Brooklyn, believe it or not, is looking for a poet laureate. Despite the fact that most people here wouldn’t know an iambic pentameter and blank verse from a cheeseburger and fries, it’s always nice to give poetry its fair share of cultural respect. “We know that with all our borough’s beauty, character — and characters [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Abraham Lincoln High School, Arts, Borough President, brooklyn, English poetry, literature, Marty Markowitz, poetry
This neon denizen of the night was exceptionally and brilliantly charged at this year’s Greenwich Village Parade. Within the afterglow of an equally dazzling geisha girl (or babe), he symbolizes the electrifying pulse of this city in his own peculiar way; the touching pathos of romance forever walking along the outer limits of bathos and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Arts, England, Greenwich, Greenwich Village, literature, London, Outdoors, Recreation
There is something for everyone at this year’s Brooklyn Book Festival, scheduled for this Sunday, September 13 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Those eight hours are set to pack in 220 authors, dozens of panel discussions, performances, contests, readings and awards, as well as an enormous marketplace of 150 book vendors, publishers and literary [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Arts, Brooklyn Book Festival, Brooklyn Borough Hall, Columbus Park, Cub Scouts, Events, literature, Recreation
A tree museum is scheduled to open in the Bronx tomorrow. One hundred trees, stretching 4 ½ miles along Grand Concourse Boulevard, will be marked with signs that will include phone numbers/ codes linked to short recordings of people talking about the Bronx, their lives and work. Tree No. 39, a honey locust at Marcy [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art deco, Arts, Boyd, Bronx, Concourse Boulevard, Course Boulevard, cross bronx expressway, edgar allan poe, George Clooney, Grand, grand concourse, honey, honey locust, Jose, Katie Holten, literature, Lloyd Ultan, locust, Loew, London, london plane tree, manhattan, Marcy Place, museum, north Bronx, park, percussion group, phone, poe park, Rosemary Clooney, Street, tomorrow, tree, work, World Literature
After the success of his novel IN COLD BLOOD, Truman Capote decided to throw a party. More in his element amongst the glitter of celebrities than at the keys of his typewriter, the magnificent gnome was a party animal if there ever was one. But unlike the typical soiree of the flowery 60s, where the [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Andy Warhol, art, Audrey Hepburn, entertainment, Frank Sinatra, In Cold Blood, legend, literature, manhattan, Mia Farrow, new york, Truman Capote, Washington Post
The 400th anniversary of the birth of John Milton was celebrated on December 9 with events throughout the world. Readings of his works, exhibits of his manuscripts and, of course, presentations of his masterpiece Paradise Lost were featured. At Cambridge University (where Milton studied at Christ’s College), the faculty read the entire text (all 10,000 [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, Arts, Cambridge University, commemoration, Garden of Eden, historic, John Milton, literature, new york city, Paradise Lost
Coney Island’s Astroland has “died” more often than Cleopatra in Shakespeare’s ANTONY And CLEOPATRA. Over the past ten years, every time it was reported that the playground was about to die, there it was again when the season began. Even over the past three years, when word went out that it wasn’t only about to [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Arts, Astroland, brooklyn, coney-island, construction, literature, nostalgia, Robert Frost, summer, World Literature
Merry Christmas to Everyone out there…whether or not you’re merry about Christmas, or merry about something else, or even if you’re not merry at all but were, or plan, to be merry about something at some other time, I and (now joining me) my technical adviser and emotional guru, Steffie (who also plays the part [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: christmas, egg cream, holiday, Kids and Teens, literature, Merry Christmas, People and Society, Steffie
Among the many traditions and tales that have enriched the Algonquin Hotel since it opened in 1902 is its famous resident cat. The practice of keeping a cat dates back to the 1930s when hotel owner Frank Case took in a stray, lovingly pampered him, and virtually allowed the cat to run loose throughout the [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: AlgonquinHotel, Arts, cats, culture, Frank Case, Hamlet, historic, John Barrymore, literature, Long Island, Matilda, Postings