Lunch with Lainie

When I first moved to California in the late 1970s, I worked briefly for a screenwriter who had an office next door to Lainie’s office, so we first “met” back then. Several years later, when I was publicist for Joe Williams, our paths crossed again — though perhaps not in person — when Joe worked in Lainie’s Room and Lainie’s Room East, night spots in the Playboy Clubs in Los Angeles and New York, respectively. During those early publicity years I was also friends with another publicist who was a good friend of Lainie’s and talked about her a lot – still no person-to-person meetings. So here we are, twenty-five-plus years later, having a bite to eat and chatting away like old friends

Lainie Kazan is a multi-award winner in film, television and on stage, but she exhibits none of the kiss-kiss Hollywood bs. She’s warm, funny, and down to earth. It has been written (here) that she “began her career as Barbra Streisand’s understudy in the Broadway production of Funny Girl and soon thereafter became the “chanteuse” of her native New York, appearing in nightclubs and as a guest on virtually every top variety and talk show on television.” But she actually had two shows under her belt before Funny Girl. First she played Theodora in The Happiest Girl in the World at the Martin Beck Theatre (4/3/1961 – 6/24/1961), and almost a year later she appeared at the Broadhurst Theatre as La Contessa in Bravo Giovanni (5/19/1962 – 9/15/1962), which is where she first met Luther Henderson. Luther was the dance arranger collaborating with choreographer Carol Haney. I haven’t researched this yet, but I suspect that when Haney was hired to do Funny Girl (her credit for that show reads “Musical Staging by Carol Haney”) it was she who suggested (or perhaps insisted) on hiring Luther to do the dance arrangements.

For those of you under a certain age, you may remember Lainie better from the 1982 movie My Favorite Year starring Peter O’Toole who played a bad-boy movie star (the story was loosly based on Errol Flynn’s appearance on Sid Caesar’s Your Show of Shows). And if you’re too young to remember that, think Toula’s mom from the romantic comedy movie My Big Fat Greek Wedding. Or if you’re a tv buff, you may have seen Lainie on lots of programs including Will & Grace, Touched by an Angel, Veronica’s Closet, and The Nanny (she played the recurring role of Aunt Frieda).

I’ve been having a blast interviewing all kinds of people who worked with Luther in one capacity or another. So far everyone has been really nice, and each and every person seems to have adored Luther. Next I’m looking forward to renewing my acquaintance with Ken Page, one of the original actors in the Broadway musical Ain’t Misbehavin’. I’ll tell you more about Ken next week.

Musicians’ Web Sites

There are gazillions of musician web sites, too many for any one person to surf. So I thought I’d mention just a few that have come to my attention lately.

Either blue is cool, or blue is jazzy, or maybe blue = cool jazz. Two dynamic drummers both have deep blue home pages. Lewis Nash starts off in blue, but changes moods with each section tinged in a different palette.

Drummer/Poet Michael Stephans combines words and music. Click on Words to sample his poems and essays, and click on Media to hear some clips, including the most unusual rendition of Hava Nagilah I’ve ever heard from his as-yet-unreleased new recording.

Drummer Marty Morell (many remember him from his years with the Bill Evans Trio, 1968 -75) has a new quintet album with sound samples available on his new web site.

Also of interest are The Bill Evans Webpages

Guitarist Henry Johnson has a cool-looking new site, but several sections are still under construction…

It looks like the ArtistShare home site has been redesigned, sporting a lighter cool blue feel and tabbed sections. The current welcome message says:

Where the fans make it happen. ArtistShare is all about delivering the excitement of the creative process to the fan.

Some of my favorite people have Artistshare web sites including: Bob Brookmeyer, Billy Childs, Scott Colley, Jim Hall, and Maria Schneider

And last for today, but certainly not least, Sonny Rollins has a killer site – it is chock full of content with lots more to come, including some really interesting audio Reflections.

Lineup

I wonder what our television viewing habits say about us? I was blog browsing over the weekend and saw that a few folks (Reflections in D minor*, Jaquandor , and Tosy and Cosh ) have posted their tv viewing preferences for the new season [Drat! I forgot that West Wing has moved to Sunday evenings.] So I might as well Fall-in. (Sorry, pun intended.)

Sunday
I really like Cold Case and West Wing, now both on at 8 PM. Guess I’ll have to start taping (don’t have TiVo). Then Law & Order Criminal Intent followed by Grey’s Anatomy (unless Grey’s gets too stupid, in which case I’ll watch Crossing Jordon, otherwise I may watch Jordon during re-runs or taped).

Monday
Nothing really until Medium at 10 PM (I like this one a lot), but if I really really want to watch something earlier, Las Vegas can be amusing.

Tuesday
8 PM NCIS (but I’m gonna miss Agent Kate Todd a/k/a Sasha Alexander). 9 PM nothing!!!!!!!! Well, maybe Commander In Chief, if it lasts, but I don’t really care for Geena Davis; on the other hand, Donald Sutherland…. And 10 PM Boston Legal and Law & Order SVU (I’ll have to tape one).

Wednesday
Not much until Law & Order at 10 PM – and this is not my favorite of the franchise — I love Lt. Anita Van Buren/S. Epatha Merkerson, but can’t stand Det. Joe Fontana/Dennis Farina).

Thursday
CSI at 9 PM, followed by Without a Trace at 10 — both of which I can live without. ER lost me a few seasons ago.

Friday
8 PM Haven’t checked out Ghost Whisperer yet…so maybe. Nothing at 9 unless Dateline has a story of interest. Maybe Numbers at 10, but I’m not that big a fan.

Saturday
Looks like network movie night, and not likely to hold much appeal.

*Note: Reflections in D minor has changed its name and address to A Sweet, Familiar Dissonance. I should probably watch less television and read more blogs. Links to this and a few other recommended blogs can be found in the last box in the left sidebar.

Protecting the Digital Rights of Authors

The Authors Guild recently sent out a message to its members that should be of interest and concern to all Internet savvy people, not to mention all writers. The Guild, which has come out against Google’s Library Program, seems to have hope for the plans of a new coalition that includes Yahoo. The message said:

A coalition including Yahoo, Adobe Systems, Hewlett-Packard, and the libraries of the University of California and the University of Toronto announced today that they’re launching a book-scanning project that would make digitized texts searchable through Yahoo. Yahoo’s coalition took care to state that only works for which it has the rightsholders’ permission or are in the public domain would be included. Although we haven’t reviewed the details of the program yet, it sounds as though they’re going about this in a sensible way.

Yahoo’s new venture is further demonstration that the right to store books in digital form is commercially valuable, a right that should be licensed rather than appropriated.

The email also included a copy of a letter to the editor from Authors Guild President Nick Taylor, published by The New York Times, in response to an op-ed piece by Tim O’Reilly, a member of a Google advisory board and publisher of computer manuals who supports Google’s Library venture.

To the Editor:

Tim O’Reilly (“Search and Rescue,” Op-Ed, Sept. 28), who is on the publisher advisory board for Google Print, informs us of the many benefits of the Google Library program.

The program, which would digitize and store millions of books, has its merits, all of which can be achieved through proper licensing. Google knows its business; it expects to profit from this project. Certainly some of those profits should go to the authors who created the books.

By digitizing mountains of copyrighted books without permission, Google is exercising a renegade notion of eminent domain: Google decides what’s good for us and seizes private property to get it done.

Legitimate eminent domain is exercised by elected officials, however. And the property owners get paid.

There’s a better way: let’s build a real digital library, not just “snippets.” Writers are willing, but not at the cost of our rights.

Nick Taylor
President, Authors Guild
New York, Sept. 29, 2005

For further information, visit The Authors Guild.

And yesterday, in a e-newsletter I receive from Publishers Weekly, I read:

The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group has pulled the company’s titles from the Google Print program to protest the scanning of copyrighted materials in the Google Library program. RLPG president Jed Lyons called Google Library’s scanning policy a “flagarant violation” of copyright laws, and has told Google it wants the books that have been scanned as part of Google Print removed from its database and the books returned.

Scarecrow Press, the publisher of my Henderson biography in progress, is under the umbrella of Rowman & Littlefield.

New Words?

The reader who chided me (tongue-in-cheek) for using the word “derivated,” wrote in again to report:

“about 55,700” results you find when typing “derivated” into google! 🙂 Great Stuff! [see for yourself]

I haven’t checked, but I don’t think “derivated” made the new edition of the Merriam-Webster Dictionary. However, the M-W lexiographers have green-lighted a bunch of new entries — “Chick Flick,” “Civil Union,” “Bikini Wax” and “Brain Freeze” are now official dictionary entries. (Hmmm, is green light a verb?) Read about the new words here, or jump straight to A Sampling of New Words and Senses on the Merriam-Webster web site.

FANs Get The Last Word

Tuesday, in my FAN-tastic! post, I told you about two buddies, both fans of Nancy Wilson, one of whom just retired. I emailed them to say I had written about them without revealing their identities, offered to remove the posting if it made them uncomfortable in any way, or, conversely, identify them if they so desired. They opted for the latter, and said some very nice things in the process — Thanks, guys. You made my day, again.

Now I’m going to give them the last word. First from the new man of leisure, David Moss:

Thank you so much for posting my sentiments on your website. I feel even more honored and thrilled having communicated with you and Nancy. You are truly terrific personalities.

I started reading my book today and it brought back such wonderful memories of the great musicians I have always enjoyed and continue to listen to today. I actually have music on vinyl of many of the artists John managed. This is truly awesome – thanks again.

And by all means, please feel free to identify me on your website – I am a proud fan and want to share the love.

And from Dave’s really good friend Stan Skinner, the man who first contacted me to ask Ms. Wilson for a special favor:

We are honored!! By all means mention us. I was talking to Thelma [Dave’s wife] and we were both saying how good it was to know that people like you, John and Nancy who have played amongst the stars are still kind and thankful. You guys are the notes that create the harmony in this world.

One Ought…

“One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words.”

    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship.
    The Harvard Classics Shelf of Fiction. 1917.
    Book V, Chapter I

RSVP

No, I’m not plugging RSVP: Rare Songs, Very Personal, Nancy Wilson’s last grammy-winning recording. I’m referring to the original meaning: Respondez S’il Vous Plait. “No news is good news” used to be true, but that has changed. The number of emails I send, and phone messages that I leave, that go unanswered grows exponentially each day. I used to think it was just plain rude (not to mention discourteous and bad for business) to not answer messages. Part of me still feels that way. I answer every communication I receive, even if it is to just to say “no” or “I don’t know” or “I’ll get back to you soon.” But I have to admit that doing so is taking up more and more of my time, leaving me less and less able to accomplish the myriad tasks on my to-do list. I know that I am not alone in this. I notice that even my own friends and business associates are hard pressed to keep up and respond in a timely fashion, if at all. But it just goes against my grain to blow someone off by not responding at all. I remain determined to respond, even if it take me a little longer than it used to. And if it’s blog-mail, I always reserve the right to repond publically in a DevraDoWrite “I’ve Got Mail” post.

FAN-tastic!

Fans make all sorts of requests of performers — from the simple “please send me an autographed picture” to the absurd, such as “Can you come to my husband’s surprise party and sing happy birthday?” Once in a while, however, a request touches me for one reason or another, and I try to make it happen. I’m not talking about the tear-jerker last-wish type of requests, just a simple request like the one I got recently from a man asking if Nancy Wilson would send a letter of retirement congratulations to his buddy who has been a lifelong fan. The man making the request said “It would be one of those special things in life that makes it all worthwhile,” and while he, too, was also a lifelong fan, he asked for nothing for himself. In fact, he added, “If this cannot be done, I will understand and we will still be loyal fans.”

I don’t know why, but I decided to call the guy and find out more about him and his friend. Long story short, the guy about to retire first saw Nancy at a New York club called The Blue Morocco — it was truly at the very beginning of her career. Years later, that same man got in line with a whole bunch of women at a shopping mall in Atlanta where Nancy was promoting a line of cosmetics. He really wanted that autograph, and he got it. I took note of a few more details and called Nancy. She sent the letter, along with two copies of Men Women and Girl Singers (one for the retiree and the other for the buddy who made the request).

I wish I could have been there to see their faces and hear the reaction, but I did get an email from the buddy making the request. He wrote:

I must tell you that the last few days have been one of those rare moments where I can say that life has a funny way of bringing a person back into the fold. The meaning of that takes me back to Music and Art High where I started playing Trombone and writing seriously. From there I played in various Army Bands and with various backup bands for great legends. This went on for 25+ years. I just jam with a few friends and sit in now and then.

Reading all about your husband and how he has been associated with all my favorites (especially the ones who used to play on the CTI label), has sparked a new musical interest. I do remember some things about him from Downbeat magazine and he definitely deserves the award coming up in January. John is just a legend himself!…I am just in awe to be in touch with such royalty!

I sincerely want to thank you again for your kindness and for being down to earth which are rare qualities these days. “You can easily judge the character of others by how they treat those who can do nothing for them or to them” — M. Forbes

I had never before read or heard that quote attributed to Malcolm Forbes, but you never know what impact your actions might have. For me, these are the moments that make it all worthwhile.

Addendum: After writing the above, I received an email from the retiree himself. He said, in part:

There were probably 100 guests at my retirement luncheon with various roast jokes and friendship testimonials … all wonderful. But you can only imagine how overwhelmed I was when [my friend] presented me with a letter from my absolutely most favorite performer Nancy Wilson. I was so surprised it took me a minute or two to come around. Then I was elated … This truly touched my heart … I will treasure these gifts always. Thank you for making me feel so honored and making my retirement celebration so special!

Cliched though it may be, it’s the little things that can make the biggest difference in someone else’s life. Who have you made happy today?