Goodbye New York!!!

Hello all!  I haven’t written these past two weeks b/c a LOT has been going on!  I’ve moved to Northern Virginia (or NoVA as webbies write) to live with my dad (who works for the Department of Transportation, DoT).  I needed to save money and look for a teaching job in a place with (hopefully) less competition.  I cried about it for a few days, and then decided to move in early November.  I REALLY didn’t want to go, and STILL hope to find a teaching job in NYC for fall 2009.  But I tried for 3 school terms already, and substituting was just NOT cutting it money-wise.  Yes, I could have scrimped and saved, but I have a tough time with that.  (It’s one of my BIG issues when I live on my own!)  Also, I have loans from when I went to law school (2 terms) that are gathering interest quickly.  (Some of you know this stuff already, but stay w/ me here!)   Good news: I have a job interview at a Catholic school (Pre-K to 8) in DC for a long-term substitute position!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Carrie and I both heart NY!!!
Carrie and I both heart NY!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Part of the reason that I was miserable end of Oct and beginning of Nov was problems w/ my former landlady (Mrs. S) in Jackson Heights, Queens (and her family).  You see, her English (even after 30 yrs in US) is so bad that she needs fam to translate for her often.  I told Mrs. S that I was moving 6 weeks ahead of time, just to be nice, and said my roomie (D) would find a new lady to live with.  (They spoke to me mostly b/c they thought of me as the ONE in charge of the apartment- the top floor of their house.)  They refused to have D there, and said flatly that she must leave when I do!  They asked about her job situation (D is looking for a job after quitting a bad one) and hinted that they didn’t trust her.  Aha!  So, they are prejudiced people! “We know you, not that woman,” they said more that once.  I thought to myself, these people are CRAZY (not to mention inconsiderate, irrational, etc.)   My mom warned me that there might be probs b/c D was white, so these (Sylheti) folks wouldn’t feel comfortable dealing ONLY with her.  That just sounded CRAZY to me b/c Mrs. S has two of her US-born and raised grown kids living in the house. 

 

After 2 long (and HIGHLY irritating) discussions, she and her fam agreed (grudgingly) to let D continue living there.  I guess sometimes I think TOO well of people, and don’t anticipate them acting shady (as the teens say).  My old roomie and I never had a lease with them, b/c THEY never wanted one.  The next week, they offered D a lease.  The weekend after that, they said D had to move out when I did- yes, again!  Mrs. S came up with her youngest daughter and son to tell us VERY clearly (and coldly).  D told her that she would move before December 1.  I couldn’t believe how calm D was being w/ these folks, but there it was!  (D even said that she “didn’t want to the ‘Ugly American’” in this situation.)  She was disappointed and surprised, I could tell, but didn’t make any drama about it.  D grew up in Brooklyn and on LI, so she knows how to deal w/ difficult people, my mom commented.  Finally, I’m done with ALL that drama.  Next time I go anywhere on my own, I’m NOT dealing with people like that- no matter what! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Great, friendly coffee place in JH, Queens.
Great, friendly coffee place in JH, Queens.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I made a few mistakes that I feel bad about before the move.  For starters, I didn’t begin packing for the move until FRI.  The only things I had packed were clothes (in a handful of suitcases)!  I was VERY anxious and sad about the move, so maybe that’s why I didn’t pack too quickly.  My dad came up in his BIG van on FRI evening.  And he had also been having back problems recently, too.  He was VERY tired after the drive; it takes between 6 and 7 hrs.  There were several tolls to pay, totaling close to $25.  Wow!  Dad and I had to visit with my mom’s brother’s fam (close by in Elmhurst) and then his sis (where he was staying).  This is how it is when you visit (Bangladeshi) relatives- they want to feed you tons of food and talk and talk.  And my dad (sometimes) wants to KEEP ON talking, even when he has other things to do!  (Not rare for the BD folks, you know!)      

 

On SAT, my dad spent the morning at his sister’s.  He said she was going on and on, so he didn’t come help me pack until noon.  My two uncles couldn’t help out because they were tired and had to take care of other errand.  I was surprised and disappointed that they didn’t make a LITTLE time for me!  I had spent time with them and their families for the past 3.5 yrs, but they had other plans that day.  Also, I was waiting to give away some of my old furniture to people in my ‘hood.  4 sweet, adorable Asian college guys from Woodside came to pick up my Ikea dining table and chairs on SAT.  It took a few minutes to get the table out; there was a narrow kitchen entry and very steep stairway.  But they were patient and thankful.  When I said I was an English teacher, and going out of state, one said: “Too bad.  You can teach us English.”  I REALLY wished I could stay, too!    

 

On SAT evening and SUN a.m., my dad and I had to flag down some random guys to help us clear some pieces of furniture out.  (My landlady came up to the apt and said she wanted ALL of my stuff cleared out.)  My dad heard two young guys from next door speaking Urdu.  He asked them for some help.  But when they were done, these guys refused to take any money!  Shortly before we planned to go, two Mexican guys in their 30s who lived nearby came to help.  They had been shopping earlier, and stopped to say “hi” on the way to their house.  Even though they didn’t speak much English, they helped my dad out a LOT!  They took out large bags of stuff I didn’t want.  They helped my dad move my (heavy) bed frame and mattress.  I gave away an Ikea chair to one of them. That shows you that there ARE some nice strangers out there!  Finally, my dad and I were ready to leave on SUN late afternoon!

 

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 There are some positive things about my new area.  The middle-class community houses and apartments (sorry to most of you New Yorkers) are much larger, newer, and in good condition.  I sometimes wish my little Queens cousins could have bigger places to live.  The people are (for the most part) polite and helpful.  My dad loves his job, and is friendly with many who work with him.  (We get along MUCH better than 5 years ago!)   He learned how to cook a few years back, and is always on the lookout for good ingredients.  He has even met some distant cousins (living in Manassas) and old friends from his college days at Dhaka University.  My mom’s second cousin’s family lives very close to my dad’s (current) apt. building.  Their eldest daughter in currently doing PhD in Harvard (a school with MANY NYC connections)!  The younger daughter recently started high school and joined the cross-country team.  It’s rare (and cool) to see desi kids in sports, right?  My uncle is visiting his mother in Bangladesh now.   

 

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The people here come from ALL over the world, like NYC.  I saw many people speaking Spanish, ads for Moroccan food/restaurants, and Thai restaurants (even inside a mall).  My dad (whose lived over here almost a year) keeps saying that kids are disciplined and smart here, as many of their parents are affluent, scientific, and all that.  I’ve met quite a few people who grew up around DC, and they all went to good colleges and have great jobs in: engineering, finance, marketing, and IT.  I talked (briefly) to one young lady (also Bangladeshi-American) who is getting a masters in teaching history and works as a sub in Fairfax Co.  She was a little surprised to hear that there are even some BDs teaching in NYC.  There is a good chance of getting a job in this school district b/c it’s one of the largest in the country.  We’ll see what happens…

 

     

     

 

 

 

 

What’s goin’ on… what’s goin’ on…

What I’m listening to:

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Back in the ole ’90s, Rick Trevino had a few hit songs.  His voice is very clear and youthful- comtemporary country.  But I didn’t find out that he ALSO sings in Spanish and is Mexican-American!  The “n” has a tilda sign over it.  He’s based in Austin- more of an “out of the box” country music town than Nashville.

These are some of his CDs:

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Songs I REALLY like of Rick Trevino’s (available on iTunes):

Running Out of Reasons to Run

Se Escapan Mis Razones (Spanish version of above song)

Learning As You Go

Just Enough Rope (Sung in Spanish AND English)

She Can’t Say I Didn’t Cry

Separate Ways (his NEW single- very touching!)

 

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This Native American country singer (Yeah, that’s RARE!) has a pure, smooth voice.  He’s a Texan who sang in church as a kid, and recorded 3 albums in the mid-to-late ’90s. 

 

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Below are the BEST songs from Ricky’s debut CD (only $7.99 on iTunes):

Alright Already

If I Had a Cheatin’ Heart

A Good Habit is Hard to Break

Songs from other CDs:

I Wanna Be Loved By You

Can’t Do A Thing About You (fun lyrics here!) 

Dangerously Close

 

 

jmc11

I heard Jason Michael Carroll on iTunes radio last week.  He’s a 30 y.o. singer out of Raleigh, NC (where there is a good music scene) with a distinctive voice- powerful, very deep, yet somewhat raw.  The voice DOES NOT match his looks!  (Though his looks have crossover appeal.) 

 

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Jason was discoverd in a talent competition in NC, and now has first album w/ 3 hit songs.  An interesting fact: Jason went against his religious background and upbringing to become a (secular) musician.

 

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I Can Sleep When I’m DeadA fun, sinple, fast-paced song

Livin’ Our Love SongA very traditional ballad

 

 

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This small-town gal from Alabama has been performing since age 8.  Her voice (and lyrics) are totally country, unlike many young aspiring “country” singers.  Ashton Shepherd won a competition to open for Lorrie Morgan- WOW!!!

 

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Sounds So GoodA fun, yet sweet, song about hanging out with your love

 

 

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I’ve never heard of composer Adrian Johnston until this year, but his music for Becoming Jane is TERRIFIC!

What I’m reading:

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Ours is essentially a tragic age, so we refuse to take it tragically.  So begins D.H. Lawrence’s emotion-packed, highly descriptive novel of forbidden love between the social classes.  The time is after WWI when England has lost a generation of young men, and industry is encroaching on the “old England” (including Sir Clifford Chatterley’s family estate, Wragby).  Connie (Lady Chatterley) tries to cheerfully take care of her crippled husband.  He was hurt both physically and emotionally, we learn.  Clifford values “the life of the mind” above physical love.  He writes stories and thinks of ways to improve his coal mines. 

Clifford can’t have children, but doesn’t mind if his wife gets pregnant by another man.  He could raise the child as his own, he feels.  His wife is (naturally) shocked by this proposal, though she would love to have a baby someday.   Connie was raised among artists and free-thinkers, so she feels constricted by the rank of “landed gentry.”  We learn that there is no one around the town for her to talk to.  Little by little, Connie feels that her life is passing by her.  Then Connie meets Wragby’s gamekeeper, Oliver Mellors, a solitary and mysterious man. 

 

 

 What I’m watching:

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I’m moving to the DC area soon, so why not re-watch this show?  Great acting (including guest stars and the small parts), LOTS of laughs, and political drama abounds!  My fave characters are: Josh (Bradley Whitford- can you believe that some NBC execs didn’t think he was attractive!?), President Bartlett (Martin Sheen), and Toby (Richard Schiff is VERY into his role).  This show is an idealistic view of politics, but you can learn a LOT from it!    

 

Emma on the (HISTORICAL) U.S. election!!!

Our New “First Family”

 

The new "First Family"
The new "First Family"

 

Wow, what a BEAUTIFUL picture!!!  Malia and Sasha are GORGEOUS!  Yes, even the (usually) pessimistic Emma felt good about the results of the election.  Indiana (my mom and lil bro’s state; he voted at IU) went Democratic- a small miracle many think.  My home state of Arizona (where lil sis and bro-in-law live) is still a BIT more Republican than not.  Virginia (my Dad’s state for past year) went blue, as MANY were hoping.  I was a little upset because I didn’t register to vote in NY on time.  My mom said that I was registered in Indiana, though.  Too bad!

 

The kids were going wild in NYC- the future US president looks like them!!!  Forget boys, gossip, and shoes- it was all about Obama this past week!  The teachers/principals/etc. are VERY happy too; as educators in a big city they deal with issues of poverty, inequality, racism, etc. all the time.  In a small middle school in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn the principal told her (diverse- racially and economically) kids that she was “more hopeful now that Obama was elected.”  She was a child when JFK was elected president and lived though the Vietman War.  “There is not one of us that can’t contribute to this world,” she said.  The kids cheered (VERY loudly) after she played Obama’s acceptance speech from last Tuesday. 

 

Because NONE of us makes it alone, I’d like to discuss the main people in Obama’s life.   

 

Obama’s Mother: A Trailblazer… In Her Own Way

Obama Mama
"Obama Mama"

 

Here is baby Barack with his lovely mom, Stanley Ann Dunham Soetoro.  This pic can be found in Obama’s first book, Dreams from My Father.  Barry (Obama’s nickname w/ family and old friends) grew up without a father, and Ann was absent for periods of his life; she instilled in him her curiosity about the world.  Obama described her as non-religious, but interested in many belief systems, cultures, etc.  She eventually got a PhD in Anthropology, and worked as a cultural anthropologist in Indonesia.  Ann died (much too young- age 52) of ovarian cancer.  

 

obama_indo-fam

 

 

She had an unswerving instinct for kindness, charity, and love, and spent much of her life acting on that instinct, sometimes to her detriment. Without the help of religious texts or outside authorities, she worked mightily to instill in me the values that many Americans learn in Sunday school: honesty, empathy, discipline, delayed gratification, and hard work. She raged at poverty and injustice.

Most of all, she possessed an abiding sense of wonder, a reverence for life and its precious, transitory nature that could properly be described as devotional. Sometimes, as I was growing up, she would wake me up in the middle of the night to have me gaze at a particularly spectacular moon, or she would have me close my eyes as we walked together at twilight to listen to the rustle of leaves.

-Obama describes Ann in The Audacity of Hope

 

When reporters asked Obama what he thought about Sarah Palin’s 17 y.o. daughter (Bristol) being pregnant, he calmly stated: “My mother was 18 when she had me.”  What a classy guy!

 

All-American Obama 

 

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Here is a cute pic from Obama’s private school in Hawaii.  Without scholarships and his grandmother’s income, young Barry wouldn’t have been able to attend Punahou.  As you can see, it was a diverse school but there were FEW black students.  Obama had a close friendship with an African-American boy at this school.  You can read about it in his first book.

 

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Here is a pic from Obama’s Harvard days.

 

Obama’s Grandparents: The Quiet Heroes

 

Lil Barry & grandpa
Lil Barry & grandpa

 

Obama w/ grandparents
Obama w/ grandparents- Madelyn and Stanley Dunham

 

I can no more disown him [Jeremiah Wright] than I can my white grandmother – a woman who helped raise me, a woman who sacrificed again and again for me, a woman who loves me as much as she loves anything in this world, but a woman who once confessed her fear of black men who passed by her on the street, and who on more than one occasion has uttered racial and ethnic stereotypes that made me cringe. 

Obama in his speech re: race relations

 

Eighty-seven years old. She can’t travel. She has terrible osteoporosis so she can’t fly, but, you know, she has been the rock of our family and she is sharp as a tack. I mean, she’s just – she follows everything, but she has a very subdued, sort of Midwestern attitude about these things. So when I got nominated, she called and said, “That’s nice, Barry, that’s nice.”

-Obama describes his grandmother on The Late Show with David Letterman 

 

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Unfortunately, both Obama’s grandparents (who raised him since age 10) are now deceased.  Madelyn died just before Election Day (November 2) at the age of 87 of cancer.  She served as the first female vice-president of a Hawaiian bank.  Stanley, who Obama described as boisterous and full of stories, was diatantly related to President Truman and the current VP Cheney.  He served in the army during WWII.
She was one of those quiet heroes that we have all across America. They’re not famous. Their names are not in the newspapers, but each and every day they work hard. They aren’t seeking the limelight. All they try to do is just do the right thing.

Obama at a November 3 rally
She Teaches History- Her Big Brother Makes History!
With lil half-sis Maya
With lil half-sis Maya

 

 

Maya and fam
Maya is the daughter of Ann and Indonesian businessman Lolo Soutero.  She is married to an Assistant Professor (Canadian-Malaysian-Vietnamese Konrad Ng) and has one little daughter.  She went to Barnard and then got a PhD from the University of Hawaii.  She teaches history at a girls’ HS, and also teaches evenings at her alma mater.  Maya took 2 months off work to campaign for Obama, giving a face to the small Asian-American population in the US.
And They Think Condi Rice has Great Legs!

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We have lost the understanding that in a democracy, we have a mutual obligation to one another — that we cannot measure the greatness of our society by the strongest and richest of us, but we have to measure our greatness by the least of these.

– Michelle Obama

 

Michelle Robinson was assigned to mentor Barack Obama at their law firm when he was an intern.  She thought his name was “kinda funny” at first.  He kept asking her out, and finally she accepted.  While listening to him speak at a community center, she fell in love with him. 

I didn’t even know then what a community organizer was!

  

Campaign trail kiss
Campaign trail kiss

 

I need to be prepared to do what the country needs me to do at the time. Whether that’s baking cookies or serving as a wonderful hostess, that’s my job. I have to be prepared to do what’s necessary. And we won’t know what that’s going to be until we get there. I will be staunchly invested. It is a joint project.

 

Though she attended Princeton, then Harvard, and worked in corporate law, etc., Michelle is happy to be a wife and mother these days.  She describes her own childhood as very happy and stable; she had two hard-working, loving parents and a protective big brother (Craig, a basketball coach at Oregon State).   Who can forget the touching story she told of her father’s great work ethic?  Michelle has already been compared to two of America’s most-loved first ladies- Jackie Kennedy (note her style of clothing) and Eleanor Roosevelt (she’s intelligent, passionate, and not afraid of a little controversy).   

 

Fitting right in w/ high-profile ladies!
Michelle fits right in with these high-profile ladies!

 

Thank God (even if you’re an atheist or agnostic) that W will be out soon!!!

Movies I REALLY Want to See!!!

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Australia – a big, sweeping drama directed/co-written by the quirky Baz Luhrmann; starring gorgeous Kiwi (person from New Zealand) Nicole Kidman, handsome Aussie Hugh Jackman, and up-and-coming Aussie David Wenham (of LOTR fame).

 

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In northern Australia prior to World War II, an English aristocrat inherits a cattle station the size of Maryland. When English cattle barons plot to take her land, she reluctantly joins forces with a rough-hewn stock-man to drive 2,000 head of cattle across hundreds of miles of the country’s most unforgiving land, only to still face the bombing of Darwin, Australia, by the Japanese forces that had attacked Pearl Harbor only months earlier.  -IMDB synopsis

 

 

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Defiance – a WWII drama directed/co-written by thoughtful Ed Zwick; starring 007 (Daniel Craig), low-key American w/ BIG talent (Liev Shreiber), and all grown up from Billy Eliott (Jamie Bell)!

 

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I LOVE watching Liev!!!

 

Three Jewish brothers escape from Nazi-occupied Poland into the Belarussian forest, where they join Russian resistance fighters and endeavor to build a village in order to protect themselves and others in danger. -IMDB synopsis 

 

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What an adorable young man he’s become!

 

Milk – a drama directed by innovative Gus Van Sant based on the life of politician Harvey Milk (Sean Penn); the multi-layered Penn is joined by Josh Brolin (having a great year!), the gorgeous James Franco, Mexican crossover star Diego Luna, Broadway’s Victor Garber, and many, many others!

 

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After moving to San Francisco, the middle-aged New Yorker, Harvey Milk, became a Gay Rights activist and city politician. On his third attempt, he was elected to San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors in 1977, making him the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in the USA.  -IMDB synopsis

 

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Two Classic Movie Reviews: “All About Eve” and “Hud”

Anne Baxter as Eve
Anne Baxter as Eve, the theater newbie

Ruthless people can be fascinating to watch, as we learn from two wonderful classic (black and white) films, All About Eve and Hud.  Both films are character-driven (my fave kind!), thought-provoking, and intelligent.  The ruthless person in All About Eve (nominted for 14 Oscars!!!) is Eve Harrington (Anne Baxter; you can see her each Thanksgiving as the gorgeous Queen Nefretiri in The Ten Commandmants). 

Yul Brynner and Anne Baxter
Anne w/ Yul Brynner- WOW!!!

Eve is petite, with intense eyes, and (unusually) humble and ingratiating at the start of the film.  She adores Broadway star Margot Channing (Bette Davis) and wants to be a part of her world.  The kind-hearted wife of a great playwright, Karen Richards (Celeste Holm; she co-starred as the grandmother in the TV show Promised Land) introduces Eve to Margot and their circle of theater insiders.  They are touched by her sad life story and her sweet demeanor.  Soon, she becomes Margot’s personal assistant and lives in her apartment.  Margot’s long-time friend/housekeeper, Birdie, thinks that Eve is too good to be true!  What are Eve’s true feelings and intentions?  We wonder this because people are rarely so helpful, humble, and grateful like her.

What's she REALLY up to?

 Don’t get up. And please stop acting as if I were the queen mother. -Margot

The ruthless person in Hud (winner of 3 Oscars) is Hud Bannon (Paul Newman- taking on an anti-hero role), the 34 y.o. son of an old, honest cattle rancher, Homer (Melvin Douglas).  Hud is handsome, charming, reckless, and insensitive to the feelings/needs of others. 

Paul Newman as Hud

Movie tagline: The man with the barbed wire soul!

When he’s not (begrudgingly) working for his dad, Hud is living a protracted adolescence- driving too fast, drinking too much, sleeping with married women, and generally being a bad example to the real adolescent in the family, 17 y.o. nephew Lonnie (Brandon de Wilde).  Lonnie is cute, sweet, and thoughtful; he’s an orphan who also works/lives on the Bannon ranch.   

The only question I ever ask any woman is “What time is your husband coming home?”

Hud flirts shamelessly with the ranch’s wise and earthy housekeeper, Alma (Patricia Neal).  But she is one woman in town that won’t be had easy!  When hoof and mouth disease threatens the cattle (and the family fortune), Hud suggests an underhanded plan.  Homer is surprised and disappointed by his son’s lack of principles.  But that’s not the only reason there is a distance/coldness between father and son!

 

If nothing else, there’s applause… like waves of love pouring over the footlights. 

Eve

Though Eve wins the trust and friendship of Margot, Karen, Bill (Margot’s director bf), and Lloyd (Karen’s hubby; a great playwright), she is not afraid to step on/use them on her way to stardom.  There is something disconcerting (notice the eyes) about her intensity and single-mindedness.   She is truly “a wolf in sheep’s clothing”- the ambition behind her smile knows no bounds!

…you don’t value anything. You don’t respect nothing. You keep no check on your appetites at all. You live just for yourself. And that makes you not fit to live with. 
-Homer
Hud, on the other hand, does nothing to disguise his “bad boy” side from his family and small Texas community.  He doesn’t apologize for his behavior because he sees nothing wrong with it!  Hud lives for pleasure (Jack Daniels whiskey, beautiful women, etc.) because he can’t live up to his father’s high moral standards (honesty, plain-speaking, moderation).  In one intense scene, Hud blames Homer for how he turned out, like an immature teen.  Lonnie, who observes his uncle carefully, is actually the bigger man in the film.  He grows to realize that Hud is no role model.

Eve is not the type of character that many viewers will sympathize with, though she is fun to watch.  Hud is self-destructive; only a dedicated actor like Newman can bring (a bit of) humanity to such a guy!  To discover those special moments, pay attention to his eyes, facial expressions, and body language during silent moments.  Sometimes the silence reveals more re: a character than his/her speech. 

Infants behave the way I do, you know. They carry on and misbehave – they’d get drunk if they knew how – when they can’t have what they want, when they feel unwanted or insecure or unloved.

Funny business, a woman’s career – the things you drop on your way up the ladder so you can move faster. You forget you’ll need them again when you get back to being a woman. That’s one career all females have in common, whether we like it or not: being a woman.

Margot Channing is a more well-developed character than nemesis Eve.  Though she is smart, talented, successful, etc., the actress is insecure about her love life.  She worries about getting old, even though her writer calls her “age-less.”  Margot creates drama where there is no need, trying the patience of her old pals.  Unlike Hud and Eve, Margot knows her faults and craves acceptance despite them.  She can laugh at herself- a great quality! 

 

Claudia: Oh, waiter!
Addison: That is not a waiter, my dear, that is a butler.
Claudia: Well, I can’t yell “Oh butler!” can I? Maybe somebody’s name is Butler.
Addison: You have a point. An idiotic one, but a point.

Marilyn Monroe has a small (but funny) part in All About Eve; she looks great (of course)!  The theater critic, Addison De Witt (George Sanders- standing by Marilyn in pic above) has some very witty/biting lines in this film.  He’s the bright, charming villain who takes an interest in Eve’s career.  I liked his character because he’s the one person who can go toe-to-toe with the real, ruthless Eve.  The best things about this film is the fast-paced, clever dialogue.

Hud has great cinematography; the B&W made the film look crisp and modern to me.  Paul Newman just becomes the character- one very different from himself.  His accent is flawless, too.  Check out these two films ASAP!