Showing posts with label theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label theatre. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Sheridan Theatre

Hopper-Self Portrait 1906 (Wikipedia)



Edward Hopper

July 22, 1882 – May 15, 1967


It was a short walk from Hopper's home on Washington Square to the Loew's Sheridan at  West 12 Street in Greenwich Village and from there to the Crawford Lunch (one of the inspirations for Nighthawks).

He loved going to the films. For Hopper, as for so many others, it was a place of refuge, an escape from the everyday.






“When I don’t feel in the mood for painting I go to the movies for a week or more. I go on a regular movie binge!"
--Edward Hopper, quote from the New York Times




Edward Hopper, Sheridan Theatre, 1937, from Artpedia



Cezar Del Valle is the author of the Brooklyn Theatre Index, a three-volume history of borough showplaces. The first two volumes chosen 2010 OUTSTANDING BOOK OF THE YEAR by the Theatre Historical Society. Final volume published in  September 2014.

He conducts a series of popular theatre talks and walking tours.


Now selling on Etsy.

Monday, July 20, 2015

On a Musical Note: The Bowery

This week, we stroll the Bowery,of the "Gay 90s", where they say such things and do strange things.

From the musical A Trip to Chinatown with music by Percy Gaunt and lyrics by Charles H. Hoyt.


From Wikipedia





Preservation Note:

Bowery Alliance

Lower East Side Preservation Initiative

Each Monday, Baghdad on the Subway enjoys a musical view of the city.


Cezar Del Valle is the author of the Brooklyn Theatre Index, a three-volume history of borough showplaces. The first two volumes chosen 2010 OUTSTANDING BOOK OF THE YEAR by the Theatre Historical Society. Final volume published in  September 2014.

He conducts a series of popular theatre talks and walking tours.


Now selling on Etsy.



 


Saturday, July 18, 2015

Elegy in Manhattan

George Jessel, photo: Gene Lester


Drawing inspiration from Spoon River Anthology, George Jessel wrote Elegy in Manhattan, transforming Edgar Lee Master's fictional village into the real world of New York entertainment.

"The confiding thoughts of fifty-six glittering guys and gals who once walked the streets of the Big Town."



As in Spoon River, the first poem serves as an introduction:

"Where are Joe and Lew;
Sam Bernard, Foy, Hitchy;

Nat C. Goodwin, and all his lovely wives;
'Terrible Terry,' 'Big John L';
The Frohman brothers, Charles and Dan;
The Shuberts, Lee and Sam?

"Nearly all are resting on
the banks of Manhattan,
Dreaming of how Lillian Russell
looked that New Year's Eve at Delmonico's,
of what Al Smith said
to Murphy that morning in Tammany Hall, 
of what Teddy R. said
at Union Square of young Cohan's 'Waving the Flag,'
and of 'dashing Jimmy'
the Mayor.

"Nearly all are resting on the banks of the Manhattan."   





On Amazon










Cezar Del Valle is also the author of the Brooklyn Theatre Index, a three-volume history of borough showplaces. The first two volumes chosen 2010 OUTSTANDING BOOK OF THE YEAR by the Theatre Historical Society. Final volume published in  September 2014.

He conducts a series of popular theatre talks and walking tours.


Now selling on Etsy.