My three-day weekend was a whirlwind of activity with
different friends in my circle, but with plenty of time for myself as well.
Saturday I went down to Paper Presentation near Union Square and picked out
supplies and tools for my love letter project. I have two of the four written
and I hope to get them all finished this week, since I don’t have many other
plans, except my Samhain ritual.
Saturday evening Liz invited me to dinner with her and
Victoria at Liz’s Upper East Side apartment, my first time visiting her place
after several aborted attempts. It resembles my place in a lot of ways, except
everything is, well, Liz-sized. Her double bed fits into a nook across from
wall closets on the way to the bathroom. Her kitchen is set out along a wall
the way mine is wrapped around a corner, opposite an exposed brick wall. Her
little flatscreen TV sits above a faux fireplace across from her coffee table
and sleeper sofa. She has lots of curios, theater props and posters on the
walls, plus art and photography, like I do with cinema. It’s a cozy little
space and shows a lot of her personality. And you can see in the photo that she wore these whimsical tights with etchings of an M-16 rifle on one leg, and a Walther PPK semi-automatic pistol in a garter holster on the other, which caused no shortage of laughs all evening.
For dinner, we had barbecue pork shoulder that she made in a
slow-cooker, along with corn and candied jalapeno peppers. For dessert, Liz and
Victoria had baked that afternoon pumpkin and cranberry cookies and apple
scones, using some of the Macintosh apples we picked up at Fishkill. I brought
a bottle of Malbec; Victoria had brought three kinds of whiskey, so we had a
little tasting flight with Liz’s three shot glasses (one of which belonged to
her grandmother).
After dinner we made our way down to the PIT to see Josh
performing as Riff Raff in the Rocky Whor-er PIT-ure Show, a full-cast
performance with costumes, props and sets in front of a projection screen. Liz
has actually performed RHPS in other companies elsewhere, so she knew a lot of
the audience responses. The only time I’ve seen it before in a full performance
was decades ago at Houston’s River Oaks Theater on West Gray, so I felt a bit
like Charlie in “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” seeing it for the first time.
Puck and I saw a version at Steampunk World’s Fair one year, but we didn’t stay
even halfway because it was super-late. I have pictures of Puck having their
cherry popped. It was a wonderfully staged, acted and lit performance. After
the show, we had another round of drinks and hopped into a cab home.
Sunday Gette and I accepted an invitation to speak on a
talk-back panel about polyamory following a play called “The Goddess,” which
was about an open marriage. Since they gave each of us a free extra ticket, I
invited Lori to come, so she and Gette came over to the apartment and we
chatted for a while before getting a cab to the theater in Kips Bay. The play
was excellent, with powerful acting and an interesting way of presenting the
challenges of an open marriage. Natalie and her new person, Zephyr, came by for
the talk-back, which included two sex therapists, an author on swinging, and a
psychotherapist, along with Gette and me. It was actually quite short, but we
all got the opportunity to say something, so it was a nice experience.
Natalie had to leave directly after, so Gette, Lori, Zephyr
and I walked down to Peacefood Café near Union Square for dinner. This
Peacefood is much classier and chill than the one we’ve been to on the Upper
West Side near Papacookie. Gette left early to meet up with a date. After dinner, the remaining three of us went our separate ways - I went home to do my laundry and get some rest before my big day.
Monday was our taping of The View at ABC Studios, so I got
picked up from my apartment by a black Cadillac Escalade like a movie star. I
walked past the small line of people forming on the sidewalk, through the lobby
past a throng of ticketholders and up the elevator to the dressing and makeup
rooms. Diana was there already, and Leon arrived soon after. Neil Patrick
Harris squeezed by me in the hallway, and we later got his dressing room. We
saw the dressing rooms of Barbara Walters and Jenny McCarthy; Whoopi was off
that day. While I tried to round up our other VIP guests downstairs, Leon and
Diana rehearsed with the producer in the dressing room, then went into makeup.
We made our way down to the set and sat in the Green Room,
waiting to go on. Olivia Newton-John and Lynda Carter were in two segments
before us, so we followed Sandy Olsen from Grease and Wonder Woman. The segment
was only five minutes long, and more combative than I thought it would be, but
I think we still came out looking pretty good. We met up with our friends in
the audience and said our goodbyes before getting back in our cars and heading
home.
The rest of the afternoon I worked on getting the
announcement ready and out, plus checking in with the office. Piper came over
around 4 and took a nap before we headed out for dinner. First I stopped by the
B&H Photo Store to return some things, then we went to Brother Jimmy’s BBQ
near Penn Station. We walked through the Greeley Square food stands and got
mini-donuts with Paris Time sugar (lavender, pistachio and vanilla) from the Doughnuttery stall and assorted macarons from Macaron Parlour Patisserie for dessert on our way home.
The Doughnuttery's mini-donut automated frying line reminded me of the full-size one at the standalone Krispy Kreme shop in Bellaire, TX.
The Doughnuttery's mini-donut automated frying line reminded me of the full-size one at the standalone Krispy Kreme shop in Bellaire, TX.
We’re continuing our AFI marathon, so our lineup of
candidates this time was the following movies:
19. Chinatown
29. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
39. Doctor Zhivago
49. Snow White and the Seven Dwarves
59. Rebel Without a Cause
69. Shane
79. The Deer Hunter
89. Patton
99. Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner
We picked Chinatown, and I gotta say, it was a creepy movie.
The two gunshots startled Piper so much that she actually screamed, and the
knifing of Jake Gittes’ nose was shocking. The whole thing was quite
unsettling, but it was an interesting take on the private eye movie. I saw a
lot of “L.A. Confidential” in it. Piper crashed on the couch while I made final
edits to my press release and sent it out before going to bed.