“Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead,” a Play by Tom Stoppard

September 13th, 2008

Continuing on my Hamlet-related binge, I read Stoppard’s play, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead. I was strongly reminded of Beckett’s Waiting for Godot–lots of existential musings, perhaps too many for my taste. Otherwise, though, Stoppard’s work is a delight. Like Updike’s Gertrude and Claudius, it identifies gaps in Shakespeare’s play and fills them in, with imagination and humor.

Incidents! All we get is incidents! Dear God, is it too much to expect a little sustained action?!

The film is waiting on our Tivo, so I hope to see and review it soon.

“Gertrude and Claudius” by John Updike

September 12th, 2008

I bought Gertrude and Claudius as a birthday gift for my husband, G. Grod, many years ago. He read it, liked it, said I should read it. We know how that goes. I finally got around to reading it, and it was quite good.

I don’t mind that it took me years to get to it, because the recent slow and careful reading I did of the Arden Shakespeare’s Hamlet stood me well. I knew why Updike chose three sets of names for the characters in the three sections. I could tell when he was explaining a vagary of Shakespeare’s play, such as why Hamlet didn’t know his best friend Horatio had been in Denmark for two months. And I recognized when he glossed contended words from the text, like eyas and hebona. This is a fascinating take on the play, imagining Gertrude and Claudius (or their differently named antecedents) as complex, human characters in the years before the play takes place. Often in productions and readings, Hamlet is the hero, Claudius is the villain, and Gertrude is rarely sympathetic. These are not the case here, and Updike’s learned, clever tale provides a fresh look at the old play.

As to the world, there is the truth from without, and the truth from within. The truth within is ours. –Geruthe (Gertrude) to Fengon (Claudius)

It’s by turns sad, funny, and provocative. My only criticism is that I didn’t find his Gertrude, the main character, had a sustained, believable female voice. I found her story compelling, nonetheless. And the final two sentences of the novel, as well as the concluding quote of the afterword, were quite chilling; they linger.

Junot Diaz reading: October 29, 2008 7:30pm

September 12th, 2008

A fall U of MN English event:

October 29: Junot Diaz, “We Are the New America: A Reading,” 7:30 pm

Diaz published his debut novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao eleven years after his acclaimed short story collection Drown–and ended up winning the Pulitzer Prize, the Sargent First Novel Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award for Best Novel of 2007. New York Times critic Michiko Kakutani characterized Diaz’s writing in the novel as: “a sort of streetwise brand of Spanglish that even the most monolingual reader can easily inhale: lots of flash words and razzle-dazzle talk, lots of body language on the sentences, lots of David Foster Wallace-esque footnotes and asides. And he conjures with seemingly effortless aplomb the two worlds his characters inhabit: the Dominican Republic, the ghost-haunted motherland that shapes their nightmares and their dreams; and America (a.k.a. New Jersey), the land of freedom and hope and not-so-shiny possibilities that they’ve fled to as part of the great Dominican diaspora.” Esther Freier Endowed Lecturer. Coffman Theater, 300 Washington Avenue SE, Mpls. 612-625-3363

Thanks to my friend The Big Brain for the heads up.

Four Book Binges in Nine Days

September 11th, 2008

I often vow to read more books off my shelf and not buy new ones. Feel free to mock me.

From Big Brain Comics:
BBC

Zot! 1987-1991 by Scott McCloud,
The Black Diamond Detective Agency by Eddie Campbell
The Amazing Remarkable Monsieur Leotard by E. Campbell & D. Best
Superpowers by David J. Schwartz (a friend of a friend)

From Half-Price Books Roseville:
HPB I

The Book of Jhereg by Steven Brust
The Book of Athyra by Steven Brust
Tales from Shakespeare by Charles, Mary Lamb, ill. by A. Rackham
Hamlet (Chamberlain Bros. edition with BBC production dvd)
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
The Far Side of the World by Patrick O’Brien
Hamlet: The Poem by Harold Bloom

From Dreamhaven:
Dreamhaven

The Book of Taltos by Steven Brust
Making Book by Teresa Nielsen Hayden
The Paths of the Dead by Steven Brust
The Lord of Castle Black by Steven Brust
Sethra Lavode by Steven Brust

From Half-Price Books St. Louis Park:
Half Price Books 2

The Eensy Weensy Spider by M. Hoberman, ill. by N. Westcott
Skip to My Lou by Nadine Bernard Westcott
Miss Mary Mack by M. Hoberman, ill. by N. Westcott
Romeo and Juliet
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stoppard
Hamlet dvd (with Ethan Hawke)
Heat dvd
Spartan dvd
Shakespeare by Peter Ackroyd
Crime and Punishment transl. by Pevear, Volokhonsky
The Early Bird by Richard Scarry
The Mouse and His Child by Russell Hoban, ill. by David Small
Stone Age Boy by Satoshi Kitamura
The Birthday Box by Leslie Patricelli

As if all these weren’t enough, and as if we didn’t have enough to read, we bought this at Big Brain Comics last night. It does double duty: it’s a novel and a bludgeoning weapon!
Anathem by Neal Stephenson

Let me know if the photos are legible; this is my first big photo foray.

You’re Welcome

September 11th, 2008

To the family who next rents the blue Mazda 5 from the Charlotte airport: check the CD player. I left Abba’s Greatest Hits for you.

On the plus side, I have a good excuse to buy the Mamma Mia! soundtrack.

Hamlet (1996)

September 9th, 2008

It took us four nights to watch the nearly four hours of Kenneth Branagh’s 1996 film of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. It was time well spent. There was much to savor, though a few things did annoy. As scholar E.M.W. Tillyard noted of the famous play, “No one is likely to accept another man’s reading of Hamlet.” Nor woman’s, neither, I would add.

Branagh chose to film the first “uncut” Hamlet, a combination of the Second Quarto and First Folio texts. This honors the play’s sweeping themes and action, but gives Hamlet a great deal of speechifying–he does go on. And on. But Branagh is a fine figure of Hamlet, only a bit older at the time than his character’s thirty years, with well-defined muscles, light blond hair befitting Hamlet’s Danish ancestry, and arresting blue eyes. The cast is a combination of seasoned Shakespearean actors, such as Brian Blessed and Derek Jacobi, with minor parts filled with Hollywood notables who fared much less well in the execution of their lines. They were far outshone by Charlton Heston as the fierce Player King, who summons the image of Sir John Gielgud as Priam and Dame Judi Dench as Hecuba, both of whose silent roles were far more powerful than those of Jack Lemmon, Billy Crystal, and Robin Williams.

I was troubled at first by Branagh’s inclusion of flashback until I realized he was deliberately exploiting the medium of film. Just as a stage play shows more than does the text, so a film can show even more of what has been inferred from the text. For instance, Hamlet and Ophelia are shown in bed together in flashback. Critical opinion differs whether the couple had prior relations, or a chaste wooing. Some took offense at Branagh’s choice to make his interpretation so literal. My husband noted that he found it perfectly understandable: cast Kate Winslet as Ophelia and of course Branagh is going to write her in bed naked with his character.

Similarly, the growing threat of young Fortinbras is shown in great detail, much more apparent than it is in the text. Yet this provides a frame for the story, and places it squarely within both an historical context as well as emphasizing the themes of action versus deliberation, and status quo versus change.

Branagh’s Hamlet is an attractive prince, horrified by the crime of his uncle, repulsed by his mother’s possible complicity, and uncertain of the ghost’s authority in urging him to revenge. This Hamlet veers between sorrow, anger, madness and introspection. It is a flattering portrayal of a complex character, an unsurprising choice given Branagh’s long affection for the character, which he owns to in the introduction to the film.

The film is literally spectacular, shot in 65 mm and at full length, though it was difficult to get made. Coming off the critical failure of Frankenstein, Branagh compromised with Castle Rock by including bankable Hollywood stars and releasing the full-length film in select theaters, and a 2.5 hour abridgment more widely. Interestingly, I recall the full-length film was more popular at the time, and was the one chosen for the dvd. (Thanks to reader VT for recalling this to my attention; I’d forgotten.)

Added later
: I found the soundtrack obtrusive and irritating. Every time Hamlet would make a speech, the music would swell, obscuring the beautiful words that have stood the test of centuries. During his speech to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, I thought for a moment I was going to see the selection from Hair.

My husband G. Grod strenuously objected to the staging of the end of IV, iv.

Zot! 1987-1991 by Scott McCloud

September 9th, 2008

Zot!: The Complete Black-and-White Stories: 1987-1991, by Scott McCloud, is a great collection of a great series. I was happy to reread its 36 issues, and sad all over again when I got to the end of Zot, Jenny, and everyone else’s story. This collection stands alone, but is a follow up to the out-of-print Zot! Book 1. Zot! is a great YA series, with heroes and villains, but also romance and problems for everyday, interesting, engaging characters. It has a hopeful outlook, which stands in pleasant contrast to bleaker views that have predominated in the comics landscape since Moore’s Watchmen and Miller’s Dark Knight Returns, in the 80’s.

McCloud’s brief commentary is enlightening. It places the comics in historical perspective, as well as on the continuum of McCloud’s work. He followed Zot! with the highly regarded, influential Understanding Comics. He also includes entertaining anecdotes, like the one where his wife went into labor with their second child during a dinner party. She gave birth hours later, while Neil Gaiman sang songs from Sweeney Todd to the elder daughter in the waiting room.

When Bad Things Happen to Good Cakes

September 8th, 2008

I burned myself out baking, constructing and decorating a dinosaur cake for Drake’s fifth birthday. So for his preschool celebration I ordered a cake–white cake, white frosting with pink balloons and writing that said simply, “Drake is 5″.

Not only were the bakery women and customers really sweet to Drake when we picked up the cake, but not one piece was left after preschool. So there’s no need to notify Cake Wrecks, the hilarious site documenting ill-conceived or poorly executed cakes. (Link from ALoTT5MA)

Project Runway 5: This n That

September 8th, 2008

I’ve heard a lot of non-love out there for the current season, 5, of Project Runway. I’m having fun watching, though. I think this is an interesting crop of designers, and that the final three, and the winner, aren’t as obvious as they were last season. Project Rungay continues to be the best, and most entertaining commentary on the show.

A few thoughts: Blayne is playing to the camera, and trying to be Christian with his catchphrases. He’s only still on because his designs are more bizarre than plain bad. Stella became much more entertaining as the series progressed, and I’m sad to see her gone. I’d been thinking Terri was a shoo-in till Jerell made his fabulously bitchy comment that she’s got two faces and four patterns. Rowrr!

The Drag Queen challenge was one of my favorite episodes. I loved how the designers referred without exception to their clients using the feminine pronoun, since their clients’ gender was female. I loved how the drag queens came in decked out, then au naturel, and then a combination before the runway show. I thought Joe deserved the win. As Michael Kors loves to say, “He put the right girl, in the right outfit, styled the right way.”

Saturnalia: I was surprised first by Korto’s woven seat belts, since bags of that have been around for ages. But the end result was so beautiful and intricately done that she deserved her second-place finish. I’m also thrilled to see Leanne finally win, with her crazy, futuristic, perfectly executed, and bogglingly not-unflattering design.

DVF: Kenley continues to crusade for most annoying, though as long as Blayne’s around, she’ll lose. But her meltdown was entertaining, and her dress was beautiful. I’d wear it in a second. I own 2 DVF dresses, and they’re among my favorite clothing items, so Diane von Furstenberg as both challenge and guest? LOVING! Leanne wins again, and Korto is in the top. Joe is delusional, and it appears Terri is, too. Delusion usually signals an imminent auf’ing, as with Mormon Keith.

I’m a terrible prognosticator, but I think Korto and Leanne are going to be in the final three. Whether the third will be Terri or Kenley I’m not sure. Jerrell could be a wild card, but I think (and hope) Blayne and Joe are next to go.

Stupid Is as Stupid Does

September 8th, 2008

There’s been a lot of noise lately about whether the information is making us, people in general and students in particular, stupid. Helpfully, the Chronicle of Higher Ed collected links to many recent articles and followed it with another article suggesting the solution is to support teachers, not vilify the digital age. (Links from Arts & Letters Daily)

As with many (most?) internet kerfuffles, I think the problem is blown out of proportion by the bloviation, and the answer’s pretty simple. Is Google/internet/lack of liberal arts/overemphasis on liberal arts/etc. making us stupid?

Only if we let it.

Google, blogs and feeds are part of my reading, writing and research life. Since graduate school, I’ve become an autodidact, learning on my own about subjects that interest and are relevant to me. The internet and its increased presence has been, and continues to be, an important part of this learning process. Even more important, though, is and always has been, reading full texts. Reading things about the texts. Thinking about them. And then finding out what others think about them. For the latter, the internet is an invaluable resource, as a supplement to, not a substitute for, real-time, in-person interaction.a v

As in many aspects of life, variety contributes to a balanced experience. The internet and Google are tools, not the toolbox.

To borrow a phrase from Mental Multivitamin: Read. Think. Learn.

I’d add, “in all the ways we can.”

Kicking Catcher out of the Canon?

September 8th, 2008

Last month, Anne Trubek’s article at Good Magazine questioned Catcher in the Rye’s place in the canon, and wondered whether other, more recent fare might suit students as well or better. (Link from ALoTT5MA, among others.) Most commenters were outraged that she even suggest such a thing, and further ridiculed several of her choices. My question is why not complement, not replace, Catcher with something else, so as to compare and contrast? I commented at the article to this effect, and more.

I reread Catcher within the last few years, and found it a mixed bag. I did not empathize with Holden. MFS, who blogs at Mental Multivitamin, one of my favorite learning blogs, is an unabashed defender of Holden. I think he’s worthy of questioning. I also enjoyed Frank Portman’s irreverant homage/critique of Catcher, King Dork.

Mamma Mia! (2008)

September 8th, 2008

Mamma Mia!, based on the Abba musical, is not perfect, but it’s enough fun that I didn’t much care. Meryl Streep is Donna, who has raised her daughter by herself on a beautiful Greek island, in a falling-down hotel. The daughter, Sophie, (Amanda Seyfried, Lilly from Veronica Mars) is getting married, and, unbeknownst to Donna, has invited three of her mother’s old boyfriends, one of whom is her biological father. Whoever cast Streep, Pierce Brosnan, Stellan SkarsgÃ¥rd and Colin Firth knew what they were doing. These actors, along with Christine Baranski and Julie Walters as Donna’s friends, steal the show, and seem to have a fine time doing so. The kids are mostly an afterthought. The familiar songs, the enthusiastic renditions of them, and the engaging cast all made this enjoyable. The directing wasn’t strong, with too many cuts, some voices were better than others, and SkarsgÃ¥rd looked oddly grim much of the time, but the overall effect was joyful and fun. It’s a sweet romance for grownups, not teenagers, for a change. According to IMDB, Streep is the oldest of the adults, at 59, then Walters 58, SkarsgÃ¥rd 57, Brosnan 55, Baranski 52, and Firth, the baby of the bunch, 48.

Side note: I took an immediate dislike to Sophie’s betrothed, Sky, and didn’t remember where I’d seen him before. Once I looked him up, I knew why he’d bothered me; he played the oily, dishonest Willoughby in the recent PBS production of Sense and Sensibility.

Eastern Promises (2007)

September 8th, 2008

I wavered on seeing Eastern Promises in theaters. The good reviews, for the film in general and Viggo Mortensen’s performance in particular, made me want to see it. The allusions to its extreme violence deterred me. I compromised, and finally watched on dvd. This is a good film, well-directed and well acted, not only by Mortensen. The story has to be read as a sort of fable, since its particulars are so familiar: a talented poor outsider (Mortenson) works his way up the power structure when a seemingly paternal but actually cruel leader (Armin Mueller-Stahl) is increasingly disappointed in his own son (Vincent Cassel), while a beautiful blond woman (Naomi Watts) toils for justice. Moses, Jesus, and the intervening two millennia have supplied similar setups; I was reminded much of Braveheart. Much of the film’s tension rested on creating horror at the fate of a 14yo girl, and fear for the fate of a baby. These devices felt tired to me as well. The violence is extreme. I spent several scenes looking at the ceiling or through interlaced fingers. But the full-frontal scene of Mortensen, in case you were curious, was more astonishing to me for what he did while nude than for the nudity itself. It truly was a case of the nudity serving the scene and the story. Overall, the particulars–Naomi Watts as a concerned bystander, Mortensen as a taciturn mystery man, and the intrigue and complexity of the Russian mob scen–combine to transcend the simplistic features of the story.

Please Stand By…

September 4th, 2008

This blog is experiencing some difficulties. High summer is in high gear and I’ve been cooking fresh veggies, doing insane amounts of laundry, and getting Drake ready for preschool. Please forgive the lack of new posts, and especially how behind I am on responding to comments. I read and appreciate every one (that’s not spam).

I have been reading and watching movies. I saw Eastern Promises. Good performances that carried a not-that-original story and characters. Very violent, but interesting. I saw Mamma Mia, which was not a great film but still a lot of fun. It sent me back to my Abba Gold cd, rather than out to buy the soundtrack. Pierce Brosnan isn’t as bad as I’d been led to believe, but I prefer the originals. I finally made it through all four hours of Branagh’s Hamlet. I’ll have more to say, but I HATED the music. And I finished Zot! 1987 to 1991. It’s a great collection of a great series. I was sad all over again when I got to the end of Zot, Jenny, and everyone else’s stories.

I’m hoping that after the equinox the universe will settle down again. This mad frenzy at end of summer is really exhausting. I hope to be posting, replying, and commenting again soon.

How We Ended the Long Weekend

September 2nd, 2008

There was much crying and screaming at bedtime last night. I wonder, is the “price” of a good day a difficult bedtime? We met friends at the pool, then met them again later for burgers, hot dogs and great french fries at the Bulldog NE, picked by Minnesota Monthly as having the best burger in the state. After that, bedtime was challenging. But once Drake and Guppy were _in_ bed, they stayed there and fell asleep quickly, so G. Grod could watch a bit more of Branagh’s Hamlet. I’m not sure how I made it through all four hours in the theater when it came out. I can’t make it through an entire hour without nodding off. Then again, I was unmarried, without kids and twelve years younger in ‘96.

Drake is 5!

September 2nd, 2008

Drake's Dino Cake As I’ve mentioned already, Drake turned five recently. We had a party with friends and family in PA a few days prior, and he requested a dinosaur cake. Here’s what I made. While not as pretty as the model I worked from, I was pleased with the result, especially the white gumdrop teeth and pale green frosting, which I made by mixing pureed fresh spinach into a vanilla buttercream.

How We Started the Long Weekend

August 30th, 2008

As soon as he got home from work, my husband G. Grod, 5yo Drake, 2.5yo Guppy and I piled in the car and headed west of Minneapolis to where G and I first lived when we moved here ten years ago, St. Louis Park. First, we went to Half Price Books, and found a huge pile of delightful books and dvds, all an extra 20% off. Then we went to Noodles and Company for supper (I love the Mushroom Stroganoff with Sriracha sauce), and Ben & Jerry’s for ice cream (I never get anything else besides Chocolate Therapy). We took a walk around part of Lake Calhoun, then headed home to get the boys ready for bed, during which Guppy peed in the potty for the second time, ever. Then G. and I watched an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer from Season 2, “The Dark Age.”

It was a wonderful evening.

Half Price Books Labor Day Weekend Sale 2008

August 30th, 2008

Half-Price Books (a US used book, movie and music store) is having a sale over Labor Day Weekend with an extra 20% off everything in the store, which is almost all at least half price already. Our little family brought home quite a stack of books and dvds last night; a pic to come, I hope.

A Flair for the Dramatic

August 30th, 2008

Coming downstairs in the morning, 5yo Drake announced, “Mom, I have BAD NEWS.”

I replied calmly, “Oh? What is it?”

“BOTH my nostrils are BLOODY.”

I did a quick check. He had a little bit of dried blood around his nose, on his face and his pajamas. It’s weed season for allergies, and he’s had a tough time. I dabbed gently at his face with a tissue. “Better?” I asked.

“Oh, yes!” he grinned, and ran into the kitchen for breakfast.

Later that day, I awoke from a nap to find Drake standing in front of me, panting and sobbing.

“Mom, I’m in GREAT DANGER in the basement!”

I took him in my arms and asked, for the second time that day, “Oh? What is it?”

“A SPIDER!” he said, continuing to tremble. “It MOVED!”

“Would you like me to kill it?”

“Yes!”

And so I took a shoe to the basement and killed a mostly harmless brown house spider. “Better?” I asked.

“Oh, yes!” he grinned, and settled back down on the couch to finish his show.

“A Night at the Fair” by F. Scott Fitzgerald

August 30th, 2008

In the short story “A Night at the Fair,” Fitzgerald described over eighty years ago what so many people still experience today at the Minnesota State Fair. I was surprised and delighted to find that much about the fair hasn’t changed.

The Magnificent Fair

The two cities were separated only by a thin well-bridged river; their tails curling over the banks met and mingled, and at the juncture, under the jealous eye of each, lay, every fall, the State Fair. Because of this advantageous position, and because of the agricultural eminence of the state, the fair was one of the most magnificent in America. There were immense exhibits of grain, livestock and farming machinery…a grand exhibition of fireworks…took place in the Grand Concourse every night.


Boys at the Fair

At the late afternoon of a hot September day two boys of fifteen, somewhat replete with food and pop, and fatigued by eight hours of constant motion, issued from the Penny Arcade.

Sensations of the Fair

The first lights of the evening were springing into pale existence; the afternoon crowd had thinned a little, and the lanes, empty of people, were heavy with the rich various smells of pop corn and peanuts, molasses and dust and cooking Wienerwurst and a not- unpleasant overtone of animals and hay. The Ferris wheel, pricked out now in lights, revolved leisurely through the dusk; a few empty cars of the roller coaster rattled overhead. The heat had blown off and there was the crisp stimulating excitement of Northern autumn in the air.

Night at the Fair

Once again the fair–but differing from the fair of the afternoon as a girl in the daytime differs from her radiant presentation of herself at night. The substance of the cardboard booths and plaster palaces was gone, the forms remained. Outlined in lights, these forms suggested things more mysterious and entrancing than themselves, and the people strolling along the network of little Broadways shared this quality, as their pale faces singly and in clusters broke the half darkness.

Yes, many things have changed. There are no aeroplanes, horse races or hoochie-coochie shows. And the wienerwurst has been replaced by the Pronto Pup (from Minnesota), the corn dog (an Iowa import), and the absolutely delicious pork-chop-on-a-stick. But the sights, the smells, and the fair as an event–all these abide.