| Past Columns
                   
   February 7, 2000 - #103
 
 Well, dear readers, 
                    I have just spent the last hour defragmenting my computer. 
                    Yes, you heard it here, dear readers, my computer is now defragmented. 
                    I don't know what that means but I'm told one simply 
                    must defragment one's computer if one is to be considered 
                    anyone. I'm told by those in the know (as opposed to those 
                    in the no) that fragmentation occurs in computers and this 
                    causes blank spaces which in turn cause the computer to run 
                    very slowly. I'm told that a similar fragmentation can occur 
                    in the brain of humans and yet we humans cannot push a button 
                    and defragment said brain. Therefore here we sit like so much 
                    fish, building up blank spaces in our brains which causes 
                    us to run very slowly. I, for one, feel somebody should invent 
                    a defragmenting device for humans immediately, because frankly 
                    I am way too fragmented right now and all because some selfish 
                    person hasn't invented a defragmenting device for humans. 
                    The other thing I think they should invent for humans is a 
                    remote control. That way, if someone is saying something we 
                    don't like we can mute them or change their channel or just 
                    shut them off. Or, if we like what they're saying and want 
                    to hear it again, we can just push rewind and voila (aliov 
                    spelled backwards). I'd just like to know one thing: What 
                    the hell am I talking about?
  Well, that was 
                    an opening paragraph, wasn't it? That just kicked this column 
                    into high gear, didn't it? Not into low gear, mind 
                    you, no, that paragraph kicked this here column into high 
                    gear. Has anyone noticed that I am in need of defragmenting? 
                    I know this to be a fact because earlier today I locked my 
                    keys in the trunk of my car. That is a very annoying thing 
                    to do, locking one's keys in the trunk of one's car. Normally 
                    I always carry a spare set of keys with me for just that reason, 
                    but because I am fragmented I did not, in fact, have my spare 
                    set of keys with me. So, there I was, sitting in the driver's 
                    seat of my car unable to drive because the fershluganah keys 
                    were locked in the trunk. I then thought to myself that there 
                    must be a way to pop the trunk from inside the car. I looked 
                    everywhere and could not find anything that resembled a trunk 
                    popper. I looked high and low and also low and high. I looked 
                    hither and thither and yon, especially yon. I then had the 
                    presence of fragmented mind to call the lady who watches my 
                    house for me when I am out of town to come get me and take 
                    me home so I could get my spare keys which should have been 
                    with me but weren't on account of my fragmentation. But the 
                    lady who watches my house did not have her car and so could 
                    not come to get me. But she did a very clever thing, and she 
                    did this clever thing because, dear readers, her brain is 
                    not fragmented and does not have blank spaces therein. She 
                    called an Infiniti car dealer and asked them if there was 
                    a way to pop the trunk from inside the car. And lo and behold 
                    they said that there was a way to pop the trunk from 
                    inside the car. They told me where to find the extra special 
                    handy-dandy trunk-popping button, which I had not been able 
                    to find. There it was exactly where they said it would be, 
                    on the armrest of the passenger door. The one place 
                    I hadn't looked! Who would put a trunk-popping button on the 
                    side of an armrest is another question for another day. And 
                    so, the story had a happy end because I pushed that there 
                    trunk-popping button and thus the trunk popped open and the 
                    keys were retrieved. It was a good thing, too, because frankly 
                    I was getting so upset that I was ready to call it a day. 
                    Of course, why would I call "it" a "day" when "it" is clearly 
                    an "it" and not a "day"? How do you suppose "it" feels being 
                    called a "day" all the time? Perhaps we should just call a 
                    "day" an "it" for a change and see how the "day" feels. In 
                    any case I was so paranoid the whole rest of the day that 
                    I double and triple checked that I had both sets of keys with 
                    me at all times. I even left the front door ajar until I'd 
                    ascertained both sets of keys were on my person. Have you 
                    ever left your door ajar? Did the door want the jar? 
                    What does a door do with a jar anyway? I'll tell you right 
                    here and now and also right now and here that this 
                    is what you get when you cannot defragment your brain. My 
                    computer, on the other hand, is defragmented and running 
                    quite well thank you very much. 
                    There is a redheaded 
                    girl who is rollerblading up and down the street, back and 
                    forth, over and over, from one end of the block to the other 
                    end of the block. Doesn't she get bored of seeing the same 
                    thing all the time? Doesn't she want to be adventurous and 
                    see another block? There she goes again. Excuse me for a moment. 
                    
                    I just went outside 
                    (first I made certain that I had both sets of keys and that 
                    the door was left ajar even though the damn door has enough 
                    jars to last it until the cows come home) and asked that rollerblading 
                    girl why she was only going back and forth and forth and back 
                    on only this one block. She looked at me as if I was an overflowing 
                    toilet and rollerbladed right past me without speaking a word. 
                    Can you imagine? That rude redheaded rollerblader just bladed 
                    right on by me and that was that and I could take it or leave 
                    it because that was just the way things were going to be, redheaded rollerblader-wise. 
                    Sometimes I think the world has gone mad. Sometimes I think 
                    we're all just rollerblading on the same block and not discovering 
                    all that the world has to offer. Sometimes I think we should 
                    stop and smell the roses, if you get my meaning. If someone 
                    asks a question in a nice tone should we just rollerblade 
                    right past them with nary an acknowledgment? I tell you I 
                    am in a fit of pique, dear readers. I have been shunned by 
                    a redheaded rollerblader. I have been ignored, passed by. 
                    Am I supposed to just take it lying down, like a piece of 
                    pickled herring in sour cream? 
                    
			As if I weren't 
                    fragmented enough I have discovered something on my defragmented 
                    computer that I never knew existed. What is it you might ask 
                    and I might tell you otherwise you might fall victim to fragmenting. 
                    What I have discovered is that you can play solitaire on my 
                    computer. Who knew? You just go to a thing called "games" 
                    and there it is, solitaire. Well, as you might have guessed, 
                    I have become obsessed with solitaire on the computer. First 
                    of all, there are no actual cards so it is much less cumbersome 
                    than playing with actual cards which can be quite cumbersome 
                    in case you missed the point of this sentence. And isn't the 
                    word "cumbersome" truly cumbersome? Just asking. Anyway, the 
                    first day I discovered solitaire on the computer I sat for 
                    three hours playing game after game after game. Now, I don't 
                    know about you, dear readers, but when I play solitaire on 
                    the computer and I lose I immediately suspect that the computer 
                    has somehow rigged the deck so that I cannot win. I think 
                    the computer does this on purpose. I think the computer is 
                    having sport with me. I think the computer is trying to torment 
                    me, trying to drive me to the point of insanity (a short drive 
                    in my present fragmented condition). And so I scream at the 
                    computer. I hurl vile epithets (no mean feat) at the computer. 
                    I rail at the computer. And do you know what? The computer 
                    does not give a flying Wallenda. The computer, of course, 
                    just sits there like so much fish and conspires for me to 
                    lose more often and faster. Has anyone realized that I have 
                    not said one word about the musical theater or my close personal 
                    friend, Mr. Stephen Sondheim? What the hell kind of column 
                    is this anyway? I think this here column needs defragmenting 
                    and defragmenting right now. Perhaps I'd just better end this 
                    section of the column right now, because frankly it's starting 
                    to resemble the new tour of The Civil War: Don't people know 
                    when they're beating a dead horse? But enough about me. 
                    
                   SONDHEIM AND 
                    JAZZ: SIDE BY SIDE
                    I had the pleasure 
                    of attending the Sondheim in Jazz concert at UCLA and, though 
                    not a perfect evening, there was plenty to enjoy. 
                    First of all, 
                    let me say that UCLA is a very confusing place. There are 
                    simply no signs that tell you if you are going to the place 
                    you'd like to be going to. Hence, after parking in one of 
                    the structures, you walk in a direction which you hope 
                    will lead you to your destination. Luckily, there were other 
                    people walking so I just followed them. Unfortunately they 
                    were going to a different concert in a different building. 
                    Once I found that out I then had to backtrack and follow other 
                    people, and these people, thank goodness, were going to the 
                    Sondheim concert. I was then shown to my seat, which was in 
                    Row Z. Now, let me just say here and now and also now and 
                    here that I do not like sitting in any row which starts with 
                    "z". But, the tickets were free so who was I to complain? 
                    However, when I see the letter "z" I immediately begin singing 
                    the song from the television program Zorro. And so, there 
                    I was, in Royce Hall Row Z singing the theme from Zorro. This 
                    caused the other people in my row to look at me askance. I 
                    looked right back at them askance and finished the song. In 
                    fact I'm quite certain that my askance look far outaskanced 
                    their askance look. I mean, what did they expect? Put me in 
                    Row Z and you get the Zorro song, like it or not. But soon 
                    the house lights dimmed, the curtain slowly rose and the show 
                    began. 
                    The opening number 
                    was the prologue from Follies, with the Trotter Trio. It was 
                    quite ravishing, as Mr. Trotter is quite brilliant, as are 
                    the others in his group. However, as an opening number it 
                    did not set the right tone for the evening. Too languid, too 
                    slow, and it did not tell us what type of an evening we were 
                    in for. What we needed from Trotter and company was any of 
                    his uptempo openers from say Company or Forum or even Passion. 
                    Something fun and with more jazz elements than the Follies 
                    number, which, for all the jazz harmonics was fairly straightforward. 
                    But, as I said, the number was beautifully played, so there 
                    you are. We were then treated to Jackie and Roy (who have 
                    their own Sondheim album and who are fairly delightful) who, 
                    I felt, were not at their best here. That said, they did do 
                    a nice sprightly rendition of Love Is In The Air. Then we 
                    had a singer named Gary LeMel, who is also a record producer. 
                    He's a terrific record producer and a merely okay singer. 
                    And I took great exception to the song he sang, Somewhere 
                    from West Side Story. I mean, let's call a spade a spade. 
                    This concert was called Sondheim in Jazz. Not Bernstein in 
                    Jazz. If one is doing a jazz concert it is not the lyrics 
                    which are in jazz it's the music and Mr. Sondheim did not 
                    write the music to West Side Story. Later in the evening, 
                    one of the other pianists performed I Have A Love which I 
                    found equally specious, albeit well performed. I don't know 
                    about you, dear readers, but I do not like specious 
                    things. Frankly, I find them specious. In fact, I find 
                    the word "specious" specious. I mean, look at the way 
                    it's spelled. What does that spelling have to do with the 
                    way the word is pronounced I'd like to know? If such a stupid 
                    word has to exist then spell it the way it sounds - 
                    "speeshus". Also, have you noticed that when you say the word 
                    "specious" out loud you sound like you've had a few too many 
                    drinks? Where the hell was I? Oh, yes, the specious singing 
                    of Somewhere which had nothing whatsoever to do with the evening 
                    at hand in my humble opinion. 
                    Other performers 
                    included the great clarinetist Eddie Daniels, who performed 
                    Pretty Women and a couple of others. I am a big fan of Mr. 
                    Daniels but hadn't seen or heard him live before. I became 
                    less of a fan because it seemed to me Mr. Daniels was more 
                    interested in showing off his prodigious technique than serving 
                    the music. We had Terence Blanchard, the great trumpet player, 
                    do his take on Poems from Pacific Overtures. I'd not liked 
                    his take on Poems from Pacific Overtures when I heard it on 
                    the Color and Light CD, but I liked it a lot at the concert. 
                    The Trotter Trio did several songs from their albums and they 
                    were, as always, great. They were occasionally joined by Oscar 
                    Castro-Neves (the producer of the Color and Light CD) who 
                    is a splendid guitarist. Dianne Reeves sang I Remember nicely 
                    and then later in the program did Liasons, a strange choice 
                    since it's such a character piece. I would have much preferred 
                    to hear her do something from Into The Woods, a show whose 
                    score was not in evidence at all. Jeff Clayton did some pretty 
                    terrific sax solos on various numbers. Maureen McGovern came 
                    out and did two songs (then had to run to the airport to catch 
                    a flight) and she was splendid. Kurt Elling, a jazz vocalist, 
                    gave the evening's most surreal performance doing Green Finch 
                    and Linnet Bird as a vocalese. It was a true Mel Brooks moment. 
                    The program promised a song from Wise Guys but it never materialized. 
                    The evening's low point was the act one closer, Every Day 
                    A Little Death as performed by Dianne Reeves and Jackie Kral. 
                    As most of you know, that song is my favorite in the entire 
                    Sondheim canon. Everything about the song eluded the two ladies 
                    including several lines of the lyric. It was a mess and certainly 
                    not a wonderful way to end the first half. For me, the evening's 
                    two unforgettable highlights were Terry Trotter doing No One 
                    Has Ever Loved Me from Passion (breathtakingly beautiful - 
                    and there was not a sound from the auditorium for the entire 
                    six minutes playing time) and Lea DeLaria (she of Broadway's 
                    recent On The Town) swinging and scatting brilliantly through 
                    The Ballad of Sweeney Todd. She simply brought down the house 
                    and received the evening's biggest ovation. Frankly, the concert 
                    could have used a few more things like that. The pace of the 
                    concert was way too slow. Had the pacing been better perhaps 
                    the show would not have seemed so long, but as it was there 
                    were endless long pauses between numbers while things were 
                    moved around on the stage to accommodate the next performer 
                    while the audience just had to sit there and watch. The host 
                    for the show was the charming and affable Charles Kimbrough 
                    (one of the original cast of Company) who was his own droll 
                    self but didn't have enough interesting material and was frequently 
                    left looking like he didn't know what he was doing. But enough 
                    nitpicking. It was wonderful that such a concert even came 
                    to pass, it was wonderful to hear how melodic, beautiful and 
                    timeless Sondheim's music is. And even more heartening the 
                    concert was a sellout. 
                    
                   THE LIVE CHAT, NEW LOOK, AND WORST PIES IN LONDON
                   
Has anyone noticed that the Stephen Sondheim Stage has a whole new look?  Mr. Mark Bakalor has been slaving away over a hot computer (defragmented, of course) for months designing the new look and he has finally unveiled the new look and we have seen the new look and we are here to tell you it is spiffy.  Yes, you heard it here, dear readers, this new look is spiffy.  And do you know why?  Because Mr. Bakalor did not create the new look in a jiffy.  Had he created it in a jiffy it might have been iffy but instead it is splendidly spiffy.  Mr. Bakalor's design skills have also been put to use by the producers of the upcoming London concert of Sweeney Todd, starring the original and only Sweeney, Len Cariou, and the delightfully deft and daft Judy Kaye as Mrs. Lovett.  In fact, Mr. Bakalor is actually going to London to attend the concert and admire his very own handiwork.  Whilst in London we trust he will partake of some what is it fish and chips and drink ale from a pub.  
The other exciting news is that on Monday, February 7 in the year 2000 we are going to have our second live chat.  It's been two years since our first live chat.  There have been several dead chats in between but we don't count those.  At nine o'clock East Coast time, or six o'clock West Coast time and various other times in various other locations around the country.  Oh, we'll have fun and I hope all of my dear readers will stop by and chat live with me.  There are several things you must do to prepare for said live chat.  First, you must prepare your cheese slices and ham chunks and shrimp bits on toast, so that we all may sup while we are chatting live.  Second, those of you who have your official One From Column A T-shirts must wear them.  Third, have some questions prepared and I will have some answers prepared and perhaps the twain shall meet, whatever the hell that means.  
   
                   THE ART DEPARTMENT
                    Let's face it, 
                    dear readers, art isn't easy. Now wait just a darn minute. 
                    "Let's face it". Why should we face "it"? What if we 
                    don't like "it"? What if we can't stomach "it"? If we don't 
                    feel one way or the other about "it" there is simply no reason 
                    to face "it". Let's not face "it" because right now 
                    I'm annoyed at "it" and I'm thinking about calling "it" a 
                    "day". Has anyone noticed that I'm blathering incoherently 
                    all about "it"? I don't mind blathering incoherently All About 
                    Eve but blathering incoherently all about "it" seems like 
                    a big waste of our collective time. Now, where was I? Oh, 
                    yes, art isn't easy. I, for one, have no talent whatsoever 
                    in the art department. But, as most of you dear readers know, 
                    I have been collecting art for a couple of years now. In past 
                    columns I have shared some of said art with you and I thought 
                    it was high time I shared some more. The type of art I've 
                    been collecting is known as illustration art. That is, art 
                    used to illustrate, whether it be for a book cover, magazine 
                    cover, story, advertisement or anything else of that nature. 
                    I have always loved this type of art, having become enamored 
                    of it like most people through the wonderful covers of the 
                    Saturday Evening Post. Even before I knew who Norman Rockwell 
                    was I had fallen in love with his vision of American life 
                    as portrayed on his many wonderful Post covers. Through that 
                    love affair I went on to discover all the other brilliant 
                    artists whose unique visions have entertained and touched 
                    everyone for so many years. It is great fun to be able to 
                    own these original paintings, especially when they can be 
                    displayed in tandem with the magazine or book they were used 
                    for. So, here are some of my more recent acquisitions for 
                    your viewing pleasure. 
                   
    Isn't that just 
                    too too? That painting was done for the November 1956 issue 
                    of Coronet Magazine. It is by one of my favorite illustration 
                    artists, Victor Olson. I love the humor in his paintings, 
                    and he captures that Davy Crockett coonskin cap mania so wonderfully 
                    it makes me want to weep (peew spelled backwards). 
                   
    Isn't that wonderful? 
                    Isn't it just too too? The artist is named Jan Balet and the 
                    painting was used as the cover of the November 24th issue 
                    of The Saturday Evening Post. Soon thereafter the Post, which 
                    was one of the leading lights in terms of illustration art, 
                    would begin to do photographic covers and sadly forego the 
                    style which made them the most beloved magazine for over six 
                    decades. 
                   
    This wonderful 
                    gal was painted by W.T. Benda for an early thirties magazine, 
                    probably Collier's. I just love her face and the detail and 
                    the style. 
                   
    Isn't that fantastic 
                    and just a little too too? This painting done for the Louis 
                    Dow Company in 1937 is by Gil Elvgren, arguably the most famous 
                    and wonderful of the pinup calendar artists. This painting 
                    was used over the years on various calendars and is entitled 
                    "Sure Shot". I'm happy to say that it's featured in the brand 
                    spanking new coffee table book on Elvgren. Next we have another 
                    pinup painting, but it is unsigned, therefore I don't know 
                    who the artist is, but I do know that it's someone with a 
                    lot of talent. It looks like it could have been used for a 
                    thirties pinup magazine called Film Fun which had similar 
                    types of covers. 
                   
    Isn't she great? 
                    I love that outfit, don't you, dear readers? If any of you 
                    have an outfit like that please take an activity photo so 
                    we can put it in this column immediately. I had an outfit 
                    like that but it seems to have gone missing. But if and when 
                    I do find it you can be certain I shall don it and have an 
                    activity photo taken posthaste. Here's another great pinup 
                    piece, this one by a famous pinup artist named Earl Moran. 
                    
                   
    Earl Moran was 
                    famous for doing a bunch of pinup calendar paintings with 
                    the very young Norma Jean Baker who, shortly thereafter would change 
                    her name to Marilyn Monroe. And finally, we have this wonderful 
                    cover painting from the January 1956 issue of Calling All 
                    Girls by Freeman Elliot. 
                   
    I just love that. 
                    It's too too and very purple, and from a time when things 
                    were simpler, sweeter and more fun. The one problem I'm having 
                    is that I'm running out of wall space. I may have to go to 
                    the store and buy some more walls very soon. I hope you've 
                    enjoyed this little show and tell. It's fun to be able to 
                    share this stuff with all of you lovely dear readers. 
                    
                   THE WHAT IF 
                    DEPT. 
                   
                  Yes, the what if department is back which I know will either 
                    be cause for great elation or great revulsion. Can someone 
                    explain why "elation" has a "tion" and "revulsion" has a "sion"? 
                    It seems so arbitrary tion or sion-wise. Oh, well, let us 
                    not dwell on it because, as you may remember, we are mad at 
                    "it" and we are not facing or dwelling because that's 
                    the way "it" is. 
                    Anyway, what if Irving Berlin had written West Side Story? 
                    And it goes something like this (to the tune of You Can't 
                    Get A Man With A Gun): 
 
                  When Jets start to grumble, There's gonna be a rumble,
 So you'd best pack a knife or gun.
 'Cause when they rumble hard - oh
 You know Riff and Bernardo
 Will be dead when that rumble is done.
 
  When Jets start in dancin'There's no time for romancin'
 When one's White and one's Mexicun.
 And when Tony starts hummin'
 And singin' something's comin'
 Then you know he'll end up on the run.
 
  On the run, On the run,
 People die and then he's on the run
 
  But he'd drink Sangria, If he could wed Maria
 In the hot Puerto Rican sun.
 But because of the tiff and
 Bernardo stabbing Riff and
 Tony killing her bro
 What the schmo doesn't know
 Is that Chino is packing a gun.
 
  When finger's start snappin'Then something's bound to happen
 All that tension can't be much fun.
 Still Maria feels pretty
 While somewhere in the city
 Chino's still on the prowl with that gun.
 
 The Jets try to stay coolWith dancing that is way cool
 While this tragedy's almost done.
 But while Tony's confessing
 Maria is undressing
 On the street Chino waits with his gun.
 
 With his gun, With his gun,
 They have sex while he waits with his gun.
 
  Anita gets taunted, And Chino is undaunted
 As he fires his loaded gun.
 Tony runs for Maria
 He's one dead quesedilla
 Tony's shot in the chest
 She's depressed - very stressed,
 And yes now West Side Story is done.
 
  
                    LETTERS... WE GET LETTERS 
                    Have I mentioned 
                    that I am feeling fragmented? Perhaps if I answer some of 
                    your letters I shall feel less fragmented, or fragmented-lite. 
                    I'm also feeling very nauseous right now because of the after-effects 
                    of eating too much spicy meat products last evening. Yes, 
                    you heard it here, dear readers, last evening I partook of 
                    spicy meat products and as usual overdid the eating of said 
                    spicy meat products and am now paying the price ($3.49). Well, 
                    nausea be damned, let's just answer some letters, shall we? 
                    
                    Allie demands 
                    that there should be more Ruthie Henshall on this page. I 
                    know it's a demand because at the end of her one sentence 
                    letter are fourteen exclamation points in a row ("Get more 
                    Ruthie Henshall on this page!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"). First of all, 
                    I'm not certain that Ruthie Henshall would fit on this 
                    page. Second, why would Ruthie Henshall want to be 
                    on this page even if she did fit. If she were on this page 
                    then she would not be able to continue doing Putting It Together 
                    and that would be a fine kettle of what is it fish. By the 
                    way, I like Ruthie Henshall and I hear she is quite wonderful 
                    in Putting It Together, which, as you probably know by now, 
                    will be closing shortly. However, it is being taped by a new 
                    entity called The Broadway Network for airing, I presume, 
                    on The Broadway Network. It will be shot on High Definition 
                    Video and recorded in Dolby Digital 5.1 sound. Isn't that 
                    exciting? Especially the .1. 
                    Emi jane 
                    writes to say that she hasn't written in ages, and wants to 
                    wish this here column a happy and lovely day. Emi jane informs 
                    me that she, like one of our other dear readers, has a pet 
                    named after a Sondheim character. It is her cat who is named 
                    Sweeney Todd, The Demon Kitty of Northeast Street. 
                    PatLaceyBulb 
                    says that if I'm Tim Flavin (as one of our dear readers has 
                    guessed) he will laugh his ass off. Wouldn't that be uncomfortable? 
                    To suddenly laugh and then be sans ass? I laughed my ass off 
                    one day and it took me hours to get it back on. And wouldn't 
                    you just know that someone came over while it was off and 
                    the first words out of their mouth were "Where the hell did 
                    your ass go" and then, embarrassed, I had to point to it lying 
                    on the floor like so much fish. Where was I? Oh, yes, Tim 
                    Flavin and how if I'm him PatLaceyBulb will laugh his very 
                    own ass off. PatLaceyBulb enjoyed Tim Flavin on the recording 
                    of Sandy Wilson's Divorce Me, Darling. Why that is a cause 
                    for laughter is unknown at this time. 
                    Ben van Tienan 
                    read this here column for the first time from the State Library 
                    of Tasmania (Hobart Branch). He liked my lyrics to Mr. Porter's 
                    Anything Goes and Ben feels that Broadway will be a damn sight 
                    better when his musicals are produced. Frankly, I am 
                    ready for a Tasmanian musical, because all we ever get are 
                    those damned Tasmanian straight plays like A Streetcar Named 
                    Tasmania and The Glass Tasmanian. We want musicals from Tasmania 
                    and that's all there is to it. Sweeney Tasmania, The Demon 
                    Barber of Hobart Branch, or A Funny Thing Happened On The 
                    Way To Tasmania. 
                    Norton Mockridge 
                    just read my comments on the Carol Channing-Charles Lowe divorce. 
                    Mr. Mockridge informs me he's an old dear friend of Miss Channing 
                    and asks if I know a way to contact her. Well, the easiest 
                    way to get some kind of contact information (usually the agent) 
                    is either through the Screen Actors Guild or Actor's Equity. 
                    
                    Pat King 
                    (he of Wheaton North) has had his first taste of New York, 
                    New York and loved it. The point of his trip was to visit 
                    various colleges. Whilst in New York, New York, Pat stayed 
                    in Greenwich Village which, by the way, is pronounced "Grenitch" 
                    for reasons that were obscure to begin with. You see, the 
                    discoverer of Greenwich Village, Mr. Throckmorton W. Grenitch 
                    didn't like the way his name was spelled, so he just changed 
                    it willy and nilly but kept the pronunciation the same. Apparently, 
                    whenever anyone asked Mr. Grenitch what time it was, he yelled 
                    and cursed at them, hence the expression "Greenwich Mean Time". 
                    Pat spent most of his time in mid to uptown Manhattan and 
                    found himself frequently humming Uptown/Downtown by my close 
                    personal friend, Mr. Stephen Sondheim. Pat saw three shows 
                    while he was there: Wit, Kiss Me Kate and Amadeus and liked 
                    them all. Pat visited Juilliard and NYU and the office of 
                    Harold Prince. Pat would like to end up in New York, New York 
                    no matter what line of work he ends up in. 
                    jc asks 
                    how, where and why I learned to take everything so literally. 
                    The interesting thing is, that I took nothing literally until 
                    I started writing this here column and then it just seemed 
                    like the right thing to do. Not the left thing to do 
                    mind you, no, it seemed like the right thing to do. 
                    Have any of you taken something literally and if so how did 
                    "something" feel about being taken literally? I was 
                    taken literally once but that's another story for another 
                    column. 
                    Tom Guest 
                    (of Oz) has been rediscovering the pleasures of Mr. Tom Jones' 
                    and Mr. Harvey Schmidt's wonderful musical The Fantasticks. 
                    I've written about that score in past columns, and it remains 
                    a favorite of mine. I also love 110 In The Shade and I Do! 
                    I Do! as well as most of their other less well known shows. 
                    They can do very little wrong in my book (Chapter 543 - Schmidt 
                    and Jones: The Men Who Did Very Little Wrong and Lived to 
                    Tell The Tale). Tom asks if I have any information on a new 
                    Kander and Ebb collection about New York, New York. The only 
                    Kander and Ebb collection I've seen recently is the one by 
                    Brent Barrett. I haven't heard about any others, although 
                    that is not to say that there won't be one coming about New 
                    York, New York. 
                    Seanm (formerly 
                    Sean) was happy I wrote a bit about Ragtime as it is one of 
                    his favorites. Seanm (formerly Sean) who, when last he wrote, 
                    was auditioning for the role of Motel in Fiddler On The Roof 
                    (not to be confused with the role of Hotel in Grand Hotel) 
                    got the part. Our congratulations to Seanm (formerly Sean 
                    - does the "m" stand for Motel?). Seanm (formerly Sean) asks 
                    if I've heard the new Die Silbersee recording. I haven't. 
                    The only recording of Die Silbersee that I've heard is the 
                    one on which Joel Grey appears. I was lucky enough to see 
                    Mr. Grey in the production of Die Silbersee, which was splendid, 
                    and I like the score by Kurt Weill very much indeed. Seanm(formerly 
                    Sean) asks my opinion on the musicals Chess and Grind. Well, 
                    for starters, I think they'd be better if they were combined 
                    into one show, ChessGrind. I like the score to Chess, but 
                    the book has always been problematic. Perhaps if they did 
                    the book to Grind and sang the score to Chess we could finally 
                    turn those two shows into one hit. 
                    Dave writes 
                    to ask who he gets permission from to quote lyrics from Sunday 
                    In The Park With George for a new non-fiction book. I would 
                    call The Flora Roberts Agency in New York, or Mr. Sondheim's 
                    publishing company Rilting Music which can be reached via Warner 
                    Chappell in New York. 
                    Colin has 
                    just discovered the Stephen Sondheim Stage and he is thrilled. 
                    Colin feels he must apologize on behalf of his hometown, New 
                    Orleans. "Behalf". Are you looking at that word? Why isn't 
                    it "bewhole"? Why half? I don't want behalf when I can have 
                    bewhole and that's all there is to that. Anyway, Colin feels 
                    he must apologize on bewhole of his hometown, New Orleans. 
                    He has yet to see a local Sondheim production which sits well 
                    with the Blue-Hairs and Seersucker Gentry (sounds like a song 
                    from The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas). It seems that they'd 
                    rather see the umpteenth production of The Sound of Music 
                    than sit through things like Passion or Follies or Company. 
                    But we can't take New Orleans too much to task because the 
                    food is so good. I mean, with beignets, catfish, red beans 
                    and rice, gumbo, and other New Orleans delights we can forgive 
                    them their Sondheim sins. 
                    Send all email to me at  
                    real@sondheim.com or use the form below...
 
 Send The Real A Some Email:
  
                    
                   Well, dear readers, 
                    it is time to close the book on another column. Of course, 
                    when you close the book on a column the column gets all wrinkled 
                    and unseemly-looking, so, let's not close the book 
                    on the column and say we did. Of course, then we'd be lying 
                    and we'd rot in hell and be stricken with bad vibes. So, let's 
                    not close the book on the column and not say we did. That 
                    way we get the best of both worlds, this one and the alternate 
                    one where there are multitudes of doppelgangers (and Amys). 
                    I, for one, would like to meet my doppelganger because I feel 
                    one simply must meet one's doppelganger at least once. I would 
                    also like to meet the person who invented the word "doppelganger" 
                    so I could congratulate him for creating such a stupid word. 
                    I no longer have any clue as to what the hell I'm talking 
                    about. This is because, as you are all now painfully aware, 
                    I am not defragmented and have blank spaces in my brain.  
                    
                   Until next time, 
                    I am, as I ever was, and ever shall be... 
                   Yours, yours, yours, yours, yours.
 
  
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                    the Chat!
 
  
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