The Count & the Housewife

August 24th, 2012

Jerry Nelson the man behind “The Count” passed away on Aug 23.

Jerry Nelson Puppeteer – Family Photo

Nelson played ‘Count von Count’ (aka the ‘Count’ seen here) on Sesame Street from the 1970’s through his retirement in 2004, but also was the first to perform Mr. Snuffleupagus. Other roles include Gobo Fraggle (my personal favorite) and Marjory the Trash Heap from Fraggle Rock, and multiple characters from the Muppets including Sgt. Floyd Pepper of the Electric Mayhem band, Dr. Julius Strangepork, Kermit’s nephew Robin, and Gonzo’s girlfriend Camilla the Chicken.
Mr. Nelson had a gift with puppets that helped shape generations of viewers. He learned to puppeteer under Bill Baird, the creator of the “Lonely Goatherd” marionette scene in The Sound of Music. Jerry was born on July 10th 1934 in Tulsa Oklahoma and died August 23rd, 2012.

  • NYtimes obit for Phyllis Diller

    She liked jokes that piled on the laughs in rapid succession. A favorite of hers was this one: “I realized on our first wedding anniversary that our marriage was in trouble. Fang gave me luggage. It was packed. My mother damn near suffocated!”

    She had six children from her marriage to her first husband (via wiki)

    Henri Cartier Bresson & Martine Franck

    August 22nd, 2012

  • (Photo by his second wife Martine Franck – pictures within picture NY-Times )

  • Henri Cartier Bresson born on August 22, 1908

  • Martine Franck dies – the photographer was more than Henri Cartier Bresson’s wife (Slate)

    Martine Frank (1938 – 2012)
    (Photo by her husband Cartier Bresson)

    Martine Franck Legacy – Time magazine

    Martine Franck wiki

  • Braille Google google braille
    – The Gift from a Blind Poet

    “One day Cartier-Bresson received a telephone call from the writer JL Borges, who wished to know whether he would be willing to accept a prize for which Borges wanted to nominate him.” (via)

  • The philosopher at his studio by Martin Franck

    Michel Foucault (Previous post – Foucault Funhouse)

    Paul Tillich , Lartigue & Arthur Waley

    August 19th, 2012
  • Paul Tillich <>
    When he said jump (Iconic Photos)

    Paul Tillich (August 20, 1886 – October 22, 1965) was a German-American theologian and Christian existentialist philosopher

    Hanna Tillich and Paul Tillich : Their relationship, sexual affair, and personality

    From Time to Time by Hannah Tillich

    Paul Tillich on youtube (on literature)

    Professor Mitsuo Aoki – Hawaii Living Treasure was Paul Tillich’s student.

  • Jacques H. Lartigue

    See more photos by Lartigue here

  • Arthur Waley <> <> ..

    Arthur Waley (August 19 1889 – 27 June 1966) was an English orientalist and sinologist.

    Translated the Pillow Book, the Noh, Tao Te Ching -see the list of his works.. amazing. and he has never visited Asia.

  • T.E. Lawrence, His Books & Bedroom

    August 15th, 2012


    Lawrence at Hejaz

  • Birthday of T.E Lawrence – 16 August 1888


  • His bedroom with books

  • Ralph Fiennes took us to see his cottage at Clouds Hill (see One Foot in the past – youtube)


  • His bedroom without books.

    Nothing in Clouds Hill is to be a care upon the world. While I have it there shall be nothing exquiste or unique in it. Nothing to anchor me.” T.E. Lawrence

  • Clouds Hill

    “The sleeping bag that served as a guest bed to some of the 20th century’s most distinguished authors at TE Lawrence’s weekend retreat has been returned 36 years after it was stolen. National Trust custodians of Clouds Hill, the author’s cottage in Dorset, were amazed when a weather-beaten package from Belgium arrived containing the sleeping bag, along with a sheepish note that read: ‘This is yours’. The bag, embroidered with the word ‘tuum’ [‘yours’], was provided for guests at the cottage, while Lawrence slept on the floor in the other sleeping bag, marked ‘meum’ [‘mine’]. According to Jeremy Wilson, Lawrence’s biographer, tuum’s occupants included George Bernard Shaw, E. M. Forster and Robert Graves.

  • T.E. Lawrence

    Lawrence was born in Tremadoc, Caernarvonshire, Wales, the illegitimate son of Thomas Chapman. His father left his wife, who had refused to allow a divorce. He set up a new home with Sarah Junner, a woman who had been governess in his household. Lawrence was the third son of this union.

    Did TE Lawrence Have a Miserable or a Happy Childhood?

    Lawrence first meeting with Faisal

    His grave

    Previous post Ralph and T.E. Lawrence

    The Child is Not Dead – Ingrid Jonker

    August 12th, 2012
  • Ingrid Jonker – was a South African poet. Although she wrote in Afrikaans, her poems have been widely translated into other languages. Jonker has reached iconic status in South Africa and is often called the South African Sylvia Plath, owing to the intensity of her work and the tragic course of her turbulent life.

    See also African history online

  • Song of the Grave Digger see a photo of her on the beach and read her poem.

  • Black Butterflies is a Dutch film about the life of South-African poet Ingrid Jonker.

    The film focused on her messy life and not enough on her early development as a poet.

  • Nelson Mandela recited a poem by Ingrid Jonker.

    The Child is Not Dead

    The child is not dead
    The child lifts his fists against his mother
    Who shouts Afrika ! shouts the breath
    Of freedom and the veld
    In the locations of the cordoned heart

    The child lifts his fists against his father
    in the march of the generations
    who shouts Afrika ! shout the breath
    of righteousness and blood
    in the streets of his embattled pride

    The child is not dead not at Langa nor at Nyanga
    not at Orlando nor at Sharpeville
    nor at the police station at Philippi
    where he lies with a bullet through his brain

    The child is the dark shadow of the soldiers
    on guard with rifles Saracens and batons
    the child is present at all assemblies and law-givings
    the child peers through the windows of houses and into the hearts of mothers
    this child who just wanted to play in the sun at Nyanga is everywhere
    the child grown to a man treks through all Africa

    the child grown into a giant journeys through the whole world
    Without a pass

    Nicholas Ray

    August 6th, 2012
  • N. Ray

  • Nicholas Ray (August 7, 1911 – June 16, 1979)

    See his filmography form MUBI

    “You like these films, but you can’t imagine how often they represent only fifty percent of what I wanted to do. You have no idea how I had to fight to achieve even that fifty percent.”

    5 Great Films by Nicholas Ray

    But while largely critically ignored and/or underappreciated for much of his career, Ray has always had his champions among cinephiles. As mentioned, the French New Wave adored him during his 1950s heyday (François Truffaut was another major admirer), and subsequent generations have rallied behind him, such as Wenders, Martin Scorsese, Jim Jarmusch, Philip Kaufman (who once tried to mount a biopic of his life), Oren Moverman (who wrote it), Curtis Hanson and many more.

  • On the set of The American Friend
    Dennis Hopper, Wim Wenders, Bruno Ganz, and Nicholas Ray while filming ‘The American Friend,’ 1976 — Caterine Milinaire.

    Lightning Over Water

    The film is a collaboration between Wenders and Ray to document Ray’s last days due to terminal cancer in 1979. The film is partially a homage to Ray who had a strong influence on Wenders’ work, and partially an investigation on life and death. Ray’s influence on Wenders includes Ray’s “love on the run” sub-genre as well as his film noir photography.

    Nicholas Ray appears in a minor role in Wenders’ film The American Friend.

    The film crew is extensively featured onscreen. Jim Jarmusch, Ray’s personal assistant at the time

  • Alain Corneau alaincorneau
    Aug 7 – birthday of Alain Corneau – French filmmaker of Tous Les Matin du Monde

    Robert Hughes R.I.P

    August 6th, 2012

    The Shock of the New (via Ubu)

    ‘He will be greatly missed’: art critic Robert Hughes dies in New York, aged 74

    Artbeat obit

    Robert Hughes wiki

    Adam Gopnik (wonderful tribute -NewYorker)

    What he really detested was mannerism, in all its guises, whether the mannerism was the Italian kind that had to be cured by Caravaggio or of the postmodern kind that had yet to be cured at all. If this left him blind to the virtues that mannerism may contain—elliptical thought, the tangle of reference, stylishness—well, who would not want to be in a minority clamoring for truth and passion in a mannerist age?

    Christopher DeLaurenti

    will always be grateful, warily, for the blustery yet brilliant arrogance of Robert Hughes; though he clearly abhorred most contemporary (esp. post-modernist) art, his magisterial TV series “The Shock of the New” abounded with gems, such as “One of the effects of today’s museums – with their lovely white walls and their feeling of a perpetual present – is to make art seem newer than it actually is.”

    Germaine Greer Note to Robert Hughes: Bob, dear, Damien Hirst is just one of many artists you don’t get

  • The Fatal Shore – The Fatal Shore is the prize-winning, scholarly, brilliantly entertaining narrative that has given its true history to Australia.

    His memoir – Things I didn’t know

    Robert Hughes on Mies van der Rohe – Vision of Space (Youtube)

    Louis & Billie

    August 4th, 2012

  • Louis and Danny Kaye (youtube)

  • Louis and Billie

    Louis Armstrong was born in a poor section of New Orleans known as “the Battlefield” on August 4, 1901.

    By the time of his death in 1971, the man known around the world as Satchmo was widely recognized as a founding father of jazz—a uniquely American art form. His influence, as an artist and cultural icon, is universal, unmatched, and very much alive today.

    Louis Armstrong’s achievements are remarkable. During his career, he:

    developed a way of playing jazz, as an instrumentalist and a vocalist, which has had an impact on all musicians to follow;
    recorded hit songs for five decades, and his music is still heard today on television and radio and in films;
    wrote two autobiographies, more than ten magazine articles, hundreds of pages of memoirs, and thousands of letters;
    appeared in more than thirty films (over twenty were full-length features) as a gifted actor with superb comic timing and an unabashed joy of life;
    composed dozens of songs that have become jazz standards;
    performed an average of 300 concerts each year, with his frequent tours to all parts of the world earning him the nickname “Ambassador Satch,” and became one of the first great celebrities of the twentieth century.

    Goodbye Gore Vidal

    July 31st, 2012

    Gore Vidal died – he was 86. (LA Times)
    Prolific, Elegant, Acerbic Writer (Nytimes)

    Early reactions of his passing from his homepage

  • Italo Calvino on Gore Vidal Imagining Vidal

    Gore Vidal on Italo Calvino

  • Gore Vidal at (via Waggish)


  • photo via

  • Gore, Vonnegut and Mailer here.

  • Paris Review interview – Gore Vidal

  • Documentary Gore Vidal

  • Anais Nin and Gore
    (via)

  • 1abestgorevidal

    NY Magazine (Best of Enemies)

  • Life in Feuds: How Gore Vidal gripped a nation..

  • On Gay Marriage

    Since heterosexual marriage is such a disaster, why on earth would anybody want to imitate it?”

    On Obama
    He has a total inability to understand military matters. He’s acting as if Afghanistan is the magic talisman: solve that and you solve terrorism. … He f***ed [health care] up. I don’t know how because the country wanted it. We’ll never see it happen” (via)

    Adieu Chris Marker

    July 30th, 2012
  • Chris Marker ‘La Jetee’ director, dead at 91

    Marker’s creative use of sound, images and text in his poetic, political and philosophical documentaries made him one of the most inventive of film-makers.
    Marker’s interests lay in transitional societies – “life in the process of becoming history,” as he put it. How do various cultures perceive and sustain themselves and each other in the increasingly intermingled modern world?

    Chris Marker

  • He was born Christian François Bouche-Villeneuve, most likely in Neuilly-sur-Seine, on the outskirts of Paris, although one source gives the place of birth as Ulan Bator, the capital of Mongolia – a legend that Marker did nothing to dispel. His pseudonym is said to have been taken from the Magic Marker pen.

  • 1aChrisMarker2-660

  • Korean women – Rare Books

    “A towering and seminal figure in the field of contemporary visual culture… Chris Marker was among the celebrated directors who formed the nucleus of the French New Wave.” During those years Marker also became an influential editor at Editions du Seuil in Paris, and personally secured “the publication by Seuil of William Klein’s raw, Dada-inspired photographs of New York” after Klein’s 1956 photobook had been turned down by American publishers. Marker, whose name is a pseudonym, also traveled extensively in the late 1950s and made a series of short films that “arose from visits to China, Siberia, Israel and Cuba, while a trip to North Korea resulted in this photo-text album entitled Coréennes”

  • Passenger photo by Chris Marker
    More Photos of Chris Marker here

    Passengers – wonderful photographies by Chris Marker

  • Tribute to Chris Marker’s Double Life via Rhizome

  • One day in the Life of Arsenevich (via 3quarksdaily via Richard Brody the NewYorker)

    Apart from the Medvedkin documentaries, Marker made further films on directors. AK (1985), profiling the location shooting of Akira Kurosawa’s Ran on the slopes of Mount Fuji, included an interview with its 75-year-old director. This reverential impression of the Japanese master at work is revealing about Kurosawa’s methods and his relations with his crew. Marker also uses the subject for his own brand of poetic-philosophical celluloid essay on the Japanese and on the making of a film.

    Banksy Olympics 2012

    July 28th, 2012


    Posted by Sheep Ish on Banksy’s wall on FB.

    Happy birthday Banksy!

  • Banksy dead rat (

    Previous posts –
    happy rat year

    Banksy in Palestine

    Pina

    July 26th, 2012
  • 1aahnen-man-mike-woman-horizontal-chair_1000

  • Sarang is a Korean song.

  • Pina and Ronald Kay (her husband – photo via)

    Pina Bausch was born on 27 July 1940.

    See more from Pina Bausch Archive.