Category Archives: Today’s Birthday

Thought of the Day 7.24.12

“Never interrupt someone doing what you said couldn’t be done.”

–Amelia Earhart

Famous aviator Amelia Earhart is thought to ha...

Famous aviator Amelia Earhart is thought to have crash landed on Nikumaroro Island when she disappeared in 1937. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Amelia Mary Earhart was born on this day in Atchison, Kansas in 1897. Today is the 115th anniversary of her birth.

She was unimpressed with the first plane she saw, a rickety thing of “rusty wire and wood” at the Iowa State Fair. When she was 23 pilot Frank Hawks took her up for her first ride in a plane and she was hooked. “By the time I had got two or three hundred feet off the ground, I knew I had to fly.” (– from Amelia Earhart, the Official Website.)

Earhart was a nurse’s aid at Spadina Military Hospital in Toronto, Ontario, during WWI. She was there when the Spanish Flu broke out in 1918 and she was hospitalized for pneumonia and sinusitis. She suffered from chronic sinusitis for the rest of her life.

She took her first lesson at Kinner Field in Long Beach in 1921. She had to take a bus and then walk four miles to get there. She cropped her hair and bought a leather jacket to ward off the chill morning flights (Amelia slept in the jacket for three nights straight to break it in before she dared to wear it to the field.) On Oct 22, 1922 she broke the altitude record for a female pilot  by flying over 14,000 feet, and on May 15, 1923 she became the 16th woman to earn her pilot’s license.

Family financial problems limited her time in the air as Amelia took jobs as a photographer a teacher and a social worker. But with Lucky Lindy’s solo flight over the Atlantic the hunt was on to find the first woman to fly (either solo or with a crew) over the ocean too. Amelia was chosen to join pilot Wilmer Stultz and copilot/mechanic Louis “Slim” Gordon. They took off from Newfoundland and landed in Wales about 21 hours later. Although her contribution to the flight was minimal — she kept the flight log and later said she that Stultz did all the flying and she was as useful as a “sack of potatoes” — it was a publicity smash. They returned to New York to a ticker-tape parade and were greeted at the White House with a reception by President Calvin Coolidge.

She become romantically involved with George Putnam, who had handled the publicity for the trans-Atlantic flight, and (after Putnam proposed six times) the two married in February of 1932. Amelia saw the marriage as a partnership. Their honeymoon was a lecture/promotional tour.  She also did a number of endorsements for luggage, clothing and cigarettes.  She became an associate editor for Cosmopolitan. And she and Lindbergh promoted commercial air travel, investing in Transcontinental Air Transport (which later became TWA).

In May of 1932, 5 years after Lindberg’s trip, she became the first woman to fly solo across Atlantic (she landed in Ireland.)  She also flew solo from Hawaii to California, from LA to Mexico City and from Mexico City to New York.

Amelia was one of the organizers and the first  president of The Ninety-Nines, an organization that advanced the cause of women in aviation.

In 1936 she started to plan a trip around the world. The first attempt ended in Hawaii when a blown tire (or perhaps pilot error) when the plane ground-looped. The damaged plane and the deflated crew went back to Oakland, CA.  For the second attempt Amelia and Fred Noonan  headed east, to Miami. They made several stops in South America, Africa, India and Southeast Asia. On June 29, 1937 they landed in Lae, New Guinea. The next stop would be Howland Island… but the plane never made it.

An intense air and sea rescue attempt ensued, but after searching a quarter million square miles of ocean the US Government gave up.

Amelia Earhart - GPN-2002-000211


Thought of the Day 7.23.12

English: Daniel at the premiere of December Bo...

 

Daniel Jacob Radcliffe was born today  in West London, England in 1989. He is 23 years old.

When Radcliffe was 10 he made his professional acting debut in David Copperfield for the BBC. The following year he auditioned for the role of  Harry Potter. He won the role and starred in the  8 block buster movies of the series.

He has been busy on stage  both on the West End (The Play What I Wrote) and on Broadway  (Equus. How to succeed in Business Without Really Trying.)

His other film roles include The Tailor of Panama, My Boy Jack, and The Woman in Black.


Thought of the Day 7.22.12

“Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

Emma Lazarus

Engraving

Engraving (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Emma Lazarus was born in New York City in 1849. Today is the 163 anniversary of her birth.

She was the middle of seven children born to Moses and Ester Lazarus. The family lived very comfortably in the Union Square neighborhood of the city. They had ties to some of the earliest Jewish American families and were part of the Jewish upper class. She received a classical education and excelled in German and French, she loved to write and translate poems.

As antisemitism began to rise in Europe and America, Lazarus became more and more involved in the fight against it. As the Russian Pogroms caused large numbers of Jews to immigrate to the US she became more outspoken on refugee issues.

She wrote “The New Colossus”  for an auction to help pay for the pedestal for the Statue of Liberty. (France had donated the statue, the US had to come up with the money for the pedestal.) The sonnet perfectly exemplified the Mother of Exiles in the the New York Harbor. The poem was engraved into the Statue of Liberty’s base after Lazarus’ death.

 

She was an accomplished writer, publishing books of poetry, a novel, a play, and several translations for the American market. She sought out Emerson as her mentor, and the two shared a long friendship.

"I lift my lamp. . .

“I lift my lamp. . . (Photo credit: ckaiserca)

 

 


Thought of the Day 7.21.12

“Life is like a movie-since there aren’t any commercial breaks, you have to get up and go to the bathroom in the middle of it.”

–Garry Trudeau

English: Garry Trudeau. I took this photo on N...

English: Garry Trudeau. November 9, 1999 at Tufts University  (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Garry Trudeau was born in New York City on this day in 1948. He is 64 years old.

He grew up near Saranac Lake in upstate New York. He went to Yale where he earned a BA and MFA in Graphic Design in 1973. (YEAH Graphic Design.) He drew a comic strip, Bull Tales,  for Yale Daily News. He later became the editor and chief of the school newspaper.

His most famous work Doonesbury was syndicated in 1970. Today over 1400 outlets, both in print and online carry the strip. In 1975 Doonesbury won a Pulitzer, the first comic strip to do so.

The first Doonesbury cartoon, from October 26,...

The first Doonesbury cartoon, from October 26, 1970. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Doonesbury was made into a short film that was nominated for an Oscar, an animated TV special and a Broadway musical (Trudeau wrote the book and lyrics, Elizabeth Swados composed the music). Rap Master Ronnie brought Trudeau and Swados together again, this time in 1984 to satirize the Reagan White House years. The show was filmed and broadcast on Cinemax in 1988. That same year Trudeau worked with Robert Altman to satirize the election campaign with Tanner ’88 for HBO. Tanner ’88 won an Emmy Award.

Illustration from The Sandbox blog on Slate.com

He  established The Sandbox, a …

forum for service members currently deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan (and serving elsewhere in the GWOT), returned vets, spouses and caregivers. …The unclassified details of deployment — the everyday, the extraordinary, the wonderful, the messed-up, the absurd.

In 2005 B.D. one of his main characters in Doonesbury was seriously injured in the Battle for Fallujah the  Pentagon invited Trudeau to Walter Reed Medical Center to visit the troops. Trudeau accepted and has been working with the wounded warriors since.  His book “The Long Road Home: One Step at a Time” chronicles  B.D.’s slow convalescence.

Trudeau lives with his wife Jane Pauley in New York City.

Interested in more Garry Trudeau quotes? Try BrainyQuote or Thinkexist.com. Those sites, along with my trusty Bartlett’s Famous Quotes, are my go-to sources for “THOUGHT” fodder.


Thought of the Day 7.20.12

“People do not decide to become extraordinary. They decide to accomplish extraordinary things.”

–Sir Edmund Hillary

Edmund Hillary circa 1953 taken by an unidentified photographer. (Photo: Courtesy Wikimedia)http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg

Edmund Hillary was born in Auckland, New Zealand on this day in 1919. He would have turned 93 today.

Hillary’s interest in mountain climbing was sparked on a field trip at 16 to Mount Ruapehu.  The first mountain he climbed was Mount Ollivier in the Sealy Range on the country’s South Island in 1939. He became a beekeeper with his brother Rex, an occupation that left ample time for mountain climbing in the off season.

During WWII he joined the RNZAF (Royal New Zealand Air Force)  as a navigator.

Aoraki/Mount Cook in Winter. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Commons-logo.svg

After the War he continued to climb his own country’s mountains, concurring Aorki/Mount Cook (New Zealand’s highest peak) in January of 1948. Next he travelled to Europe and tackled the Alps.

In 1951 Hillary went to the Himalayas. He joined expeditions in 1951 and 1952 to recon Everest. In 1952 He was part of a team that attempted (but didn’t reach) the summit of Cho Oyu from the South side.

And in 1953 he was part of team to attempt 29,035ft summit of Everest. The group established 9 camps on the mountain (some of which are still in use today.) On May 26 the first team, Tom Bourdillon and Charles Evans tried for the peak. They got to about 300 ft from the summit but had to turn back. Problems with their oxygen tanks, bad weather and a fall had worked against them.

Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay on their return from the summit.

So, the second team, Hillary and Tenzin Norgay made preparations for the ultimate climb. They woke early, but Hillary’s frozen boots  caused a 2 hour delay before they set off to forge the summit. They left camp at 6:30 pm. Almost at the top of the mountain they encountered a nearly vertical  40ft rock face. Hillary found a way to climb it by wedging his way up a crack. (The rock formation is now called the “Hillary Step.”) at 11:30 on May 29th, 1953 the two men stood at the top of the world.

Tenzing Norgay on the summit of Mt. Everest as photographed by Edmund Hillary on May 29, 1953. Norgay offered to take a photograph of Hillary, but the later declined. They spent 15 minutes at the top of the World. They documented the event (to confirm that the ascent was not a fake); looking for any evidence that a previous team who had disappeared on the mountain might have made the summit (they didn’t find any); and leaving offerings of thanksgiving (Tenzing left chocolates, Hillary left a cross. (Photo courtesy of Wikimedia.)

Hillary‘s itch to explore turned to the Antarctic and in 1955-1958 he led the New Zealand party of  the Commonwealth Tran-Antarctic expedition  and participated in the first mechanized expedition tot he South Pole.

In 1985 he joined with another famous explorer, Neil Armstrong,  for a flight over the Arctic Ocean. The two landed at the North Pole, and Hillary became the first person to reach the northern most, southern most and highest point on Earth. (Armstrong, of course had gone a bit further.)

In 1992 New Zealand honored Hillary by putting his image on a $5 note. Since He was still alive this was a break with convention. (He is the only person to be awarded such an honor during his lifetime other than a head of state.) (Photo: Courtesy Wikimedia)

He returned to Nepal in the 1960s on several philanthropic missions to help the people. There he helped build clinics, hospitals and schools for the Nepalese people.  He enlisted the help of the New Zealand government to provide aid and technical support to Nepal in setting up the agencies needed to establish and run Everest National Park and the tourist industry that grew around climbing the peak. He spent the rest of his life working to help the Nepalese people.

Mount Everest (Photo: Courtesy Wikimedia)


7.17.12

Vince Guaraldi 

Couldn’t really find a verbal quote for today’s birthday honoree, but, please, isn’t this musical clip better? 

Vince Anthony Guaraldi was born today in San Francisco in 1928. He he would have been 84.

Guaraldi, aka “Dr. Funk,” began playing piano gigs in college. His first record was with the Cal Tjader Trio in 1953, entitled “Vibratharpe.” in 1955 he started his own trio with guitarist Eddie Duran and bass player Dean Reilly. The trio released “The Vince Guaraldi Trio” in 56 and “A Flower is a Lonesome Thing” in ’57. Guaraldi continued to do album work with other musicians throughout the late 1950s.

He picked up on the Latin vibe with a reformed trio (Bassist Monte Budwig and drummer Colin Bailey) and  put out Jazz Impressions of Black Orpheus.” The track Cast Your Fate to the Wind became his first Gold Record and earned him a Jazz Grammy.

He was chosen by Reverend Charles Gompertz of San Francisco’s Grace Cathedral to compose a “modern setting for the choral Eucharist.” The  40 minute piece, for jazz trio and 68-voice choir,  took him a year an half to write, and includes an 11 minute instrumental “Holy Communion Blues” and a syncopated “Kyrie Eleison.” Performed in May of 1965, the recording went on critical and popular success.

He became a household name when he  pennedLinus and Lucy and other songs for  A Charlie Brown Christmas.

Heres another version of the Linus and Lucy Theme that I really liked  (it takes a bit of time to start, but it’s nice).


Thought of the Day 7.16.12

“When two people love each other, they don’t look at each other, they look in the same direction”

–Ginger Rogers

Virginia Katherine McMathwas born in Independence, Missouri on this day in 1911. She would have been 101  years old today.

Her parents divorced when she was a baby and little Virginia, Ginger, stayed with her mother, Lela. When she remarried, Ginger took the name Lela’s second husband John Rogers. Ginger was introduced to the theater when Lela became a theater critic and took the girl to the shows that she reviewed. Legend has it that Ginger would hang out backstage picking up the songs and dances from the performers as her mother sat in the audience and took notes. One night while she was backstage at a traveling vaudeville show the act needed a stand-in, Rogers was tapped for the duty and had her first gig.

She was still in high school when she won  The Texas State Charleston Championship. The prize — a tour of theaters in Texas cities — was expanded to include  a wider tour of the Western US.. Ginger’s easy banter with the master of ceremonies was such an audience hit that it became as much of a draw as the dance routine.  At 17 she married vaudeville artist Jack “Pepper” Culpepper and the two formed the act known as “Ginger and Pepper.” The marriage was short lived, but Ginger’s career continued. She made it to New York where she had her Broadway debut in Top Speed in 1929.  Shortly thereafter the Gershwin Brothers picked Ginger to star in Girl Crazy along with Ethel Merman. The musical made a star of both actresses  and introduced Ginger to Fred Astaire who was hired as a dance coach. Ginger’s amazing renditions of  Embraceable You and But Not For Me in the musical helped the tunes become part of the American Song Book.

At 19 she switched to movies. Her breakthrough role was in Warner Brother’s 42nd Street. In 1933 she made her first film with Fred Astaire, Flying Down to Rio. The duo made nine musicals together, the most famous probably being Top Hat.

Dancing was only one arrow in her quiver, she was also an acclaimed singer and actor and her career went on long after she stopped making musicals with Fred. She won an Academy Award for Kitty Foyle in 1940.

She went back to the Great White Way when roles for mature women in film became scarce. Ginger took over for Carol Channing as Dolly in Hello! Dolly in 1965 and performed to packed houses for an 18-month run. She then took Mame to London’s West End for 14-months (and a Royal command performance.)

Ginger Rogers - 1920s

Ginger Rogers – 1920s (Photo credit: danceonair1986)


Thought of the Day 7.15.12

“Choose only one master — Nature.”

Rembrandt van Rijn

Self-portrait in cap, with eyes wide open. circa 1630.

Rembrandt van Rijn was born on this day in Leiden, the Netherlands in 1606. Today is the  406th  anniversary of his birth.

His father, a  miller, wanted his son to be an educated man and sent Rembrandt to the University of Leiden. There he learned science and anatomy, but he didn’t stay long. He wanted to paint. He  learned about light, form and composition from by studying the masters of Renaissance art like Da Vinci and Caravaggio. In 1630 he moved to Amsterdam and set up a studio painting portraits for individuals and for local guilds.

The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolas Tulp as an important early work. With its dark background and focus of light Rembrandt tells a story in the painting. It isn’t just a group of men sitting around having their picture painted. This is a narrative slice of action.

His reputation as a painter grew he established himself as in society. He married the beautiful and rich Saskia van Uylenburgh and the couple moved into an expensive house on the good side of town. Domestic bliss was not long lived however as the couple lost their first three children in infancy. The fourth child, Titus, survived, but Saskia died the next year. It seemed that life followed art for Rembrandt and every bright spot on his personal canvass had and equal patch of darkness.

In 1642 he painted The Night Watch. It  was almost 12 feet by 14.5 feet and was his masterpiece. Another guild painting, this one was commissioned by the Captain and guard of the Kloveniers (the civic guard). He was paid 1,600 guilders for the work.

Rembrandt van Rijn - Self-Portrait (1659)

Rembrandt van Rijn – Self-Portrait (1659) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


Thought of the Day 7.14.12

“Sometimes love is stronger than a man’s convictions”

Isaac Bashevis Singer

Isaac Bashevis Singer was born on this day in Radzymin, Poland in 1904. He would have been 98 years old today.

He came from a religious family. His father was a rabbi and his mother had several rabbis in her family. He grew up surrounded in a world steeped in Hasidic traditions and even attended Rabbinical School. According to Singer’s Nobel Prize biography, it was a world:

which the reader encounters in Singer’s stories, … a very Jewish but also a very human world. It appears to include everything – pleasure and suffering, coarseness and subtlety…

But Singer wanted  a more secular life. The World was changing fast around him and he wanted to be a part of it.  The conflict of old verses new (both on a personal level and a global level as Eastern Europe churned through WWI and the build up and horrors of  WWII ) were fodder for Singer’s budding journalism and short story writing. Singer gave voice to those conflicts, mixing the tragic with the comic; breaking our hearts but warming them too, all on the same page.

He emigrated to the United States in 1935 and began to work  for Yiddish Newspapers. Because of the Holocaust the Yiddish language was nearly wiped out  in Europe, but Singer  reveled in the power of his native tongue and knew there was still an audience for it. His work often recalled a Poland before the War, but without the sugar coating of nostalgia.

He published memoirs, essays, novels, children’s books and short stories.  Singer won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1978.

English: Isaac Bashevis Singer, Miami Book Fai...

English: Isaac Bashevis Singer, Miami Book Fair International, 1988 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)