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Today's Inspiration

June 9, 2010
While reeling from the Kennedy killing Betty witnesses the on-camera murder of Harvey Lee Oswald and now, she is onthe verge. 
Frantic, she turns to Don hoping some one can make sense of what she just saw or at least share in her despair. No use, Don seems unfazed. He and can only offer her some vague stoicism. Betty’s out the door! She drives to see her boyfriend, the Snug Like a Daddy’s hug Harry Francis. He can’t make sense of it either. Betty says doesn’t know what to do. Maybe see a movie? She tells Francis her favorite movie is ‘Singing in the Rain’

Oh, Betty! What’s there not to love about ‘Singing the Rain’? While Don’s at the art house taking in those mopey black and whites, there’s Betty watching Gene Kelly splash around on MGM lot. I love it!
 


Kelly, Kelly, Kelly. Look at him. He was a different kind of leading man/dancer than Fred Astaire. Kelly was more adventurous and athethetlic; Brawnier, even. As David film Oracle Thomson put it, ‘As a dancer he is not equal of Astaire. Kelly is balletic, Romantic, and sometimes mannered as a dancer who thinks and feels, where Astaire is a man who dances before he thinks.”

But like all great men, there’s a darkness to Kelly. For me, and for Thomson there is a creeping chill Kelly’s performances (perhaps that’s why he was less successful as a straight leading man).  There’s a nascent aggression Kelly that gets blown up on the screen. You can also hear it in his singing voice which was always just a bit strained.  
Thomspson wrote of it: “Too often, Kelly’s teeth glared out at us, as the filling for a smile.’

The title song, and the best number in the movie, is set at night; Kelly is alone, for the most part, doing what you would expect. He is impervious to the elements because of his cheerful mood. Beyond the intricacy of the dance, perhaps one of the reasons why that scene is so indelible is because it’s what so many Americans, like Betty, wanted from the movies: a quick respite from the hard rain falling outside, alone, in the dark.

While reeling from the Kennedy killing Betty witnesses the on-camera murder of Harvey Lee Oswald and now, she is onthe verge

Frantic, she turns to Don hoping some one can make sense of what she just saw or at least share in her despair. No use, Don seems unfazed. He and can only offer her some vague stoicism. Betty’s out the door! She drives to see her boyfriend, the Snug Like a Daddy’s hug Harry Francis. He can’t make sense of it either. Betty says doesn’t know what to do. Maybe see a movie? She tells Francis her favorite movie is ‘Singing in the Rain’

Oh, Betty! What’s there not to love about ‘Singing the Rain’? While Don’s at the art house taking in those mopey black and whites, there’s Betty watching Gene Kelly splash around on MGM lot. I love it!

 

Kelly, Kelly, Kelly. Look at him. He was a different kind of leading man/dancer than Fred Astaire. Kelly was more adventurous and athethetlic; Brawnier, even. As David film Oracle Thomson put it, ‘As a dancer he is not equal of Astaire. Kelly is balletic, Romantic, and sometimes mannered as a dancer who thinks and feels, where Astaire is a man who dances before he thinks.”

But like all great men, there’s a darkness to Kelly. For me, and for Thomson there is a creeping chill Kelly’s performances (perhaps that’s why he was less successful as a straight leading man).  There’s a nascent aggression Kelly that gets blown up on the screen. You can also hear it in his singing voice which was always just a bit strained.  

Thomspson wrote of it: “Too often, Kelly’s teeth glared out at us, as the filling for a smile.’

The title song, and the best number in the movie, is set at night; Kelly is alone, for the most part, doing what you would expect. He is impervious to the elements because of his cheerful mood. Beyond the intricacy of the dance, perhaps one of the reasons why that scene is so indelible is because it’s what so many Americans, like Betty, wanted from the movies: a quick respite from the hard rain falling outside, alone, in the dark.


November 22, 2009

New York office workers, interviewed by NBC outside 30 Rockefeller Plaza on November 22, 1963, one hour after JFK’s death.

via peterfeld

Nov. 22, 1963
via peterfeld

Nov. 22, 1963

via peterfeld


Lyndon Johnson is sworn in as president by Judge Sarah Hughes aboard Air Force One, Nov. 22, 1963.

via - peterfeld


Lyndon Johnson is sworn in as president by Judge Sarah Hughes aboard Air Force One, Nov. 22, 1963.

via - peterfeld

November 3, 2009
Out of a group of 500 people that were polled ten days after the assassination, the majority reported learning about the shooting from other people—either by phone, by a co-worker or out while shopping or eating. Almost half said they learned about it first directly from another person, the checked the radio or TV to confirm.
The numbers:
136  people heard the news face to face
97 from the radio
72 from the tv
37 over the telephone

Out of a group of 500 people that were polled ten days after the assassination, the majority reported learning about the shooting from other people—either by phone, by a co-worker or out while shopping or eating. Almost half said they learned about it first directly from another person, the checked the radio or TV to confirm.

The numbers:

136  people heard the news face to face

97 from the radio

72 from the tv

37 over the telephone

November 2, 2009
Oh man, we all knew this episode was coming, so let’s dive in…
AND GET CONTRARY:
But for us now, that afternoon Dallas is more illustrative of something else: the swift and unscrupulous pace of history. Particularly, recent American history and how it is so phenomenally compressed. In just one generation, the psychic trauma of RFK and JFK has been largely erased. So maybe Don Draper’s aloof attitude is enlightened rather than repressive: “Everything’s going to be OK. We’ll have a new president. And everyone is going to be sad for a little bit.
Oh I could go on, and I do! click for more going-on about THE episode.

Oh man, we all knew this episode was coming, so let’s dive in…

AND GET CONTRARY:

But for us now, that afternoon Dallas is more illustrative of something else: the swift and unscrupulous pace of history. Particularly, recent American history and how it is so phenomenally compressed. In just one generation, the psychic trauma of RFK and JFK has been largely erased. So maybe Don Draper’s aloof attitude is enlightened rather than repressive: “Everything’s going to be OK. We’ll have a new president. And everyone is going to be sad for a little bit.

Oh I could go on, and I do! click for more going-on about THE episode.

“So, we’re driving, two couples, I call it ‘Double Date.’  The woman in the back’s scarf blows off, and her hair starts blowing.  Her hairdo falls apart.  (Marty Faraday in the ‘backseat’:  ’Oh no!’)  And then the woman in front takes off her scarf, and hands it back to the woman in the back.  (Peggy: ‘Take mine’.)  And he says, ‘Are you sure Marsha?’  Marsha’s hair is perfect.  And then her date gives her a knowing smile of admiration on her confident smile — Aqua Net: Arrive in Style.”Peggy’s going to be working extra late.
• footnote - by Darrin Roberts. Illustration by Dyna Moe.

“So, we’re driving, two couples, I call it ‘Double Date.’  The woman in the back’s scarf blows off, and her hair starts blowing.  Her hairdo falls apart.  (Marty Faraday in the ‘backseat’:  ’Oh no!’)  And then the woman in front takes off her scarf, and hands it back to the woman in the back.  (Peggy: ‘Take mine’.)  And he says, ‘Are you sure Marsha?’  Marsha’s hair is perfect.  And then her date gives her a knowing smile of admiration on her confident smile — Aqua Net: Arrive in Style.”

Peggy’s going to be working extra late.

• footnote - by Darrin Roberts. Illustration by Dyna Moe.

1:10am  |  71 notes   |  dyna moe |  Mad Men Season 3 |  Peggy |  Paul Kinsey |  Kennedy Assassination