NOSTALGIC FOR CONVERSATION?

pic of me tipping cap
photo by Laurie Selik

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AHOY THERE,

FELLOW

CONVERSATION FANS !

 

It’s been a few weeks and I was starting to miss talking to you.

Ever find yourself nostalgic for good conversation?

I found myself in a long discussion with four writers on a panel recently. The Topic?

Nostalgia.

Was it Nietzche who said nostalgia was, “looking backwards with bullshit in both eyes”?

Well this panel was certainly full of it.

And full of fun too.

Presented by the Independent Writers of Southern California (IWOSC) at the Veterans Memorial Building in Culver City, CA: “Writing Nostalgia: When the Past Sings, Make it Zing.”

IWOSC sign for PanelLET’S MEET OUR PANEL

IWOSC host Gary Young quotes Noel Coward to get things going: “May you have a warm hand on your opening,” Coward told a starlet before her show. Warming to the idea of a raucous couple of hours, I lean into the microphone when moderator Bob Birchard asks us how we became nostalgic, and say: “I’m nostalgic for good conversation and can’t wait to hear some tonight!”

I take my cues from the venerable experts here tonight, like Jordan R. Young, showbiz historian and author of books like, Spike Jones Off The Record. He recalls a time, he says, “Before camp, before nostalgia,” way back in the 1950s when he could call up Silent Movie actors names he saw listed in the phone book.

They don’t make researches like that anymore.

Through such determined journalistical sleuthing, Jordan sought out celebrities, holding conversations with Hollywood figures like King Vidor and John Carradine, eventually starting Past Times Publishing. One of his books, I truly loved: The Laugh Crafters: Comedy Writing in Radio and TV’s Golden Age featured an interview with Irving S. Brecher. And I got to help Irv complete his memoir The Wicked Wit of The West in 2009.

I met Robert S. Bader once in Palm Desert at a dinner thrown by Harpo Marx’s son Bill. Tonight he talks about Groucho Marx and Other Short Stories and Tall Tales. It’s been translated into “dozens of languages, including Catalan.” Bader, a producer of PBS specials on Dick Cavett and Bing Crosby, tells us he didn’t know it was being nostalgic when as a kid he got into the Marx Brothers. But upon sharing that interest, discovering that some other people found it “cool too,” he knew he’d “made a group of friends forever.”

Panel moderator Birchard, writer of a book series called Cecil B. Demille’s Hollywood, makes a point of describing we few fellows on the dais as: “Not Historians.” He wants us to explain to the packed house of Southern California writers how we do our research. Herbie J Pilato, author of The Essential Elizabeth Montgomery and Twitch Upon a Star: The Bewitched Life and Career of Elizabeth Montgomery suggests using classic stock photo agencies like Globe and Photofest.

“Hey whatever happened to Black Star,” I interject. “Does anyone remember them?” When I first saw their photo credits in magazines as a kid I thought it was an African-American agency. (It was around the same time I learned that “Black is Beautiful.”) Bader and Pilato think Black Star is long gone or was bought up by a larger stock house.

Pilato, a one-time actor and NBC page, is founder of a nonprofit called the “Classic TV Preservation Society,” dedicated to shows that reflect “positive things,” including old programs like, “Life Goes On,” “Kung Fu,” “That Girl,” and “Gidget.”

“Herbie, you’d make a great host on the TVLand channel,” I offer.

“I’m working on it,” he says.

Robert S. Bader thrills the Culver City faithful with this tale of research: He discovered two hundred Marx Brothers photos in an attic.

“From that early 1900s period of the Brothers performing on the road.”

Bader’s book comes out in October and is called, Four of the Three Musketeers: The Marx Brothers on Stage. Devoted to Minnie’s boys’ pre-Hollywood movie career. I can’t wait to read about their earliest vaudeville shows and see that trove of pix. (NOTE TO SELF: I also need to pick Bader’s brain about getting The Wicked Wit of the West translated into Catalan.)

 

INQUIRING IWOSCERS WANT TO KNOW          Flo Selfman fronts panel

 

We take questions from the audience. (Flo Selfman, President of IWOSC, at panel above)

One man says he wants to write about a B-movie actress who did pin-ups and died young, but he can’t remember her name.

Next!

One woman says she’d like to write a biography, but read a Marilyn Monroe book that was nothing but erotic stories never documented in any history. Three panelists tell her you can write anything you want about a person no longer living. You see, one says, just because it isn’t true doesn’t mean it can’t also be a lousy read.

Wow. Shouldn’t it matter if a life story is true to the page its printed upon? Neal Cassady offered this advice to Jack Kerouac after reading an early draft: “Embellish.”

Robert Bader says, regarding his Marx Brothers research, Groucho would give two answers to your question, “and then tell you both of them were lies.”

Okay then. I jump in with an “IWOSC mini-seminar,” telling audience members not to worry, but “YOU’VE GOT TO HIT THE TYPEWRITER BROTHER! CREATE YOUR OWN MYTH SISTER!”

In other words, get the dang thing written. To another writer waiting for permission from a subject’s estate: “Write the book already; it’s easier to be forgiven than it is to get permission.”

(Also thinking now of Scoop Nisker, the unique radio man at KSAN in San Francisco who ended every broadcast of “The Last News Show” with, “If you don’t like the news, go out and make some of your own!”)

“Any one of these gentlemen up here will be happy to write you a perfectly good biography or memoir,” I add, although of course I’m thinking of myself on the prowl always for next writing gig.

 

THE LAST ARCHIVISTS?

A question for Herbie Pilato:

“You can write about Elizabeth Montgomery,” a man asks. “But how can you write about a TV show?” Isn’t that program — product — a corporate property?

“Nah,” Pilato aces it. “There have been ninety books about Star Trek, none of them authorized by Gene Roddenberry.”

“And isn’t everybody an archivist now?” I toss in. “Able to look up anything in a single bound on the web and assume they’ve done the research?”

Jordan Young says he thinks the millennial generation is the last who actually do archive things. “The next generation won’t.”

The first archivists, in Jordan’s field, were the people who audio-taped TV shows. Robert Bader makes a joke about a guy who audiotapes silent movies. I playfully punch him in the side. Later, after I blurt out something, he will say, “You’re scaring me.” (Which you love to get that from an adult. It’s only when you get it from a 4th-grader that you should worry.)

Bader, who said he loved the research part of his job, has been very generous to me this evening, praising The Wicked Wit of the West which he told the audience he read before beginning his new Marx Brothers book. (Yes, fine, but did he believe any of it?)

Realizing my fellow panelists are the kind of people who tape TV shows on reel-to-reel audio, I must confess to being part of that techno-nerd set, taping The Bill Cosby Show, but adding the caveat that this was in 1971 and I was using a cassette recorder.

SouthCarolina GO WEST014
“South Carolina” scene in MARX BROTHERS GO WEST (1940)

BEST PART OF THE NIGHT

About halfway in I realize: this is not nostalgia, these are pop historians. Jordan Young describes his work as, “the diggings of a cultural archeologist.”  Afterwards, I ask his wife if she thought the panel had covered the basics pretty well — the legal aspects, dealing with a subject’s family members, getting their memories straight. Yes, she says, “but it did skirt into the weeds a bit.” I think back on one panelist who described “looking for stills from Nancy Drew movies,” and another bringing up clearances and contracts. Still another mentioned Emil Jannings (1884-1950) in regards to a bon mot from Ernst Lubitsch (1892-1947). I wanted to blurt, “Where’s my MTV?” into the microphone I was forced to share with Robert S. Bader, but that would have sounded ancient…

Inside baseball to be sure, but this was about nostalgia.

 

 

SEMI PROFESSIONAL PANELIST LOOKING FOR TWO-HOUR POSITION

I could have been a better panelist. When moderator Birchard, author of King Cowboy: Tom Mix and the Movies, said he recalled Shakespeare’s “Richard III” appearing on TV’s “Omnibus” in the 1950s, I asked why, with today’s plethora of stations we still have no Shakespeare channel. “Springsteen claimed in song how there were ’57 Channels and nothing’s on. But today there’s like a zillion aren’t there? Thornton Wilder said at the end of every civilization there’s a period of great creativity and production. Look at the stuff being churned out, the platforms, the programming!”

Oh well. Just trying to get the conversation beyond clearances and contracts. At the panel’s completion, some of us rush off to greet well-wishers or potential customers, some remain seated there at the dais, basking all self-actualized, awaiting groupies. A woman comes up to tell me the story of a young actor in the closet who marries a woman, Hollywood style, but she kills herself, and a year later with the same gun, he kills himself.

“Great Story, huh?”

Um, I did make two nice contacts. One said she had a friend in Madrid who could translate the Italian version of The Wicked WitA PESCA CON GROUCHO — into Spanish. Then I’ll translate from Spanish back into English to see if any jokes exist at all.

A Festival of Books Panel

As well as the IWOSC panel went, the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books has never booked me to appear, despite my applying for “Memoir,” “Hollywood Biography” “Senior Memoir” and “Humor” panels, and despite having written for the paper for ten years including two stories about Irv Brecher, THE wicked wit of the west, given that moniker by Groucho himself.

Perhaps I’m bitter about never making it onto their rarified USC and UCLA stages in late April every year since 1995? (See picture of typical panel above) Listen, I spend a lot of time alone writing, so when I do make public appearances — slide shows about Irv Brecher pretty much — I tend to get excited.

But hey, IWOSC wanted me on their panel, right?

Perhaps I could learn how to become a professional panelist. Should I try and become more nostalgic? Anyway, if you know of any upcoming panels, I might be able to add some semi-comic relief to the proceedings.

(I mean, the guy’s own wife thought he got into the weeds; this is from someone who gets all his arcane references, you know?)

Finally, one more IWOSC audience member came up. She’d seen me reading TWWOTW at Chevalier’s Books on Larchmont in Los Angeles a few years ago. “Remember when you gave me the Groucho glasses and nose?” she asked. I didn’t, but I told her I should have given her a kiss instead, and leaning past the microphone stand, pushed into her as she stood on her tippy toes to reach the dais and I thought: That’s showin’ em! If a semi-professional panelist can’t get a kiss, he aint doin his job right.

IOWSC PANEL NOV 2015
Nostalgia Writing/When the Past Sings Make it Zing!

Jordan R. Young, Herbie J Pilato, Robert S. Bader, Gary Young, HR, Flo Selfman, Bob Birchard

WEBSITES REFERRED TO

Independent Writers of Southern California
http://iwosc.org/calendar/index.html#monthly_meeting

Jordan R. Young
http://www.thecommentarytrack.com

Herbie J Pilato
http://classictvps.blogspot.com
Chevalier’s Books
chevaliersbooks.com

A Pesca Con Groucho!http://www.libridivertenti.it/a-pesca-con-groucho-c2x13427728

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Concert Convo: Springsteen Wrecks L.A. !

Button Springsteen Concert

Had a dream our love would last forever

Had a dream tonight that dream came true  

Bruce Springsteen, Rendevous

“This button’s goin’ on eBay,” says the security guard guiding us to our seats at the Springsteen concert in the L.A. Sports Arena Tuesday night, the first of three shows before they tear “the dump” down. That’s the name Bruce gave it and the night is billed that way: The Dump That Jumps.

I took this picture of the button [Above] pinned to the chest of the guard. Her name is Gloria and I tell her Bruce wrote a song about her, but I don’t sing it to her, I just want a picture before her button goes on eBay.

An Open Conversation to The Ladies Who Loge

Dear You Two Gals who were near me singing  full-throated like me into the face of that blast back, the kind you can only receive from a nine-piece rock and roll band playing live. Such a high-spirited musical message, delivered with unstoppable untoppable energy. The E Street eight pretty much blew me away.

I also enjoyed almost sitting with you two at the concert last night. You may have been in the Loge section behind me (on the Arena Risers) but I felt we really connected. Especially when I waved and looked at you often back there. Like we were all family, didn’t you?

Springsteen makes that happen in the hall.

“He seems like such a nice guy,” my sister sitting next to me says. Yes. Look at all the friends he has. He’s got lots. And when we all sing “Wrecking Ball” together, because that’s what’s coming to the Sports Arena after the band’s last concert this weekend, we perform it as a farewell tribute. More than ten-thousand of us; it feels like a civic moment, one that we shall never see the likes of again.

Probably. Right?

I mean, just as JFK will only be nominated once in his life and it took place in this building in 1960, these will be the last shows here, although Bruce began playing here in the 1980s.

JFK SPORTS ARENA
JFK got Democratic nomination at Sports Arena in July, 1960

The Los Angeles Memorial Coluseum Sports Arena. Just below the USC campus. JFK was right here at the dawn of rock and roll, the Beatles and all of that hope.

Bruce may be God for a lot of people in here, but it’s Nils Lofgren who puts the shiver in me. Drove it in deep, rounded it off, spun it around. He’s a swirling dirging droning guitar dervish. He stuck in the shiv and I shook for the life of me. (Nils is a mad hatter who used to do backflips on stage too)

So energetic! At some points the show was too much really — too much energy. I had to sit down. Like when they did, “Baby I’m a Rocker,” immediately I thought well, “Baby no, I’m not a rocker.”

Not like that, anyway! I mean where do they get it? This family band who swear they, “would drive all night/ just to buy you a pair of shoes/and to taste your tender charms.” That’s deep, deep love.

Soon come thoughts of like, who am I to be receiving all this? What did I do to deserve these inspiring stories of faith, hope, anger, rebellion, imprisonment, freedom, sex and love. So energetic, as I said, all lined up nine in a row like that! Like BRUCE: THE MUSICAL. Playing every song in a row from The River lps create a concept kind of concert. His up and down adventures and finally breaking free leaving home on “Independence Day”  with a plaintive cry from his harmonica. Other songs popped up like double bubble bubblegum Bruce, especially “Hungry Heart,” a branded pop topper all the way (and his first #1 single). But I looked and you two were definitely happy hoppy teeny-bopping, recognizing we are family when Clarence Clemons’ nephew seems to hit every single sax note originally blasted by the Big Man.

I need to sit down, take a drink of water and think about this. Okay, here’s my energy: I’m living in that Dylan world where “it’s doom alone that counts.” First my father went, then my favorite uncle, now the near and dear older brother I never had. It’s too much doom doom doom and did I mention I’m trying on my third SSRI this week?

So thanks Boss. Appreciate the release. This religious experience I only get from live rock and roll.

I am happy to hear him play “Human Touch.”  I saw you singing it up there in the loge behind me. A song about conversation, after all:

You might need somethin’ to hold on to
When all the answers, they don’t amount to much
Somebody that you could just to talk to
And a little of that human touch

 

Springsteen drawing at Arclight

 

Wow. You gals looked like you were having such a great time. In my mood it sounds at times like The Dirges and Drones concert.  The crush of two pianos and five guitars at one point a buzz snapping at my head in high pitch like the sound mix was off — probably my hearing was.

“One fast song, one slow,” right, that’s Bruce at heart as I explained to my sister. He’s more than heart. He is the heart and soul of integrity. Singing, “Two hearts are better than one/two hearts can get the job done” sends a straight ahead gut-or-just-above-it-level truth that gets into everyone who sings along.

I believe in the love that you gave me
I believe in the faith that can save me
I believe in the hope
And I pray that some day it may raise me
Above these Badlands

For the ones who had a notion
A notion deep inside
That it ain’t no sin to be glad you’re alive

I would follow his stirring storytelling anywhere. And I have for so many years, seeing him play in NYC, D.C. and England. No wonder it is meaningful for me.  Overwhelming at times, this fullness brings tears. Wondering how I will get through this “Lonesome Day,” Bruce asks me to join in :

It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright, yeah
It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright, yeah
It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright, yeahI
It’s alright, it’s alright

And you know it will be, or it is at least right now, which brings such tremendous release.

Speaking of dirging and droning and weeping,  how sad was the band’s rendition of the title cut? “The River” started down and then at the chorus dropped another notch entirely, like the song just drops off the table in a change of gears, like the slowed-down chorus in “Strawberry Fields.” [SEE PREVIOUS WALKY.TALKY POST where George Martin explains how he edited together two sides of that Beatles classic] But this seems the darkest, hardest slog the show has to pull through:

Is a dream a lie if it don’t come true/Or is it something worse?

And a ghostly feminine “woooooooooo” reaches from “The River” into another realm (LA TIMES says it was Bruce in falsetto). Church comes with “The Rising” as Bruce stands in stark white light and “Lonesome Day” brings the group hug everyone needs. Then comes the Benediction of “Thunder Road” and we hear it thunder as only arena rock can, while you’re walking up the concrete steps underneath on the way out.

Oh-oh come take my hand/Riding out tonight to case the promised land

The Beatles are Love and Bruce is Togetherness. All of us dancing in the dark trying to write our story. A union prayer book as big as the world. We use it when we sing and rejoice, sharing one voice. And of course, following Bruce’s story. His myth. A helluva lot better than following the Ted Cruz myth. That path is so depressing, aint it, death and sickness all around –if they’d told me this was what adulthood was really about I’d have tried to have more fun as a young person. More fun with you ladies in the Loge!

My sister describes it this way when I drop her off at her hotel in Santa Monica: “Music surpasses life. You know?”

Wow. That was something I’d never thought of before.

“You’re right,” I say.

“What’s the word I’m looking for?” she asks and then Googles it:

“’Transcends.’”

Yes! She has had a transcendent experience. Just like me. Still believing in the power of music to transcend our daily lives. Now to take the energy from this concert and spread it wherever we go. It will take us a while to recover, hopefully.

 

Nice Pic W Nancy at Springsteen
inside the arena

 

Outside of Sports Arena
outside the arena (Bring on the wrecking ball)

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The American Conversation

 

TheCalConvo

As more and more of our relationships play out over social media, with political squabbles passing for conversation and emojis standing in for genuine expressions of affection…

Meghan Daum, LA Times February 18 2016 on how Justices Scalia and Ginsberg could share common joys despite their political differences

http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-daum-bader-ginsberg-scalia-friendship-20160218-15-column.html

 

People yearn to elevate the “national” conversation.  When a culture like ours lacks decent political dialogue, comedians act as our philosophers and guides. We turn to Samantha Bee and John Oliver.

I do, for guidance.

Meanwhile, do you think texting has helped the national conversation?

I don’t. When you don’t have to face a convo-correspondent, you can grind them down and out  by turning a give-and-take into a rugby grunt. It’s so easy to push and shove aint it? But screaming angry and lost is not a conversation.

Political conversation can be enlightening. Despite what you may take from current debates. And the best way to join a national convo? Start one. Locally. Here’s an example:

In August of 1968, I was sitting on the floor of our “family room” in Detroit watching the Democratic convention being broadcast on NBC. (My parents liked Cronkite, but Huntley-Brinkley were great covering conventions.) Suddenly there on our 19-inch Magnavox were policemen in Chicago swinging billy clubs at protestors, knocking them into dark streets.

I turned to my father sitting behind me. My father always watched TV shows from the sofa with the evening’s Detroit News on his lap.

“Dad?”

“Yes?”

“Why are the cops beating up those students?”

My father folded the newspaper on his lap. The continuing mayhem kept flowing right there in front of us in uncut black-and-white news footage, and he seemed at a loss.

“I don’t know, son,” he said.

“I don’t get it,” said the 13 year-old son.

“I don’t understand that, either,” said the dad.

And this is when I first learned to – the phrase was already popular on protest buttons —“question authority.”

Because guess what? Authority did not have all the answers. Sometimes authority didn’t know what was going on. It was time for me to join the national conversation. (Ask your grandparents for more details.)

WT Folk Journalist
By Andy Rash

Back Pocket Banter

Perhaps some folk journalism seeds were planted during that 1968 Democratic convention. I remember seeing NBC News reporter Sander Vanocur brandishing his microphone like a weapon, flashing past competing convention floor reporters from ABC and CBS, adjusting the antenna on his portable headset—made him look like My Favorite Martian — and shouting: “Buzz off guys, this is my interview!”

Questions

What do you think of our current discourse?

Do you ever write letters to a newspaper or call a radio talk show? What about?

A popular button worn during the revolutionary days of the 1960s said: “Question Authority.”* Do you ever question authority? What kind of response did you get?

Cultural Convo

Write a short thank you letter to a public figure who has had a positive influence on you.

Shoot an email to a local, statewide or national politician about something they said. See what kind of response you get and tell others about it.

Join “the national conversation” online or on a street corner. Annotate, annoy, amuse and inform others. With verses of your own devising, drive eyeballs open 24/7. “Write your ream or only dream.” Go ahead and pull a leg pull a face pull a prank. Kesey and the Merry Pranksters of the 1960s defined a prank as, “Something never been seen before: You bomb them, but you do it at night, with poetry.

Pen & Envelope

 

America is talkin’. It is this conversation that I find fascinating and vital. It is who we are – a highly opinionated, multimillion-voiced choir with Internet access. I think the anonymity allows people to honestly state what’s on their mind. The ugly Americans and all the rest come out to play. 

Henry Rollins in The LA Weekly February 2014

In the mixed-up scrum of politics and media that our so-called national conversation has become….[it’s] a roiling cauldron of outside observers, all bent on ‘bearing witness’ to the situation.  

Mark Leibovich, “Let Us All Bear Witness To The Conversation!” NY Times Sunday Magazine September 2014 

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/07/magazine/bearing-witness-in-ferguson.html

 

*  John Mellencamp’s “Authority Song”

http://www.lyricsfreak.com/j/john+mellencamp/authority+song_20074552.html

 

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