I have been tidying the house because it is this nightmare. And today this old datebook washed up on the tides. It is "The 1988 Sylvia Book of Days."
Sylvia was this cartoon to which my roommates and I had a deep devotion back in the day. Awfully feminist, awfully funny. The cartoonist who wrote the comic strip, Nicole Hollander, is 80 now, how about that? I just had to look it up.
I should write an, ahem, essay about this and get it published somewhere, but I am too lazy and I have other things to write and do. Speaking of which, the things I wrote and did while I was using this datebook, just looking at the notes I made of them takes me back to this crazy era of my life.
What was I, 25? I turned 26 during the course of this book. I do remember though that I carried the book around with me long after that, because I had a lot of notes and phone numbers in it. The list of phone numbers made me kind of teary. My Uncle Bob was on it. I miss my Uncle Bob. Robert Junior Lockwood was on the list too, God rest his soul. He was a bluesman my friends and I were friends with. We went to Cleveland and stayed at his house.
The notes show me freelancing for the Niagara Gazette. I recognized my questions for John Lennon's sister, who was one of the people I interviewed. Some of the interviews I totally forgot. On Monday, Oct. 24, I had a note to interview Maria Irene Fornes at the Lenox Hotel. Who was Maria Irene Fornes? I had no recollection so I Googled it and she is a lesbian Cuban playwright.
How boho is that, interviewing this Cuban playwright at the Lenox Hotel? Surely we spoke of many things. I kind of remember going to the Lenox Hotel for something, you know? But beyond that, it is a mystery.
The Niagara Gazette hired me near the end of that tattered year. My tryout was Oct. 7. The "yuch" I wrote did not mean I did not want the job. I did. But the tryout stressed me out. I was much more happy to write that on Oct. 9, my bartender friend Lupe was singing at the Feede Bagge.
Suddenly because of the Gazette a net was dropped over my head and the days are marked, "Off." "Midnight." "Late." Late was the late shift, 6:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. At least if you are going to get a job, get the craziest job you can get, you know? That is what I did.
The honeymoon with the Niagara Gazette did not last long because I had these plans to go over New Year's to San Francisco with my brother George to hear the Grateful Dead. I stuck to those plans -- I made the job let me go, I remember -- and it totally shot my work ethic. The old Sylvia datebook includes a million notes for the trip. I went back and jotted them on unused pages earlier in the book.
There were money notes about splitting the expenses with George, directions involving Sausalito and the Golden Gate Bridge and my Auntie Rose, who lived in Santa Rosa. My dear Auntie Rose. She is gone too. She was very anti-job and it was while we were touring the Sonoma wine country that my work ethic officially vanished. I stuck it out for something like two years at the Gazette but things were never the same. They stopped letting me write, was another problem. They wanted me to write headlines but not stories and I became discontented with that.
Back to Sylvia. There were pictures stuck between the pages of hippies George and I met in San Francisco. There was a postcard of the Three Stooges that made me laugh out loud because I knew it was from my friend Daryle and sure enough it was.
There was also a photo of Jackie Kennedy Onassis and Nelson Mandela. And a photo of me with George and our sister Margie who, I have to say, looks exactly the same now. Phone numbers of guitarists. Lists of my favorite blues songs.
Really, as Dickens famously wrote, it was the best of times, it was the worst of times. It would be over 10 years before I met my husband. I was not even yet in my West Delavan apartment. I think I was still living in the haunted Parkside place. What a zoo.
Moral of the story: Do not toss your old datebooks!
They are time machines!
Newspaper Writer, Artist, Classical Pianist, Author of the Heartfelt Musical Memoir "Pennario"
Showing posts with label Cartoons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cartoons. Show all posts
Saturday, September 28, 2019
Wednesday, August 7, 2019
Castle in the air
I just did my fourth weekly edition of the Buzz Column! It is my new weekly sketch diary modeled after the column I did for years for The Buffalo News.
I realize I am falling back into my old ways!
Just today I caught myself emailing notes to myself for the next go-round. I always used to do that.
I began jotting down a few things people told me.
It is nice because along with working on the book I am working on, it reminds me that I write.
It also allows me to track what I have done. This week I made the main drawing the sketch I did a few days ago of the Connecticut Street Armory.
When I drew the Connecticut Street Armory I had special fun drawing the bus shelter. I love the contrast between the big medieval-looking castle and the mundane NFTA shelter. The people on their phones.
Why is everyone always on a phone, you know? This morning I was walking around the park and you know how you get when your mind wanders, you can get brooding over something. I was brooding over I forget what, and I passed one of the million people you pass who are on their phones. And suddenly I brightened.
I said to myself, "At least I'm not oblivious."
Now that I look at that picture I drew, it is like one of those Charles Addams cartoons you used to see in the New Yorker. These people are on their phones oblivious to this giant castle rising over their heads. It is as if they did not know it was there.
Looking at it with that in mind it is almost as if I dreamed it. What an amazing, absurd creation that place is.
At least I'm not oblivious!
I realize I am falling back into my old ways!
Just today I caught myself emailing notes to myself for the next go-round. I always used to do that.
I began jotting down a few things people told me.
It is nice because along with working on the book I am working on, it reminds me that I write.
It also allows me to track what I have done. This week I made the main drawing the sketch I did a few days ago of the Connecticut Street Armory.
When I drew the Connecticut Street Armory I had special fun drawing the bus shelter. I love the contrast between the big medieval-looking castle and the mundane NFTA shelter. The people on their phones.
Why is everyone always on a phone, you know? This morning I was walking around the park and you know how you get when your mind wanders, you can get brooding over something. I was brooding over I forget what, and I passed one of the million people you pass who are on their phones. And suddenly I brightened.
I said to myself, "At least I'm not oblivious."
Now that I look at that picture I drew, it is like one of those Charles Addams cartoons you used to see in the New Yorker. These people are on their phones oblivious to this giant castle rising over their heads. It is as if they did not know it was there.
Looking at it with that in mind it is almost as if I dreamed it. What an amazing, absurd creation that place is.
At least I'm not oblivious!
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Easter Yeggs
Our friend Ryan said that the mention of yeggs made him think of just one thing:
Bugs Bunny and "Easter Yeggs"!
Hahahahaa! I looked up Bugs Bunny's "Easter Yeggs" and found this cartoon, this clip of it I mean. It is like nothing you would see now. Bugs is in a shoddy part of town. You see signs for "Dead End" and "City Dump." Then there is that mean kid sleeping in a crate.
The kid beats Bugs up! And there is this weird old 1930s looking sofa in the background.
I had never seen a Bugs Bunny cartoon before. This is my first one.
There will be more!
By the way my mother's crossword puzzle supremacy continued today. She was able to call the first name of some football coach I had never heard of.
"He was the coach for Notre Dame," she said.
I said, "Mom, how do you know these things?"
She said, "I read the sports pages."
Researching Leonard Pennario leaves me no time for researching football coaches, alas. But I hail my mother's victory.
She is rocking that rehab!
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