Category Archives: Postcard from the Slope

LOOK OUT LITTLE THINGS: FAO SCHWARTZ IN PARK SLOPE?

I won’t bore you (or maybe I will) with my childhood memories of visits to FAO Schwartz with my maternal grandmother. But check out this scoop via Brooklyn Record. Could it possibly be true? Look out Little Things.

Chain restaurants aren’t always welcome in Brooklyn neighborhoods, so
we’re curious to see what our readers think about this bit of gossip.
According to NY1, "Crain’s New York Business says FAO Schwarz plans to
open two more stores in the city, smaller than the flagship store on
Fifth Avenue. The company is reportedly looking to have a presence in
neighborhoods like Union Square and Park Slope, Brooklyn." (We don’t
have a Crain’s subscription, but if anyone does, please share the
details!) Would this be a welcome chain store for the families of Park
Slope — or just an annoying tourist attraction? NY1 also reports that
"more than two million people visit its New York City location each
year."
FAO Schwarz Plans For Two More City Stores [NY1]

PARK SLOPE IN A STATE OF JOY OVER ELECTION RESULTS

Park Slopers are reacting with joy to the results from last week’s mid-term elections. At a dinner party on Saturday night someone said, "After the elections we have so much more in common with the rest of the country."

Who said that? It might have been me.

A palpable feeling of relief, the elections make Park Slopers feel like there’s real consensus about the mess in Iraq.

In a cab yesterday, returning home from Louis and Capathia’s show at Joe’s Pub, a friend said that her heart breaks for the family members of those soldiers who’ve died in Iraq. How can they live with that pain? she asked out loud.

Indeed, Americans collectively mourn the loss of hundreds of thousands of lives (civilian and military) and fear for the lives of the troops in Iraq, as well as the lives of innocent civilians.

In the cab, we also discussed how we heard the cheering news of Rumsfeld’s resignation. That event in tandem with the election results was a double whammy. News of his resignation spread through the city like wild fire. An actress friend heard the news over headphones just before the Wednesday matinee performance of a Broadway play. "Rumsfield has resigned," the stage manager told those who were listening. The night before, that same stage manager was delivering state-by-state results to the actors and tech crew.

I heard about it during the Leonard Lopate show on WNYC during my work shift at the Food Coop. Where were you when you heard that Rumsfeld resigned?

There’s a feeling of unity that hasn’t been felt since the weeks after 9/11. Even the Europeans must be relieved that the American public has spoken and have expressed their dissatisfaction with Bush’s policies in Iraq loud and clear.

For the first time in years, Park Slopers and the rest of America can feel proud to be American.  Let’s see what happens next. Hopefully this consensus will mean that peaceful decisions are made that make the world a better and less deadly place. Please.

GUESSING GAME

My twin sister and I frequent many of the same shops. But only in two of them can the confusion cause a problem.

It’s become a guessing game for the people in Palma Pharmacy and Personal Cleaners.

Everytime I walk into to Palma to pick up a prescription, Frank, the nice white haired man (without the beard) tries to guess. "Caroline," he’ll shout out as I walk into the store. "Wrong,{  I’ll say. "Louise, I’m Louise."

It’s a little game. He looks disappointed when he gets it wrong. "You fooled me again, Louise." And he’s always apologetic.

It’s important that he get it right because I don’t want to get the wrong prescription and visa versa.

Same thing at Personal Cleaners. Claudia, the beauty who works there, never knows the difference. But she never tries to guess. She just gets a funny look on her face like, I have no idea who you are. The first thing I do is give her my phone number so that she can figure it out.

"You had me fooled again," she said.

I don’t understand it. I think I look different enough from my sister. But when we’re without kids (sis has a 2-year old red head and I’ve got a nine year old brunette) they can usually figure it out.

But when we’re alone. Forget it. It’s like we’re one person — something we’ve been hearing our entire lives.

Oh well.  Maybe Frank and Claudia will figure it out one of these days.

Continue reading GUESSING GAME

GRILLED CHEESE WITH GROOVY GRANDPA

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Smartmom is always thrilled to have lunch with Groovy Grandpa. They rarely get together one on one.  Usually, they meet for dinner as a large group with his wife, Mima Cat, Hepcat and the kids.  Sometimes Diaper Diva, Ducky, and Bro-in-Law are dialed into the mix.

But lunch alone with Groovy Grandpa is a rare treat. Except for one thing: he’s got a thing greasy spoon coffee shops.

It’s not that he’s not a gourmand. Groovy Grandpa is always up on the latest Brooklyn and Manhattan restaurants. And MiMa Cat is an incredible cook, who specializes in French and Italian specialties.

But for lunch, he likes to keep it simple. Sandwich. Tap Water. Neat.

This time, wanted to go to the Park Diner on Seventh Avenue, the coffee shop between Berkeley and Union.

But Smartmom suggested they try someplace he’d never been: the diner on Flatbush Avenue across from the Crunch Fitness.

GG liked the look of the place: it has a roomy, vaguely Art Deco feel. They sat in a nice booth.  and the waitress, wearing a Rolling Stones T-shirt, handed GG the gigantic menu. "What is this, Voltaire?" he said handling the gigantic, multi-paged book with full color pictures of everything from Belgium pancakes to Mousakka.

GG is a risky kind of guy: "It’s always dangerous to order chicken salad in Greek Diners," GG told Smartmom. "You never know what kind of mayo they’ll use." Still, something compelled him to order it.

Smartmom, who has been to this diner quite a few times always orders their delicious, small Greek salad with a side of toasted Pita.

While they waited for their lunch choices, GG told Smartmom that MiMa Cat was at home preparing the Brazilian national dish, a stew that has twelve kinds of meats, including organ meats, linguisa, and blood sausage, for a dinner party they’re having on Sunday. MiMa Cat is an adventurous cook, who likes challenging, labor intensive dishes like cassoulet.

When GG’s chicken salad sandwich arrived, he looked dubious. The chicken salad appeared  blenderized, completely smooth. He took one bite. "This is awful," he said. Smartmom advised him to send it back. He decided to order a grilled cheese instead.

Get grilled swiss on rye Smartmom advised. GG waved the waitress over, handed her his sandwich plate and ordered American cheese on white bread.

While he waited for sandwich number two, GG eyed the plates of food the waitress carried to other tables. "Gee, looks like I ordered the wrong thing," he said as he saw milk shakes, fried chicken, and cheeseburger deluxe dance by.

Finally his grilled cheese arrived. GG went straight for the small paper cup of cole slaw. One bite of the grilled cheese later he said, "Yuck. The Amercian cheese is so salty."

What did you expect? Smartmom wondered.

No, but this is really salty.

GG left half a sandwich on his plate. They moved on to other topics. So what if the lunch wasn’t top notch, the food is never the draw.

It’s the conversation. That’s the what it’s all about anyway.

OLD FIRST: NEW BLOG ON THE BLOCK

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Pastor Daniel Meeter, of Old First Dutch Reformed Church (Seventh Avenue and Carroll Street), is a blogger. His blog, Old First, is just a couple of months old. But it gets you inside the head of one of the most thoughtful and spirit-full members of our community. We were talking a few weeks back and he told me that he was going to mention one of the homeless of Seventh Avenue in his Sunday sermon. I tried to get over to the service that Sunday at 11 a.m. but life and Boo-at-the-Zoo intervened. I  am glad to see that he posted that sermon, as well as other sermons and observations on his blog. Here’s an excerpt:

One morning last week, on the church’s front steps I found Robert
sleeping. He’s the panhandler who has taken up residence in the shelter
of our building. He’s been drinking 24/7 and he worries me. I have told
him that during school hours he can’t sleep here, because the Nursery
School parents get upset. I figured if I had to wake him up to move him
at least I could feed him. I bought him a coffee and a fried egg
sandwich. I woke him up. He sat up, I gave it to him, and the first
thing he said was, "Dear Jesus thank you for this food. Thank you for
everything you’ve given me. Please bless me like you bless other
people. Amen."

When he asked Jesus to bless him like other
people I found myself feeling the need for God’s mercy. Sometimes your
soul cries out for mercy. "Lord have mercy upon us. Christ have mercy
upon us. Lord have mercy upon us." Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me.

The
blind man Bartimaeus is a panhandler. His spot is just outside Jericho,
on the road up to Jerusalem, and he’s there because the pilgrims who
are going up to worship at the festivals will be generous with their
alms. Jesus passes on his way up to Jerusalem—this is just before Palm
Sunday. Jesus no longer is hiding his identity. He is the Messiah, the
Son of David returning to the city of David in order to set up the
kingdom of God.

And to the Son of David the blind man cries for
mercy. What does he mean? What they say on Seventh Avenue? "Anything
will help. Anything will help." A little extra cash from the royal
purse? A disability pension from your new government? Or is it please
don’t exclude me from your kingdom just because I have a Gentile name
which I got from my Gentile father? Or please don’t exclude me because
I am unkosher, being blind, and not allowed in the temple, and barred
from all the rituals and practices? What does "Jesus, Son of David,
have mercy on me" mean?

photo by Dope on the Slope (found on Flickr).

FEELS LIKE THE START OF SPRING

Today reminded me of a song I wrote when I was 16 years old. It was written about a fall day just like today. I was humming it to myself all day.

Feels like the start of spring
but you know it’s just a funny fall day
Feels so pretty in this town
The leaves are changing back from brown
The birds are turning round and heading back north again

Oh mama, show me the way
to the playground
where we gonna play

Push me on a swing
Now we’re gonna sing
I got a long hard winter ahead but today is like the first day of spring
I got a long hard winter ahead but today is like the first day of spring

OUR NEW TV

The family that for a few years lived without a television — Hepcat actually cut the cord once night because he was so sick and tired of it — just got a 32 inch LCD high definition.
television.

For those who are interested, we got it on sale at Best Buy. It’s a Westinghouse and it really was a good buy. Apparently, the price is going down some more next week.

Our new TV: It’s a big one and it arrived in a huge box yesterday. Smartmom and OSFO just let it sit in its box for an hour or so before cutting the box open just to see exactly how big it was.

When Hepcat got home, he unpacked the box, found the manual, and turned the thing on. There’s a whole bunch of set up that happens with a digital television. It needs to locate the signals – the stations that you get. On-screen text directs you through the process. It takes a few minutes.

For every network, there are two or three channels. One is regular broadcast, one is High Def. The High Def channels are incredible, expecially if they’re showing shows that were shot in High Def.

Our new TV is a flat screen beauty and we were utterly blown away by the reception (we’re a cableless household), the clarity, and the color.

THIS GOES OUT TO A FRIEND: YOU KNOW WHO YOU ARE

I saw you today with your handsome hubby going for a walk in Prospect Park. You looked beautiful as always and you shared some of the details of your situation with me.

You are my hero. I’ve always loved your forward-thinking, fun, sparkling attitude about life. Even in this situation, as hard as it is, you haven’t lost your sparkle.

Which isn’t to say that you’re not feeling all sorts of other things, too. This may not be a walk in the park, but I hope you had a pleasant walk in our Prospect Park on this surprisingly warm fall day.

I’m sure you know how cherished you are by your friends. I hope you know that you inspire us every day. Now more than ever.

LACTATION SPECIALISTS: GET THEE TO WILLIAMSBURG

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FROM BLOCK MAGAZINE: a magazine that proudly serves and observes Williamsburg, Greenpoint, and Bushwick.

Williamsburg has an apparent lack of resources for breastfeeding
mothers. Most women are forced to travel to Manhattan or Park Slope for
breastfeeding stores and classes. The nearest representative of La
Leche League, an international support and informational resource for
breastfeeding women, is in Fort Greene. "There is definitely a need for
lactation services in Williamsburg," says Barbara Holmes, an
International Board Certified Lactation Consultant who has many clients
in Williamsburg.

ONE PLUS ONE MAKES THREE: LOUIS AND CAPATHIA

Here’s what I was thinking after Capathia Jenkins’ and Louis Rosen’s tight, moving, musically glorious show at Joe’s Pub last night: How lucky they are to be working together.  And how lucky we are to witness the on-going story of their unbelievably fruitful collaboration.

For Capathia: Louis has created a personal repetoire for her that fits her vocal instrument and emotional range like a glove. How lucky she is. It’s like she has her own private George Gershwin, Steven Sondheim, Burt Bacharach, Antonio Jobim, and Randy Newman rolled into one. She’s a lucky, lucky girl One plus one make three.

For Louis: Capathia is a perfect muse for his continuing evolution as an artist. Her voice challenges him to create incredible songs that express many sides of them both.

As a duo: They compliment one another. Louis with his edgy, intimate, low-tech voice is great alongside Capathia’s virtuosic intensity. Each enhances the other.

First he created songs on
Maya Angelou’s poetry. Then a song cycle about various
characters growing up in a neighborhood in transition on the South Side
of Chicago (based on Louis’ non-fiction book).

Now, he’s working on a song cycle based on the poetry of
Nikki Giovanni. They did one of the Giovanni songs as an encore and it was a standout.

Great, great show. I for one am going back again next week with some friends.  For info and tickets, go to Joe’s Pub. To buy their debut album, Southside Stories, go to CDbaby.com

YOU CAN DRESS UP AS THE DEVIL BUT YOU CAN’T WEAR A HITLER COSTUME?

A Brooklyn high school student, who attends the elite Leon M. Goldstein High School caused quite a a stir Tuesday when he showed up for school on Halloween dressed as Adolph Hitler.

The student, Walter Petryk, said it was a parody of the Nazi dictator.

But some students and officials didn’t get the joke.

The school ordered the junior honors student to remove his coat, his swastika armband or possibly face spending the day
in the office, according to Wednesday’s editions of the New York Post.

Petryk refused, saying his parody was protected by freedom of expression rights.

Petryk’s
stepfather is Jewish and lost relatives during the
Nazi genocide, told the Post he was initially ‘very disturbed’ by the
costume but nonetheless defended his step son’s rights.

To get to school, Petryk disguised his
Hitler costume with a costume of Charlie Chaplin, with a bowler hat and
cane.

PUPPETS ON GARFIELD PLACE

All these years in the Slope and we’ve never been brownstone streets  trick-or-treaters. We usually stick to Seventh Avenue and do the parade.

Now that Ducky is around, though, we’ve started to venture onto Garfield and First Street for trick-or-treating and it’s quite a revelation.

People sit in front of their brownstones giving out candy. Some sit on top of the stoop and give out candy there (make ’em work for their candy!). Some even make you ring the doorbell.

Mid-block on Garfield there was a big crowd, music, applause. "What’s going on?" I asked.  The Black Box Theater I was told. Some professional puppeteers do a black light puppet show out their ground floor window. The Puppets: a skeleton, some ghosts, a movable skull and a trumpet. The song: "I Ain’t Got No Body."

It is so well done and funny — I was WOWED. And it’s been going on for years. So I’m the last to know. It won’t be the last time.

Picture to come. Yoo Hugh, Where’s that picture?

THE BANK OF AMERICA ON A SUNDAY EVENING

Walking by the new Seventh Avenue B&A on Sunday evening coming home from a dinner party, we couldn’t help but notice that it was a bit of a mess again.

There seems to be some kind of weird liquid splashed on the window on the Union Street side.

Inside, someone left a scarf and there was a weekend’s worth of paper receipts on the floor.

If you’re gonna do brightly lit, you have to keep it litter free and clean. I think so anyway.

BANk OF AMERICA: SOMEONE CLEANED UP!

Happy to report that someone cleaned up the rubbage in the new Bank of America ATM storefront on Seventh Avenue and Union Street.

They even put some new door knobs on the door. I checked to see if they removed the piece of paper taped on with the number 94 written on it. NOPE.

The place still has the in-progress look. Someone put a flyer up in there. They do have a big, clean white wall with nothing on it.

Still, it seems that those ATMs just set themselves up and there’s no body watching over that space?

COMMUNITY BOOKSTORE : A NEWSLETTER AND BOOK GROUPS

The Slant on the Slope, the much enjoyed newsletter from the Community Bookstore has been revived. YAY. It is delivered via email now and can be downloaded in PDF format. Join their Yahoo group: communitybookstore@yahoogroups.com or go into the store and sign up for the newsletter so you can get all the Community Bookstores news.

Okey-Dokey!  Here’s our new idea.  We’re resurrecting the Slant,
and attaching it to email as a pdf.  Does this work for you?  We think
it will eliminate reading lots of lengthy-lengthy emails (and be
prettier, too), plus there will be paper versions available in the
store for those *non* emailing-types.  (Or you, if you’d rather . . .
at least you’ll know it’s there).
The big news in the Slant: The Community Bookstore has a Music Listening Group (currently meeting the first Tuesday of every month at 7:30) nd two new Book groups.

A Book Club of (and for?) the Unappreciated, which will meet third Wednesday of the month at 7:30 p.m.

The eclectic and interesting reading list includes; Between the Acts (Virginia Woolfe), Babylon Revisited (Fitzgerald), Dubliners (James Joyce), If Streets Could Talk (James Baldwin), and other works by Tolstoy, Garcia Marques, Flaubet, Borges, and Mark Twain, Jane Austen, Jamaica Kincaid,

The Heavyweights of Jewish Philosophy on Tour at the Community Bookstore meets Tuesday nights at 9 p.m (open to negotiation). Rabbi Micah Kelber, a Bay Ridge rabbi (who I interviewed for a Brooklyn Papers article and was much impressed with) will be leading this along with Josh Milstein of Community Books. The reading list includes: Buber, Arendt, Maimonedes, Scholem, Rozenzweig and MORE. If you are interested speak to Josh joshua.milstein@gmail.com.

CHECK OUT THE WINNING DESIGN FOR THE PARK SLOPE PARENTS LOGO

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Park Slope Parents
held a design competition for a design for their new logo. Go to Flickr to see the winning design and the designs that did not win. The designer is Sarah Way. As designer of the winning entry, Sarah will
receive a gift certificate in the amount of $100.

Sarah Way is a freelance graphic designer,
who designs retail packaging, promotional materials, magazine ads, business cards, logos, pamphlets, catalogs, book jackets, and textbooks.

The logo design competition attracted 26 designs, submitted by a total of nine artists. Over 200 PSP members voted and Sarah’s design was the top vote recipient.

FROM CORNELIA STREET TO SMITH

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A Brooklyn Life reports that they received a tip (a rumor, a hunch) from a reader who says that Po, that great Italian restaurant on Cornelia Street, which was Mario Batali’s first place, is coming to Smith Street.

Batali no longer owns the restaurant but it still serves excellent Italian food. Anyone have more on this. Silly rumor or TRUTH?

It won’t be the first West Village place to open an outpost in Brooklyn. The Cornelia Street Cafe’s owner opened Night and Day (now Biscuit) on Fifth Avenue) a year ago. And before that, Mary’s Fish Camp, which opened Brooklyn Fish Camp on Fifth Avenue.

Is this the Great West Village migration?

Pix by Linda Sandoval on Flickr
 

THAT NEW BANK OF AMERICA ON THE CORNER OF UNION…

…it’s a mess. What gives?

Today I was going to try it out (for bloggy purposes of course). First I noticed that the windows were dirty and there was tons of paper garbage on the floor.

What? N receptacles for paper receipts and the like. Sure enough, there is one but it’s not near enough to the machines. Then I tried to get in the door and I noticed the door handles had been removed — vandalism? something else?

You’d think they’d wanna make a nice impression.

DEFINITELY MAYBE

Yesterday crews were setting up at the Montauk Club. There was a lot of loud noise right above my office. A lot of movies use The Montauk Club as a staging area for shoots. The Club is also used as a location.

There were NO PARKING signs on Lincoln Place between Seventh and Eighth Avenue. Cones were on Eighth Avenue.

My friend is the Director of Photography on this film, which is called, Definitely Maybe, so it will be fun to see him in action (if they are shooting out on the street).

The little girl from "Litte Miss Sunshine" has a big part in this movie. Rachel Weisz is in it as well. 

BISCUIT SCOOP: THE REAL STORY

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Night and Day has this note on their website.

We are delighted to discover that our new chef, Josh Cohen, owned the late lamented, much praised Biscuit BBQ on Flatbush. Barbecue is much needed in Park Slope, which as we discovered to our cost, another French, Italian, or American bistro, however beautiful, is not.

Josh was featured on the Al Roker show, named best Barbecue buy the New York Times, lavishly praised by Time Out.

Accordingly, we have decided to adopt Josh, his menu, and the name of his restaurant.  This requires retooling the kitchen and making some adjustments to signage, menu and so on. Our beautiful back room remains the NIGHT AND DAY ROOM and is available for quieter dining, parties, and some of the less raucous presentations.  We aim to reopen the week of October 30.

So there you have it. A note from Night and Day, written I would guess, by the very literary owner, Robin Hirsch, a former Fullbright scholar and author of The Kempinki, a book of poetry written with his kids called, "F.E.G. Stupid Poems for Intelligent Children."

Anyone who has spent time at his West Village restaurant, the legendary Cornelia Street Cafe, knows that Robin can write. I, for one, am happy he came out with this nformation before more rumors and misinformation spread.

Pix from Flickr:   flickr.com/photos/shannonholman/show/

                                                               
               

ITCHY HANDS AND FEET: ALLERGIC REACTION IN THE HAMPTONS

The strangest thing happened to me last night after dinner at East Hampton’s Della Femina restaurant (this was after screening of Margarete Von Trotta’s film "I Am The Other Woman at the Hamptons International Film Festival).

I had a weird allergic reaction and I have no idea what caused it. My hands and feet itched under the skin. My right eye got swollen and my nasal passages got stuffed up. I had a hard time swallowing and was generally very uncomfortable.

The itching on the palms of my hands and soles of my feet was probably the worst part of it.

Here’s what had for dinner:

A delicious three mushroom and broccoli soup with cheddar cheese

A pork chop with apple compote, celery root slaw and swiss chard

Two glasses of a French red wine

Then my hands started to itch. It got worse before it got better. I slept fitfully. Took a Claritin. Thankfully, when I woke up I felt fine. The whole thing was so mysterious.

BISCUIT: YOU ARE THE ONE

From a reliable source: The owners of Night and Day are opening BISCUIT in their space on Fifth Avenue and President Street. They found out the hard way that one more bistro on Fifth Avenue just wasn’t going to cut the mustard. So they threw in the towel on bistro fare and are switching over to BBQ — I’m guessing in collaboration with the old Biscuit crew from Flatbush Avenue. (Perhaps the former cook/owner at Biscuit will be a part owner?)

It didn’t sit right with me that the owners of N&D would close after just over a year.

Also: They plan to move the performace space to the front so that passersby will know that there’s KULTURE inside.

They plan to continue to call the back room NIGHT AND DAY and will continue to have KULTURE in there (see above post).

YAY to Night and Day for not completely giving up. Pick yourself up, dust yourself off, start all over again.

I admire that. Three cheers for BBQ night and day.  It’ll be opening SOON.

BROOKLYN FREE SCHOOL: OPEN HOUSE

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Found this in my Inbox from someone I know from my son’s pre-school. Her son is now in high school at the Brooklyn Free School.  YOU MUST SEE THEIR FANTASTIC WEBSITE.

I’d really appreciate it if you’d post this on your
Blog–especially because it ties in with your running dialog and Smart
Mon column about homework. No homework is just one part of the Brooklyn
Free School’s philosophy of self-directed learning.

 
The Brooklyn Free School will be hosting an open house this
Thursday eve, Oct 26, from 6 to 8 PM. The address is 120 16th Street,
Brooklyn 11215 (between 4th and 5th Avenues). The Phone is
917-715-7157.  The sign in front says Free Methodist Church. Students
will be on hand to talk with visitors.
 
For more information about the Brooklyn Free School, log onto our Web site: www.brooklynfreeschool.org
 

ANNIE LEIBOVITZ COMES TO BROOKLYN

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The media, including bloggers like me, was invited to the Annie Leibovitz show at the Brooklyn Museum Thursday morning. When I got there, a woman handed me a press packet and said excitedly, "Annie is walking the reporters around the show."

Surrounded by dozens of hungry reporters and camera people, there she was, this tall, unglamorous, real looking person — the person behind all those Vanity Fair and Rolling Stone covers and spreads — talking graciously about her life as a photographer.

Her mentor, Robert Frank, taught her that "You can’t get every pictrure," back when she was shooting for Rolling Stone. She said she was dumbfounded and then relieved. "I was only as good as my last picture back then."

She never thought of herself as a rock and roll photographer, who lived for the music. "It was always about the photographs," she said. But all those Rolling Stone covers taught her about portraiture. Later at Vanity Fair, she got tired of showing up at shoots and having to figure out what to do with the subject on the spot. "That’s when the work got conceptual," she said.

The portraits she did for Vanity Fair, whether it’s Scarlet Johansson looking like an underaged hooker, Karen Finley showing off her curvacous backside, Julian Schnabel in his ubiquitous pajamas, with paint on his shoes, or a nude and pregnant Demi Moore exuding a powerfully maternal vibe, come across as   as a knowing collaboration between two people — celebrity and photographer.

Make no mistake, these are two experts engaged in the art of image making.

It would be true to say that  Leibovitz is an instrument in the star making machinary of our celebrity culture. The show is, at once, a celebration and a critique of it. One of the last portrait images in the show is a grotesque shot of Melania Trump posing naked and pregnant in a gold bikini on the steps of a private jet (in all of its phallic grandeur), with Donald Trump practically hidden nearby in a sports car.

An obvious perversion (or progression) of the photographic gesture that began with the nude shot of a pregnant Demi Moore with a big diamond ring, the Trump shot is a crass display of money, power, and the trophy values of our commercial culture (including the cache of having one’s picture taken by  Leibovitz).

The show ends with a display of enormous black and white landscapes, Walking in, I said to myself, the critics are really going to nail her for these because they set off pretension alarms.  And yet, they are like  Leibovitz’s other work about power and fame. In this case, portraits of monuments of nature that have the same recongizablity and star power as the human celebs,  Leibovitz  compared them to the group shots she became famous for at Vanity Fair. "I don’t like groups, they’re anti-photography, really. But in this context they’re like a time-line of where I’ve been."

The show includes a large number of personal snapshots of her family and her life partner, Susan Sontag. These seemingly off-hand snapshots of Susan and Annie on vacation, in cancer wards, in hotel rooms, with Annie’s children are displayed right next to the big, commercial work. But they are also shown as small prints and tear sheets on pin up boards.

The family shots are, ultimately, about the decay of the body. Her mother’s flabby, unapologetic figure in a bathing suit, her father on his deathbed, Susan Sontag in a unflattering hospital gown, Annie posed a la Demi Moore big and pregnant, Susan Sontag layed out after her death in funeral home wearing a Fortuny dress looking like Gertrude Stein. There is, of course, beauty in these shots, but beauty of a different order: it is unadorned and real.

Ultimately, there is a continum between these two strands of  Leibovitz’s work.  “I don’t have two lives. This is one life, and the personal pictures and the assignment work are all part of it," she writes. Whether she is trying to make the most out of high-end, overproduced encounter with a celebrity or snapping gently in the homes of her family and friends, Annie Lebovitz’s work is much more personal than anyone ever expected.

That’s because her life as a celebrity photogarpher and her personal life are one and the same. "I had no life when I was younger. I was so wrapped up in the shoots," she told the reporters. Ultimately she created an unorthodox family in her late forties, which became her inadvertant muse. At the time, Susan Sontag told her that she’s the only photographer she knows who doesn’t take pictures all the time. I guess  Leibovitz took her advice.

It must have been great to have one of the world’s foremost theorists on photography around for constant comment and critique.

By taking on a real life,  Leibovitz takes on the big stuff: birth, illness, death, more death.  Leibovitz  lost her lover, Susan Sontag and her father within weeks of each other. Real life, it turns out, is about as unglamorous as you can get (even if they did travel to incredible places).

The personal pictures, shown in serial form, are not as bold and beautiful as her famous work. But they do pull you in – partially because they satisfy certain voyeuristic tendencies (mine) I got to see the screen of Susan Sontag’s Apple computer and what her handwritten notes look like. I saw what famous people look like when they are on vacation, with their families, in hospital beds.

We are all so ordinary and the same in hospitals.

Susan Sontage in a tiny NYC-style bathtub covering her mastectomy scar is breathtaking in its ordinary power. It also reminded me of the many famous pictures Leibovitz has done of celebrities like Whoopie Goldberg and Bette Midler in the bathtub.

"You only get one shot for a magazine cover," she told reporters. But real life is abut multiples, about what happens before and after "the picture."

And for these photograph, she didn’t have to bring any props to the shoot.

They were pictures just waiting to be told.

EMAIL FROM PETE SEEGER: END THE WAR NOW

I did a doubletake when I saw this email from Pete Seeger in my inbox. Here it is, a heartfelt anti-war letter from a legend who feels like an old, dear friend.

Protest music has been around for thousands of years. It just leaks out every so often and helps make history.

A group of young people and not-so-young people have gotten together to
sing one of my songs that I wrote around 1965 about the Vietnam War.
And they’ve done what I did a few years ago; they’re singing it about
the situation in Iraq. "Bring ’em Home!"

You can watch them singing and share it with your friends right here:


http://www.workingfamiliesparty.org/bringthemhome/

What they are saying is we need to send the politicians a message in a
language they understand: election day votes. Here in New York, voting on the Working Families line is the best way to tell the politicians, bring them home, bring them home.

We’re in a very dangerous situation. The problems in the Middle East
are not going away — they’re getting worse. Churchill said, anybody who
thinks, when they get into a war, that they know what’s going to
happen, is fooling themselves. With all the power that the American
military establishment has, they still cannot predict all the things
that are going to happen.

To quote Martin Luther King, the weakness of violence is that it always
creates more violence. Darkness cannot drive out darkness. Only light
can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate. Only love can do that.

That’s the message at the end of the song, "the world needs
teachers, books and schools . . . And learning a few universal rules."
I’m glad they left that verse in.

Watch the video and then pass it on:


http://www.workingfamiliesparty.org/bringthemhome/

There’s a saying from William James a young friend painted on my
barn. It goes: "I am done with great things and big things, great
institutions and big success, and I am for all those tiny invisible
molecular moral forces that work from individual to individual . . .
like so many rootlets, or like the capillary oozing of water, which, if
given time, will rend the hardest monuments of pride."

Apply this to the current situation: Take this email and forward it
to your friends and family. Technology will save us if it doesn’t wipe
us out first.

We need to spread this message. Back in the sixties, I’d go from
college to college to college singing songs. That’s how folk songs were
shared. Sure, some person who thought it was an unpatriotic song might
boo, but a few seconds later he’d be drowned out by a few thousands
voices who started cheering enthusiastically. Made the poor guy start
thinking.

Change comes through small organizations. You divide up the jobs:
Some people sing bass, some sing soprano. Some copy the sheet music,
others drive and pick up those who ride the subway. You take small
steps. They all add up.

Take a small step today. Here’s your part: Tell your family and your
friends about what we can do to send a message to the politicians to
bring our troops home. And then vote on election day.

The very worst thing is for people to say: "My vote doesn’t count. So
why bother to vote at all?" Our votes do count. And if we vote to bring
the troops home, they count even more.

Let’s bring them home:


http://www.workingfamiliesparty.org/bringthemhome/

In solidarity,

Pete Seeger

 

CHANGE OF SCENE: UPSTATE FOR THE DAY

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Yesterday, we drove up to Kingston for Dadu and Red Eft’s party to celebrate the 13th and final Lemony Snicket book. Red Eft’s brother, a supernumerary at the Metropolitan Opera, was supposed to come dressed as Count Olaf, but he couldn’t make it.

So we met up with him in Manhattan and picked up the make-up and disguise (prepared by the make-up artistat the opera), so that Dadu could wear it.

We made it to Kingston in record time, just enough time for Dadu to become a perfect Count Olaf.

The enormous dining room of their grand Victorian home was decorated with a festive circle of all the Series of Unfortuante Events (SOUE) books. Lots of friends, most from the local home schooling community, were in attendance

There was a bountiful feast of dishes based on the book, including a menu taken from various volumes: Pasta Puttanesca of
course, Parsley Soda, Aqueous Martinis, Mango/Black Bean Salad, Aunt
Josephine’s Chilled and Chapfallen Cucumber Soup and a
Quaff-the-Bitter-Cup Coconut Cream Cake inspired by Uncle Monty), a
magnet fishing game for Stricken Salmon, and a Dewey Decimal hunt
borrowed from The Penultimate Peril’s Hotel Denouement. All these dishes are mentioned in the books.

Dadu’s daughter was very frightened when she first saw him in diguise. Red Eft had to take her another room until she calmed down. Later, she was positively giddy about Dadu’s new face.

After the party, adult scragglers talked and the kids engaged in "extreme" imaginary play in costumes, while listening to the SOUE soundtrack. Red Eft and Dadu’s nine-year-old son, WM Thing, showed  the movies that he makes. You can see some of them at his website.

We ducked out to get OSFO some BIG pumpkins at a farm stand. The drive back to the city was slow but not as bad as we expected.

Big day in the country. Great party. Fabulous autumnal leaves. Too much driving. Worth it to celebrate with friends.

BOB DYLAN’S AMERICAN JOURNEY: AT THE MORGAN LIBRARY

Dylanphotos
I once saw Bob Dylan in Park Slope. It was on Eighth Avenue at Lincoln Place, right across from the Montauk Club. He was with a photographer and it was June 12, 2001—I remember because it was my son’s birthday—and we were on our way to the subway for an evening in Manhattan.

A small, polite crowd was standing on the corner, talking to Bob. As he walked away, I asked for his autograph and he obliged. He wrote his name on my Mastercard envelope (it was all I had with me).

It’s framed and on the bookshelf in the living room. Did I mention I said to him: "You’re my idol."

I can’t help it. I am such a Dylan fan and this show at the Morgan Library sounds good to me. I am so there. 


Bob Dylan’s American Journey, 1956–1966,
the first
comprehensive exhibition devoted to Bob Dylan’s early career, is on
view at The Morgan Library & Museum from September 29, 2006,
through January 6, 2007. The exhibition examines the critical ten-year
period that coincides with Dylan’s transformation from folk troubadour
to rock innovator during a momentous, turbulent period of American
history. Bob Dylan’s American Journey, 1956–1966, is organized by Experience Music Project, Seattle, Washington.

The
exhibition includes original typed and handwritten lyrics, rarely seen
photographs, concert and television footage, posters and handbills of
Dylan’s early performances in New York, and other artifacts. Several
Dylan manuscripts and typescripts of lyrics from a selection of more
than ninety songs given to The Morgan Library & Museum in the late
1990s by collector George Hecksher will also be on view. These include
such well-known songs as "Blowin’ in the Wind," "It’s Alright, Ma,"
"Masters of War," "Ballad in Plain D," and "Gates of Eden."

Bob Dylan’s American Journey
traces Dylan’s personal and artistic development, beginning in postwar
Hibbing, Minnesota, the industrial town where Robert Zimmerman (b.
1941) grew up as a store owner’s son inspired by early rock and roll.
The exhibition follows Dylan to his debut on the national stage of the
Greenwich Village folk scene—one of history’s most fascinating
intersections of art, politics, and lifestyle—through to his massive
fame as one of the first true rock stars and the man who "electrified"
contemporary songwriting. This ten-year span encompasses the release of
some of Dylan’s seminal albums, including The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, Bringing It All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited, and Blonde on Blonde.

BIAS CRIME VICTIM DIES AFTER ONE WEEK IN COMA

This from New York 1:

Twenty-eight year old Michael Sandy, who police say was assaulted by
three men in a hate crime last week, died Friday afternoon after being
removed from life support.

Sandy had been in a coma since being beaten on Sunday in Brooklyn.
He was removed from life support at the request of his family.

Nineteen-year-old John Fox, Gary Timmins, 16, and Ilya Shurov, 20,
were charged with robbery in the first and second degrees and assault
in the first degree, all as hate crimes.

There is no word yet whether police will upgrade those charges now that Sandy has died.

Investigators say the men used the Internet to lure Sandy to an
isolated parking lot near Sheepshead Bay with the promise of a sexual
encounter.

But when he got there, police say the men attacked him.

The confrontation eventually spilled onto the Belt Parkway, where Sandy was struck by a car.