Saturday, June 3, 2017

Lucille Ball -- The Perfect Clown.



I joined Ringling Brothers Circus as a clown, in part, because of the crazy shenanigans of Lucille Ball on her sitcom 'I Love Lucy.' She was a gutsy lady who wasn't afraid to get sprayed with seltzer while doing the 'Niagra Falls' routine, or get chocolate goo smeared all over her face on an assembly line reminiscent of the one in Chaplin's 'Modern Times.' The canned laugh track that functioned as her Greek Chorus didn't distract me from the fact that Lucy knew her slapstick.
Lucille Ball should have quite a shindig going on for her upcoming birthday this coming August. Her hometown of Jamestown, New York, is planning a celebration, and you can see a Lucy look-alike on the main page of the city’s website at http://www.jamestownny.net/   
Ball was an outstanding physical comedy actress in her day; highly acclaimed and publicized.  Most purists would say that someone like Buster Keaton was the better of the two, indeed, was the superior of even Chaplin himself.  And Keaton and Ball have a shared history at the MGM studios.  But Buster doesn’t generate the same warmth and affection that Lucille Ball does, and, after much reading and thinking on the subject while traveling the country as a circus clown, I have an idea why . . .
In the book “Keaton” (Blesh, Rudi, Keaton (1966) The Macmillan Company ISBN 0-02-511570-7) the author devotes several chapters to the late Thirties and early Forties, when Buster Keaton, drying out for the final time from the alcoholism that destroyed his career, was relegated to the back lot of MGM studios as a gagman and occasional extra when a scene called for a spectacular pratfall or a reference to Hollywood’s “Golden Age”.  It was a Tinsel Town Siberia for Buster, where the studio paid him a few hundred dollars a month and forgot about him.  This was the same period when Lucille Ball was spinning her wheels at MGM, playing everything from dizzy blondes to conniving blondes to wholesome blondes to an occasional Technicolor redhead who didn’t do much but look good in an Edith Head dress. Wandering the back lot of MGM between movie takes, she struck up a deep and abiding friendship with Keaton, who saw her as something of a protégé, and taught her all he could about the subtleties of physical comedy.
From him she learned the proper way to do a double-take, where the comedian looks at something but it doesn’t register, and then snaps back to gawk in consternation, fear or anger at whatever it is that he missed the first time.  He taught her to do the spit take – calmly drinking coffee or beer or some other refreshment, only to geyser it out when something untoward occurs.  He showed her how to fall properly, breaking the fall with the arms so no injury occurs.  Keaton taught her all the ancient lazzi, the physical business of comedy that had been around since the Greeks first put on plays.  Ball proved to be an apt pupil, and wanted to put her new-found talents to work, but MGM kept putting her in empty-headed musical comedies and perky domestic comedies where she either wore an evening dress or an apron and was not allowed to do much more than pout or simper.  The executives at MGM, and at most other entertainment venues, felt that physical comedy was exclusively a man’s prerogative – nice ladies, unless they were the dowager-type like Margret Dumont, did not get pies in the face.  They danced, were romanced, and married happily ever after.
When Ball teamed with her husband, Desi Arnaz, in a nightclub act, she decided to pull out all the stops and go completely physical; while Arnaz stayed the smooth, gracious Cuban, Ball would lope onstage dressed in a baggy suit straight from the Goodwill Store and pretend to be auditioning as the new bass fiddle player.  There followed some standard slapstick business, straight from a Keaton silent film, before the two of them would sing a ballad together and walk offstage, arm in arm.  The similarities between Desi Arnaz as Dean Martin, and Lucille Ball as Jerry Lewis, are quite striking.   You can see this bizarre act in their audition tape for the “I Love Lucy” Show.  It was considered so outrageous by TV executives that the tape was never used during the run of the show.
Bowing to network feedback, Ball toned down her zany character, becoming the dutiful housewife who now and then gets a wild hair up her coif and is allowed to bellow, topple, and grimace like a circus clown, until Arnaz, with some help from neighbor/confidant Fred Mertz, puts everything right again.   
And this is the character she kept on playing for the rest of her television career; the dutiful, demure woman, who always looked good in a pair of slacks or a Paris gown, who was allowed to go wild for a few minutes, and then was brought back down to earth by a man, whether husband, boyfriend, or boss. 
Ball had learned more from Keaton than Keaton realized.  While Keaton was a fantastic figure, a frozen icon, he produced no lasting affection in an audience, especially in a female audience.  That is why he was honored for his genius, and then allowed to sink into poverty and near-obscurity.  Lucille Ball, on the other hand, had her moments in the slapstick sun, but prudently balanced them with tender moments, as a mother, a wife, or a good friend and neighbor.  Audiences, especially female audiences, could identify with Lucy when she burned the breakfast toast while talking on the phone, and men could relish her persistent good looks and guffaw at her zany antics, smugly aware that at some point a man would enter the picture and calm her down – as was a man’s duty.
  She was one of the first beautiful women to buck the male-dominated comedy system and perform as an accomplished physical comedienne, yet her greatest success came exactly because she played the stereotypical housewife so well.  Behind the scenes she was all business, running a large entertainment empire and finally casting off Desi Arnaz when his drinking and infidelities became too blatant (and too damaging to the ‘family’ image Ball wanted Desilu to project).  Onscreen she donned an apron to make a meal at the least provocation, and looked to a man to guide her domestic life and her career.  In the last analysis, she was the smartest of showmen/women, because, as P.T. Barnum had said long before, the best way to please an audience is to give them exactly what they want.  As long as American audiences wanted a subservient female on their screen, they got Lucille Ball.  Ball faded just as Roseanne and others like her came barnstorming on the scene, taking guff from no one, and especially not from any man.
Lucy would probably have done a spit take over that . . .




Telemarketers Have Found an Invasive New Way to Reach You



Mr. Kemp had just experienced a technology gaining traction called ringless voicemail, the latest attempt by telemarketers and debt collectors to reach the masses. The calls are quietly deposited through a backdoor, directly into a voice mail box — to the surprise and (presumably) irritation of the recipient, who cannot do anything to block them.


The telemarketer enduring
Has no end -- or mode of curing.
They thrive amidst both flame and flood.
They call when you are stuck in mud.
No earthquake keeps them from their job.
They do not fear the raging mob.
Leaving voicemails without pause,
They’re sneakier than Santa Clause.
So ditch your phone, and go in hiding --

Otherwise they’ll sell you siding!

Utah Headlines & Limericks. Saturday. June 3. 2017.




THIRD DISTRICT JUDGE BARRY LAWRENCE DENIES BYU PROFESSOR CHIA-CHI TENG THE RIGHT TO RUN FOR OUTGOING REP. JASON CHAFFETZ’S SEAT -- BECAUSE TENG USED SKYPE TO REGISTER FOR THE RACE.

Confronting the board face to face
Is how you must enter the race.
Election bosses
stay on their high hosses --
How else can they check your birthplace?




DEBT-RIDDEN UTAH GOP TO REQUIRE ENTRANCE FEE TO SPECIAL CONVENTION TO REPLACE CHAFFETZ? THEY’RE THINKING ABOUT IT . . .

To vote in the strapped GOP
You have to cough up a slight fee.
The party is broke,
So they want your poker
To let you play Democracy.





SPANISH FORK EX WIFE PLEADS ‘NO CONTEST’ TO CHARGES SHE HIRED A HITMAN TO MURDER FORMER SPOUSE FOR HIS LIFE INSURANCE AND TO GAIN CUSTODY OF THEIR CHILDREN.

Hell hath no fury, they say,
like women who don’t get their way.
Their murderous rage
Will mean that old age

For ex’s requires they pray.

Friday, June 2, 2017

Email to a Friend



I don’t profess to know anything about women -- Caucasian, Asian, or otherwise. But I don’t understand why you say you won’t be saving money anymore because it won’t do you any good. Are you talking about bank savings? I love having money in my savings account -- it gives helps me sleep at night and keeps my stomach from churning too much.

But anyway, you’ll do the right thing. You always do, even if you don’t want to admit it. It’s early evening here and usually I’d be grumpy and uncommunicative, but tonight for some strange reason that I really can’t figure out I feel pretty happy and talkative. I can identify four things that are making me happy right now:

  1. Adam just gave me a bunch of rewrite work. I was worried I wouldn’t make it until my next Soc Sec check arrives in the middle of the month, but now I’ll have a little something extra to take the kids/grandkids out to dinner, etc., if I want to.
  2. I just bought a cast iron skillet at Walmarts. Bacon and eggs taste so much better when prepared in cast ironware. It’s also a nostalgia thing -- i have many happy memories of experimenting with the cast iron skillet that Amy and I got when the kids were small -- we cooked a lot of cornbread in it, as well as many a Midwest casserole. My kids grew up on casseroles -- and today not a single one of them makes them or wants to eat them. Sometimes I think all their dietary fads are just a form of rejection. Rewind  . . .   I like to think that my cast iron skillet will last beyond my lifetime and that one of my kids will take it when I pass on and that it will be handed down through countless generations of Torkildsons.
  3. I bought a pair of good walking sandals, so I don’t have to struggle with putting on socks and shoes again until October. I hate socks -- my feet get so itchy and hot nowadays that I’m spending a fortune on foot creams and ointments. And they’re not cheap -- on average a tube of foot rub costs seven dollars and lasts me only two weeks. But now with my breezy new sandals I don’t have to use any socks (except when I go to Church) and my feet are staying much cooler.
  4. I found a crazy Japanese anime on Netflix called One Punch Man. It’s basically a send-up of all the superheroes-fighting-monsters anime cartoons for the past thirty years. Excellent artwork and clever writing.
  5. Oh, and one more I forgot about until just now. I bought several cans of Read brand German Potato Salad -- made in Marion, New York. I love to eat it cold out of the can. I had some for lunch, with a piece of cold fried chicken and a ton of pickled beets.
  6. Oh wait -- there’s even another reason I feel convivial this evening! As you well know, I’ve been doing limericks based on newspaper stories for many years now. But rarely have I done them based on local, Utah stories. Today it hit me that I should stop writing about so many national/international stories and concentrate on Utah news, sending it out to the appropriate local reporters/journalists -- and then compiling them altogether as Utah Headlines & Limericks for my blog site. The concept is meeting with a lot more clicks on my blog than I thought it would -- so I’m going to do it everyday from now on. And this makes me extremely happy and grateful - - to feel like I’m a big fish in a small pond (although it’s just another internet illusion . . . )
So there you have it. Normally cantankerous Tim is a pussycat tonight. I’m even doing my laundry right now as I write this, and not feeling sorry for myself for not having a date on a Friday night. Who cares? Date, schmate! Instead, I’m going to have crisp clean perfumed sheets to sleep on tonight -- and it was only a scant two years ago that I didn’t even HAVE A BED to sleep on at all!

Ain’t life grand?

Thank You, Kim Ruest!

   


To the wonderful readers who liked my recent post “The Noses of Clown Alley” I can only say ‘velsigne deg.’ You warm the cockles and periwinkles of my heart:

Mike Johnson; Kenneth Arrow; Tony Chino; Barbara Bergmann; Gabriel Romero Sr.; Ernst Fehr; Mike Weakley; Kim Ruest; Mary Pat Cooney; Francis Fukuyama; Daniel Kahneman; Francois Guizot; Pat Wilson Harsey; John Red Lawrence Stuart; Dave Letterfly; Patti Jo Estes Williams; Lesley Nichols; Kenneth L. Stallings; Bonnie Wieboldt Lewis; Troy Peace; Ambrose Bierce; Lorraine Baltzer; Kel Parry; Julie Howard; Marion Seidel; and the exquisite Bill Rothe.


“The story is always better than your ability to write it.”  Robert Lewis Stevenson

Utah Headlines & Limericks for Today. Friday, June 2. 2017



SALT LAKE MAYOR BISKUPSKI AT LOGGERHEADS WITH CITY COUNCIL OVER APPOINTMENT OF NEW UTA MEMBER STATE SENATOR JIM DABAKIS.

When mayors and councils contend,
The drama seems never to end.
They ought to reason
Instead of cry “Treason!” --
Not into complaining descend.




TAX INITIATIVE TO FUND NEW ROUND OF STATE SCHOOL PROJECTS READY TO KICK OFF IN SALT LAKE.

Taxes to fund education
Are subject to recrimination.
While learning is good,
It’s misunderstood
As something that needs a small ration.




PERTURBED WOMAN DRIVER CRASHES CAR INTO KEARNS HOME, NARROWLY MISSING RESIDENT IN BED. 

When driving a car at high speed
The one thing your really don’t need
Is some kind of dwelling
That stays so compelling
It makes you stop and start to bleed.

In Maine There Are No Working Men




During radio interviews this week, Maine's Governor LePage suggested his push for commutations was not a sudden shift in his views on the criminal justice system. Instead, he said, he is trying to solve the aging state’s mounting labor problem. The released offenders will be required to find jobs or job training.

from the NYTimes  


In Maine there are no working men,
And so they must empty the pen
For clerks and busboys
Who may lack much poise --

But look good in stripes now and then.


Thursday, June 1, 2017

The Noses of Clown Alley

Richard Mann had one of the longest noses ever recorded in clown alley.

Of all the appendages on the human face, the nose is the most fixed. It cannot move, like the mouth, or wiggle up and down, like eyebrows, or open and shut, like eyelids -- if you practice hard enough, you can even move your ears more than you can your nose. Yet down through the ages the nose has always assumed the highest importance when it comes to comedy and clowning.

Just think of some of the great comic noses of the past -- the schnozzola of Jimmy Durante; the ripe red rum blossom of W.C. Fields; Bob Hope’s insouciant ski snoot; and the classic thrust of France’s most famous dueler and jester, Cyrano de Bergerac.

Then there are the wonderful noses of clown alley. On the Ringling show I don’t believe anyone ever achieved the length of Richard Mann’s prolonged proboscis. It was done with a combination of latex and nose putty, and extended more than four inches. Lou Jacobs, of course, initially started with a red rubber ball, hollowed out on one side and kept in place with fishing line. Felix Adler had a flashy rhinestone imbedded in his red rubber nose. And various clowns have had noses that lit up like light bulbs or honked when they were pinched. If the latex is thin enough, you can inhale through your clown nose and make it collapse in a manner that children find irresistibly droll.  



When I was a registrant at the Ringling Clown College, each of us was taught how to make a life mask with plaster of Paris so we could mold distinct clown noses should we choose to enhance our own snouts. Since my nose was rather longish to begin with, I stuck to coloring it with just a bit of rouge. But many others, such as Steve Smith, Ron Severinni, and Chris Bricker, carefully crafted their own unique clown nose casts. And Bricker went one step further when he colored his latex model -- he painted it in rainbow stripes.

While beards have been used to comic effect from time to time, it is the moustache, located directly below the nose, that has offered the most prolific comic possibilities -- all the way from Chaplin’s toothbrush tuft to the ferocious upper lip shrubs worn by many of Mack Sennett’s slapstick minions. In clown alley Mark Anthony produced a steady supply of rubber noses with long black mustachios attached -- when the mood struck him, he’d put one on himself for a show or two. He gave me one that featured a hideously bulbous and cratered beak with a tremendously long black mustache attached underneath. It obscured nearly half my face, so I used it when the clowns were dragooned into doing animal walks from the train to the arena for the local media early on load out day. That way I saved myself the bother of putting on my full whiteface makeup before breakfast -- a ghastly prospect for the weak-minded and lackadaisical joey, which I certainly was.

The nose enjoys a special status in human anatomy and history. In Mediterranean countries the size of a man’s nose indicates the potency of his manhood. To this day in China most foreigners are referred to as ‘long-nosed devils.’ You need a green thumb to tend a garden, but you must have a ‘nose for news’ to be a successful reporter. In the novel ‘Tristram Shandy, Laurence Sterne wrote an entire chapter devoted specifically to noses, which claimed, among other things, that breastfed infants developed stronger, healthier noses -- for obvious reasons. Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe lost his nose in a sword fight, and replaced it with one made of gold and silver. A broken heart may last forever, but physicians say a broken nose is the fastest healing part of the human body -- usually fully healed within a single week.

Seeing as how we collectively cherish our noses, the true clown is inevitably drawn to distorting his or her own nose in weird and comical ways. Nose putty, an amalgam of beeswax, chicle, and plasticene, has been used for the past two hundred years to add body and length to a performer’s proboscis. I recall Otto Griebling massaging a lump of the stuff to warm it up before applying it to his own rather modest nose. When the putty began to lose it’s hold, he invariably threw it up to stick on the ceiling of whatever building we were playing. I suppose most of those wads are still up there -- ready to give archeologists in the distant future conniption fits trying to figure out what it is and what it was used for.

In the good old days a rubber nose was held on with spirit glue -- a nasty concoction that smelled bad and didn’t hold very well. Most of the veteran clowns I worked with eschewed it -- using instead Dentu Creme to cement their rubber noses onto their clown faces. I myself began using a red foam rubber ball, split down the middle, as a clown nose when I switched from doing a whiteface to an August back in the 1990’s. They were lightweight and cheap. But, like all clown noses past and present, they pinched the nostrils pretty tight. That is why in most photos of clowns with false noses you’ll notice the mouth is wide open. It’s the only way to get enough air. Which explains that classic ‘gaping’ look that retro clown photos always have.   






Ivanka Trump's Shoes




Such tensions are fueling the drive of Huajian’s founder, Mr. Zhang, to move work to Ethiopia. A former drill sergeant in the Chinese military who sometimes leads his workers on parade-ground drills, Mr. Zhang says work like making shoes will never return to the United States and is increasingly difficult in China as well.
“Do Americans really like to work, to do these simple and repetitive tasks?” said Mr. Zhang, in the December interview. “Young Chinese also don’t want to do this after they graduate from college.”
from the NYTimes 

Ivanka makes shoes for the loaded,
From factories that are outmoded.
The Chinese who toil
For her in turmoil
To Addis Ababa are goaded.

What Lou Jacobs Said About Laughter



What do you think of when you hear Chopin's haunting Etude Op. 10, #3?
Leaves falling on a dreary Autumn day? Past loves and regrets? The impossibility of breaking through the solitude of existence?
When I hear that refrain I think of the Keystone Kops. Of spills out of windows or into ponds of water. Of pastry tossed about with a wild disregard for the laws of physics. Of hats thrown and crushed and battered by disgruntled spouses, rivals, or bosses. Of the tremendous silence that comes after a lifetime of tremendous laughter.
For that lovely bit of Chopin was appropriated in 1957 for the film "The Golden Age of Comedy".  A compilation of film clips from the silent movie masters of comedy like Laurel & Hardy, Charlie Chase, and the unhinged Keystone Kops.
I saw that movie at a revival in 1961 at the old Varsity Theater in Dinkytown, next to the University of Minnesota campus in Minneapolis. As it played, I heard for the first time in my life the true belly laugh -- a gasping, wheezing near-death experience where a man or woman drools and snorts in a paroxysm of mirth. There were moments during that screening when the audience's laughter seemed to lift me into a strange new dimension -- one I wanted very much to understand and conquer.  
It was a career epiphany for me. I wanted to obtain the same kind of comic influence those herky jerky figures on the screen possessed, that could make a crowd dissolve into helpless delight.
As an eight-year old I had no idea how to achieve such distinction, but I was determined to find out. So I was in every school play; the part didn't matter, for I would wind up tripping over my own shoes and taking spectacular pratfalls that had my teachers terrified I would break my neck. I read the wonderful and abundant clown biographies of the day -- Mr. Laurel & Mr. Hardy, by John McCabe; W.C. Fields; His Follies and Fortunes, by Robert Lewis Taylor; Keaton, by Rudi Blesch; Father Goose, by Gene Fowler; and Notes on a Cowardly Lion, by John Lahr.  I haunted the local Film Societies, sitting in the dark and learning from the nimble Old Masters of slapstick.
I even wrote an entire Marx Brothers play, in longhand. And had the effrontery to mail it to Douglas Campbell, the Artistic Director of the renowned Guthrie Theater. He actually responded several weeks later, with a brief note thanking me for my submission and suggesting I have someone type it up so he could actually read it.
To me all this was a deadly serious pursuit. As the years slid past my adolescent passion to make people laugh turned into an obsession.
Walking home from school in the middle of a deep Minnesota winter, I would pry up sheets of ice from sidewalk puddles, then smash them over my head and stagger about like Curly Howard or Chaplin after being hit with a mallet. I carried banana peels with me, the better to impress the girls with my balletic slides and tumbles. (It didn't work.)
The world would never hold any satisfaction for me, unless I could stick my tongue out at it as a paid professional.
What kept my parents from sending me off to a laughing academy was the fortuitous opening of the Ringling Brothers Clown College. The school actively sought amateur clowns of every stripe. As soon as I was out of high school I was on my way to Venice, Florida, to enter the school's unhallowed halls. That’s where I heard the matchless Lou Jacobs say “It’s no good trying to hold onto a laugh -- it just goes rotten quick, like a ripe peach.”

And all because I had once seen Charlie Murray hit Louise Fazenda with a two-by-four on the screen of the Varsity Theater.