Dispatches From the Fortress – Day 542

Costco is out of Kirkland Paper Towels and Kirkland Toilet Paper. This is not a good sign.

I feel like I'm in one of my "Don't look at the news too much" periods. I'm as concerned as you are about the disasters — political and environmental — and our inability to address, let alone solve any of them. I just don't have anything new or interesting to say on these topics. It's times like this I find myself quoting this great thing that Jim Henson once said…

At some point in my life, I decided, rightly or wrongly, that there are many situations in this life that I can't do much about — acts of terrorism, feelings of nationalistic prejudice, Cold War, etc. — so what I should do is concentrate on the situations that my energy can affect.

Smart man, that Jim Henson. I think I'll spend this weekend concentrating on the situations that my energy can affect.

Oh…and sleeping. I think I need to get more sleep.

Mal Z. Lawrence, R.I.P.

A lot of people reading this probably never heard of Mal Z. Lawrence but for about sixty years, he was a popular stand-up comedian in select circles. His main venues were hotels and theaters and anywhere that catered to a largely Jewish audience…preferably one that knew a smattering of Yiddish. He was an opening act for stars in Las Vegas and other gambling meccas but largely, he was what they called a "Catskills Comic."

Back when there were a number of resorts in the Catskills Mountains that catered to a (mostly) Jewish clientele, he was a star in those showrooms. And when that industry declined, he played other places — a lot of them in Florida — that appealed to the same crowd.

For a year or so on Broadway and touring for years after in the eighties, he was a part of Catskills on Broadway, a show that consisted of four comedians who'd either perfected their acts in the Catskills or could have. All the comics in Catskills on Broadway were good but they almost always had Lawrence close the show…because no one could follow him. Like a fine juggler who's been at it so long he's become incapable of missing, Lawrence had done it so long, he was incapable of not pleasing his audience…that is, when he was in front of the right audience.

I met him once when through a series of odd coincidences, I found myself at a table in the New York Friars Club lunching with him, Louise Duart, Freddie Roman, Corbett Monica, Dick Capri, Jackie Gayle and Henny Youngman. It was close to impossible to get a word in edgewise at that table but fortunately, I was seated next to Mr. Lawrence and when our fellow diners were chewing, I was able to tell him how much I enjoyed his act.

He asked me if I was Jewish and I told him I was half-Jewish. He said, "So I guess you just get every other joke."

Here's a video of about 25 minutes of Mal Z. Lawrence…and if you start watching, you may have trouble stopping because he had that kind of machine-gun delivery. But notice the utter professionalism of the man. He takes command of the stage and never lets go. And if one of his lines doesn't land with the audience, he has another already on its way.

As the New York Times obit will tell you, he died last Monday at the age of 88. He was one of the last of his kind…

Updates

Boy, when I go, I hope I hope even half as many people miss me as seem to be missing Lydia, a cat most of them never met.

Because several folks asked: I've decided to stop feeding strays of any species in my backyard, at least for now. Maybe someday if I can figure out a way to be more selective — like feeding possums and cats I've named without feeding raccoons and cats I don't know — I might resume. But for now, the buffet is closed. (This message is for any possums who follow my blog. Sorry, guys.)

I did talk to my lovely friend Betty Lynn the day after her birthday. She was a little pooped from all the celebrating but she'd doing well. Here's an article that ran in her hometown newspaper.

If you're a fan of our Groo Meets Tarzan mini-series, you have about three days to e-mail me a letter that I might (might!) publish in issue #4. Use the e-mail address in the comic book.

If I subtract the number of reruns, I'm at around 29,100 posts on this blog. I recently paid my annual fee to my hosting company which does a way better job than my previous three hosting companies of keeping this blog online and pretty swift to respond to your clicking. If you've been thinking of sending in a donation, this would be a really good time to do it because that fee is pretty steep. The PayPal link is to the right. Thank you.

The Latest Groo News

The second issue of Groo Meets Tarzan seems to be out and available from discerning comic book vendors across the land. I haven't received my copies yet but that's okay. I know what's in it. This is the second of four issues that took place during the Comic-Con in San Diego last July…the one that really didn't happen. If the con had taken place, this is what would have happened at it, I assure you.

You can always find the latest Groo News — and I know you just can't get enough of it — at www.groo.com. Also, Sergio and I are making silly little videos answering questions from Groo readers and I should have started posting them weeks ago. Here's the first one we did…

Mark's 93/KHJ 1972 MixTape #24

The beginning of this series can be read here.

I had three Turtles songs on my mixtape — "She'd Rather Be With Me" (which I covered here), "The Guide for the Married Man" (which we'll get to) and this one…"Happy Together." The song was written by Garry Bonner and Alan Gordon and legend has it that every other recording artist in the world had been offered the song, passed on it and been chagrined when The Turtles grabbed it up and had a very big hit with it.

Here they are on The Ed Sullivan Show performing it in 1967. It's hard to believe that when some adults saw this, they said things like, "Those hippies should get haircuts and get jobs."

My Latest Tweet

  • There's too much news these days…just too much news. I'm beginning to think that when all these 24-hour news networks came along, God said, "Gee, that's a lot of time to fill. I'd better create more natural disasters and political upheavals."

Lydia the Cat, R.I.P.

For the first time this century, I will be feeding no recurring feral cats in my backyard. Since "Jackie" showed up one day in 1991, I've had a fairly constant stream of them dropping by to partake of the Friskies Buffet. Some came and disappeared swiftly enough that I never gave them names. Some came regularly enough that I did…and there were a few in the second category who basically lived out there.

As far as I can tell, all but one of the ones who earned names lived way longer than the norm. The one who didn't was one who got hit by a car. At one point, as some of you may remember, I was up to four regulars and Lydia, who died today, was the last of that four.

Just how long feral cats live with and without human assistance is apparently the subject of much heated debate among cat doctors and fanciers. Whatever the answer, I'm pretty sure Lydia beat it. She first turned up out there in 2007. The following year, I trapped her, took her in to be spayed — a tale told here — and released her back into the yard. The veterinarian who operated thought she was at least three then which would have made her sixteen today. Another vet — one who saw her later — guessed she was even older.

You needn't write to tell me she had a great, long life. I know that. What I don't know is if I want to take this moment to close down the Feline Golden Corral I've been running out there for a few decades. It fed not only cats I intended to feed but also a steady array of raccoons, possums and cats I never saw enough of so that I assigned them names.

In the past, any time one of my steady customers died or disappeared, I had at least one other one coming around for grub…so I didn't think about shutting it down. If I'm going to, this would be the time. Lydia's been pretty much alone out there since August of 2018 when her friend Sylvia died.

For about six weeks last year, little Lydia had the occasional companionship of a feline I named Murphy the Mystery Cat since I never found out its gender or where it was dining the 3-5 days a week it didn't dine here. As mysteriously as he or she came, Murphy disappeared around April of last year.

Lydia never seemed to mind being alone. I think in a way she liked not having to compete for the supper dish. What did seem to bother her — and I'm attempting a bit of pussycat mind-reading here so this may not be so — was the deterioration of her physical condition. She couldn't run. She couldn't climb. She developed a bad limp. The less spry she was, the more she seemed afraid of my gardeners…other animals…even sometimes me.

I will miss her. I won't miss the Lydia who was lame and in pain the last few weeks but I'll miss the healthy Lydia. Often, she slept in that little house in the first photo in this article. I can see that house from the window of the bathroom in my bedroom. First thing in the morn when I was in that bathroom, I'd always peek out to see if Lydia was in her house. If I saw her there, it put a top-o'-the-morning smile on my face.

When I didn't see her there, it didn't mean anything bad. It just meant she'd gotten up before me and she could be anywhere on my premises or in the yards of my immediate neighbors on several sides. So it didn't depress me to not see her there. But it might, tomorrow morning.

"I Don't Know" – Special Edition

I'm getting a lot of questions about Comic-Con Special Edition, which is scheduled to take place November 26-28 (i.e., the weekend after Thanksgiving) at the San Diego Convention Center in that town they named the convention center after. Here's a brief Q-and-A about it and as you'll see, there are many Qs and I don't have many As. In fact, you can skip this entire post and go look at the con website and know pretty much everything about it that I do…

Q: Is it still on?
A: It would appear that the folks who stage this thing are pretty determined to stage this thing.

Q: Might it still be canceled or postponed?
A: We live in a world now where anything might be canceled or postponed. No one can say for sure if The Pandemic will be better, worse or about the same 86 days from now when the con is scheduled to open.

Q: What should I do if I need to book travel soon in order to get a flight on Thanksgiving Weekend?
A: I don't know.

Q: When will badges or exhibitor space be made available?
A: I don't know.

Q: How big will this thing be? Will we have the run of the entire convention center?
A: I don't know. I don't know.

Q: Will all the hotels that are usually available for Comic-Con be available? Will the convention offer deals for them? When will we know about this?
A: I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.

Q: Will attendees have to mask and/or show proof of vaccination or a recent test?
A: I don't know. Oh, wait. I can answer this one. Or at least direct you to this post which the convention released yesterday.

Q: Won't these policies make things rough for cosplayers?
A: Yes. And while I love cosplayers — or at least the ones who don't crash into me or stab me with props — I could support a policy that anyone who thinks their cosplaying is more important than protecting others should be tossed out and banned from all future Comic-Cons. The con hasn't said they'll do this but if they do, I'm behind them on it or some similar action.

Q: But I really want to cosplay at this convention and this mask thing will ruin whatever I come up with. What should I do?
A: Go as Hawkeye Pierce in M*A*S*H.

Q: Are you going to attend?
A: I don't know. I mean I really don't know. I have some time before I have to decide and I intend to use it.

I keep having to remind myself of my own advice, which is to accept and deal with the fact that life is way more unpredictable than usual because of COVID-19. No one knows when this thing will end. No one knows how bad it will get before it does. Advance planning is very difficult and it may be for quite a while.

San Diego Comic-Cons are usually wonderful things that I greatly enjoy. I miss them. But there are many things that I miss that I understand would be dangerous at the moment…and maybe you and I disagree as to how dangerous. Maybe I'm being too cautious…but given the choice of being "too cautious" or "not cautious enough," I'm going to opt for "too cautious" every time. After all, I'm going to be seventy years old next year and I would like very much to be seventy years old next year.

Dispatches From the Fortress – Day 539

I understand that if you post anything on the Internet about current events, you're supposed to have firm, "I-am-absolutely-right" viewpoints on all the issues at hand but I'm afraid I don't. I'm reasonably sure that it is a good thing that the U.S. is out (or nearly out) of Afghanistan and that both Democrats and Republicans kept us there — and did a lot of misrepresenting to justify keeping us there — for far too long.

But that bit of deception and incompetence was too bi-partisan for either side to score many points over it so everyone's going to get a pass on that waste of lives and money. We're not going to talk about who to blame for getting us into it or who to blame for not getting us out of it sooner. Republicans are going to hammer Biden for how he got us out of there because of course they are.

I've become just about numb to politicians and pundits being outraged at the opposition party. Their job descriptions these days seems to be looking at what The Other Side does and spinning it, no matter what it is, as corrupt, stupid, senile, immoral, self-dealing and certain to lead to the destruction of the United States. If Biden spilled his iced tea, Ted Cruz would be on Hannity within minutes explaining why it's the end of America as we know it.

Here's what I'm waiting for: The Democrat or Republican — I'll settle for either — with the courage and integrity to not play this game; to tell his or her "base" that the other side did something good. I expect to wait a long time for this. And if it's an elected official who does this, he or she might not be one for long.

Regarding the pullout in Afghanistan, Kevin Drum — a pundit I like because I don't think he does that — makes a pretty good case that things over there have gone as well as could be humanly expected. But I don't hear too many Democrats making that case and I don't expect any Republicans would dare and nothing I've read has coalesced into a solid opinion for me.

The same is true of another current issue that someone asked me to comment on…the parole of Sirhan Sirhan. It's easy to say he should rot in prison forever for what he did. Hell, you could say that of anyone convicted of committing any degree of murder and just be done with parole for such people. I saw one web post from a lady who seemed to be saying, "We should never parole anyone who murders someone I've heard of."

Somewhere in this state, there's a parole board and doctors-of-the-mind who actually interviewed Sirhan as he exists today and arrived at some sort of evaluation…and I have trouble just discarding that as irrelevant to the discussion.

Often, a jury returns a verdict that seems cockeyed to those of us who didn't sit in the courtroom for eight weeks and hear every last bit of evidence and sit ten feet from the witnesses. I don't think that should be ignored. They might not be right but they do know a lot more than I do about the case. What I know comes in short bites conveyed by a news media I do not think is always as competent as we'd like it to be.

Sorry for the uncertainties but I'm like that at times. If you want a firm opinion, I've got one for you: The folks who say to wear masks and get vaccines are right and the ones who say it's a hoax and unnecessary and that being told to wear a mask is like Nazis carting Jews off to be executed are wrong and making this thing last way longer and be much more destructive of life and the economy than it had to.

Today's Video Link

Julien Neel, my favorite one-man quartet, sings my least-favorite Beatles song…

Today's Video Link

Hello, Dolly! opened on Broadway on January 16, 1964 and played there for a then-record 2,844 performances. When it finally closed two days after Christmas in 1970, a lot of theater reporters doubted that any musical would ever best that number. Wrong! The Phantom of the Opera, the revival of Chicago, The Lion King, Cats, Wicked, Les Misérables, A Chorus Line, the revival of Oh! Calcutta!, Mamma Mia!, Beauty and the Beast, Rent, Jersey Boys, The Book of Mormon, Miss Saigon, 42nd Street, Grease and Fiddler on the Roof all did it…and some of those are still running. In fact, Phantom of the Opera has now had more than four-and-a-half times as many performances as Hello, Dolly!

But Dolly! was still a triumph and it lasted as long as it did because its producer, the infamous David Merrick, kept bringing in Big Star Names for the lead when the first Dolly Levi, Carol Channing, left the show.  They included — not in this order — Pearl Bailey, Phyllis Diller, Betty Grable, Mary Martin, Martha Raye, Ginger Rogers and Ethel Merman. (And here's something I didn't know until I just looked up that list: One of the actors who played the male lead of Horace Vandergelder for a while was Richard Deacon. That's right — Mel Cooley on Broadway!)

The casting of Pearl Bailey was heralded as an especially shrewd bit of stunt casting because they restaged the show with black actors including Cab Calloway as Horace. Here, from a 1967 episode of The Ed Sullivan Show, is a number from that production…

Tales of My Childhood #11

Another rerun — this time by popular request, which means one person suggested I post in here again. This first appeared on this blog on 8/6/14…

This time out, I'm going to tell the story of two of the best laughs I ever got in my life, one at age ten and one at twelve. They were both with the same joke and the person who laughed at it twice was my Uncle Aaron. He was a nice man — my father's sister's husband — who looked enough like Art Carney to be occasionally mistaken for him.

One time when we went to a crowded restaurant with him and Aunt Dot, we were surprised to be seated immediately, ahead of many other parties. As he passed out the menus to us, the host told Uncle Aaron how much he loved him on The Honeymooners. Uncle Aaron, who was afraid they'd rescind our preferential seating, said, "Thank you. I love working with Jackie Gleason."

As I've mentioned here, he sold window displays. If you had a small business, you could peruse his catalog and order little, relatively-inexpensive creations of wood, styrofoam and cloth to jazz up your store or front window. He offered low cost displays for all holidays and occasions. As Halloween approached, he sold a lot of witches and ghosts. As Thanksgiving neared, he sold turkeys and pilgrims. Christmas accounted for around 50% of his annual sales.

The displays were manufactured by a company in Japan and much of Uncle Aaron's life revolved around "The Japanese." He never spoke of his suppliers by name unless, I suppose, he was meeting with them, here or there. When he wasn't, it was "The Japanese are giving me trouble again" or "The Japanese overcharged me on that last shipment" or "The Japanese will be in town next week."

Even as a child, it struck me as bizarre to refer to his associates that way. He'd say, "The Japanese will be visiting my apartment on Saturday" and I'd say, "Really, Uncle Aaron? All of them?" And he never got it. He'd say, "Of course. The Japanese will be in town all next week. I'm taking them all to lunch on Monday." There was nothing racist about it. It was just shorthand. In the same way, he'd turn to his secretary and say, "Get Chicago on the phone!" and I'd think to myself, "Really? You're going to talk to the entire city?"

The displays were also designed in Japan, often from little sketches Uncle Aaron would doodle out and mail to them. He wasn't much of an artist but he'd draw a crude, almost-stick-figure snowman sunning himself under a cruder palm tree and then "The Japanese" would figure out what he had in mind and build it. A few times, he let me do the sketches and even at age 10, I was better than he was.

He had an office/warehouse down on Beverly Boulevard in what was then largely a Hispanic neighborhood but is now trending Korean. Once every few months, I'd spend the afternoon there. He'd assign me my own desk and I'd sit and draw or sit and read. Sometimes, Uncle Aaron would let me stuff catalogs into envelopes. Then he'd ridiculously overpay me for about an hour of work and I'd spend it all on comic books.

One day, "The Japanese" presented Uncle Aaron with a proposition. His supplier over there had acquired interest in a firm that could make full-sized mannequins for an absurdly low price. I do not remember the exact numbers but they went something like this. The top department stores were paying $100 and up for the kind of mannequin you dress in the clothes you're selling and place in your store window or on the floor. Via this new connection, Uncle Aaron could sell mannequins of the same size for $29.95 and still make a nice profit on each one.

"The Japanese" proposed a partnership arrangement whereby he would advertise and sell them in America. He made the deal which meant expanding his business considerably. Fortunately, the store next door to his office was for rent so it became the warehouse and shipping center for the mannequin side of his business. There was a considerable expenditure in setting up that store, staffing it and especially in advertising and mailings but he saw it as a great investment. And indeed, orders were soon rolling in and mannequins were arriving from Japan for him to repackage and ship to buyers.

You have probably seen a horror movie or suspense drama where someone is trapped in a warehouse full of mannequins. They walk nervously through it with eerie lighting and eerier music setting the mood. They glance from face to face, from silhouette to silhouette with the mounting terror that one or more of those mannequins might just be…alive?

Well, I got to play in just such a warehouse.

I have this odd memory of being alone in the warehouse at least once. I don't recall the circumstances that led to me being alone in there and probably it was for a matter of minutes as opposed to the hour or two I recall. But in the memory, I am ten and I'm wandering around amidst hundreds of nude, genital-less mannequins, females outnumbering males by about two to one. At that age, I was still trying to get clear on what women actually had under their clothing and nothing I saw there was any help. The whole thing was, like I said, odd.

It was not scary like in the movies because it lacked the ominous music and lighting…but it was odd. At one point, I turned to them and said aloud, "Okay, you can knock it off, guys. Move!" When they didn't move, I felt safer.

Mannequins today are, like everything else except tattoos and Joan Rivers, sexier. Female mannequins now look very much like the women in Playboy, which is partly a function of more realistic eyes and hair and makeup and a greater suggestion of reproductive organs on the mannequins. It's also partly a function of the women in Playboy looking more and more like they were sculpted out of papier-mâché. The mannequins in Uncle Aaron's warehouse were designed to be as non-offensive (i.e., non-sexy) as possible.

That was true of the ones on the north side of the warehouse, which were the ones that were all assembled, mostly for display purposes for when potential buyers came around. Less sexy were the ones on the west side of the warehouse. These were the ones in pieces, newly-arrived from Japan, which were to be shipped to buyers for assembly. Each of them was in nine parts — head, a two-part torso plus pairs of arms, hands and legs. Being low-cost mannequins, they had limited posing possibilities…but what did you want for $29.95?

Well, you might have wanted something sturdier. On the south side of the warehouse were the broken ones. What turned out to be an unacceptable percentage of them arrived from Japan in unsellable condition. The secret of the $29.95 price tag was that they were made with cheap material from cheap molds by poorly-paid employees and then were shipped over with inadequate packaging.

When a shipment of mannequins arrived from their maker, one would be missing a hand, one would have a leg that was busted, one would have a defective arm that wouldn't lock into place, etc. Uncle Aaron found he had to have his staff inspect and try assembling each one. Then they'd cannibalize, taking the head from this one and the arm from that one to turn three busted ones into one whole one. He would soon get into a lawsuit with "The Japanese" over this. They'd bill him, say, for one hundred mannequins. He'd pay for the seventy-one out of a hundred he considered complete. They finally sued him and in a counter suit, he charged that the product they were delivering to him was inferior to the samples he'd been shown when he agreed to the joint venture.

There were also many returns from buyers of mannequins that didn't live through their 90-day guarantee. The flesh-coloring would flake off or fingers would break or the torso would implode from the slightest bump. The metal fittings whereby one part locked to another would snap off and be unrepairable.

The mannequins may have had a 90-day guarantee but Uncle Aaron's new business didn't. In less than three months, he realized he was in trouble and for a simple reason: He was being delivered, and was therefore delivering to his customers, an inferior, shoddy product. That doesn't always put you out of business in this world but it did in Uncle Aaron's case.

Before long, it was all in the hands of lawyers. Eventually, there was a settlement and I never heard the terms but Uncle Aaron did refer to it as — and I quote: "A very expensive lesson." I wish some companies today would learn it.

My almost-final memory of Uncle Aaron's mannequin venture was the last day I spent in his office, watching and helping a bit as he and his few remaining employees packed to vacate the premises. He was leaving the mannequin biz behind and moving what was left of the window display operation to new quarters a few miles away. As he packed, he quoted to me what he said was an Old Jewish Curse. It went as follows: "May you have partners."

Uncle Aaron, by the way, was an Old Jew and he knew how to curse.

As he put the lid on one box, he asked me to give him a hand. My comedy impulses were starting to kick in at that age so I ran into the adjoining warehouse, came back with the hand (only) of one of the mannequins and gave it to him. He looked at it for a second, puzzled. Then he "got it" and began laughing uproariously.

It was one of those laughs that just went on and on. Tears — the good kind — came to his eyes and then he hugged me and said, "This whole business venture has been such a nightmare. But this almost makes it worth it." I didn't believe that but I was real happy I could do anything good for my Uncle Aaron. Real happy. A little later, he let me pack up a box of pads and pencils and other office supplies he wouldn't be needing so I could take them home. When he wasn't looking, I put a few of those stray mannequin hands into the box. Just in case.

mannequinhand

This all happened in 1962. A few months later, and I'm not suggesting a connection, Uncle Aaron got sick and he underwent a series of operations. The first was certain to solve the problem but it didn't so he had the second one which was certain to solve the problem. It didn't so he had the third one which was certain to solve the problem, which led to the fourth one which was certain to solve the problem. By that point, even I knew how the problem would end and that it would not be long.

One day in 1964, my parents told me we were going to see Uncle Aaron in the hospital. They didn't say "This may be to say goodbye" but from their manner, I figured that part out. Since a visit to the hospital usually involved sitting around a waiting room for long periods, I packed a little bag of comic books and a pad of paper and my favorite doodling pen…and I took along something else. Just in case.

Uncle Aaron looked terrible there in the bed. The sheet didn't completely cover his chest and I could see terrible, ugly scars and stitching all over him. I tried to look at his face without looking at the scars but his face wasn't much more pleasant. You could see he was in pain — the physical kind and the emotional kind. The latter kind seemed to be worse.

We all talked for a little while and then I was sent out of the room so he could talk to my mother and father in private. I later learned he was asking them to take good care of the woman who would soon be his widow. And of course, they said yes.

Then he asked to have a moment alone with me. My mother and father went out and I went in. Uncle Aaron told me how proud he was of me and how he regretted he wouldn't be around to see what I would become but he was sure it would be impressive. He asked me to never forget about my Aunt Dot, the woman he loved so, and to do what I could to be of help to her, especially right after he was gone. The way he said it, I wondered if he expected this to happen within the hour.

It was all a lot for a child of twelve to hear and I remember thinking two things during it. One was to wonder if I should say something like, "You're not going anywhere. You'll be up and around in no time." I didn't believe that. I also knew he would never believe that. And I really knew that he would never believe I believed that. Still, I was thinking: Isn't that the kind of thing you're supposed to say in these situations?

I wasn't sure why but I decided not to say anything of the sort. Looking back, I suppose my instinct was that what he was telling me was very serious. This was perhaps the most serious moment of his life and if I'd said "Oh, you'll be fine," that would have been me not taking his seriousness seriously.

So I was thinking that and I was also thinking, "How can I get this man to ask me to give him a hand?" Because you know darn well what was in my bag with the comic books and the drawing pad.

As he finished his emotional plea to me to grow up right and to prosper and to care for Aunt Dot, he got a tad hoarse. On the table next to the bed, there was a little cup of club soda with a straw in it. He started to reach for it and I asked, "Do you need help?" and he said, "Yes, please, give me a hand!" I couldn't believe my luck.

I grabbed for my bag of stuff and out came the mannequin hand I'd brought. Uncle Aaron stared at it and began howling with laughter. Howling! I have never made anyone laugh like that in my life since then and I doubt I ever will again. My parents and a nurse came in to see what was happening. For a moment there, I thought maybe I'd harmed him somehow…perhaps hastened his demise. Then I thought, "No, he's not going to survive anyway. Maybe I've given him the chance to literally die laughing."

I thought he would have liked that. I know when I go, I'd like that.

He survived my joke, snickering and savoring it, and insisted on putting the mannequin hand on his bedside tray. That was the last time I ever saw him but Aunt Dot and one of his nurses both told me he couldn't look at it without laughing and feeling a little better. He died about two weeks after my visit.

Yeah, the hand thing was a silly joke but it wasn't bad for a kid that age…and it made 100% of its audience laugh, which is more than most jokes do.

When you're a kid, you can't do much to make your family happy. You can not get into trouble, and I almost never got into trouble, but you can't actually do anything. I was glad I could do something good for my Uncle Aaron. He did so many good things for me.

Today's Video Link

And yes, that's Oprah Winfrey narrating…

These days, I have zero desire to sit in an audience and even less to sit on an airplane…so I don't care how wonderful Hugh Jackman is as The Music Man, I ain't going. But it sure would make me feel good to know that Broadway was alive and thriving and being enjoyed by people who were properly vaccinated and masked…

The Song That Now Goes Like This…

I really liked the show Spamalot. I've seen it four times — once in Columbus, Ohio with the national touring company…once in Las Vegas…once at the Ahmanson in downtown Los Angeles…and once down in Redondo Beach in a production that used (I think) the sets and costumes of the national touring company. The one I enjoyed the most was the one in Columbus because it was expertly presented, everything was new to me…and I was in it.

And I've listened many, many times to the Broadway Cast Album. I'm not sure why I never listened to the 2010 album done by the company that went on tour with a revival of the show in the United Kingdom. Guess I never noticed it…but I did recently. You can buy it on Amazon but it's very expensive. I listened to it on Spotify and discovered that (a) it's very good and (b) a lot of it's different.

There are quite a few lyric changes, most notably in "Whatever Happened to My Part?" And what may be my favorite song in the show — "You Won't Succeed on Broadway" — is completely rewritten to omit all mention of Jews. It's now called "The Star Song" and instead of trying to have a hit show on Broadway, it's about trying to have one in Bromley, which is a large town in South London. Here's a before-and-after of one small hunk of each…

BROADWAY VERSION:
In any great adventure, if you don't want to lose,
Victory depends upon the people that you choose.
So listen, Arthur darling, closely to this news,
We won't succeed on Broadway if we don't have any Jews.

BRITISH VERSION:
In any show biz venture, from Shakespeare down to Keats,
If you want to be successful, you must put bums in seats.
So listen, Arthur darling, or you won't get very far,
You won't succeed in Bromley if you haven't got a star.

And then all the stuff about goys and shiksas and the little snatch of "Hava Nagila" and the Fiddler on the Roof reference is gone. The quest from that point on is not to find Jews to be in the show but to land a major star. Some of the dialogue that surrounds the songs on the U.K. cast recording suggests other changes in the book.

This is not a complaint. I'm just sharing something I just found out and find interesting. Based on a bit of Internet Research, it would seem that the original London company on the West End used the Broadway script when it debuted in 2006. Then in 2010 when a tour began, it was decided to change the song to make it more local and about the theater business in Great Britain and its stars. Also, British theater has nowhere near as much Jewish blood in its DNA. And apparently, it's only "Bromley" in this CD because it was recorded when the tour was playing in Bromley. In other cities, there were other place names there.

You can probably hear the song a dozen places online if you search for "star song spamalot" without the quotes.  And if you're as much a fan of this show as I am, you might want to listen to the whole album which you can do on Spotify, Amazon and probably other places.  It's a pretty good presentation of the songs.

Today's Video Link

From 1967, it's the wonderful Gwen Verdon performing a number from Sweet Charity on The Ed Sullivan Show. Doesn't get much better than this…