I thought it was just a rumor, but instruments recorded wind gusts of over 160 MPH (200 KPH) on the ridgetops of Glacier National Park Friday night. Thank goodness we didn't feel any effects down in the valley to the west of the park here. There were seriously destructive winds in my old neighborhood near Seattle, Washington -- many tall trees fell down, and killed some individuals. Power was knocked out for over a million people in the Puget Sound area. I mention it because we were part of that same storm system -- again. We've shared some nasty weather with the West Coast this winter! In the clear, cold early afternoon sunshine on Sunday, I saw a Bald Eagle eating a fish on the lake. A Deer family was snooping for Sunflowers while my little cat Buttercup stood six feet away on the back deck -- they looked each other in the eyes, sniffed, and went about their business.
Footbarn's Celebration of Theatre:
Theater X-Net
Starring: Ida Rubinstein Belle Epoch Russian/Parisian beauty.
Ida's Places in Paris -- from my first jet-lagged day by the Seine.
Read more about Ida in Sisters of Salome by Toni Bentley
Visit: Michael's Montana Web ArchiveTheater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!NEW!
Spitfires of the Spaceways Watch Dale Arden rescue Flash Gordon for a change!
Charity Alert: Keep that resolution as Winter settles in. Click on
The Hunger Site every day.
In The Community: Flathead Valley Community College had it's annual Christmas party. I was able to go because
Art Walk was two weeks earlier, instead of the same night. My boss synthesized a game show called
Who Wants To Be A Genius? which was one of the best participatory events I've ever seen in these circumstances. I had a small cameo part as big-voiced "Howie" from
Deal Or No Deal. Next year we'll host this "do" in our own building. Speaking of which, the
Hockaday Museum of Art is on it's way towards it's OWN addition to the century-old Carnagie Library building which houses us.
Media Watch:
Cecil B. DeMented by John Waters was on IFC. I think I've blogged about this film before, but it was shown between jumps to
Sunset Boulevard and
In A Lonely Place on TCM. All three are movies about the movie industry.
C. B. DeMented definitely counts as minor John Waters, but there's a discernably unique spirit in this particular production. I don't have any trouble praising or dismissing Melanie Griffith's acting, and I think she's excellent in this film. (Sam Waterson and Kathleen Turner were also good in Waters' equally preposterous
Serial Mom.) A bit of inside humor I missed in previous viewings was gun-toting, gold-bricking Teamsters going after non-union idealists on C.B.'s crew -- fictional porn star Cherish temporarily saves everybody's lives by taking refuge in a skid-row theater, which happens to be showing her movies, and enlisting the assistance of her moaning, ecstatic fans. It's worth noting that Tracy Lords shot two movies with Waters, the making of which gave her a "leg up" out of the sex-movie trade, and led to a much more rewarding career in the entertainment industry at large. Patricia Hearst played the mother of one of C.B.'s crew -- I wonder what she thought about being in a movie whose main plot-point was Melanie (Honey Whitlock) Griffith's kidnapping? Honey's "mainsteam" movie also resembled Cherish's "pornographic" film, with minor exceptions of course. There were many jokes about celebrity and stardom, which both Griffith and Waters know something about, but they were mostly sad jokes.
One kind of misbegotten movie derided by C.B.'s possee has gotta be George Cukor's lugubrious
My Fair Lady, also shown on TCM this weekend. Production values aside, it deprived posterity of a visual transcription of the great Broadway hit which made Julie Andrews a star. The chemistry between her and Rex Harrison had to be astonishing, but Audrey Hepburn, for all her talent and beauty, was cynically inserted into the flick as a voiced-over clothes horse. Andrews showed the whole world how excellent an actor she was in
The Americanization of Emily. She also showed the gawdamn bean-counters how overwhelmingly popular she could be in
Mary Poppins and
Sound of Music. Love 'em or hate 'em, Julie Andrews is GREAT in musicals!
Billy Wilder's
Sunset Boulevard is sometimes called a black comedy -- maybe it is, but it also counts as a 50's
film noir. What Kenneth Anger called "the evil star system" squirms in front of the viewer's eyes as Wilder turns the underside of Hollywood's rock over for a brief moment. C.B. DeMille was very much alive at this time, and I wonder what he thought about the way his name was used in this film. I also wonder if he still socialized with his ex-compatriots Eric Von Stroheim and Gloria Swanson. I will take this opportunity to mention that Andrew Lloyd Weber's musical version of
Sunset Boulevard was a triumph on Broadway for first-rate movie actress Glenn Close not too long ago.
In A Lonely Place was made by Humphrey Bogart's production company, and took a couple of risks, considering it was a post-WWII film with an expensive major star. Since it's in black and white, and tells an unpleasant crime story featuring a talented, but violent Hollywood writer (Bogart) it qualifies as yet another
film noir. Co-star Gloria Graham was young, beautiful, and sexy -- her husband at the time was also the director of this movie, Nicholas Ray, who made sure the audience knew just how lucky he was. After the show, TCM told a story about Graham divorcing Ray, and marrying his son. Prolific filmmaker Nicholas Ray has been described by others as a "Multi-sexual Hollywood creature." He had a none-too-savory role in the blighted career of Natalie Wood, and goodness knows what else. (As if goodness has anything at all to do with sociopathic power-mongering.)
Another story TCM could have told was how Humphrey Bogart had a wife in the 40's who drunkenly bragged all over Hollywood how she was going to murder him. Bogart wasn't particularly promiscuous by movie star standards, and began his famous lifelong romance with Lauren Bacall after he was safely out of the power of the scary ex-Mrs. Bogart. His character in
Lonely Place was a mean drunk, who, though innocent of one certain murder, was a clear and present danger to the ingenue who loved him at first, but learned to fear for her life as she witnessed his repeated rages. Whose life was imitated by who's art? I can't leave this discussion without mentioning Alfred Hitchcock's proto-
noir movie
Suspicion. It is much less gritty, but has a similar vibe, with another stellar movie actor (Cary Grant) as another contemptible leading man.
Time Magazine's Person of the Year is YOU -- particularly the vast population of the world who interact online. I choose to treat their choice as a marketing ploy, much like 1967's 25 and Under. It's worth a load of laughs, though, and I'm glad to join in the fun -- here we go! This is the second time in 40 years that the cover of Time has been devoted to ME -- here's a montage of "real" Time covers interspersed with versions featuring my OWN face, from High School and the 21st Century. I even entered it on Huffington Post's Contagious Festival.
Time Magazine's logo and content are property of their copyright holders. This graphic is satirical comment, protected by US law, and is not to be confused with any actual Time/Warner productions.