Thursday, March 19, 2009

King of the Monkeys

through my newly found love of Southern Literature, i've recently discovered Eugene Walter. how i did not know about him before, i do not know-- after all, he grew up in Mobile, Alabama, was the city's most infamous character, and after decades spent living in New York, Paris, and Rome, came back to Mobile in the late 1980's and lived there until his death in 1998. Sucks for me that I never knew him, afterall, I grew up in Mobile from about 1990-2004!

anyway. he was quite an amazing person. he was a writer, poet, editor, actor, translator, puppeteer, basically everything good in life.



he was gay, though maybe never admittedly, as it seemed was the case with a lot of Southern writers/people in the art world in his day. like Truman Capote for instance, who Eugene knew, and who spent a lot of his life in Mobile too. one of my neighbors at home in Alabama was part of Eugene Walter's circle in Mobile back in the day. he & my mom are good friends. he has some other cool-gay-old-dude friends who own antique stores around town & my mom found some of Eugene's books there for me.

i just started reading Milking the Moon, which is his oral biography as told to Katherine Clark. i've only read a tiny bit of it so far but already i am completely enthralled with Eugene Walter.



one thing that Clark wrote about him in her introduction that really made an impression on me was how, though he was a very talented writer/actor/etc., he put his real genius into living his life; as if, his life was his greatest work of art. that idea, to me, is really incredible.

he also loved monkeys. they were his favorite animal. and he loved all "wayward things." in his most famous novel, The Untidy Pilgrim, the main character, who spends most of the book in Mobile, is based off himself. the title "untidy pilgrim" is a juxtoposition of the unrelenting work ethic of early Puritan pilgrims, which was passed down generation after generation to those hard workers up in the North. but in the South, there were only UNTIDY pilgrims, who did not have their lives mapped out, and who were more leisurely; they were the "monkeys" according to Eugene, who lived in the "green and crazy land" of the South.

i love that sentiment.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

post #1000000 devoted to Elvis Costello

i've been having a bit of a SUCKY week & the only thing that's been really keeping me going is Elvis (especially Get Happy!!, GOD that album is gorgeous) so i thought he deserved a little love. i am very grateful he exists.

this is the cover of Punch the Clock, which M & i listened to recently in Athens, in the car everywhere we drove. we think his look is saying, "Oh, me?" in a seductive, coy tone.


M & i made fun of his song "Shabby Doll" because he keeps singing "shabbydoll" over & over again & it's really silly. HAHA. but it's okay, because we're both in love with him. Elvy knows it's all in good fun.
hear for yourself:


i made a list of my favorite Elvis songs about a year ago, & i decided to make a new one, because i think it's changed a lot. this is just like VERY VERY FAVORITES, 'cos i have about a million favorites.

1. WATCH YOUR STEP
2. Possession
3. Wecome to the Working Week
4. Everyday I Write the Book
5. No Action
6. (The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes
7. Miracle Man
8. No Dancing
9. Hand in Hand
10. White Knuckles
11. Senior Service
12. Oliver's Army
13. Veronica
14. Man Called Uncle
15. King Horse
16. Pidgin English
17. Really Mystified
18. Man Out of Time
19. Busy Bodies
20. Sulky Girl

okay, that's all for now. Elvis is bored. goodbye.