Thursday, March 08, 2007

Golden Eye Ducks around the aereation pond on Middle Foy's Lake. Skunk on the back deck last night, but no bad smells -- the Deer must have left him/her alone. Seagulls calling around the college campus -- what language!

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 Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
SPECIAL: Spitfires of the Spaceways
Watch Dale Arden rescue Flash Gordon for a change!

Charity Alert: Make a resolution as Spring (slowly) approaches to click on The Hunger Site every day.

In The Community: We got the museum into fair shape for today's Senior Tour and Tea. We've moved over a hundred works of art over the last few days -- thankfully, most of them were small. Tomorrow night is the Auction of Miniatures preview party at the Hockaday. FREE to the public! Don't miss: Auction of Miniatures thumbnail pictures and a bid form on the Hockaday Museum of Art's Website.

Media Watch: Marvel Comics is getting all sorts of free press for "bumping off" Captain America. As I said yesterday -- YEAH RIGHT!

Another homage to Joe Simon and Jack Kirby's anything-but-subtle stars-and-stripes super-hero -- born as a comic-book protest to pro-Nazi Bunden and America Firsters before the USA even entered WWII. Against a poster for a 40's chapter serial starring Dick Purcell and Lorna Gray, I've placed images of Captain America by Jack Kirby and Syd Shores in 1941, with Cap's long-lost sidekick Bucky, and his arch-nemesis the Red Skull in the frame; Jim Steranko's graphical mixture of Will Eisner with Kirby in 1970; and a sketch from Kirby & Shores' brief reunification in 1969.



Jack split with Joe Simon in the 50's, and revived Captain America in the pages of Marvel's Avengers around 1964. Our hero had supposedly been frozen in Arctic ice since the 40's. The injection which made him super probably had something to do with it, and might play a part in the NEXT phase of this fictional character's existence.

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Two days of excellent Early Spring weather. The Red-Winged Blackbirds are back with their beautiful singing!

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 Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
SPECIAL: Spitfires of the Spaceways
Watch Dale Arden rescue Flash Gordon for a change!

Charity Alert: Make a resolution as Spring (slowly) approaches to click on The Hunger Site every day.

In The Community: Worked all day yesterday helping Mark Norley and Linda Engh-Grady install the Minatures Show at the Hockaday. Don't miss: Auction of Miniatures thumbnail pictures and a bid form on the Hockaday Museum of Art's Website!
I went right from there to set up and run FVCC's Honors Symposium at the Red Lion Hotel in the evening. Dr. Debra Miller was very good. She'd worked hard to prepare the keynote lecture in this series on Emerging Roles in Gender. As a sociologist, she clearly explained the none-too-comfortable fact that we are ALL born with a sex, but how we deal with that fact is indoctrinated into us by our various societies -- on so many levels that it is impossible to scientifically distill "Nature" from "Nurture."
The next one is Monday, March 12 - Feminism 101 by Brooke Barnett, director of the Department of Women’s Studies at the University of Montana in Missoula. I'll be running the PA and a Laptop/Data Projector combination for her PowerPoint presentation.

Media Watch: The History Channel was doing another Barbarians Week: Lombards; Franks; Vandals; Saxons; Mongols (Told ya' they belonged in this bunch!); Huns; Goths; and my ol' homeboys, the Vikings -- they outlined the life of bloody King Harald Hadrada of Norway, but skipped King Canute altogether, even though he briefly united most of the North Sea under his rule and did more to establish Christianity as a unifying force than even King Olaf (Harald's older half-brother).
Their new Dark Ages show was just the start.
I saw Derailroaded, a film by Josh Rubin and Jeremy Lubin about out-there street singer Larry (Wild Man) Fischer. Wikipedia article HERE. He was somehow associated with Bill Mumy, Robert Haimer, and the song Fish Heads (One of my favorite early MTV videos). I first heard about Fischer as a protoge of the late Frank Zappa -- the film showed a clip of his appearance on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In when he was on Zappa's Bizarre Records. Zappa and R&M had both sponsored Tiny Tim as well.
I've laughed at the antics of (the late) Tiny Tim and Wild Man Fischer, but I also remember the words of (the late) Phil Ochs: There but for Fortune go you and I...

Mighty Marvel Bombast!

Word is that Marvel Comics' venerable hero Captain America will fall to a sniper's bullet in the next issue. Yeah right. Original co-creator Joe Simon has reportedly said "We still need him!" I frankly doubt that major franchise characters EVER go away for good in comic books -- I know villains don't. This is a portion of Cap's very first issue in 1941. (Most of a year before the US entered WWII) I am very proud to have known his OTHER co-creator -- the late Jakob Kurzenburg AKA Jack (King) Kirby, designer of the Marvel Comics Group.
Image from the Grand Comics Database
Permission granted for all non-commercial use.

Monday, March 05, 2007

People are still fighting a nasty strain of the Common Cold that has attacked some people three times. I haven't got it, and don't want it either. I woke up early Sunday morning to a chattering squeeking sound -- "What was that?" The answer came wafting into our noses. I got up to check, and YES, there was a large Skunk in the back yard, foraging with the Deer. In the moonlight, it's tail looked as big as it's body. He/she sprayed in the driveway too. A light rain seemed to remove the bad scents by Sunday afternoon.

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 Archive
Theater, Art, Flash Gordon, Funky Music and MORE!
NEW! Spitfires of the Spaceways
Watch Dale Arden rescue Flash Gordon for a change!

Charity Alert: Make a resolution as Spring (slowly) approaches to click on The Hunger Site every day.

In The Community: I fixed a ton of leftover Website problems at the Hockaday last Saturday, and hoisted some bulky flipchart easels around town. Auction of Miniatures thumbnail pictures and a bid form on the Hockaday Museum of Art's Website! I'll be there all Tuesday hanging the Miniatures show, with a car full of equipment for FVCC's Honors Symposium at the Red Lion Hotel later that evening.

Flathead Valley Community College's 2007 Honors Symposium
Men and Women/Girls and Boys: Emerging Views on Gender

March 6 - Debra Miller, FVCC sociology instructor, will open the series with a presentation entitled, “Fractured Fairytales,”
March 12 - “Feminism 101,” by Brooke Barnett, director of the Department of Women’s Studies at the University of Montana—Missoula.
March 20 —“Biological Differences,” Dr. Steven Gaulin—Department of Biosocial Anthropology—University of California, Santa Barbara, 7 p.m., Red Lion Hotel;
March 23 and 24 —“Twelfth Night—Gender in the Shakespeare Theatre”—Brian Bechtold—Department of English and British Literature—Flathead Valley Community College, Free lecture from 6-6:30 p.m. followed by FVCC theatre department production of “Twelfth Night” at 7 p.m. Theatre tickets are sold on a first-come, first-serve basis and can be purchased by calling 756-3814. Lecture and theatre production will take place at FVCC, Learning Resource Center, room 123;
March 26 —“Understanding Native American Perspectives on Gender,” Dr. Kathryn Shanley—Native American Studies Program Chairman—University of Montana, Missoula, 7 p.m., Flathead Valley Community College, Learning Resource Center, room 123;
April 9 —“Is There a Boys Crisis in Education,” Dr. Holly Anderson—Department of Education—Boise State University, 7 p.m., Red Lion Hotel;
April 19 —“History of Gender Integration in the Military,” Dr. Lt. Col. Kevin Farrell— Department of History, United States Military Academy, West Point, 7 p.m., Red Lion Hotel.


Media Watch: Remember that History Channel film Exodus which I dissed a few months ago? James Cameron and that same silly bunch of film-making bullshitters are playing similar games with a 1st Century tomb from Palestine in which a family with the names of Joshua, Mary etc. were buried. Many tombs inscribed with the name of Joshua (Jesus) Bar-Joseph have been found over the years -- this scenario is neither new, nor will it change anybody's mind.
Speaking of the History Channel, I tuned in to their 2 hour Dark Ages special. It was glitzy in design, but very bare-bones in it's historical accuracy, and sometimes shakey. There was too much of a jump between Alaric (410 A.D.) and Clovis (490 A.D.), so they missed Gaiseric of the Vandals and Attila the Hun. There was plenty of time time to tell about General Belisarius when they were talking about Emperor Justinian and Emperess Theodora. They rightly mentioned that the Eastern Empire's reconquest of Italy ended up a curse rather than a blessing. They were stupid to say anything about the fictional DaVinci Code while mentioning France's Merovingian Dynasty.
The Catholic Church played many roles in the cultural disaster known as the Dark Ages. The filmakers chose monks like Bede in Britain and Benedict in Italy as the literate faces of that multi-faceted institution. Karl Der Gross got his proper alloted time as Charlemange -- both as bloodthirsty tyrant, converting pagans by the sword, and as patron of literacy. His grand-dad Charles Martel correctly deserved a place in history for his victory over Islamic invaders at Tours -- how the course of our history might have run otherwise is grist for an unending watermill of debate. The Vikings, my more or less direct ancestors, slowed European recovery down by centuries because of their vicious raiding.
I guess you have to set an ending point for the Dark Ages somewhere, and these filmmakers chose the Crusades. They had their reasons.
The way I look at it, I blame the long, sorry, series of bad fortune and misery on unchecked migrations of semi-nomadic populations -- the Germanic invaders, the Huns, the Islamic conquerers, the Vikings, et cetera, but migrations didn't cease with the Crusades!
It is my contention that Europe's continuting bad fortune ended by historical accidents -- like the Mongols sweeping out of Asia to upset the Islamic Empire, and The Great Khan dying as his troops were about to overrun Poland and link up with their army beseiging Vienna. They withdrew to select a new Khan, but didn't come back right away because they'd laid the Steppes to waste.
The Ottomans had several chances to conquer still-backward Christendom, but thanks to Tammerlane's interference in the 14th Century, and the eastward distractions of all-too-capable Sulieman the Great and Mohammed II in the 15th Century, Europe was able to make a Renaissance, and start inflicting it's own gunpowder-fueled Colonialism on the rest of the World.

Theater/Theatre: Howzzabout some Magpie Music/Dance?
March 13 Orgelpark (right off the Overtoom – Vondel Park)
Amsterdam Gerard Brandtstraat 26 / 20.15 (8:15 PM)

Dancers: Katie Duck, Makiko Ito, Eileen Standley; Musicians: Michael Moore (winds) Michael Vatcher (percussion) with Willem Tanke (organ)
For information and reservations go to: www.orgelpark.nl


Katie Duck gettin' DOWN with the Bass during a Magpie performance.
Watch the whole VIDEO by Alex Fischer on Justin Morrison's Site.