Thursday, March 30, 2017

RAIN

"You're committing a serious offence." "What you're doing would make a hyena cry!"--Rain

Tonight I went to the first Vintage Meetup.  I hadn't been into vintage clothes, true, but I'm willing to try new things.  I wore this corduroy jacket in my closet which probably dates from the '70s which I hadn't much worn for almost thirty years.  It got rather tight for me in the meantime. (Fancy that!) I miss corduroy pants.

We met at the Starbucks at College & Euclid. (On the way over, the bust of Luis Vaz de Camoes reminded me of Gabe, Claire's badass boyfriend in the first season of Six Feet Under.) The generous organizer handed out gift packages, and I got a pair of cufflinks and a bracelet that I briefly wore--I guess I'm a metrosexual now!

After a while we went to the Royal nearby and saw Lewis Milestone's Rain, which I'd never seen before. (There are still a few classic movies I haven't seen!) It was presented by Ladies of Burlesque, and just before the movie we saw a stripper with a face like Barbara Stanwyck and several tattoos--really, I don't get the appeal of body art.

The movie, adapted from the W. Somerset Maugham story by playwright Maxwell Anderson, is striking:  Joan Crawford and Walter Huston made a fearsome pair! (I'd forgotten what a great actor Huston was.) I remember seeing Sonny and Cher doing a recurring spoof of the movie on the TV, with Cher's posterior making a drum noise.

I recalled researching my Ph.D. thesis on Chongqing's foreign community and learning that Maugham had visited the city and met some local missionaries, including one named Alfred Davidson, whose name he gave to the missionary played by Huston! (Maugham was cheeky that way.) To tell the truth, I'm not so surprised that Huston ended up going all the way with Crawford:  look at all those big religious leaders with a promiscuous side, like Mormon Joseph Smith or Elijah Muhammed or Sun Myung Moon, or even Jimmy Swaggart. It's like the gregarious sort of character that can lead you into preaching can also lead you into sex!

The missionary movement has a fairly mixed record worldwide: too often it's been caught up in colonialism and destruction of aboriginal culture. But I'd say the China missionaries tend to come off well, partly because they had less power than some.  I like the idea of going to a foreign country and doing good, like education and medical care, but I don't care for the mindset that says you have to win someone over to your belief system in order to save his soul! The part I wouldn't like about being a missionary is getting a letter asking me, "How many people did you save last year?"

I've finished the Caravaggio biography, but now I want to go through it again and download all the paintings it talks about!

Monday, March 27, 2017

Classic Book Club

"Sex is so stupid!"--Six Feet Under

Yesterday at the Classic Book Club we discussed James Joyce's The Dubliners.  I managed to reread it in one week flat, including "The Dead" in one two-hour session the night before. (I've translated the last couple of pages of "The Dead" into Portuguese.) I should see the movie again too.

Last night I dreamed of being hypnotized into believing I was married to this young woman.  I also dreamed of reading a review of a non-existent book that said that diplomats who'd served at a compound in Finland got to put a little circle at the end of their C.V.!  And I dreamed again of being on the moon, and getting a view of the earth much bigger than you can actually see on the moon.

Friday, March 24, 2017

DUEL

Tuesday morning I submitted my consent form for O.D.S.P., so I'll presumably be getting it at the end of the month.  I handed it in at the Eglinton Avenue office, when I should have taken it to the Sheppard Avenue office (d'oh!), but it got straightened out in the end.

At the same time I went to see my shrink Dr. Hassan to tell him the good news.  Without him, I not only couldn't have done it but wouldn't even have imagined it!

Tuesday night I saw Stephen Spielberg's early TV movie Duel (I'd seen part of it before) with the Classic Movie Meetup, which I hadn't attended for a while.  That's the one with driver Dennis Weaver in danger of being crushed by a malevolent truck!

The Staples people straightened out the problem with the printer return.

I've finished Britain's Bloodiest Dynasty and started Britain's Bloody Crown, a documentary by the same historian about the Wars of the Roses.  Funny how the Plantagenets (including the Lancaster and York branches) combined very strong kings with very weak ones!

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Reading out loud

Yesterday afternoon was the latest Reading Out Loud Meetup. There were ten people there! (Getting to the location was complicated by the St. Patrick's Day parade down Yonge Street.) Someone said I should warn people you have to enter the building at the door near Gould Street.

I read the last half-dozen pages of James Joyce's The Dead and translated my Portuguese picture book Mama's Heart.  I also sang not one but two a capella songs: Burns' "Ye Banks and Braes" and Yeats' "Down by the Sally Gardens." They seemed to like my singing.

Speaking of "The Dead," I realized that the Classic Book Club will be coming up before the History Meetup, so I stopped reading the Caravaggio biography and started reading Joyce's The Dubliners.

Donald came over for dinner and set up my new inkjet printer. (I might have done it myself, but didn't complain.) It prints at a high quality!

My credit card statement showed that Staples failed to refund the price of that last printer I returned when it malfunctioned.  This morning I went there and showed them the statement.  The manager's trying to solve the mystery now.

I've been playing this Facebook game Dakota Farm Adventure, but I think it's time to quit.  The interior decorations I need to open Aunt Sally's room cost more than my income can produce, and too much of the game depends on production there.

Saturday, March 18, 2017

RYAN'S DAUGHTER

Priest: "Doing nothing's a dangerous occupation!"--Ryan's Daughter

Last night I saw David Lean's Ryan's Daughter (for the second time) with my history group. Debi brought some mini-cupcakes and I ended up eating six!

At three hours, the movie is anything but lean.  It's about Irish girl Sarah Miles marrying earnest but unexciting schoolteacher Robert Mitchum and cheating on him with a British officer, leading to the locals scapegoating her after a Republican landing gets betrayed.  Mitchum was oddly cast against type, perhaps for his resemblance to Lean. (Moira wonders, "How can any guy be more exciting than Robert Mitchum?") Sarah Miles was a babe, even with her hair cut off! It's the sort of movie where the villagers often move about en masse.


We saw the missing episode and are now watching the second season of Six Feet Under.  Nate not telling Brenda about his brain condition is a straightforward cliche! (If he told her right away, as most people would presumably do, that would be less dramatic...) Nate said about the corporate villainess, "What kind of name is Mitzi?" I could have told him,  "The kind of name they give a TV show character!"

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

St. Patrick's Day snowstorm

Back in New Brunswick we'd speak of the last big snowfall that would happen around this time as the St. Patrick's Day snowstorm. Toronto had one yesterday. Stayed in the house all day!

I've been watching Britain's Bloodiest Dynasty, another Acorn TV British documentary, this time about the Plantagenet House.  As the title suggests, it's on the unsubtle side. (I would have like to hear more about King John--I'm so picky!) One thing it mentioned was Henry II getting monks to whip him thousands of strokes to atone for his indirect role in Beckett's murder.

Last night I had a dream where I was walking along the coast of Cape Breton with my parents and saw a trail leading up to a promontory sacred to First Nations.  I tried to climb it, and Father gave me a leg up, but it was too steep for me.  I was also wondering if I should take flogging to atone for my responsibility for what we've done to the Indians!  I also saw tall urban buildings over the sea and decided it was an optical illusions. (I've seen that in several dreams.)

Tonight I was going to see A Streetcar Named Desire at a Classic Movie Meetup, but when I got to Queen's Quay I couldn't find the place! (They'd given a number to text message them, but I'm not a text messager.)

I finally succeeded at Level 629 of Candy Crush Saga, another particularly difficult one.

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Back to the memoir group

With my cold out of the way, this afternoon I finally returned to my memoir group after a month away. (I hardly ever miss a session normally.) One of the subjects was "High," and instead I wrote about trees, one of last week's subjects.

Yesterday afternoon I went to John Snow's book club where we discussed Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha.  Unfortunately, what with my cold I'd only got around to reading a fifth of the book, and on top of that I was over an hour late, because I'd forgotten about the Daylight Savings Time change. (D'OH!) They took it pretty well.  John told me that he missed my memoir blog posts.

Tonight I finished Waldemar Januszak's documentary series Rococo Before Bedtime.  The rococo movement was oddly contemporary with the Enlightenment of the 18th century!

We were going to see the last episode of the first season of Six Feet Under but accidentally skipped it and saw the first episode of the second season instead.  That Watteau portrait of the Pierrot reminds me of Buster Keaton!

Friday, March 10, 2017

Book exchange

This morning I got a letter from the Ontario Disability Supports Program.  My application was accepted, so the next step will presumably be a live interview!

This afternoon I had a dental checkup.  I have some root canal work coming up, but I'm delaying it till the O.D.S.P. business is finished, because that'll probably cover the expense of it.

This evening I went to a Book Exchange Meetup at Pauper's.  I brought Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome and D.H. Lawrence's The Rainbow, and took a graphic treatment of the H.P. Lovecraft story "The Shadow of Time."

I've resumed reading Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha since my cold interrupted.  I won't have time to finish it before John Snow's book club this Sunday, but I'll read some of it by then.

March is my favorite time of year.  Too bad there's some more cold weather coming up this weekend.

Tuesday, March 07, 2017

The opera's finished

Sunday afternoon was the last opera performance. (We did Carmen, and were in rare form!) No more leering at Merry Widow grisettes--of course, I was it wasn't me who was leering at them, I was only playing a leering character!  What new reason will I find for returning next year?

For a change, I went to the cast party afterward at Paula's loft near Dufferin Streets. (Paula was one of our Carmens, and she's also an artist!) They had a lot of that churrasco chicken with the orange-colored rice.

I'm still not completely over my cold, so I skipped the memoir group again this week. (I hardly ever skip it!) This evening I went to Loblaw's and bought four of those huge pomelo grapefruit.

The third episode of Six Feet Under is a doozie!  That's the one where a guy cleaning an industrial bread machine gets cut into a thousand pieces, and Claire's boyfriend has carelessly blabbed around high school that she sucked his toes, so she swipes the guy's foot and puts it in the creep's locker, then he dumps it in the park where a dog eventually finds it! (Meanwhile, mother Ruth blows 25 grand at the racetrack.)

I was dreaming about the actual incident when I was twelve and painting a bunch of blue squares as my first assignment in art class, then got 1 out of 5 because the edges were messy.  Really, I'd never been in an art class before and thought that just getting it done was an achievement!  What bugged me was that this was the only time the art teacher graded our individual assignments, which meant that people like me didn't get the chance to earn a better grade next time.  She only graded that first assignment to start out the year with a show of power, as bad teachers are wont to do.

Saturday, March 04, 2017

Getting over the cold

Ruth (going through her late husband's clothes): "How could a man who had so few clothes have so many clothes?"--Six Feet Under

I think I'm almost over the cold. I've been eating grapefruit constantly, and Wednesday I found one of those huge pomelos at Loblaw's.  Tonight I returned to the opera, and ate a grapefruit during the breaks. (Kathy got me to add my signature to the gingerbread recipe!)

Too bad Father and Moira have caught my cold.  Last Sunday we had a big family gathering and ordered lots of Indian food, and we kept eating Indian leftovers through Thursday, which is nice for people with colds.  Today we used a coupon for Harvey's hamburgers, and I was the one who went out and bought them.

We've regressed to brass-monkey weather just now. That groundhog must have gone for a long stroll a month ago!  But it should be warm again on Monday, and I hope this is the last cold weather before next winter.

Yesterday I started a new computer game on Facebook, Dakota Farm Adventure.  We'll see how far I get before there's nothing interesting left to do...

My browser's been acting up.  It won't open meetup.com properly, so I've had to access it on the downstairs computer.  And I can start threads on The Huffington Post, but not add to them.

Wednesday, March 01, 2017

SIX FEET UNDER

A.J. Soprano (answering the phone): "Home of the Burger--what's your beef?"

"Your father is dead and my pot roast is ruined!"--Six Feet Under

I think I'm over the worst of my cold. Monday night I sweated a lot.  The Merry Widow song "A Highly Respectable Wife" has been going through my head, as has Don Jose and Micaela's duet in Carmen, and Danilo's song near the end of the Merry Widow second act!

We finished the fourth season of The Sopranos.  We've decided to skip the rest of the show, which I recall gets even bleaker and has less of Meadow and A.J.  After Adrianna got killed that was sort of the show's "point of no return": after that everything else seemed anticlimactic.

Last night we saw the first episode of Alan Ball's Six Feet Under, about a Los Angeles family in the funeral home business, which would start each episode with someone dying and have lots of surreal stuff like the dead speaking.  It was a brilliant balance between the real and the absurd, though I didn't like the last two seasons nearly as much. (They were bound to run out of ideas eventually...)