Never let it be said I’m too politically correct to have a sense of humor…
I loved this….
Never let it be said I’m too politically correct to have a sense of humor…
I loved this….
Filed under Entertainment, Gay, Religion, Social Commentary, Television
I love Joe Jackson. This is one of my favorite songs and videos from the 1980’s.
So many layers….and still so – if not more – relevant today…
Filed under Entertainment, Gay, Media, Music, Social Commentary, Style
Gag me….
Bristol Palin is one of the four finalists on “Dancing With the Stars,” the No. 1 rated show in the country, a fact that has bedeviled some fans and critics.
The 20-year-old daughter of the former governor of Alaska has consistently earned low scores from the show’s on-camera judges, but those scores are combined, a la “American Idol,” with the contestant’s call-in vote, where Miss Palin is a juggernaut.
The show’s producers think tea party voters who back Sarah Palin have turned “Dancing With the Stars” into a referendum on the power of grass roots political muscle.
via Tea party politicizing Dancing With the Stars? – Washington Times.
Filed under Entertainment, Media, Politics, Social Commentary, Style, Television
Interesting article for the W&L and theatre friends. I didn’t realize he and multiple Tony Award Nominee Rob Ashford also went to my college, Washington and Lee University, in Lexington, VA about the same time I did….
While his fellow students at Washington and Lee University may not recognize him around campus, his fans would know Grant Aleksander immediately.
He is the actor who portrayed Phillip Spaulding on the daytime drama “Guiding Light” at different times between 1982 and 2009. He also appeared in television series and movies, including the 1986 movie “Tough Guys” with Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas. Aleksander, 50, has now returned to W&L to complete his theater major 30 years after he left to pursue his acting career.
AND
Aleksander said he left W&L after his sophomore year to transfer to Tisch School of the Arts at New York University because he thought that he needed to go to a big theater school. “My assumption that I needed to be in New York because that was where the work was being done was correct,” he said. “But I was wrong to think that I needed to go to a big theater school. I learned an enormous amount about acting at W&L because I got to actually do it. I was in a lot of productions here and some of them were very difficult.”
“My time at W&L was really a pivotal time for me. I met the love of my life, who was a Lexington resident at the time, during a W&L production of Hamlet (he is married to attorney and former actress Sherry Ramsey) and we’re still happily together. I have nothing but wonderful memories of my time here. Now, it’s 30 years later and I’m surprised at how comfortable I feel back here in this environment. The school feels much as it did when I was here before, although there are some new buildings such as the sororities and the Lenfest Center.”
In addition to teaching acting classes, Aleksander is also assistant director to Mish for the Stephen Sondheim musical “Assassins” to be performed at the end of October in the Lenfest Center. Mish described “Assassins” as more of an acting piece than singing and dancing. “That’s one of the reasons I really enjoy working with Grant on this. Plus, we’re getting twice as much done in a shorter amount of time,” he said. “While I’m working with one group, he can take another group aside to work with them. And the students love him. They sort of know about his career but it doesn’t faze them and he doesn’t allow it to.”
Aleksander has also paved the way for a group of students to watch a rehearsal of the revival of “How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying” starring Daniel Radcliffe in New York City, courtesy of his friend and Tony award-winning choreographer Rob Ashford, who roomed with Grant at W&L .
via Soap Star Grant Aleksander Resumes Classes at W&L after 30 Years :: Washington and Lee University.
We saw this film about Allen Ginsburg tonight and really, really liked it. The trailer really doesn’t give you a clear picture of how creative the film really is. There are a lot of layers depicted in black and white, animation and color cinematography. It’s really good…
As my partner, Steve, said so well: “If you love literature and/or Gay history, you must see “Howl”.
It’s also a fascinating study of the court case where they tried to have “Howl” declared obscene. Makes you want to draw some parallels to today’s uptight conservatives…
Filed under Entertainment, Gay, Movies, Politics, Theatre
Great NY Times article about Deborah, the Dowager Duchess of Devonshire. She was one of the famous society Mitford Girls and became quite a businesswoman.
YEARS after the fact, Deborah, the Dowager Duchess of Devonshire, looked in her mother’s engagement book to see what had been written on the momentous day of March 31, 1920.
Nothing.
“She didn’t refer to my birth at all,” the duchess said. “There was nothing for five days, and then, on the fifth day, in capital letters, it said ‘KITCHEN CHIMNEY SWEPT.’ ”
“No one took any notice of me except Nanny.”
Maybe so, but not for long. Now 90, the duchess is doubly famous. First, as the lone survivor of the six celebrated Mitford girls, who included Nancy (the renowned comic novelist), Diana (the renowned beauty and wife of the fascist leader Sir Oswald Mosley) and Jessica (the renowned Communist, author and naturalized American). Second, as the woman who transformed Chatsworth, one of the grandest of England’s grand houses, from a museumlike relic into a family house and self-sustaining business that is visited by 600,000 people a year. Along the way, Deborah Cavendish, to use her civilian name (her friends call her Debo), has become something of a national treasure, as grand as the queen but as approachable as anyone, effortlessly bridging the gap between Us and Them in this perennially class-conscious society.
via The Saturday Profile – A Duchess With a Common Touch – NYTimes.com.
Filed under Entertainment, History, Social Commentary, Style
Jill Clayburgh was one of my favorite actresses. She was such a critical part of the 1970’s film scene with her signature role in “An Unmarried Woman”. I always thought she should have won the Oscar for that part…I will miss her. I was looking forward to many more years of her work…
Jill Clayburgh, whose Broadway and Hollywood acting career stretched through the decades, highlighted by her Oscar-nominated portrayal of a divorcee exploring her sexuality in the 1978 film “An Unmarried Woman,” died Friday. She was 66.
Her husband, Tony Award-winning playwright David Rabe, said she died after a 21-year battle with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. She was surrounded by her family and brother when she died at her home in Lakeville, Conn., he said.
She dealt with the disease courageously, quietly and privately, Rabe said, and conducted herself with enormous grace “and made it into an opportunity for her children to grow and be human.”
Clayburgh, alongside peers such as Anne Bancroft, Shirley MacLaine and Jane Fonda, helped to usher in a new era for actresses in Hollywood by playing women who were confident and capable yet not completely flawless. Her turn as a mother dealing with life after 16 years of marriage in “An Unmarried Woman” earned Clayburgh her first Oscar nod.
“There was practically nothing for women to do on the screen in the 1950s and 1960s,” Clayburgh said in an interview with The Associated Press while promoting “An Unmarried Woman” in 1978. “Sure, Marilyn Monroe was great, but she had to play a one-sided character, a vulnerable sex object. It was a real fantasy.”
The next year, Clayburgh was again nominated for an Academy Award for “Starting Over,” a comedy about a divorced man, played by Burt Reynolds, who falls in love but can’t get over his ex-wife.
via Oscar-nominated actress Jill Clayburgh dies at 66 – Yahoo! News.
Filed under Broadway, Entertainment, Movies, New York, Social Commentary, Television, Theatre
I have mixed feelings about seeing this film. I loved the play, but Tyler Perry scares me….
I’ve hated all his movies up until now. To me, he has played the worst black stereotypes for a lot of cash.
But I think I will go see this film. I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt.
This article makes a very good point. Why hasn’t someone written the black male point of view? I would love to see that, too…
Or maybe Essex Hemphill or other writers wrote it, but it has yet to be filmed…
This is a gap in popular culture I would like to see explored outside of the world of E. Lynn Harris, the black, male Jacqueline Susann.
Not that there’s anything wrong with that…
I’ve already seen For Colored Girls.
I was slightly coerced (pushed!) by my colleagues to accompany fabulous Tell Me More host Michel Martin to a screening the other day.
But I’m thinking, “here we go again.”
The last thing I wanted (or needed) to see was another film that painted the black man as society’s stammering uber-demon, who comes to steal, kill and destroy; or another project that portrays black men as this nation’s perpetual delinquents — jobless, thoughtless sexual misfits who can’t stop screwing long enough to pick our heads up and realize how we’re letting down our women, our children and families, our God and our America.
Hide your kids, hide your wife, and hide your husbands, too … (you know the rest).
Quite frankly, it’s a narrative I’ve had enough of, thank you very much.
In For Colored Girls, yes, there is a disproportionate number of troubled black men. There is one redemptive male character who isn’t a killer, a rapist, or a liar.
But although the movie (I never saw the stage version) is basically the story of black women who are — in awful ways — victimized by black men, it is also very much the story of black women, pressing through the grit and gravel of life and finding a hope and place of vulnerability that they can depend on. And that’s a beautiful thing.
I left the screening with Michel disturbed, for many reasons. It was, partially, because the film was so emotionally intense. But I was also disturbed thinking about how the men in For Colored Girls — although perpetrators — had struggles, too.
Where was their healing, their resilience? Where is the window into that pain? And who’s telling that story?
I feel blessed to have a motley circle of friends. And, specifically, among my black male “homeboys,” there is no shortage of issues among us. One good friend is a self-described “flaming heterosexual,” for whom dating (and mating) is like a sport. Another is navigating his way through his own sexuality — in the closet some days, out and proud on others. One was sexually abused as a youngster. Another grew up with an absent mother. And another suddenly lost his father at a critical time in his life.
We all have issues, and we’re working through them daily — sometimes selfishly, and not so wisely. And I believe (scratch that, I know) that among us, we’ve at times “fit the profile” of destructive black men, and caused others (including the women we love) a portion of pain.
My point? Hopefully one day, more narratives will unearth the delicate taboo of the wounded black male and his journey to find “god in himself.”
For Colored Boys? Right now, it remains unwritten, but that’s a story I’m waiting to see.
Filed under Broadway, Entertainment, Gay, Movies, Social Commentary, Style
I have a new post up on my other blog: http://www.mysoutherngothiclife.com. Here is an excerpt and a link to the full post:
A young friend of mine just saw “Breakfast At Tiffany’s” for the first time recently and it got me to thinking…
Holly Golightly, of course played by the one and only Audrey Hepburn, always goes to Tiffany’s when the “mean reds” hit or she needs to feel safe and secure. That’s how I feel about Brooks Brothers.
More: Chapter 37: Brooks Brothers Is My Tiffany’s | My Southern Gothic Life.
Filed under Danville, Entertainment, Movies, My Journey, New York, Social Commentary, Style
Shame: Evelyn Champagne King
This was the first “disco” song played at my college fraternity, Lambda Chi Alpha, at Washington and Lee University in the late 1970’s.
As I recall, it was quite controversial to play this as previously it had been all Beach Music or some strange Southern rock stuff late at night…
But my friend Ralph prevailed. He was after a new attitude for the parties…
And the parties got much better…
It was a good mix…
And we danced all night…
Because it might have been “disco” but you could still shag to it…
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Filed under Entertainment, My Journey, Social Commentary, Style, Virginia