Archive for February, 2009

Superman: A Poem

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

You can be strong, you can do no wrong
you can outrun a train
you can fly in the rain
you can withstand the bullets of hate
you can overcome your Kryptonian fate
but if you’re without love
no nothing’s the same
even being Superman 
seems so lame.

Is Clark Kent really a disguise?
Who does Lois Lane see in her eyes?
Who you are?
Or what you do?
Who’s her real hero
when the day is through?

You’d like to tell her
but you hesitate
wearing glasses for a mask
seems your fate.

Has she fallen for you
or fallen for a cape?
Does she love you for your heart
or your muscleman shape?

Oh Superman you may never know
but it’s her touch and smile
that keeps you on the go
for those leaps and bounds
don’t mean anything
if to the one you love
you’re not everything.

                                                  -written by Dracul Van Helsing
                                                    Wednesday, Feb. 25th, 2009

Charles Laughton

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

British actor Charles Laughton was one of the greatest
actors of the 20th Century.

Sadly he isn’t as well known today as Sir Laurence
Olivier but in some ways Laughton could be just as
good as Olivier if not better in some of his acting
performances.

What brought this to mind is this past weekend, my dad
and I watched the 13th installment of the BBC television
series I, Claudius.

I, Claudius was a famous BBC television series of the
late 1970s which gained enormous popularity and a large
following in North America when it was shown on American
PBS television back in the early 1980s.

We got the DVD back in December and we’ve been
watching it on and off- 1 or 2 episodes a week ever
since.

Last Thursday, we watched the final installment- Episode 12-
where Claudius eats poisoned mushrooms fed to him by
Agrippina (the psychotic mother of the equally psychotic
Emperor Nero) and promptly kicks the bucket.

But there was a bonus on the DVD- a thirteenth episode- if
you will - a documentary that was done on BBC television
back in the mid-1960s.

The documentary was about British filmmaker Sir 
Alexander Korda’s forgotten and unfinished epic
movie of 1937- I, Claudius- the first time they
attempted to film Robert Graves’ famed 1934 novel
I, Claudius.

The movie starred Charles Laughton as Claudius,
Merle Oberon as Messalina and Flora Robson as Livia.

Surprisingly this was one London Films production (London
Films was the name of Sir Alexander Korda’s studios) that
Korda did not direct himself.

He was just the producer.

Instead he hired a German-American director named von
Sternberg (the man who directed Marlene Dietrich in her
breakthrough film in America, The Blue Angel) to direct
his production of I, Claudius.

Only a few scenes were shot in the film and then the
project was scrapped.

 

Coincidentally shooting on the film began on February 15th,
1937.

And it was the wee morning hours of February 15th, 2009 (exactly
72 years later) that my dad and I watched the documentary about
the making of this unknown and unfinished virtually forgotten
epic.

The film it turns out was Charles Laughton’s most
difficult role. He was having a hard time trying to figure
out how to bring Claudius to life.

For Charles Laughton was one of those method actors who
wanted to totally immerse himself in the character and become
that character. It was this that made him such a great actor of course.

But he was having a heck of time trying to capture Claudius- trying
to become Claudius- trying to bring Claudius to life.

In a 1965 interview with Merle Oberon for the documentary, she
said that during the month of shooting for the flim, Laughton would
enter her dressing room and start crying on her shoulder for hours
saying, “I can’t find Claudius. I can’t find Claudius. I can’t bring 
Claudius to life.”

Needless to say, this caused numerous setbacks in the
shooting schedule. And it lead to much bitter fighting
between von Sternberg the director and Laughton the actor.

Laughton was depressed.

von Sternberg was depressed.

And there was a feeling of tension and unease on the 
set.

What finally killed the film was that Merle Oberon had a
car accident after about a month of shooting into the film.

It turns out Miss Oberon had a crazed chauffeur and
the jerk blew through a traffic intersection crashing into
another car and sending poor Miss Oberon flying
through the windshield of the car (remember there were
no seat belts in those days).

Anyways Merle Oberon’s face was badly cut
and they didn’t know if her scars would ever heal
and since Merle had shot so many scenes as Messalina
it would have been impossible to bring in a replacement for
her (not that Korda would have allowed them to anyways
since his purpose in making the picture was to make an epic
greater than the Hollywood epics of the day with his beloved
Merle as the star).

 

And since the picture was behind schedule anyways because
of Laughton’s anghst and the tensions between Laughton and
von Sternberg, it was decided to just scrap the picture.

Of course, Merle Oberon’s facial scars did heal but by the
time they did, the chilling winds of impending war were already
blowing across Europe so no effort was ever made to finish
the picture.

I remember as a young kid, I had a tremendous crush on
Merle Oberon.

There was one night a week when the local TV station every summer
showed what they called a Korda Film Festival in which they ran one
of Sir Alexander Korda’s great London Films movies from the 1930s.

The first film I ever saw Merle Oberon in was called The Divorce of
Lady X and starred both Miss Oberon and the young Sir
Laurence Olivier.

I went to bed that night having pleasant dreams.

I dreamed that I was busy kissing Merle Oberon.

But my favourite Korda film of all with Merle Oberon in
it was the 1934 The Scarlet Pimpernel in which she
played Lady Blakeney and Leslie Howard played the
eccentric English nobleman and seeming fop Sir Percy
Blakeney (it was just an act for he was actually
the courageous intelligent and brave Scarlet
Pimpernel who saved thousands of Frechmen
and women and children from their deaths at the
hands of Madame Guillotine during the French Revolution).

I remember the dresses Merle Oberon wore in that
film were absolutely gorgeous.

So I’d go to bed imagining that I was the
Scarlet Pimpernel and having spent the day
rescuing people from Robespierre’s guillotine
would spend my nights kissing and making out
with the lovely and beautiful Merle Oberon.

In the few scenes that were shot with
Merle Oberon as Messalina in I, Claudius,
she made a priceless and far better Messalina
than the one they cast in the mid-70s BBC TV
production.

And Flora Robson made a far better Livia
than did the one cast in the mid-70s TV production.

Derek Jacobi was of course excellent as Claudius in
the BBC-TV production.

But how did he stack up against Laughton?

Well of course not too many scenes were shot
with Laughton as Claudius because of Laughton’s personal
anghst in trying to capture the character.

My godfather a retired high school art teacher
who used to also do set designs for local stage
theatre productions once met Charles Laughton.

My godfather and another man Bob Willis
were doing set designs for a University
Studio Theatre production back in the 1950s
and Charles Laughton was going to be sitting
in the audience on the opening night of the production.

The play was a Greek tragedy and was to be set
in the Temple of Diana of the Ephesians.

Now for those of you who have studied classical
Greek history, the statue of Diana of the Ephesians
was of course a multi-breasted woman.

So my godfather and Bob did a faithful reproduction of
the statue- there was Diana of the Ephesians in all her
multi-breasted glory.

Well of course in Social Credit governed Alberta of
the 1950s, to show a statue of a nude multi-breasted
woman would be verbotten shall we say? ;)

So the breasts were covered up with gauze and cloths.

My godfather being the meek and mild mannered man
that he is went along with it.

But Bob Willis was fuming.

On opening night before the play began,
Bob stormed out on stage in front of the curtain
and began a long diatribe against censorship to
the audience.

At first the director thought, “oh well. We’ll just
give Bob the chance to get it all off his chest
and then the play can begin.”

But Bob wasn’t letting up in getting it all
off his chest (the way Diana of the Ephesians
had got it all on her chest) and so after
20 minutes with no end in sight, the play’s
director sent out a couple of extra strong
stage hands to drag Bob off stage.

Bob had to be dragged literally kicking
and screaming off the stage.

At the end of the play, Charles Laughton
in the theatre auditorium was asked by the local
press what he thought of the play and Laughton 
answered in all honesty and seriousness, “Well
I do think the play dragged a bit but I thought
the prologue was positively brilliant. I don’t
think I’ve ever seen a better performed prologue
to this play. That fellow was marvellous.
A marvellous actor. And to have him dragged
kicking and screaming off the stage like that-
with such utter passion. My kudos to the director
for conceiving such a brilliant performance.”

As to who was the better Claudius? Laughton
or Derek Jacobi?

Well most of the scenes with Laughton as Claudius,
Laughton did seem a bit unsure of himself.

You could see his anghst in trying to capture the
character.

Ironically on the same day that Merle Oberon had her
car accident, they shot the scene where Claudius
after the murder of Caligula is dragged off by the
Praetorian Guard to the chambers of the Roman
Senate to have Claudius acclaimed Emperor.

The night before, Laughton had spent hours
listening to a grammophone recording of 
King Edward VIII’s abdication speech
in which Edward gave up the throne “for the woman
I love” (Mrs. Wallis Simpson).

That morning like a child, Laughton excitedly entered
the studio, exclaiming with glee, “I’ve found him.
I’ve found Claudius.”

And after watching that performance where Laughton as
Claudius had spoken to the Senate and the Praetorian 
Guard, my dad and I both sat silent at the end of the speech.

It’s what one does when one is in the presence of a
great work of art.

Viewing the Mona Lisa in the Louvre.

Or gazing at Michaelangelo’s Last Judgement on 
the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.

Or putting down a copy of Shakespeare’s or Keats’
sonnets.

Or having just listened to Beethoven’s 9th Symphony.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen or probably ever will see
a better speech delivered on a screen by an actor.

It was even better than Sir Laurence Olivier’s St.
Crispin’s Day speech from his performance as 
Shakespeare’s King Henry V.

For Laughton had indeed become Claudius.

Sad that the day it happened, Merle Oberon
had a car accident and the picture was shelved.

For what was probably the greatest film performance
in all of motion picture history has sadly been seen by few
as a result.

Only those fortunate enough to watch that scene on
that documentary about the forgotten unfinished epic
of Sir Alexander Korda would have seen it.

And today instead of wondering whether it
was Sir Laurence Olivier or Sir John Gielgud
who was the 20th Century’s greatest actor,
there’d be no discussion.

Laughton as Claudius. The silver screen’s greatest
performance.

The 20th Century’s greatest actor.


Cupid

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Just another Valentine’s Day.

Just another Saturday night.

Except it was a Saturday night that was a Valentine’s Day.

And once again Cupid was working.

Valentine’s Day.

It was his one big day of the year.

Santa Claus had Christmas.

The Easter Bunny had Easter.

And Al Gore had April Fool’s Day.

But this, Cupid thought, this was his day.

This was his moment, this was his time.

To paraphrase Barack Obama.

Cupid set out for the nearest nightclub with his arrows.

After a short kerfuffle with the bouncer, he drew back an arrow and shot the bouncer in the heart.

Just as a male ballet dancer wearing pink tutus arrived on the scene.

The tattooed muscle bound bouncer ran after the pink tutued
male ballet dancer who shouted, “Help! “Help!”.

Cupid entered the nightclub.

He noticed a girl with pink hair sitting up at the bar.

“Hey Psyche,” the bartender said to the pink haired girl, “what will it be?”.

“A Pink Lady,” Psyche replied.

Cupid shot his arrow at Psyche.

“Now for the bartender,” he thought.

But he was having problems getting the arrow into his bow…

and he accidently shot himself in the heart.

Psyche gazed at Cupid.

And Cupid gazed at Psyche.

And after so many eons, Cupid himself now had a girlfriend.

HAPPY VALENTINE’S DAY, everyone!

No One Knows Where The Circle Ends

Friday, February 6th, 2009

Bernie the Baker reached for four chocolate eclairs.

It was for the same kid who had been buying them every
Friday afternoon now for the past 2 years.

The kid didn’t say much. Just bought four
chocolate eclairs. And left the shop.

Bernie looked at the clock. Yep, just after
4 o’ clock- the same time every Friday
the kid bought them.

There was a late afternoon rush of business
people on their way home who stopped to buy 
his goods.

At 6 o’ clock, Bernie closed up shop.

He walked around the block to the little
deli where he ate every Friday night.

He couldn’t handle going back to his apartment
alone every Friday night.

Friday night had been his and Estelle’s night to go out-
have dinner, a glass of wine and then go to a movie,
a concert or a stage play.

How he missed those times.

He didn’t think Estelle would have been the first to go.

Then he thought.

That was selfish of him.

How did he think Estelle would have felt had he been
the first to go?

Living life without the one you truly love must be hard for
anyone male or female.

Being the one left behind is not easy for anyone no
matter who they are.

Of course these days there were plenty of husbands and wives
who felt quite relieved when their spouses die.

But that wasn’t true for him and Estelle.

His and Estelle’s had been a golden love story- one of those
rare and too unfrequent occasions when two soulmates actually met
and encountered one another in the right place at the right time-
the encounter that the rest of us can only dream about.

 

 

Some of us may even think that such a love does not exist.

Because it’s not part of our life, our experience.

Bernie ate his cold meat sandwich and thought back on his
life.

He thought of Richard’s Milkshake Bar.

Wow. Richard’s Milkshake Bar.

He hadn’t thought of that place in years.

A place he had visited when he was a kid.

Oh, how he had loved Richard’s Milk Shake Bar.

Chocolate, strawberry, vanilla, blueberry, raspberry and seemingly
every other flavour under the sun.

You know he had never tasted a milkshake as good before or since.

There was just something about Richard’s milkshakes that was different
and better than any other milkshake.

What was that secret ingredient?

Probably love, his romantic of a mother would have said.

Some people carry out their jobs with love
and it makes all the difference in the world his mother
told him.  Love. Passion. It’s what created excellence not greed or desire
for fame, his mother told him.

Funny, the time he had walked into Richard’s Milkshake Bar
and had been told the old man had died came as a stunning 
blow to him.

He had felt Richard would always be there. Always be there serving
his delicious milkshakes. But he was gone.

Still Bernie ordered a mikshake from the new
owner.

But it wasn’t the same.

And it would never be the same.

Funny, the day he walked away from
Richard’s Mikshake Bar the day Richard
had died, Bernie knew then that he would
look on this period of his life as a golden
age, a golden age as far as milkshakes were
concerned.

 

 

Bernie finished his sandwich and got
up to pay the bill.

As he did so, Bernie felt a sharp piercing
pain in his chest.

He fell to the floor gasping for breath.

Someone call an ambulance, the deli
manager shouted.

Bernie looked at the whirling images
of faces now around him.

The manager, the cashier, the waitress,
the paramedics as they came rushing
through the door.

Then he looked at the woman to his immediate
right.

Estelle.

It was Estelle.

How young and beautiful she looked.

Bernie looked up at her and smiled.

And then closed his mortal eyes for the last
time.

Paul entered the bakery promptly at
4 PM the next Friday afternoon.

He looked around for signs of old Bernie.

Where was old Bernie?

He looked at the chocolate eclairs.

What was up with the chocolate eclairs?

They didn’t look the same.

“Can I help you?” a gruff voice spoke to him.

“Um… where’s Bernie?” Paul asked.

“Bernie’s dead,” the voice answered very
unsympathetically, “he croaked last Friday
night.”

“Um…” Bernie looked at the chocolate eclairs,
“I’ll have… I’ll have… one chocolate eclair please.”

 

 

“One chocolate eclair?” the man answered, “is
that all?”.

“Yes,” Paul nodded.

As he walked down the street after
leaving the bakery, Paul bit into the solitary
chocolate eclair.

No, it wasn’t the same.

And even though young as Paul was, he
felt the voice of wisdom telling him that somehow
this was the end of the golden age as far as
chocolate eclairs were concerned.

He would never again taste a chocolate eclair
as good as Bernie’s had been.

15 years later as Paul sat on a bench
on a promenade overlooking the river
valley, he munched on a ham and cheese
sandwich and started thinking about
Bernie’s Bakery.

Funny, he hadn’t thought about Bernie’s Bakery
in ages. Bernie’s Bakery. And those yummy
mouthwatering out of this world chocolate
eclairs.

What was in it that made them so good?,
Paul wondered.

“Hi, is it all right if I sit here?” a soft gentle
feminine voice asked him.

Paul looked up. A beautiful woman in a multicoloured
spring dress stood there. 

“Sure,” Paul stammered somewhat.

Paul had always usually felt comfortable around pretty women
but this woman somehow felt different.

 

 

Not that Paul didn’t feel comfortable in her presence
but he felt extremely awkward as well for some reason.

Both extremely extremely extremely comfortable and at
the same time awkward. It was a strange sensation.

The more Paul and the young woman whose name was
Laura talked, the more comfortable he felt.

They got up and left the bench and walked on a
path along the river.

They were so busy looking at each other, of course
neither of them would notice the tiny plaque on the park
bench.

For the city encouraged people and businesses to donate
money to pay for these park benches.

And plaques would be put on the back of these
benches naming the people or business who
had sponsored this particular bench.

As Paul walked away with Laura, he thought to
himself, yes the golden age of chocolate eclairs
was long behind him but he couldn’t help thinking
to himself that some vaster greater golden age of
something far far more wonderful lay just ahead
of him.

As for the plaque on the very old but extremely well
kept-up park bench, it read,

Bernie and Estelle- two people who were very much
in love.

The End.