Mar. 15th, 2007

ceebeegee: (Irish!)
Your Leprechaun Name Is:

Greenie Whiskeybreath


I'd have to rank St. Patrick's Day behind Halloween and Mardi Gras or Christmas, but nonetheless SPD is still a completely awesome holiday here in New York City! Because it's a sign of spring! And beer and Irish whiskey and flirtable cops on parade duty and Tim's roooftop party!

I love this holiday...and I have (as far as I know*) no Irish blood in me.



*I am very Scottish and have been told by Scots that there's a lot of crossover. As far as I know I have no Irish blood, but would be thrilled to find out I did. But my Scottish ancestry is from the Eastern part of Scotland...
ceebeegee: (Irish!)
As I said last night I love St. Patrick's Day...but I'm really starting to dislike the parade organizers. They just seem like such power-hungry assholes. They don't let The Gays march (which is just ridiculous really, SO 19th-century) and now they're dissin' the NYFD. The fire department used to be the first group in the parade (something of an honor, I guess) and this year the organizers bumped them back to mid-parade--they claim last year the FD "took too long." The reason they "took too long" is because the New Orleans FD marched with them last year and they were unfurling some sort of banner thanking New York. You're gonna hold THAT against them?

The organizers also said the FD drank too much, or was too unruly during the parade. Irish pot, meet kettle! Just let 'em have their fun--it's St. Patrick's Day, for cryin' out loud. It's not meant to be a sober holiday. As long as they weren't pissing on the lawns or flashing to high school bands, no harm done.
ceebeegee: (Alice the Queen)
I just upgraded my cable package to get Showtime (quite a step for me--I never get the premium channels, that's what Netflix is for). Showtime is premiering a new series in April called The Tudors--it's about Henry VIII mainly. They're saturating the subways with print ads that make it look quite fun--they're trying to market it as a kind of historical soap. However the nitpicker in me is grumbling about the actor playing Henry--he is far too slight and dark-looking. Henry was quite tall and broad in his youth (though not fat--that happened later in his life) and very fair. Reddish-blonde hair and fair skin--Jonathan Rhys-Meyers doesn't look like him at all. He'd just better be good in the part.

One of the ads says something like "The King's best friend is having an affair with the King's sister." They're talking about Charles Brandon, a very close friend of Henry's (he was the son of William Brandon who carried the standard into Bosworth Field next to Henry VII and died in the battle (killed, I believe, by Richard III)--Charles was basically raised with the Royal Family). Henry VIII's younger sister, Princess Mary, had a crush on him that developed into a full-blown romance (kind of like Princess Margaret and Peter Townsend, now that I think of it, and when her marriage to Louis of France ended (he was much older) she and Charles married in secret and then begged Henry for forgiveness which he eventually gave. Mary and Charles were the grandparents of Lady Jane Grey, the original nine-day-wonder. Jane was eventually executed for the various rebellions on her behalf thanks to her dumbass father and one of my Tudor books ends her chapter with "sometime later the mangled corpse of Henry VIII's great-niece was unceremoniously thrust into St. Peter's ad Vincula, between two former queens. The debt incurred at Cluny Chapel 39 years before had been repaid at last." St. Peter's was where Catherine Howard and Anne Boleyn were buried, and Cluny Chapel was where Charles and Mary married in secret. I thought that was a rather poetic way of characterizing Jane's fate.

However, the site for the series has Princess Margaret--Henry's older sister--as a major character and doesn't list Mary at all. I hope they're not conflating the two Princesses!--Margaret was no Mary and certainly not the sexpot shown on the site. Margaret married James IV of Scotland at 13 and had kind of a rough time of it there--she sure wasn't vamping it up with Charles Brandon.

I'm such a nitpicker. But I'm sure I'll enjoy it anyway.
ceebeegee: (Default)
Clara Barton Green in Mark Hollman's Fare for All at the Mount Vernon Hotel

“Fare For All at the Mount Vernon Hotel”
Sunday, March 18th 1PM $10, $8 Members, $5 kids
A musical play both adults and kids will enjoy!


An original play with music and lyrics by Tony award winner Mark Hollmann, creator of Broadway success, “Urinetown.” The New York Times says this original musical production, “captures the romance of old New York without minimizing its hardships.” The play tells the story of life at the Mount Vernon Hotel, a popular country resort for early 19th-century New Yorkers and explores the lives of the people who visited and worked at the hotel. Feel free to either just watch or participate in the play.

Call (212) 838-6878

The theater/museum is located at 421 E. 61st St. (between 1st & York), and there are many restaurants nearby if you decide to have lunch or brunch afterward (including Serendipity on 60th). Tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for children--the targeted age group for the interactive activities is 5-10, but older children can enjoy the show as well. (No one *has* to participate in the activities but of course all are welcome!--If you do decide to come, let me know so I can keep an eye out for your kids during the interactive bits.)

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