All About the Bard on this week’s “Picture This” radio show

 

If you missed Picture This 111: All About the Bard ( which aired on WRIU, 90.3 FM, and streamed at wriu.org on Sunday, November 23, from 6-8 PM), you can catch it on the Mischief Time Blog at wcressser.com

(This program aired on WRIU, Kingston, 90.3 FM, also streaming at wriu.org, on Sunday, November 23, from 6-8 PM)

By Wayne Cresser

Coming Attractions from Matinee, composed by Jerry GoldsmithThe It’s a Movie Song of the Week

King Henry Fifth’s Conquest of France from 1000 Years of Popular Music, traditional, performed by Richard Thompson

From Kiss Me Kate, all songs composed by Cole Porter

And So to Wed, performed by the MGM Orchestra

It’s Too Darn Hot, performed by Ann Miller

Brush Up Your Shakespeare, performed by Keenan Wynn and James Whitmore

The Picnic from Much Ado About Nothing, composed by Patrick Doyle, performed by Emma Thompson

This Day is called The Feast of St. Crispian from Henry V and Great Speeches of Shakespeare, words by William Shakespeare, music William Walton, performed by Sir Laurence Olivier

Two pieces from Henry V, composed by Patrick Doyle

St Crispian’s Day

Non Nomis Domine

Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet, composed by Nino Rota

The Willow Song from Othello, composed by Charlie Mole, performed by Irene Jacob

Lear and The Storm from King Lear, composed by Philip Glass

From Hamlet, composed by Patrick Doyle

Fanfare

What Players Are They

Sweets to the Sweet

You Stop My Heart from Ophelia, composed by Steven Price

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern from Hamlet, composed by Carter Burwell,

Hamlet from Red, Hot and Blue, composed by Frank Loesser, performed by Betty Hutton

The Village from The Art of the Lute, composed by Robert Ballard, performed by Ronn McFarlane

Let Me Not to the Marriage of True Minds (Sonnet 116), written by Willaim Shakespeare, performed by Dame Judi Dench

Medley/Come Down to the Yellow Sea/Full Fathom Five from The Tempest, performed by Lawrence Shragge and Kuhoo Verma

Intermezzo Agreste (Rural Interlude) from Chimes at Midnight, composed by Antonio Francesco Lavagnino

Lines from Act V, Scene I of The Merchant of Venice, performed by Sir John Gielgud

Come Away Death from Twelfth Night, composed by Daniel R. Meese, performed by Hem

From Hamlet, music composed by Carter Burwell, dialogue performed by Frances McDormand and Denzel Washington

Leave All the Rest to Me

Out Damned Spot

The End of Macbeth

Medley from A Midsummer Night’s Dream, composed by Felix Mendelssohn, reorchestrated by Eric Wolfgang Korngold

From Shakespeare in Love, music composed by Stephen Warbeck

Viola’s Audition

End title music

Dan’s Suite from Ghostlight, composed by Quinn Tsan

 

Source: Picture This Playlist 111: All About the Bard

Picture This: St. Patrick’s Day at the movies

By Michael Stevenson

Happy St. Patrick’s Day, Hobbledehoys! Here’s your chance to bypass that dreadful “green beer” music playing at your local bar, and instead listen to some gorgeous compositions from a dozen-or-so Irish-inspired films, such The Grey Fox, The Quiet Man, Barry Lyndon, The Secret of Roan Inish, The Guard, and Calvary. And as the late night TV commercial would boast – “But, wait, there’s more!” – you’ll hear an offering from the One True 007, Sean Connery, who warbles a classic Disney movie tune that may leave you … ‘shaken. but not stirred.’

LISTEN TO THE SHOW

Composers covered in this 2-hour broadcast include the classically-trained Irishmen Shaun Davey and Patrick Cassady, as well as more than a few pillars of Irish Trad, notably The Chieftains and Donal Lunny.

As well as the above, you’ll hear a few delightful jigs and reels that will leave even a St. Paddy’s Day cynic getting reely jiggy!

This special St. Patrick’s Day broadcast of “Picture This” is hosted by friend to The Hobbledehoy and fellow grey fox, Mr. Wayne Cresser.

The Hobbledehoy’s Summer Reads

The Hobbledehoy love to bring a new book to the beach, and with August vacation plans on Old Cape Cod approaching, we may spend more time on our screened-in porch with a good read than swimming with the sharks, hiking with the ticks, or dining out with the mosquitos. Damn you, Climate Change! And you too, Patti Page!

Two new books we highly recommended for Summer reading!

“The Book of Norman” by Wayne Cresser

As a kid, Norman Winters aspired to be good at something, baseball, canoe-racing, anything at all. As an adult he wants to teach eager minds and keep his house free of smoke and frauds. And in his old age, he just wants to burn the money and hold on to the clams. Does Mr. Winters want all these things too much?

Readers will wonder as they follow him over the course of a life, loosely chronicled in a fresh collection of interconnected short stories by author, broadcaster, and teacher Wayne Cresser.

The Book of Norman deals with such topics as sibling rivalry, bullying, forgiveness, mercy, and love at first sight and promises readers, to paraphrase the great comic, many “a laugh and a tear.”

Mr. Cresser authors the excellent Just Between You and Me blog, and has contributed to The Hobbledehoy. His weekly radio program Picture This is must-listening for fans of great film composers like Bernard Herman, Ennio Morricone, and Elmer Bernstein, as well as classic soundtracks from Breakfast at Tiffany’s to Fantastic Mr. Fox. His recent show on the beloved American lyricist Johnny Mercer was, as the poet wrote, “too marvelous for words.”

“The Book of Norman” is available on Amazon in paperback, hardcover, and Kindle.


“The Last American Road Trip” by Sarah Kendzior

In 2016, Kendzior wrote about similarities between Donald Trump and the authoritarian leaders she had studied given Trump’s admiration for Russian president Vladimir Putin before there was widespread public awareness of Russia’s interference in the US election:

Today is November 18, 2016. I want you to write about who you are, what you have experienced, and what you have endured.

Write down what you value; what standards you hold for yourself and for others. Write about your dreams for the future and your hopes for your children. Write about the struggle of your ancestors and how the hardship they overcame shaped the person you are today.

Write your biography, write down your memories. Because if you do not do it now, you may forget.

Write a list of things you would never do. Because it is possible that in the next year, you will do them.

Write a list of things you would never believe. Because it is possible that in the next year, you will either believe them or be forced to say you believe them.

It is increasingly clear, as Donald Trump appoints his cabinet of white supremacists and war-mongers, as hate crimes rise, as the institutions that are supposed to protect us cower, as international norms are shattered, that his ascendency to power is not normal.”

Kendzior co-hosted the podcast Gaslit Nation, with filmmaker Andrea Chalupa. Psychology Today stated that the podcast “frequently reminds listeners that the Trump administration is part of a ‘transnational crime syndicate masquerading as a government'”, stating that the podcast’s title, Gaslit Nation, refers to their assertion that the Trump administration is “gaslighting” America in precisely the way that Arendt, Orwell, and Pomerantzev have described, by repeatedly contradicting the facts and claiming that black is white.”

It is one thing to study the fall of democracy, another to have it hit your homeland — and yet another to raise children as it happens. The Last American Road Trip is one family’s journey to the most beautiful, fascinating, and bizarre places in the US during one of its most tumultuous eras. As Kendzior works as a journalist chronicling political turmoil, she becomes determined that her young children see America before it’s too late. So Kendzior, her husband, and the kids hit the road — again and again.

Starting from Missouri, the family drives across America in every direction as cataclysmic events – the rise of autocracy, political and technological chaos, and the pandemic – reshape American life. They explore Route 66, national parks, historical sites, and Americana icons as Kendzior contemplates love for country in a broken heartland. Together, the family watches the landscape of the United States – physical, environmental, social, political -transform through the car window.

Part memoir, part political history, The Last American Road Trip is one mother’s promise to her children that their country will be there for them in the future – even though at times she struggles to believe it herself.

Listen to a recent interview with Sarah at The Muckrake Podcast | Order her book at Amazon

Sources: Wikipedia | Amazon | WRIU Radio | Just Between You and Me

Give a little whistle: The life and sad death of Cliff Edwards, voice of Disney’s Jiminy Cricket

AT THE BARBERSHOP: Cliff Edwards, aka “Ukelele Ike” was the voice of Disney’s beloved character Jiminy Cricket

By Michael Stevenson

The most memorable song from Walt Disney’s Pinocchio, “When You Wish Upon a Star” was the very first Disney song to win an Academy Award in 1940. The song, written by Leigh Harline with lyrics by Ned Washington, is performed in the film by a cute and acutely conscientious top hat-wearing insect named “Jiminy Cricket.” 

“Like a bolt out of the blue

Fate steps in and sees you through

When you wish upon a star

Your dreams come true”

Jiminy’s warm, reassuring voice (with just the hint of Midwestern drawl) was supplied by singer/actor Cliff Edwards. Edwards was the possessor of high natural tenor voice with a three-octave range. The purity of his final note of “When You Wish Upon a Star” (appropriately landing on the word “true”) is nothing short of sublime.

On the record and in the film’s credits, Cliff Edwards isn’t noted as singer, but rather Jiminy Cricket

Cliff Edwards was born June 14, 1895 in Hannibal, Missouri – the birthplace of Mark Twain, whom Edwards remembered once passing on a city street. Edward’s professional life didn’t so much resemble a story of Twain’s, but more a chapter from Nathaniel West’s nightmarish depiction of 1930’s Hollywood “The Day of the Locust.

Not long after the successes of Pinocchio, Edwards found himself in financial ruin due to unpaid taxes, gambling losses, multiple bankruptcies, cocaine and alcohol addictions, and three failed marriages. Today, a resume like this might belong to a GOP presidential candidate, but the 1940s were not as forgiving a time. “Cliff made millions,” said famed Disney animator Ward Kimball , “and he lost it all.”

When you get in trouble and you don’t know right from wrong,
Give a little whistle!
Give a little whistle!
When you meet temptation and the urge is very strong,
Give a little whistle!
Give a little whistle!
– “Give a Little Whistle” (Leigh Harline and Ned Washington)

BEGINNINGS

Cliff “Ukelele Ike” Edward’s fans once included both Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill. Decades after his death, both James Taylor and Paul McCartney covered his ukelele songs on their records. According to Van Dyke Parks, the brilliant Harry Nilsson (who knew a little about self-destructive behavior himself), regarded Cliff Edwards as “his favorite singer.” The man and legend had humble beginnings.

Growing up in the Midwest, Cliff Edwards worked as a youngster in a Hannibal, Missouri shoe factory. He ran away from home before finishing school. By age 16, he was singing in St. Louis saloons where he learned to play the ukulele to provide his own accompaniment since many of the bars had no piano.  He acquired the nickname “Ukelele Ike” when a barkeeper couldn’t remember his name.

Moving from St. Louis, to Chicago, and eventually New York, in 1924 he graduated from carnivals and vaudeville shows to Broadway when George Gershwin picked him to join the cast of Lady, Be Good. Sharing the bill were a young Fred and Adele Astaire. Lady, Be Good was a Broadway success and Astaire later recalled it was Cliff Edwards who regularly “stopped the show” with his rendition of Gershwin’s “Fascinating Rythym.”

After his Broadway success, Edwards had his first recording success with “It’s Only a Paper Moon.” The song later was recorded by all the greats, Crosby, Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald and Nat King Cole, but Cliff Edwards’ record, with his trademark sweetness and vulnerability, remains the gold standard version of the song.

Music critic Imogen Sara Smith observed: “No one has ever sung “Paper Moon” more beautifully . Edwards (backed by the exquisitely spare guitar of Dick McDonough) brings a pitch-perfect blend of wistful longing and rueful world-weariness to this great Yip Harburg-Harold Arlen song about searching for something real amid the phony dazzle of stage scenery, lighting effects, circus ballyhoo, parades, jingles, penny arcades and honky-tonks.” 

Some 40 years after Edward’s recording, director Peter Bogdanovich changed the name of his 1973 film (originally titled Addie Prays) to Paper Moon, while choosing music for his film.

Along with pop songs of the “crooner” variety, Edwards recorded a number of novelty-jazz hits such as “Ja Da,” which included the irresistible lyric I myself sing nearly every time good fortune comes my way:

“Here’s a funny little melody
It’s so soothing and appealing to me
It goes Ja-Da, Ja-Da,
Ja-Da, Ja-Da, Jing, Jing, Jing”

There was also “Hard Headed Hannah,” “I Want to Call You ‘Sweet Mama,” and the delightful “Hang On To Me,” (below) from the 1935 short film Starlit Days at the Lido. In this colorized scene from the film, Cliff plays his uke and mugs alongside “slight of hand artist” Suzy Wandas. If you knew Suzy like I knew Suzy, indeed

Edwards left New York and headed west for The Hollywood Revue of 1929, one of MGM’s earliest sound films. The film marks the debut of the song “Singin’ in the Rain”, performed by Cliff Edwards as “Ukulele Ike.” When not credited as himself, Edward’ gathered over a hundred acting credits; mostly small “character” parts with names such as Froggy, Owly, Pooch, Snipe, Bumpy, Screwy, Sleepy, Shorty, Runty, Speed, Tips, Hogie, Handy, Happy, Minstrel Joe, Banjo Page, Bones Malloy, and (… wait for it …) “Squid Watkins.” In Howard Hawks’ classic His Girl Friday (1940) Edwards plays a reporter named Endicott who delivers snappy one-liners like, “Is there any truth in the report that you’re on Stalin’s payroll?”

On stage and on record, Edwards performed one of the earliest examples of scat singing, or as Edwards called it, his “Effus.” He imitated the wa-wa trumpet with growls and purrs, sounding like a cross between Louis Armstrong and Baby Snooks. No one has ever sounded quite like it, before or since.

BUSTER KEATON AND A BEAR IN A LADIES’ BOUDOIR

Between 1923 and 1933, Edwards recorded more than 120 sides for records, and one account claims that during his career, he sold more than 74 million records, including what was then described as “party” records with suggestive titles such “Bear in a Ladies’ Boudoir” and “I’m Gonna Give It To Mary With Love.” Had he lived long enough to work with the Coen Brothers, I can imagine Ukele Ike singinging “How Ya  Gonna Keep ’em Down Once They’ve Seen Karl Hungus?”

One of my favorite clips of Edwards “efussing” was in the film Doughboys a 1930 talkie-comedy film starring Buster Keaton, who was a close friend of Edwards’ and fellow hell-raiser in the hills of Hollywood. In  Doughboys Edwards beats the strings of a ukelele  with drumsticks while a deadpanned Keaton frets the chords on the song “You Never Did That Before.” It is a hilarious and extraordinary musical performance by both actors, and one can imagine the two pals developing their schtick over a drink or seven.

Keaton recalls in his autobiography, My Wonderful World of Slapstick (1960), “all my weekends were lost weekends. … I had as much fun with my land yacht as a man can whose purpose is to forget his whole private world has fallen apart.”

PINOCCHIO AND DUMBO

Edwards continued partying hard while gambling away his earnings. A case can be made that the success of Pinocchio served only to accelerate Edward’s eventual decline. Along with his drinking and cocaine binges, he was now using heroin.

He managed to stay afloat with his novelty and “party” songs” while taking dozens of small parts in Hollywood films, including his portrayal of a “Reminiscent Soldier” in Gone With the Wind.

In 1941, Edwards again landed a memorable role in a Disney animated classic Dumbo, portraying the regrettably-named “Jim Crow” who sings in ‘hokum’-style, “When I See an Elephant Fly.”

It was Disney animator Ward Kimball cast Edwards as Jim Crow in Dumbo: “We were recording the track for the Black Crows, and we got Hall Johnson’s Black Choir from the Methodist church in Los Angeles for it. Cliff was the only white guy among them. He actually sounded more black than the blacks we had backing him up.” (The tremor you just felt is Hall Johnson rolling in his grave.) But let us remember – this was 1941, when even Left-Wing lion Woody Guthrie was performing Amos n’ Andy-style ebonics on his Pasadena KFVD radio show. (Woody eventually abandoned the hokum and offered an on-air apology.)

MICKEY MOUSE CLUB and UKELELE IKE’S DECLINE

By the 1950s, the Disney Studio used Edwards as the voice of Jiminy Cricket on several animated short segments on the original Mickey Mouse Club show and aging actor appeared in person several times to entertain the Mouseketeers, including Annette Funicello, the teenage actress soon to appear in the idiotic Beach Blanket Bingo (1965) which sadly featured a cameo by Edward’s drinking buddy, Buster Keaton (somebody cue broadcaster Raymond Morrison, “Oh, the humanity!”)

Micky Mouse Club, November 20, 1956 (Guest Star Day) Guest Starring Cliff Edwards (A.K.A. Ukulele Ike) Featuring Lonnie Burr, Margene Storey, Charley Laney, Doreen Tracey, Dennis Day, and Annette Funicello.

As Jimmy Johnson, the man in charge of Disneyland Records remembered:

“Cliff was declining right before our eyes—I made some work for him on records which we really didn’t need. Toward the end, royalties from records were his only source of income. The last time he came into my office, he didn’t seem to know where he was or who I was. It  brought tears to my eyes. He was a warm and wonderful man with never a sour word about anything or anybody. I cherish my memories of him.”

“Ukulele Ike Sings Again” was a 1956 Disneyland record, suggested by Walt himself, to remind the public of Edwards’ musical legacy. I’m one of the proud owners of this album, which I pulled from the bargain bin of my local record shop, along with Procol Harum’s “A Salty Dog,” for a dollar apiece! “Ja-Da, Ja-Da, Jing, Jing, Jing!

“We recorded the whole album in six straight hours on one night,” remembered Disney producer Jimmy Johnson. “There were no written arrangements. With an assist of ‘John Barleycorn’ (booze), we made one of the most spontaneous and musical albums I have ever been associated with … We cut ‘Singin’ In The Rain’, Darktown Strutters Ball’, ‘Ja Da’ … we had a ball! Unfortunately, the album didn’t sell well and there wasn’t much in the way of royalties for Cliff.”

“I’ll See You In My Dreams” – a favorite of Beatle George Harrison

ONLY CRICKETS HEARD UPON HIS PASSING

Cliff Edwards was no longer officially employed by Disney when he entered a nursing home in Hollywood in 1969 as a charity patient supported by the Actor’s Fund. At the time of his death from a heart attack on July 17, 1971, at the age of 76, Edwards’ passing wasn’t reported to the public for several days because hospital officials didn’t consider it newsworthy since they didn’t know he had ever been famous. 

His body was initially unclaimed and donated to the UCLA medical school. When Walt Disney Productions eventually discovered news of his passing, they offered to pay for the burial. Instead, the Actors Fund of America and the Motion Picture and Television Relief Fund paid for the burial.

Thirteen years after Edwards’ death, Disney provided a marker for the performer’s grave when the lack of a proper headstone was reportedly brought to the company’s attention by the Ukulele Society of America. In addition to his name and years of life, the marker simply reads, “In loving memory of Ukulele Ike.”

“It is hard to laugh at the need for beauty and romance, no matter how tasteless, even horrible, the results of that are. But it is easy to sigh.”

― Nathanael West, The Day of the Locust

Listen to Cliff Edwards’ music, and more music from Disney’s Golden Era of Animation at WRIU Radio’s Picture This, hosted by friend of The Hobbledehoy, Wayne Cresser.