Friday, 10 July 2026

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.

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

Kay Cole


            On Tuesday morning I went to bed after 2:30 and didn’t sleep before getting up at 5:00. Yoga is not a substitute for sleep but it helps. 
            I worked out the chords for the first line and a half of “La complainte de Bonnot” by Boris Vian.
            I revised some more of my translation of “Ça” (That), a parody of the Serge Gainsbourg song “Je t’aime. Moi non plus (I Love You. Neither Do I)”. I might have it finished on Wednesday. 
            I weighed 89.05 kilos before breakfast. 
            I played my Martin during song practice for the third of four sessions and as usual it was out of tune constantly. 
            At about 13:35 I left to go up the street to Family Dentistry for my bi-annual checkup. Dr. Singh fixed a few of my fillings and we were done in half an hour. My next check-up is in January 12. 
            I rode over to Home Hardware where I bought the Dirt Devil Handheld Steamer that I was told they would be getting yesterday. It cost $62.14 after tax and hopefully it will kill my bedbugs. 
            I weighed 89.05 kilos at 14:50, which is the lightest I’ve been in the early afternoon since May 20.
            I took a siesta and slept an extra 20 minutes. 
            It was too late to take a bike ride. 
            I weighed 90.15 kilos at 17:45. That’s the hardest I’ve been in the scale in the evening since June 29 but not as hard. 
            I was caught up in my journal at 20:14. 
            I digitized my cassette tape of Rob Siciliano’s Heckle Night, recorded in Slough, England in the early 1990s. It’s only fifteen minutes long so I recorded both sides through my audio interface to Audacity and then extracted it to my hard drive. Tomorrow I’ll digitize my feature at Fat Albert’s in 1996 accompanied by Brian Haddon on recorder. 
            I used the steamer for the first time. I was supposed to wait for the green light but when it came on, at the same time the red light was still on. I didn’t know if I should wait for the red light to go off or if it just stays on so I just started. In the beginning it spit out a splash of water before there was a steady stream of steam. Considering the little bit of water the tank holds at 250 ml, it produces a lot of steam. I blasted the spaces under the baseboards a few times. 
            I had a potato with gravy and two strips of finger beef while watching season 10. episode 7 of The Carol Burnett Show
            Four of the players from A Chorus Line are in the audience. They are there to see Kay Cole’s guest appearance. Carol encourages everybody to go see A Chorus Line. 
            A white guy with an afro asks Carol if she still gets stage fright. She says when she does her hair looks just like his. 
            A teenager asks her to do Nora Desmond but Carol says she needs the drag. She asks the kid if they know what “drag” is and they say it’s a cigarette. Carol explains that it’s the costume. 
            A girl wants a kiss from Tim Conway and a guy wants a handshake. Tim pretends to be awkward about it. 
            In the first sketch Harvey plays a person pretending to be paralyzed from the waist down after supposedly having been run over by Carol. If he wins against her she and her husband will lose their house, their car, and their life savings. Carol comes to his door to apologize and says he deserves everything he can get from them. He mentions that he just spoke to his lawyer on the phone. She asks if she can use it to call her husband and then she notices that it is sitting on the shelf, too far for someone who is paralyzed from the waist down in a wheelchair to reach. She tickles his foot with a feather and if he’s paralyzed he shouldn’t feel anything. He starts laughing but says it’s at a joke he just remembered. She offers him the chicken soup she brought but he says he doesn’t trust her so she has some, begins choking and convulsing then falls motionless on the floor. He gets up from his wheelchair to investigate and Carol gets up to catch him in his scam. They struggle, then he falls backward ending up with a real broken neck and legs. 
            Kay Cole comes out and Carol, Harvey, Vicki and Tim are there to greet her and offer support because this is her TV debut. Carol says no matter how many live performances one has done the cameras are pretty frightening. Kay says to the audience, “Aren’t they nice?” Harvey tells her she should talk to the cameras and not the audience. The regular cast are arguing among themselves as to how Kay should proceed until Kay asserts that she’s just going to be herself and so they leave her to do her song. 
            Kay sings and dances to “Boys and Girls Like You and Me” by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II from the 1943 musical Oklahoma. 
            In the Mama’s Family sketch Mickey Hart (played by Tim) has his boss Ed, (played by Harvey) Ed’s wife Eunice (played by Carol), and her Mama (played by Vicki) over to his tiny place to celebrate his fifth anniversary of working for Ed. He says he’s never had any guests in his room before. Eunice says none of her’s and Ed’s wedding anniversaries have ever gotten Ed so hopped up as anticipating this party. Mama says she hasn’t seen anything this cozy since she visited her Aunt Elizabeth in her trailer. The family starts arguing and Mickey calls it horsing around and says he loves it because he never had a family. He ran away from his aunt when he was 14. Mickey has ordered Chinese food from Kim’s down the street so he leaves to pick it up. After he’s gone Mama complains about how she got all dressed up to sit in a rat trap. She says they shouldn’t have even come into this neighbourhood without a police escort. “There’s every colour of the rainbow livin on this block!” (That’s the first hint we’ve gotten in the history of this character that she’s racist). She says to Eunice, “I never expected anything like this! I thought your place was a disaster area!” Mama refuses to taste the dip that Mickey made and she chooses to drink her beer from the can. She says there’s not telling where his hands have been and what’s growing in his glasses. Ed argues that Mickey has been an asset to his business so Eunice asks if that’s true how come he cut $5 a week from her food budget. Mama picks up one of Mickey’s magazines and points out that he doesn’t even take the trouble to hide his smut. Ed tells her that National Geographics aren’t smut. Mama says she used to catch Eunice’s father looking at the pictures of naked women in National Geographics. Mickey returns with the Chinese takeout and says Kim was surprised he had company and called him the Lone Ranger except that in imitating Kim, Mickey switches the “L” and the “R”. Eunice is surprised that Mickey can afford to eat Chinese food since Ed never takes his family out to one. Mama says her Aunt Francis had a friend who went into a Chinese restaurant and never come back out. She adds that they probably drugged her and took her off in a boat or something. Mama says the food looks pretty good. Mickey says what’s a raise for if you can’t spend it on people you care for? Eunice asks, “A what?” Mickey repeats, “A raise”. Ed puts his hand on Mickey's shoulder to try to signal for him to shut up, but Mickey says, “Imagine how surprised I was when the chief laid an extra $5 a week on me!” Eunice blows up and Mama tells her to calm down. Eunice asks, “Are you married to a man who takes the bread out of his family’s mouths and gives it to a stooge?” Mama says she told her she was gonna come to grief if she married Ed. Eunice says she had no choice since living with her was a living hell. Mama says, “I didn’t come over to this god forsaken part of the city to sit in this pigsty and be abused!” Mickey says, “Wanna try the pea pods?” Mama says, “Shut up you sawed off little weirdo!” Mama storms out and says she’s taking a bus if she doesn’t get mugged first. Eunice tells Ed to drive them home. Ed tosses her the keys and says he’ll grab a taxi later. Eunice says, “That’s all I need is for you to throw away more money on account of this twerp!” Eunice tells Ed it’s either her or Mickey. Ed tells her to drive carefully. Eunice leaves and Ed sits down to enjoy Chinese food with Mickey. Eunice comes back in, puts all the Chinese food in a box and says, “At least my sons are gonna have a good meal!” and then she leaves. 
            Carol, Vicki and Kay sing a medley of rain songs. Carol sings “Here’s That Rainy Day” by Jimmy Van Heusen and Johnny Burke from the 1953 musical Carnival In Flanders. Vicki sings the 1966 song “Cloudy” by Paul Simon and Bruce Woodley. Carol and Kay join in. Kay sings “Soon it’s Gonna Rain” by Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt from the 1960 musical The Fantasticks. They all sing the 1932 song “Rain on the Roof” by Ann Ronell. Carol sings the 1928 song “I Get the Blues When It Rains” by Harry Stoddard and Marcy Klauber. The dancers lip sync the 1927 song “Rain” by Eugene Ford. Carol, Vicki and Kay sing the 1971 song “Rainy Days and Mondays” by Paul Williams and Roger Nichols. Kay and Carol sing the 1941 song “When the Sun Comes Out” by Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler. Carol finishes “Here’s That Rainy Day”. 
            Kay Cole was seen in a ballet class at the age of 6 by a director who asked her to audition for his show Me Candido. She made her Broadway debut as Sad Girl in Bye Bye Birdie in 1961. She originated Urchin in The Roar of the Greasepaint the Smell of the Crowd in 1965. She originated the role of Crissy in Hair in 1968. She played Mick Jagger and Joan Baez in National Lampoon’s Lemmings in 1973. She originated the role of Maggie in the 1975 Broadway production of A Chorus Line. She originated Strawberry Fields in the musical Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band in 1975. She directed the plays Desperate Writers in 2007, and The Dining Room in 2009. She directed and choreographed I Only Have Eyes for You in 2005. She choreographed Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks in 2001 and 2003 and also the film adaptation. She released her debut solo album Souvenir in 2020.

July 8, 1996: I carried my mattress to the new place


Thirty years ago today

            On Monday night I carried my mattress from 111 Sheridan to the streetcar and transported it to my new place at 428 Queen West. I spent my first night in my new home.

Tuesday, 7 July 2026

Pierre Bernard: The Omnipotent Om


            On Monday morning I looked at the chords that I found yesterday for “La complainte de Bonnot” by Boris Vian and they were the same as what I found when I transcribed the lyrics a few years ago, except that there were chords for the intro among the new set. I copied those down but then I worked out the intro on my own. Tomorrow I’ll start on the first verse and see if I agree with the uploader’s chord choices. 
            I revised some more of my translation of “Ça” (That), a parody of the Serge Gainsbourg song “Je t’aime. Moi non plus (I Love You. Neither Do I)” based on the separation of the two voices that I got from the audio yesterday. 
            I weighed 89.15 kilos before breakfast. 
            I called P. Carito Plumbing and Heating about my leaking toilet. The guy said someone would come by at 11:00. Later though he left a message that his helper was having a very busy morning so he gave me his number and told me to call him in the early afternoon. 
            I played my Martin during song practice for the second of four sessions and it always went out of tune. 
            I called the number Carito gave me and the guy said to call him at 13:30. I shaved and showered and then called him. He said he’d be over soon. 
            I weighed 89.9 kilos before lunch. 
            Alfredo came at around 14:00. I recognized him from when he bled my radiators a year and a half ago. He’s still huffing and puffing even though he’s the same age as I am. When he walked into my place he said, “Your landlord doesn’t do any maintenance”. He tightened something up on the toilet pipe at the back but said it’s mostly condensation caused by warm summer air hitting cold pipes. Whatever he did seems to have fixed the problem and he only charged me $30. 
            In the afternoon I took a bike ride downtown and back. 
            I weighed 89.3 kilos at 17:50. 
            I was caught up in my journal at 19:29. 
            I digitized side 2 of Tom Smarda’s home recorded cassette tape of his songs. I played the cassette with my Sony stereo cassette deck through my Scarlett audio interface to Audacity and then extracted it to my hard drive. Tomorrow I’ll digitize my tape of Rob Siciliano’s Heckle Night
            I had a potato with gravy and a strip of finger beef while watching season 10, episode 6 of The Carol Burnett Show
            During the audience warmup an 11 year old boy asks Carol what specials she’ll be having this year. She reminds him that he’s not supposed to be there if he’s under 14. She mentions her special with Beverly Sills at the Met. 
            Someone asks Carol to name her favourite actress. She says Glenda Jackson and Shirley MacLaine. 
            Someone asks how’s yoga? The woman says her sister has a class with Carol’s yoga teacher Susanne. This would be Suzanne Stern and some of her classes were held for a small group in Carol’s home. Suzanne was trained by Clara Spring, who co-wrote a book in 1959 called Yoga for Today with Madeleine Goss. Spring studied under Blanche Devries (a former showgirl). Blanche studied under her husband Pierre Bernard (Born Perry Baker) who came to be known as the Great Oom, the Omnipotent Oom, and the Magnificent Oom. He trained in yoga for 18 years under a wandering yogi from Calcutta named Sylvais Hamati who he met in Nebraska at the age of 13. They travelled to San Francisco and started The Tantrik Order. I’m assuming that Hamati died and Bernard took control of the Tantrik Order because there is no information about his teacher after that. He was essentially kicked out of San Francisco and relocated in a 120 acre compound in Nyack, New York where nighttime baseball games were played in drag. His students tended to be rich women (including some Vanderbilts) and his fees were high. He spent three months in prison for abduction of 18 year old Gertrude Leo who he told he was a god. There were accusations that he was running a white slave ring and rumours of ritualistic sex and opium use. His reputation as a rascal was perhaps tempered by his marriage to Blanche. He passed on his yoga empire to her when he died and she eventually relocated to New York City where she started The Living Arts Center. 
            Someone asks Carol if she plans to do another cameo appearance on All My Children. Carol played Verla Grubbs, the long lost and secret daughter of Langley Wallingford. She says she’d love to but they shoot the show in New York and she would have to have an occasion to travel there from LA. Carol announces that they are going to find out that Kitty’s mother isn’t her real one but an actor whose been hired to keep Kitty away from Link. 
            Someone asks how many brothers does Eunice have. So far there have been three: One was Philip played by Roddy McDowell, another was Jack played by Tommy Smothers, and a third was played by Alan Alda. 
            In the Mr. Tudball-Mrs. Wiggins sketch, Mr. Tudball has a buzzer to unlock his office placed under Mrs. Wiggins’s desk. He shows her a yellow badge and says for her not to buzz anybody in unless they are wearing one. He buzzes her into his office to show her how it works and after she goes in she closes the door and sits at his desk. He tries to buzz himself in but it has to be buzzing when it’s opened and he can’t reach the buzzer and the door at the same time. Finally shouts for her to open the door. He pretends he’s a salesman coming in to see Tudball without a badge and asks if he can see Mr. Tudball. She looks through the window at Tudball’s office and tells him Tudball isn’t in. He tries it again and pretends he’s both the salesman and Tudball and Tudball says he can come in so she buzzes him in. He tries to explain that she’s not supposed to do that but says it’s like trying to teach a mermaid to do the splits. He makes it clear he doesn’t want anyone to come in without a badge then, no longer pretending to be a salesman he asks her to open the door. She asks to see his badge but his badge is in his office so she refuses to buzz him in. He tells her to go get him a coffee and while she’s gone her opens her office window to go out on the ledge to his office window to get into his office and get his badge but his window is locked. Wiggins comes back and closes the window and locks it. She sees Tudball is gone so she goes to lunch, leaving Tudball stuck on the ledge. 
            Ted plays Mr. Kramer who is the patient in an operating room with Vicki as the nurse. Harvey is the doctor and he arrives with Roddy who plays a filmmaker wanting to shoot the operation. Kramer is given knockout gas with a mask and a bubble bag that expands and contracts when he breathes. Roddy tells Kramer to take quicker breaths to make it more dramatic. After several changes Roddy wants to make the surgery more exciting Harvey says they are now going in for the gallstones. Roddy says that’s not an interesting enough surgery. So Harvey says to Kramer, “Your first name is Harry isn’t it? Have you ever thought of changing it to Harriet?” Kramer runs out the door. 
            Vicki sings a very depressing song called “Hollywood Seven” by Gloria Sklerov and Harry Lloyd about a person who moves to Hollywood to be a star and puts herself in a hotel while waiting for the call. She starts to run out of money and begins to turn tricks until one of them murders her. It was an Australian top 20 hit for Australian singer John English in 1976. 
            In London, Carol and Roddy enter an elevator together. They plays the same characters they played in a previous sketch in which their dialogue consists of single words for each person. They recognize each other and he reminds her that they already had an affair and even though they are both married they decide they would like to meet for another picnic but their schedules conflict. 
            Carol and Harvey play a couple with wicked hangovers after a party they don’t remember. But Harvey finds a bra and realizes he must have had sex with someone at the party. He confesses to Carol that he was with someone but recalls she was a dog. Vicki comes in without a hangover and tells Carol she remembers everything that happened and tells her that she and Harvey had sex. Now Carol is relieved but not so happy about the “dog” part. 
            Carol, Harvey, and Roddy do a musical tribute to silent films that is very similar to one that was done in season 5, episode 3 with Steve Lawrence instead of Roddy. Carol plays Buster Keaton and Roddy and Harvey play Laurel and Hardy in competing ice cream businesses, with each sabotaging the other’s and with the Keystone cops played by the Ernie Flatt Dancers.



July 7, 1996: My daughter and I carried a few things to my new place


Thirty years ago today 

            On Sunday my daughter and I carried a couple of my things to the new place at 428 Queen West. Marjorie told us where the nearest playground was. It was a little further away than the one near my old place. It was in Alexandra Park off Bathurst and south of Dundas.