The Liquor Locker appears also in Into the Sunset (Aug. 24, 2019)
and in For Devil’s Night (Oct. 30, 2017).
Monday, July 6, 2020
Sunset Boulevard Revisited
Monday, August 7, 2023
Consensual Twilight
The previous post (on "Come Swim") suggests a Sunset Boulevard review —
From a search in this journal for "consensual" —
"Yet if this Denkraum , this 'twilight region,' is where the artist and
emblem-maker invent, then, as Gombrich well knew, Warburg also
constantly regrets the 'loss' of this 'thought-space,' which he also
dubs the Zwischenraum and Wunschraum ."
— Memory, Metaphor, and Aby Warburg's Atlas of Images ,
Christopher D. Johnson, Cornell University Press, 2012, p. 56
Friday, October 14, 2022
The Harlan Kane Story
See as well "Sunset Boulevard" in this journal.
Friday, January 14, 2022
Trick Question
In David Mamet's TV movie "Phil Spector," set prior to Spector's
first, 2007, trial, Helen Mirren holds up a 45 rpm record and asks
a younger lawyer . . .
"Now, what is this?"
Actually, it's something to do with 6515 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles:
A graphic image from the current business at 6515 Sunset —
Related art . . . See Test Patterns (May 10, 2014).
Monday, August 9, 2021
Art Criticism for the Chateau Marmont
"Nice work if you can get it." — Classic song lyric
Photo credit: Peter Lindbergh
See also . . . Sunset Boulevard Revisited and . . .
“Do not block intersection.” — City of Los Angeles
Wednesday, August 19, 2020
In Memoriam: Ben Cross
See Cross at IMDb. He reportedly died yesterday.
“For decades, Mr. Cross worked steadily
in television and film. He had just completed
shooting for the coming film ‘The Devil’s Light,’
about an exorcism, according to a statement from
his representative, Tracy Mapes.”
Also by Azi Paybarah —
See as well Sunset Boulevard Revisited and . . .
“Do not block intersection.” — City of Los Angeles
Monday, August 3, 2020
Liquor Tale
From an obituary in today’s Boston Globe —
“His father, meanwhile, had retired and hoped
to open a liquor store in Brooklyn.
When bureaucratic hurdles made his goal seem unreachable,
an old friend, Anthony Paterno, who ran a grocery and bottling
business in Chicago, persuaded him to try opening a shop there,
where fewer obstacles existed.
Salvatore Terlato enlisted Anthony to help him, and together
they opened the shop, Leading Liquor Marts, in 1955.”
See also Sunset Boulevard Revisited and . . .
“Do not block intersection.” — City of Los Angeles
Wednesday, April 8, 2020
For LA Boulevardiers
A screenshot from 10:07 PM EDT —
See also this journal on Sunset Boulevard.
Monday, October 30, 2017
For Devil’s Night
From a Los Angeles Times piece on Epiphany (Jan. 6), 1988 —
“Some 30 paces east of the spooky old Chateau Marmont is
the intersection of Selma and Sunset Boulevard.” . . . .
“Though it is not much of an intersection, the owner of
the liquor store on that corner might resent that you have
slotted his parking lot in the Twilight Zone. . . .
And directly across Sunset from Selma looking south is
where the infamous Garden of Allah used to stand. . . .”
Friday, February 24, 2017
For Your Consideration
Hollywood, from the Alto Nido Apartments
to Sunset Boulevard —
See also the Jan. 31 post "Sunset Passion."
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Saturday, April 14, 2007
Saturday April 14, 2007
the Egress
Continued from April 12:
“I have only come here
seeking knowledge,
Things they would not
teach me of in college….”
— Synchronicity lyrics
Quoted in Log24,
Time’s Labyrinth continued: “The sacred axe was used to kill the King. The ritual had been the same since the beginning of time. The game of chess was merely a reenactment. Why hadn’t I recognized it before?”
— Katherine Neville,
The Eight, Ballantine reprint, 1990, |
“Know the one about
the Demiurge and the
Abridgment of Hope?”
— Robert Stone,
A Flag for Sunrise,
Knopf, 1981,
the final page:
Saturday, January 11, 2003
Saturday January 11, 2003
METROPOLITAN ART WARS:
The First Days of Disco
Some cultural milestones, in the order I encountered them today:
From Dr. Mac’s Cultural Calendar:
- “On this day in 1963, Whiskey-A-Go-Go—believed to be the first discotheque in the world—opened on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles with extraordinary hype and fanfare.”
From websites on Whit Stillman’s film, “The Last Days of Disco”:
Scene: Manhattan in the very early 1980’s.
Alice and her friend Charlotte are regulars at a fashionable disco.
“Charlotte is forever giving poor Alice advice about what to say and how to behave; she says guys like it when a girl uses the word ‘sexy,’ and a few nights later, when a guy tells Alice he collects first editions of Scrooge McDuck comic books, she…”
“… looks deep into his eyes and purrs ‘I think Scrooge McDuck is sexy!’ It is a laugh-out-loud funny line and a shrewd parody, but is also an honest statement.”
(Actually, to be honest, I encountered Thomson first and Ebert later, but the narrative sequence demands that they be rearranged.)
The combination of these cultural landmarks suggested that I find out what Scrooge McDuck was doing during the first days of disco, in January 1963. Some research revealed that in issue #40 of “Uncle Scrooge,” with a publication date of January 1963, was a tale titled “Oddball Odyssey.” Plot summary: “A whisper of treasure draws Scrooge to Circe.”
Further research produced an illustration:
Desiring more literary depth, I sought more information on the story of Scrooge and Circe. It turns out that this was only one of a series of encounters between Scrooge and a character called Magica de Spell. The following is from a website titled
“Magica’s first appearance is in ‘The Midas Touch’ (US 36-01). She enters the Money Bin to buy a dime from Scrooge. Donald tells Scrooge that she is a sorceress, but Scrooge sells her a dime anyway. He sells her his first dime by accident, but gets it back. The fun starts when Scrooge tells her that it is the first dime he earned. She is going to make an amulet….”
with it. Her pursuit of the dime apparently lasts through a number of Scrooge episodes.
“…in Oddball Odyssey (US 40-02). Magica discovers Circe’s secret cave. Inside the cave is a magic wand that she uses to transform Huey, Dewey and Louie to pigs, Donald to a goat (later to a tortoise), and Scrooge to a donkey. This reminds us of the treatment Circe gave Ulysses and his men. Magica does not succeed in transforming Scrooge after stealing the Dime, and Scrooge manages to break the spell (de Spell) by smashing the magic wand.”
At this point I was reminded of the legendary (but true) appearance of Wallace Stevens’s wife on another historic dime. This was discussed by Charles Schulz in a cartoon of Sunday, May 27, 1990:
Here Sally is saying…
Who, me?… Yes, Ma’am, right here.
This is my report on dimes and pennies…
“Wallace Stevens was a famous poet…
His wife was named Elsie…”
“Most people do not know that Elsie was the model for the 1916 ‘Liberty Head’ dime.”
“Most people also don’t know that if I had a dime for every one of these stupid reports I’ve written, I’d be a rich person.”
Finally, sitting outside the principal’s office:
I never got to the part about who posed for the Lincoln penny.
I conclude this report on a note of synchronicity:
The above research was suggested in part by a New York Times article on Ovid’s Metamorphoses I read last night. After locating the Scrooge and Stevens items above, I went to the Times site this afternoon to remind myself of this article. At that point synchronicity kicked in; I encountered the following obituary of a Scrooge figure from 1963… the first days of disco:
The New York Times, January 12, 2003 (So dated at the website on Jan. 11) C. Douglas Dillon Dies at 93;
|
Et cetera, et cetera, and so forth.
(See yesterday’s two entries, “Something Wonderful,” and “Story.”)
Two reflections suggest themselves:
“I need a photo opportunity.
I want a shot at redemption.
Don’t want to end up a cartoon
In a cartoon graveyard.”
— Paul Simon
Ending up in a cartoon graveyard is indeed an unhappy fate; on the other hand…
It is nice to be called “sexy.”
Added at 1:50 AM Jan. 12, 2003:
Tonight’s site music, in honor of Mr. Dillon
and of Hepburn, Holden, and Bogart in “Sabrina” —
“Isn’t It Romantic?”
Wednesday, September 18, 2002
Wednesday September 18, 2002
There she stood in the doorway;
I heard the mission bell. And I was thinking to myself, “This could be Heaven or this could be Hell.” |
|
Then she lit up a candle and she showed me the way… |
|
Mirrors on the ceiling, pink champagne on ice. And she said, “We are all just prisoners here of our own device.” |
BACKGROUND FROM DON HENLEY
ON “THE GARDEN OF ALLAH”
“The song is loosely based on a recently published book (actually, I wrote the song before I read the book), The Death of Satan (How Americans Have Lost the Sense of Evil), written by Andrew Delbanco….
…we land at last smack-dab in the ‘culture of irony,’ which is where we sit, like Job, in dust and ashes.
THE STORY LINE OF THE SONG
“THE GARDEN OF ALLAH”
Satan is quite frustrated because things have gotten so bad that even he is confounded….
He waxes nostalgic about the good ol’ days when he hung out in Hollywood with the likes of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Aldous Huxley… [at] the historic Garden of Allah apartment hotel.
THE L.A. GARDEN OF ALLAH
A 3 1/2-acre hotel complex of Spanish-style bungalows that once stood on Sunset Boulevard…. During its three-decade heyday, the Garden of Allah was the site of robberies, orgies, drunken rages, tense honeymoons, bloody brawls, divorces, suicides, and murder.”
Sunday, September 8, 2002
Sunday September 8, 2002
In honor of the September 8 birthdays of
- Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain (The Killer Angels),
- Peter Sellers (“Doctor Strangelove”), and
- Patsy Cline (“Crazy”):
From a website on Donna Tartt‘s novel The Secret History…
“It is like a storyteller looking up suddenly into the eyes of his audience across the embers of a once blazing fire…
…the reader feels privy to the secrets of human experience by their passage down through the ages; the telling and re-telling. A phrase from the ghost in Hamlet comes to mind: ‘I could a tale unfold whose lightest word / |
This work of literature seems especially relevant at the start of a new school year, and in light of my remarks below about ancient Greek religion. One should, when praising Apollo, never forget that Dionysus is also a powerful god.
For those who prefer film to the written word, I recommend “Barton Fink” as especially appropriate viewing for the High Holy Days. Judy Davis (my favorite actress) plays a Faulkner-figure’s “secretary” who actually writes most of his scripts.
Tartt is herself from Faulkner country. For her next book, see this page from Square Books, 160 Courthouse Square, Oxford, Misssissippi.
Let us pray that Tartt fares better in real life than Davis did in the movie.
As music for the High Holy Days, I recommend Don Henley’s “The Garden of Allah.” For some background on the actual Garden of Allah Hotel at 8080 Sunset Boulevard (where “Barton Fink” might have taken place), see