All Parade Photos Outdoors Taken by Gregg |
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
Sunday, November 3, 2019
Tuesday, October 22, 2019
ENDORSEMENT REQUEST
I hate ads of any kind, especially ads on websites. They take attention away from the site's content. Therefore, I have designed an endorsement that will promote your restaurant, one that fits right in with the material in front of you. How is that possible?
I review theatre. I interview theatre people. I am a well-known writer for the theatre. People who go to the theatre like to know my opinion, and read my reviews. They also like to eat before and after shows. Some like to eat out. Others like to order in. My endorsement of your eatery includes my review of the establishment, shows a photo inside or out and presents the most favorite menu items, including all pertinent information for your clients like address and phone number. There is also a link to your website.
My blog gets 15, 000 hits per month, so I guarantee you will be seen and read. Check out the link below of a typical local restaurant:
https://grigware.blogspot.com/2019/10/endorsement-eat-at-dog-haus.html
If you like what you see, I can do the same for you. The prices are exceedingly reasonable.
For your listing, posted every week for the entire month, you pay only $200. It will be on the site and seen every day.
If you choose the wiser, 6 month plan, here's the deal:
1st month $150
2nd month $100
3rd month $100
4th month $100
5th month $75
6th month $50
It's a total of $575 paid upfront for 6 months with the endorsement appearing every day. If you choose $200 per month, you will end up paying $1200 over 6 months, more than twice as much.
Take the deal and tell your friends. Watch your customers grow and your business prosper!
Thursday, October 17, 2019
interview request
Hello,
I am well-known freelance writer Don Grigware. I would love to do an interview with you. I do charge $200 - a fee which you may negotiate with me. The article will appear on my popular blog www.grigwaretalkstheatre.com It is difficult to earn a living as a writer in Los Angeles, as most sites do not pay their writers. What you pay me is to compose and put together the interview, nothing more. You are not paying for where it appears.
My site gets about 15, 000 hits a month, so your article will be widely seen. The interview will help promote your project and may also appear on other prominent sites I associate with by sharing content. If interested, we will discuss this.
Contact me here and we will proceed via our regular emails.
thank you,
sincerely,
Don
I am well-known freelance writer Don Grigware. I would love to do an interview with you. I do charge $200 - a fee which you may negotiate with me. The article will appear on my popular blog www.grigwaretalkstheatre.com It is difficult to earn a living as a writer in Los Angeles, as most sites do not pay their writers. What you pay me is to compose and put together the interview, nothing more. You are not paying for where it appears.
My site gets about 15, 000 hits a month, so your article will be widely seen. The interview will help promote your project and may also appear on other prominent sites I associate with by sharing content. If interested, we will discuss this.
Contact me here and we will proceed via our regular emails.
thank you,
sincerely,
Don
Wednesday, October 9, 2019
Anastasia review
CRITIC's PICK
Anastasia The New Broadway Musical
book by Terrence McNally
music by Stephen Flaherty/lyrics by Lynn Ahrens
directed by Darko Tresnjak
Hollywood Pantages Theatre
choreographed by Peggy Hickey
musical director: Lawrence Goldberg
through October 27 only
Based on the 1997 animated film "Anastasia", Anastasia the New Broadway Musical, bowing on broadway in 2017, is an entertaining whirlwind of sight and sound. It will make you laugh and cry. You will undoubtedly leave the theatre with a lasting impression of grande theatricality and how it weaves its magic into our humdrum lives. Plus, it is based on fact. Currently onstage at the Hollywood Pantages until October 27 only, this Anastasia has the makings of a great big hit.
In 1917 when the Romanov dynasty was gunned down in St. Petersburg, Russia by the revolting Bolsheviks, the entire family perished with perhaps the exception of Grand Duchess Anastasia of Nikolaevna. It was rumored that she survived, merely a rumor, no proof. In 1927 impoverished street sweeper Anya (Lila Coogan), looking for other work, stumbles upon conmen Dimitry (Jake Levy) and his partner Vlad (Edward Staudenmayer), who are determined to come up with a girl that they may train and pass off as Anastasia to her grandmother the Dowager Empress (Joy Franz), who now resides in Paris. She is a hardboiled woman who lives with the dream of finding her granddaughter but is quick to decry a fraud of any kind.
Terrence McNally has cautiously structured his book with Act One in Russia and Act Two in Paris. In 1927 Paris offered everything that Russia did not: freedom, and the opportunity for creativity, basically to live as one pleased. The characters we see in St, Petersburg in Act One are searching for soemthing better. Orphan Anya wants to know who she is and Dimitry, also an orphan, longs to find his identity as well. Vlad wants to find passion with his former lover Countess Lily (Tari Kelly), now a lady in waiting to the Dowager Empress, and the Dowager Empress still dreams of being reunited with Anastasia. Another character, new to the Anastasia storyline, is Gleb, a villainous Bolshevik general who has taken control of St. Petersburg, now called Leningrad. Gleb's (Jason Michael Evans) father was one of the revolutionaries who gunned down Anastasia's family. He longs to be like his father and kill Anastasia, if she exists. Unfortunately, for him, he falls in love with Anya and cannot complete his mission.
The beauty of the story is that the old adage is dispoved; the grass is not always greener on the other side. Happiness cannot be bought. Anya is Anastasia and is reunited with her grandmother, but she finds she is in love with Dimitry and would rather continue her life wih him than live amongst the wealthy members of the royal family. Dimitry too gives up his desire for the money and settles for the beauty of being forever in love with Anya. It's a lovely fairytale come to life.
Under Tresnjak's uber skilled direction and with Peggy Hickey's fast and furious choreography, the ensemble is sublime. Coogan is dynamic as Anya with a rich and powerful vocal instrument. Stuadenmayer is a fabulous dancer and delightfully funny as Vlad. Evans makes a strong villain out of gleb and Levy is fine as Dimitry. Franz is superb as the Dowager Empress, torn by doubt and filled with relentless passion. The real scene stealer in Act Two is Kelly as Lily. She is hilarious as the member of the court in love with a commoner and goes all out to get thunderous laughs.
Technically projection design by Aaron Rhyne is over the moon. St. Petersburg at night converting in Anya's mind into the 1917 ball preceding her family's execution is astounding as is the ride on the train from Russia to France. With the movement of thr railroad tracks behind, you could swear you were onboard. Add bravo to scenic designer Alexander Dodge, to gorgeous costumes by Linda Cho, magnificent lighting design to Donald Holder and vibrant sound design to Peter Hylenski. McNally's book moves along providing tears and laughter and Lynn Ahren's and Stephen Flaherty's score is memorable, especially during the "Traveling Sequence". The train station reminds one almost to the letter of the immigrants in Ragtime, which the pair also cowrote.
Don't miss Anastasia the New Broadway Musical! It is a theatrical experience of the highest order. I saw men cry as well as women, so forget that macho crap! This is a sensitive tale filled with passion for everyone young and old.
5 out of 5 stars
www.hollywoodpantages.com
(photo credit: Evan Zimmerman)
Anastasia The New Broadway Musical
book by Terrence McNally
music by Stephen Flaherty/lyrics by Lynn Ahrens
directed by Darko Tresnjak
Hollywood Pantages Theatre
choreographed by Peggy Hickey
musical director: Lawrence Goldberg
through October 27 only
Based on the 1997 animated film "Anastasia", Anastasia the New Broadway Musical, bowing on broadway in 2017, is an entertaining whirlwind of sight and sound. It will make you laugh and cry. You will undoubtedly leave the theatre with a lasting impression of grande theatricality and how it weaves its magic into our humdrum lives. Plus, it is based on fact. Currently onstage at the Hollywood Pantages until October 27 only, this Anastasia has the makings of a great big hit.
In 1917 when the Romanov dynasty was gunned down in St. Petersburg, Russia by the revolting Bolsheviks, the entire family perished with perhaps the exception of Grand Duchess Anastasia of Nikolaevna. It was rumored that she survived, merely a rumor, no proof. In 1927 impoverished street sweeper Anya (Lila Coogan), looking for other work, stumbles upon conmen Dimitry (Jake Levy) and his partner Vlad (Edward Staudenmayer), who are determined to come up with a girl that they may train and pass off as Anastasia to her grandmother the Dowager Empress (Joy Franz), who now resides in Paris. She is a hardboiled woman who lives with the dream of finding her granddaughter but is quick to decry a fraud of any kind.
Terrence McNally has cautiously structured his book with Act One in Russia and Act Two in Paris. In 1927 Paris offered everything that Russia did not: freedom, and the opportunity for creativity, basically to live as one pleased. The characters we see in St, Petersburg in Act One are searching for soemthing better. Orphan Anya wants to know who she is and Dimitry, also an orphan, longs to find his identity as well. Vlad wants to find passion with his former lover Countess Lily (Tari Kelly), now a lady in waiting to the Dowager Empress, and the Dowager Empress still dreams of being reunited with Anastasia. Another character, new to the Anastasia storyline, is Gleb, a villainous Bolshevik general who has taken control of St. Petersburg, now called Leningrad. Gleb's (Jason Michael Evans) father was one of the revolutionaries who gunned down Anastasia's family. He longs to be like his father and kill Anastasia, if she exists. Unfortunately, for him, he falls in love with Anya and cannot complete his mission.
The beauty of the story is that the old adage is dispoved; the grass is not always greener on the other side. Happiness cannot be bought. Anya is Anastasia and is reunited with her grandmother, but she finds she is in love with Dimitry and would rather continue her life wih him than live amongst the wealthy members of the royal family. Dimitry too gives up his desire for the money and settles for the beauty of being forever in love with Anya. It's a lovely fairytale come to life.
Under Tresnjak's uber skilled direction and with Peggy Hickey's fast and furious choreography, the ensemble is sublime. Coogan is dynamic as Anya with a rich and powerful vocal instrument. Stuadenmayer is a fabulous dancer and delightfully funny as Vlad. Evans makes a strong villain out of gleb and Levy is fine as Dimitry. Franz is superb as the Dowager Empress, torn by doubt and filled with relentless passion. The real scene stealer in Act Two is Kelly as Lily. She is hilarious as the member of the court in love with a commoner and goes all out to get thunderous laughs.
Technically projection design by Aaron Rhyne is over the moon. St. Petersburg at night converting in Anya's mind into the 1917 ball preceding her family's execution is astounding as is the ride on the train from Russia to France. With the movement of thr railroad tracks behind, you could swear you were onboard. Add bravo to scenic designer Alexander Dodge, to gorgeous costumes by Linda Cho, magnificent lighting design to Donald Holder and vibrant sound design to Peter Hylenski. McNally's book moves along providing tears and laughter and Lynn Ahren's and Stephen Flaherty's score is memorable, especially during the "Traveling Sequence". The train station reminds one almost to the letter of the immigrants in Ragtime, which the pair also cowrote.
Don't miss Anastasia the New Broadway Musical! It is a theatrical experience of the highest order. I saw men cry as well as women, so forget that macho crap! This is a sensitive tale filled with passion for everyone young and old.
5 out of 5 stars
www.hollywoodpantages.com
(photo credit: Evan Zimmerman)
Saturday, September 28, 2019
Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Saturday, August 17, 2019
2019 Birthday Dinner
(with Sheila and JJ at Brent's Deli Northridg) So much food; I was stuffed after the delicious clam chowder; brought the brisket dinner home...
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
Grandparents New Article July2019
When I contemplate how old I am and how much has changed in the world, I am gobsmacked, dumbfounded and feel quite out of place. I was a kid in the 50s and times were simple and safe. I lived in an apartment building, and we could leave our windows and door to the back porch open at night in the summer to let in a cool breeze. You could walk down the street without being laughed at and bullied...well, at least a lot less than nowadays. I was fat and there was no getting around anyone pointing a finger and singling me out as different. My mother could walk back from sodality meetings at church at night without worry of being accosted or robbed. There was a sense of community in which people protected rather than harassed one another.
And then, there's the world of technology to deal with. Back in the 50s we did not have computers or cell phones to occupy our time. We did have television, but parents usually put a limit on how many hours you could watch it. It was the same with radio. You could listen for an hour or so a day. If you played games - no, not video games; no internet, remember - physical games like softball, basketball or touch football; or had hobbies like stamp collecting, getting autographs or accumulating baseball cards or record albums ... these were pleasant, peaceful pastimes without any kind of violence that could physically or mentally harm you or your friends. It was a keen time in which to grow up.
Advanced technology creates distractions from what is basic and at the core of our lifestyle. Take violence, for example. It's everywhere we look in 2019. In international wars, on the big and small screens, and on the computer. The internet fosters hooking up with people you don't know, possible criminals who can take advantage of you in so many damaging ways. Now I am a grandfather. I have to look out for my children and my grandkids. They are my responsibility ... or are they? Has our world become so technologically advanced and independant that we can function alone without close personal help? Is it inconsiderate to question any choices they may make; do they consider us butting into their affairs and interfering in what belongs to them and them alone? This is a big problem in our relationships. But do we want to court violence that can happen in the blink of an eye, that can destroy our loving connections?
Let's take a close look at my friend Tim, also a grandfather, and how keeping quiet has created a significant rift with his family members. Tim does not believe in putting himself in the middle of controversy, even though keeping silent makes him terribly unhappy. His little 10 year-old grandson Mark emails him all the time to tell him of his exploits, like overspending on his father's credit cards or shunning relatives even when they send him gifts, or worse, lying to his parents about what he has been doing. When Tim phones his daughter Ellen - the family lives in Pennsylvania - she laughs when she tells him how cute she thinks Mark has become in his efforts to get ahead and how sharp his aggressiveness is in propelling him forward into, what she believes will be a successful future. Tim is appalled but says nothing. He's petrified to get into a fight with Ellen. He is also afraid to fly back and visit, knowing full well the horrors that await him.
I am always telling Tim that he is dead wrong. We have been friends a long time, since college, and so I know I can say anything to him. I want to encourage him to do what I have been doing. My little 9 year-old granddaughter Susie has already overlooked parental permission. She uses the internet to hook up with whom she believes to be new friends. She even made a date to meet a man on her school playground during mid-morning break. I was mortified, and when I told her that was wrong, she giggled and said, "Grandpa, you're an old fuddy duddy."|"Don\t talk to me that way", I retorted, "Never talk to your elders like that." She hung up on me, so I called my son Dave and told him how I felt. At first he made light of it, but in a week or so, he called me back and apologized. "Dad, I know you mean well...and you're right. I have suspended Susie's privileges. No internet for a week." I told him it should be for good, but I knew full well that a week's punishment is better than none at all.
As it turned out that man Susie met was harmless, but what if he had kidnapped her or tried to rape her? It happens all the time and I do not wish my relatives to be party to that. Communicate how you feel or else you are miserable. I have to compromise my feelings but so be it. Tim won't do a thing. I pray he will not be in for a shock, as Mark seems to get more brazen by the minute. From what Tim hears, Mark is getting some tattoos and has threatened to sue his parents if they try to interfere with his behavior. Imagine suits from minors! Deplorable.
Speaking of violence I accidentally caught a video game recently online and was stupified at how much violence is utilized. Kids see this and think it's a joke. Hitting someone over the head with a hockey puck, pushing someone backward and letting them fall down a flight of stairs, pulling out a knife or even worse a gun and pointing at another, threatening to pull the trigger. It's all too much. It puts evil ideas into kids' heads. It should be stopped or parents should not allow their kids to watch it. Our parents never did. I was brought up Catholic and most films with the slightest amount of objectionable material were condemned. Maybe that was not such a bad motion after all. It kept us safe. Some might look at it as reverse psychology. Try to prevent the kid from doing something and then he is bound to do it. It's a confusing world for all of us.
Technology is here to stay. It will only get more advanced, increasing dangers for one and all. Should I calm down and stop worrying? Never. I don't care. I will continue to interfere in my children's decisions that affect my grandchildren. I will do my best, whatever that is, to help keep them more secure and purposeful in their intentions. They are the future; we have to ensure that they grow up to be good leaders., who work diligently to make the world a better place.
And then, there's the world of technology to deal with. Back in the 50s we did not have computers or cell phones to occupy our time. We did have television, but parents usually put a limit on how many hours you could watch it. It was the same with radio. You could listen for an hour or so a day. If you played games - no, not video games; no internet, remember - physical games like softball, basketball or touch football; or had hobbies like stamp collecting, getting autographs or accumulating baseball cards or record albums ... these were pleasant, peaceful pastimes without any kind of violence that could physically or mentally harm you or your friends. It was a keen time in which to grow up.
Advanced technology creates distractions from what is basic and at the core of our lifestyle. Take violence, for example. It's everywhere we look in 2019. In international wars, on the big and small screens, and on the computer. The internet fosters hooking up with people you don't know, possible criminals who can take advantage of you in so many damaging ways. Now I am a grandfather. I have to look out for my children and my grandkids. They are my responsibility ... or are they? Has our world become so technologically advanced and independant that we can function alone without close personal help? Is it inconsiderate to question any choices they may make; do they consider us butting into their affairs and interfering in what belongs to them and them alone? This is a big problem in our relationships. But do we want to court violence that can happen in the blink of an eye, that can destroy our loving connections?
Let's take a close look at my friend Tim, also a grandfather, and how keeping quiet has created a significant rift with his family members. Tim does not believe in putting himself in the middle of controversy, even though keeping silent makes him terribly unhappy. His little 10 year-old grandson Mark emails him all the time to tell him of his exploits, like overspending on his father's credit cards or shunning relatives even when they send him gifts, or worse, lying to his parents about what he has been doing. When Tim phones his daughter Ellen - the family lives in Pennsylvania - she laughs when she tells him how cute she thinks Mark has become in his efforts to get ahead and how sharp his aggressiveness is in propelling him forward into, what she believes will be a successful future. Tim is appalled but says nothing. He's petrified to get into a fight with Ellen. He is also afraid to fly back and visit, knowing full well the horrors that await him.
I am always telling Tim that he is dead wrong. We have been friends a long time, since college, and so I know I can say anything to him. I want to encourage him to do what I have been doing. My little 9 year-old granddaughter Susie has already overlooked parental permission. She uses the internet to hook up with whom she believes to be new friends. She even made a date to meet a man on her school playground during mid-morning break. I was mortified, and when I told her that was wrong, she giggled and said, "Grandpa, you're an old fuddy duddy."|"Don\t talk to me that way", I retorted, "Never talk to your elders like that." She hung up on me, so I called my son Dave and told him how I felt. At first he made light of it, but in a week or so, he called me back and apologized. "Dad, I know you mean well...and you're right. I have suspended Susie's privileges. No internet for a week." I told him it should be for good, but I knew full well that a week's punishment is better than none at all.
As it turned out that man Susie met was harmless, but what if he had kidnapped her or tried to rape her? It happens all the time and I do not wish my relatives to be party to that. Communicate how you feel or else you are miserable. I have to compromise my feelings but so be it. Tim won't do a thing. I pray he will not be in for a shock, as Mark seems to get more brazen by the minute. From what Tim hears, Mark is getting some tattoos and has threatened to sue his parents if they try to interfere with his behavior. Imagine suits from minors! Deplorable.
Speaking of violence I accidentally caught a video game recently online and was stupified at how much violence is utilized. Kids see this and think it's a joke. Hitting someone over the head with a hockey puck, pushing someone backward and letting them fall down a flight of stairs, pulling out a knife or even worse a gun and pointing at another, threatening to pull the trigger. It's all too much. It puts evil ideas into kids' heads. It should be stopped or parents should not allow their kids to watch it. Our parents never did. I was brought up Catholic and most films with the slightest amount of objectionable material were condemned. Maybe that was not such a bad motion after all. It kept us safe. Some might look at it as reverse psychology. Try to prevent the kid from doing something and then he is bound to do it. It's a confusing world for all of us.
Technology is here to stay. It will only get more advanced, increasing dangers for one and all. Should I calm down and stop worrying? Never. I don't care. I will continue to interfere in my children's decisions that affect my grandchildren. I will do my best, whatever that is, to help keep them more secure and purposeful in their intentions. They are the future; we have to ensure that they grow up to be good leaders., who work diligently to make the world a better place.
Grandparents new Article 4
To be sure, grandparents have many responsibilities to work out with their grandchildren. On the plus side, one of them has to be to make them happy. What happier venture can there be than a trip to Disneyland in Anaheim, California or to Disneyworld if you are in Orlando, Florida. You have opportunities on both coasts to spread love in the form of bigger than life entertainment.
I have always detested the crowds and the lines and the overall wait time at the Disney parks, but I must admit getting out into the throng of families and kids of all ages is a way to view a minicosm of the world. There are people who come from everywhere to enjoy Mickey and Minnie Mouse and the other cartoon characters, to visit places like the Haunted Mansion or the Mark Twain Riverboat and to participate in the street parade during the summer at night with a dazzling array of fireworks. There are North Americans, South and Central Americans, Mexicans, Asians, Europeans and many more nationalities who upon visiting this fairyland experience what it's like to be American for the day, week or however long they're staying.
The excitement of seeing the cartoon characters like Mickey larger than life on the streets waving at you and then greeting you up close is thrilling. After all, it's the sharing of friendship and love that counts. I carried my little 3 year-old Marie over to Donald Duck to give him a hug as she blurted out, "I wuv you, Duckie. " He laughed and jumped up and down for joy. What a pleasure to witness!
Then, of course, there's my favorite attraction the Haunted Mansion, a little too scary for tiny ones like Marie, but ... I found myself making the trek with my son Jake, as Mary treated Marie to a cinnamon-sugar churro on the midway. Then there are the terrific indoor shows where you can watch and sing along to all the merry Disney tunes. Frozen was an experience that left us all breathless...the beautiful sets, costumes and those triple threat actors and actresses who can sing, dance and act to the max.
Once you have spent a day at Disneyland with your grandchildren, you realize that there still is a lot of kid inside you and what you share is unforgettable fun.
I have always detested the crowds and the lines and the overall wait time at the Disney parks, but I must admit getting out into the throng of families and kids of all ages is a way to view a minicosm of the world. There are people who come from everywhere to enjoy Mickey and Minnie Mouse and the other cartoon characters, to visit places like the Haunted Mansion or the Mark Twain Riverboat and to participate in the street parade during the summer at night with a dazzling array of fireworks. There are North Americans, South and Central Americans, Mexicans, Asians, Europeans and many more nationalities who upon visiting this fairyland experience what it's like to be American for the day, week or however long they're staying.
The excitement of seeing the cartoon characters like Mickey larger than life on the streets waving at you and then greeting you up close is thrilling. After all, it's the sharing of friendship and love that counts. I carried my little 3 year-old Marie over to Donald Duck to give him a hug as she blurted out, "I wuv you, Duckie. " He laughed and jumped up and down for joy. What a pleasure to witness!
Then, of course, there's my favorite attraction the Haunted Mansion, a little too scary for tiny ones like Marie, but ... I found myself making the trek with my son Jake, as Mary treated Marie to a cinnamon-sugar churro on the midway. Then there are the terrific indoor shows where you can watch and sing along to all the merry Disney tunes. Frozen was an experience that left us all breathless...the beautiful sets, costumes and those triple threat actors and actresses who can sing, dance and act to the max.
Once you have spent a day at Disneyland with your grandchildren, you realize that there still is a lot of kid inside you and what you share is unforgettable fun.
Monday, July 22, 2019
Grandparents New Article3
Grandparents beware! As happy as you may be to be a new grandparent, realize from the top that there are tons of responsibilities that face you in the years ahead. It's not just about buying gifts, sending cards and wishing them well. It's more about tough love, a love that they may not like but it is up to you to ensure that they get it, understand it and mature responsibly.
I have one grandchild, my son John's 10 year-old little girl Ally, who is sweet, caring and always ready to receive my love and send it back. She does not seek out excuses to not do her homework or chores around the house, but does everything carefully and loves to learn. She sends me drawings or sketches via email, some of her, others of me and some of the two of us together ... even if it's not real but the product of her imagination, it doesn't matter. She's honest, loyal and endearing.
Then I have another Todd, a 9 year-old from my daughter Marie. Just the opposite from his cousin Ally. He does not thank me for any of my gifts, only writes when his mother makes him, and, as of late, has started to lie to his parents about where he goes after school and who his friends are. He is technologically savy for a little kid, but what does that mean if he is not responsible toward his family?
I must say when I heard about being a grandfather for the first time, I was delirious with joy, but as of late, am burdened with worry about Todd. If only Ally could talke some sense into him, but they barely know each otther...and their parents next to never connect.
If you have a suggestion, write to me and share your story with me. I am most enthusiastic to go forward as a grandparent who truly cares about how to make his grandchildren bear up to total responsibility.
I have one grandchild, my son John's 10 year-old little girl Ally, who is sweet, caring and always ready to receive my love and send it back. She does not seek out excuses to not do her homework or chores around the house, but does everything carefully and loves to learn. She sends me drawings or sketches via email, some of her, others of me and some of the two of us together ... even if it's not real but the product of her imagination, it doesn't matter. She's honest, loyal and endearing.
Then I have another Todd, a 9 year-old from my daughter Marie. Just the opposite from his cousin Ally. He does not thank me for any of my gifts, only writes when his mother makes him, and, as of late, has started to lie to his parents about where he goes after school and who his friends are. He is technologically savy for a little kid, but what does that mean if he is not responsible toward his family?
I must say when I heard about being a grandfather for the first time, I was delirious with joy, but as of late, am burdened with worry about Todd. If only Ally could talke some sense into him, but they barely know each otther...and their parents next to never connect.
If you have a suggestion, write to me and share your story with me. I am most enthusiastic to go forward as a grandparent who truly cares about how to make his grandchildren bear up to total responsibility.
Grandparents New Article2
Grandparents do not always take center stage in the family. This is apparent when their children no longer value the traditions that accompanied their growth and maturation. They look at their parents as over the hill and lacking the foresight to accept current trends as important changes for the future.
I was brought up a Catholic under the very strict beliefs of my mother. Swearing, not attending mass or skipping catechism classes were signs of rudeness or laziness and were never tolerated. My father was not a church goer but supported my mother to the letter and provided the proper punishment for me when she shared her feelings with him. Yes, I was slapped on the derriere and sent to my room without dinner.
Slapping by today's standards is called abuse. Children should never be touched unless you are hugging them as a sign of approval and love. This is the credo of my children who coddle their children, my grandchildren. When I tire of hearing how much they get away with, I try to instill in them a sense of what is right and wrong. However, the kids don't listen and neither do their parents.
I so want to be close with my family once more. I want to communicate regularly with them, but their refusal to accept my traditional perspectives makes it practically impossible. Refusing to send them cards or gifts for Christmas or birthdays is not acceptable to me. Neither is refusing to call and speak to them over the phone, or not writing emails. Communication is so important in any relationship, and despite my antagonism toward foolish changes in bringing up children, I will continue to try to contact them. At some point I am sure they will wake up and smell the roses. If not, we are literally outcasts, and our world is filled with loneliness and despair.
I was brought up a Catholic under the very strict beliefs of my mother. Swearing, not attending mass or skipping catechism classes were signs of rudeness or laziness and were never tolerated. My father was not a church goer but supported my mother to the letter and provided the proper punishment for me when she shared her feelings with him. Yes, I was slapped on the derriere and sent to my room without dinner.
Slapping by today's standards is called abuse. Children should never be touched unless you are hugging them as a sign of approval and love. This is the credo of my children who coddle their children, my grandchildren. When I tire of hearing how much they get away with, I try to instill in them a sense of what is right and wrong. However, the kids don't listen and neither do their parents.
I so want to be close with my family once more. I want to communicate regularly with them, but their refusal to accept my traditional perspectives makes it practically impossible. Refusing to send them cards or gifts for Christmas or birthdays is not acceptable to me. Neither is refusing to call and speak to them over the phone, or not writing emails. Communication is so important in any relationship, and despite my antagonism toward foolish changes in bringing up children, I will continue to try to contact them. At some point I am sure they will wake up and smell the roses. If not, we are literally outcasts, and our world is filled with loneliness and despair.
Saturday, July 20, 2019
SET LIST – 7/19 LISA DONAHEY’S BIRTHDAY BASH CONCERT - Feinstein’s @ Vitello’s
1. HAWAII 5-0 – OPENER
2. COME WHEN YOU CALL
3. STRANDED (Original)
4. TRY ME AGAIN
5. ONLY YOU KNOW AND I KNOW
6. IMAGINE A JUMP
7. JOE (Original)
- Vocals: Don Lucas, Roger Befeler, Lindsay Dodoras, Billye Johnstone & Lisa Donahey
8. EDGE OF GLORY
9. FEELS LIKE THE FIRST TIME/I FEEL THE EARTH MOVE MASH UP
10. DANCING IN THE STREETS
11. UP THE LADDER
12. WHERE ARE YOU NOW?
13. ANOTHER TIME, ANOTHER PLACE (Original)
- Duet: Roger Befeler & Lisa Donahey
14. BACK IN LOVE AGAIN/WANNA BE STARTING SOMETHING MASH UP
15. STEALIN’ UNDERWEAR
16. DON'T STOP BELIEVIN’
- Lisa Castle, Pathik Desai, Lindsay Dodoras, Lisa Donahey, BIllye Johnstone, Harrison Johnstone
19. BOWS – JUST ONE DREAM
20. I’VE GOT TO SING – ENCORE
- Back Up Vocals: Lisa Castle, Lindsay Dodoras & Billye Johnstone
21. FINAL BOWS – HAWAII 5-0
Band:
David Arana – Piano
Sherry Luchette – Bass
Dave Johnstone – Drums
Pathik Desai – Guitar
Sax – Kyle O’Donnell
Trumpet – Dexter Warren
Friday, July 19, 2019
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
interview with Daniel Hurewitz
Daniel,
Try to have the answers back by Thursday or Friday ot this week and please send me a headshot to go with the article.
1. With a title like the one you have, this piece has got to be very, very comedic, or politically serious. Please comment about the title and how you came up with it.
2. Tell our readers briefly about the plotline of the play.
3. Discuss the sensitive areas of the play without giving too much away.
4. I understand you have already won an award for the piece. Tell us about that.
5. How did Larry Margo and other Group Rep members become involved?
6. Why did you pick the Secret Rose or did you? That's a very wide stage. Does the piece need to be centered like an intimate play or is there room to spread out?
7. Are you involved with the production or are you leaving it in Larry's capable hands?
8. What do you hope audiences will take away from seeing the play?
9. Tell us about your other plays. Is Nancy different from them? If yes, in what way?
10. Add anything you wish that we have not discussed.
thanks, Daniel. I will see you on the 11th.
Monday, June 24, 2019
Don Grigware Program Bio
Don Grigware (Sheridan Whiteside) - is best known to LA audiences as an entertainment journalist, reviewing and interviewing for BroadwayWorld.com, where he is LA senior editor, and on his own blog at www.grigwaretalkstheatre.com
Don's work in the theatre as an actor goes back to his early days in Massachusetts where he essayed regional theatre and summer stock in such productions as Barefoot in the Park, The Odd Couple. Don't Drink the Water, and Guys and Dolls among others. He studied acting in New York at AADA, HB Studios and in LA with Stella Adler and Jose Quintero. He was a member of the original Actors Alley and more recently with The Road where he is currently a member emeritus. He was nominated for an Ovation Award for Tom Jacobson's play Bunbury. In between he has written a novel Two Worlds Together Donnelly's Greatest Christmas and a trio of plays entitled Holiday Madness. He even manages to teach Spanish, French and ESL privately from time to time.
Grigware devotes his performance of Sheridan Whiteside to the original star on Broadway and film the late great Monty Wooley. "This charming man with the beard made me truly love the play. I hope I do it justice."
Don's work in the theatre as an actor goes back to his early days in Massachusetts where he essayed regional theatre and summer stock in such productions as Barefoot in the Park, The Odd Couple. Don't Drink the Water, and Guys and Dolls among others. He studied acting in New York at AADA, HB Studios and in LA with Stella Adler and Jose Quintero. He was a member of the original Actors Alley and more recently with The Road where he is currently a member emeritus. He was nominated for an Ovation Award for Tom Jacobson's play Bunbury. In between he has written a novel Two Worlds Together Donnelly's Greatest Christmas and a trio of plays entitled Holiday Madness. He even manages to teach Spanish, French and ESL privately from time to time.
Grigware devotes his performance of Sheridan Whiteside to the original star on Broadway and film the late great Monty Wooley. "This charming man with the beard made me truly love the play. I hope I do it justice."
Thursday, June 6, 2019
Caseworker NoHo Address for June 13
Meet me at MCC Church in North Hollywood on June 13 between 12 and 2 PM The address there is 5730 Cahuenga Blvd North Hollywood, CA
Monday, April 29, 2019
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)