11.26.2015

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
November 24, 1864 - September 9, 1901

 




 




 
 height: 4' 6"
French painter, printmaker, draughtsman and illustrator.
http://www.toulouse-lautrec-foundation.org/
 
At the Moulin Rouge, 1895
 


At the Moulin Rouge, 1895
 
Moulin Rouge La Goulue
Equestrienne at the Cirque Fernando
 
The White Horse 'Gazelle', 1881


 
 
La Toilette 1889
Nude Standing before a Mirror
 
The Dancer in Her Dressing Room
 
 
Partie de campagne
 

11.23.2015

The World's First Jukebox


This day in music history:
November 23, 1889- The world's first jukebox is installed.
November 23, 1889- The world's first jukebox is installed.

 Constructed by the Pacific Phonograph Company it consisted of four stethoscope-like tubes attached to an Edison Class M electric phonograph fitted inside an oak cabin...et. The tubes operated individually, each being activated by the insertion of a coin, meaning that four different listeners could be plugged in to the same song simultaneously....up to two minutes, all for a nickel. The machine was originally called the “nickel-in-the-slot player” by Louis T. Glass, the entrepreneur who installed it at the Palais Royale Saloon in San Fransisco.
http://www.radiomuseum.org/forum/jukebox_history_of_coin_operated_phonographs.html
http://81.83.5.134/doc-pub/lists/tijdlijn/tijdlijn04_grote-wereldrijken(1860-1891).html

9.15.2015

First Motorcycle Woman

 
 
 
September 15,1937:
Sally Halterman is the first woman granted a license to operate a motorcycle in Washington, D.C.
http://ghostsofdc.org/2013/07/18/first-motorcycle-license-granted-to-a-woman/
 
 

8.05.2015

Bertha Benz

 
 
 
August 5, 1888:
Bertha Benz, with the help of her two sons, became the first person to drive an automobile over a long distance - 66 miles.

4.11.2015

The Black Pope

 


 
"Yeah, well, I'm crazy, but I'm not stupid, hopefully.  And I think we're all a bit of crazy if we do anything that's deviant. I've studied a great deal on deviance and aberrant behavior.  Most of the interesting people I've ever met have been deviant in one form or another"
 
Anton Szandor LaVey
April 11, 1930 - October 29, 1997

2.14.2015

George W. G. Ferris

 
 
 
The world's first Ferris Wheel for the 1893 Chicago Worlds Fair.

The world’s first Ferris wheel , in construction, for the Chicago world's fair. (1893)
 
George W. G. Ferris, Jr.
February 14, 1859 – November 22, 1896
 
George W. G. Ferris, Jr
February 14, 1859 - November 22, 1896
 ...bthuilt the first Ferris Wheel for the 1893 Chicago Worlds Fair to prove that America could top the Eiffel Tower. During planning for the fair, Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel offered to build a tower larger than the one he had built in Paris but the planning committee insisted the work be from American genius. The giant wheel had 36 cars that could hold 60 people for a total of 2,160 passengers at a time, and was as high as a 26 story building.

11.26.2014

Feed Your Head


November 26, 18
65: 
The first edition of Lewis Caroll's Alice in Wonderland is published.

Crimson Peak (2015)

 

Tom Hiddleston in Crimson Peak (2015)

 
 
Crimson Peak (2015)
director: Guillermo del Toro
cast: Mia Wasikowska, Tom Hiddleston, Jessica Chastain, Charlie Hunnam
trailer

11.17.2014

The Elizabethan Age

November 17, 1558:
The Elizabethan Age begins.
Just as Queen Mary I dies, Elizabeth I becomes Queen until her death in 1603. 
Under her reign England becomes a major world power in every respect.




The English dominated at sea, with Elizabeth encouraging voyages of discovery, such as Sir Francis Drake’s circumnavigation of the world and Sir Walter Raleigh’s expeditions to the North American coast.
Sir Walter Raleigh's ship
The Ark Royal (1587)
illustrator: Claes Janszoon Visscher


This "Golden Age" represented the apogee of the English Renaissance and saw the flowering of poetry, music and literature. The era is most famous for theatre, as William Shakespeare and many others composed plays that broke free of England's past style of theatre.


Conjectural reconstruction of The Globe Theatre by C. Walter Hodges based on archeological and documentary evidence

 

Burghley House, Peterborough 
England’s Greatest Elizabethan House- 35 major rooms on the ground and 1st floors, 80 or more lesser rooms.




Needlework bag and pin-cushion (allegedly) of Queen Elizabeth I, English, 16th C. In the collection of the Duke of Northumberland, Alnwick Castle, Northumberland, Great Britain




Elizabethan Fencing Doublet c.1580
featuring a protruding peascod waist Western European,
 Leather silk linen cotton

 


Collar from the textile collection at Hardwick Hall. - 1592


Pair of mittens, c. 1600 - Embroidered in England, said to have been a gift from Elizabeth I to her maid of honor, Margaret Edgcumbe (1560-1648). Crimson velvet, white satin, embroidered with silver gilt thread, colored silks, beads, and spangles. IMAGE: Elizabethan gloves at the V&A Museum.






 
Hot poking stick used to press Elizabethan ruffles.





more:
Royal Collection

10.23.2014

Utica Zombie Walk 2014

Despite some tremendous set-backs...the show must go on- and it did!

The 6th Annual Utica Zombie Walk was a success.

We got there after a mountain of trouble- and rocked the hell out of it!
We had yet to perform with so many young ones before, they were an enthusiastic crowd you could only wish for. I hope it sustains them until they are a bit older.  Entertaining an audience with such diversity was a pleasure.
I am very grateful to those who helped us carry it off- a last minute drummer, a new bassist, friends and family that helped us with details that could not go unlooked. The past week was a lemon...we got lemonade.
- Miss Jayne




Jayne Dracula
Utica Zombie Walk 2014
The Stanley Theatre
photo: Scott Herb


Jayne & Monster
photo: Scott Herb


Monster
photo: Scott Herb
 
Jayne Dracula
Utica Zombie Walk 2014
photo: Scott Herb

9.23.2014

Pilkington

 
 
Some people don't try to be funny, they just are.
Enjoy the wisdom of British TV personality Karl Pilkington.