Today would have been the 60th Birthday of actor and activist Christopher Reeve.
Like most people, I am most familiar with Reeve thanks to his work in the four Superman movies and then his work around spinal cord injuries following the equestrian accident which paralyzed him.
If you've ever discussed Superman media with me, you know the esteem with which I hold Reeve's performance in the Superman movies. I still find his take to be my touchstone for how I think of the alien who finds the joy in putting on the suit and helping others and who can never understand the forces that drive men like Lex Luthor. I could go on, but suffice it to say, I'm a fan.
Reeve passed in 2004 after a valiant battle with his paralysis and associated ailments. He became the premier voice for spinal cord research in the United States and his foundation is still active today. Reeve had a dream of walking again, and I don't think I was alone in believing he might just pull it off because he so believed it was possible.
For all of us who grew up thinking of Reeve as Superman, to see him take on the challenges dealt to him was an awe inspiring sight, and while you always know that's just an actor wearing the cape, it was a Superman who turned adversity into inspiration.
You can donate to The Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation and help keep the memory of our own Man of Steel alive.
In addition to his work as Superman, I quite like:
Somewhere In Time (1980)
Noises Off (1992)
The Remains of the Day (1993)
Village of the Damned (1995)
and his role as Dr. Virgil Swann on TV's Smallville.
You can see my comments on the day of his death in 2004 here.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Monday, September 24, 2012
Today is the Birthday of World War II Ace Major Richard Bong
Today, Richard Bong would have been 92 years old.
World War II was an odd time for air combat. The mechanized age had come into full swing, and the planes were far superior to the bi-winged aircraft of WWI. Today's pilots are sitting behind 10's of millions of dollars in equipment and tend to get recruited from top universities. During World War II, some airplanes were being assembled out of boxes on the tarmac and flown by anyone with stones enough to get behind the stick.
Richard Bong was one of nine children from a small town in Wisconsin. He was attending a teacher's college when, in 1938, he signed up for the Civilian Pilot Training program (that's age 18) where he trained under Barry Goldwater of all people.
Richard Bong does not have time for your awards. He has planes to shoot down. |
World War II was an odd time for air combat. The mechanized age had come into full swing, and the planes were far superior to the bi-winged aircraft of WWI. Today's pilots are sitting behind 10's of millions of dollars in equipment and tend to get recruited from top universities. During World War II, some airplanes were being assembled out of boxes on the tarmac and flown by anyone with stones enough to get behind the stick.
Richard Bong was one of nine children from a small town in Wisconsin. He was attending a teacher's college when, in 1938, he signed up for the Civilian Pilot Training program (that's age 18) where he trained under Barry Goldwater of all people.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Nobody has been killed more ways or for more reasons than Thomas and Martha Wayne
editor's note: I had called this post something about "Batman: Court of Owls", but it's not really about that, so I went back to my original title.
Many months ago when I was thinking I'd probably continue to follow DC Comics in the wake of the Nu52, I made a decision to just read the collections of Batman comics rather than single issues. Actually, I'd been doing that for a while as I found I really could stand to wait for the trades when it came to the often ill-paced thrills of a Batman mystery unfolding.
To that end, I am now reading the first Batman New52! trade, The Court of Owls.
Thanks to Adam West, I've been a Batman fan literally since before I could talk. Like most kids, I was somewhat unaware of the death of Thomas and Martha Wayne as a motivating factor for Bruce until I started picking up Batman comics in middle school.
Many months ago when I was thinking I'd probably continue to follow DC Comics in the wake of the Nu52, I made a decision to just read the collections of Batman comics rather than single issues. Actually, I'd been doing that for a while as I found I really could stand to wait for the trades when it came to the often ill-paced thrills of a Batman mystery unfolding.
To that end, I am now reading the first Batman New52! trade, The Court of Owls.
Thanks to Adam West, I've been a Batman fan literally since before I could talk. Like most kids, I was somewhat unaware of the death of Thomas and Martha Wayne as a motivating factor for Bruce until I started picking up Batman comics in middle school.
Opera Watch: Siegfried from the Met (2011)
Again, I know absolutely nothing about opera, Germans, Norse/ Germanic mythology, etc...
But we did make it through four hours of Siegfried, the third in the four opera cycle by our good friend Wagner.
And, boy howdy, does a lot happen in this thing.
Siegfried is the child of the lovers/ twin siblings (I KNOW) from Die Walküre, the preceding episode. He has grown to manhood under the watchful eye of Mime, the brother of the Nibelung, Alberich, from Das Rheingold. Our hero is both preternaturally brave and oddly unworldly, having had grown up in the woods among bears and wolves.
I'll leave it to you to Google the plot, but in this installment the use of the rotating arms of the set and integrated visuals reached a new level of sophistication, with interactive digital leaves, a singing, 3D bird and imaginative use of the shifting set.
But we did make it through four hours of Siegfried, the third in the four opera cycle by our good friend Wagner.
And, boy howdy, does a lot happen in this thing.
Siegfried is the child of the lovers/ twin siblings (I KNOW) from Die Walküre, the preceding episode. He has grown to manhood under the watchful eye of Mime, the brother of the Nibelung, Alberich, from Das Rheingold. Our hero is both preternaturally brave and oddly unworldly, having had grown up in the woods among bears and wolves.
Singing AND Dragon Slaying! |
I'll leave it to you to Google the plot, but in this installment the use of the rotating arms of the set and integrated visuals reached a new level of sophistication, with interactive digital leaves, a singing, 3D bird and imaginative use of the shifting set.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
So, sometimes I work on this manuscript
Hey, it's the weekend, which means nobody is paying attention. So I'm going to talk about something that has nothing to do with anything we usually cover.
When I was a college freshman I wrote a 140 page manuscript in WordPerfect, I believe. It's since been lost to time, formats and a lack of what we in the digital libraries world refer to as "forward migration". And, frankly, I'm totally okay with that. I gave up looking for a copy of it as far back as 2006.
I don't even really remember what the manuscript was about except that when I finished it I didn't really feel like it had actually been about anything at all. I was just coughing something up. Sure, it was a sort of novel-like thing, and it featured characters and had a beginning, middle and end. Characters grew and changed, had conflicts, and resolved them amicably or otherwise. But even as I wrapped it up, the lead character started echoing my own thoughts about the pointlessness of the narrative itself and the whole thing sort of ate it's own tail, which I'd like to report was a brilliant twist or comment on adolescence in the suburbs - but it was not.
When I was a college freshman I wrote a 140 page manuscript in WordPerfect, I believe. It's since been lost to time, formats and a lack of what we in the digital libraries world refer to as "forward migration". And, frankly, I'm totally okay with that. I gave up looking for a copy of it as far back as 2006.
I don't even really remember what the manuscript was about except that when I finished it I didn't really feel like it had actually been about anything at all. I was just coughing something up. Sure, it was a sort of novel-like thing, and it featured characters and had a beginning, middle and end. Characters grew and changed, had conflicts, and resolved them amicably or otherwise. But even as I wrapped it up, the lead character started echoing my own thoughts about the pointlessness of the narrative itself and the whole thing sort of ate it's own tail, which I'd like to report was a brilliant twist or comment on adolescence in the suburbs - but it was not.
Friday, September 21, 2012
Today Would Have Been the 100th Birthday of Chuck Jones
If you have to ask who Chuck Jones was, I pity you, for you were not born into a world in which Looney Tunes seemed to be on the air 24 hours per day.
I can't really state how much impact Bugs may have had on me and my occasionally completely inappropriate responses to thuggishness.
I contend that Warner Bros. and the cartoons made at the studio under the eyes of huge talents like Fritz Freleng (an extraordinary talent), Tex Avery (who would go on to do his own work) and Hanna & Barbera (also - left to do their own work), were a huge cultural touchstone for folks who grew up in multiple decades from the 60's - 80's, when one could pretty much count on the likes of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck to teach them important lessons about not taking things all that seriously, even when faced with dynamite or a falling anvil.
I can't really state how much impact Bugs may have had on me and my occasionally completely inappropriate responses to thuggishness.
this is my manifesto |
I contend that Warner Bros. and the cartoons made at the studio under the eyes of huge talents like Fritz Freleng (an extraordinary talent), Tex Avery (who would go on to do his own work) and Hanna & Barbera (also - left to do their own work), were a huge cultural touchstone for folks who grew up in multiple decades from the 60's - 80's, when one could pretty much count on the likes of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck to teach them important lessons about not taking things all that seriously, even when faced with dynamite or a falling anvil.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Signal Reads: The Spy Who Came in from the Cold
I was born into the Cold War, and I often wonder if The Kids whose sense of awareness crested after 1992 really understand what it was like. As far back as 2001, I was taking a martial arts class where the "adult" class meant high school and up. After class we were putting on our shoes and chatting and somehow I managed to ask one of the kids if they even knew what The Cold War was. Long story short, he knew it had something to do with Russia, but he didn't know why we may have been in conflict with The Russkies.
It's now been more than 20 years since I sat in class and watched video of Germans dancing on the wall, and I still don't really understand how one day we had An Evil Empire with whom we were locked in the world's worst staring contest, and the next, we had Eastern-block countries cut loose from Mother Russia and spiraling into fresh, new problems (see: Sarajevo) and Russia deciding that a government based on something that looks an awful lot like gangsterism should take the place of the death-mask Stalinist taskmasters.*
It's now been more than 20 years since I sat in class and watched video of Germans dancing on the wall, and I still don't really understand how one day we had An Evil Empire with whom we were locked in the world's worst staring contest, and the next, we had Eastern-block countries cut loose from Mother Russia and spiraling into fresh, new problems (see: Sarajevo) and Russia deciding that a government based on something that looks an awful lot like gangsterism should take the place of the death-mask Stalinist taskmasters.*
Happy B-Day to Sophia Loren
I haven't seen as many Sophia Loren movies as I'd like, but she's pretty terrific (in many, many ways).
Loren has had no small amount of cross-cultural success, appearing in a large number of American films as well as her prolific career in her native Italy.
Her image is also a major fixture at Italian-stereotype kitsch palace/ restaurant "Buca di Beppo". So while you're gorging yourself on meatballs, you can look in wonder upon framed pics of Loren next to Italian flags and pictures of old Italian grocers and whatnot.
Happy 78th to Ms. Loren.
and this picture of Loren and Jayne Mansfield never fails to crack me up.
Loren has had no small amount of cross-cultural success, appearing in a large number of American films as well as her prolific career in her native Italy.
Her image is also a major fixture at Italian-stereotype kitsch palace/ restaurant "Buca di Beppo". So while you're gorging yourself on meatballs, you can look in wonder upon framed pics of Loren next to Italian flags and pictures of old Italian grocers and whatnot.
ah, Venice. |
and this picture of Loren and Jayne Mansfield never fails to crack me up.
Amanda Palmer at Stubb's BBQ in Austin, Texas
Wednesday evening I hit Stubb's BBQ here in sunny Austin, Texas with Jason's finance, Amy, to see Amanda Palmer and The Grand Theft Orchestra.
Much has been made of Palmer in recent months as she released yet another album not just independent of any label, but by asking her fanbase for about $100,000 via Kickstarter and came up with $1.2 million. As Palmer mounted her tour, her usual routine of recruiting local talent to help out in what's always a pretty raucous stage show, was met with a sudden and vociferous bit of controversy. Apparently a lot of musicians who were in no way involved got mad that Palmer was asking for volunteers, and, anyway... it got ugly.
Keep in mind, Palmer is far from the only artist who has folks sit in, includes local marching bands, choirs, whatever... But because these were horn and string musicians, somehow it became a big deal. Anyhow, it all ends happily with Palmer shuffling her budget, not doing a music video or something, and coughing up cash so people would get the @#$% over it.
I tend to think of rock and roll as having far less whining associated than what folks were tossing Palmer's way, and as many people I personally know (this is Austin) who play for free all the time, I couldn't really wrap my head around it. It's a rock and roll show, and, no, you're not going to convince me otherwise when it comes to Palmer somehow undermining the payment of musicians when she's inviting collaboration with locals. You psycho.
By the way, while you're getting mad at Amanda Palmer, you can download the new album for whatever you can or feel like paying. Here you go.
Fast forward to today, and Palmer's album, Theater is Evil, has debuted on the Billboard top 200 at position #10. Not bad for a record by an artist that has no TV coverage, no label support and has never had it's featured artist on American Idol.
You'll have to forgive me re: the pictures. I was using my iPhone. I'm a lousy photographer to begin with, and the stage lighting and the limitations of the iPhone's digital zoom capability were wreaking a bit of havoc. For fun, though, let's pretend this was all intentional and I'm just a really un-self-aware but hilariously lousy artist.
Much has been made of Palmer in recent months as she released yet another album not just independent of any label, but by asking her fanbase for about $100,000 via Kickstarter and came up with $1.2 million. As Palmer mounted her tour, her usual routine of recruiting local talent to help out in what's always a pretty raucous stage show, was met with a sudden and vociferous bit of controversy. Apparently a lot of musicians who were in no way involved got mad that Palmer was asking for volunteers, and, anyway... it got ugly.
Keep in mind, Palmer is far from the only artist who has folks sit in, includes local marching bands, choirs, whatever... But because these were horn and string musicians, somehow it became a big deal. Anyhow, it all ends happily with Palmer shuffling her budget, not doing a music video or something, and coughing up cash so people would get the @#$% over it.
I tend to think of rock and roll as having far less whining associated than what folks were tossing Palmer's way, and as many people I personally know (this is Austin) who play for free all the time, I couldn't really wrap my head around it. It's a rock and roll show, and, no, you're not going to convince me otherwise when it comes to Palmer somehow undermining the payment of musicians when she's inviting collaboration with locals. You psycho.
By the way, while you're getting mad at Amanda Palmer, you can download the new album for whatever you can or feel like paying. Here you go.
Fast forward to today, and Palmer's album, Theater is Evil, has debuted on the Billboard top 200 at position #10. Not bad for a record by an artist that has no TV coverage, no label support and has never had it's featured artist on American Idol.
You'll have to forgive me re: the pictures. I was using my iPhone. I'm a lousy photographer to begin with, and the stage lighting and the limitations of the iPhone's digital zoom capability were wreaking a bit of havoc. For fun, though, let's pretend this was all intentional and I'm just a really un-self-aware but hilariously lousy artist.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)