Friday, May 31, 2019

Frank Miller


“The noir hero is a knight in blood caked armor. He's dirty and he does his best to deny the fact that he's a hero the whole time.”

When I was a kid I read comic books.  As far as I know, I was the only one of my friends who did.  They were far less interested in fantasy literature than I and would roll their eyes whenever I would mention the latest volume of X-Men or Spider-Man or The Avengers.  It's funny to think that those titles are the ones that, lately translated into movies, now earn more money than any others at the box office.

My favorites of childhood were originally those of the DC Comics company, which featured Superman, The Flash, Aquaman, and Green Arrow among their champions [again, all now familiar through television shows].  The stories in DC Comics were simple and fun; there was little that was complicated in the relationships between the characters as they all represented the value of fair play and emotional maturity.  They lived in fantasy cities like Metropolis, Gotham, Central City, and such.

One of the high school seniors whom my parents was tutoring told me of another collection of titles and thus I discovered the more complicated world of Marvel Comics, where characters didn't always get along, were rarely supported by the police, government, or media, and always carried the wise-cracking attitude of their New York City locale.  While there were those who had a strong preference for one comics company over the other, I enjoyed both.

Then, due to the good tutelage of my 5th grade teacher, Mrs. Haven, I discovered in my elementary school library a little used section in the corner that simply carried the title "Mythology".  What a series of wonders that section contained.  I checked out Edith Hamilton's classic book on the subject, read it until it was time to return it, checked it out again, and read from beginning to end practically memorizing each and every tale.  It was then that I noticed something interesting.

The themes that were present in the great myths of the Greeks and Romans were the same themes that common to the comic book stories.  Both groups dealt with heroes who carried tremendous flaws; so much so that it was often those flaws more than the super-villains that they had to overcome.

And, of course, in both myth and comics, there was the powerful theme of redemption.  A hero could fail, could know defeat, could be injured or even killed [after all, this was a comics universe so the rules of mortality were different than in the real world], but then, realizing the strength of their own goodness or will or calling or perseverance, they would reclaim their heroic stature to the confusion of their enemies and save the world.

Thus, I read comics with a new eye, eventually surrendering them to favor mythology and later, mainly due to some good professors in college, seeing the same mythic elements re-worked through the fiction of the 19th and 20th centuries.  It was those skills that eventually were employed in scripture and theology classes in my seminary days.  To the surprise of some, I can trace all of my academic achievement to the reading of comic books.

But myths of any sort have their ups and downs; they can collapse under their own mythic weight or not be well-served by their stewards.  Whether it is in the ancient myths or in more modern fiction, there comes a time when, as with their heroes, the literature itself needs to be redeemed.

Such was the case with the character of Batman.  While originally conceived as a man traumatized by his parents' murder before his eyes while a child and determined to wreak vengeance on the criminal class of his city, his originally dark stories became lighter and lighter to the point, by the 1950's, they were losing their audience.  While a silly and camp TV show in the 1960's stalled the decline of the title for awhile, Batman was all but doomed.

Absurd...and a little flabby.

Then a radically different story writer and artist, Frank Miller, had an idea that he managed to sell to Batman's publisher.  In the mid-1980's, a limited edition storyline was introduced that looked like nothing anyone had ever seen, especially for a venerable character that had been around since 1940.  Entitled "The Dark Knight Returns", over a four month period it told the tale of an upper-middle aged Bruce Wayne [for those who don't know, Batman's secret identity; a billionaire loner] long since retired from his highly individual service to his city, content to drink his way through his vast wine collection, muse on the death of his sidekick, Robin, and sit in the darkness of his mansion watching the evening news as the reporters describe in lurid detail the atrocities befalling his city.  Until, one night, a particularly vicious combination of gang violence and political corruption visits violence on the innocent and sends Wayne into a fugue state of righteousness.  Thus, once again, a mysterious figure begins to be seen in Gotham, striking out at the criminal class.

This particular path towards redemption is not easy, however.  Wayne/Batman is 55 years old and bears the long-term physical damage of his vigilante work.  He has not kept himself in shape and is rusty in the art of subterfuge.  The new class of criminal is younger, stronger, and far more vicious.  However, surrendering his alter ego of Wayne and again fully embracing that which he truly is, the persona of "The Dark Knight", Batman rediscovers the essence which is always that of the hero's.

"This should be agony. I should be a mass of aching muscle — broken, spent, unable to move. And, were I an older man, I surely would... But I'm a man of 30 — of 20 again. The rain on my chest is a baptism. I'm born again."

Miller's reinterpretation of Batman not only revitalized the character and comic, but also the genre, beginning the process by which comic books came to be known as "graphic novels".  What was once juvenile literature became a vivid and popular place to explore the relationship between darkness and light in character and action.  Through this renaissance, graphic novels began to reach an acme of literary nuance that was not captured in any other contemporary medium.  So much so, that his interpretation of the Batman character lead to at least three cycles of films that chronicled not so much the adventures of a cartoonish character as they did the nature of mortality, duty, responsibility, independence, and, of course, redemption.

These days one may easily buy collections of Miller's graphic novels in chain bookstores or check them out from libraries.  There are college courses that study his literary style and doctoral dissertations about Miller's contemplation of the archetype of hero.  At least one seminary professor has used Miller to illustrate how to tell a resonant story to adolescents.  Mostly, though, Miller's work is now known in cinema as many of his stories and screenplays have been and are in the process of being filmed. 

What's always been of interest to me through Miller's story is that sometimes, whether it is something as simple and common as a comic book or as deep and eternal as a faithful way of life, there is always the need to re-appraise and sometimes restore the relevance of an experience.  As with the comic book/graphic novel becoming a viable and unlikely source for the study of human nature in popular arts, so it is that religion, once it can be divorced from the narrow strictures assigned to it by poor leadership in the late 20th/early 21st centuries, would be able to blaze a newer, clearer path to a refined contemporary consciousness.

All it takes is a new vision, the courage of leadership to trust it, and that grand, welcome moment of epiphany.

Miller

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Thursday's Place: The University of Leeds Refectory


Refectory is an upscale word, isn't it?  It's really much more classy than "cafeteria" or "canteen" or even "dining hall".  "I'll meet you for a repast in the refectory" is better than "I'll see you when I'm trying to choke down an inedible, dry sandwich in the cafeteria".  It was called a refectory when I attended the original General Theological Seminary in New York City and even on days that were challenged by Chef Ernie's tripe soup, it was still somewhat elegant to spend time in a...ahem...refectory.

The thing is, refectories are large rooms that serve a purpose maybe eighteen times a week.  A room of that size, left empty for most of those hours, still consumes a daunting amount of heat and light.  Those utilities are expensive, so other uses for the space may be required.

For example, the TRW corporation headquarters in Euclid, Ohio had a workforce of 16,000 and the largest cafeteria I've ever seen.  However, in order to assuage costs, even with their vast resources, TRW would rent the massive room to my high school for sports banquets and the infamous senior after-prom.  [The official prom was at the school and supervised by teachers and parents; the after-prom was organized by students and some counter-culture parents and usually featured bands of a much higher quality than those of the official prom.  The after-prom was never considered a success until the police were called.  Ah, youth.]

Leeds University was faced with the same issue in the 1960's.  Their refectory could feed 2100 students at a time, but was empty for the majority of the hours of the week.  To offset expenses, and with very little adjustment to the facility, the university decided to lease the refectory as a concert venue from time to time.  Well, "from time to time" became "frequently", then "weekly"; and, due to the high quality of popular entertainment in England of the swingin' sixties, managed to create, without very much work at all, the most legendary concert venue of the era.

The Leeds equivalent of a student activity committee [that's what they were called in my day] was able, in the mid to late '60's, to summon some up and coming bands to what was the largest indoor performance space in northern England.  Thus, they hosted the following:

The Kinks
Led Zeppelin
Pink Floyd
Elton John
Rod Stewart
Deep Purple
and The Rolling Stones

What made it even more desirable a locale for bands was when The Who recorded Live at Leeds there, in what became the best-selling live music album for over a decade.

[An aside: The Who's concert, performed on February 14, 1970, also made history for achieving the highest decibels of any rock concert.  So much so that it was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records and The Who's guitarist, Pete Townsend, credits his profound deafness to that evening.  Rather proudly credits it, I should add.]
 

After Live at Leeds, everyone had to play in the cafeteria of a sometimes-dreary northern uni, even when larger stadiums and venues became available.  The second generation of musicians to play at Leeds included:

Paul McCartney and Wings
Roxy Music
The Ramones
The Boomtown Rats
ACDC
Fleetwood Mac
Mott the Hoople
Black Sabbath
Leonard Cohen
Queen
Steely Dan

Well, I could go on and on, but you get the idea.  Groups more recognizable to my children and their cousins still perform there and relish it as a rite of passage in their industry.


In fact, I'll leave you now and pull out my old records and my favorite bass and enjoy the rest of the evening trying to break The Who's decibel record.

More may be read here, with a great playlist included.


A Clear, If Pungent, Observation on the Nonsense Occurring on Mount Everest

Monday, May 27, 2019

Memorial Day


A day of reverence that even the nihilism of our post-religious age cannot besmirch.

Lord God Almighty, who have made all peoples of the earth for your glory, to serve you in freedom and peace: Grant to the people of our country a zeal for justice and the strength of forbearance, that we may use our liberty in accordance with your gracious will; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Below, A.E. Housman's "Here Dead We Lie":

Here dead we lie
Because we did not choose
To live and shame the land
From which we sprung.

Life, to be sure,
Is nothing much to lose,
But young men think it is,
And we were young.

[For Jeff and Scott, who were young; and for those of the 1/4th who fought the good fight and kept the faith.  You were the best of us.]

No Surprise

Connecticut tops interstate migration losers as Florida profits

Re-institute highway tolls, Connecticut.  That, in addition to all of the new taxes that have been added over the last few years, will really bring in new businesses and residents.

The leadership of The Episcopal Church is shaking its head over the loss of clergy [down 15% over the last few years] and haven't yet come to the realization that, as with undesirable parts of the U.S., they're going to have to recruit.  That's something that's never been done as clergy of my generation once all wanted to work in Connecticut.  [Honestly, I'm really not sure how I wound up here; it was more of an accident than a plan.  Don't @ me.]

It could be worse.  We could be Rhode Island.

Friday, May 24, 2019

Lucien Aigner


"Pictures produce impact, writing adds meaning. Pictures without words are often ambiguous, words without pictures lame."

He was a small, natty man in a beret.  He would have looked at home in the French countryside, strolling with purpose towards the town.  With a showier wardrobe, he could have been Hercule Poirot.  I had one of the best afternoons of my life with him.

As it was, he didn't live in France, he lived in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, a pokey railroad town with a large number of increasingly geriatric hippies that was just beginning to be discovered by an annoying collection of New Yorkers.  His home, which was also his studio, was just off the main street and in easy walking distance from his familiar hangouts.  On any given day, Lucien would be seen at the local coffee house, the provencal restaurant, the bookstore, the library and, on Sundays, at the Episcopal Church. 

I once asked him, since he was a Jew, why he attended the Episcopal church on Main Street.  He told me that his late wife was an Episcopalian and he had fallen into the habit of walking there on Sunday mornings to listen to the music, which he appreciated.  After services he also enjoyed the whole notion of a "coffee hour" where, as he said, "The coffee and conversation are of a high quality." 

I wasn't sure of his age, although I guessed he was in his 70's [I was off by about twenty years].  He no longer drove, so from time to time, especially as I worked in a school in those days and had weekends and summers off, I would drive him to the supermarket or to a bookstore in the northern part of town.

One year, due to the generosity of one of my wife's cousins, we wound up with season tickets to Tanglewood, the music venue that is the summer home of the Boston Symphony and hosts a variety of other orchestras, quartets, soloists and pop acts during the season.  It was common for us to take along a picnic lunch after my wife had concluded her church services and spend some pleasant afternoons on the great lawn.  When I mentioned this to Lucien, he asked if he could hitch a ride some Sunday and I said, "Sure". 

That Sunday came and I found myself behind Lucien in the season ticket holders' line.  I assumed that he had a ticket but, to my surprise, and to that of the ticket taker, he pulled from his ancient wallet an even more ancient press card from a magazine that was not only German, but I think had ceased publication around the time I was born.  I thought it might disintegrate upon contact with the air.  It looked like some artifact drawn from a forgotten shelf in an archaeology museum [That's about right, actually].  In a spiel that was carefully rehearsed, balanced in its use of persuasive language and enlivened by Lucien's continental charm, he managed to get past the gate attendant, the usher, and the guard and join us in the season ticket holder's private seating area.

As a former reporter, I confessed to how much I admired his technique.  His response remains a classic: "That was nothing compared to sneaking into the League of Nations."

Lucien Aigner was born in 1901 in what was then Austria-Hungary.  He was from a family that was prominent in the shoe industry [his younger brother, Etienne, was the founder of a famous house of luxury leather goods].  He rather disappointed his family when, at the age of nine and in possession of an early Brownie camera, he informed them it was his intention to be a reporter who also took photos.  Little did they realize that, once he had upgraded to a Leica, their son would create the entire field of photojournalism.

Lucien told me of his photo technique, that lazy summer Sunday on the lawn at Tanglewood, in that the secret was always to observe the hand gestures of the subject.  Their motion, more than facial expression or body attitude, indicated that an expression or gesture was about to be made that would allow the photo to have animation and resonance.

For example, the photo of Mussolini above, the one that would advance Lucien into the top rank of news photographers in the 1930's.  While it may appear that Il Duce was expressing his distaste for something before him, in fact he was about to sneeze.  The photo made the cover of Life magazine.

When that failed, it was also good to ask the subject a difficult or troubling question, something designed to annoy them for a moment.  Again, in that second of reaction, their mask would drop and their essence revealed.  For example, this is what happened to Fiorello LaGuardia when he shared a limousine with Lucien:


Or, when one interrupts Einstein when he's on his third pipe and on the verge of solving the riddle of the universe:



Lucien Aigner's photos are on display at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Victoria and Albert in London, and in galleries and smaller collections that specialize in the photographic arts.  I once found an Aigner portrait of Haile Selassie hanging in a small historical society in the Caribbean. 


There are many, many resources online that display the full range of the subjects.  Many of those photos I helped Lucien catalog while he was still living in his home/studio in Great Barrington.  They were stored in trunk after unopened trunk, still bearing travel stickers of the sort that had fallen out of use earlier in the century.  At least one trunk contained photos he had not himself seen in sixty years.  Personally, after combing through his collection, I always thought that his best work was of decidedly non-famous people:

Like this guy

Lucien would eventually move to an assisted living community elsewhere in Massachusetts, where he would die in 1999.  A very complete obituary appeared in the New York Times shortly afterwards; it marked well his contribution to journalism and the art of the camera.

On the occasions when I drive along Great Barrington's Main Street, I still sometimes absent-mindedly look for the natty man in the beret, walking with the memories of his times and those remarkable people, common and uncommon, whose visage he made eternal.

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Thursday's Place: La Cave

La Cave
Cleveland, Ohio


Memories of music inevitably bring me back to Cleveland.  

Just as an aside, and for my parents now in the eternal regions who may hear this sentiment, I'm glad that I spent my formative years in that city of paradox and extremes set on the Great Lakes.  When I was growing up, it was a time of political innovation [Carl Stokes was, in 1968, the first African-American elected mayor of a major American city], an active and inquiring media, compelling, and often tragic, sports seasons, and the greatest collection of characters ever to grace the urban landscape.

But it is for Cleveland's role in music that I'm particularly grateful.  Many know that it is marked as the host city for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame [even though the induction ceremonies are always held in New York], but what may be missed by those not native is the role of the small clubs and gathering places in supporting the nascent artistic community that became the massive rock music industry.

Now, Euclid Avenue is one of the least prepossessing streets anywhere in the United States.  In the downtown of Cleveland, the avenue has some older, urban charm, but after ten blocks or so it surrenders to collections of auto shops, liquor stores, cinder block apartment buildings, the Episcopal cathedral, and, in the early 1960's, at least one, struggling pool hall that eventually surrendered to its fate.

It was then purchased by a couple of enterprising fellows who wanted to start a coffeehouse like those developing in New York City.  That went as well as the pool hall, apparently.  By 1962, the next buyer shortened the name of La Cave de Cafe to simply La Cave [pronounced in the American, rather than French, manner], mainly because the locale was in a basement of its building at the end of the long, steep, narrow, and dark stairway, and began to offer not just coffee.  The new owners also invited local and transient musicians to perform in the corner of the club, and that's when history was made.

During its seven year lifespan, La Cave, that dingy basement club on that dull avenue, hosted performances by Simon & Garfunkel, Buffy Sainte Marie, Jose Feliciano, Ian and Sylvia, Phil Ochs, Janis Ian, Richie Havens, Arlo Guthrie, and Judy Collins.


As folk music surrendered to rock music, La Cave changed its program and introduced Cleveland to performances by Jimi Hendrix, Jefferson Airplane, the Youngbloods, the Butterfield Blues Band, the Jeff Beck Group [with Rod Stewart], Canned Heat, Iron Butterfly, and The Stone Poneys [with their teenage vocalist, Linda Ronstradt].

However, what became the biggest act in Cleveland, and the most familiar returning act at La Cave, was Greenwich Village's own The Velvet Underground, featuring Lou Reed, and widely known as Andy Warhol's favorite band.


Not bad for an underground room that could, at best, hold 200 people in an uncomfortable closeness, filled as it was with motley tables and chairs purchased from the cathedral's rummage sale.

All good things.., however.  As rock music became a massive, multi-million dollar industry whose musicians could fill stadiums, the role of little clubs such as La Cave would subside and, as early as 1969, it would close for good.  I hope that the owners took heart, especially in reflection, at how they changed the world's music simply by indulging in an idea for off-center entertainment and opening those doors.

Yeah, But It Sells Newspapers

The Conventional Wisdom About Millennial Suffering Is A Myth

Well, technically, it sells "clicks" on a computer site, but it's the same idea.

If you judge your life by what you covet in others, you will always be miserable.  It's always about how one exercises one's choices and moral agency.
The driving reason for this disparity is the millennial penchant for delaying traditional adult milestones. As a group, they are prone to choose short-term happiness and independence over long-term wealth accumulation. Now, maybe millennials are leading more fulfilling lives than their parents and grandparents, and maybe not. Comparing themselves economically to generations that embraced a different set of priorities at the same age, and then wondering why the results are different, however, is disingenuous.

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Our Imminent Return


I've been following the trail of Old Bull Lee this week, enduring the 108° heat and the French.  Sitting in a pleasant courtyard in Marrakech this afternoon, drinking mint tea and listening the muezzin's call to prayer, I realized that I have to return to the other, far less adventurous, life soon, and thankful that, even at my advanced age, I can still feel the wild from time to time.