sometimes, it is not easy to respond and perhaps better to stay quiet. However, as we are not physically present in the same room, where a simple nodding or eye contact may suffice, I give it a try.
A very special thank you for sharing this. It amazes me how few words it takes to say everything.NJS wrote: "We'll know more about it in the morning."
Thank you for introducing me to Lena Zavaroni. What a voice, what a painful end. Good to know we can still admire her.NJS wrote:And our fragility too:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8sewohu ... re=related
RIP Lena Zavaroni. RIP.
I chose Lena Zavaroni because there was a time when she was at the top of the arc in terms of popularity and certainly vivacity. Then, she slowly killed herself, dying of self-imposed starvation at the age of nearly thirty six. I didn't choose her to brighten anyone's morning.
NJS
"Excuse my dust" - incredible self fulfilling prophecy... Dorothy Parker would love it.NJS wrote:There's an interesting aside about Dorothy Parker's dust. She was cremated in 1967 and the ashes were left at the crematorium for six years and then sent to her lawyer's offices, where they remained in a filing cabinet for fifteen years. Someone then remembered them and they were given to the charity which was her principal beneficiary and they interred them, on 20th October 1988, in a dedicated memorial garden, under a plaque which mentions "Excuse my dust". An alternative epitaph which she gave herself was "Have this one on me".
Contemplating about Dorothy, dark humour, Lena, the beauty of the human voice and the fragility of our existence, I found something you might perhaps like. Next Saturday October 8, it will be 58 years since the premature death of Kathleen Ferrier.
David
http://youtu.be/dX7FjQu1uss
http://youtu.be/WjvHg9cBriw