TV News, San Diego Radio, Politics and News, Sewing--The Sewing Herald Tribune....we need contributors, Travel.... Agree or Disagree....Please feel free to comment.....all comments appreciated and thank you for your time..... and food,dogs and cats...... let's sit down at this cafe, have a cup of coffee and talk about politics.
Apr 15, 2016
Hillary Did Good Last Night
donald's dumb and unthought out comments only make Hillary better........
HILLARY DID GOOD LAST NIGHT:
Just wanted to say I really appreciated your comments about the donald last evening because as a OR nurse one cannot always opt out of a procedure and the "D and C" or TAB, therapeutic abortion, is a routine procedure done for many reasons.
The idea that we would go back to pre 1970 and not have a personal choice or the idea that a health care worker would go to jail or be punished for participating in a routine procedure is archaic. Not to mention stupid.
This is someone who by his actions wants to participate in the sexual revolution footloose and fancy free but punish the woman if an unwanted pregnancy occurs.
The man is disgusting.
I have been waiting for Hillary forever because she is a mom just like me but now I would vote for her on Planned Parenthood alone because that is not something I am never willing to negotiate.
I was voting for her anyway. I am still sad about the last election but I love President Obama, too.
We are a team, me and Hillary.....same-same.
This is why she will easily beat the Repubs also.
Well done!
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Apr 11, 2016
Long Day's Journey Into Night review – Jeremy Irons and Lesley Manville shine with sexual passion and rage
Bristol Old VicRichard Eyre rushes through Eugene O’Neill’s masterpiece but gets to the heart of the tortured love of the Tyrones, played mesmerisingly by his leads
Richard Eyre famously directed a 90-minute version of Ghosts at the Almeida. Ibsen’s play had a profound effect on Eugene O’Neill’s lengthy autobiographical masterpiece, which Eyre now steers home in three and a quarter hours. For my taste, this is too fast but there is no denying this is a distinguished event with a cast headed by Lesley Manville, who was Mrs Alving in Ghosts, and Jeremy Irons, returning to the theatre where he started to be part of its 250th anniversary.
But timing matters with O’Neill as much as it does in a Wagner opera. I suspect Eyre is seeking to contrast the brisk allegro of the play’s opening with the long adagio of its tragic end where the four members of the Tyrone family confront the appalling truth. But too often the tempo is unvaried, so that we miss the almost comic pattern of accusation and retraction that afflicts all the characters. When James Tyrone, a celebrated actor who sold out to commercial success, recites Shakespeare and his tubercular son Edmund recites Baudelaire, we should also feel them dwelling on the consolations of poetry rather than rushing through the speeches as they do here.
There are, however, many virtues to Eyre’s production. I’ve never felt so strongly before the sexual passion that Tyrone and his morphine-addicted wife, Mary, still feel for each other after 36 years. Manville is also outstanding as Mary. She mesmerisingly captures the violent mood-swings of the addict, switching in a second from girlish friskiness to mordant recrimination. She conveys Mary’s inner anxiety through a compulsive talkativeness and physical restlessness that leads her to be forever needlessly patting cushions. In Manville’s expert hands, O’Neill’s play becomes Mary’s tragedy: the story of a woman whose drug dependence was the result of her husband’s stinginess and who journeys into a past filled with religious faith and innocent hope.
Loss of faith affects all the characters: in the case of Tyrone, it is faith in his potential as a great Shakespearean actor. Irons has, of course, played Shakespeare but he remains unusual casting for the role. His forte is to suggest a refined asceticism whereas O’Neill’s character is a broad-shouldered, hard-drinking figure of Irish peasant stock. But, although cast against type and not always secure with the lines, Irons brings out strongly Tyrone’s tortured love for his wife: the moments I shall remember from his performance are those where he gazes at her with a sad-eyed mixture of guilt and longing.
The two Tyrone sons are also very good. Hadley Fraser has just the right blend of man-about-town ebullience and self-loathing as the worldly James Tyrone Jr and Billy Howle, a graduate of Bristol Old Vic theatre school, lends the consumptive Edmund a fitful romanticism and tainted hopelessness: it struck me the character is a direct parallel to Oswald in Ghosts. Jessica Regan also appears to telling effect as a caustic Irish maid who has the capacity for contradiction that blights her employers. It’s a great play filled with what the American critic Harold Clurman calls “the soulful poetry of despair and forgiveness”. And, although Eyre’s production often goes at too great a lick, it gets there in the end with the characters frozen in a deeply moving pietà in which Manville’s Mary takes on the quality of a wrecked madonna.
- At Bristol Old Vic until 23 April. Box Office: 0117 987 7877
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Stones London Saatchi Gallery: I'm There
LOUD AND PROUD
04.09.16 9:01 PM ET
Inside London’s Amazing Rolling Stones Exhibit
The Rolling Stones have created a lavish, over-priced celebration of themselves at the Saatchi Gallery. It's hard not to love them for it.
LONDON — We’re greeted by a wall of screens pulsing with Mick Jagger’s trademark strut and snatches of the great Rolling Stones’ riffs and licks.
The footage at the start of Exhibitionism, a massive gallery show devoted to the Rolling Stones in London, begins with an early ’60s gig; Jagger is shirtless and throwing buckets of water over a tiny, bouncing crowd. It ends with their long-overdue and triumphant Glastonbury debut in 2013.
My mother was a schoolgirl dancing at the front when the Stones bloomed from raucous pub band into rock ’n’ roll powerhouse—she and her classmates even gathered to help film an early promo.
Half a century later, it was my turn to witness music history at firsthand during what the founder of Glastonbury would later describe as the festival’s all-time greatest set.
Spanning London generations with the very same epic tunes, the Rolling Stones have bettered or outlasted every rock ‘n’ roll band to set foot on stage. One of the great constants of British life is Jagger and co. swaggering off with our money.
Their latest ruse may be the best yet: a magnificent and bombastic retrospective exhibition with exorbitant ticket prices ready to be rolled out for a global money-making tour.
Decades of stadium shows have made millions, but with the band members now heading into their mid-70s; they have struck upon a wheeze that will keep the crowds rolling in while they sit back in their expensively upholstered armchairs.
***
The blockbuster show is housed in the Saatchi gallery at the eastern end of the Kings Road, West London’s crossfire hurricane where both the Swinging Sixties and the Rolling Stones were born.
The band lived at the other end of the road—their first room-share on Edith Grove is re-created in intimate detail inside the exhibition.
Four crowded rooms are brimming with cigarette butts, discarded beer bottles, and filthy plates towering over the kitchen sink.
“It was a pigsty, basically,” says Keith Richards in the first of dozens of video, audio, and written commentaries that accompany visitors around the exhibition.
With the band members themselves as your guides, it feels more like an immersive autobiography than an exhibition. The band are credited as producers of the show and their control has both positive and negative effects.
This is clearly a sanitized version of an extraordinary sex- and drug-soaked adventure. Even the overflowing ashtray doesn’t smell in this cleaned-up re-creation.
The real-life 102 Edith Grove, which is a mile west of the show, remains disheveled and ungentrified. Two “no dumping” signs are fastened to the wrought iron railings in front and moss is growing out from beneath the cracked paint on the first-floor window ledge.
As you walk towards the lavish Saatchi gallery, the King’s Road—where independent boutiques once provided extravagant clothes and esoteric footwear for the band—is now dominated by sushi chains and international fashion brands.
“The scene was great down the King’s Road,” recalls guitarist Ronnie Wood. “Where you went to be seen—or you could just watch the theater go by.”
Charlie Watts, the drummer, adds: “It’s a bit of a high street now—in those days it was a bit different.”
Arriving at the show, it’s obvious that we are no longer in swinging, bohemian West London. We’re deep in the modern version—a rich-man’s playground where Russian oligarchs and investment bakers vie with tourists for tables in overpriced, average restaurants. The band made the same journey long ago.
After paying almost $40 for one ticket and an audio guide, visitors are met by huge security men in black suits with earpieces. It seems unlikely that the middle-aged couples making their way through the retractable barriers are going to cause them much trouble.
***
Once we reach the heart of the exhibition, concerns about rock stars selling out start to be eased by the power of the music.
Buddy Guy, a Louisiana blues guitarist, recalls the moment the young Rolling Stones arrived in the U.S. to work with their blues heroes. “I had never saw a white man with hair that long and boots this tall,” he says. “The British made the blues more popular than any African American.”
An old clip of Muddy Waters, himself, appears on screen: “Thanks to the Rolling Stones,” he said. “They introduced my music to the white kids of the United States.”
Next we are invited into a rebuilt studio where those bluesy guitar riffs were laid down.
Don Was, one of the Stones’ longtime producers, is on screen to talk us through their sessions. “They are relentless in their pursuit of a good take,” he says, explaining the months of hard work that would go into a single song.
But more than that, Was impresses upon us the sheer talent bursting from these men.
“One of the things about Mick’s vocals is if you’re mixing the song and you bring up the faders on the board, you only have to bring up Mick’s vocal a little bit and he comes leaping out of the speakers,” says Was.
“The definition of a star is someone who can jump out—whose voice jumps out—most people don’t ever do that. It’s not something you can learn. It’s just some God-given thing that you’re born with.”
Once we’ve heard the master, we get a chance to play producer ourselves. A digital mixing desk is amazingly good fun to play with. By fading the different parts up and down you can explore the way the Rolling Stones’ trademark sound is created.
Take out the brass section from Honky Tonk Women, or max out the bassline inSympathy for the Devil, one thing is clear—Wass is right, no matter how low you fade the vocal, Jagger’s extraordinary voice somehow punches through.
Next Martin Scorsese takes us on an amusing tour through the movies made about the Rolling Stones—which culminates in his own film Shine a Light from 2008.
“The Rolling Stones music was part of me. I felt like they were speaking to me directly. Their music cut deep, it was dangerous… and accepting of the dark side of human nature,” he says.
A section on their videos, however, which featured apologetically brief snatches of their music videos, shouts out what we already knew—this is a live band.
They were a rowdy covers band first who learned to write their own songs, rather than musical theorists who composed first and got dirty playing live later. They were born on stage, and surely at least one of them will drop dead on stage.
The clothes seem to make the same point. A room full of mannequins wearing the original stage outfits looks like a ludicrous pimps’ paradise—but when you see the video and the pictures of Jagger and Richards writhing around in them, they are transformed.
A rare early shot of the band looking dorky in matching dogtooth blazers makes them look like a sub-Beatles pop combo. That look was soon replaced by clothing that would help turn the London fashion scene upside down.
“It was a very new development that famous photographers would take pictures of rock bands. Suddenly we became part of the whole sixties phenomenon, breaking through the boundaries of pop music into fashion, films, television and everything else,” says Jagger.
He knew that the image was crucial in their quest to become the world’s biggest band. “Musicians like to say it’s only about the music, but it’s not, of course.”
Amid the style and swagger on show, there is more evidence of sanitization. Richards’s battle with drugs or falling out with Jagger is scarcely mentioned.
There’s even an odd little attempt to cover up the self-evident commercial instincts of the band.
Above some Andy Warhol images of Jagger is a quote from the frontman: “Andy and I decided to do a set of lithographs. It was an artistic thing. He was also making money and, you know, Andy was a guy that wanted to make money.”
When you listen to Jagger’s interview on the audio guide, he actually says: “We were making money.” It’s a small distinction, but it seems both unnecessary and discomfiting to try to twist the truth.
By the mid-1970s, the Rolling Stones were ready to take their studio and billboard success to the next level. “We did a tour of arenas, which we’d never done before and—believe it or not—no one else had ever done before,” says Jagger.
The Tour of the Americas culminated at Madison Square Garden in 1975. The stage, which was in the middle of the audience, was shaped like a lotus flower. “I had to get inside the lotus and, climb up a ladder and hang on like grim death to one of the petals, which then opened to reveal the band playing,” says Jagger.
The sketches and stunning scale models of the some of the sets are on show in the exhibition.
Jonathan Park, who was poached by the Stones after his peerless set design for Pink Floyd’s The Wall tour, was one of the geniuses who helped the band create their legendary live shows.
He told The Daily Beast that it was thrilling to have some of that behind-the-scenes craft showcased to the public. “It’s wonderful to really be able to see all that hard work,” he said.
As we come to the end of the show, we are invited into a mocked-up backstage where you can hear music blasting in the next room. When it’s our turn to walk through the stage doors—this compelling show ends with a 3D live performance Satisfaction.
Everyone walks out beaming.
It’s not just those leaving the rarified gallery who seem to have been affected by the first week of the Rolling Stones’ new West London residency.
Further up the road, a hipster in his late-20s was strolling in the spring sunshine with the exhibition T-shirt peeking out from beneath a long coat, and a teenager in a green duffle coat had sewn a Rolling Stones patch into his jeans. Something is stirring on the King’s Road.
Exhibitionism at the Saatchi Gallery, Duke of York’s HQ, SW3, runs until Sept 4.
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