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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 11:48 am
(That famous day in history the men of the 7th Cavalry went riding on)
(And from the rear a voice was heard)
(A brave you man with a trembling word rang loud and clear)
What am I doin' here??

Please Mr. Custer, I don't wanna go
Hey, Mr. Custer, please don't make me go
I had a dream last night about the comin' fight
Somebody yelled "attack!"
And there I stood with a arrow in my back.

Please Mr. Custer, I don't wanna go (forward Ho!!)--aaww

Look at them bushes out there
They're moving and there's a injun behind every one
Hey, Mr. Custer-you mind if I be excused the rest of the afternoon?
HEY CHARLIE, DUCK YER HEAD!!
Hmm, you're a little bit late on that one, Charlie
Hooh, I bet that smarts!

(They were sure of victory, the men of the 7th Cavalry, as they rode on)

(But then from the rear a voice was heard)
(That same brave voice with the trembling word rang loud and clear)
What am I doin' here??

Please Mr. Custer, I don't wanna go
Listen, Mr. Custer, please don't make me go
There's a redskin a'waitin' out there, just fixin to take my hair
A coward I've been called cuz I don't wanna wind up dead or bald

Please Mr. Custer, I don't wanna go (forward HO)--aaww

I wonder what the injun word for friend is
Let's see-friend-- kemo sabe, that's it
KEMO SABE!, HEY OUT THERE-KEMO SABE!
Nope, that itn't it
Look at them durned injuns
They're runnin' around like a bunch of wild Indians-heh, heh, heh
Nah, this ain't no time for jokin'
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 11:55 am
Love that song, dys. Tried to locate it myself, but I figured Waterboys might be something a little different.

Thought for Today: ``Where apathy is master, all men are slaves.'' - Anonymous.



09/29/05 20:00


And what's the difference between ignorance and apathy, folks?
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 12:35 pm
Ignorance and apathy. Don't know and don't care.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 12:48 pm
Right, Hawk man. And tonight is our Bio Bob's karaoke night, listeners

Here's for those who don't know and don't care to know:

Don't Care


Music by Elton John
Lyrics by Gary Osborne
album A Single Man



I got feet sticking out of my shoes
I got heat more than I can use
I got love, I got all I need
I got soles that are wearing thin
I got holes where the rain gets in
I got you and that's enough for me

I don't care, I don't care
I don't care, I don't care
I don't care, I don't care
I don't care, long as I got your love

Clothes that are falling apart
I got a car that refuses to start
I got love, I do the best I can
I got bills piling up in the hall
I got paint peeling off the wall
I got you, I'm a happy man
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 04:51 pm
Well, my goodness. Where did everyone go?

Europe is asleep, and edgar is tired from working, so I think I'll shake dj, and ask him if he knows about this song:


Verse 1
They say I'm crazy, got no sense,
But I don't care.
They may or may not mean offence,
But I don't care;
You see I'm sort of independent,
Of a clever race descendent,
My star is on the ascendant,
That's why I don't care.

Chorus 1
I don't care,
I don't care,
What they may think of me.
I'm happy go lucky,
Men say I am plucky,
So jolly and care free.
I don't care,
I don't care,
If I do get the mean and stony stare.
If I'm never successful,
It won't be distressful,
'Cos I don't care.

Verse 2
Some people say I think I'm it,
But I don't care,
They say they don't like me a bit,
But I don't care;
'Cos my good nature effervescing,
Is one, there is no distressing,
My spirit there is no oppressing,
Just 'cos I don't care.

Chorus 2
I don't care,
I don't care,
If people don't like me,
I'll try to outlive it,
I know I'll forgive it,
And live contentedly.
I don't care,
I don't care,
If people do not try to treat me fair.
There is naught can amaze me,
Dislike cannot daze me,
'Cos I don't care.

Hmmm, listeners. I always thought that song was in 4/4 time
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 05:00 pm
Friday night! Karaoke. For those of you who don't sing let me state it's positively therapeutic. I've talked to other singers who also admit to a feeling of euphoria while singing. I'm sure different people are affected in different ways. At the end of the night I feel let down because it's only been four or five hours.

Trying to stick to my regimen I've a list of ten songs with me to try out. I know I won't have time to try them all especially since some of the regulars who attend will ask me to sing a song again that's special to them. I'm especially happy to do this for them as it's an indication that you've given them something worthwhile. Two more hours to go. Fun, fun, fun!
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 05:07 pm
Well, you are right, Bob. Even singing in the shower is therapeutic. Then, of course, there are times when the gig bombs. Ever had that happen, Boston?
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 07:33 pm
Well, listeners. It's been fun circulating around in our vast audience.

"Ah, sleep that knits up the raveled sleeve of care."

My goodnight song:


by Karen South


In these nights,
I lay on my side,

curl-up like an ear,
and wait

for the blank wafer called sleep,
the dark hesitation between day and day;

wait for the comma
in the white noise of life.

I have counted all my bones;
aloneness is cold.

I need you, father seed,
to come back,

to sing your sleep song,
that lullaby of endlessness

that sends me off without good-byes,
and sent the whiteness of my days

drifting out
like Chinese poem boats.

From Letty with love
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 07:57 pm
New Orleans
Silver Jews

I'm scared, I swear of you-uuuuuuuu
In a tunnel, in the darkness, darkest shade of blue

There's beasts, and there's men
and something on this earth
that comes back again.

Alpha, beta, gamma, ...everybody smoke

Well you can't say, that my soul has gone away
Well you can't say, that my soul has gone away
No, you can't say, that my soul has gone away

Well, this trouble in the house,
trouble on the stairs
Trouble in the trouble,
that trouble in the air

Well, please don't say (repeat in second voice)
That my soul has died away

There is a house in New Orleans
Not the one you heard about
I'm talking 'bout another house
They spoke of gold in the cellar
That a spanish gentleman had left

I broke in one hundred years ago
With a dagger tucked in my vest
Legends ago, that I tried to hold
The grey half lie of the hole at night

One, two, three four five
Well we're trapped inside the song
....
Well we're trapped inside the song
trapped inside the song
trapped inside the song
and the nights are so long


House Of The Rising Sun
The Animals

There is a house in New Orleans
They call the Rising Sun
And it's been the ruin of many a poor boy
And God I know I'm one

My mother was a tailor
She sewed my new bluejeans
My father was a gamblin' man
Down in New Orleans

Now the only thing a gambler needs
Is a suitcase and trunk
And the only time he's satisfied
Is when he's on a drunk

------ organ solo ------

Oh mother tell your children
Not to do what I have done
Spend your lives in sin and misery
In the House of the Rising Sun

Well, I got one foot on the platform
The other foot on the train
I'm goin' back to New Orleans
To wear that ball and chain

Well, there is a house in New Orleans
They call the Rising Sun
And it's been the ruin of many a poor boy
And God I know I'm one
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 08:04 pm
e|---------|
b|-0-0--0-0|
g|-0-0--0-0|
d|---------|
a|2----3---|
E|---------|

Fill 1
e|--------|
b|-0-0-0-0|
g|-0-0-0-0|
d|2-------|
a|----3---|
E|--------|

Fill 2
e|-------------|
b|-0-0--0-0-0--|
g|-0-0--0-0-0--|
d|-------------|
a|2----3---/5--|
E|-------------|
slide
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 08:58 pm
Just got home from work at eight. It was a long day, wrangling with some plummers, who could not believe a line from a toilet could have a clog in it under the circumstances. They reasoned that, if there be a toilet on the other side of the wall, using the same line, it too would be stopping up if the clog be there at all. It did not matter to old edgarblythe that there was an unclogged one in the adjoining apartment. He knows a clog when he confronts it. These same yahoos had already been out four times. Each time they had some line of bull to explain why the line did not have a clog. Each time after they left, the toilet promptly clogged up and the sewage backed into the bathtub. They had recommended replacing the toilet. Which I did. They tried to blame the resident, despite the fact we had begun experiencing the problem before he moved in. I lied to the head plummer. Told him the toilet was on an outside wall, blowing his theory of a toilet that wasn't clogged on the other side. Then he took me seriously.
Well, the new plummer they sent us promptly cut out the sheetrock above the toilet and cut off the vent pipe. He moved the upper portion aside and ran a camera in there. Sure enough, we saw a clog, but only on the side of the drain line used by the resident.
My new friend, the caring, thorough plummer, augered the hell out of it. He withdrew the auger all in knots. Expecting the worst, he ran the camera back inside, and it was totally clear. Suckcess. After only two months, the resident could go to the restroom without contemplating a trip to McDonalds.
I would submit a doody song, but can't think of any.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 30 Sep, 2005 10:49 pm
OLD TURKEY BUZZARD - Jose Feliciano

Ole' Turkey Buzzard
Ole' Turkey Buzzaarddd...
flaa-yin', flyin' hii--ghh

He's just-a watin'
ole buzzard's just-a wa-atinnn'
Watin' for someone down below to die (Jose climbs some high notes here)
Ole' buzzard knows that he can wait
for every mother's sons's got a date
with him...

gold gold gold
people are dyin' for
gold gold gold
people are fighting (killing) and dying for gold
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Oct, 2005 05:23 am
Good morning Letty:

A fun night at the Beachfront. In answer to your question if I'd ever bombed, the answer is yes. Happened at the Cathay Hanover a couple of weeks ago. One of the new songs of the three I was going to sing, Neil Diamond's (Coming to) America, did a nosedive. I'm lucky I didn't need a nose job after it. I cancelled the other two and fell back on some oldies I hadn't sung in a while.

But with a new day comes new optimism. Last night I trotted out Roy Orbison's In Dreams to rousing applause. Redneck Al was there and near the end of the evening he had enough tequila to require aid in finding songs in the book which I readily supplied. He was almost comatose by then and one of his songs wasn't finished when he left the mike. Not a clue did he have. Sean was miffed at him and let him know. Poor Al was a little off course later on and apparently got his little Belinda annoyed. This is surmise garnered from an aside when he quietly asked me to give her a hug and a kiss. This always brightens her and he hoped it would get him off the hook. It did.

A patron I'd never seen before stopped when he was about to leave and came over to remark on how impressed he was at my singing. He asked where I'd learned how to sing and I told him right there at the Beachfront. Tonight I'm going of course to the Cathay Hanover. I've a list of ten new songs in my pocket. God help them.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Oct, 2005 05:28 am
Paul Dukas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Paul Dukas (October 1, 1865 - May 17, 1935) was a French composer of classical music.

Dukas was born in Paris and studied, under Théodore Dubois and Ernest Guiraud among others, at the Conservatoire there, where he was a friend of Claude Debussy. After completing his studies he found work as an orchestrator and critic.

Although Dukas wrote a fair amount of music, he destroyed many of his pieces out of dissatisfaction with them, and only a few remain. His first surviving work of note is the energetic Symphony (1896) which belongs to the tradition of Beethoven and César Franck. It was followed by another orchestral work, L'apprenti sorcier, better known under its English title The Sorcerer's Apprentice (1897), which is based on Goethe's poem "Der Zauberlehrling". This piece was used in the Walt Disney film Fantasia, which accounts for much of its fame. Dukas's rhythmic mastery and vivid orchestration are evident in both works.

For the piano, Dukas wrote two complex and technically demanding large-scale works, a Sonata (1901) and Variations, interlude and finale on a theme of Rameau (1902), again reminiscent of Beethoven and Franck. The opera Ariane et Barbe-Bleue ("Ariadne and Bluebeard"), on which he worked from 1899 to 1907, has often been compared to Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande, partly because of musical similarities and partly because both operas are based on plays by Maurice Maeterlinck. The sumptuous oriental ballet La Péri (1912) was Dukas's last major work.

In the last decades of his life, Dukas became well known as a teacher of composition, with many famous students such as Joaquín Rodrigo, Maurice Duruflé, Olivier Messiaen and Jehan Alain. He died in Paris and is one of many famous people to be buried in the Père Lachaise cemetery there.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Dukas
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Oct, 2005 05:34 am
Stanley Holloway
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Stanley Augustus Holloway (October 1, 1890 - January 30, 1982) was a British actor and entertainer famous for his comic and character roles on stage and screen. He was also renowned for his recordings of comic monologues.


Life

He was born on the 1 October 1890 in London, England. His first job was as a clerk in Billingsgate fish market, but from 1907 he was performing in end of pier concert parties at English east coast seaside resorts. He was then recruited by established comedian Leslie Henson to feature as a support in Henson's own more prestigious concert-party. He planned a career as a singer and went to Milan to train his voice but the outbreak of war in 1914 changed his plans.

During World War One he enlisted in the Connaught Rangers infantry regiment.

After the war he found his first big success is the show The Co-Optimists which ran from 1921 until 1927 and was then filmed. A second run of the show from 1929 developed his comic song and monologue repertoire which launched his recording career with records of his own created character, "Sam Small," and Marriott Edgar's "The Ramsbottoms" selling world wide.

He spent the 1930s appearing in a series of cheaply made movies but which included some notable work in Squibs (1935) and The Vicar of Bray (1937).

His career changed again in 1941 when he played in a major film production of George Bernard Shaw's Major Barbara. He then took patriotic, morale boosting, light comic roles in The Way Ahead, and in This Happy Breed (1944).

After World War Two he had notable roles in the smash hit Brief Encounter , as Mr Crummles in Nicholas Nickleby, and a cameo role as the grave digger in Laurence Olivier's Hamlet.

He then became a mainstay of the Ealing Comedies productions, making classics like Passport to Pimlico, The Lavender Hill Mob and The Titfield Thunderbolt.

His film output had made him enough of a public name in the USA to land him the part of Alfred P. Doolittle in the Broadway stage smash hit My Fair Lady, after Jimmy Cagney turned it down. He had a long association with the show appearing in the original 1956 Broadway production , the 1958 London version and the film version of 1964. He entitled his autobiography Wiv a Little Bit of Luck after the song he performed in these productions.

He was still performing English character parts into his eighties.

He died in a Littlehampton nursing home on 30 January 1982, aged 91..

His son is the actor Julian Holloway (best known for being in some of the 'Carry On' films)

His granddaughter is the actress and model Sophie Dahl.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_Holloway

My Fair Lady Lyrics

Get Me to the Church on Time Lyrics

Jamie, Harry, Friends There's just a few more hours.
That's all the time you've got. A few more hours
Before they tie the knot. Doolittle
There are drinks and girls all over London,
and I've gotta track 'em down in just a few more hours!
I'm getting married in the morning! Ding dong!
The bells are gonna chime. Pull out the stopper!
Let's have a whopper! But get me to the church on time!
I gotta be there in the mornin'
Spruced up and lookin' in me prime.
Girls, come and kiss me;
Show how you'll miss me.
But get me to the church on time!
If I am dancin' Roll up the floor.
If I am whistlin' Whewt me out the door!
For I'm gettin' married in the mornin'
Ding dong! the bells are gonna chime.
Kick up an rumpus But don't lost the compass;
And get me to the church, Get me to the church,
For Gawd's sake, get me to the church on time!
Doolittle and Everyone I'm getting married in the morning
Ding dong! the bells are gonna chime.
Doolittle Drug me or jail me, Stamp me and mail me.
All But get me to the church on time!
I gotta be there in the morning
Spruced up and lookin' in me prime.
Doolittle Some bloke who's able Lift up the table,
All And get em to the church on time!
Doolittle If I am flying Then shoot me down.
If I am wooin',
Get her out of town!
All For I'm getting married in the morning!
Ding dong! the bells are gonna chime.
Doolittle Feather and tar me;
Call out the Army; But get me to the church.
All Get me to the church...
Doolittle For Gawd's sake, get me to the church on time!
Harry and Everyone Starlight is reelin' home to bed now.
Mornin' is smearin' up the sky. London is wakin'.
Daylight is breakin'. Good luck, old chum,
Good health, goodbye.
Doolittle I'm gettin' married in the mornin'
Ding dong! the bells are gonna chime...
Hail and salute me Then haul off and boot me...
And get me to the church, Get me to the church...
For Gawd's sake, get me to the church on time!
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Oct, 2005 05:37 am
Vladimir Horowitz
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Vladimir Horowitz (ru: Владимир Самойлович Горовиц) (OS 18 September, NS October 1, 1903 - November 5, 1989) was a classical pianist. His use of colors, technique and the excitement of his playing are thought by many to be unrivalled, and his performances of works as diverse as those of Domenico Scarlatti and Alexander Scriabin were equally legendary. Detractors are quick to point out that his output is uniformly mannered (termed Horowitzian), and often too much so to be true to the composer's intentions. Even so, he has a huge and passionate following and is widely considered by many to be the very greatest pianist of the 20th Century.


Life and career

Horowitz himself said that he was born in Kiev in Ukraine, but some sources have given Berdichev as a birthplace. His cousin Natasha Saitzoff, in a 1991 interview, stated that all four children were born in Kiev, corroborating his story. He was born in 1903, but in order to make Vladimir appear too young for military service so as not to risk damaging his hands, his father took a year off his son's age by claiming he was born in 1904. This fictitious birth year is still found in some reference sources, but authoritative sources now list his correct year of birth as 1903. Horowitz had piano lessons from an early age, initially from his mother, who was herself a professional pianist. In 1912 he entered the Kiev Conservatory, leaving in 1919, and playing the Piano Concerto No. 3 of Rachmaninoff at his graduation. His first solo recital followed in 1920.

His star rapidly rose - he soon began to tour Russia (where he was often paid with bread, butter and liquor rather than money due to the country's economic hardships), and in 1926 made his first appearance outside his home country, in Berlin. He later played in Paris, London and New York City, and it was in the United States that he eventually settled in 1940. He became a United States citizen in 1944.


Career in the US

In 1932 he played for the first time with the conductor Arturo Toscanini in a performance of Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 5 (the Emperor concerto). The two went on to appear together many times, both on stage and on record. In 1933, Horowitz married Wanda Toscanini, the conductor's daughter.

Despite receiving rapturous receptions at his recitals, Horowitz became increasingly unsure of his abilities as a pianist. Several times he withdrew from public performances, and it is said that on several occasions, the only thing that stopped him from cancelling recitals at the last moment was the persuasiveness of his wife. After 1970 he gave solo recitals only rarely.

Horowitz made many recordings, starting in 1928 upon his arrival in the United States and ending right before his death in 1989. His early recordings were made for EMI, the most notable of which is his 1930 recording of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3 with Albert Coates and the London Symphony Orchestra, the first known recording of that piece. In the 1940s and 1950s, Horowitz recorded for RCA Victor. During this period, he made his first recording of the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1, under Toscanini. After 1953, when Horowitz went into retirement, he made a number of acclaimed recordings at home, including discs of Alexander Scriabin and Muzio Clementi.

In 1962, Horowitz began recording for Columbia Records, and it is these recordings which are among the most well known. The most famous among them is his 1965 return concert at Carnegie Hall and his 1968 performance from his television special, Horowitz on TV, featuring Scriabin's Etude Op. 8 No. 12 and Horowitz's own Variations on a Theme from Bizet's Carmen, the most famous of his piano transcriptions along with the Stars and Stripes Forever. From 1965 until 1982, all of Horowitz's recordings were done live.


The last years

After another brief retirement from 1982 until 1985 (he was playing in a drugged state and as a result, memory lapses and loss of physical control occurred during his tour of America and Japan), Horowitz returned to recording and occasional concertizing. In 1986, Horowitz made a return to the Soviet Union to give a series of concerts in Moscow and Leningrad. In the new atmosphere of communication and understanding between the USSR and the USA, these concerts were seen as events of some political, as well as musical, significance. The Moscow concert was recorded and released, entitled Horowitz in Moscow.

Vladimir Horowitz died in New York of a heart attack. He was buried in the Toscanini family tomb in Cimitero Monumentale, Milan, Italy. His body was rumored to have been buried along with a book of Hanon's piano exercises, because according to Horowitz, "I never want to do anything without warming up; that includes dying." Horowitz was 86.


Repertoire and technique

Horowitz is best known for his performances of the romantic repertoire, with his six recordings of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3 and Franz Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsodies being particularly highly acclaimed. He is also famous for his transcriptions, the most extensive being the complete rewriting of the piano version of Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition and the most exciting being the impossibly difficult transcription of Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2. Towards the end of the Friska section of this piece, Horowitz appears to have three hands as he combines all the themes of the piece resulting in a fantastic finale. He only recorded it once in 1953 for his 25th anniversary concert at Carnegie Hall and he said, "it is probably the hardest piece I have ever played." Other transcriptions of note are his Variations on a Theme from Bizet's Carmen and of course, Sousa's Stars and Stripes Forever. Audiences would not let him leave the concert hall until he played his "scoring" of this piece. Later in life, he abstained from playing it altogether, as he said "the audience would forget the concert and only remember Stars and Stripes, you know." Other well-known recordings include works by Schumann, Scriabin, Chopin and Schubert. He did much to champion contemporary Russian music, giving the American premieres of Sergei Prokofiev's 6th, 7th and 8th piano sonatas. He also premiered Samuel Barber's Piano Sonata.

He was sometimes accused of self indulgence in his performances, but his extravagances were always well received by his audiences. Indeed, there are "bravo!"s in all his recorded live performances. He is most famous for his octave technique; his scales in octaves move so rapidly his hands appear a blur. He had an unusual technique, playing with very straight fingers and low wrists. The little finger of his right hand was always curled tight until it needed to play a note, and as Harold Schonberg rightly put it, "it was like a strike of a cobra".


Sexuality

Despite his marriage, there is considerable independent evidence that Horowitz was gay.

He is credited with the ambiguous aphorism: "There are three kinds of pianists: Jewish pianists, homosexual pianists, and bad pianists".

It is believed he underwent treatment in the 1950s in a futile attempt to alter his sexual orientation.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Horowitz
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Oct, 2005 05:52 am
Walter Matthau
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Walter Matthau (October 1, 1920 - July 1, 2000) was a Jewish American comedy actor. He is possibly best-known for his role as the gruff and less tidy member of The Odd Couple.



Biography

He was born Walter John Matthow in New York City, the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants. There is a persistent rumor that his birth name was Matuschanskayasky, which is false, as are the rumors that his name was Matashansky or Matansky, or any of the other reported names. In truth- as reported by the authors of Matthau: A Life, Rob Edelman and Audrey Kupferberg-along with Walter's son, Charles Matthau-Walter was a teller of tall tales. In his youth, he found the joy of embellishment lifted a story (and the listener) to such enjoyable heights, that he could not resist trying to pass off the most bogus of information, just to see who was gullible enough to believe it.

He told many stories to many reputable people- including the Social Security Administration. When he registered for a number, he was amazed that they only wanted him to write his name, and offer no proof of his identity. So, as another of his traditional goofs, he wrote that his true name was "Walter Foghorn Matthau."

His true name, as records from his youth prove, was Walter John Matthow. However, he was also called "Jake," so he occasionally signed his name as "Walter Jake Matthow." When, as a young man, he began acting in the Yiddish theatre in New York, he decided to change the spelling of his name. He believed that "Matthow" looked too brash and crude, and opted for the "more-elegant" spelling of "Matthau," and kept it for the rest of his life.

Matthau served with the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. He attained the rank of Staff Sergeant and became interested in acting. He often joked that his best early review came in a play he did where he posed as a derelict. One reviewer said, "The others just looked like actors in make-up, Walter Matthau really looks like a skid row bum!" Matthau was a respected stage actor for years in such fare as Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter and A Shot In The Dark.

In 1955, he made his motion picture debut as a whip-wielding bad guy in The Kentuckian opposite Kirk Douglas. He appeared in many movies after this as a villain such as the 1958 King Creole (where he is beaten up by Elvis Presley). That same year, he made a western called Ride A Crooked Trail with Audie Murphy. Matthau also directed a low budget 1960 movie called The Gangster Story. In 1962, he won acclaim as a sympathetic sheriff in Lonely Are the Brave. He also played the bad guy in Charade, which starred Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn.

In addition to his busy movie and stage schedule, Matthau made many television appearances in live TV plays. Although he was constantly working, it seemed that the fact that he was not handsome in the traditional sense would keep him from being a top star.

Success came late for Matthau. When he was age 45, in 1965, Neil Simon cast him in the hit play The Odd Couple opposite Art Carney. It was also during this time that Matthau nearly died of a heart attack. In 1966, he again achieved glory as a shady lawyer opposite future friend and frequent co-star, actor Jack Lemmon, in The Fortune Cookie.

He won an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for that movie, and also made a memorable acceptance speech. He was visibly banged up, having been involved in an auto accident shortly before the awards show. He started out with a joke about having "fallen off his bicycle," then scolded nominated actors who were perfectly healthy and had not bothered to come to the ceremony, especially three of the other four major award winners: Elizabeth Taylor, Sandy Dennis and Paul Scofield.

Matthau had two wives, Grace Geraldine Johnson (1948-1958), and Carol Marcus (August 21, 1959 until his death on July 1, 2000). He and Grace had two children, Jennifer Matthau and David Matthau. He and Carol had one son, Charles Matthau. His grandchildren include William Matthau and Emily Roman.

The "Matuschanskayasky" name rumor culminated with the release of 1974's Earthquake. The director, Mark Robson, came to Matthau and asked him to play the starring role in the movie. Matthau was uninterested and rejected the part, as he did not want to have a heavy presence in such a movie. However, Robson persisted and pleaded with Matthau to take a part- any part. So, Matthau agreed to take the small part of "The Drunk." However, after viewing the pre-screening, he was furious. The movie featured his "Drunk" character so prominently that he appeared to be a feature player opposite Charlton Heston. It was already made, and there was no editing it by this point. However, when it came time to insert the credits, Walter reached into his old bag of tricks and pulled out a whopper: He instructed the credits writer to credit him with his "birth name," and gave it as the ridiculously long name, "Matuschanskayasky," thereby preventing the famous name "Walter Matthau" from being used on promotional products.

Matthau and Lemmon became lifelong friends after making The Fortune Cookie and in an amazing act of teamwork made a total of ten movies together, including the movie version of The Odd Couple (with Lemmon playing the Art Carney role) and the popular 1993 hit Grumpy Old Men, and its sequel Grumpier Old Men with Sophia Loren. He won another Oscar in the star studded cast of High Rollers Casino.

His son, Charles, directed Matthau in the movie The Grass Harp (1995).

Matthau's tall tale about his last name is still listed as gospel in the "Original Names of Selected Entertainers" section of The World Almanac, including the edition published in the fall of 2004.

Walter Matthau died of a massive heart attack in Santa Monica, California at the age of 79. He is interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood, California. Almost exactly one year later, Jack Lemmon, his old pal and frequent co-star, was also buried at the cemetery, after dying from cancer.

After Matthau's death, Lemmon as well as other friends and relatives appeared on Larry King Live in an hour of tribute and remembrance. Poignantly, many of those same people appeared on the show one year later, reminiscing about Lemmon.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Matthau
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Oct, 2005 05:58 am
Julie Andrews
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Dame Julie Andrews, DBE (born October 1, 1935) is a British actress, singer, and author, best known for her starring roles in the musical films Mary Poppins (1964) and The Sound of Music (1965).

She was born Julia Elizabeth Wells in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, the daughter of an actor and a pianist. She had a rare, four octave coloratura soprano talent, and her parents enrolled her in voice lessons to develop her abilities. Her earliest public performances were during World War II, entertaining troops throughout the UK with fellow child star Petula Clark. She made her stage debut at an early age, appearing in London's West End in 1947. She graduated through radio (on the show Educating Archie), appeared in the London West End (Cinderella), and made her American debut starring in the Broadway production of The Boy Friend in 1954. Late in her career, she directed productions of The Boy Friend at the Bay Street Theatre in Sag Harbor, New York (2003), and at Goodspeed Opera House in Connecticut (2005).

In 1956, composers Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner cast Andrews as Eliza Doolittle opposite Rex Harrison's Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady (a musical adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion). The show became the smash hit of the year and Andrews an overnight sensation. During her run in the musical, she starred in two television musicals, High Tor with Bing Crosby, and Rodgers & Hammerstein's adaptation of Cinderella.

In 1961, Lerner & Loewe again cast her in a period musical: as Guenevere in Camelot opposite Richard Burton and newcomer Robert Goulet. After a slow start, cast appearances on Ed Sullivan's television show ensured that the show would ultimately become a hit.

When she lost the starring role in the film of My Fair Lady to Audrey Hepburn, she received the consolation of the starring role in Walt Disney's Mary Poppins (1964), winning the Academy Award for Best Actress as a result. Studio chief Jack Warner had told Andrews he didn't feel she packed the gear to play in My Fair Lady. After beating Hepburn for the Oscar, Andrews got a measure of "sweet revenge." In her acceptance speech, she said "I would like to thank Jack Warner for his faith in me." At the Grammy Awards of 1965 she and her co-stars won the Grammy Award for Best Album for Children for Mary Poppins. She was nominated for an Academy Award again, the following year, for her role as Maria von Trapp in The Sound of Music (1965), and thus became, briefly, one of the most sought-after stars in Hollywood. As a result, she appeared in the three-hour epic Hawaii, co-starring with Max von Sydow, and Alfred Hitchcock's Torn Curtain with Paul Newman (both in 1966), and Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967), with Mary Tyler Moore and Carol Channing.


Star!, a 1968 biography of Gertrude Lawrence, and Darling Lili, with Rock Hudson (1970), are often cited by critics as major contributors to the decline of the movie musical. Both were damaging to Andrews' subsequent career and, despite several starring roles in musical and non-musical films - including some directed by her second husband, Blake Edwards, such as 10, Victor/Victoria, and S.O.B., in which she appeared topless, she was seen very rarely on screen during the 1980s and '90s. She starred in her own variety series (for one season, on the ABC in 1972-1973 winning 7 Emmy Awards), but the greatest critical acclaim accorded her TV work was for her variety show specials with Carol Burnett. In 1983, she was chosen as the Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year by the Harvard University theatrical society.

Her film career was revived by director Garry Marshall, who cast her in The Princess Diaries and its sequel, both of which proved to be major box office hits. She has also starred in two made-for-television movies based on the character of Eloise, the moppet who lives at the Plaza Hotel in New York City. In 2004, she lent her voice to the role as Queen Lilian to the highly successful animated hit Shrek 2, the sequel to the 2001 smash.

In the 2000 New Year's Honours she was made a DBE, becoming Dame Julie Andrews. Since then she has been struggling to recover her singing voice, following a throat operation, but had a short tour of the USA at the end of 2002 with Christopher Plummer, Charlotte Church, Max Howard, and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. In 2005 she agreed to direct a Toronto revival of The Boy Friend, the Broadway musical in which she made her debut in America.

Dame Julie's career is said to have suffered from typecasting, as her two most famous roles in Mary Poppins and The Sound of Music cemented her image as a "sugary sweet" personality best known for working with children. Her roles in Blake Edwards's films could be seen as an attempt to break away from this image: in 10 her character is a no-nonsense career woman; in Victor/Victoria she plays a woman pretending to be a male, and, perhaps most notoriously, in S.O.B. she plays a character very similar to herself, who agrees (with some pharmaceutical persuasion) to "show my boobies" in a scene in the film-within-the-film. For this last performance, late night king Johnny Carson thanked Andrews for "showing us that the hills were still alive", alluding to her most famous line from the title song of The Sound of Music.

Andrews received Kennedy Center Honors in 2001. She also appears in the 2002 List of "100 Greatest Britons" sponsored by the BBC and voted for by the public. For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Julie Andrews has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6901 Hollywood Blvd.


Andrews has written several children's books, under the name Julie Andrews Edwards. Among the most well-known are Mandy and The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles (ISBN 0064403149). She also has collaborated with her daughter, Emma Walton, on the Dumpy children series, illustrated by Tony Walton.

By her 1959-1967 marriage to Tony Walton, the British director, she had one daughter, Emma Kate Walton. With her current husband, director Blake Edwards, she adopted two daughters from Vietnam, Amy Leigh and Joanna Lynne. Andrews has seven grandchildren.

Although she was raised with virtually no religious affiliation, Andrews became a "zealous convert" to Freudian psychoanalysis as an adult; it became her de facto religion. She spent many years in five-days-a-week psychoanalysis and, after initial secrecy about her participation, became a vocal proponent of the practice[1].

She has had a rose named after her.

In the fall of 2005, the production of "The Boy Friend" that Andrews directed at The Goodspeed Opera House (in Connecticut), with sets and costumes designed by Tony Walton, begins a tour.

Julie also served in 2005 as the honorary ambassador for the 50th anniversary celebration of Disneyland. She hosted the ceremony in front of Sleeping Beauty Castle at the park on May 5, 2005 to kick off the celebration.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julie_Andrews


My Favourite Things
by Julie Andrews


Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens
Bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens
Brown paper packages tied up with strings
These are a few of my favorite things!

Cream colored ponies and crisp apple strudels
Doorbells and sleigh bells and schnitzel with noodles
Wild geese that fly with the moon on their wings
These are a few of my favorite things!

Girls in white dresses with blue satin sashes
Snowflakes that stay on my nose and eye lashes
Silver white winters that melt into springs
These are a few of my favorite things!

When the dog bites, when the bee stings
When I'm feeling sad,
I simply remember
my favorite things
and then I don't feeel so bad!

Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens
Bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens
Brown paper packages tied up with strings
These are a few of my favorite things!
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Oct, 2005 07:29 am
Good day WA2K.

Today's birthdays:

1207 - Henry III of England (d. 1272)
1471 - Frederick I of Denmark (d. 1533)
1507 - Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola, Italian architect (d. 1573)
1540 - Johann Jakob Grynaeus, Swiss protestant clergyman (d. 1617)
1620 - Nicolaes Pieterszoon Berchem, Dutch painter (d. 1683)
1644 - Alessandro Stradella, Italian composer (d. 1682)
1671 - Guido Grandi, Italian mathematician (d. 1742)
1685 - Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor (d. 1740)
1691 - Arthur Onslow, English politician (d. 1768)
1730 - Richard Stockton, American attorney, signer of the Declaration of Independence
1760 - William Thomas Beckford, English writer and politician (d. 1844)
1865 - Paul Dukas, French composer (d. 1935)
1881 - William Boeing, American engineer (d. 1956)
1885 - Louis Untermeyer, American author (d. 1977)
1878 - Othmar Spann, Austrian philosopher and economist (d. 1950)
1890 - Stanley Holloway, British actor (d. 1982)
1896 - Liaquat Ali Khan, first Prime Minister of Pakistan, (d. 1951)
1896 - Ted Healy, American actor and comedian (d. 1937)
1900 - Tom Goddard, English cricketer (d. 1966)
1903 - Vladimir Horowitz, Ukrainian pianist (d. 1989)
1904 - Otto Robert Frisch, Austrian-born physicist (d. 1979)
1909 - Sam Yorty, Mayor of Los Angeles, California (d. 1998)
1910 - Bonnie Parker, American outlaw (d. 1934)
1914 - Daniel J. Boorstin, American historian, writer, and Librarian of Congress (d. 2004)
1920 - Walter Matthau, American actor (d. 2000)
1921 - James Whitmore, American actor
1924 - Jimmy Carter, 39th President of the United States
1924 - William Rehnquist, Chief Justice of the United States (d. 2005)
1925 - Bob Boyd, baseball player (d. 2004)
1926 - Roger Williams, American pianist
1927 - Tom Bosley, American actor
1928 - Laurence Harvey, Lithuanian-born actor (d. 1973)
1928 - George Peppard, American actor (d. 1994)
1930 - Sir Richard Harris, Irish actor (d. 2002)
1931 - Sylvano Bussotti, Italian composer
1932 - Albert Collins, blues guitarist (d.1993)
1935 - Julie Andrews, British actress and singer
1936 - Stella Stevens, American actress
1939 - George Archer, American golfer (d. 2005)
1945 - Rod Carew, Panamanian baseball player
1947 - Aaron Ciechanover, Israeli biologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
1947 - Stephen Collins, American actor
1948 - Cub Koda, American singer (d. 2000)
1949 - Isaac Bonewits, American author
1950 - Randy Quaid, American actor
1954 - Martin Strel, Slovenian swimmer
1962 - Esai Morales, American actor
1963 - Mark McGwire, baseball player
1964 - Jonathan Sarfati, Australian-born chess player, scientist, and author
1968 - Jon Guenther, American author
1979 - Rudi Johnson, American football player
1985 - Dizzee Rascal, British musician
http://www.thefoxmoviechannel.com/images/mathau-original.jpghttp://www.blackfilm.com/i3/movies/s/shrek2/010.jpghttp://www.chrysalisbooks.co.uk/assets/covers/1861057660.jpg
http://www.fasteddiesbullet.com/images/jimmy_carter_72133a.jpghttp://www.famouslocations.com/images/movies/manchurian_360.jpg
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Oct, 2005 07:31 am
Good morning, WA2K listeners and fans.

Thanks, dj for The House of the Rising Sun. Always liked that song, and speaking of "rising" the sun has fully risen here.

Dys, those most have been chord changes for guitar, but to what song, is anybody's guess.<smile>

Edgar, as if working hard isn't enough, it simply does not seem right that you should have to fight the fixtures. Hope all is well now, Texas, and thanks for the gold fever song.

Bob, We are so pleased that you had a great karaoke experience last evening. I think we all need to take some time and review your bio's today.

Incidentally, listeners, the president of our small country has announced that the ability to edit may soon be "deleted", so we'll have to work on our speech expressions.
0 Replies
 
 

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