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December 14, 2004

Songs for Lions

It's not that I'm bored, per se. I certainly have plenty to do and plenty to think about. But my mind gets restless and needs to play around with other, non-legal things from time to time.

This week Huey Lewis and the News are doing a two-night concert series in Chico to record a DVD celebrating their 25th anniversary. I couldn't go, unfortunately, because of exams. But you know what they say: if you've seen 1.5 dozen HLN concerts in 2004, you've seen them all...

Anyway, a woman on the fan board is apparently a zookeeper and was talking about how she'd be singing HLN songs to her lions. I suggested the band do a set of their songs specially-adapted for her lions:

  • "Some of My Lions are True" (1st album: "Some of My Lies are True")
  • "Tell Me a Little Lion" (2nd album: "Tell Me a Little Lie")
  • "Workin' for a Lion" (2nd album: "Workin' for a Livin'")
  • "Walking on a Thin Lion" (Sports: "Walking on a Thin Line")
  • "Whole Lotta Lion" (Fore!: "Whole Lotta Lovin'")
etc.

Not being content to stop there, I then wrote out one of them, as suited for her brood:

I Never Stalk Alone

I remember my old hunting ground
The animals there, the prey I'd found
You could wind up snacking on a wildebeest
Or taking down an elephant and having a feast
So me and the cubs had our own little den
And mom would feed us again and again
Until we learned to hunt ourselves and then
And I... I never stalk alone.

It isn't what you catch but what you eat
If your friend kills it it's still fresh meat
We catch our dinner when it's on the run
You know we're eating our meals one by one
And when the gazelle's all been chased
I remember others I have raced
I love me some of that familiar taste
And I... I never stalk alone

(For the tune, consult the "I Never Walk Alone" track on the album "Fore!")

I've now been threatening to reinterpret their number 1 hit, "Jacob's Ladder," for mollusks.

Posted 12/16, backdated closer to when song was written.

December 22, 2004

Bobbleheads

It's my friend's birthday tomorrow so I gave him his present today at lunch. Last year I became aware of just how fascinated he is with political bobblehead dolls. At the Public Interest Project auction last year he had coveted the bobbleheads of various Supreme Court judges on offer. But, alas, being the ones in need of the funds the auction was to raise (grants for unpaid summer public interest work) we were unable to bid for them. Then this summer he mentioned in passing that he'd seen ones of Colin Powell at some store in Georgetown but was again unable to buy one. I decided to get it for him for his eventual birthday and tried to figure out where it was that he said he saw it. I turned the town upside down looking for it but was unable to track it down. (I couldn't really ask him for more information because it would ruin the surprise.) At this point it became my mission, to find and acquire a political bobblehead doll, sometime before his birthday. But where?

On the way back from monitoring the presidential election in Florida I changed planes at Dulles Airport. In the airport there's an MSNBC store. (An MSNBC store? Who knew?) It's like an ordinary newsstand kind of place, except that there's a big screen tv behind the counter broadcasting MSNBC, which that evening was surrounded by people watching the results come in. In the front of the store was a temporary display full of DNC-related merchandise. T-shirts and stuff. Oh, and the "Defiant Kerry" bobblehead. There he was, bobbling away while his political fortune was being decided. Resolving to ignore the incredible awkwardness of conspicuously purchasing a Kerry bobblehead (I'm sure everyone there - probably even the clerk - thought to themselves, "Who IS this weirdo who shops for a Kerry bobblehead? And on election night in an airport no less?) I made my move. This was my chance to finally end my quest.

I'm glad I did as my friend seemed really pleased with it. I've never really been able to see the appeal of bobbleheads. They seem... grotesque. But maybe now I can see the absurdity in them. At least for major public figureheads.

February 12, 2005

Shabbat Shalom

I had a whole slew of errands to run yesterday, mostly to return all the things I regretted buying the last time I ran errands. I left later than I wanted, and spent an interminable amount of time waiting for the T, but I got most of them done. I managed to locate the Cambridge Galleria and from there Downtown Crossing. Then I got lost because it was dark and all the streets look the same. I had to ask a guy for directions. "Where are you from?" he asked politely. "Oh, um, here..."

After eventually locating the T I went to my friend's house for Shabbat dinner. She made a very nice lasagna, complemented by selections from Ben and Jerry...

Then after dinner we crowded around her laptop (shades of the 1950s?) to watch a DVD. We watched Hebrew Hammer. It was really good. The plot was a little strange - a diabolical Santa Claus (played by Andy Dick, who normally I can't stand, but was really well-cast here) tries to stamp out Hannukah, and the Hebrew Hammer (not to be confused with Mike Hammer, whose office is down the hall) has to stop him. But it was a comedy in full Airplane! tradition - no detail was too small to be a joke. And many of the jokes made fun of the stereotypes about being Jewish - yet not so much the stereotypes others have, but the ones we have about ourselves. Overbearing mothers? Check. Noshing? Peter Coyote had it down. Manischewitz wine? Ah... there's the good stuff...

There were a few weak points with strained jokes, but it was a pretty tight production all the way through. I'd definitely recommend watching it.

More ridiculous JC Penny ads

Who do they keep hiring to do their commercials? First it was those outrageously sexist "WHERE is your mother?" ads.

Now it's a softly sung, very romantic version of 99 Red Balloons in a commercial touting Valentine's Day jewelry.

Did they not realize that 99 Red Balloons is a song about nuclear war?

February 15, 2005

Yelling at the TV

Silly me for thinking that watching a little TV would relax me. Instead I stumbled upon a bizarre and terrible medical show on FOX, called House. Sniping, clueless and/or drugged-up antisocial doctors... it was the practice of medicine somewhere there clearly was no tort regime, where there were readily-available donor organs, and where there were no insurance issues to speak of. I would have ignored it altogether, had it not starred Hugh Laurie. What is he thinking getting involved with such dreck? Yes, his American accent is impressive and acting skill fine. But this is the comedic master I first saw in "A Bit of Fry and Laurie." I don't even like watching him in dramas because I hate to miss out on his unique comedy talents, but for a worthwhile work I could hardly begrudge him to stretch his craft. But on this? His talents are completely wasted on this horrible program. It's really sad to watch. Sadder even than seeing him in Stewart Little. And that was pretty sad.

So I flipped channels and ended up catching Dr. Phil. I used to think he was ok, fairly common-sense in his advice and effective at making people see it. But lately I've been gravely concerned that any legitimate therapeutic goals are being subverted for the purpose of making entertaining television. I've seen some revoltingly cruel segments, like one involving a woman who had a dream to be a country singer. She wasn't great, but she also hadn't had much opportunity to develop. She was enthusiastic and willing to work on it, but Dr. Phil's advice pretty much amounted to him just crushing her dream, and in a very public, humiliating way. Meanwhile on other shows there are so many guests (can't even call them patients or clients) that there's only a few minutes of interaction before they are shoved to the side to make room for the next. On other occasions he involves his wife and children, often in inappropriate situations as therapists that puts them or the "guests" at risk for harm. As TV it's become painful to watch, and as therapy it's a travesty. A good therapist can be really helpful, but a bad one can cause damage. I fear he's become the latter.

After that I stumbled onto SpikeTV where I was scarred by the 30 seconds I caught of Mortal Kombat Annihilation. I think it's time to turn off the TV.

Edit 2/16: On retrospect, I realize I got lucky. It was Tuesday, so I might have accidentally ended up watching One Tree Hill. I watched it purposefully earlier this year because Huey Lewis was on it. Huey really needs to pick better roles, I'm tired of suffering for his art... (Well, just the acting. No suffering ever involved with the music. And Duets and Short Cuts were perfectly respectable, as was his appearance on Just Shoot Me. Unfortunately not so Shadow of a Doubt or .Com for Murder, or this...)

One Tree Hill involves a town full of supremely morose kids and adults. Perhaps the show thought existential angst would be "cool," and the kids would relate, but I can't imagine any kid actually wrestling with the meaning of things would recognize anything about that show as being representative of their life. The character played by Huey, and the character's wife, were the only reasonably emotionally-healthy people in the entire town (based on the two episodes I happened to watch), who conveniently sold their house to buy an RV (thereby writing themselves off the show) AS SOON AS THEIR HIGH SCHOOL AGE DAUGHTER GOT MARRIED!!! "Yeah, you're 17, so what? You're married now -- you don't need us!" Naturally, upcoming plot lines suggested marital difficulties. What's the poor girl gonna do now that her safety net has driven off in a camper?

Anyway, I'm going to have to stop watching TV on Tuesdays. It's way too aggravating.

February 23, 2005

Must see TV

I finally found something to watch on Tuesday.

This National Geographic show was tremendously informative and insightful:

National Geographic Specials Inside Mecca

Mecca's Grand Mosque With more than 1 billion believers, Islam is one of the most widely practiced religions in the world. Once a year, adherents from around the world converge on Mecca, Saudi Arabia � the birthplace of Muhammad. This pilgrimage to Mecca is called hajj, a religious duty that Muslims must perform once in their lifetime. As Muslims ask pardon for their sins and renew their spiritual commitment, National Geographic takes its cameras inside Mecca to capture the rites and rituals of this event.

The show followed three people on their pilgrimage: a South African man, a Malaysian man, and a woman from Texas who had converted. It explained how the logistics were handled (two million people descending on Mecca doesn't just "happen" without an awful lot of planning), the rituals that pilgrims participated in and their biblical origins, and the personal spiritual nourishment that each person gained. It was refreshing to see a TV program expose the humanity of Muslims since so many others seem content to stoke further ignorance and foster bias and suspicion.

Edited 2/24.

April 10, 2005

Great performances

I never read The Little Prince until my French friend gave it to me for my birthday a few years ago. I didn't particularly enjoy it. Maybe because I was too much the grown-up already, perhaps.

So I wasn't too keen to catch the operatic adaptation on PBS this weekend. But with nothing else being on, and it being broadcast somewhat incessantly, I've watched it. It's really good. I still may not completely tap into its themes, but it's an excellent production with excellent performances. It's been described by its creators as an opera accessible to children, and it certainly is that. I think that's admirable. The only opera I saw as a child was a performance of Hansel and Gretel, and that was a sort of tedious experience. It was a videotaped stage production that I saw in a grainy broadcast on a small black and white television. It didn't suck me in at all, and it wasn't until I was nearly 18 before I gave opera-watching a second shot.

But this production is bright and vivid, adapted specially for television. And the music becomes quite captivating, once you get used to listening to music not structured into a complete song.

Also, the casting is very good. 11 year old Joseph McManners played the little prince. I found opera sites on the web discussing how amazing he'll be as an opera performer if his voice develops well through puberty. But even without the singing, he'll make a great actor. Especially for someone so young, he really understood how to use his physicality to give a performance with subtlety and emotional nuance, which grown-ups with years of training sometimes never grasp.

May 1, 2005

Buzz marketing

I used to entertain the daydream that I was a famous baseball player. And in that daydream I fantasized about all the things that would go along with being a famous baseball player: interviews, autographs, commercial endorsements, etc.

But in that daydream I always turned down all the commercial endorsements, with two exceptions: one, I would have gladly done PSAs promoting blood donation, and two, I would have entertained the possibility of doing a Pepsi campaign promoting caffeine-free Pepsi, just to see if I actually had the influence to affect consumption patterns. I've since stricken the Pepsi possibility from my fantasy, though � the stuff just isn't very healthy and I don't want to be part of a campaign to get people to drink more of it. (The blood drive campaign is still viable though, if anyone wants to get in touch about that.)

The reason I was so picky, even locked away in my fantasyland where it really didn't matter, is because I did not want my opinion to be bought. What I like, what I don't like... I want people to know what I think - and I'd certainly like them to agree with me - but I what I really want is for people to be able to believe me when I say it's what I think. If my opinions could be bought, why should anyone do that? Even in my daydream I didn't want to do anything to mortgage my credibility. Agree with me, or don't agree with me � but trust that the opinion I espouse is one I can honestly represent.

Which is why these "grassroots" viral word-of-mouth buzz-marketing campaigns (call them what you will) are so nefarious. Actually, it's why any marketing campaign is so nefarious. They are all designed to create the desire for something, without even knowing why you might want it. Just buy into the buzz, then go buy the product.

At least, though, with a major mainstream marketing campaign it's clear � or at least, it can be clear � that it's a marketing campaign. When Pepsi advertises at the Super Bowl we know it's Pepsi marketing at the Super Bowl, trying to make us see how wonderful Pepsi is. We might succumb to their temptations against our better judgment, but at least we know that's what's happening.

Buzz-marketing is intentionally more subtle, however, and that's what makes it so harmful. Because its method of persuading us involves co-opting our better judgment *without* us being able to realize that's what's going on. The goal is to generate buzz from seemingly unbiased sources so that we believe they are unbiased and thus grant them the ethos to plant the seeds of desire in our minds. I mean, gosh, if everyone's talking about it, it must be good, right?

Unfortunately, with this kind of marketing you can't really be sure of that. Under normal circumstances (meaning, with no marketing campaign driving these comments) if lots of people were raving about something you would tend to think there must be some merit to it. But if that opinion you kept overhearing wasn't spontaneous or naturally-occurring, if rather it had been bought or contrived, then you really can't presume it's such a great thing after all. But you might anyway, because by its very design, there's no way you can really tell. Buzz-marketing is designed to make maniupulated "opinions" masquerade as unbiased ones. And that's a huge problem.

The problem is not that the marketing campaign uses real people, as opposed to celebrity spokespeople. It's also not a problem that it relies on affordable communications technologies rather than expensive advertising space with a major media outlet. A grassroots, organized effort to get many people to speak highly about something isn't necessarily bad. In fact it might even be a good thing in that it lets smaller, less well bankrolled ventures have access to viable marketing channels that let them compete with the Pepsis of the world in the court of public opinion.

The problem is one of transparency. Whether it's a Pepsi commercial or a word-of-mouth campaign, it's essential that the audience be easily able to tell that the good opinion being communicated has been purchased. To allow � or worse, to intend � any other perception about the independence of the opinion is dishonest and duplicitous and discredits the entity that chose to employ this kind of campaign, regardless of the merit to its message.

Personal opinion really is a very potent, very viable persuasive mechanism. It's why, for example, I am so positive about blood drives. When I was a little kid my dad used to (and still does, actually) donate regularly. A person I respected made clear that blood donation was something good, and thus I valued it too. It's a wonderful thing, personal ethos, and should not be so easily cheapened by engaging in these kinds of marketing tactics. Good ideas will win out, as long as we can believe that they really are the good ideas.

June 28, 2005

Great billboard

Coming out of BART I saw an ad for an international film festival. I liked its message:

"The actors have never heard of you either."

Then the tagline was "Widen your focus."

I always like it when the cult of celebrity gets skewered...

August 3, 2005

Not your typical Huey Lewis article

A few weeks ago I blogged about the Huey Lewis and the News concert I went to see in Marin County.

This week SF Weekly published another person's account of the concert, written by a woman who works with developmentally challeged (or "retarded," as she flatly puts it) people who, universally it seems, all love Huey Lewis. Many were in attendance that night, she reports, and despite the concert being held under a low-flung, sweltering, crowded tent they all seem to have had a fantastic time nonetheless.

Her article is an interesting read.

August 20, 2005

Paul Thorn

At the Huey Lewis and the News concert in Boston and again last night in New Hampshire, Paul Thorn was once again the opening act. I'd first seen him last summer opening for HLN. And he was fantastic. When I go to a HLN show I really want to see HLN, and RIGHT NOW. Not some other guy... But Paul Thorn's performances are absolutely worth seeing, and I was happy to catch some again this year.

A singer/songwriter, Paul speaks and sings with a thick, rhythmic Mississippi accent. His songs tell wryly humorous and insightful tales gleaned from his rather interesting life (for instance, he was once a boxer who fought Roberto Duran, which resulted in a song entitled, "I'd Rather be a Hammer, than a Nail."). Other favorites I've heard include "Joanie, the Jehovah's Witness Stripper," and the bittersweet, so-beautifully-melodic-I-can't-help-but-sing-this-in-the-shower song, "If I Can Get Over Her, I Can Get Over You," where he compares the soul-crushing feeling he felt at 10 years old when he saw his puppy-love sweetheart being pushed on the swingset by another boy, with how he's felt when a more contemporary relationship ended with the same depth of heartbreak.

As he sings his set, he shmoozes with the audience with his perfectly-paced southern drawl, charming even the most begrudging audience and bringing the crowd into his stories. (A woman sitting near me last night, in the middle of his set as she laughed and clapped, exclaimed, "I'd pay to see him!" High praise indeed, particularly from someone who hadn't even heard of him before and had certainly not come to see him.) It's interesting, because when I've seen him perform on the north side of the Mason-Dixon line, the audience laughs at the mental images of these characters his songs conjure up in their heads from this foreign world he describes. Whereas when I saw him perform in Virginia, I saw most of the audience nodding their heads as if to say, "Yep, I have relatives like that."

I've had a chance to meet Paul and talk with him a bit at some of these shows. At one, he paid me the wonderful and hopefully-deserved compliment that I was "an interesting person." I'm glad to return the favor and lob the certainly-deserved praise back his way, with my sincere recommendation that people should check out his work.

October 28, 2005

Halloween in Europe

What with it being Thursday, last night there was a party...

It was the school Halloween party. Held at the St. Pauli clubhouse, like the last one was, it was well-decorated with the orange and black spooky motif. I was impressed, since Halloween is not nearly as entrenched in Europe as it is in the US. But people largely got into it and most showed up in costume. For my part, I bought some white first-aid adhesive tape and taped "bones" onto a black shirt and pants. Then I got some bandages, stained them with red nailpolish, and tied them around my neck and wrists, since those parts were obviously not flayed.

On the other hand, it's a little weird seeing Halloween and all its ghoulishness become popular around here. In the US its ambience is sort of a form of fictional escapism. The horrors that we imagine and decorate ourselves and our houses with have rarely been seen on America's shores. But in Europe, with its plentiful history of torture, war, and disease, it all seems a bit too real to celebrate.

November 1, 2005

East Bay Grease

My "break" from school finished up on Sunday with a Tower of Power concert. Tower of Power is a 38 year old! band from the Bay Area. A funky, soulful, horn-powered band. I'd come to know them because the 5-piece horn section used to tour with Huey Lewis and the News, but I'd also seen them a few times in their own performances.

It was interesting seeing a concert in Hamburg. Hamburg is a really musically-cultured town. It takes its music seriously. (It is no wonder that the Beatles thrived here.) People jam into standing-room only venues and stand there, attentively, for the whole set. (Whereas I notice that in the US there's always lots of people moving back and forth in the periphery. The audience never really seems to settle down.)

The crowd seemed mostly male, but of varying ages � high school on up. And it was amusing listening to them all sing lines like "Still digging on James Brown" in their German accents... (James Braun?)

(James Brown himself seems really popular in Germany. Every party I've gone to has had lots of his music playing. I don't encounter nearly so much of his music when I'm in the US, although then again, I don't go to so many parties...)

It was a good show, and interesting to see a bunch of Bay Area residents put on a show. There's something about them that was just so familiar. And I don't just mean musically, but visually. Something about the way they comported themselves transported me back to my summer in Oakland. It was a nice flashback.

November 9, 2005

Props to Huey

Last week Huey Lewis made his Broadway debut in Chicago. My sister had once made a comment about being cynical of this kind of "stunt casting," and I can't say that there's no room for cynicism about it generally. But early word indicates that Huey is doing a good job in his first Broadway performances, and I'm really happy for him.

When I'd first heard that he'd been thinking about taking the part, I was a little concerned. Perhaps some of that was because I thought it might be a reach for him. Yes, he sings and he dances around on stage all the time, but that's not necessarily the same as doing it within a production of such structure.

But I think most of my concern was because I didn't want it to detract from his day job. Part of my admiration for Huey Lewis (and the News) is that his art is true self-expression. He doesn't need to turn himself over to someone else to be a vessel for anyone else's artistry - he's fully capable of expressing his own impressive originality. Acting, on the other hand, and particularly acting in such a famous production, seemed the antithesis of all that. And as a fan of his work, I jealously wanted to guard against his further work from being supplanted by anyone else's. I mean, geez... Actor upon actor has taken on that Chicago role. But there's no one else who can replicate Huey Lewis.

But it is selfish, as his fan, to begrudge him the opportunity to stretch - or simply to take on an experience because it is new. As an inadvertent student of his life, I know that it is germane to his personality to want to try new things. Indeed, I've benefited from that reflex. Had it not existed, there might not have been any Huey Lewis and the News in the first place for me to have enjoyed all these years.

And objectively, I think there's something tremendously admirable about it. It's admirable to be willing and able to try out new experiences to enrich one's life. It's especially admirable to be willing and able to take risks to do it.

It's something for me to keep in mind, and I find it personally reassuring to watch him show me that it can be done.

If you'd like to see how he's doing, he performed a number from the musical on the CBS morning show last week, which can be seen here. (Click on the "Huey Lewis Does Broadway" link.)

November 12, 2005

Effervescent Huey...

There's a nice picture of Huey Lewis reading to children on the Playbill.com website. The surrounding article describes him as "effervescent." I don't usually see articles use that word in describing him, but it seems apt nonetheless.

There's also a site with a flash video clip of three songs from his performance in the Chicago (I think from his first night). I liked it, especially the puppetry number. I particularly liked the look he gave to his Brooke Shields "puppet" when she gave the wrong answer to the "Are you sorry he's dead?" question...

It's interesting watching him in the video and seeing which mannerisms and gestures are organic to him. There's obviously quite a bit different about this performance compared to his normal act - not the least of which is the musical motif of his songs. I do have to admit that I miss the soulfulness his voice normally has, but still he has a nice voice that's obviously capable of singing other styles. And a lot from this performance is the same, like his stage presence and the way he moves about on it. Though much more constrained by the choreography than he usually ever is, his body language - the bits of physicality he's brought to the role - are very much his and much like I've seen him do before.

I had one other thought, watching the video, which is that it feels like I'm looking at an actor backwards. Normally, people see an actor and imagine the person behind it as colored by the role. Here, I already know the person behind the role, and now I'm looking at the acting as tinted by my familiarity with him. I don't think this is bad, per se. (Arguably it might even be good, because I can appreciate the actual effort put into the performance by contrasting it to how I normally know him to be.) But it does feel unusual to have this perspective, so I thought I'd state the observation.

December 22, 2005

Quite the sales pitch...

I was just talking to the box office about buying tickets to a Broadway show, and the woman was telling me that I could buy box seats. Different venues call different things "box seats," so I asked her what she meant by them here.

"Oh you know," she patiently explained, "The kind of seats where Lincoln was sitting..."

December 30, 2005

Seeing "Chicago"

I finally saw Chicago. I saw it twice: on Sunday and Wednesday. The first time I bought a "rush" ticket, and for $26 was only about 6 rows back. Unfortunately the ticket was all the way off to the side of the stage and prevented its full view. The second time was a $21 standing-room only ticket at the back of the lower section of the seats. It wasn't too far from the stage, and I was fairly central. I just had to stand the whole time (and on my backpack, since I was a little too short to see over the dividing wall comfortably), but it was a much better viewing experience overall.

The production was a lot of fun to watch and definitely worth seeing twice. And things were different the second time. For example, the actress playing Roxy was different. The first night the understudy Bryn Dowling played her. The second night the current lead actress Charlotte D'Amboise did. They both played her somewhat differently: I thought the second Roxy was more naive and stupid as a character, whereas Dowling's Roxy was more sociopathic. Both contrast with what I remember of the movie version (though it's been several years since I saw it), when Renee Zellweger's Roxy was more driven throughout by ambition. That ambition wasn't really a factor in the musical version until about midway through, and this absence likely accounts for the variance in performances. Since the script itself doesn't really explain why Roxy does what she does until many scenes into it (when it then includes scenes that explicitly show her mental wheels turning) each actress can sort of fill in the blanks on their own.

Another thing that was different between the two performances was the audience. Because it's the holiday season both nights were comprised primarily of tourists. This was especially true the first night, which was Christmas Day and the first night of Chanukah. As a result I suspect that I may have been one of the few people in the audience who could even remotely be considered local. Many of the tourists were also foreign, and that can change the cultural orientation of the audience and affect how it responds to the performance. The audience the second night seemed to "get it" much more than the first had, and thus was much more responsive. One potential criticism of the production is that the cast tended to cruise directly from the end of one musical number right into the next scene, without giving the audience a chance to react. The first night the audience simply gave up trying to get any applause in, whereas the second night the audience seemed to win the battle of wills and made the actors pause for a moment to absorb some of the audience's appreciation.

One moment that I remember being quite popular the second night was Amos's "Mister Cellophane" number. The audience really enjoyed it, and it fueled the energy of actor P.J. Benjamin's performance. I also enjoyed Debra Monk's Matron "Mama," and noted it was sort of ironic when, in between both nights, I happened to catch her on a random "Law and Order" episode. (Quite a few members of the cast seem to have made appearances on the show, and I suspect that the show and its offspring have been very good for the economics of the local acting community throughout the years of its production.) She did seem incredibly familiar to me even the first time I saw her on stage, and I realized later that she'd also been on the "Nero Wolfe" series (with Maury Chaykin and Timothy Hutton) on A&E a few years ago, which I was quite fond of.

Velma was played by Brenda Braxton, and she was really excellent. She had a husky, resonant voice, a ton of energy, and she really made Velma's personality come alive. I thought Velma, too, suffered as a character from the lack of exposition afforded by the musical's script, but the strength of the performance quickly overcame that problem.

The rest of the company was fun to watch too. Really excellent dancers, and I liked the way that the members of the "chorus" filled the roles of different incidental characters.

And then there was Huey. It was a real treat to watch him perform. Arguably this may partially be because he's the first person I've ever known who's been on Broadway. Everyone else I watched I got to "know" through their roles. But he's someone I've spoken to as an individual, which makes it a more substantive acquaintance and may have been behind that silly warm fuzzy proud feeling I got when I watched him take the stage.

He takes the stage much as he has done in many of his own shows - with an assertive, dramatic flair tinged with a certain impishness. There's also certain mannerisms and gestures that he's given to his Billy Flynn character that I recognize from his usual performances. But it's commendable how he doesn't force Billy Flynn to be simply a "Huey Lewis" in a suit pretending to be a lawyer. Huey is quite clearly playing a role, and playing it well.

For instance, there's his dancing. The dancing he does as Flynn is nothing like how he moves in his own concerts. Instead it's Bob Fosse dancing, yet Huey performed it as if he'd been doing it for years. I was totally impressed with how smoothly and willingly he moved around in ways that until just a short while ago were probably entirely unfamiliar to him. Surely his strong sense of rhythm and general familiarity with moving around a stage helped, but still, it's not something that just anyone can do, and his willingness to move around much differently than normal, with the particular abandon and precision it required, resulted in a really strong performance.

If there were any weaknesses to his performance they likely stemmed from lack of experience and/or training, and not a lack of talent. For instance, he's a terrific singer, and few people could sing what he does with his unmistakable soulfulness. But what makes him a fantastic R&B singer doesn't necessarily make him a great singer of show tunes. His voice doesn't quite resonate and carry as effortlessly as those in the cast with more vocal training. But he makes it work. He carries the tunes well and with personality, though with maybe more personality than Billy Flynn necessarily requires (Billy Flynn is glossy, while what makes Huey's singing so special is its emotional grittiness.) Still, his songs are completely stuck in my head now, particularly "Razzle Dazzle," which I now can't imagine being sung by anyone else in any other way than Huey's inimitable style, and the puppetry song, where Huey switches rapidly from a nasal, phony voice ("singing" for Roxy) and his own natural tenor, all the while balancing and bouncing an actress on his knee...

Huey also has a lot of raw acting talent, which can even be seen in some of his videos. (I'm thinking in particular of "If This is It," "Stuck with You," "Heart and Soul," etc.) He intuitively "gets" using his own body as a vessel for another personality, and he can comfortably convey a lot with his movements and expressions. In fact, he is particularly expressive with his face, and even during the second performance when I was all the way in the back I could clearly see every bemused Billy Flynn smirk.

I think, though, that he can benefit from more direction. It doesn't always seem, even in watching his movies, that he always knows how to comport himself within a role if there isn't something obvious the character should be doing. When there was something concrete for Flynn to do, he of course handled it deftly. It's in the other moments, when he just needs to exist as the character, that he doesn't necessarily seem to adopt the character's full physicality, and as a result his performance can sometimes seem a little wooden. However, based on interviews he's given about his role on Broadway I think some of his stiffness is due to polite trepidation: he really does not want to step on the toes of the rest of the cast, whose talent and professionalism he greatly admires. He may not be sure how much he can ooze beyond the basic confines of the role to fully occupy the character without it becoming too much. Again, I think this is something that experience and direction can help, and it's a criticism I make with the fullest amount of respect and hypocrisy - since it's not like I could do any better myself.

But all nits aside, I thoroughly enjoyed the production and Huey's performance especially. "Worth coming back from Germany for," I quipped to him after one of the shows, but only semi-jokingly. I think it's tremendously impressive that he was willing to challenge himself and even attempt the role, and I'm glad I got to see the results of his efforts.

He (and the other lead actors) will be with the show through January 15, and it's definitely worth checking out, even if just the once.

January 10, 2006

Jud Süß

I wrote most of this in November but never had a chance to prepare it for posting until now.

During the Third Reich the anti-Jewish propaganda included movies like 1943's Jud Süß. Movies like these are now almost impossible to watch. The copyrights are under the control of a foundation, which limits their showing to situations where they will be properly contextualized and discussed. Bucerius was able to satisfy these requirements and [in mid November] showed the movie.

Before it began faculty members gave presentations about the historical context of the movie and the anti-Jewish laws from the era. It was the first time I'd ever seen the Nuerenberg law themselves, spelled out in their full legal awfulness. But there they were, up on a powerpoint slide, while a professor explained their evolution. Even though they were written entirely in their original German, I found I was able to read them. For the first time I didn't need to be told how terrible these laws were; I could finally see it for myself.

I went to the showing of the movie, even though it and all the presentations were entirely in German – a language I only barely understand. I felt I needed to. But I didn't know what to expect from the movie. I knew it was anti-Jewish, but I suppose I was expecting something with the vehement energy like "Triumph of the Will." The prospect of seeing something like that directed towards Jews actually frightened me to the point of physical unease. I decided it would be best to sit with some friends, rather than alone, but I got really annoyed with their inability to understand my anxiety. "It'll just be a movie about dark-haired people," one said. "Not people like you." To him, because the whole pretense of the movie was invalid, it rendered the movie harmless. I wasn't so sure about that. "What do you mean, 'it's not about me?' This movie may very well turn out to be an hour and a half of the message equivalent, 'Kill Cathy! Kill Cathy!'"

It turned out we were both wrong. Jews were not characterized as being strictly dark-haired, and the anti-Semitism, though overt, was somewhat more subtly conveyed.

In a way the movie was somewhat harmless though, just because it was of such poor cinematic quality. It was so dreadful I even almost laughed at one point, it was so contrived. But while I doubt the film could have the same effect today – it's so terrible as a dramatic work it's so easy to see through – I can see how it could have stoked the anti-Jewish fervor of a people already comfortable with pogroms and expulsions.

The film told the story, warped in its own wicked way, of a count and Jewish financier named Oppenheimer who lived in the early 18th century. There is a certain historical truth to this story: these two people did live during that time, something did go south in the course of their relationship, and it all ended in tragedy (the count died of a heart attack, and Oppenheimer was hanged). Some of the specific details are shrouded in history, but that didn't stop the filmmakers from filling in the gaps according to their hateful viewpoint in order to use their movie as "proof" that Jews were no-good opportunists out to make a buck at all costs, and rape German daughters.

It was difficult for me to understand the movie's dialog but I could understand the visual imagery. It was quite bold in its manipulativeness. The movie opened with a scene of a young German man and woman – she so perky and pure and blonde – madly and happily in love. All is good in the world until Oppenheimer comes to town. From what I could gather, he came following a visit by the count to his shop, whereupon he apparently realized that a fortune could be made by underwriting the count's activities. So he shaved his beard and put on fashionable clothing of the period, and simpered and smirked until he'd convinced the count to accept his financial support. He also manage to wrangle an influential political position out of the relationship.

But the movie explains that Oppenheim was up to no good. First he let the Jews move into town. (The movie showed their wagon train arrive, full of dirty, uncivilized, sickly people.) Then Oppenheimer let nothing stand in the way of what he wanted. For instance, when he wanted to build a road where a house stood, he ignored the desperate pleadings of its residents and had it knocked down. Meanwhile, his influence with the count grew ever stronger. Even as his critics grew louder the count remained steadfast in his support.

And then there was the subplot. Oppenheim had his eye on the pure blonde young woman from the opening scene and apparently would stop at nothing to get her. He arranged to have her husband arrested and tortured, allowing the torture to be stopped only when she at last consented to sleep with him. In the next scene (with no explanation) she is seen staggering into a field. In the next one (also with no explanation) she's dead. Soon after the count dies of a heart attack, and without his ally Oppenheimer was arrested.

During his trial Oppenheimer is shown to have let himself go. His fashionable clothes are now rags, and his scraggly beard is back. He looks like he did in the very first scene, the Jew he always was no matter how much he covered it up.

The movie was extremely heavy-handed in driving home its "points." According to the movie, Jews were dirty and sickly, scheming and manipulative, conniving and cruel. They engaged in weird rituals and practices. They were the antithesis of everything good and German, and no matter how nicely they cleaned up they would never be anything more than Jews, completely adverse to the interests of pure, decent Germans.

The movie didn't just say these things; the movie showed the German characters slowly coming to realize this cold, hard "truth." At first they were so trusting! Even the innocent blonde woman had given Oppenheimer a ride into town in her wagon when his stagecoach had crashed, obviously taken in by his cunningly devious charm. But then, all too late, they learned the apparent error in their judgment.

This is where the movie's real power is. Because in trying to teach an audience its message of hate it modeled the very reaction it sought, and then used powerful, contrasting imagery to drive the point home.

Edited 1/11.

January 24, 2006

Gratuitous pictures

I have nothing to actually say about this, but as the (not particularly) official clearinghouse for all things connected to Huey Lewis's recent appearance in Chicago, I figured I should post the link to the pictures from his final night.

(The second shot in the series includes the other lead actors I saw in the production.)

January 26, 2006

In praise of not being insufferable

I ended up watching "Live with Regis and Kelly" this morning because my cousin was playing viola with Enya.

I can't say the show is my cup of cultural tea, and except for the random Huey Lewis and the News appearance I rarely bother tuning in. In fact, I'm not sure I've seen it since Kelly Ripa joined. I remember lots of fuss being made about it - about her acting, her children, etc. etc. - and I remember distinctively not caring.

I still don't actually CARE, but after watching her this morning I did happen to note she was quite watchable. Witty, charming, not insufferable...

I'm still not going to go out of my way to watch*, but given that the amount of superficial buzz is usually directly proportional to the absense of talent by said focus of such buzz, I was pleasantly surprised to find that the rule didn't seem to hold in this instance.

* Don't forget about the Regis Philbin factor. But today there was a guest host. Ironically, he's the current Billy Flynn in Chicago...

February 4, 2006

With my finger on the pulse of fashion

Legal Quandry is wondering about the people who are wearing their polo shirts with their collars popped (read: turned up). Since when did that come back into fashion?

I pointed out to her that it seems to be quite the rage in Germany:

"I swear I saw more people with popped collars during the fall I spent in Hamburg than I have since 1985. All that was missing for the complete flashback was the Jams shorts..."

Meanwhile, it has not escaped my notice that while I was out of the country bangs seemed to have come back into fashion. I always find it amusing when I inadvertantly become fashionable just by staying exactly as I was...

February 7, 2006

Let's spend some time together, at halftime

Nearly 40 years ago the Rolling Stones were invited to play on Ed Sullivan, but he apparently objected to the scandalous nature of their song, "Let's Spend the Night Together." In order to be able to perform, they had to change the lyrics to the less "objectionable" "let's spend some time together."

But that was the 1960s. Things were different then, right?

Apparently not. The Rolling Stones halftime performance at the Super Bowl - nearly 40 years later - was censored. The NFL lowered Mick Jagger's mike to mute several lyrics it decided were "objectionable."

Mick Jagger is reportedly not happy, nor should he be. His words were censored. His words, that he's been singing for decades, that the NFL was fully aware he'd be singing when it invited him.

Which raises the question: why did they invite him? Because they were impressed with him as an artist? It would seem not, if they were so ill at ease with his art. No, it seems like they were just looking for his commerciality to exploit. A commerciality that the NFL has managed to divorce from any substantive reason for his popularity.

March 15, 2006

Spamalot

I saw Spamalot last night as the touring company hit Boston. I see why it's been getting raves. It's extremely clever, particularly in how it combined old (and much loved) Monty Python material with new material in a way that optimized the nostalgia factor (and original humor) without feeling like a tired rehash. There was also some truly excellent satire added into the new performance.

If I had any criticisms, it is these five three things:

- When the actors did do some of the old routines, they generally lost the unique pacing of dialog of the original performance. It sounded a little grating to me, as my ear expected to hear Michael Palin's fantastically nuanced, rhythmic diction, which in my mind was always an essential component to the humor of the bit, and instead heard something quite different.

- The end was a bit underwhelming, but then again, the movie Monty Python and the Holy Grail, which this musical roughly (and I do mean roughly) paralleled also had an underwhelming ending. This ending was probably better…

- There is no third thing.

It struck me that the audience was pretty split between those who were familiar with Monty Python's earlier work and those who were just there for the musical. The way people were laughing sometimes seemed to suggest they were laughing out of recognition, and sometimes seemed to be just because it was funny. (Or often both, of course.)

It would have been nice to have seen the original production on Broadway, with the original cast, though this cast was really good. Arthur was played by someone who definitely seemed to have Tim Curry's presence. And the script was obviously tweaked a bit to make it more applicable for Boston, but those few local jokes they slipped in added to its charm. Still, they make me wonder what used to be said in New York.

April 25, 2006

United 93

Ever since I heard about it, my instinctive feeling has been that it's an appallingly bad idea for a movie. Nothing good can come of it, and it's tacky and cheesy and not remotely redeemable on its own. What could it possibly hope to accomplish?

I have heard some suggest that the hope is that it will restore Bush's popularity numbers, as it serves to remind us about how scared we're all supposed to be. I find it very plausible that Bush might indeed want the movie for that very reason, but I'm wary about ascribing his motivations to that of the moviemakers. From what I've gleaned, the director really wanted to tell this story. But did it need telling? The details that are available are already well known, but there's a lot that's missing. And I don't think it "tells the story" by filling in those gaps with his own fictionalization. As worthy as the story is, it disrespects it through the inevitable distortions. Plus, by even trying to capture the story at all, it minimizes it. The horror people can imagine the flight to be is much more horrible than any director will be able to convey. Once he plucks the story from the ether to force it into the tangible package of a two-hour movie he strips it of its endless largeness. The story is the story it is because it was so big, so uncontainable within the limits of our imaginations. But by shoving the story into a movie, it makes the story small.

But that's not the only reason I don't like the idea of the movie. I've written before about what it was like for me to experience 9/11, trapped and isolated in sunny California. It was very difficult to make it seem real from such a distance. And not just a physical distance but also an emotional distance. Not only were you not there, but, very likely, no one you knew was there either. This whole thing was playing out, terribly, but mostly in other people's lives. So I watched in the following days how local news tried to cover the story and how people talked about it. And I couldn't help but notice this incredibly affected response, as people tried to insert themselves into the tragedy, trying desperately to find some way they themselves had been victimized by it. I of course don't mean that in a broad American sense, because certainly we were all affected by the attack on our country. I mean in a personal sense, of whom this tragedy had happened to. People would cling to tenuous threads like, "My cousin's best friend's sister's son worked in the tower." Or that someone who'd died had once lived in your tiny town 15 years ago. People would work really hard to manufacture some sort of recognizable connection.

The cynical part of me was aghast at the hubris of people to create their own sense of victimhood. With so much sympathetic attention being cast about in the days afterwards, it seemed the height of callousness and greed for people to try to claim some of it for themselves. But the understanding part of me also understood that sometimes this was the only way people could make what happened seem real enough to themselves to even begin to grasp its enormity. Without some sort of personal handle to grab onto, it was so horrible as to be almost abstract.

Still, there was no way I was going to tolerate that reaction in myself, though part of my consciousness tried to get away with it anyway: - I'd been to Windows on the World. Yes, but that was in 1982. - My dad used to work in the towers. Yes, but not in years, and you already knew he was ok. - I'd just been there in June… Yes, but that was June, and you weren't there now. - My sister's friend lost 61 people that she knew… Yes, but that means that you know one person who was deeply affected. It doesn't give you the right to claim any of her pain.

There was one more angle though that I tried: United Flight 93. Because that was the bit that did strike close to home - the non-stop United morning flight from Newark to San Francisco. It was a flight I took all the time, commuting between my parents in New Jersey and school in California. On any trip back East, it's how I almost always went back. Which led me to the question: was that my flight that this had happened to?

As it happened I still had all my old frequent flier statements. I pulled them out to check them - had I ever been on Flight 93? The answer: no. I'd always been on the flight before it. So that was that, and with that information I dismissed that thought from my mind as well. My problem therefore with this movie? It's trying to pull that thought back from the discarded pile and revive my own sense of victimhood, something I find abhorrent. So, yeah, I know I wasn't on that flight or other Flight 93's. But in the trailer when you see the guy get on wearing a Cal polo shirt and Cal hat you are absolutely seeing me. It was a kick in the stomach to see that portrayed. That was me, that was my life, that was what I looked like when I traveled. That's what all my flights looked like and felt like. It makes no difference whether it was one of my flights or that one. It was all the same - the movie has made that unmistakably obvious.

But I do not want to be drawn back in. This is not my moment, this is not my story. The gall of this movie to make me, or other people like me, think otherwise. How dare it stoke our narcissism. This story belongs only to those who were in it. They should not be forced to share it with others because someone decided to exploit it for a movie.

May 6, 2006

Summer of '69

It's not quite the Super Bowl commercial of yore:

"You've just finished law school! What are you going to do next?"

"I'm going to -- the Beale Street Music Festival?!?!"

But that's where I am. It's a three-day music festival in Memphis, TN. It's huge. It all takes place in a park along the Mississippi, with four stages and a series of artists performing on each throughout the day. It began last night at 5 and ran until after midnight, although I petered out a bit before 11. But not before catching a lot of music. In the afternoon I caught most of the set of bluesman Billy Gibson. Someone had recommended I check him out, and he was good although I can't say his music really resonated with me. But there was one part I did like: his harmonica solos (or "Mississippi saxophone" as he called the harmonica at one point) tended to meander through the melody lines of all sorts of other familiar songs. E.g., "When the Saints Come Marching In," "Oh Susannah," "Low Rider," "Meet the Flintstones"... As someone who always liked that sort of Peter Schickele/Canadian Brass/Victor Borge approach, that part definitely appealed to me.

By the end of his set I was hungry, so I checked out the many foodstalls. For the most part it's food of the region, with lots and lots of barbeque. I went to one place that served out of a renovated tour bus and got a turkey leg. It only cost $5 but it was the hugest hunk of meat I think I've ever held in my hand. I wouldn't have wanted to run into the turkey it came from in a dark alley... I ate as much as I could, in between the drips of barbeque sauce raining down all over me, but I had to surrender before I was done.

Then I caught the end of Jason Mraz's performance. I might have caught more if I'd recognized his name on the program as being behind the songs I've heard (and liked) before, but what's nice about a festival like this is that you can make these kinds of discoveries rather costlessly. A ticket for all three days of the festival cost less than $60 (including the Ticketmaster fees). And for that reason I didn't worry about it when I dragged my exhausted self away before Friday was over. I was disappointed not to get to check out Train or BB King, but there were two more long days of music ahead of me to rest up for.

But before I left I did end up with a front row seat for a Bryan Adams concert. I'd never seen Bryan Adams before. And yeah, I'd always liked his songs when I heard them on the radio, but I never bought any records or went to his shows. (Although truth be told, I probably always considered him a fashion icon, but then I'm all about the t-shirts and jeans…) But here I was, sort of by chance, and right up front. So I thought I'd check it out...

It was good. He wastes no time in getting down to rocking, taking the stage and taking off at the first chord. Good, solid, straightforward rock. Although I did find his lead guitarist exasperating. I've never had any patience for the overwrought theatrics some lead guitarists like to do. Particularly if they're 17 years old and trying to show off. What I've now realized is that they aren't any better when it's a 40-something doing them... I kept having to look away to keep from giggling at his antics because I found them so ridiculous. He's a perfectly good musician, so I kept wishing he'd just play...

Apart from that though I really like the performance, and the band, a lot. I noted with admiration that the backing musicians were also the backing vocalists - something I greatly appreciate about Huey Lewis and the News and the News' vocal skills. And I got a giggle out of the general style of the band - everyone with the same short hairstyle, black t-shirt, and jeans - it was like a wave of clean-cut masculinity radiating from the stage...

But all silliness aside, I was really impressed with Bryan Adams. A ton of energy and he really knew how to work his crowd. He has a different style than Huey Lewis, but he shared some of the same skills I admire in Huey, like how to play the entire stage, shmooze with the crowd, and use his body language in a way so that even those in the crowd for whom he's a tiny spec can still feel like he's performing just for them.

Song-wise he played some things I didn't necessarily recognize, but it wasn't a barrier to enjoying the show. And there were plenty of songs that I did recognize. The crowd knew a lot of the lyrics and sang them out freely (which did lead to some humorous moments when they beat him to the punch), but not being a big Bryan Adams fan, I mostly sat them out. That is until "Summer of 69."

Although I always enjoyed hearing the song on the radio, I always found it perplexing. In 1969 Bryan Adams was nine years old. So how could he be singing what he was singing as if it were autobiographical? But as I listened to him perform it the other day I suddenly realized that even though the lyrics might not be about a literal truth, it still conveyed a truth in its greater meaning. The song wasn't really about what may or may not have happened in those specific summer months - it was about holding onto the memory of a time when the world was new and everything seemed possible. As I listened to a forty-six year old singer sing a 20-year old song to my 32-year old self it took me back to a time when it was new and everything seemed possible - and I suddenly realized that 1969 was just a metaphor, and one I was finally old enough to understand.

Written 5/6, posted 5/9.

May 8, 2006

The Great Inducement

It hardly takes a rocket scientist to figure out what inspired me to make this foray to Memphis. Closing the show on one of the stages on Saturday was Huey Lewis and the News. But it was one of those HLN concerts that became a vehicle for a greater experience beyond just their concert - this time it was three days worth of all sorts of music.

The only problem with this plan is that three-day music festivals are really not the greatest way to recover from law school exams. I really needed to be lying on a beach somewhere, not standing in the same place for hours and hours on end. On Saturday I was there for over 10 hours, five of them on the same few inches of ground so I could hold myself a front row spot for HLN. In one sense this strategy was a problem because it meant that I missed the Bruce Hornsby performance all the way at the other end of the park. But it wasn't too bad a trade-off because it meant that I got to see Bo Diddley and Little Richard.

But way before that I started out earlier in the day watching a bit of a bluegrass band, followed by the Gin Blossoms. Then came the Disco Biscuits, which was sort of acoustically-generated techno rock. When they finished I then worked my way to a spot up front to wait for HLN. But first was Bo Diddley, whom I liked a lot. He was quite the elder statesman of rock, but what was interesting is how current his music was. His music has always been very rhythmic, but I think it's something relatively new for him to rap his lyrics. It came off really well though. The lyrics were of the same motif and attitude that his older, more bluesy songs had - just faster-paced.

He was going to play for a little over an hour, but it started to rain and, after declaring that he "couldn't afford to get electrocuted" he stopped playing early. But he didn't leave the stage entirely. The band had been playing "Hey Bo Diddley," which has that famous pounding rhythm. So he put down his guitar and moved towards the back of the stage, picked up some drumsticks, and joined the drummer in banging out the rhythm. It looked completely spontaneous with him and the drummer sharing the kit, leading and following each other. This went on for quite some time until he was ready to leave.

He left about 15 minutes early, which gave Little Richard's band 45 minutes to set up instead of the usual 30. Yet they still started 25 minutes late. Which was a huge problem because he already had a short set, and they had to keep the schedule because the next band (HLN) couldn't be pushed too late because of curfews. But Little Richard isn't cut out for a short set. He has a huge, powerful band (two drummers, two bassists, two guitarists, four horn players, at least one other keyboardist) and likes to hold court on stage and soak up attention from the audience and his fawning band. He preens for the audience: "I'm 73 years old with skin like a baby!" and "Aren't I pretty?" and "I'm just the prettiest little black Indian from Macon, Georgia." And he flirts with his band. And praises the lord (and has his staff give out a religious tract that he wrote to the audience). In the course of all this he would tend to announce the song he was going to play, and then play something else. So there was no setlist to speak of, and in the end the only way they could get him off the stage was by shutting off his mike. I was right up front and could see this all play out and it was a little sad. But Little Richard is just not a good performer to have at a festival. Put him at the House of Blues where he can completely own the stage for a few hours and that will be fun. But neither he nor his entourage was prepared for this kind of stage-sharing arrangement.

Eventually he did leave and HLN's incredible crew came out to build the band's entire set-up almost from scratch and in no time flat. And then soon HLN came on and I took it in from my favorite spot: the front row. I could have lived without the incredibly drunk guy next to me, but otherwise it was my favorite 90 minutes of the day. It was exactly three years ago that I started my traveling-for-HLN program, back in the day when I was still thinking about which law school to choose to attend (I hadn't yet decided on BU or Hastings and went to the UK in part to reflect on the decision). So being there again, now that law school was over, was a nice way to bookend the whole experience.

Written 5/8, posted 5/9.

Beale Street Music Festival, Day 3

I was tired. Tired from law school, tired from standing around outside in the rain in one place the day before… The only thing that stood between me and scalping my ticket for Sunday's day of the festival was Paul Thorn. I love Paul Thorn. I got to know his music from when he opened for Huey Lewis and the News the past couple of years, and he's someone I've come to really looking forward to hearing. His songs are fantastic, and he has such a unique personality to really drive them home. If he comes to a town near you (and he tours a lot, so he very well might) you should absolutely check him out.

This was the first time I'd ever seen him play with his band - when he's opened for HLN it's just been him accompanying himself on the acoustic guitar - and they were tight. If there was one possible downside to the arrangement it was that from where I was sitting the volume of the band slightly drowned out his fantastic lyrics (every syllable of which are worth hearing), but having the band really highlighted how musically diverse his songs were. And he's got a ton of them - I heard a lot of stuff I hadn't before on any of the umpteen previous occasions (in five states and three time zones…)

Seeing him recharged me, so afterwards I hung out a bit longer and checked out G.E. Smith in the Blues Tent for a while. And then I felt done. I did end up missing out on Chicago, but I'll get to see them a lot this summer when they tour with HLN, and I also missed out on James Brown - which is too bad - but over the three days I got to see so much other great music that I feel ok about it. (I'd also seen Billy Lee Riley earlier in the day before Paul Thorn.) While physically the festival was demanding, the music was soothing, so I think I came back from it all no worse for wear.

(For an idea of what Paul Thorn sounds like when performing, there's an MP3 of an acoustic performance available here.)

Written 5/8, posted 5/9.

May 22, 2006

Soundtrack of the summer

Last summer it was the Huey Lewis and the News Live at 25 concert DVD that came out around finals time. This summer it's the Paul Thorn concert DVD that I just got today. It's fabulous. Full of the songs and stories I remember from his shows, plus a bunch I hadn't caught in the 9 or 10 shows I've heard before. I'm constantly surprised by the depth of his repetoire, and I don't think there's a song in the bunch that doesn't immediately make itself at home in my mind. They're funny, they're poignant, they rock. On top of the lyrics, on top of the hooks, on top of the personality and on top of the band he's also got a great, gritty voice. Not gravelly - it's smooth - but it's got enough texture that emotion really sticks to it.

Anyway, I'm really enjoying getting to know him better as an artist, and I suspect that there will be plenty to discover over the course of the long upcoming summer.

Like today, when I saw on the DVD a clip from a documentary from 1992 where he was interviewed about his life up until that point. He'd been a boxer coming out of high school and culminated his boxing career with a fight with Roberto Duran (an experience which provided him with his "theme song," "I'd Rather Be a Hammer Than a Nail"). But he lost, and it soon became clear that his boxing talent was not going to carry to the pinnacle of the profession. So he returned home to Mississippi and his job in a chair factory installing springs, all the while keeping alive his dream of supporting himself through music.

In the interview he talked about the futility of lots of people's existence, going to work to get money to buy food to get the strength to go to work so they could get money to buy food to get the strength to work some more... But that wasn't for him, he declared. His dreams were different. But then he cautioned, ""If you're dreaming, don't share your dreams with people that ain't dreamin', because they'll laugh at you and they'll mock. Dreamers need to be around other dreamers."

I think this comment helps explain why I've always liked him.

June 13, 2006

Greatest Hits

I bought the new Huey Lewis and the News Greatest Hits CD the other day. I have some reservations about this release. For one, the market already pretty saturated with compilations of their hits, and putting this one out there might just dilute the market for a proper box set that could better show off the depth of their talent that isn't necessarily reflected in their more commercial hits (e.g., with more esoteric cuts and live performances, or even the songs everyone knows but set into the context of the overall development of their career). (Of course, I suppose it could also be true that the release could help stoke interest in such a release, perhaps.)

More significantly, however, it's extremely odd that a "Huey Lewis and the News" greatest hits CD includes a song not by Huey Lewis and the News. Clearly some record executive somewhere thought he could make some extra money if he included the recent hit "Cruisin'" from the movie Duets and performed by Huey Lewis and Gwyneth Paltrow. But that's the problem: it's performed by Huey Lewis and Gwyneth Paltrow, with nary another Newsman anywhere on the track. I think it's quite wrong to pass off a non-News song as a News song. It's misleading, first of all, and it also disrespects the band. Despite what many non-fans mistakenly think, "Huey Lewis and the News" is not Huey Lewis plus a random group of musicians. Rather, the band has been a stable group of friends and colleagues, each of whom has made an integral contribution to the unique musical chemistry behind their distinctive sound. So while "Cruisin'" is a pleasant song to listen to, and the vocal performance is perfectly fine, it clearly pales to any of the actual News songs on the disc. It just does not have anywhere near the quality or depth that anything the ensemble of the News ever has produced, and it's wrong to taint the band's musical credibility through the association.

On the other hand, the CD does include 20 other songs that are actually News songs, and of course they are quite good. People unfamiliar with their work might be surprised to learn that jazz great Stan Getz performed on one of their records, and the song he appeared on, "Small World" is included on the Greatest Hits album. While I still would recommend listening to their actual albums for a better demonstration of their work (especially the less popular but no less excellent Small World and Plan B albums) for people without their full discography at the ready the Greatest Hits CD provides a handy way to stroll down memory lane remembering some of their biggest hits over the years.

There is also a version of the release that includes 10 of their videos on a companion DVD. And that's fun. Again, as a fan I wish it had included some other videos that have yet to appear on a DVD, but it does cover many of their better-known ones and shows off their distinctive slightly-Pythonesque video style. For instance, there's the video from "If This is It," where the band finds themselves buried up to their necks in sand. There's the "Stuck with You" video, where Huey gets accosted at a cocktail party by people pressuring him to follow-up Sports, sneaks out by offering to take a beautiful woman (played by the future wife of Pierce "James Bond" Brosnan) out for a ride in his yacht, and ends up with them washing up on the shores of an allegedly deserted island after falling off a rowboat named "Myott."

And then there is the epic video from "Doing it All for My Baby." It begins with Huey driving the band on a dark and stormy night. Things begin to take a tragic turn when they crash into something in the road. They all get out of the van to assess the repairs, which somehow involves jacking the whole thing up, removing a wheel, and then getting under the elevated van with a wrench. The band makes Huey do it. Unfortunately a careless bandmember causes the jack to slip, and poor Huey gets squashed under the van. At first the band panics and tries to pull him out but they succeed only in removing a shoe (thus revealing a polka-dot sock). After trying and failing to replace said shoe, they give up and walk off to find something to eat.

Meanwhile some very persistent gravediggers (i.e., when their corpse suddenly sits up they hit him over the head with their shovel so they can keep burying him), later driving a truck from "Acme Meat Co.," come upon Huey's body and take their turn at trying to remove it. While they struggle with this, the band approaches a spooky castle. A very scary-looking butler welcomes them in, then brandishes a meat cleaver. The band is not seen again, except for later in the video when their dismembered heads in specimen jars sing the chorus.

It turns out that they had arrived at Dr. Frankenstein's castle, where the not-so-good doctor intends to create a monster. Fortunately for him the gravediggers have arrived with Huey's body so he has something to work with. His work is a success, and then we are shown why he went to the effort: to make a groom for his monster bride. As the two monsters lumber toward each other in monster love, Dr. Frankenstein's assistant happens to notice the large lever with the sign below it reading, "Do not touch no matter what." Naturally, he pulls the lever, and in a flurry of sparks Huey reverts from his monster form to his normal self, the result of which disgusts his would-be bride.

The Tower of Power horn section also appears in this video - hung from a wall in chains. All other characters, creatures, and monsters (except for the bride) are played by Newsmen.

I've always liked that they are a very silly band.

June 26, 2006

The Electric Company

When I cashed in my Lexis points for Barnes and Noble gift certificates I used them on some DVDs, including a box set of Electric Company DVDs. (Er, well, technically I got the single DVD "The Best of the Best of the Electric Company," but that wasn't what I wanted (what a confusing title) so I sold it to a friend and went out and got the bigger, plain old "The Best of" version instead.)

What a great show that was. I used to watch it every weekday afternoon after Sesame Street and Mr. Rogers. I was never all that crazy about Mr. Rogers, but I loved the Electric Company. I think for a while I was much younger than its target demographic, but I found it enthralling. (And probably also educational, whether I realized it or not.) In watching these episodes now it's amazing how much I remembered: lots of the skits, lots of the cartoons, lots of the music…

But it's also interesting what I don't remember. Like the actors. I remember many of the characters, like Crank, but with only one exception I never recognized any of the actors in anything afterwards. (The exception is Luis Avalos, because he always confused me: You see, there were two guys who looked very similar, but one had a mustache and the other didn't, and I never could quite figure out if it was one person or two… So later on, when I got older and started to see adult movies and TV I'd recognize him, because at least he looked like one of the faces I was always trying to figure out…)

But Rita Moreno? Morgan Freeman??? I like Morgan Freeman from what I've seen from his recent work, like The Shawshank Redemption. And I can recognize him from role to role now, but I never, ever recognized him from his work on the Electric Company, even though I watched him nearly every day over the course of my young childhood. I did find an interview with him where he talks about how you can either be a star, or an actor. If they are coming to see you, he said, you're a star, but if they are coming to see the role, you're an actor. And what a great actor he was, since I was always so absorbed in the performance that I never thought to worry about who was behind it. (Luis Avalos is actually deserving of this compliment too, and if it hadn't been for his confusing mustache I don't think I would have looked for the man behind the curtain either.)

Watching these shows now through adult eyes I can really appreciate the acting. It is very, very good. Excellent comedic timing, dancing, singing… Now I want to see these actors. Now I want to see them show off their talents in other contexts. For Rita Moreno, Luis Avalos, and Morgan Freeman that's not too hard (although I do think it's a shame that Freeman's comedic and musical talents are rarely tapped into in his more recent roles). But some of the others, like Jim Boyd and Skip Hinnant seem to have rarely performed since then, and that's really a shame. Plus in these retrospectives a lot more emphasis is put on the contributions of those who were and became more famous, like Freeman and Moreno, and even Bill Cosby who appeared in it for about a year. Even some of the child performers like Irene Cara get a lot of attention for it because of how famous they came to be. But the contributions of the lesser-known cast members, like Boyd and Hinnant, and Judy Graubert, and child performer June Angela (who seems even more talented than Cara) should not be overlooked, especially since they often are even better.

In any case, I hope they do another box set. This one has a lot of older episodes I don't particularly remember (I suspect they may have taken some of the earlier ones out of circulation by the time I started watching) and it's missing some great sketches that I do (like "Whimper and Whine," and the "T-I-O-N Shun Shun-Shun Shun" song). But it's been nice to watch these episodes and remember a lot of things I'd thought I'd forgotten. Like how "It's the plumber; I've come to fix the sink!" ended up in my family's lexicon… And how good children's television can be.

July 2, 2006

(The Carnage that was) The Day Wil Wheaton Met the Bar Candidate

There's a bookstore near me that hosts writers who come in to make presentations and then sign their books. Today's writer was Wil Wheaton. Most people know him as an actor (think Stand by Me and StarTrek, the Next Generation). He's also a writer, with at least two books out and a nice blog. I'd always liked his roles, but it's his writing that converted me from someone who might say indifferently, "Oh yeah, that's Wil Wheaton," to actually wanting to hear what he had to say in person and then wait eons for a chance to exchange a few awkward words.

And did I ever. I had an hour and a half on line to think of intelligent things to say, but by the time it was my turn it was like my brain said, "What's the worst possible phrasing you could possibly come up with to articulate this thought?" and then proceeded to say it exactly that way. I was amazed at the heights of my dorkitude. You'd think that with all the work I did in moot courts I would have improved my impromptu speaking skills. Perhaps I in fact did, but while I might very well have been able to convince Wil of a matter of law, my ability to pay him a compliment without the implicit subtext of, "And by the way, I'm a complete idiot," was apparently lacking. I sense it's a separate skillset.

Of course, none of this was his fault. He was very nice. Even with 300+ people(!) to sign autographs for, which must have been arduous, it never showed. He had a quick, "Hi, how are you" routine that he would start with, but if the other person said something to open a door to a more personal connection he gladly walked through it. Even 200 people into his 300 person autograph marathon.

So while I rue my social ineptitude (I'm sure this is all the fault of the bar exam prep, which is systematically destroying any mental faculty that does not involve multiple choice answers or IRAC), it was nice to have met him. I sort of thought our paths might cross someday given his predilection for being outspoken on the correct side of technology civil liberties issues (e.g., there's a mutual EFF connection), but I was also interested in making his acquaintance because he's an interesting person (one of the highest compliments I think anyone can be paid). I particularly admire his ability to blaze an unconventional path. A regular 9-to-5 job is much less important than self-actualizing, but few people are brave enough to make the hard choices to forego the former in pursuit of the latter, so I tend to admire those who do.

Edit 7/6: I changed the title to what it probably should have been all along...

July 21, 2006

It's that time of year

It's Huey Lewis and the News concert season. They're out on the road for the rest of this month in a double-bill with Chicago. Last night they came to a theater somewhat near me so I went. I don't have the bandwidth now to re-blog it, so see here for what the night was like. (For background on the moon-baying thing, see here. (You can also scroll up to see the a link to the transcript of what *really* happened at the World Cup.))

July 29, 2006

Protecting against negligent waving of a "Y"

I was also disappointed at Jones Beach that they wouldn't let me bring my "Y" into the theater. After the Good Morning America performance all the other people holding letters gathered them up and tried to give them to the band. Um... "The guys from the record company said we were to give it to them!" Um...

But I had kept my "Y." After all if I had to get stuck with holding it on national tv then I was going to enjoy it, dammit. So I decided to bring it to the Jones Beach show, as the official Huey Lewis and the News concert-going "Y." But security was not having any of it, and after asking me why I wanted to bring it in (at least I think that's what they were asking – they might have just been pronouncing it) they enforced their unwritten "no 'Y'" policy against me and forbade it. Apparently they were concerned that one of its corners could poke someone in the eye.

Damn Huey then for not spelling his name with an "O," because I bet I could have brought that letter in...

August 22, 2006

Congratulations! You're cancelled.

First it was Mystery Science Theater 3000. Now the SciFi network has gone and cancelled Stargate SG-1, right after showing the record-breaking 200th episode last Friday. (Actually, word has it that they dropped the announcement on the production as they were gathered to watch it.)

I am most displeased. SG-1 is one of the few shows onTV I don't yell at (e.g., doesn't Dr. House realize that battery is not just a civil tort but also a criminal charge???)... Like Star Trek: the Next Generation, which I also liked, SG-1 has good stories, interesting characters with good chemistry and humor, and a plausible and consistent mythology underpinning the science fiction aspect. I'm not really a sci-fi fan, so these are the things I need to see in such a show in order to be induced to regularly watch it. In fact, they are things I would want to see in any show.

SG-1 is also distinctive because it has one of the strongest female characters on TV. "Lt. Col. Samantha Carter" has been there from the beginning. She is blazingly (but not annoyingly) smart, physically as capable as her peers, pretty - even beautiful - but not a sexualized character. Some story lines have developed romantic interests for her, but they are always with people outside her team and she always stays true to herself. The only time sexual tension becomes a factor with her male colleagues is when alternate realities are in play, and even then there are signs that the writers are being tongue-in-cheek.

Even though there have been some substantial changes to the show in recent history (including the departure of Richard Dean Anderson (formerly MacGyver), whose wry Jack O'Neil character is sorely missed) it still has legs and should have been allowed to run on further. There are some reports that MGM, its production company, might try to shop it elsewhere. It's already survived a cancellation from Showtime, which is how it ended up on Sci-Fi in the first place. Otherwise fans are sending petitions and such to the Sci-Fi network to get them to reconsider. I can't quite get behind that because there are more worthwhile things to do with one's energies, but if Sci-Fi does reconsider I think it would be a good thing. Yes, ratings may have dropped. But Sci-Fi put it on Fridays against Monk, another decent show. (As is the show that follows it, Psyche, although the Dule Hill (from the West Wing) character is underdeveloped. Hill is quite good, with excellent comedic sensibilities, but his character is essentially extraneous.) It's like they were trying to kill it.

August 29, 2006

Here he goes again

For the sake of completion I feel obligated to post that Huey Lewis will be playing lawyer Billy Flynn in Chicago again. October 24th -- November 5th, (with the exception of Sat, Oct. 28th) at the Orpheum Theater in San Francisco, and November 20th -- January 15th at the Ambassador Theater in New York.

All jokes about him not having taken the bar implied.

August 30, 2006

Is this not the Perfect Event?

A Huey Lewis and the News concert and CLE credit*... What could be better? (Clearly I'm heading into the right profession...)

(And Huey must really have a thing for lawyers...)

*CLE stands for "Continuing Legal Education" and is something lawyers in many states must do to maintain their bar membership.

September 28, 2006

Anonymous Lawyer in China

I was a very naughty Jeremy Blachman fan. I'd gotten a pre-release copy of his Anonymous Lawyer book this summer, with the intention that I'd review it on my blog, and then… didn't. Bar study crap and all that, but it's been a guilt-laden lingering item on my "to do" list.

Until today, when the planets have finally aligned and I can at last provide my review: I liked it. There. Was that so hard? Of course not, so here - let me throw in some more details.

What I particularly liked about the book is how Jeremy solved the problem of translating the Anonymous Lawyer blog to novel form. Unlike most other novels there's no detached narrative. The characters and plot are all developed and explained through his Anonymous Lawyer character's eyes. Which is no small feat, because, parallel to the development of his own hobbled character he has to notice, understand, and process the development of others' characters in order for the reader to be able to see it too. Whether or not he succeeds at this turns out to be the crux of the plot.

Which leads me to my only criticism of the book, which is that I felt that at the end certain characters behaved inconsistently within their own character. On the other hand - did they really? The book gleefully toys with readers' expectations of believability. Indeed, the blog does too. For people unfamiliar with it, the Anonymous Lawyer blog is written from the perspective of a jaded, somewhat sadistic partner in a large law firm, whose self-admitted behavior, no matter how awful, seems to have tremendous traction with readers. While for some it's probably voyeurism, for many others the intrigue seems to stem from an amazement that someone would finally be admitting to the behavior they themselves had observed in large law firms, albeit anonymously. Torturing associates, backstabbing colleagues… it apparently happens all the time in these environments. Of course it turned out that there was no such admission. The Anonymous Lawyer was merely a creature of Jeremy's imagination. But so gifted was his insight into human behavior and flair for the perfect subtlety of satire that scads of readers were convinced it was real. When it comes to illustrating the apparent endemic dysfunction of large law firm life, apparently Jeremy is the guy to do it.

So when I was getting ready to go to China and was trying to arrange with my friend when we could get together, and she said, "Oh, I can't meet on Saturday because I have to work [at the large American firm where she was clerking that summer]" I knew what I had to do: get her the Anonymous Lawyer book.

al_in_china.jpg

(Notice the Chinese newspaper I'm holding in the picture. To prove, you know, that we were actually in China…)

To further spread the influence of American legal cynicism, I gave a copy to my German law school friend too.

October 4, 2006

Runaway Shark

In keeping with my general proclivities to complain about TV shows that squander excellent actors (see, e.g., "House") I feel I should comment on "Shark," especially since it's (ostensibly) a legal show. Granted I have no firsthand experience with the inner-workings of a DA's office (either as an employee or opposition or prey), but from everything I've heard from those who have, the show strikes me as incredibly unrealistic. And not your usual "it's TV" unrealistic, but "even for Los Angeles" unrealistic. For one thing, no one who works there is busy. The lead guy and his team of idealistic young airheads (supposedly JDs, though they get treated like - and act like - pre-law undergraduate summer interns) take on just one case at a time, which all gets to trial in no time at all. Additionally, none of them have anything resembling a personality, except for the lead guy. However, what makes the show watchable is that the lead guy is played by James Woods. I'm not a huge James Woods maven - I've seen him in very few things. And, unfortunately, nearly everything I've seen him in has been awful. But even in dreck, he always shines. In the skin-crawlingly horrible movie "The General's Daughter," for instance, he gave the one decent performance in the whole film. (Naturally, therefore, his character soon got killed off, thus removing the one thing that made the movie even remotely tolerable.) So simply because he's in this show, I've watched.

Meanwhile "Shark" also "stars" Geri Ryan, who's always struck me as a perfectly competent actor (see her performance as a humanized Borg in "Star Trek:Voyager"), but like Dule Hill in "Psyche" she gets stuck with an underdeveloped character to inhabit. I can't see much future for this character, or this show, for that matter, unless, like Hugh Laurie, James Woods can keep carrying the whole show himself. (Actually, I take that back. The character of his daughter is also compelling and surprisingly "real." It stands out in aberration from the rest of the show.)

I've also gotten sucked into the new show "Runaway," which comes on after the Camden Family Trainwreck, otherwise known as "7th Heaven." "Runaway" is about a family on the run following a gruesome murder their hotshot lawyer father got framed for. It's a little contrived, a little "X-Files" in its overwrought conspiracy theory, but it's also well-acted, pretty solidly conceived and written, and an interesting scenario to explore dramatically. Within each episode there's the whole mysterious "whodunit" factor trying to figure out the murder, there's the manhunt by the authorities a la "The Fugitive" (one of the least interesting dynamics of the show, but I suppose it needs to be there as part of the exposition since it's what provides pressure to the characters), and then there's the character development within the family as a family and each character individually. There's plenty of thematic exploration about what it means to start over, disconnected from your past, and whether it's a good thing, or a burden, or both.

So far the first two episodes have been very tight. Although their situation seems somewhat implausible, the family has problem-solved maintaining their anonymity relatively plausibly. Sadly what makes the show seem the most implausible is that in this day and age it's pretty much impossible to maintain anonymity. People with no reason to care about hiding their identity often can't and don't realize how hard it is. So watching sympathetic people who do have a good reason not to be themselves struggle with it can be most illuminating.

I do worry about whether the series will stay as good as it is right now. The problem is that American TV series are generally open-ended. They try to produce as many seasons and episodes as they can, and if a cancellation comes without sufficient notice, they may not get a chance to tie up loose ends. This show would be much better if it was done in the British series style, where within a series of episodes there's a resolution, and then the next year there can perhaps be a discretely different story arc. Or, if the story has been completely told, the production will simply end. This show really needs that kind of treatment, but I fear it won't get it. Right now the story arc here is interesting: the family's on the run, the father's trying to figure out who's framing him, and everyone is trying to adjust. But the situation seems so temporary. Even the characters within the show are banking on that. At some point things will become normalized - will it still be interesting TV when it does?

One other nice aspect to the show is that it's pretty well cast. I particularly liked the father, who conveys a quiet strength, resolve, savviness, and intelligence - and isn't bad looking either... So you could have knocked me over with a feather when I realized he was played by Donnie "New Kids on the Block" Wahlberg! I'm sorry, I remember quite well (and not particularly fondly) the mania surrounding them, the contrived hip-hopesque bad boy poses... It was really hard to wrap my brain around the idea that the guy whose teen mag pictures I justifiably mocked back then was impressing me on the small screen now. But I guess it can be good to get to leave your past behind sometimes.

October 26, 2006

Just like me, he's trying to practice in California too

The touring production of Chicago is currently in San Francisco, starring Huey Lewis once again as lawyer Billy Flynn. I was in the city yesterday for some appointments anyway, so I decided to go see it. (Mid-week balcony tickets are pretty cheap.) At first it was hard to just enjoy it for itself and not keep comparing it to the Broadway version I'd seen last year. In some ways I thought it compared unfavorably and I missed certain details, but in other ways I liked some of the differences. The biggest difference to get used to, though, was that apart from Huey all the other actors were different.

In a sense it's a shame that Huey gets all the attention on the marquee: it's really a show where the two women (Velma and Roxy) are the stars. They each have incredibly demanding parts, very physical, and the show makes or breaks with their performances. Still, Huey's fun to watch with his impish Billy Flynn. Huey's obviously very comfortable on the stage and he really throws himself into it, but I think he's still learning how to throw himself into it most effectively. He's a little too "Justine Bateman" in scenes where he has to confront Roxy and Amos, and I think it detracts from the command Flynn would naturally have as a lawyer.

(The "Justine Bateman" thing is a reference to a performance of The Crucible I once saw her in off-Broadway. She played the woman who instigates the witch hunt through her sociopathic jealousy. The reason why the character is able to get away with this is because she's subtle in her approach, and none of the other characters quite realize how she's manipulating the situation until it's too late. But Bateman played the character 100% angry, all the time. She just came out and snapped at people. Which breaks down the logic of the play, because if the character had really been like that no one would have taken her seriously and the witch hunt never would have happened.)

I also think Huey would have benefited if he'd been in that fabulous Copyright and Rhetoric class I took, for the same reason I benefited from it. One of the things we learned was how, and why, to slow down our delivery. To let each word properly hang for its full rhetorical power. For instance, in one scene in Chicago Huey gives a rhetorically provocative closing argument. The way it's scripted, even though the audience can see it's tripe, it's still rhetorically poignant tripe designed to manipulate the heartstrings of the jury. I think Huey rushes through the delivery a bit and it takes away from the power the soliloquy is supposed to have. In fact, overall, I think Huey may need to slow down and claim his space as a character a little more. Of course, I note the heavy irony that I'd even suggest such a thing of him, since in real life when Huey's just being Huey he's much better and more practiced at public speaking than I am and has no problem taking the time he needs to get the most punch from his delivery. (Whereas I'm still learning.)

I did find last night, though, that I was having an unexpected and somewhat negative reaction to the play, for reasons having nothing to do with Huey per se but a lot to do with Billy Flynn. When I watched it last December I was still in law school. "Ha, ha," I often joked (somewhat not unembitteredly…), "Huey's getting to be a lawyer before I am." But seeing as how I was still in law school I just made more jokes about not having taken classes on razzle-dazzling and left it at that.

This time it was different. I'm out of school, and fighting tooth and nail to become a lawyer, wrangling with bar exams and moral character applications and the general angst that comes with trying to break into a new career. At this point I identify much more with being a lawyer. It's a role I'm ready, willing, (nearly) able and anxious to take on. So when I watched Billy Flynn commit all sorts of breaches of legal ethics (e.g., failure to zealously advocate for his clients, suborning of perjury, etc.) I think I took it personally somehow. It wasn't funny to me to watch a bad lawyer; in an odd way it almost felt like an attack on me through its attack on the profession I'm eager to join and nobly uphold.

Anyway, my point is mostly that by being a graduate as opposed to a law student I found myself identifying with the role in a much different way. Never fear, however: I'm still aware that it's just a silly play.

Edit 10/31: Turns out I had a few more thoughts on this...

October 31, 2006

Some additional thoughts on the "Justine Bateman" problem

Why am I still thinking about this? Because that nagging sense of having been dissed by proxy by Huey Lewis's Billy Flynn portrayal in Chicago didn't go away, and in thinking about it I decided it was probably somewhat connected to the anger issue I noted before. The comment I made earlier, "detracts from the command Flynn would naturally have as a lawyer," is at the crux of it. Basically, I think Huey slightly misinterprets Flynn (assuming he wasn't explicitly instructed to play him exactly this way), portraying him too much as just being in it for the money, when in reality the money's just a byproduct; Flynn's really in it for the esteem he gets as a lawyer.

In one scene, for instance, we see Roxy's husband Amos encounter Flynn and try to stall for time because he only has raised $2000 of the $5000 Flynn requires for his fee. Amos is a meek pushover of a guy, an impotent combination of naivety and spinelessness. He's no match for someone debonair and sophisticated like Flynn, and the play really drives home that contrast with many of the musical numbers (compare Flynn's "All I Care About is Love," where he sings about loving the attention he gets, and Amos's "Mr. Cellophane," which laments how no one ever even notices him). So when this confrontation happens, we know that Flynn is going to end up with what he wants: the case itself and the attention it brings, on his terms. There's no way Amos could stand up to Flynn to arrange for things to be any other way.

When Amos doesn't have all the money like he's supposed to, Huey's Flynn really lets him have it, practically threatening to drop the case right then and there. In my current state as an aspiring almost-lawyer this scene bothered me because it makes Flynn seem like a petty mobster, a bully, practically shaking down his clients for exorbitant sums in order to continue representation. Lawyers may be criticized for many things, but overt extortion is generally not one of them (though naturally there are exceptions). (And lawyers may withdraw if their clients cannot pay, but usually not so unilaterally as to prejudice the client.) Lawyers may, of course, be thought of as smug and smarmy (qualities Billy Flynn has in spades) and heavily resented for it, but that's because lawyers are regarded as authorities, and people resent feeling dependent on them. A lawyer who plays up the inherent power their authority gets them is more likely to be seen as slick and oily, but exploiting that position of power is not the same as engaging in outright wrongful behavior. The problem with Huey's Flynn is that he has him doing the latter and not so much the former. Which not only made me squirm, but also seems contrary to the way the role is scripted.

Billy Flynn clearly loves the attention he gets from his authority. He sings about it. He speaks about it. It's his motivating force. So when Huey has him get actually angry with Amos, he's abdicating the natural authority of his character. Which is particularly jarring in this context, as Amos is the kind of guy who would show deference to a telephone pole. That exchange between him and Flynn should really be about Flynn toying with him like a cat toys with a mouse. It should be false-anger that Flynn projects, enough to remind Amos who's boss, but not in a way that communicates animus. Huey could probably play the argument sarcastically, comedically, maybe even winking at the audience as he lets Amos walk off dejectedly before reeling him back. We all know that Amos will take him seriously and do what he wants, so there's no need for Flynn to actually be serious in the argument. But the way Huey plays him, he is, and as a result his Flynn almost seems desperate, pretty much relenting at the end of the scene in order to keep the case. Which doesn't make sense, because someone like Flynn would have been in control of the whole situation, and certainly no insignificant spec like Amos should have been able to wrest it from him.

Especially because there's a later point in the play where Flynn is engaged in a genuine power struggle, when Roxy challenges him. Unlike Amos she is not an insignificant spec, and it seems like the two argument scenes are designed to stand out in contrast with each other (diminishing Amos's character earlier helps promote the strength of Roxy's later). When Roxy doesn't abide by his instructions, when she asserts herself as being more important than he is, that's genuine anger that comes out of Billy Flynn, because she's truly questioning his role as an authority and weakening his control of the situation. For someone like Flynn who does what he does for the near reverence he receives as a result, to have her undermine his position would be genuinely threatening. So when he argues with her, that should be real anger, defensive anger, because he has a lot to protect with it. (Meanwhile if he were only in it for the money, there would be little reason to argue at all since he'll get paid no matter what happens at trial.)

Anyway, if this all seems like a bit too much attention to be giving to one play, well, it is. Except in as much that I often think about how people interact and relate to me differently as I go through this Great Change and incrementally become more and more a lawyer. I do see differences in the esteem people treat me with. I see also that it's my choice to decide how to respond to it, and the different consequences those choices have. So it's something I'm attuned to reflecting upon, and when I saw the play I couldn't help but do.

December 4, 2006

Like William Faulkner, but with punctuation

No, really, you absolutely, positively must catch Paul Thorn in concert. He's off the road for the rest of the year, but he'll be back and likely coming to a neighborhood near you next year. (Boston readers should note in particular that he'll be in Cambridge in mid-January.) I saw him again last night and was freshly reminded what a wonderful and entertaining talent he is. Plus one of the sweetest people ever, and I'm not just saying that because he came up and gave me a big hug while exclaiming, "I heard you passed the bar!" (Though he does get massive bonus points for that...)

If you do get out to see him, I promise you won't be sorry. (I brought one of my roommates last night for her first time, and she's now openly declaring herself a PT fan.) Feel free to mention that Cathy the former law student sent you.

March 18, 2007

Kids these days...

Watching a trailer for an upcoming movie I'm reminded of the swimming lessons I taught in the summer of 1990 or so. One of the exercises I always do with the kids is have them "talk to the fish" (blow bubbles), and then "listen to their responses" (rest their ears on the water and take a breath). To further engage them, I always have the kids ask their fish for their names and then ask what they were. The very young kids tend to imagine the fish had their own names, or the name of someone very close to them. Slightly older, though, and their imaginations provide the names of other people or characters they have recently thought about in their lives.

So imagine how impressed I was when the kids reported that the imaginary school of fish swimming in our town pool all had the names of Renaissance artists. "Raphael!" "Donatello!" "Michaelangelo!" "Leonardo!"

And how crushed I was the day I discovered that these were also the names of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

June 18, 2007

Better than a kick in the head

A weird thing happened on Friday: I did not attend a Huey Lewis and the News concert I physically could have gotten to, deciding instead that it wasn't worth the time or money it would have required.

What do you think? Is this a sign that Cathy is growing up? Or a sign of the apocalypse?

But lest you think I went completely HLN-less, I did get to see them (and Paul Thorn) on Sunday, which was much more fun than a kick in the head. A full write-up of the day's event is here.

I mention this not because I'm trying to make my blog "all HLN all the time" but because a legal issue was raised at the concert that I want to analyze in a subsequent post.

It was a fun show, though. You should have been there.

July 19, 2007

In praise of public culture

I think the only reason I like to have cable is because it carries in full clarity 3-4 PBS channels. Probably at least half of my television viewing is spent watching them. Not that everything's perfect, of course. For instance, I just watched an unimpressive hour-long show about author Simon Winchester coming to San Francisco to write a book on the 1906 earthquake. And occasionally even some of the PBS-staple British mysteries and dramas bear signs of having taken lessons from some of their American cousins in their taking a turn for tripe (Inspector Lynley, I'm looking at you).

But more often than not, what PBS shows is really great television. PBS has always shown a lot of British mysteries (e.g., Agatha Christie, Inspector Morse, Foyle's War) and most of them are very well done. Even the recent foray into American-bred mysteries was quite enjoyable as well (see the Tony Hillerman adaptations of mysteries set on the Navajo reservation). Like the British examples these mystery productions shared rich characters, deeper motivations, and a patient pacing willing to take all the time it needed to properly unfold its tale.

Now one of my favorite times to tune in is at 10pm on Monday nights on KCSM, when they have been showing similar mysteries produced in other parts of the world. Once I saw a French one (the detective's name slips my mind at the moment), there's been several installments of Sicily's Inspector Montalbano, this week there was an excellent one from Germany, and, perhaps most intriguing, they've shown several episodes of Sherlock Holmes produced in Soviet-era Russia. All of these shows are broadcast in their native languages with English subtitles (although amusingly there are occasionally superimposed subtitles appearing in a different font, for where American TV censors apparently disapproved of the literal, yet accurate, original translations of the dialog's earthy vernacular...) and all of these shows afford a glimpse into the places that produced them. Not just in terms of settings (e.g., Sicily is gorgeous, and it's interesting to watch 1980's Russia be passed off as 19th century London) but also in terms of what it says about the people whom these shows reflect. Obviously not too much can be presumed by that (for surely America isn't defined by Friends and the like...) but use of language, dramatic themes, examples of humor... all these things reflect the society they belong to and entertain.

Meanwhile, also on PBS, I stumbled onto what is now my favorite production of Jane Eyre. I think I'd seen one or two older productions, including the 1944 Orson Wells-Joan Fontaine version, and I'd really hated them because they were so dark. They were simply tragic, not romantic in the least. I always presumed that's how the story was, and consequently was dissuaded from ever reading the book since it seemed too unpleasant. But this version manages to be uplifting, even while dealing with the hard tragedies in its protagonist's life. For one thing, the cinematography is much brighter, more akin to the excellent 1995 BBC/A&E Pride and Prejudice than past Jane Eyre productions. In this England, spring does come, and as a consequence the characters seem much more real. I could never imagine how people could live in a place with so much darkness, as the older versions portrayed England to be, so seeing them cast in daylight helps one better identify with their lives, since, apart from the constraints of their historical circumstances, they really don't seem so different from ours today.

The other point of note from the production is how Jane Eyre is portrayed. Jane has always been a strong woman, but I always remember from the older versions a sense that strong equated with severe. Perhaps that's also a sign of the times, reflecting a cultural value of the period in which the production was made. Strong women have often been characterized negatively, as if their strength comes at the expense of any softness or femininity. So it's refreshing to see a Jane Eyre who has not had to sacrifice either in order to protect herself from life's cruelties. Indeed, they may actually be the source of her strength.

Of course, all these productions are adaptations of the book, which, as I said, I've never read. But for the first time I'm now motivated to. So I went over to Project Gutenberg to look for it. Project Gutenberg is dedicated to creating a library of works that have come into the public domain. Any copyright in this 19th century novel has long since expired, so some volunteer converted it into an ebook anyone can download for free.

I need not make a statement about private sources of culture, as surely they provide value as well. But public sources like PBS and Project Gutenberg are certainly to be praised for the rich collection of culture they make freely available for all.

Edited 7/20.

August 21, 2007

Save the Sweetwater

The Bay Area has historically had a very active music scene. San Francisco is famous for the music of the 60s, but even into the 70s and 80s the surrounding area was churning out countless more talented artists. Some eventually became internationally famous, but before that happened they and others were plying their craft in the various clubs dotting the landscape. Marin County had a particularly vibrant scene, yet today there are but few of those legendary establishments left that had nourished all those legendary artists.

The last one may well be the Sweetwater Saloon in Marin, and it may well be on its way out too. Every few years circumstances crop up to threaten its existence, and every few years its loyal backers rally around to save it. But this time the wound looks fatal: the landlords have served it a 30 day notice to evict it. By September the Sweetwater may be no more.

Once again its loyal friends have rallied around, but it's unclear whether anything can be done. The landlord wants to do a lot of work to the building, and then ultimately repurpose the space. It may well be true that the place could use a lot of work - the Sweetwater apparently offered to move out temporarily, with the understanding it could come back in, but the landlords seem disinterested in that proposal.

Many in the community are upset about this. Another seminal musical institution, Village Music, is also slated to close in September. The owner John Goddard may be a bit burnt out from his decades of running his terrific used record shop, but the ever-rising rents squashed whatever enthusiasm he might have mustered. Thus the last vestiges of a very deep local music scene will together pass into history.

Perhaps change is inevitable. But with the loss of these places people are wondering what is the point of change if it doesn't change for the better. Oh, sure, both buildings will be modernized and some chic shop or restaurant will open. But the culture of the community will be lessened. Mill Valley will be a village of expensive eateries, and nothing else.

September 8, 2007

Jersey Boys

I saw the touring production of Jersey Boys in San Francisco on Thursday. I went principally because the regular Huey Lewis and the News trumpet player, Marvin McFadden, was playing in the production, and I wanted to be supportive. But even though he had a lot less on-stage time than I expected, I still enjoyed the production.

At least eventually, as I thought it started out a little slow and confusedly. The beginning has a lot of rapid dialog that sets up the exposition, and up in the balcony of the Curran Theater I couldn't hear it. (I've had balcony seats for other productions in other theaters, but somehow the Curran's seemed higher than others'. I'm not sure it's worth the savings to sit in those cheaper seats.)

I also thought it was perhaps a little much in playing up Italian-American stereotypes to some degree. I mean, it wasn't really politically incorrect, but, how should I express this? It perhaps sacrificed accuracy for the sake of easy jokes. Which I guess is reasonable, although somehow it rubbed me wrong. Which is sort of odd, since I'm not Italian, but since I am from New Jersey I think that's where my sensitivities were. I did laugh at a funny early joke about the Meadowlands, but otherwise I think I felt irked that the culture defined by the play was being passed off as the culture of the entire state. And while I think there may be a ring of truth to it in some places, *my* New Jersey was a much different place, and I felt like it was being painted over by the play's broad brush.

But I eventually warmed up to the play, mostly because the music won me over. For people unfamiliar with Jersey Boys, it's supposedly the story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. I'd actually never really liked the Four Seasons. Valli's falsetto never worked for me. But after having seen the musical, I'm rethinking my opinion.

The early songs in it, non-Four Seasons songs (as they were from the period before the group finally gelled), were a little stiff. But in a sense that's a good thing, because it helped drive home the point of the amazing musical chemistry generated when they finally recruited Bob Gaudio and harmonized on their first note, which reasonated amazingly throughout the Curran Theater. And from there the music took off. Even days later I still have the songs rattling around in my head. For that, tremendous praise goes to the cast, particularly the actor playing Valli (I think it was Jarrod Spector), who had a tremendous range and faithfulness to Valli's sound.

This production is in San Francisco through the 30th of September, at which point it travels on.

Edit 9/18: Did you see the Emmys? If so, you saw the cast of the Jersey Boys I saw in San Francisco. (In fact, if you look closely, I think you see Marvin too.)

I'm finding myself tempted to see the production again while it's still in town. That Jarrod Spector, who plays Frankie Valli, is really pretty amazing. CNN (and others) may have panned the Four Seasons medley as a tribute to the Sopranos, but while it may have been misguided as an idea (enough with the Jersey = Italian = mobster insinuations, ok?) it's impossible to pan the performance.

October 6, 2007

What's so funny about peace love and understanding

Last night after work I walked up the street to the Great American Music Hall. I know I've been there once before, although it was years ago when I saw Bill Champlin perform.

This time Nick Lowe was performing. Oddly, I think I'd only seen him perform once before, although I've met him briefly in person twice. Last night it occurred to me, however, how stupid I've been for not seeing him more often.

07_10_05_NickLowe.jpg

Even this time was a near-miss, as once again I was ticketless and the show was sold out. Fortunately someone was offloading several spares and I was able to secure one. I was very glad, as it was a very good show.

I think the last time I saw him (at a free concert on the beach in Asbury Park sometime while I was in high school) he was backed by a band. This time it was almost entirely a solo acoustic set that covered both his latest tracks and some of the other notable, and at times irreverent, songs he's done over the last 30 years. I was happy to recognize quite a few of them, including a song with some of my favorite lyrics ever, "All Men Are Liars."

His latest album is called At My Age, and at his age his musical personality seems a bit more mellow than it used to be. But although that meant some of the older songs had different arrangements than on their records, it's not really a criticism. I found myself enjoying just how gentle this tall, lanky English gentleman's serenade really was.

I do wonder, though, if his perspective may have shifted over the years with regards to his older songs. The one from which I titled this post, "What's So Funny 'Bout Peace Love and Understanding," became a big hit for Elvis Costello when he covered it. "But everyone thinks I was being serious when I wrote it," I once heard Nick Lowe chuckle in an old interview.

Last night, though, when he closed his set playing it, I think he might well have been.

November 10, 2007

My Aim is True, Part III

Read part II.

"It only takes 35 minutes to play it straight through," commented Elvis Costello of his My Aim is True album. "Twenty-five on a good day."

elvis_costello_singing_110807.jpg

Thursday night Elvis actually played it twice, in two benefit concerts back to back at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco. I attended the second show. Following an opening performance by duo Austin de Lone and Bill Kirchner (who then later joined the band at the end), Elvis, Sean Hopper, John McFee, John Ciambotti, and drummer Pete Thomas took to the stage and immediately tore through "Welcome to the Working Week." Song by song Elvis and the former band he recorded it with worked their way through the album, performing each track much the same way it had been recorded -- with a few pauses along the way for Elvis to regale the crowd with stories about the album's making.

For instance, apparently they were using a studio in a house somewhere in England, a storied property that Led Zeppelin and Bad Company had once used. Over the years, however, "the house got a little dilapidated." At least one room became infested with rats, which were tolerable roommates -- as long as the light was left on. One night a party ensued, and when Elvis woke up he found himself lying on the couch. In a darkened room.... In order to turn the lights back on he had to cross the room. So he reached down, in the dark, to put on his shoes... And "Blame it on Cain" was born.

After the songs from My Aim is True were exhausted the band turned their sights to "Watching the Detectives" and other Elvis Costello songs. He also played several acoustic ones alone. His rule for the night, though, was that only songs written prior to 1978 could be played. This included some dusty old ones of his that might never have been heard in public before, a Clover song from their early 49er album (one recorded long before the two done in England) and "What's So Funny About Peace, Love, and Understanding," an angry, loud, fast version that closed the show.

Tickets for this event had naturally been very hard to come by. Even though there were two shows and tickets cost $100 each they may have sold them all out in about 15 minutes. I had no choice in the matter, since by the time I got through to Tickets.com only the latter show still had tickets available. But it may have turned out to be the better one to have seen anyway. The 7 o'clock show does have the distinction of being the very first public performance by the Elvis-Clover combination. But because the room had to be cleared to bring a new crowd in for the 10 o'clock one, they couldn't meander. Whereas for the later one, there definitely seemed to be some meandering... (At one point Elvis led the crowd in singing "Happy Birthday" to one of his assistants and then celebrated audience-member Bonnie Raitt's with a solo serenade.)

This occasion marked the first time I had ever seen Elvis Costello perform live, and I was impressed. His rapport with the audience was witty and charming, and he threw himself entirely into his performance (without, of course, being over-wrought). For instance, when he sang out, "I'm not angry!" the irony came through loud and clear...

sean_hopper_austin_de_lone_110807.jpg

It was also a pleasure to see these other musicians. For the record (no pun intended), Clover wasn't entirely reunited. Vocalists Alex Call and Huey Lewis had not performed on My Aim is True and they were not in attendance the other night. Also, the last drummer of record for Clover, Mickey Shine, has moved onto other things and was not available. Instead Pete Thomas, who has played with Elvis and whose path had earlier crossed with Clover's, filled in. But the John McFee-John Ciambotti-Sean Hopper trio might not ever have played together within the last thirty years. The occasion certainly marked the first time I'd ever seen Ciambotti and only the second for McFee. Sean Hopper, as a member of Huey Lewis and the News, I've of course seen many, many times, but never playing this. Not that anyone could tell from his performance that these songs weren't his regular bread and butter, of course. He didn't coast by, backing Elvis with a few basic chords; his parts were fully fleshed-out and articulated keyboard lines. That he looked like he was thoroughly enjoying playing.

As did everyone, for that matter. If it wasn't that everyone kept noting how historic the occasion was you might think it happened all the time because the performances were so tight. But given how unique it was, everyone - audience and band alike - clearly got an extra kick out of it, knowing it was a special night to remember.

More reviews:
Joel Selvin, San Francisco Chronicle
Shay Quillen, San Jose Mercury News
hln.org thread
Elvis Costello fan forum thread
Welcome to the Working Week

My Aim is True, Part II

Read part I.

Austin de Lone is a local Bay Area musician of some repute. As this article explains:

A utility keyboard player who has led many of his own bands - including the pioneering '70s band, Eggs Over Easy, whose 1971 stint in London is credited with starting that country's pub rock movement - de Lone has long been known as one of the nicest guys anyone could want on the bandstand. Those who have wanted him include Bonnie Raitt, the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Commander Cody, Boz Scaggs, Lightnin' Hopkins and countless others.

He has also worked with Nick Lowe (in fact he teamed up with Bill Kirchner to open for Nick Lowe in San Francisco last month), and it was Nick Lowe who had introduced him to Elvis Costello.

Austin de Lone and his wife have two children, a daughter and a nine year-old son. His son was born with the chromosomal disorder Prader-Willi syndrome. People with this syndrome are insatiably hungry. Without constant supervision they would keep eating, and many die of morbid obesity. To get the kind of care they need most will need to live in a residential facility.

Towards that end the de Lones are launching the Richard de Lone Special Housing Project, "whose goal is to build a state-of-the-art residential care facility for Prader-Willi children and adults in the greater Bay Area, and to find ways to improve existing facilities."

Of course, that takes money, so their friend Elvis Costello decided to perform a benefit concert. But no ordinary concert; this concert marked the first time he ever performed the whole My Aim is True album live, and, moreover, with the same people he recorded it with.

Read part III.

My Aim is True, Part I

Thirty years ago this year Elvis Costello released his first album, My Aim is True. He later went on to play with the Attractions, but on this first album he was backed by a bunch of Americans - a band called Clover.

Clover was a California country-rock band from the Bay Area that was plucked out of near-obscurity by Nick Lowe and his manager Jake Riviera and brought over to England, where they made two records for Phonogram. And remained in obscurity. Clover unfortunately suffered from poor timing: no sooner had their plane landed in England when the Sex Pistols burst on the scene, obliterating the demand for the pub rock they played.

After a while Clover gave up, disbanded, and went home. Clover had several drummers over the years, and they all moved on to other things. Bassist John Ciambotti became a chiropractor. Lead singer Alex Call went on to record a few solo albums and pen some notable hits. Guitarist John McFee joined the Doobie Brothers, where he still plays today. And keyboardist Sean Hopper, along with singer/harpist Huey Louis (as he was then known), went on to form Huey Lewis and the News.

But before all that happened the future Elvis Costello was spending his time working in the computer operations department of a cosmetics producer and hustling his demo tapes. Eventually Nick Lowe and Jake Riviera took a chance on him, and Elvis started taking sick days to go down to the studio to record his album.

Through the Lowe/Riviera connection Elvis ended up recording it with Clover, who were then being passed off under the feeble alias "The Shamrocks" due to their lack of proper UK working papers. As a result of the legal issues Elvis Costello and Clover never appeared on a stage together. That is, not until this past Thursday night.

Read part II.

December 13, 2007

The play's the thing

Here's another old post from early 2005 that was mostly written but not posted because I hadn't quite finished it. So I've tied it up and posted it now since I think the original thought was interesting.

Our instructor from the Copyright and Rhetoric class has been performing in a production of The Tempest in Boston. Last night my classmates and professor went to watch it. (The Boston Globe had some nice articles about him and the production, which I would link to, if only the Globe made their archives available.)

On the way home my professor was asking me what my thoughts were about going to see a play. Not so much on the play itself, but the act of going to see one. I said there was a moment in the beginning when I wondered how it was that I found myself sitting there at a play. I don't normally go to plays. When I think, "What should I do today?" it doesn't usually result in the resolution to go see a play. I have seen others before, but it usually took something particular to induce me, like making an event out of it. This is why I was there last night, how I ended up seeing a Moliere production, how I saw an off-Broadway production of The Crucible, etc. There was some other excuse drawing me there, other than the simple appeal of just watching a play.

I mused that unless one grows up having a specific interest and or particularly easy access to the theater, going to see plays does not seem an intuitive option in our cultural portfolio to pursue. It's not that we would refuse to go see one, but it wouldn't be a default decision when we decide to seek entertainment. We're more likely to go to movies or rock concerts. Classical arts tend to be lost in the periphery of our consciousness and we forget to enjoy them.

I don't mean this as an indictment against more modern arts, but it seems unfortunate that the classical ones get so marginalized. Culture and democracy managed to thrive in the days before television and rock music, but I wonder how well they can survive if that's all there is.

December 18, 2007

Hugh, too

What is it with all these talented people named Hugh running around? Well, not that there are all that many Hughs (Hughes?) but it seems like the percentage of talented Hughs among the greater Hugh population is higher than, say, the percentage of Johns in their respective population. If you're very lucky the John you happen to meet might turn out to be talented, but with Hughs it seems like a safer bet. At least if they are named Huey Lewis. And Hugh Laurie, whom this post is about.

It is being made partly in contrition. A few years ago I tried saying nice things about him and ended up insulting projects he'd worked hard on, like House and Stuart Little. And I'm embarrassed. I'm particularly embarrassed that I misspelled Stuart Little... (For the record, in case I edit it, I misspelled the "Stuart" part. I'm happy to say I at least had the "Little" part down.) I suppose I really had no reason to censure it, given that I've never seen it... For all I know, and from what I hear, it was a perfectly fine movie. But my reflex to dismiss it stems partly from my distaste of the Hollywood line of thinking that says, "Hey, if it was a good book I bet it will be an even better movie!" In certain instances such movies can be fine. My favorite movie, for example, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, is an adaptation of a book I've never read and probably never will (I find the movie so perfect I've been hesitant to disturb my impression of it). But particularly for children's books, we want children to learn how to paint their own imagery with their imaginations. Every scene does not have to be acted out for them in order to enjoy the tale. Just enjoying the book should be a vivid enough experience. In fact, for a good book it may even be more of one than any movie could provide.

The other reason for my skepticism of the movie is that I just felt like Hugh Laurie was too talented for such a film. And I'm still unrepentant in that view.

As I noted the last time, I've been familiar with his work for many years. Lots and lots of Americans know (and justly admire) him for his portrayal of Dr. House on the like-named FOX series. But those of us who watch public television more than network television have long been aware of the impressive body of work he's done in England. Over the last 10-15 years I've seen all sorts of excellent British productions he worked on, including such shows as Blackadder and A Bit of Fry and Laurie, the box set of which, as I mentioned, I recently decided to treat myself to as a "getting on with my life" present. It was a very good present, full of hours and hours of giggling. Which then inspired me to see what else he'd done.

The answer is "a lot." Since leaving Cambridge University, where his performing career began with the Footlights Club, he's been extremely prolific. Thanks to the wonder of the Internet I've been able to see a lot of the sketch comedy he'd done pre- and post-A Bit of Fry and Laurie (about 3:22 into this video is one of my favorite early sketches) as well as some of his dramatic work. I don't think there's been a sour note comedically, although some of his dramatic catalog did give me pause. Stuart Little aside, there also was All or Nothing at All, a brilliantly-cast production saddled by a completely illogical plot. (Hugh's character gets in over his head with gambling, but the whole set of circumstances from which this problem arose seems entirely too flimsy to have realistically motivated his behavior.) And then of course there's House, which regularly gives me conniptions, but I'll save my comments on that show for a separate post. Except to say here that I have no quarrel with any aspect to his performance, which really is excellent.

However, even in the productions I fear are weaker his dramatic performance alone is always worth the price of admission, so to speak. He's a terrific physical actor, able to use his entire body to emote dramatically or react comedically. It's more than just his impeccable timing, tremendous coordination, or sense of character - it's also his ability to commit to the portrayal so thoroughly and unselfconsciously. (See, e.g., any episode of House. Or Girl from Rio, a lightweight but enjoyable movie where he expertly plays an expert samba dancer.)

I think it's fair to say he's one of the best actors I've ever seen, but what makes him particularly deserving of the praise I feel inclined to make is that he has such a long list of talents. Including what I tend to value most: the ability to write. Even if he were but an empty vessel for someone else's words he'd still be worthy of praise, but his ability to create his own sets him apart. All of his comedy sketches are as good as they are not just because of how he performed them but because of how he (with Stephen Fry) created them.

Of course, it's not just any old comedy script writer who can then sit down and muster the attention span to write a whole book. This is now one of my life goals - to write a book - and I suspect I someday will, since I tend to be good at eventually getting around to most of my life goals (e.g., becoming a swimming teacher, becoming a lawyer, jumping out of an airplane...). But in the meantime I have nothing but the most enormous respect for people who have already done so. Particularly when the books they've produced are actually good! As was Hugh's The Gun Seller.

I'm not sure on what criteria one properly evaluates literature, but I think I can safely say, "I liked it." "A page turner" I believe is the typical way of describing his plot. His characters were well-developed, and his narration sublime. Rife with pithiness and understatement it never obviously sought to be funny but nearly always was. In fact it's a bad book to read in public because of all the uncontrollable giggling it is bound to cause. But apart from that downside, if it suffers at all it's because his satire lost some of its humor the day reality caught up with it. Poor Hugh, John Malkovitch was going to turn it into what surely would have been a really excellent movie. Reading the book you can hear practically Hugh's voice through his protagonist and Stephen Fry's as a Jeeves-like character Solomon as they work their way through a geopolitical conundrum of a pre-9/11 world. Unfortunately, given Hugh's prescient plot points, you could probably also cast George W. Bush somewhere in it too. Who knew that in the few years since it was written so much would change... (Fortunately, however, even if the movie never gets made the book alone is enough to vividly entertain the imagination for hours.)

Meanwhile, there is also another area of Hugh's creative talents that has me thoroughly smitten, and that's his music. He's a phenomenally talented musician, but that's not the point I want to dwell on, which is that he's written his own songs. Funny songs, even, which I tend to think are the best kind. Like a Nick Lowe or Paul Thorn he packages up these humorous ideas and gently floats them down a musical river. And some of them are really funny - I absolutely love their bluntness. Like Nick Lowe who once dared to sing that "she was a winner, who became her doggies' dinner," my funny bone gets tickled by Hugh's odes to Steffi Graf and protest songs. They have the kind of lyrics you can't believe someone actually wrote, while at the same time feeling like they are so obvious that someone obviously had to. (And I don't just say this as someone who really does live on a houseboat in an estuary...)

So, if you are American, you've probably already heard of Hugh Laurie if you've come anywhere near a television recently. And, if you're English, if you've come anywhere near one in the last 25 years. If you are from any other country or continent, or have sadly misplaced your remote control, Internet modem, or, indeed, your library card for any of the past several decades, I can only hope you soon make up for lost time and not miss whatever he chooses to do next.

December 28, 2007

Paean to a polymath

There's nothing like trying to rave about a writer to make one self-conscious about their own writing. For quite some time now I've been trying to find just the right words to wax on about a particular wordsmith. Unfortunately these are the best I can come up with, although there are quite a few of them...:

Never mind Hugh Laurie, I think I'm in love with his colleague Stephen Fry.

Yes, that is a very silly thing to say. After all he's too tall, too English, and too predisposed not to be interested in someone with my particular chromosomal structure for us ever to have a future together... No, I just mean that he seems like someone who would be absolutely fascinating to meet for a conversation sometime.

Which, given that I think I may only be two degrees away from him via several avenues, may not be beyond the realm of possibility of ever happening. But more on that later - first, the gushing...

I could begin by gushing about his acting. He fits the criteria of actors I admire - people for whom acting isn't a substitution for their own intelligence but rather a vehicle for expressing it. I have not yet caught up with the full catalog of his dramatic productions but what I have seen so far I've enjoyed. See, for example, his portrayal of P.G. Wodehouse's unflappable butler Jeeves. Jeeves was Wodehouse's notion, but his televised embodiment was Stephen Fry's creation. His Jeeves is a pillar of quiet strength, servile but hardly subordinate, and, if I were the type to ever use such a word, also completely adorable. Such a figure of reassuring steadiness is his Jeeves that I always feel better whenever I see him on the screen, personally comforted by the knowledge that with him on the job all will soon be set right.

I could also continue to gush about Stephen's own original comedic work. I've watched every bit of Fry and Laurie I could find, including the sketches they did before their own series. My face still aches from all the smiling. What's notable, though, is not that he's funny, per se - because what does that mean, anyway? - but that he has a sense of humor. These aren't the same things. Tragic figures can be funny - people are always able to laugh at other's misfortune. But it takes a sense of humor - an ability to actually sense the humor - to create something that's meaningfully funny. I always get the feeling that he's someone who enjoys a laugh as much as he likes to inspire them, and as a result it's easy to trust his humorist sensibilities.

It's his sensitivity generally that shines through in his other work as well. He's lately been doing a series of documentaries - on HIV, on manic depression, on genealogy - and in this non-fictional work he comes across as genuinely caring as he gently leads viewers through the important stories he's telling.

I'm sure I could continue to list things to gush about - I haven't even begun to talk about his writing - but I'm going to want to change gears and talk more about the areas of personal resonance my recent exploration of his work has had. I have certainly enjoyed everything described above. On their basis alone I could call myself a Stephen Fry fan and be interested in seeing anything else he does along those lines. I probably have been ever since first seeing him on screen years ago. But in the last month or so, as I've enjoyed diving into his incredibly deep body of work more particularly, certain qualities to it, and by proxy him, have inspired a much more significant appreciation than mere admiration for the product would necessarily explain.

I wrote a post some weeks ago talking about a trip to the library and rediscovering what fun it was to check out books for pleasure reading. What I didn't say was that I was checking out his books. To be fair, this wasn't my first trip to the local library. I'd already checked out Hugh Laurie's book a few weeks earlier and about a year before a different book altogether. But I remember as I walked among the shelves of the Mill Valley library with a long list of Stephen Fry's titles to find feeling this long-forgotten feeling of excited (and, oddly, illicitly-tinged) anticipation: I was going to get to read a book!

I ended up with three of his many books, which for lack of a better plan I read in the order they were published. The first was a novel, The Hippopotamus. I did have a slightly hard time getting into it as he does sometimes tend to dawdle in exposition, and I was trying to read it while commuting on a bus, which is a difficult (and jolting) environment for enjoying his always-apt yet loquacious digressions. Not that "bus commuting-worthiness" should be a metric by which to judge literature, but I figure anyone who might be inclined to read it too should be advised in advance on what might or might not be an appropriate environment in which to do so... It had at first appeared to take a while for the plot to unfold, but on retrospect I can see that it had been unfolding all the time as he wove together all his characters into a unified and satisfying story.

The third book - more on the second one later - was another novel, Revenge. (I think it may also have been published under the title The Stars' Tennis Balls.) This novel improved upon The Hippopotamus in a key way - shorter chapters! Lots of good places to put the book down when real life beckoned... Still, I can't quite recommend it as good bus reading either... In the latter case it was partly because, again, there was a lot of exposition, covering maybe as much as the first third of the book. And the role of the protagonist kept shifting from one character to another - although I don't mention this as a criticism. I actually thought it was an interesting approach, but it did mean that it was slightly hard to penetrate the book since it took a while to figure out what was really going on. But then once it settled on a clear direction it became an engrossing read.

It's only quite recently that I finished it, and I'm still left considering how I feel about it. At first I thought it was his answer to Hugh Laurie's The Gun Seller novel, but then I realized that Stephen Fry's was much scarier. He did a really excellent job, writing this book around the turn of the millennium, in creating setting, summing up the modern progress of the 20th century and intimating toward the apocalyptic post-modern horror that would soon be the 21st, but I sometimes found it too hard to contemplate the reality he was explaining. Sure, this was fiction, but like Hugh Laurie's book its satirical humor has diminished where reality has caught up with it. I realize I'm being frustratingly vague because I'm trying not to give away any spoilers, but let's just say that the technological civil libertarian in me frequently wanted to cry, not because the book was wrong in what it described but because I fear it was right. Way too much of this fiction was way too plausible to be able to sleep comfortably at night.

And then there was the second book, the memoir. A quick search on my blog reveals that, before now, I've used the word "memoir" only twice before in 1100+ posts - once alluding to the legalities surrounding James Frey's apparently fictional one, and once just a few weeks ago in my series of posts about "The Great Change considered." Which, as it happens, were written immediately after finishing Stephen's book.

His Moab is My Washpot memoir has been widely hailed because of two topics he candidly confronted: his homosexuality and bipolar disorder. I'm neither homosexual nor bipolar, but I still felt his book speak to me because of how it was written. Stephen's voice sounds an awful lot like my own, and for that alone I read it with immensely relieved gratitude.

I'll try to explain, because I don't mean to be so arrogant as to try to pass myself off as his literary equal. There are two major points of connection: his use of words themselves, and his transparency. With regards to the latter, his memoir was a profoundly personal document that he shared publicly anyway. I obviously don't know exactly what he was thinking when he decided to do so, but from reading other interviews and such I gather that doing so probably made perfect sense to him. And I understand that. Maybe there are some brains out there whose mental calculations always equate "personal" with "private," but mine has never really been wired that way. It's not that I lack a sense of discretion, or any sort of sense period. There's obviously consequences to letting people see your wrinkles, including that people now know you are wrinkled. But there's consequences to not sharing too, and, on the heels of reading Stephen's book, I explored them in my first "Great Change considered" post:

[It regularly raises] the hackles of those more risk-averse that I should be so candid in my posts, but surely they wouldn't want the alternative, a world where no one shared anything that's personal. This is what writers are for, to share bits of themselves so that others may discover they are not alone. Without people brave enough to share their lives publicly - think novels, memoirs, or newspaper columns, if the idea of blogs frightens you - everyone else would be islands adrift, never knowing how common their own experiences were since they would have nothing to connect them to. Writing exists to unite readers. I'm not saying that I deserve a parade for being willing to put myself out there, but my point is that excoriation is hardly an appropriate response either.

I suspect he might ratify this sentiment. There are so many who have found his candor so commendable, including me. My issues are not the same as his issues, but I can't overstate how reassuring it was to read his recounting of his path back from a difficult place just as I was trying to find my way back from mine.

The other point of connection to note is his use of words themselves. It's really not a question of him writing in a way I liked or found amusing. I liked Hugh Laurie's writing, for instance, but I can't generally replicate it. Well, occasionally and with practice I can sometimes come close, but the natural tides of my personality tend to pull me towards much more verbose articulation than Hugh's succinct pithiness. Whereas the tides of Stephen's personality seem much more like my own. While his love affair with words is longer and deeper than mine, he pushes and pulls and dances across their syllabic delicacy in ways I often tend to. True, he's been criticized for it. Like me he's been criticized for it. Even by me he's been criticized for it, above, for potentially meandering too long on digressions in his novels. But I think we would tend to share the thought that with so much in the world to express it's hard to bring oneself to skimp on vocabulary. There's so many things to say, and so many great words with which to do it.

Reading through those Great Change posts, written so soon after finishing his book, you could probably hear some of Stephen Fry's voice echoed in them. But it's only a slight affectation. Emerging through my Great Change my muse had gotten confused and muddled and sometimes no writing occurred because I'd lost connection with any sort of instinctive vocabulary to do it with. Discovering his writing was tremendously helpful because I could key what I wanted to say to his tone, almost imaging him narrating what I had to say. And in doing so find my way back to my own voice.

Of course, I'm hardly his twin. A published author, playwright, actor, comedian, raconteur, television presenter, amateur academic, etc. he's already distinguished himself in numerous fields. Far more than I can claim, although I'm working on it... He's a perfect example of a modern Renaissance Man, the kind of self-actualizing person I've always admired. There's so much in the world that's interesting - how can anyone pick just one thing to indulge in? I'm often amazed that more people are not so diversified, but maybe it takes a certain kind of personality to find so much so fascinating that they just can't keep themselves from exploring it.

The word I've seen used to describe him, as someone like this, is "polymath". I think it can generally be used as a synonym for "Renaissance Man," which pleases me since it means I can aspire to be a polymath without running into the gender-bending issues I would with the alternative... (However I think the strict definition of the term may technically be slightly different.) I've also seen him regarded as pedantic, although I think the pejorative is a little unfair. He's someone who clearly takes pride in knowing things and isn't selfish with that knowledge. What could possibly be wrong with that? I've noted before about how strange it is that people keep approaching me for the time and/or directions. But the truth is that I find it immensely flattering (if not also a little terrifying as I've become quite unsure lately that I will not get people hopelessly lost...) to be regarded as someone who knows stuff. I like knowing stuff. I wish I knew more stuff. And I love sharing what I know. Yes, perhaps I'm a pedant too - it's certainly seems a worthy goal.

There's also the word, "opsimath," which I first saw in the book he wrote on poetry, The Ode Less Traveled. (Yes, the actor/comedian/playwright/etc. has also done that too...) An opsimath is someone who continues to learn throughout life. It seems like a good thing to be. He certainly seems to answer to that description, enthusiastically diving into whatever subject captures his imagination. And maybe with my new career, new languages, new skills, new talents... maybe so do I.

The effect of him being an opsimathic polymath is that he has been extremely prolific. For weeks now I've been working my way through what he's produced and I still feel like I've only barely scratched the surface. His work ranges from the silly to the serious, which itself I find heartening, particularly as I am increasingly spreading my creative wings while simultaneously entering a very serious profession. It's good to see that one doesn't have to preclude the other. But what currently excites me, and is another area of connection between us, is that he blogs! A kindred spirit, I always knew... It's such a convenient proclivity for him to have, too, as it requires no trips to the library or book store to get to enjoy a potentially bottomless supply of fresh writing...

Which leads me to one final point of connection and full circle to why I said above our paths might one day legitimately cross: he's a geek! Or, as they apparently say in England, a "dork." An unabashed, experienced, and extremely knowledgeable technophile he even now regularly writes a column for the Guardian about the subject. It's because of this interest that we are only two degrees away in various dimensions and why, if I continue to hew the professional path to which I've aspired, he might someday find himself blogging about wanting to meet me...

Edited slightly 2/5/08.

About Pop Culture

This page contains an archive of all entries posted to The Great Change: Turning Cathy into a Lawyer in the Pop Culture category. They are listed from oldest to newest.

Politics is the previous category.

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