Showing posts with label New York City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York City. Show all posts

Monday, December 26, 2022

Old Leaves: The Miserable Ones

The day after Christmas exactly a decade ago we got to see a brand new film in a huge theatre in New York. I really liked it.

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12-26-2012

 


Tonight was perhaps the most captivating night at the cinema of my life. Our daughter Brannon treated us to Lex Miserables, the musical movie, at Ziegfield Cinema near Times Square in New York City. The theater was sold out so we were glad to find seats down close slightly to the right. I had the aisle, giving my aching legs stretching room, and my eyes a full view, sometimes of individual sweating pores and tears building to a drop.

I have a bone or two to pick, but let me begin by saying that it is a magnificent piece of film, creatively imagined, expertly cast, gorgeously photographed, dramatically lighted, really acted, beautifully sung.


Hugh Jackman will give Daniel Day Lewis a run for the Oscar for best actor. One of the beauties of this story, the musical, and now the movie is its reminder to those of us who live in comfort and plenty that poor, dirty, despairing folk are folk. Behind the grime, the pretense, the toothless grins, the overdone make-up, the ragged clothes, the unkempt hair, the poor English... are flesh and blood humans with the same wants and needs, hurts and hearts of all men. Jackman as Valjean is unrecognizable and totally believable in the opening scenes as the depraved, dehumanized convict.

And he becomes one of the beloved characters of all literature.
I thought Jackman's singing was sometimes a little nasal. Where Colm Wilkinson, very effectively and purposefully, used falsetto, Jackman used a full, though somewhat strained voice.



Fantine (Anne Hathaway),



not of her own volition, takes the opposite path, falling from virtuous and beautiful to compromised and pitiful. Both are outstanding.

My favorite character and the strongest acting and singing was that of Eddie Redmayne.



His portrayal of the distraught Marius singing Empty Chairs at Empty Tables was heart-rendingly perfect. Redmayne deserves a supporting actor Oscar, in my humble and correct opinion.

Siblings Eponine (Samantha Barks) and  Gavroche (Danial Huttlestone) were captivating.

The Thernardiers were well cast, though I thought (my kids disagree) that they were overdone. The disgusting food scene was more graphic than necessary and not believable to me. Like Sheila, I was glad they were made more disgusting than comic though.

Russell Crowe as Javert has received the most criticism of any actor in the film, I suspect. I actually liked his acting. His singing was a little weak, though I like its understated manner except for the suicide when I wanted him to give me more overt pain and... volume.

The 1200 sold-out seats at the Zeigfield were filled with Les Mis enthusiasts, like the Shaws, who applauded for the announcement, after interminable previews, of the main attraction. They also applauded individual songs again and again, especially I Dreamed a Dream, On My Own, Empty Chairs at Empty Tables, and nearly brought the house down for One Day More and the Finale.

Drat it! One of my dreams is to sing the Valjean part someday in a local production or concert version. Folks will now picture Jackman (20 years my junior) in the role rather than an older Colm Wilkinson type. I'm already pushing the upper limit even with the Wilkinson image of ol' Jean.

Get your tickets. You don't want to miss this on the big screen, at least once. I'll see it again soon.

Monday, December 12, 2022

Old Leaves (PTSW): Exchanging Gifts

This oldie is from Christmas Day 2012:

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Here we are in Gotham for Christmas again. We did this in 2004, again in 2008, and now in 2012. I don't know if it's associated with elections or leap years, or what. But it's a great place to celebrate Christmas.


We have tried recently to de-emphasize the commercial aspects of Christmas and make it meaningful in a deeper sense. Our tradition of attending the Christmas Eve service then standing in the Trinity Methodist Nativity has been precious to me and broken only by these trips to NYC. On both earlier trips we have spent Christmas Eve at church (2004 at Marble Collegiate Church and 2008 at the Catholic Church of Saint Paul the Apostle near Central Park).  We were just too tired to go out to a Christmas Eve service last night. We'll see Les Miserables, the movie, today. To me that is a religious experience. We might make a Christmas Day service somewhere this morning, but I'm the only early riser in my family (Can you hear the snores?), so that's doubtful. I s'pose I could get out myself to one of the Greek Orthodox churches in this neighborhood. That would be a new experience for me.

I am thankful to be able to spend Christmas 2012 with my much-loved daughters and their mother whom I adore. I could never adequately explain my feelings for them but here is a little effort at that I wrote for them one Christmas when the girls were very small:

Exchanging Gifts 
What gifts will you bring your Papa?
Pure  gold, however they’re made—
Wrapped in sunshine of smiles;
Tied up with love that won’t fade.
 
What gift will you bring your Lover?
Its rich, whatever you’ve spent,
You’ve  paid thrice in sweat and tears
and my promises, broken or bent.
 
What gifts can I bring my daughters?
What present is worthy my wife?
Tawdry trinkets diamonds would seem
On these precious true-treasures of life.
 

-Terrell Shaw


Happy Christmas to all my friends and loved ones. We hate to miss the Shaw Christmas tomorrow at Mother's house --- our flight won't get in till 9 pm or so. Y'all have fun!



Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Gleaning FaceTime: Christmas 2012

New York bagels --from Lots o' Bagels -- eggs, cheese, coffee, and my girls.
(Actually they spell it Lot's O Bagels, but the English major in me forced me to relocate the apostrophe.)

Terrell Shaw
Of course I suppose there could be a guy named Lot who owns a bagel store called O Bagels.


Jackson Williamson
Are they...salty bagels?

Terrell Shaw
For JW who wants to know: Bran & I had "everything" bagels, Sheila had plain, and Lil had cinnamon raisin. 

Bran had the eggs & cheese among the few things left at her apartment and scrambled them together for us. The coffee was from Dunkin Donuts.


Ruthy Countryman
Perfect Christmas breakfast...actually I could really enjoy a REAL bagel some cream cheese & lox! 


Buzz Wachsteter
Bring home some real NY water bagels. They are the REAL bagels and I am betting very few folks in Rome have ever had one.


Julia Hilburn Dent
I am soo jealous!!!! Merry Christmas!!!

Charlie Hehn
Dude!!!!!! Bagels!!!!!!! I want a punperknickel toasted with cream cheese, lox, thick Bermuda onion slice and sprouts. Of course don't forget the thick black coffee. Ahhhhhh.....

Bob Doster
They got any grits up there?


Terrell Shaw
Actually Lillian had grits at the Stone Park Cafe in Brooklyn yesterday! And she says they were good.


Anita Stewart
Enjoy the New York life and fringes!

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We did it. Gluttony. We went back to Seva Indian Cuisine for lunch. Chicken Saag, Mulligatawny Soup, Naan, Tandoori Chicken Tikka, Navrattan Korma, Aloo Gobi Matar. Now for some coffee to keep me awake for Les Miserables, the movie musical.
I will now have to visit Seva every time I come to NYC.

Nancy John Singh
Lol, enjoy the movie:)...we may have to try this Seva...by the way Seva means to serve!

Mary Clemones Stanley
Since you know your way around NYC why not do a Christmas tour next year. You could make some "cha-ching"!
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Les miserables. Oh. My. I have a couple of bones to pick but what a gorgeous, awful, wonderful, terrifying, inspiring, emotionally draining two and a half hours. I have just vicariously experienced overwhelming despair, exhilarating optimism, desperste grief, and thrilling love.

Kendra L Harris I'm glad you got in. lol I had figured I may see you there... We were too late.. sold out before we arrived but are headed back tomorrow. So glad to know I have an almost 18 year old who is super excited to see it! 

Terrell Shaw It was sold out here in NYC too.


Kendra L Harris lol then I guess I wouldn't have run into you... wish I had though 

Jagdeep Singh Le Miz ... it WILL deliver everytime if done properly, thanks to Boublil, Shonberg, and of course Hugo.
Mary Nisbet Asbury
So....you liked it???
Howard Smith sounds like LIFE!


John Vick It is a perfect example of art reflecting life, and it is always entertaining and emotional, both Hugo's theme and Webber's music. It never gets old.

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A bit of rhyme I wrote for my bride and daughters at Christmas a few years ago:

Exchanging Gifts
What gifts will you bring your Papa?
Pure gold, however they’re made—
Wrapped in sunshine of smiles;
Tied up with love that won’t fade.
What gift will you bring your Lover?
Its rich, whatever you’ve spent,
You’ve paid thrice in sweat and tears
and my promises, broken or bent.
What gifts can I bring my daughters?
What present is worthy my wife?
Tawdry trinkets diamonds would seem
On these precious true-treasures of life.

Monday, December 24, 2012

Gleaning Facebook:

This is our second straight non-commercial Christmas. We are celebrating Christmas. We are not shopping & stressing. We are making some donations, seeing some shows, telling some stories, sharing some meals, enjoying some music, and soaking up some love (and serious calories).

I apologize for leaving the heavy lifting of the economic recovery up to others for a while -- though the restaurant & theater industries can't complain.
Merry Christmas Eve! Off soon to brunch with my daughters, Sheila, and Rachel Craw.

Mary Caldwell We are doing this as well Terrell, just a small gift and time together...amazing how much more fun it is than ripping open a bunch of gifts...
Michelle Moriarty Smith Sounds nice....
Bob Doster No, No, No. You're in liberal land again. Oh woe is us. (LOL). Ya'll have a Merry Christmas.
Martin Penland Teem
Merry Christmas & Happy New Year to the Shaws wherever they be.
Howard Smith pretty much to...we did a family vacation instead of gifts....much better.
Laurie Craw
Thanks for bringing love from home to Rachel. We won't allow her to stay in NYC next Christmas, no!


Anita Stewart If only more families would practice a non-commercial Christmas, it would be more meaning to this holy time and make family times together more important than gift exchange. Have a wonderful New York holiday with the girls.
Cara Loelle Reichel The theater appreciates it!

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Gleaning Facebook: In Queens

Have arrived at our lodgings. Brannon's apartment is very spartan. She has sold or given away most of her furnishings in preparation for her cross country trek. My arthritic carcass (a two-day drive is not a cure for sore bones) has taken over the one seat, while my daughters and wife sit about on the floor warming themselves before the crackling video fireplace. I'm such a gentleman.

Comments

Tersi Bendiburg
Thankful you arrived safely. Merry Christmas to all. I know about having an arthritic carcass. LOL! When I'm traveling, by car, I have to stop often and just get out and walk.


Laurie Craw
Let the fun begin! Glad you made it safely.

Charlie Hehn
Terrell, it's not an arthritic carcass, it is rather a vessel of knowledge like a well stocked library. Just think of it as a mild earthquake tremor and books got a little shuffled on the shelves.

Anita Stewart
Tell us more about Brannon's cross country trek.


Terrell Shaw
She is moving out of this apartment when we leave Wed. Then Jan. 15 she begins a year long road trip in her new little Kia Rio around the US. San Diego (3 mos) Chicago (3 mos) Georgia for a month or so next Christmas season, etc. I between those spots she will wander about the country. She wants to see lots of nat'l parks etc. -- maybe even spend some time hiking a portion of the Appalachian Trail. That's my baby... same adventurer who terrorized her parents with her independence as a youngster.

Deborah Lake Dawson
Have a wonderful holiday!

Saturday, February 04, 2012

Gleaning Facebook: Lillian's Staten Island Ferry Pictures













Lillian: Ew, Gross.
Terrell: I beg your pardon... Yo' mama is one good lookin' woman, and your ol' man has his strong points.



 

Saturday, December 24, 2011

leaning Facebook: Home from NYC

 Home, sweet home. Home at last!


Jim Ellington
Welcome, home, ya'll!!!

Lyn Davis
Glad you are home safely! Can't wait to see you!


Tersi Bendiburg
So thankful you are back home happy and safely.


Barbara J. Gale
Welcome home. I know everyone is glad you are home at last.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Gleaning Facebook: One More Night in NYC

Headed South about midday tomorrow. Lil and Peter brot me some great Mexican take-out tonight. As usual I've enjoyed eating here.


Ruth Pinson
Have a safe trip back south...ya'll...ya hear? Merry Christmas my friend!


Terrell Shaw
Thanks, Ruth. And a Merry Christmas to you & yours!


Jennifer Peppers
Have a safe trip there and back. And Merry Christmas to you and your family. 


Sherry Jean Sims
Be safe. Merry Christmas to you & yours


Kathy Wilson
Be safe.Merry Chritmas to you and your girls.!

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Gleaning Facebook: NYC

Off to Manhattan to see the UN, then a show with Sheila and the girls and maybe (?) Rachel Craw. Guess I better carry that big ol' bumberchute -- it's still threatening rain out there.

Comments:

Howard Smith
love NYC theatre

Nora Matthews
have fun you guys! we love yall! and Happy Thanksgiving

Terrell Shaw
Thanks Nora. Wow! 6 days till Vada Day!!!! We are thinking of you and praying for you and Vada (and Grandma and Gramps and Daddy Derrick, too.)

Terrell Shaw
@Howard, we do too, but tonight we ate Indian at a wonderful little place on 50th near 2nd Ave and had such a good time we decided to skip a play tonight. Maybe we'll catch one tomorrow -- there are a few playing even on T'day. Or maybe we'll let that be it for this trip.

Nancy Johal Singh
Have fun, we are going in December

Terrell Shaw
Ahhhhh... Nancy tonight was almost as good as eating at the Johal/Singh Restaurant: Bhajjas, Chaat Papri, Samosas, Chettinad Chicken, Naan.. scrumptious! I thot of you and Jagdeep many times this evening.


Nancy Johal Singh
I am sure that its way better than what I can make, I love that about NY/NJ, the food is amazing, don't forget to have Chinesse and Pizza

Terrell Shaw
Yours is still the tops, but this was close! I am stuffed!!!!
(Yours was also a lot less expensive.)

Nancy Johal Singh
We will be seeing Wicked this year, last year we saw Lion King, it was EXCELLENT!!!....you are too nice, I am not an expert cook just yet but I think a few more years I could be or at least hope to be, the good thing about living in Rome is that Jagdeep doesn't get to compare my cooking to anything else so it just seems like my food is great!...LOL

Terrell Shaw
You will enjoy Wicked. We saw it 2 or 3 years ago. It is one of the few times when I disliked a book but like the play (or movie.)

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Gleaning Facebook: Terrell & Sheila in the Big Apple

From Lillian Shaw's Facebook  today...


"Ain't we sweet, see us walkin' down the street..."

Dad must be making fun of Mom for something here.

Terrell Shaw
Nope. It would never happen.






 

Thursday, January 01, 2009

GrannyJ and the Third Avenue El

GrannyJ at Walking Prescott visits the Limb occasionally. I often click her homepage link then to discover what daily wonders she and her camera have recorded for us in and around Prescott, Arizona.
On this first day of 2009 --- I am living a life of science fiction: I have traveled to the future! --- Granny commented on my recent posting of "The Yawn" by Paul Blackburn with a few memories and a couple of pictures from our visit to New York City last week.

She wrote:
"You have reminded me, Terrell, that a one-time college friend made an 16 mm indie film years and years ago, Third Avenue El, that won many prizes."
Being me I immediately had to run the collective memory of mankind through the Google "Third Avenue El" sieve. Sure enough there is a webpage dedicated to the now-defunct Third Avenue El. And about halfway down that page of old pictures of stations and tracks, and newer photos of remnants and artifacts, was this --- Is it your friends film, Granny? --- imbedded youTube video, a beautiful 10 minute film of a "day in the life" of the late Third Avenue El with no narration but the strains of Haydn and the rattle of the elevated train.:

What is a 3rd Avenue El?

It's the elevated train that used to run up and down Manhattan until the mid-1950's, when it was decommissioned and turned into scrap metal.

Despite this, you can still experience the trip through New York City that vanished over half-a-century ago, not only from the overhead view of the train window, but through the actual neighborhoods and with the authentic people who road it daily.

A beatnik photographer with a tripod, a stumbling drunk from the old Bowery, a giddy little girl traveling with her father, and a couple on a romantic excursion help create a loose narrative.

For the soundtrack, a sprightly rendition of Haydn's Concerto in D for Harpsichord is accompanied by all of the real sounds of a metropolitan elevated subway trip. Along with it's superb photography and creative editing, a viewing of '3rd Avenue El' is like taking a ten minute vacation to a place that is no more.

-from the youTube intro to the video

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Happy Christmas!

As you are reading this I am enjoying, with my wife and daughters, a New York Christmas. Brannon is a nanny in Astoria (Queens) and invited us to have Christmas here so that she could continue to care for her two little charges while her employer, a soprano with the Metropolitan Opera, rehearses for an upcoming performance. We are staying in her employers home. Brannon insisted: she says we should spend our hotel savings on her Christmas present!

This is our second New York Christmas. The four of us flew to Lagaurdia in 2004, lugged our bags onto a bus, crossed the Tri-Burrough bridge to a subway stop at the Harlem end of Manhatten. We rode the subway to the Flatiron district where we toted the bags to the avant garde Gershwin Hotel. It turned out the Gershwin is near some interesting landmarks. Next door is the Museum of Sex. Just around the corner was Cafe 28 - delicious and very reasonably priced. And on the next block was the Marble Collegiate Church Norman Vincent Peale's old stomping grounds - we attended Chrismas Eve services there. The Empire State Building towers over this section of Manhatten.

We took in four shows on that trip: Little Women, Wicked, Wonderful Town (with Brooke Shields), and Disney's Beauty and the Beast. Watching Wicked with Idena Menzel was glorious, and should have been since it was the most expensive entertainment that I have ever purchased. Don't bother with the dreary book, but the musical is magical.

One of our pleasures in 2004 was people watching and people meeting. One couple we especially enjoyed were from Singapore. We were stuck with them in an hour-long queue at the TCKTS booth at Times Square. We had a delightful conversation and then exchanged e-mails during the next few weeks as their country dealt with the horrible tsunami that struck that week.

Christmas Day 2004 we spent in Central Park. We ice skated for a while, then strolled through the park in the crisp cold of a sunshiny winter day.

From our first busride till our last and the untold miles on the subway in between, we were struck at the friendliness and helpfulness of the New York people. The only angry voice I heard during the trip was from a poor disabled fellow who was nearly knocked over by this clumsy southerner, trying to manuever an awkward rolling suitcase out of an elevator at the Port Authority terminal. He certainly used some colorful language to describe my ineptitude.

Anyway, we're in New York again. I'll try to avoid running down disabled folk this time. I hope we're having as much fun as we have had here in the past.

I'll let you know.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Sunday Concert - White Christmas

As this is posted your host should be, with a little luck, on his way to a White Christmas in New York City. So here is the old crooner himself, Bing Crosby, singing Irving Berlin's "White Christmas" with Marjorie Reynolds in the movie, Holiday Inn. "White Christmas" is the top-selling single of all time -- a Christmas song written by a Jewish songwriter!

Lillian went with me to my voice lesson last Monday and we made a start on recording this song as a duet. We'll try to finish it up the Monday after Christmas when we will be back from New York.



Friday, January 02, 1970

Ringing Bells for the Sallies, December 1965

Christmas 1965, NYC. This looks like a bus, could be the subway. The blonde is Evie Spencer. Looks like we'd done some shopping.


Christmas 1965, Scarsdale NY. The Sallies sent us out each morning EARLY to meet the commuter lines in different locations. Then we worked all day at various shopping areas, Then when we were finally off-duty, we used the rest of each 24 hours to explore the big city through the night. There was no sleep during that two weeks.

Christmas 1965, Scarsdale NY. We four were assigned to the Yonkers Sally HQ. That's where we ate and slept (well, no actual sleeping occurred). It was from there that we ventured out in a rattletrap Salvation Army station wagon to all parts of Gotham.

Comments from 2010:
Jim Achmoody
Wow does that bring back memories of Manhattan etc.


Terrell Shaw
Sorry that we chopped you in two, Kim. 

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John Countryman
Love the ear muffs!


Jennifer Kellogg
Love this!


John Paul Schulz
The making of a liberal.


Terrell Shaw
Since they worked us from daylight till dark we felt obliged to use the hours of darkness for seeing the city... never mind sleep. Joan showed us the city. This eighteen year-old Georgia boy drove that dilapidated Sally wagon all over the city at all hours, as if I knew what I was doing.


Joan Doelick, a local Sally employee was our driver and companion for the duration of our assignment. Evie Spencer is in the front passenger seat. You see the folded feet of the ever-present kettle apparatus.

Here our driver and fearless leader, Joan Doelick, looks away from the road as I snap her picture. See me in the mirror? Well, my fingers, anyway.

Evie was a senior and I was a lowly freshman, but pickings were slim I s'pose (no offense, Kim, as I recall you were taken at the time ;-)) and she deigned to allow me to court her for the duration of this adventure. I was mightily stricken and greatly honored by her attention. Here we do a little cooking in the kitchen of the Sally HQ in Yonkers.

Christmas 1965, outside the Scarsdale NY railway station.

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Note from the future (2023)
Kim Gilson made comments on these pictures in 2010 but, sadly, his comments have disappeared. He was in a terrible auto accident in April of 2015. He died that June.