Sunday, 12 July 2026

July 12, 1996: My last payday of the summer


Thirty years ago today

            On Friday it was payday and there might have been some small cheques to pick up from The Ontario College of Art and The Toronto District School Board. After that it would have been pretty dry financially. I might have busked on Bloor with Brian Haddon and then we would have performed together on the Spit Fridays open stage in the back room of the Cameron.

Saturday, 11 July 2026

Alan King


            On Friday morning I guess my steaming of the baseboards the night before had flushed out more bedbugs because there were just as many as yesterday morning. I think I need to lay down diatomaceous earth after steaming to catch them when they come out. 
            I worked out the chords for the second verse of “La complainte de Bonnot” by Boris Vian. Next is the chorus and after I have those chords it should set the pattern for the song. 
            I ran through the French text while listening to the audio of “Ça” (That), the parody of the Serge Gainsbourg song “Je t’aime. Moi non plus (I Love You. Neither Do I)” to see if I’d split the two voices correctly. I made some adjustments to my translation and now it’s ready to be uploaded to my Christian’s Translations blog. 
            I weighed 89.25 kilos before breakfast. 
            I played my Kramer during song practice and it stayed in tune most of the time. 
            Around midday I touched up the blue bliss hued paint around the outer edges of my four floral reliefs that I’d painted pink on my future bathroom mirror frame. On Sunday I’ll do the inner edges and then hopefully the mirror will be ready to mount in the bathroom on Tuesday. 
            I weighed 91.05 kilos before lunch, which is the heaviest I’ve been in the early afternoon since July 1. 
            In the afternoon I took a bike ride downtown and back. 
            I weighed 90.15 kilos at 18:00. 
            I was behind on my journal and worked on getting caught up. 
            I grilled four chicken legs and had one with a potato and gravy while watching season 10, episode 11 of The Carol Burnett Show
            During the audience warmup someone asks Carol what Rock Hudson was really like. She says he was one of the nicest people she’s ever worked with. 
            Someone asks if she’ll be teaming up with Lili Tomlin again. She says they try to get her but she’s very busy. Carol thinks Lili’s a genius. 
            In the first sketch Tim and Carol play a couple with a new baby. Tim is getting ready for work and wants breakfast but Carol has been up all night and just got the baby to sleep so she’s dead on her feet. Tim says for her to go to bed and he’ll make his own breakfast. She urges him to be very quiet so as not to wake the baby. He’s incompetent in the kitchen. plus the kitchen is falling apart. When he tries to open a cupboard it comes crashing off the wall. She comes out and shows him that the coffee was on the counter. He asks her to open a can of pears for him and she falls asleep again. He finishes opening the can and bops her in the face a few times while turning the crank, then hits her with the cupboard door. He makes a lot of noise looking for a frying pan and she shows him it’s on the stove. He gets the bacon and puts it in the pan but I guess it made his hands slippery because when he grabs one egg it flies out of his hand, another falls on the element, another flies onto the counter. A fourth one breaks open perfectly but there’s nothing inside. He says, “Must be on the pill”. Finally Carol comes out and says it will be easier for her to cook his breakfast so he can be gone sooner. He hands her the hot frying pan but he’s holding the handle and burns her hands. I guess maybe there’s an earthquake because another cupboard crashes off the wall and the baby starts crying. He says he’ll grab something on the way to work but will be home for lunch. 
            Carol introduces Alan King and says they are very old and dear friends. She asks him if he’s been sued lately. He says he’s been sued for many things he’s said on television. He says he doesn’t make up his jokes but has had to live them. They announce flights leaving every half hour for Cincinnati. “Do you know anybody that’s rushing to Cincinnati?” He mocks the slogan, “The friendly skies of United”. Are all the other airlines attacked by the Luftwaffe? He says there’s a European airline whose ad shows all the passengers dancing in the aisles. He says that’s because there’s only one toilet. There are luggage ads where the luggage is dropped out of a plan but hits the ground undamaged. They’re telling to that it’s safer to fly inside your suitcase. He says last Christmas his network gifted him with six pieces of Gucci luggage worth about $3000. He says he doesn’t think one should travel with luggage that expensive. One should just show it off to guests at home. He says everybody on an airplane is nice because they are close to their creator. But when they land at the airport they will kill each other to get at their luggage. He says he saw his Gucci luggage coming down the belt and it looked like someone had taken a knife to it. Behind it was a cardboard carton wrapped in rope and it didn’t have a scratch. he says from now on he puts his Gucci luggage inside of cardboard cartons when he flies. Alan then tackles the airline food. he says the ads show seven chefs slicing the beef Wellington but on the plane you get a diseased piece of chicken on which you can see the blackheads. He says he refuses to eat another Hawaiian nut (I guess me means macadamia nuts) because you choke on it for weeks. Inside your body it swells up to the size of hockey puck. 
            Carol comes out to move the show along but Alan protests that he doesn’t get a duet with her. He convinces her that he can sing and so they do. They bring Carol a stool and Alan asks if she’s comfortable. She asks for a stool for Mr. King and someone tosses one out to the stage. Carol gives him a piece of the music to sing and she sings an altered version of “You Say the Nicest Things” by Dick Manning and Carroll Carroll from the 1952 movie Roadhouse Nights. Alan’s parts are mostly “Yeah”. He grabs her part of the song and then they sing the rest together. 
            In the next sketch Alan plays a psychiatrist and Carol comes in as a first time patient. She tells him about a recurring dream in which she’s walking through the woods and comes upon a castle. She knocks on the door and the door opens… Alan’s phone rings. He tells the person, “The minute he gets home from school, lock him in his room”. Carol begins to tell him her dream again several times but at the same point the phone always rings and each time Alan is talking to a different person. In the second call he tells Margot that the alimony is in the mail. In the third call he tells his mistress he hasn’t been able to tell his wife about her yet. In the fourth call his daughter is calling from a commune and she’s asking for a wig because she shaved her head. In the fifth call it’s his mommy calling from the home he put her in. After he hangs up he screams that he hates his mother. He breaks down and starts telling Carol his problems and she takes his place behind the desk. 
            They do a salute to Warner Brothers. They’ve done this before but with different sketches. 
            The first sketch is a parody of the 1949 film The Fountainhead. Alan plays the architect and he’s telling Vicki that he got fired for one mistake. There are no washrooms in his entire building. 
            The second is a parody of the 1941 film They Died with Their Boots On. Harvey plays General Custer under attack with Tim by his side. Tim tells him they are outnumbered. Custer says they’ll escape in disguise. They go behind a rock and Tim comes out disguised as Custer but Custer is dressed as a Lakota warrior. 
            Carol sings the 1931 song “As Time Goes By” by Herman Hupfeld from the 1942 film Casablanca
            They do a parody of a famous scene from the 1935 film Ceiling Zero. Harvey, and Alan are arguing about which one of them while fly the plane to deliver the vital serum while Vicki telling them how important it is. I guess “ceiling zero” indicates the fog and zero visibility so it would be a dangerous flight. Harvey says she’s in love with Alan and so he’ll fly the plane. Alan says she’s in love with Harvey. Vicki says she loves them both but can’t decide. The two men knock each other out so Vicki takes the serum to go fly the plane. Then Harvey and Alan show they are faking and smile at each other. 
            There’s a parody of the 1946 movie Night and Day in which Harvey plays Cary Grant playing Cole Porter. Carol plays his fiancé Linda who is a nurse in a hospital and Harvey is a wounded soldier. When she sees him she is concerned that he keeps up his songwriting while he’s more concerned with recovery. She pushes him to write a song and brings a piano in. he throws in everything that’s happening around him and everything people say into the song. 
            Tim says the king of Warner Brothers musicals was choreographer Busby Berkeley. No matter how silly the song was he always had a spectacular way of producing it. Harvey plays an optometrist and Carol his assistant. The song seems to be called “Two of You” and the glasses make Harvey see two of Carol with Vicki as her double and then they see two of Harvey with Alan his double. The song is in a 1920s style. The dancers and Carol, Vicki, Harvey, and Alan tap dance while wearing glasses. There’s Busby Berkeley type choreography with the dancers making kaleidoscope patterns seen from above. The song might have been written for the sketch because it doesn’t turn up in a search. 
            Alan King played drums in a band in his teens. At 14 he competed on Major Bowe’s Amateur Hour as a singer. He didn’t win first prize but toured with the show. He dropped out of school at 15 to become a rimshot comedian in the Catskills. Then did standup in a burlesque house in Canada while fighting as a professional boxer until a fighter named King broke his nose. That’s when he took on the last name King. His nickname became “The last angry man of the suburbs”. Jerry Stiller called him the Jewish Will Rogers. He made his film debut in Hit the Deck in 1955. He often got sued by airlines and insurance companies for mentioning them negatively in his routines. He frequently appeared on Ed Sullivan and Johnny Carson (for whom he became a frequent guest host). He hoisted the Academy awards in 1972. He co-starred in The Girl He Left Behind, On the Fiddle, Bye Bye Braverman, The Anderson Tapes, Just Tell Me What You Want, Cat’s Eye, Sunshine State, and Memories of Me. He created the Laugh Well Program to send comedians into hospitals to entertain patients. he created Alan King’s Tennis Classic in Las Vegas. He said women live longer than men because they aren’t married to women. He wrote Help! I’m a Prisoner in a Chine Bakery in 1964, Is Salami and Eggs Better Than Sex?, Name Dropping, Alan King’s Great Jewish Joke Book, and Matzoh Balls for Breakfast.

July 11, 1996: After the streetcars got empty I carried some furniture to my new place


Thirty years ago today

            On Thursday night after the streetcars got emptier I started making trips from my old place in Little Portugal, carrying my biggest pieces of furniture each time, to the new place at Spadina and Queen.

Friday, 10 July 2026

Johnny Mercer


            On Thursday morning when I checked for bedbugs there were still a lot more after the steaming. It’s as if the steamer itself is spawning them but I guess the heat is forcing them out from deep in the wall. 
            I worked out the chords for the first verse and the first line of the second verse of “La complainte de Bonnot” by Boris Vian. The second verse has the same chords as the first except for the end where it goes lower. 
            I ran through the French text while listening to the audio of “Ça” (That), the parody of the Serge Gainsbourg song “Je t’aime. Moi non plus (I Love You. Neither Do I)” to see if I’d split the two voices correctly. I had to split them up some more and so that changes the meaning slightly and I had to revise my translation again. I haven’t quite finished that but I will tomorrow and then I’ll check with the audio again. 
            I weighed 89.3 kilos before breakfast. 
            I worked on getting caught up in my journal. 
            I weighed 90.65 kilos before lunch. 
            In the afternoon I took a bike ride downtown and stopped at Freshco on the way back. The cherries these days are still cheap so I got seven bags. I also bought a pack of Quebec strawberries, some bananas, a jar of natural peanut butter, a pack of Full City Dark coffee, and some 2 in 1 shampoo. When I got home I realized I’d forgotten to buy Sponge Towels so I rode back to Freshco to get a pack.
            I weighed 89.9 kilos at 18:50. 
            I was behind on my journal so I worked on getting caught up. 
            I had a potato with gravy and my last two strips of finger beef while watching season 10, episode 9 of The Carol Burnett Show
            During the audience warmup someone asks Carol why all of her gowns have pockets. She says she specifically asks Bob Mackie to give them pockets because she never knows what to do with her hands. 
            Someone asks Carol what alternative career she would have chosen. She says a school teacher for college boys. 
            In the first sketch Tim’s old man character is the counter person and the cook at a diner when Harvey sits down to order a hot dog and a chocolate milkshake. Tim keeps forgetting the order and so Harvey grabs his pad from him and writes it down. Tim asks, “What’s a hot dag?” When that’s cleared up Tim asks what he wants on it and he says he wants it plain. Tim asks if he wants a bun. Harvey asks, “What’s a hotdog without a bun?” Tim says, “A lonely weenie”. Tim pulls the hot dog out of the steamer but there are 12 of them linked and he doesn’t have the strength to break one off so he lowers 11 of them into the garbage disposal. Tim pulls the fries out of the hot grease with his bare hand but doesn’t feel burned until Harvey points it out to him. Tim is struggling with a box of buns while Harvey is holding the wiener. Harvey puts the frank in his vest pocket and takes a bun, then reaches for the hot dog but pulls out a cigar and puts it on the bun and bites into it. He blames Tim for that and abandons the idea of having a hot dog. He just asks for the chocolate shake. Tim puts a scoop in the metal cup, adds milk and chocolate. Tim asks if he wants it thick or thin and Harvey says thick. As he struggles with the scoop, Harvey is cracking up. Tim puts it under the mixer and pours in in a glass. Harvey asks why he couldn’t have been that efficient with the hot dog. Harvey takes a drink and spits it out, saying it’s horrible. Tim says it probably needs more ice cream and gets another scoop. But then Harvey looks and sees he made the shake with mashed potatoes. Tim says in that case he’ll have to charge him for the Blue Plate Special. 
            Ken Barry does a number with a group of male dancers and the scene is a patio bar where he and the other guys are harassing and inappropriately touching a waiter. Ken sings “Love Stolen” by Alfred Uhry and Robert Waldman from the 1975 musical The Robber Bridegroom. In the dance, a lot of female dancers are grabbed as if against their will. Eventually one very tall woman turns the tables on Ken.
            They do a parody of Mildred Pierce called Mildred Fierce with Carol playing the Joan Crawford part. She comes into a police station to confess to the murder of her husband. Tim takes down her confession and so she tells the story, starting from just after her first husband left her. She breaks the news to her spoiled daughter Vida (played by Vicki) who only cares about lost money. She asks her mother how a no talent klutz like her is ever gonna make any money. After three years Mildred is making money but Vida is embarrassed because she has a chain of restaurants called Mildred’s Fatburgers so she runs away. Monty Slick arrives (played by Harvey) to sell her one of his buildings for another restaurant. Vida returns and is impressed with Monty the lecherous playboy she’s heard of. She encourages her mother to marry Monty so they can be rich. Monty says he’s not interested in marriage. Vida reminds him flirtatiously they he’d also be living with her and so he agrees to marry Mildred. He embraces Mildred and kisses Vida at the same time. Returning to the present, Tim informs Mildred that they caught the real killer and Vida is brought in. Mildred continues telling the story. She is married to Monty and when she comes home from work she catches him making out with Vida. Vida tells her they are getting married and running away together. Mildred leaves but then Monty tells Vida he never said he’d marry her and won’t. Vida grabs a gun and shoots him. Mildred returns and agrees to take the blame to save Vida. Returning to the present, Mildred tell Tim that this is only Vida’s first murder and she’s sorry. Tim says he’ll let her go this time but don’t do this again. But we hear Vida being unrepentant and on the way out of the police station Mildred shoots her, then comes back to confess to Tim. 
            They do a mini-musical built on the lyrics of Johnny Mercer. Sam (played by Harvey) pretends to play piano and sings “Laura” with music by David Raksin from the 1945 musical Laura. Carol plays Laura who waits tables in a place owned by Eddy who Laura is in love with. But Eddy (played by Ken) is in love with the singer Tangerine (played by Vicki). Laura sings the 1942 song “Not Mine” with music by Victor Schertzinger. Eddy sings the 1941 song “Tangerine” also composed by Schertzinger. Eddy tells Laura he’s going to ask Tangerine to marry him but he’s nervous. She tells him what to say by singing, “Namely You” with music by gene De Paul from the 1954 musical Li’l Abner. But when Tangerine walks in he sings, “My Night to Howl” with music by Robert Emmett Dolan from the 1964 musical Foxy. Tangerine does her stage act while singing, “Any Place I Hang My Hat is My Home” with music by Harold Arlen from the 1946 musical St. Louis Woman. Laura gets Eddy to give Tangerine the ring and then she goes off to party with some customers. Eddy sings more of “Tangerine”. Sam sings the 1944 song “Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive” with music by Harold Arlen. Then Laura sings it to Eddy. But then Tangerine comes back. Sam sings to Laura “Namely You”. But then Eddy joins in and gives the ring to Laura. They kiss and leave together. Sam sings “Laura”, then Tangerine sits with her arm around him. 
            Johnny Mercer learned to dance from Arthur Murray. He started as a singer and songwriter for Paul Whitemena. He started writing songs for and acting in movies in 1935. He teamed up with Hoagy Carmichael in 1933 and they co-wrote “Lazybones”, which earned them each $1250 ($32, 223 today). He moved to Hollywood in 1935 to write songs for movies. He wrote the song “Hooray for Hollywood” for the movie Hollywood Hotel. He wrote the words and music to “I’m An Old Cowhand” and it was his first hit. He got his first Academy Award nomination in 1938 for “Jeepers Creepers”. The same year he co-wrote “You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby”. In 1941 he started writing songs with Harold Arlen and their first hit was “Blues in the Night”. They wrote “One for My Baby”, “Come Rain or Come Shine”, and “That Old Black Magic”. , He co-founded Capital Records in 1942 for $25,000 and sold it to EMI in 1955 for $20 million. In 1946 he won his first Oscar for “On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe”. In 1951 he won another Academy Award with Carmichael for “In the Cool Cool Cool of the Evening”. He wrote “Moon River”, “Days of Wine and Roses” in 1961 earning him his fourth and fifth Oscars. He wrote the horrible English version of “Les feuilles mortes” called “Autumn Leaves”. In 1965 he wrote the English lyrics for “Der Sommerwind” and it became a hit for Frank Sinatra. He wrote the lyrics for more than 1,500 songs. He was nominated for 19 Oscars and won 4. He was sometimes Judy Garland’s lover. A fan named Sadie Vimmerstedt once wrote Johnny a letter telling him that “I Wanna Be Around to Pick Up the Pieces When Somebody Breaks Your Heart” would be a great title for a song. Mercer agreed and wrote the song, which became a hit and he shared half the royalties with Sadie. He co-wrote and “Something’s Gotta Give”. I think Mercer was overrated as a lyricist. I steamed my baseboards again.



July 10, 1996: I carried my dresser to the new place


Thirty years ago today

            On Wednesday evening I probably performed on the Art Bar reading series open stage. After that I might have gone back to my place at 111 Sheridan Avenue and taken my dresser, carried it to the streetcar and transported it to my new place at 428 Queen Street West.

Thursday, 9 July 2026

Dinah Shore


            On Wednesday morning I was hoping that my steaming of the baseboards near my bed the night before had wiped out the bedbugs but when I checked there were more than usual. Apparently this is normal because it drove the ones out that were too far in to be killed on contact. 
            I worked out the chords for three quarters of the first verse of “La complainte de Bonnot” by Boris Vian. I should have that verse done on Thursday and therefore probably also the all of the second verse. Then there’s the chorus. 
            I finished revising my translation of “Ça” (That), the parody of the Serge Gainsbourg song “Je t’aime. Moi non plus (I Love You. Neither Do I)”. I’ll run through the French text with the audio tomorrow to see if I split the two voices correctly. 
            I weighed 89.6 kilos before breakfast. 
            I played my Martin during song practice for the last of four sessions and it always went out of tune. 
            I finished painting the four floral reliefs on my future bathroom mirror frame with the “crazy in love” shade of pink. On Friday I’ll touch up the main parts of the frame with blue bliss. If I don’t smudge the pink while doing so, on Sunday I’ll mount the mirror. Once it’s mounted I might see the need in the different light for pink and blue touch ups. 
            I weighed 90.8 kilos before lunch, which is the heaviest I’ve been in the early afternoon since last Wednesday. 
            In the afternoon I took a bike ride downtown and back. 
            I weighed 89.5 kilos at 17:55. 
            I worked on getting caught up in my journal. 
            I was thinking that it would be too hot to cook but it cooled down just enough. I made pizza on a slice of multigrain sandwich bread with rosée tomato sauce, tomato pesto, oven fries, and five-year-old cheddar. I had it with a glass of Creemore lager while watching season 10, episode 8 of The Carol Burnett Show
            Carol says her favourite actor of all time is James Stewart but she introduces a young actor in the audience who is her favourite actor today: Anthony Hopkins. 
            Paul (played by Harvey) and Celeste (played by Carol) are two executives who meet for what appears to be a business lunch. Paul presents Celeste with an agenda and calls her attention to item 1, which is his proposal of marriage to her. He says, “We’ve been enjoying each other’s company with escalating regularity since fiscal 74 with increasing profits”. Celeste adds, “Except for that one dip in the second quarter of this year”. He provides her with various position papers for her to consider, titled: “Children”, “Religion”, and “Your Mother”. She wants him to go over the “Children” file with her. He’s calculated the optimum number of children at 1.3. She wants to know why he thinks marriage would increase their marginal utility over the long term. He says, “Based on an analysis of available data, I love you and you love me”. She makes some notes: “You love me and, what was it? I love you”. She says regarding the physical aspects of their relationship she has some reservations because of the second quarter dip. He says, “You must agree that I rallied during the following quarter”. She says it was a sluggish recovery at best. He goes to the washroom and she asks the waiter for the telephone. She punches the number and then in a little girl voice says, “Mommie he popped the question!” 
            Dinah Shore sings the 1975 song “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover” by Paul Simon. 
            Tim (in his old man character) plays a butcher. Harvey comes in and asks for a quarter kilo of ground round. Tim tells him to take a number even though he’s the only customer. Harvey protests but he insists. Harvey gets number 28. Tim calls for #12 a couple of times, then goes back to the number indicator and calls out #13. Harvey insists on being served. Tim tries to reach under the counter for the round but can’t so he crawls in and swats a fly while he’s in there. He gets the round then puts it in the grinder but doesn’t have the strength to turn the crank. Harvey tries to help him and gets the crank started but his tie gets stuck while Tim keeps turning it. Tim takes a scissors and cuts Harvey’s tie. Harvey decides instead on a half a kilo of hotdogs. Tim tries to wrap them up but doesn’t have the strength to tear the butcher’s paper and ends up wrapping himself up. Harvey just decides to wear the hotdogs around his neck. He asks for a quarter kilo of Swiss Cheese. Tim starts playing the cheese like a flute, blowing into one hole and fingering the others. Tim accidentally pulls Harvey’s pants off and so he is standing there in his underwear when a lady walks in and flees in shock. She returns with a cop and Harvey is arrested for indecent exposure. 
            Carol says recently Gone With the Wind made its TV debut. They’ve put together a mini-version called Went With the Wind. Carol plays Starlet O’Hara. Vicki plays the excitable maid Sissy but thankfully not in blackface. She’s always shouting “Miss Starlet! Miss Starlet!” and Starlet has to slap her face. Tim plays Brashly Wilks and Dinah plays his cousin Melody. Starlet is in love with Brashly and considers Melody a rival. She tells Melody to stick her head in the punch bowl because she’s sure it could use more sugar. Melody does as she’s told. Brashly informs Starlet that he married Melody this afternoon. Then Starlet meets Rats Butler (in a great imitation of Clark Gable by Harvey). He tells her that he and her are cut from the same dirty cloth and if it weren’t for the war he’d marry her in a minute. She asks, “What war?” Then Sissy comes up and shouts that war has been declared. Rats says he’s going to war and asks Starlet for something to remember her by so she punches him in the gut. Both Rats and Brashly leave. Melody announces that she’s pregnant and that the baby’s coming now. Sissy says she doesn’t know nothin bout birthin no babies but Starlet slaps her and she says she’ll try. A Union soldier comes to the door to ask for a match so Sissy gives him some. Next thing they see is Atlanta burning. Starlet gives a speech while Sissy provides backing vocals. Four years later the plantation is run down and Sissy’s wearing rags as she announces that the war is over. A Yankee soldier comes to collect $300 back taxes on Terra. Starlet hits him with a chair and knocks him out. Brashly arrives and Starlet asks him for the $300 but he tells her his money went with the wind. She’s told that Rats Butler became a millionaire during the war. Starlet makes a dress out of her drapes including the curtain rod. Starlet comes down the stairs wearing her ridiculous curtain dress. Rats compliments it and she says she saw it in the window and couldn’t resist. He asks her to marry him and she says yes. The union soldier wakes up and turns out to be a minister so he performs the ceremony by saying I now pronounce you man and wife. She pays the Yankee the $300 and tells Sissy to show him the door. She says, “For $300 I’ll show him anything he wants”. Rats carries Starlet up the stairs and then he’s pooped. Starlet tries to kiss Brashly and Rats catches them . He swings at Brashly and punches Starlet, knocking her down the stairs. Melody stands at the top of the stairs and says she’s dying then collapses. She says she wants to talk to Starlet, who gets up and climbs the stairs. Melody wants Starlet to know how she feels then pushes her back down the stairs. Melody dies and Brashly leaves. Rats says he’s leaving Starlet. She asks what she’s going to do and he says, “Frankly my dear I don’t gi…” then she shuts the door on him. She asks Sissy what she’s going to do. Sissy slaps her and says she doesn’t give a damn. 
            The final musical sketch begins with the dancers moving to the 1928 song “Basin Street Blues” by Spencer Williams. Carol, Vicki and Dinah sing the song. Harvey pretends to play the trumpet then sings the 1926 song “The Birth of the Blues” by Ray Henderson, Buddy DeSylva, and Lew Brown. Dinah flirts with Harvey while singing her 1942 hit “The Mad About Him Sad About Him Howe Can I Be Glad Without Him Blues” by Larry Markes and Dick Charles. Harvey licks Dinah’s nose. Vickie flirts with him while singing the 1917 song “A Good Man is Hard to Find” by Eddie Green. Carol pushes her away and sings “I Ain’t Got Nobody” from 1911, which has disputed authorship. Then one of the dancers does a seductive dance and lures Harvey away. carol, Vicki and Dinah sing the 1920 song “Wang Wang Blues” by Henry Busse, Gussie Meuller, and Buster Johnson. They end with “Basin Street Blues”. 
             Dinah Shore was a cheerleader in high school. She majored in Sociology in college. While still in college she took voice and acting lessons and sang on the radio. After graduation she moved to New York. She made her first TV appearance in an experimental broadcast in 1937. She made her national radio debut in 1939 on Ben Bernie’s Orchestra. She sang with Xavier Cugat’s orchestra and recorded with him as well. She signed a recording contract with RCA in 1940. That year she became a featured vocalist on the radio show The Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street. The same year she became a regular on Eddie Cantor’s Time to Smile. She starred in 7 radio series from 1941 to 1954. She made her film debut in 1943 in Thank Your Lucky Stars. She was the first entertainer to visit the troops on the front lines during WWII. Her first #1 hit was Blues in the Night. Her song “Buttons and Bows” was #1 for ten weeks and the most popular song of 1948. “The Gypsy” and “The Anniversary Song” were also #1 hits. She had a string of 80 charted hits from 1940 to 1957. She hosted the radio show Birdseye Open House from 1943 to 1946. She co-starred in Up in Arms, Belle of the Yukon, Make Mine Music, Fun and fancy Free, Aaron Slick from Punkin Crick, She made her commercial TV debut on The Ed Wynn Show in 1949. She was the first female star to have her own prime time variety show, The Dinah Shore Show from 1951 to 1960, for which she won a Peabody Award in 1957. She hosted The Dinah Shore Chevy Show from 1956 to 1963. Her talk show Dinah lasted from 1974 to 1980. Starting in 1971 when she was 55 and he was 35 she had a 6 year love affair with Burt Reynolds. She wrote a cookbook called Someone’s in the Kitchen with Dinah. I steamed the bedroom again. When I picked up the steamer hot water on the top around the cap spilled on my right hand and scalded my index finger. It was a bit sore for the rest of the night. I used the narrower needlepoint attachment to get deeper under the baseboards near the bed.







July 9, 1996: I hosted my Orgasmic Alphabet Orgy writers open stage


Thirty years ago today

            On Tuesday night as always I hosted my Orgasmic Alphabet Orgy writers open stage in the Art Bar of the Gladstone Hotel at 1214 Queen Street West.