Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Death Becomes Her (2*)

I should have known better--even the incomparable Meryl Streep and Goldie Hawn couldn't save the dreadful 1992 movie.  Why should I have expected any more of the formidably talented Megan Hilty and what turned out to be Natalie Charle Ellis understudying Jennifer Simard, a name more likely to be dropped by Broadway cognoscenti than this pop culture maven?  But the packed, aged house roared in disagreement on a Wednesday matinee. They probably were fans of Absolutely Fabulous and watch the Real Wives franchise, too, but women dishing women ain't my cup of tea, especially for more than two hours.

 

My dislike of the show--particularly the excruciating second act in spite of an amazingly acrobatic stair case plunge--has little to do with the quality of its execution.  I'm more angry at myself for getting suckered by the Tony Awards broadcast of "For The Gaze," a deliriously punning, over-the-top production number that features the indefatigable Hilty impersonating BOTH Judy Garland and Liza Minelli.  It reminded me of a recent article about the vaunted fact-checking department at The New Yorker, now celebrating its centenary.  When a writer once described "chaps" as "assless" a discussion ensued:  aren't chaps, by definition, assless?  

Death Becomes Her only muddies the question; on the boob tube, definitely not (I doublechecked video from the Tony's and Hilty's appearance on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon), but at the Lunt-Fontanne Theater chorus boys bare buttocks the size of melons and costume designer Paul Tazewell frames them in technicolor glitter, adding a star to my abysmal rating and winning a Tony Award for proving the fact checker's point!


Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Book of Numbers (4*)


I haven't been as challenged by a novel since reading Ulysses at Columbia which turns out to be a fitting comparison:  like James Joyce before him, Joshua Cohen, who likely will always be the smartest man in any room, has written a defining book for a new century partially inspired by the modernist classic.  He even has transformed Molly's soliloquy, surely literature's most famous verbal orgasm, into a hard working professional woman's furious blogpost about her feckless, unfaithful husband.

A decade after its publication, The Book of Numbers still feels prescient about how the internet is changing humanity.  Critics far more knowledgeable than I have noted that its structure follows that of the book with the same name in the Old Testament and Torah which was much redacted before taking its final form.  I'm guessing that's behind Cohen's reason for using a great deal of struck-through text in transcribed passages to tell the story of the man responsible for creating the world's dominant search engine, here called Tetration, for reasons that don't become apparent until the end.  He, the book's stream-of-consciousness narrator, and the author all share the same name, the primary reason that the tech visionary has hired the narrator, whose own authorial success has been thwarted by the 2001 terrorist attacks.

I took the title more literally, falling deep into the Cohen's fascinating rabbit holes which begin with a tutorial about the utilization of zeroes and ones in the creation of digital technology and include brilliant exegeses of the "random" draft lottery during the Viet Nam War and the impeding threat of Y2K, neither of which are what they have always seemed if the author is to be believed.  But, as he might say, numbers don't lie but they certainly can be manipulated by human beings who are motivated as much by obfuscation and greed as by altruism no matter what their race or religion.

Cohen is no slouch in describing the benevolent origins of the internet, either, specifically in creating a transcendent Holocaust metaphor in anticipation of its creation when tracing the lineage of Tetration's founder whose grandfather Joseph fled Ukraine for America before the Nazis could tattoo a number on his forearm.  Here's Joseph explaining to Joshua why he's asked him to pick a star out of the night sky as they walk on the beach in Far Rockaway one summer night (the colored background indicates the redactions the narrator has made in the transcript of the conversations he had with the man whose story he is under contract to tell):

But it was difficult to stay in touch with the rest of the family, Joseph said, especially given all the turmoil. It wasn’t like he could just pick up a telephone, or send a telegram so easily. Rather he could, Joseph said, but it wasn’t like the family was always available to pick up the other end, or reply. The post was unreliable too, especially for packages. Instead, Joseph said, we could only think certain thoughts, and they could only think certain thoughts and, but this was important, “Each half of the family had to know that’s what the other half of the family was doing.” Joseph said, “At least, that’s how my father explained it.”

“He told me he’d picked his own star,” Joseph said, “like Polaris—lots of people pick Polaris, especially if they’re young, especially if they live in the north, in the cold. And he told me that if he was in the mood to communicate with his family he faced this star, not at a certain time or from a certain place, but whenever, wherever, and he talked to that star, or he didn’t even talk, he told me, he just poured himself into it, all his life and frustrations, all his feelings, his dreams, he just poured all of himself into that fire.

“Then he told me,” Joseph said, “that I could do the same thing, that I could just find a star, any star—I could find my own or I could use his star, because any star has the capacity of all of them—and I could invest this star with my emotions, I could make this star the outside pocket for everything inside me, and that the family still over in Europe would have their own stars and would do this same thing too, all of them, all of us, sending and receiving.”

[REMOVE FROM DIRECT QUOTATION]

Joseph told Cohen that these communications would become stored in these stars, turning them into mutual archives, common caches, omnipresent and yet evanescent. From which they could be accessed, not at a certain time or from a certain place—“people have to work, after all”—but at any time, and from any place, and ultimately not just by the relations and friends they were intended for but also by anyone sensitive enough to go seeking. Anything ever communicated to a star, Joseph told Cohen, could be accessed even after the death of its transmitter, and, unlike with the spinning satellites and their transmissions, could be accessed and even altered by the dead themselves, and then he mentioned Oma Eve and encouraged Cohen to speak with her in this way, freely, and then he mentioned himself and encouraged Cohen to speak with him in this way too, freely, once he himself passed, to that light on the other side of the darkness.

Several years before Cohen was born in 1980, I worked in publishing and became close friends with an editor at Crown Publishers who lived in Prospect Park.  Harriet and her husband joined the book group I organized which Dave (never a reader because of his dyslexia) christened the "Dilly Dally Tante Club" before making himself scarce.  Unlike me, Harriet put out quite a spread when the group met at her house. As a joke, she once sketched the difference between meals prepared by Jews and goys, with the plates of the former piled abundantly with food and the latter with the bare minimum.  

The Book of Numbers reminds me of her Jewish plate, definitely an OK boomer metaphor: so overstuffed that I had difficulty distinguishing among flavors and barely could finish. Among myriad other topics in his romance/thriller (“subject” and “genre” are distinctions necessary for shelving a book, but necessarily ruinous distinctions for writing a book deserving of shelving) Gen X Cohen addresses friendship, publishing, code (so much about coding!),  Judaism, surveillance, capitalism, loss, psychology and anthropology through a truly international cast of characters including Americans, Ashkenazi Jews, Pakistanis, Arabs, Koreans, Swedes and Russians, all of them compellingly drawn with convincing and culturally appropriate back stories. 

That's not to say it isn't a brilliant, worthwhile book--Harold Bloom included it among the four best works by Jewish writers in America--but c'mon Josh:  your vocabulary and penchant for customizing language consistently intimidated the dictionary that accompanies my e-reading app, forcing me--who scored much higher on his verbal than math SATs--to "tetrate" on dozens of occasions for the meaning of words such as “dimidiate."  Why not simply describe the moon as half instead?

Cohen's not quite jokey response--absolutely reflective of his more than occasionally exasperating style--can be found buried in the text for the patient and attentive reader:

Language itself is a burqa, an abaya—so many new words! so much chancy chancery cursive! The garments that blacken even the tarmac, that blacken the lobby (irreligiously lavish). Words are garb. They’re cloaks. They conceal the body beneath. Lift up the hems of verbiage, peek below its frillies—what’s exposed? the hairy truth?

The "hairy truth" in The Book of Numbers turned out to chime eerily with what was going in our brave new world just as Joshua Cohen was imagining it.  His novel's denouement is so sympatico with what happened when whistleblower Edward Snowden uploaded National SecurityAdministration files to Wikileaks that Snowden asked his fellow Gen Xer to help write his memoir after defecting to Russia.

Add prophet to Cohen's incredible portfolio of diverse talents.

Friday, August 29, 2025

Cloud Surround

The reflective surfaces on recent buildings in the vicinity of the World Trade Center can make it appear as if you are surrounded by fair weather clouds.

 

I made this belated discovery after catching the Beauford Delaney exhibit in Soho, where advertisers for the new Darren Aronofsky movie (poor Austin!) ignored the "no posting" signs.


Fall is just around the corner.  I walked south on West Broadway, a route seldom taken.


"Masters of the universe" play jenga at 76 Leonard Street. 

In Tribeca, a woman watered the community garden at Finn Square.



Many of the buildings look as they have for decades.


Jay McInerney's Bright Lights, Big City put this restaurant on the literary map in the 80s.  I wonder how much longer it can survive.


Change, baby, change.  That's what gives New York its vertical energy.


The glorious Municipal Building, designed by McKim, Mead & White as part of the City Beautiful movement, marked the consolidation of the New York City's five boroughs shortly before the turn of the 20th century.  

The weather was surprisingly cool for August.

This solid federal building--completed in 1938 and once described as "a boring limestone monolith that has trouble deciding between a heritage of stripped down neo-Classical and a new breath of Art Deco"--survived the collapse of the nearby Twin Towers.

Second millennial construction mostly looks a lot more vulnerable, although the cladding of the Perelman Center for the Performing Arts mixes things up a bit.

The novelty of the Oculus never diminishes.  Is it a stegosaurus? A porcupine?  No, it's a mall disguised as a commuter rail station.


A man relaxing with a book instead of a phone is a rare and encouraging sight, even if it does require three chairs.


The government officials, private organizations, businesses, developers and architects who re-imagined lower Manhattan after 2001 certainly had awesome, long-term vision.  It really is both breathtaking and heartbreaking, a peculiar combo to say the least.


When I visited the area in 2011 with the Mayor's Office as the World Trade Center Health Coordinator, it was still very much a construction site.  We had to wear hard hats.  Fun fact:  I'm kneeling below Scarlett Johansson's future mother-in-law!  And the young woman in the light blue dress is the niece of former Mayor Ed Koch.


Here I am with former New York City Health Commissioner Thomas Farley.  


Both of us were appointed by Mayor Michael Bloomberg.


New buildings, new hairstyle, older face what can I say?  My work life seems ages ago.  I've been retired for more than a decade just about as long as it has taken for lower Manhattan to fully re-blossom.


The rebuilt Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church--the only house of worship to be destroyed in the 2001 terrorist attacks--was consecrated in July 2022.





There's an elevated plaza directly in front of it


. . . with spectacular views of the phoenix risen.


The Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel turned 75 in May.  I have a very dim memory of driving through it with my father sometime in the late 1950s, when the toll was just 35 cents.  Today, it will cost you $11.19 without an EZ Pass to get from the southern tip of Manhattan to Red Hook--a distance of nearly two miles-- beneath the East River.  If Robert Moses had had his way, the two-tube tunnel would have been a bridge but the land grab required for such a structure provoked a public outcry that forecast his diminished power.

I've added a ride through it to my bucket list, if only to get a clear view of the giant working clock that adorns the lower Manhattan entrance. I'd also love to see what I assume to be lights on the top illuminated at night.


Here's what the tunnel entrance looks like from the back.  Even though it was named after former Governor Hugh Carey shortly before Hurricane Sandy flooded it for the first time, you would never know it from the engraving on the facade.


Late afternoon sunlight bathed the non-reflective Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, designed in the Beaux Arts style, on Bowling Green. A ten-minute stroll from the World Trade Center, it takes you back more than a century.


Battery Park had been my final destination under the misapprehension that it was home to the recently re-opened Wagner Park.  A ranger informed me that it's actually located in Battery Park City, a little farther uptown.  Next time--I'd seen more than enough for one day. 

More Beau

They say a rising tide lifts all boats.  That's just as true in the arts; James Baldwin may be more widely read and admired now than he was at the time of his death in 1987.  So it's probably no coincidence that the Drawing Center is honoring Beauford Delaney, Baldwin's mentor, with an exhibition of his drawings and other works, including an early portrait of a man who later became his fiercest champion. It's one of more than twenty completed by Delaney, who met Baldwin when the author of Giovanni's Room was just a teenager.  He's twenty-one here.

James Baldwin (1945)
Self Portrait (Yaddo, 1950)
Delaney, born in Tennessee and educated in Boston, had moved to New York in his late twenties, five years before Baldwin's birth and just as the Harlem Renaissance was coming to an end. The New York Public Library branch on 135th Street exhibited Delaney's early, academically influenced charcoal sketches.

"Harlem Athlete" (1929)
Delaney's development as an artist anticipates the Abstract Expressionism movement although he had no time for the macho posturing that accompanied it. Given his closeted homosexuality--apparently he had his first same sex experience with a man he met in the Boston Public Garden--I wondered if the Ramble might have inspired this colorful work.

"Central Park" (1950)
Delaney lived in a loft on Greene Street where his bohemian friends included sexually explicit author Henry Miller and artist Georgia O'Keefe, who painted his portrait.

"Greene Street" (1950)
With Baldwin's encouragement, Delaney moved to Paris in 1953, at almost the precise moment that New York City pre-empted its role as the capital of the art world.  But his distance from America only partially explains why he never became a major figure. Poverty, racism, homophobia, alcoholism and dementia all stacked the odds against him.

"Paris" (1953)
This work vividly captures the color of my first encounter with stained glass at the source of its inspiration.  We visited the iconic Gothic cathedral on a day trip from Orleans in the mid-sixties.  Delaney, whose father was a preacher, described it as "the most wonderful thing I have ever seen created by man."


 
"Chartres" (1954)
Here's what Baldwin had to say about his mentor in 1963, when alcohol and mental illness first began to take their toll:

He has been starving and working all of his life – in Tennessee, in Boston, in New York, and now in Paris. He has been menaced more than any other man I know by his social circumstances and also by all the emotional and psychological stratagems he has been forced to use to survive; and, more than any other man I know, he has transcended both the inner and outer darkness.

Delaney returned to the U.S. only once before his death for a brief family visit, in 1969.  He must have sketched this portrait of Rosa Parks from a photo.


He can capture the soulfulness of someone's eyes even in a tiny work.


Delaney was one of ten children, only four of whom survived.  His illiterate mother Delia, born into slavery, worked as a domestic to help support her family. She particularly valued education as a buffer against racism.  This unsentimental portrait, which Delaney painted six years after her death, evokes both dignity and toughness if not warmth.

"Mother's Portrait" (aka Portrait of Delia Delaney) (1964)
Abstraction may have had a calming influence, an aesthetic approach to what is now called "self-care."  Delaney was rarely without brush in hand.  He once used an old raincoat as a canvas when he ran out of the real thing.

Untitled  (ca 1964)
Delaney painted two portraits of Henry Miller, first in New York and again two decades later in Paris.  The exhibit also includes Miller's letters to his friend, whose work he greatly admired. "The impression I carried away was being saturated in color and light," Miller once wrote. "Poor in everything but pigment. With pigment he was lavish as a millionaire."

Henry Miller (ca 1967)
These two works hang side by side, although only one is identified as a self-portrait.

Untitled Self Portrait (ca 1968)
It's hard not to interpret the absence of pigment in these paintings as a psychological diminishment of the artist, almost as if the lights had gone off in his life.
 
Untitled (ca 1968)
Untitled (1970)
Delaney began to experience the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease after he returned to Paris from America, just four years before he was committed to St. Anne's Hospital for the Insane. He remained institutionalized there until his death in 1979, not long after he turned 77.  In this late return-to-form he appears to be enjoying himself one last time even if he is working from a long-ago memory.

"Self Portrait in a Paris Bath House" (1971)