Most of the movies were on PBS channels, of which I have access to seven.
Those are truly a Godsend.
I have made steady use of them ever since the pandemic limited my access to external forms of entertainment and knowledge.
stranding me in Hell,
I express my gratitude
to PBS, to GPB, and to SCE-TV
for helping me stay sane.
I'll begin this post with a documentary about a strong woman and end with one about more strong women, with some men in between.
"Olympia", released in 2018, featured interviews and film clips with actress Olympia Dukakis.
She was in her mid-80's, talking about her career and life, mostly.
Toward the end of the documentary, she was back in Greece, and one of the things she did was attend the release of a turtle back to the Aegean Sea.
The turtle's name was Lola, so of course Olympia regaled us with a few lines from the campy 1955 song about a headstrong woman.
Very amusing!
I felt a kinship with her during that segment, as turtle release events are something I hadn't known that we shared.
(smile!)
It burned out sometime in the fall.
I'd mentioned it a few weeks ago, but let the matter drop.
He brought it up last night at the S&K Friday Fiesta.
"Did I still need that done?"
He arrived just before noon, at the door with the extracted dead bulb already in hand.
All he had to do was reach up to get to it!
I would have had to drag out the ladder and I didn't trust myself to do that with the inguinal hernia still active.
Knowing he was to come, I had the replacement (Ecobulb) ready for him, and he even cleaned the light globe and stayed to make sure the new light worked.
Then he was off to drip pipes at the shop and I went out into the low 40's and did the same here.
Good to know I won't have to be concerned about my front porch light for another seven years.
Thank you, dear brother!
(smile!)
Notice the red letters in the piece of music from Alban Berg's "Lyric Suite"?
Those notes indicate his initials, plus those of his mistress, Hanna Fuchs., and appear repeatedly throughout the "Lyric Suite".
In other words, as George Perle determined in 1976, the entire piece from 1926 documents the affair the couple had when Alban was almost 40 years old and she was almost 30.
The documentary was from the point of view of the modern-day musicians - the Emerson String Quartet and Renee Fleming - who were determined to play it with all the emotion and passion the Austrian composer had intended, acknowledging the heat behind the messages meant for his lover.
I found it all quite fascinating!
I wonder if they might be enticed to perform it in its entirety at a future Savannah Music Festival concert?
I'd love to see them perform again!
(smile!)
I decided to watch a movie from the reward stash that Comcast has bestowed upon me: "Love Actually", from 2003.
Alan Rickman, nearly two decades after his American film debut in "Die Hard", is a man in his mid-life crisis, much as Berg was, and, much as Berg did, he had an affair with a younger woman.
Perhaps Olivia Dukakis' character was right in "Moonstruck": men have affairs because they are afraid of death as they slide down towards it.
Nice segue, wasn't it?
Here's another: the movie I was watching was set at Christmas, with snow on the ground, snow falling... and then my first niece called.
She was watching snow fall in Hinesville.
Within an hour, I was watching snow fall here.
I tried to take photos, since that's what I do.
This one is the clearest.
Look closely at the tree trunk and its limbs...
there's a fine draping of white lines from snowflakes dashing through the air.
Sure, a magnifying glass helps, but the snow fall was still evident.
Grit TV had a Kevin Costner movie from 2003 that I'd somehow missed!
Like with the Alan Rickman movie, "Open Range" has him almost twenty years after he was kissing a girl in "Silverado"... and he kissed a girl (Annette Bening) in this movie, too.
Robert Duvall didn't do any kissing, as he was busy trying to keep his men and free-grazing cows alive in cattle country.
This was another I know Daddy would have enjoyed.
Time to switch this film festival's focus back to women with a new documentary, "Coronation Girls".
This was amazing as it followed fifty young Canadian girls and women chosen to travel to England in 1953 for the crowning of the 27-year-old Elizabeth II as she, of a similar age as they, began what would become 70 years of her reign.
What an amazing time those girls all had on their 7-week trip that summer!
The movie looks into several of the reunions the group had as the 50-year mark was passed, then concludes with a dozen of the women, now in their 80's, unexpectedly having tea in 2023 with King Charles II on a second trip to England.
Wow.
That's one of those once in a lifetime events...
just as their earlier trip there had been.
I recently had one of those myself this year.
Those are to be treasured.
This view, however, is not.
Once upon a time, when snow fall was rare here, I did enjoy it, because it was not a common thing.
Now, for the second year in a row, there is snow on th ground in January.
Definitely not a treasure.
Good night, all.







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