Showing posts with label Window into the Past. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Window into the Past. Show all posts

Monday, June 20, 2011

Oscar Wilde Reaches Across Time


After recently posting on gay hero Quentin Crisp, there seemed a kind of follow on logic for one on Oscar Wild as recently I came across the only recording of the poet and playwright's voice. In which he recites nearly two verses from the fourth canto of 'The Ballad of Reading Gaol' ...

In Reading Gaol by Reading Town
There is a pit of shame,
And in it lies a wretched man
Eaten by teeth of flame,
In burning winding-sheet he lies,
And his grave has got no name.

[And there, till Christ call forth the dead,
In silence let him lie:]

No need to waste the foolish tear,
Or heave the windy sigh:
The man had killed the thing he loved,
And so he had to die.



As we all know, Wilde was imprisoned in 1895 for two years with hard labour after the follow-up trials to his failed attempt to sue the Marquess of Queensbury for the calling card libel of 'For Oscar Wilde, posing sodomite'.


'The Ballad of Reading Gaol' was written in France in Berneval or Dieppe on or about 19 May 1897 and was initially published under the the name 'C.3.3' - for cell block C, landing 3, cell 3 of Wilde's incarceration.

Wilde in Exile in France c1900

The poem was inspired partly by the hanging in 1896 of a fellow prisoner, Charles Thomas Wooldridge, for the throat-cutting murder of his wife - 'The man had killed the thing he loved, And so he had to die.'

I am fascinated to know the particular character of the poet and playwright's voice, as it must give a clue to the delivery of those deliciously paradoxical aphorisms we love to find occasion to remember and perhaps quote ...

We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.

A man's face is his autobiography. A woman's face is her work of fiction.

A dreamer is one who can only find his way by moonlight, and his punishment is that he sees the dawn before the rest of the world.

A little sincerity is a dangerous thing, and a great deal of it is absolutely fatal.

Ambition is the last refuge of the failure.

A man can't be too careful in the choice of his enemies.

Alas, I am dying beyond my means.

All women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy. No man does. That's his.

All bad poetry springs from genuine feeling.

Wilde seems much more theatrical and arch than I would have imagined, even taking into account the performance tradition of the time. In this context and in retrospect, Lord Olivier used to make fun of this earlier style of delivery, likening it to singing arias in opera.

Curiously and incidentally, Wilde's voice reminds me more than a little of the vocal manner of a particular group of older queans I knew as a kid in London and so has a further resonance for me.

VID

This audio recording, imaginatively at least, lets me know this great writer just a tiny bit better. There is something of the quality of the living breathing human voice that reaches across time and emotionally connects up.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Just There Leaning Out A Window

Just about everyone must know about Anne Frank and her now famous dairy - German born and moving to near Amsterdam in the 1930's to flee anti-Jewish sentiments, hiding with her family in concealed rooms in her father Otto's office building when Hilter's forces occupied the Netherlands, dying with her sister Margot of typhus in March 1945 in the concentration camp of Gergen-Belsen.


What fewer may know is that the diarist was filmed in 1941 leaning out of a window during a neighbour's wedding day.

The Merwedeplein building where the Frank family lived from 1934 to 1942

I love Anne's gesture of tossing back her hair as she turns to respond to something happening in the room behind her - it's hard not to try to imagine the dimensions of this cheerful domestic situation - so at odds with the horrors to come.



'A Window Out The Past' rather than one into it.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Hard Hard Work in Bucharest at the Turn of the C20

Young Street Busker

With the social reform movements in Europe in the C19, photographers felt encouraged to record the plight of working men and women of the time - here in Bucharest round the turn of the twentieth century and up to the 1920s.

Though the names of some of these professions which have pretty mush disappeared may have a strange romantic resonance in popular culture today, everyone knows the reality would have been very different.

The obvious pathos in the image of the street musician encouraged me to place it first.

The second shows women gathering each day at some predetermined spot in the hope of being offered temporary work as maids.

Maids for Rent

Counter to expectation, the Library of Congress informs that chimney sweeping ...



... has been a steady profession right up to today.

A post on working class professions in the street in Romania would hardly be complete without an image of a fortune teller.

Fortune Teller

Physically demanding itinerant jobs included tinkering ...

Tinker

... wood cutting ...

Wood Cutters

... and iron working ...

Iron Worker

Though life would hardly have been much easier for organ grinders ...

Organ Grinders

An Organ Grinder

To finish, an image ...


... of 'the oldest profession in the world'.

A post dedicated to those who usually slip through the cracks in the system.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

One Of The Seriously Less Serious Moments of Dance


These days when people speak of the Ballets Russes, it's often in hushed and reverential tones.

So it's great to see film of dancers from this legendary company(ies) away from the hallowed halls of 'The Theatre' (said in the manner of Bette Davis in 'All about Eve', 1950).

Particularly when they were having fun in the surk and the sun, as in this slow motion, silent but colour amateur footage taken during the 1938-9 tour of Australia by the 'Covent Garden Russian Ballet'.

The first film is straight-forward enough - larking round with ballet movements and positions and starring Paul Petroff and, I suspect, Hélène Kirsova ...










But the second film seems to have a much 'darker' tone.

A Lothario (above) and a friend observe a dramatic sea rescue ...



... which dissolves into a 'From Here to Eternity' moment ...


... followed, curiously, by more than a hint of the final act of 'Romeo and Juliet' ...



But then unexpectedly things seem to go wrong ...






... or right?




So what's your story board on this one?

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Rudolph Valentino - A Curious Little Tease


Not quite sure what I have here - I guess a publicity teaser, yet again reconstructing the idea of 'The Great Lover'.

Whatever, I find it curiously erotic!

After getting out of his car ...


... Valentino gives one of those desperately self-conscious stretches - exactly as a lot of guys (including me) do in a gay bar just before they say 'Do you cum here often?


After a quick survey and in a prelude to things to come ...


... he takes off his jacket ...


... and goes back to his car ...


... giving some pretty good bubble butt on the way ...



Then Valentino strip teases, unbuttoning his collar ...



... and then his shirt ...



... before getting his suspenders (braces) off his trousers ...



Vulnerable - unbuttoned and with his arms up and back as he peels off his braces - he notices us.

And we can almost smell, on this hot summer day, the sweat of his armpits on his freshly ironed cotton shirt.


Valentino feigns coy modesty ...


... but we sense more an erotic invitation ...


... as he draws down the blind ...



Enhanced by what we now know of Valentino's sexual orientations, I get a real strong homoerotic charge from this footage! Call me crazy ... but!

It's that he's seductive but essentially passive - a dynamite combination for me. You'd need to take all the initiative - from getting into the back seat with him on.

Images can of course only say so much - it's really all about the movie ...



... don't you think?

PS I'm also entranced by the gorgeously shiny paintwork of the car!