was fun - none of us really like blocking or choreography days, but it was great to see one of these what ifs on its feet, and the juxtaposition of correct choreography in the wrong music is really funny to me.  We began with the hardest number, so everything hereafter will ease up.  It will take the company a bit to get used to all the steps and staging, but when they do it will be killer.  More later.  I'll be back by seven-thirty and then we can have a frenzy and a half.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:38:56 PM
Some BK questions for today. Do you have either of the compilations on RAVEN records (from Australia of course) of obscure Bacharach tracks and of Jimmy Webb songs? I didn't know about them until yesterday.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 05:39:04 PM
Here are the first three paragraphs of the VARIETY review of THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE. The reviewer is Todd McCarthy, a writer who I believe is astute, level-headed, and practical in his evaluations with eyes on both the artistic achievements (or lack thereof) of films and also of their potential box-office grosses.

Well, the film lost me as an audience member once I heard that Jonathan Demme was directing.  I'll never forget THE TRUTH ABOUT CHARLIE; dammit, I wish I COULD! ! ! !
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: S. Woody White on July 18, 2004, 05:40:25 PM
Joy wants to throw out our issue of the New York Post declaring Gephardt Kerry's running mate, and I'm having flashbacks to the time my mother forced me to throw out the Nolan Ryan rookie season baseball card.  What should I do?
Who the hell is Gephardt Kerry?

No, more seriously, everyone will have a copy of this paper.  It's monitary value will be zilch.  If you want it for some sentimental reason, then keep it.  Otherwise, why bother?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 05:40:39 PM
well all right DR TD - of course DRPANNI is correct in that he had no business in the show in the first place...
IF he had no business in the show in the first place, HE SHOULDN'T HAVE BEEN CAST!
This is two strikes so far for Stro, anybody remember who replaced Nathan Lane in THE PRODUCERS?  ?  ?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 05:42:53 PM
I'm off to find another DVD to watch before SIX FEET UNDER comes on. Have no idea what I'll end up picking.

I watched THE ENGLISH PATIENT.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:43:18 PM
All I can think of at the moment is Hernado's Hideway Arnold and it is not that. Of course it should be a duet - it takes two to tango after all. I suspect it is a comedy song. Too early in the morning for me - even too early for me "elevenses"
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 05:44:55 PM
For some reason, today, when I think of the jawbone of an ass....all I can picture is Chris Kattan.

YOU MADE ME SPIT DIET COKE ALL OVER MY DESK!
You may take that as an invitation to come over. . .and clean it up!:)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:45:15 PM
Was it that Engish actor ??? who replaced Lane?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:47:04 PM
Good news from my local post office. I can now send CDs at letter rates. Mail is on its ways to a few DRs.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 05:47:27 PM
Was it that Engish actor ??? who replaced Lane?
Well, it wasn't THE ENGLISH PATIENT.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 05:48:01 PM
I'll wait for a few more reviews on The Manchurian Candidate.  Todd McCarthy is a Demme acolyte, despite the Truth about Charlie comment.  I hope he's right, I hope it's a total surprise, in a good way.  But part of me thinks he simply can't be.  We shall see.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:48:25 PM
How was I supposed to know that three question marks would end up being a face? Guess it was not an inappropriate place anyway.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: S. Woody White on July 18, 2004, 05:48:50 PM
RE: dem bones, dem bones, them shattered bones:

Yep, been there.  Only it was my shoulder that got scrunched.  So vibes.  [move=left,scroll,6,transparent,100%]~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[/move]

To make things worse, I'm right-handed, and it was my right shoulder.  The cast wrapped around my torso, down my arm (holding it up with my arm parallel with the ground), then a nice bend at the elbow, with everything braced with a stick so that the arm wouldn't weigh itself down and re-dislocate my shoulder from it's healing position.  Writing with my right hand was a disaster, of course, since the cast looped around my hand, making it impossible to use, opposable thumb or no.  Figuring out how to write with my left hand, even to print, was fun.

As was feeding myself.  Fortunately, I was recouperating at my parent's, and Mom was a good food-cutter-upper.

And forget about bathing.  Stinky feet was not the problem, stinky pits was.

The worst was when the cast was removed.  My shoulder muscles had atrophied, and the pain was gigantic.  Just be forwarned on that one.

Rehab, on the other hand, wasn't too bad.  Try to arrange for a cutie or hunk as your specialist.


Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 05:48:59 PM
Is this a casting couch reference?

I think I'll make a bumper sticker for Chris Kattan:
I BRAKE FOR FROGS
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:50:41 PM
Snow is probably still there in Blackheath td. Even made the TV news here in Melbourne. JOK is on his way.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: S. Woody White on July 18, 2004, 05:51:22 PM
I must return later, after getting dinner fixed.  Dinner has been playing around with too many other dinners, and the threat of baby food cannot be ignored.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 05:53:55 PM
DIT - you will soon have a Rainbow round your shoulder.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 06:07:45 PM
Aaaargh. Posting problems.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 06:28:59 PM
Snow is probably still there in Blackheath td. Even made the TV news here in Melbourne. JOK is on his way.

And I have seen lovely photos of dogs wallowing in the snows of Blackheath.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 06:56:11 PM
Panni do the cat and the turtle get along then?  They might have scared each other.

RLP when I went to therapy for my hand my doctor told me to take a pain pill before the therapy.  It really made a difference.  I have had physical therapy for other problems and Tylenol was more than enough.  
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Sandra on July 18, 2004, 07:00:45 PM
Greetings from wherever I am! I don't have time to read the notes because my dad is paying six dollars an hour for me to sign on.

I am at the family reunion somewhere in Kansas. I am surrounded by relatives. I'll have a full report when I get home and my dad doesn't have to shell out six bucks for me to sign on. I shall have stories, I can tell you that. And pictures.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Sandra on July 18, 2004, 07:04:41 PM
P.S. Hi Mom!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 07:09:48 PM
And one for ME! (Why not?)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 07:12:14 PM
I'm going out to get oatmeal and ice cream. Not to eat together. I'm out of oatmeal which I must have to exist.
And I'm going to get some ice cream to eat. Now.
No turtle soup.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: DearReaderLaura on July 18, 2004, 07:15:48 PM
PS -- Hi Sweetie!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 07:17:51 PM
DearReaderLaura, please thank Sandra for stopping in to visit. :)

Panni I like lots of milk in my oatmeal along with dried cherries.  I have been eating so much fresh fruit lately I have been passing on the dried cherries and adding cinnamon.  I only eat the old fashioned oats.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 07:26:03 PM
I have been gorging myself on watermelon as well as on dried papaya.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 07:37:00 PM
Keith cut up a fresh watermelon and we will have some while watching "whatever" tonight. :)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 07:48:51 PM
Do my eyes fail me?! ?! ?!

Do I honestly see DR TCB, that handsome silver fox, online? ? ?

What words of wisdom will he have to impart?
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 07:49:33 PM
TCB you have mail!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 07:51:18 PM
But can he post as well as browse?  

Hi TCB. :)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jane on July 18, 2004, 08:00:05 PM
Goodnight all.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: S. Woody White on July 18, 2004, 08:05:55 PM
der Brucer (having suffered through a broken sholder, I can "share your pain" - and I don't envy you your rehab)
It should be noted, the two shoulders happened before we met.  We've been fortunate, so far, not to be physically out of the running at the same time.

We've been known to get a little nutso together, of course, but that's something different!   8)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Michael on July 18, 2004, 08:05:59 PM
I think I'll make a bumper sticker for Chris Kattan:
I BRAKE FOR FROGS

Shouldn't it be I DON"T Break For Frogs
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: S. Woody White on July 18, 2004, 08:26:30 PM
I had a nice day at work today.  I was on call, in case they needed me or not.  As it rained and thundered during the night, I was asked to come in.

We were quite busy, busier than I've seen it before.  When it rains, the tourists don't go to the beach, they go shopping.  And shop they did!

Hopefully it will be as busy tomorrow.  Bring on the dreary days!  I love it!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 08:44:39 PM
Back from pie.  Tammy and I discussed details of where we are and where we need to be in the next few days, then we got to the House of Pies and the Pogue's decided to mosey on down from their nearby abode to have some pie, too.  Tammy and I both had Cobb Salads and we shared onion rings, but the Cobb was HUGE, and the onion rings were HEAVY.  She then had apple pie ala mode and I had coconut cream pie ala whipped cream, and I, who have a bottomless pit of a stomach, thought I was going to explode I was so full.  So, for the first time in ages, I could not even come close to finishing the pie.  I could finish the hat, of course, but not the pie.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 08:45:16 PM
And one for Mahler.  

I must now sit on my couch like so much fish until I lose that bloated feeling.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Robin on July 18, 2004, 09:02:51 PM
I've had pie today, too.  

Blueberry pie...my favorite.  It's not homemade, though.  I got it from Baker's Square.  I'm too darned lazy to cook right now; I've got some serious loafing about to do for the next day or two.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: TCB on July 18, 2004, 09:07:02 PM
Good evening, one and all!

I am holding my breath that my computer will stay online long enough for me to write this post.  If you are reading this, I guess you can figure out the answer.

I have been trying to stay abreast and athigh of all the exciting news and events going on at this here site, even if I have not been able to post.  

My best wishes to RLP on a speedy recovery.  I hope that someone can give you a hand with certain chores.

BK -- I am so excited about your show!

Jane, Danise, Tomovoz, and td -- Thank you for the notes and the emails.

Hopefully, someday soon, things will turn around for me.


Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 09:10:50 PM
DR JRand, the song at the end of FATHER OF THE BRIDE was "Goodnight, Sweetheart."
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Matt H. on July 18, 2004, 09:15:11 PM
DR td, I guess it was our talk the other night because I pulled my copy of THE ENGLISH PATIENT off the shelf and watched it earlier this evening. Mine is the old non-anamorphic DVD. I'm sure yours looks spectacular, but I have to say that on my TV with its built in line doubler, this non-anamorphic copy looks quite good. Unless I can find a used copy of the new issue for a VERY cheap price, I probably won't trade up. I like the film just fine, but it took me three years to pull this version off my to-watch DVD shelf, so I doubt the new version would get enough screenings to justify its cost (unless the cost was minimal).

Watching the film again knowing the story so that the flashbacks and forwards aren't so confusing, I enjoyed it a lot more tonight than I did when seeing it in the theater.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: td on July 18, 2004, 09:32:30 PM
Well, DR Matt, I did get a good deal on THE ENGLISH PATIENT, and had never owned the non-anamorphic version, only a duped from laserdisc videotape, which may now be retired.
I truly had forgotten how moving this film really is, quite an accomplishment considering that Catherine and The Count are very cold characters and icily portrayed by the gifted Kristen Scott Thomas and Ralph Fiennes.  Hannah's fascinating relationship with Kipp, though, brings such warmth to the film, and Juliette Binoche's smile is worth millions.
The bonus disc of Special Features is one of the better sets of featurettes I've seen, from the author's own presence, to contemporary interviews, readings from the novel and a short piece on the real Count.
Try to find it if you can.

And DR TCB - thanks for keep athigh!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: PennyO on July 18, 2004, 09:42:58 PM
Hi, all. Jewish Thighs here, keeping athigh... Egad, the show sounds so fun! It's raining here right now - what a surprise... I was hacking at brush for a good bit of the day. And working on my newest incarnation of the play, for a January run in LA. I'm adding actors - I think it will be 3 and 3 now.

Nagging headache all day - I think it's the weather. For awhile this afternoon, it rained a bit and I thought I had a reprieve from the salmonberry yanking... came indoors, changed my clothes, and I be go-ta-hell if the sun didn't come out. Changed back into the filthies, and headed out for a three hour chop and drag fest. Ah, the life of an artiste!

Okay , so off to beddie, I think. Head hurts. Nitey-nite.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 09:43:49 PM
Thank you dRMATTH - yes!  Such a lovely moment....and I think FATHER'S LITTLE DIVIDEND even begins with this scene....or one very similar.

td - sorry did mean to make you spit!

DRJANE - I like to write letters for people.  We are also helping a couple of people with some family histories.  It just takes a few moments to do some research on the net and help them the next time.

Also - if someone is interested in something historical....I use newspaperarchive.com to print out a news story from a particular day for them.  

I love to listen the the stories of "back when"....and so many people have met celebrities or been onstage or performed sometime in their lives, and of course love to talk about it.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jrand73 on July 18, 2004, 09:49:06 PM
Time for bed.

Nytol
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: PennyO on July 18, 2004, 10:03:02 PM
Quote from: Jay
The last concert will include a performance of Holst's [b
Savitri:  An Episode from the Mahabharata[/b], which ties to Isherwood's involvement with Vedanta, a system of Hindu philosophy.
Quote

Late reading over the posts of the day - but this caught my eye. I actually performed this opera Savitri when I was a student at Juilliard!

Brucer - thanks for posting the article about the hapless Chris Kattan. Yipes.

RLP - so sorry about the arm. I only ever broke one bone: 5th metacarpal, left hand. Playing volleyball. Oy. Best wishes for your speedy recovery!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: PennyO on July 18, 2004, 10:05:09 PM
Oh, good heavens! Am I a Senior Member? Well, I do have the AARP card...
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 10:06:06 PM
SIX FEET UNDER was quite disturbing and remarkable tonight. More like an Albee One Act (Zoo Story) than episodic TV.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 10:12:34 PM
...And an Emmy next year to Michael C Hall for his performance in this episode. You heard it here first.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: George on July 18, 2004, 10:50:32 PM
~~~~Healing Vibes for RLP!!~~~~  I've never broken any bones and as far as I can remember, no one in my immediate family has, either.

I shall be interested in hearing DR George's views re Arthur. From what I have seen (and heard from the dialogue) I have no intention of seeing this version of the legend.

I still prefer "The Mists Of Avalon" to all other films  about the subject matter. "The Sword In The Stone" is still a favourite and the last few minutes of "Camelot" make the journey worthwhile.

Well, I've never read "The Mists of Avalon" so I don't know that version of the story.  I haven't actually seen the movie "Camelot" all the way through and the stage musical was the only show that I didn't know of before I did it, but didn't like afterwards.  Good score, but I just didn't like the show.

About "King Arthur," the movie:  I didn't really like it, either.  Well, actually it was okay.  Not really bad, but it didn't grab me.  It was so melodramatic and for some reason, that bothered me in this movie.  I know it's not supposed to be a documentary, but things like Guenevere's outfit near the end when she was all painted in blue and wearing the straps for a top really made me lose interest.  Now if Arthur or Lancelot wore the straps, then I might have remained interested...but that would've been a different story. ;)

Anyway, I've always wondered (but never did any research into) what the true historical version of King Arthur was and I certainly didn't mind that it was so different than the musical/legend Camelot version, but the endless underscoring and the Enya-like songs seem so cliché anymore.  The very accurate shooting of the arrows by the good guys and the marching armies just made me think of the "Lord of the Rings" movies.  My niece has now seen it twice and she really likes it, as did Ebert and Roeper.  And I know that a lot of other people do like it as well, and that's fine, but I just don't think that I'll need to see it again.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Panni on July 18, 2004, 10:53:13 PM
Signing off early tonight. Me tired.

Good vibes to TCB!!
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jay on July 18, 2004, 11:05:35 PM
I'm back.  The Bowl is just too large a venue, I'm sorry to say, for ballet.  That the Joffrey had to perform Act II of The Nutcracker on a narrow strip of stage in front of the orchestra did not help matters, either, though they gave it noble effort.

The second half of the concert began with "The March of the Cossacks" from Franz Waxman's score for Taras Bulba.  Taras Bulba, according to Maestro John Mauceri, is the film in which Mr. Tony Curtis uttered the immortal words "Yonda lies da castle of my fodda."

Fireworks--and pleasant they were to watch--were integrated into the performance of "Pictures at an Exhibition."  Mr. Leopold Stokowski's orchestration of the piece is surprisingly transparent and lighter of weight than the familiar one by Mr. Maurice Ravel.
 
There were two encores:  "The Sabre Dance" by Mr. Aram Khatchaturian and--please don't ask me why--Mr. Leroy Anderson's "Sleigh Ride."
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Jay on July 18, 2004, 11:09:18 PM
Let's give Mahler a rest.  Here's one for Tchaikovsky, Mussorgsky and others of that ilk.

I love Russian composers.  (Oh.  A Danny Kaye reference.)
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: Tomovoz on July 18, 2004, 11:30:48 PM
Thanks for the review DR Jay.

"Sleigh Ride" would have been more appropriate for my Christmas In July event yesterday. Very odd.

Thank you George for your comments re Camelot.
There has of course been so much written about the  Authurian Legend - truth!!! Probably very little.  What I liked about "The Mists Of Avalon" is that the writer put the story into a much larger frame and thus there were reasons for actions and events to unfold as they did. The movie is quite faithful to the book.

Interesting comment from DR Panni after recent comments about "Six Feet" and its direction.
Title: Re:ALL-SINGING ALL-DANCING
Post by: bk on July 18, 2004, 11:35:48 PM
Of course, Mr Mauceri, as is often the case, is completely wrong about the Curtis quote which was absolutely NOT in Taras Bulba.  I believe, if I remember correctly, it may be in The Black Shield of Falsworth or whatever it's called.  If not, it's from one of his earliest films.  Skammen on Mr. Mauceri, who should know better but often doesn't.