Tuesday, June 28, 2011

"East Side, West Side"

I had read about them, the 88 pop-up pianos placed in the five boroughs of New York City by Sing for Hope. I thought it would be a perfect memorial for my mother. I found two in Central Park. It was a misty, almost rainy, day so the pianos were covered but anyone was allowed to play them briefly as long as the tarp was replaced. There were two college-age students ahead of me. The woman was filming the man with her Blackberry. He played one note several times as though he were not a piano player at all which gave her the giggles. Then he sat down at the make shift bench and started the Schubert Impromptu #4. Unbelievable! Then he said I could have a turn. I said, "I'm not following a Schubert Impromptu!" He was amazed I knew what it was. She continued filming us. I sat down and played the Mexican Birthday song, "Las Mananitas." They weren't familiar with it and I said I played it in honor of my birthday. They (as well as two park workers) screeched, "Happy Birthday!!!!!" I left feeling very good about my gig in the Big Apple. My mother would have loved it. She had such dreams for my concert career mostly based on the fact that during high school I played every Saturday night at some retirement hotel and the oldsters applauded generously. However, I played the same three pieces and my girlfriends played a variety of much harder ones. However, they were low on charm and I had big teeth. My smile was always at the ready. I won a talent contest as a result and my mother exclaimed, "You see? You see?" I did see. I saw what she didn't. I was not cut out for Julliard. In the decades following, she was gratified that I always played somewhere--for the junior high chorus, a handbell choir, or a church. She would be over the moon that I can now say I played in the city of her dreams. After watching The Lives of Others, I was impressed that one of the stars, Sebastian Koch, was enthralled with a piece Gabriel Yared wrote for the score; Sebastian, who was not a piano player and wasn't interested in any other piano endeavor, spent hours practicing this piece. I thought watching him in the movie that he was a gifted pianist! He is sort of like me in the sense that he has this one and I had my three. I encourage anyone to learn whatever is a favorite and then come up to the Big Apple next year. This year there were 28 more pianos than there were last year so who can say how many more there will be waiting for you!
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...may you also have the blessings of a little dream come true...

Sunday, June 19, 2011

The Why People

I love the little people. My dad didn't approve of the word, "kids." If I said something about the kids at the day care center where the Service Club volunteered, he would correct me with a rejoinder including the word, "goats." Luckily, I think "children" is a beautiful word. And children are beautiful people. I was behind a child on the M15 bus going up Manhattan from the Staten Island ferry. This was one genius of a kid goat! He couldn't have been even three years old but he talked steadily to his nanny (I guess my dad would have made another goat reference on that word) about the excursions they had been on. He said, "Oh, that was when we went up to 77th Street for the frozen yogurt." At first, I thought he was referring solely to special occasions and consequently would know the addresses but, no. He was a running commentary on all sorts of streets. I noticed he did all the talking and never once asked, "Why?" "Why" is one of my favorite expressions from the Little People. They really want to get to the core of whatever they are investigating. I volunteered with children from the time I was in high school and the Why's tickled me better than a sunny day with an ice cream cone. Children can be very courageous, too. Like the two youngsters in DRUMMERS OF JERICHO. This is the story of a 14 year old Jewish girl, Pazit, in band at a Texas high school in a town which  has no Jews."'People get mean when they're afraid they might be wrong. Or afraid they're gonna lose something. So they end up blaming you for what's their own fault.'" It would be hard for me to imagine what she goes through if I hadn't spent some of the Civil Rights years in  Louisiana where I was told I might have to leave school if I didn't drop my "Outside Agitator" posture. The interview with the dean was on account of my having praised a photo of JFK shaking hands with Nat King Cole. Unreal, right? I throw my lot with the ones who speak out and I started young. I told my second grade teacher that I wouldn't write, "Examination" on the top of my test paper because I considered it too difficult for someone my age. I had been a child advocate before but this was the first time I had shown my true colors in public. My reaction to Paola in Donna Leon's book, FATAL REMEDIES, was, "Go Paola!" when her husband, the Commissario says, "'Why does everything have to be filled with such meaning....?'" I like characters like Jane Eyre and Billy Elliot who stand their ground, or in his case, soar in the air, with their convictions. Opinionated? Self-righteous? Judgmental? Take your pick. I stand accused but I don't mind. When I'm told that I should act my age, I have to ask, "Why? And what age are we talking about?" I'm very willing to be kid-age if I'm "The Emperor's New Clothes" kid-age. Often, the going get rough. Nobody cheers. Things get ugly. But there is something wonderfully freeing about trying to right wrongs. There is no failure grade for doing one's best. As my brother put it, "I can't do everything. I can do something."
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...may you speak up today and receive the blessings of tranquility...

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Shamrocks in the Menorah

Years ago, I had a friend, Lillian Brunswick, who had grown up in a Yiddish neighborhood. She said her mother never missed an opportunity to celebrate a holiday. Anybody's. At Christmas, Mama decorated a small Christmas tree with as many lights as it could bear and when the rabbi came to call, it was Lillian's job to put the tree on the fire escape while Mama answered the door. On St. Patrick's, the menorah sprouted shamrocks. St. Andrew's would have the little apartment awash with Scottish thistles. Mama was delighted when she discovered Lewis Carroll's "unbirthdays" which pretty much covered the gaps in the holiday year. Unbirthday cupcakes ahoy! She had a heart for the underdog so when I read about Juneteenth in JUBILEE JOURNEY, I thought immediately of Lillian's mother. Juneteenth is honored by African Americans all over Texas as the day, June 19, 1865 when word reached Galveston, Texas that slaves had been freed back in January 1863.
 This week includes Pentecost and Flag Day. I can picture Mama wearing red and making her own special flag with its cross-cultural bonanza of symbols. Lillian's best friend, Geonene Scott, wrote to me in 1981 that Lillian had died after a short bout with pneumonia. Since they had taken tap dancing lessons together in their forties, Geonene imagined Lillian in pink tights and snappy tap shoes doing the shuffle ball step in Heaven. I remember adding to the picture: a sidekick. Lillian's Mama with iridescent wings sporting 6-pointed stars dancing off tiny Irish harps and sky blue menorahs. I let Lillian's Mama guide me every day to make sure each day is festive whether it has a name or not. If no name comes already chosen, I invent one. Unbirthday is good but I lean more to something like Saint Gratitude by the Forgotten Fountain Day or Shoshoni (did you know the word for mother in Shoshoni is Pia?) Friendship-in-the-Hinterland Bracelet Day. 
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...may the blessings of holiday getaways be yours...

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

"Around the Corner"

 There is a line from West Side Story which sums up one of my little pleasures in life. "Around the corner." I like coming upon an unexpected event, place, or person. I delight in the happenstance of reading a book and discovering the date mentioned is the day I was actually reading. For instance, last Saturday, I started KILLING THE KUDU and cheered when I saw in the opening paragraph, "June 4th." I was reading it on June 4th! On a visit to Nova Scotia, I was strolling down some streets which might or might not be leading to Halifax harbor. I went around a corner and there was a Greenpeace vessel. I was wearing my Greenpeace button! I had no idea the ship was in town, so to speak. I mentioned to Carolyn Meyer I had ordered a copy of WHERE THE BROKEN HEART STILL BEATS  and she said, coincidentally, that after twenty years, she was just informed it was being reissued with a new cover. I came around a corner of a path at Central Park and there was my favorite ballerina, all in white doing her, "still" act. She stands motionless until someone puts a donation in her tin pail and then she does a quick, graceful dance and blows a kiss. I didn't have a dollar to throw in but I blurted out, "It's so good to see you!" as though he were my lucky talisman and she winked. I came around a corner and there at the Pulitzer Plaza fountain were the impressive bronze figures of the Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei (last names first in Chinese). He is currently imprisoned in China for supposed economic crimes which as far as I'm concerned is criminal. He is the son of the poet Ai Qing and that poetic quality infuses the statues, especially the Dragon. The following information comes from the NY Parks & Recreation newsletter, The Daily Plant: Full Circle focuses on the inspiration for Ai's current project: the ransacked 18th-century zodiac fountain clock designed by European Jesuits for the imperial retreat known as the Yuanming Yuan (the Garden of Perfect Brightness). 


...may the blessings of found joys be yours...