Monday, October 6, 2025

Off to Quebec

I'm heading out to Quebec City in just a couple of hours.  I have to say some of the idiotic things Legault has been saying lately (that we have no choice but for continued and further economic integration with the USA -- and that dairy supply management and French language labeling are untouchable in any renegotiation of CUSMA) are really grinding my gears.  But overall, the trip should be fine.  I don't have all that much to do on Monday and Tues., though I should take a quick look at the program to see what is going on, and if I can slip away Tues. to get over to the museum.

Anyway, I had thought I might bring along a couple of mid-pile books, but I decided instead to see if I can wrap up or mostly wrap up Canetti's Auto-de-Fé, as it is kind of slow going.  I was able to bring it along and read a few pages during the intermission at a TSO concert and before Waiting for Godot, but it just isn't really grabbing me.  In addition, I have decided to see how much Virginia Woolf I can read in Oct., in advance of a couple of November events.  One is a production of Sarah Ruhl's script for Orlando (probably broadly similar to the movie, but not sure) that George Brown is putting on in early Nov.  The other is an event at TPL where they are unveiling a new edition of Mrs. Dalloway put out by NYRB.  I understand that this is supposed to have a lot of Woolf's notes on the novel, but I don't think it is supposed to be a scholarly edition, so I don't really know how they are treating textual variants, and if I even want to read the ur-text.  I think I will probably be fine just rereading Mrs. Dalloway and Mrs. Dalloway's Party and call it a day...  But I am curious to hear more about it, so I will go to the event.  Anyway, that means that Mrs. Dalloway is also on the list.

I'm making pretty good headway on Russo's Empire Falls, and I should be able to get through it a few days after I am back from this conference.  It's quite good, reminding me a bit of Updike but generally funnier.  The book club at work is sort of limping along at the moment, though the Nov. selection (China Miéville's The City & the City) seems to be generating some interest.  Anyway, the Oct. selection is Kundera's last novel (or perhaps novella): The Festival of Insignificance.  I did borrow it, as it is super short, but I don't care for it, and I don't think I would bother dropping in to talk about it.

As I was searching deep in the basement for Kiran Desai's The Inheritance of Loss (because I am going to her talk at TIFA and wanted to get her to sign my copy), I managed to find Murdoch's Under the Net.  I liked this a lot, though I don't plan on trying to reread it before late 2026 (at the soonest).  I also brought up Midnight by Julien Green.  I thought it had some parallels to Orlando, but I think that is not the case after all.  Still, it looks like a book I can read quickly and get out of the house, which is a pretty big plus these days.

One slightly surprising addition to the reading list is Mitchell's relatively recent translation of The Epic of Gilgamesh.  I'm not entirely sure where I picked this up, though perhaps at a library book sale.  Anyway, I decided sort of at the last minute to go to the Sunday matinee of King Gilgamesh at Soulpepper.  While this was the last performance and was mostly sold out, I did get a rush ticket in the end.  Score!  It was mostly the same as from the 2023 run, though they may have tweaked a few minor things.  It's an energetic and engaging show, and I feel that I should try to read this new translation while the story is fresh in my head.  I don't think Gilgamesh is actually that long, though the intro and the copious notes definitely add up!

The one other book that I mentioned is Austen's Persuasion, which I will try to get through in Nov., in advance of her 250th bday party in early Dec. at the TPL.  After this, I will probably return to some of the books in the stacks that were calling out, like The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, The Last Song of Manuel Sendero and The End of Mr. Y, and then, after that, back to the general list. William Maxwell has been waiting patiently for quite a while now...

 

Sunday, October 5, 2025

First Thoughts on Nuit Blanche 2025

On the whole, I found this a pretty disappointing Nuit Blanche, though the art did get better as the night went on.  I probably didn't plan it out all that well, as I was at Waiting for Godot as Nuit Blanche started.  The show didn't finish until 10 pm.  (On the whole I thought it was very well done with some inspired clowning, but it can be pretty exhausting as so little actually happens during the play.)  

Then I grabbed an adequate slice of pizza nearby, so I didn't really get going until about 10:30.  I saw a few things along Danforth between Coxwell and Greenwood. 


Then I hit Aki Native Earth Studio in Regent Park.  Then I went over to Yonge-Dundas Square.  Apparently, I got there just as the music ended.  Perhaps it was a much more lively scene a few hours earlier, but it was kind of desolate (and it wasn't really all that late, just after 11 pm!).

I continued on Dundas and there was a bit of a dance party on McCaul, and there were decent crowds watching a film about Toronto and the many films that have been shot here.

At this point, I went over to City Hall.  I found Nathan Phillips Square to be a complete let down.  There was a bit of art but it was all dispersed and there wasn't really anything to do on the main plaza.  It was certainly a missed opportunity.  An even bigger missed opportunity was that they didn't shut down a main street to serve as the spine of Nuit Blanche.  Aside from a short section of Dundas, I don't think any roads were actually closed down for the event.

When I got to 401 Richmond, slightly after midnight, it was hopping!  I guess everyone decided to just hang out there.  The crowds actually were a bit too much for me, and I just went into a couple of galleries and then split.  But I do hope that the city decides next year to build around the 401 Richmond hub and maybe shut down Spadina (except for the streetcars).  One can dream anyway!

So then I biked over to Stackt Market (dodging some poor drivers on Bathurst), and that was generally pretty interesting and also moderately busy, though not quite as overwhelming as 401 Richmond.  There were some really interesting video installations, as well as this set of skyscraper models.  I think the point was these were all from movies where skyscrapers were destroyed, but I'm not really sure. 


Then I went briefly over to the Bentway.  There was some video art, but mostly it was disappointing how empty it was.  Apparently it was busier earlier, but they didn't really do much to keep the crowds there, as opposed to previous years when I think there were food trucks and a dj.

One of the more striking pieces was along Ft. York Blvd.


It was just about 1 am at this point.  I decided to stop in at St. Lawrence Market, and thought one of the video installations was pretty good.  At least my bike didn't act up, and I covered a decent amount of the city in one evening.  I managed to get home just after 1:30 am.

So it wasn't a complete bust, but I definitely think Nuit Blanche was more successful and was more of a civic happening in previous years.  Let's see what next year brings...

Saturday, October 4, 2025

Back on the Bike (Again)

I guess it was last week I was talking about how my bike fell over, and the derailleur was somewhat damaged, so I took it in the shop.  I got it back, but it still wasn't really acting right, so I left it there again, perhaps on Monday.  After talking it over with the mechanic, he agreed it was probably that the front ring was worn out, as I almost never shift out of the middle gears (or rather the middle ring).  I wasn't expecting it back until Thurs., as they needed to order the part, though they called me late on Wed. (around 5:30), saying it was ready.  As the shop is only open until 6 pm, I had to wait until after the electrician wrapped up (another adventure in itself!), and then I went and retrieved my bike.  I probably wouldn't have bothered, but as I was off to the TSO that evening, I went in to work in the late afternoon, since I had to go downtown.

Anyway, the mechanic said that he had replaced the front ring and the chain.  I think the cassette on the back tire was still fairly new, so they left that alone.  (At least he had noticed the skipping, and it wasn't just in my imagination.)  But he had found a used derailleur that was in better condition than mine(!), so they replaced that as well.  Over the years, pretty much all the components, including the seat (after one was stolen), brakes, shifters, tubes and recently the rear tire casing have been replaced.  (Indeed, I had yet another bike light stolen after a quick trip to 401 Richmond, so I had to buy another one of those as well!)  It's possible that the only original components (from when I got the bike back around 2012) are the frame itself, the mud guards and the very beat up rack for my pannier.   I was thinking about the Ship of Theseus paradox lately (as it is discussed in the book version of Mickey 7, though not necessarily in the movie).  Is this really the same bike or not?  I suppose if I ever have to replace the frame for some reason, at that point I would say it is no longer the original bike.

This reminds me of a particularly annoying "concern troll" on Linked In, who popped recently and who was going on and on about how bicycle advocates were not honest about how much repairing bicycles would cost over the life cycle of a bike, completely distorting the cost and basically ignoring the much higher auto maintenance costs, even if these are somewhat lower for EVs.  And then not content with this, he had the nerve to say that cycling advocates were ignoring the carbon costs of the bananas that fuel cyclists (in some promotional material).  There really isn't much to do with these folks, who are likely just AI bots, than ignore them. 

Anyway, the bike chain still slipped a little bit going through gear shifts, though it was working much better.  I did find, however, that the middle ring seems to be just a bit smaller, and I was ending up in the upper gears all the time, compared to how I am used to riding.  So I have started to shift up into the largest ring more often.  One interesting side effect is that it seems that I have shaved about 5 minutes off of the trip downtown (as well as from my house to Woodbine).  I guess it is possible to teach an old dog new tricks, as I have done this much shifting in 10+ years!

The downside, however, is that I thought I was on the larger ring and was downshifting, and I was in the middle and shifted to the smallest ring.  The chain completely jumped off and ended up jammed between the ring and the frame!  It took some time but I was able to free it and get it back on the ring.  That was extremely concerning.  I had to rearrange my schedule, but managed to stop in at the bike shop on Sat.  They said there was no damage to the chain, and that I should just try not to do that (sort of like the old doctor's joke) and to shift a bit more gently.  I think if I keep to the middle and largest rings, I should probably be ok.  However, there was one more time when I was going between the upper and middle ring and I was coming up to a light, so didn't have a lot of time for the shifting to take place, and the chain jumped off again!  This is far from ideal, and maybe this is just a sign that it is time to think about buying a new bike.  But for now, it seems to be working reasonably well. 

Saturday, September 27, 2025

2nd Concert Update

I had a look at the Devo/B-52s concert that went down in Pine Knob a day ago.  Astonishingly, Devo was indeed the headliner and the B-52s opened for them!  So I guess it is true when Fred said this was Devo's tour and they just tagged along.  I wonder if they will alternate headlining duties, or it will mostly be Devo headlining on the remaining dates in the States.  In any case, if you are going, pay extra attention to the times and the line-up.  I know I would have been annoyed had we missed any of the B-52s' set.  The other thing is that they seem to be performing a slightly abbreviated 12-song, 1-hour set, so indeed they didn't shorten it due to the rain (and they seem to have dropped 'Deadbeat Club' on this version of the tour, which is unfortunate).

The second bit of news is that I am back from Elvis Costello and the Imposters at Massey Hall.  Massey Hall was again frustrating, with not enough leg room, so I sat sideways throughout the show.  While I didn't have a pole blocking my view, the view from the sides is still pretty lousy.  I could only see Elvis and his keyboard player.  If I really stretched out, I could occasionally see the drummer and the bass player but not most of the time.  And Charlie Sexton was off to the side and was completely invisible, except for 3 or so songs in the middle of the set where he came center stage.  So not very pleasant, and I am definitely going to limit the number of times I go back.  I'm not going to swear off Massey Hall forever (like History and Phoenix), but it is going to have to be a big event, like Tinariwen coming back again, to make me reconsider. 

At any rate, I have to admit I just didn't enjoy the concert with only a few exceptions.  Elvis was playing almost entirely material from the first 10 years of his career, and he wanted to rearrange them and play them differently as apparently he must just be bored with these songs, even though some of them are not in heavy rotation, while others are some of the biggest hits of his whole career.  I wonder if he wanted to distort them so much that no one else would ask for them again.  I thought what he did to 'Alison' was a bit weird, but I actually hated his new renditions of 'Watching the Detectives' and 'Man Out of Time.'  It was painful listening to them.  In the middle of the set, I did enjoy 'Almost Blue' seguing into 'Clubland.'  And 'Radio Radio,' while somewhat distorted was ok.  One interesting fact is that 'Deportee' was indeed a song he cut as a demo back in 1985, but he only started playing it live in 2025 (as part of the ramp up to this tour) while the lead up story (though too long) is clearly inspired by today's political scene, and indeed if Elvis doesn't cut back a bit on the acidic commentary on the mess down in the States he may find his visa gets revoked...  Then at the end, he just ripped through 'Chelsea,' 'Pump It Up' and 'Peace, Love and Understanding.'  That got the audience to their feet and was a decent way to end the show.  There was no encore, which is becoming a bit more common these days.  I just don't think I want to see him live again.  He still messed around with song arrangements when he was at Budweiser Stage in 2024 (opening for Daryl Hall) but there was more for the general fans (and not just hard-core fans) to grab onto, but not really tonight.  All I can say is I felt pretty alienated from a lot of what he was trying to do.  Of all the shows I saw in Sept, this was towards the bottom, though Elvis does slightly beat out Devo...

On the classical front, I almost had forgotten that I am seeing Jonathan Crow* plays Mendelssohn next Thurs.  It's my first TSO concert this season.  Fortunately, the TSO emailed me a reminder or I might well have missed it!  I had planned on going up to see Beethoven's 5th in North York in a few weeks, but when I tried to get a ticket, the only remaining seats were just too expensive for my blood.  Then I saw that UT Orchestra was playing Beethoven's 5th.  (I just never got around to seeing anything from UT's music school last season.  I just got too busy and forgot to keep on top of their schedule.)  However, when I went in to probe, I saw that they were playing at York University for some strange reason, which would be a real hassle.  I guess the main hall (McMillan?) still is not ready, and they can't fit the entire orchestra in Walter Hall.  Now previously they moved to a church at Church and King, but for some reason they are doing their concerts up at York, which probably means I won't go.  At any rate, the concert is Sat. (i.e. tomorrow) and my evening is completely packed, so I couldn't go.  I think there is a reasonable chance I will see Beethoven's 3rd and 7th this season, but not the 5th.  (I did see Beethoven's 5th last season, sneaking in with one of the very last tickets to see Hart House Orchestra do it.)  What may be more intriguing is that TSO doesn't appear to be doing Dvorak's 8th or 9th Symphonies (I try to catch either of them when they are on), though they are doing his 7th Symphony in two separate concerts(!), though I am only going to one of them.

I am a little bummed that once again I missed out on the U Vic book sale, which was last weekend.  I will just need to set some sort of reminder next fall.  The University College book sale is this weekend, and I should be able to swing by, though perhaps not until tomorrow.  It was much more convenient last year when the Word on the Street Festival was not that far away at Queens Park Crescent, but it is now relocated to David Pecault Square, right next to Roy Thompson Hall and quite close to our offices, so I can go to a reading, duck into the office, and then go to a late afternoon reading.  But I can't really run up to UC for their book sale, or at least as easily as last year.  Then I also need to remember than in about 3 weeks, it is the Trinity book sale.  So many books to read, and I can't help adding a few more here and there, though generally I am buying books that will go into the Little Free Library in the front yard.  Or at least that is what I tell myself...

 

* Jonathan Crow was MIA for long stretches at the TSO last season.  I'm not sure what that means for this season, though I know I'll see him in a few concerts and probably as a guest for one of the Amici concerts, though I have yet to book tickets to that.  Maybe tomorrow...

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Concert Update

I'm definitely on the mend, though still pretty tired.  I think it's probably best to be upright, however, so I'll go in to work.  I expect I should be able to make my Thurs. evening event (Naked Lunch at the Revue) and Friday night concert (Elvis Costello at Massey Hall).  I think the general excitement should carry me through, as it did last night.  I actually don't have much planned for Sat. until the very late afternoon, so maybe I will sleep in a bit and then see where I can go swimming.  Perhaps it will be Jimmie Simpson, unless Regent Park has finally got back on track and has their normally-scheduled lane swimming.

It threatened to rain all evening, and in fact since I didn't want to be sitting out in the rain longer than I needed, we skipped the opening act (Lene Lovich).  I'm not even 100% she actually went on at 7, but she probably did.  We got to Budweiser Stage at 7:45 and Devo was just launching into their set.  It was good, though there were two songs towards the end that were kind of grating.  I mean there is absolutely no way I would have gone to see them on their own, but it apparently was their tour and they invited B-52s to join on one leg.  They did their full set!  It still hadn't rained, but it was threatening all night.

I think the B-52s actually cut their set short by about two songs, mostly hoping to get to their big hits before the rain started.  Now maybe they aren't actually doing encores because they are co-leading the tour, and Devo didn't do an encore, but I suspect it was just to try to wrap up in time.  It doesn't appear they have played 'Channel Z' in some time (this is the song my wife wanted to hear).  They often but don't always play 'Deadbeat Club,' and that was the song I was hoping to hear (even beyond 'Rock Lobster' and certainly more than 'Whammy Kiss'!).  Oh well...  It was still a lot of fun, and they certainly won't be touring much more, so it was worth grabbing the opportunity to see them.  We really did luck out that the rain held off until after the show.  We just missed the GO Train, so we walked and walked and walked to get to the streetcar loop.  (Such poor design on the part of the TTC at Exhibition Place.  Just in general the transit transfers there are terrible.)  We got back to Pape at 11 or so when it finally started to rain, and then it rained quite steadily all night, so overall we really lucked out.  The B-52s and Devo are off to Pine Knob today.  That's also an outdoor venue, so hopefully the weather is more cooperative for the fans out there.

Now that I am on transit more due to all this rain, I am reading more.  I finished Kundera's Ignorance (just not that good) and made great progress on Ellen Foster (just shy of halfway through).  Tonight, I plan on taking TTC over to the Revue to see Naked Lunch, and I'll bring Auto-da-Fé along.  But I just got my bike back from the shop, so I may not have quite as much transit reading time as before.  That said, I actually am flying out to Quebec City for a conference soon.  I think I might take Scarlett Thomas's The End of Mr. Y and Ariel Dorfman's The Last Song of Manuel Sendero and see which one grabs me more.  If anything, it's even slower than the weight loss, but I am making some headway in bring down my book piles.  Speaking of book piles, I was pretty sure Thammavongsa's How to Pronounce Knife was at the very bottom on one of these piles.  Indeed it was, but I have freed it now and will make sure I have my copy with me when I go to her reading in a few weeks.

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Still Sick

I'm still definitely under the weather, and the actual weather isn't cooperating very much.  It was supposed to rain Mon. and Tues., and then mostly clear up.  Instead it barely rained on Tues., and now the rain is supposed to be a drizzle most of the day and then heavier showers from 7-9 pm just when we are out at Budweiser Stage to see the B-52s.  Lovely...  I'm sure that will do wonders for my overall health.  However, I think at this point I just need to be upright to have the rest of the junk drain out of my lungs.  I think my nose is just about finished running, so I am close to getting over this cold or whatever it was.

I forgot to mention the other day that there were a few very frustrating incidents over the weekend.  First, Sat. morning I found out that because of some last-minute scheduling changes, there was no lap swimming at Regent Park, either on Sat. or Sun.  And I guess it is their annual pool clean-up, but Matty Eckler's pool is completely closed all week (and this week as well).  Unfortunately, the times just didn't work for Jimmie Simpon, though I had planned on doing late night laps there on Mon., which I am starting to really value as the lanes are nearly empty, but I just was not up to it.  I might have attempted to go on Tues., but that is the only day they don't have evening hours, and I still wasn't feeling all that well.  So I am short one swimming session with no obvious time to make it up.  Not very happy about that.

Also, on Sunday, I somehow failed to lock my bike up properly at Trinity-St. Paul's.  (They have some of the stupidest bike racks I've ever seen.)  When we came out from the concert, my bike was lying on the ground.  Someone apparently had locked up on the other side, saw the bike fall over and just left it there.  What an asshole!  I think this fall somehow messed up the derailleur, as I was having lots of slippage in the upper gears.  So I dropped it off at a bike shop to have them look it over, and I am hoping to have it back on Thurs.

I did find that, even on the home scale, I have lost another 5 or so pounds, which often happens when I get sick, so now I need to just keep on with the better eating habits.  If it turns out I can finally squeeze into a smaller size of jeans that will also help me stay motivated and not completely backslide...

Off topic, I am really very frustrated at not being able to find these photos from the Georgia O'Keeffe show in 2017.  I clearly went twice (in April, then May) or even three times and would have taken some photos on each visit.  I clearly remember taking photos of her last paintings at Ghost Ranch, but none of these seem to be archived on the 10 or so external hard drives I have lying around!  I spent some time (back in the day) organizing my 2017 and 2018 photos, but they aren't there.  About the only lingering possibility is I left them on my (work) iPhone for a very long time and so the datestamp is off, but this seems unlikely.  This is quite upsetting actually, though I don't think there is anything I can do about it.  I will see if I can track down the catalog from that show and borrow it from the library at least.

 

Edit (9/25): Well, it's not as good as squeezing into a size 34 loose fit pair of jeans.  (I'm still trying to track those down, but they should be somewhere in the house.)  But I am able to fit comfortably in a straight size (that was too tight a month or two ago.)  So real progress, which is about the only thing that can motivate me to stick to a diet.  Progress is much slower than it was pre-Covid, but I am starting to see it.

Monday, September 22, 2025

Busy Sept.

I've been quite busy throughout Sept.  I actually had a bit of a rest day today, and I promptly got sick.  It could be the changing of the seasons or stress.  I suppose it could have been worse, as I could have gotten sick on the way to (or back) from Ottawa.

Let me back up a bit and see if there is anything I haven't covered at least a bit.  Maybe I'll start with books.  I wrapped up The Scarlet Letter and then was mostly alternating between Denis Johnson's Angels and Zevin's Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow, which I thought was great.  However, there were a couple of concerts (James and Pulp) I was going to where I couldn't take a large bag, so I took one of the smaller paperbacks towards the top of my list, Canetti's Auto-da-Fé, and read that before the shows started.  (I actually didn't have much time at the Pulp show but had a bit of time before James started.)  Then I wanted to take something slightly shorter than a doorstop book up to Ottawa, and I opted for Russo's Empire Falls (over McCullers's The Heart is a Lonely Hunter).  As it turns out, I was able to get more work done on the bus than I expected, and only read about 75 pages, so I could have taken anything and perhaps I should have just finished Kundera's Ignorance (though I am not enjoying this much at all and just wish it was over...).  

On Sunday, I was at Trinity-St. Paul's seeing a short Tafelmusik concert for subscribers.  It was fun, though I do wish they had program hand-outs or done a better job in announcing the pieces they were playing.  They ended with Purcell's Air from Timon of Athens, which I liked a lot when they played it back in 2024.  It is possible that I was starting to come down with whatever I have now, as I was feeling pretty draggy and didn't really want to bike home.  I did, however, and I didn't think much of it, though whatever I had came back with a vengeance today.  The main reason I bring this up is that I was reading a bit of Angels before the show started and then tucked it next to me in the pew rather than putting it back in my backpack.  Big mistake.  When I got home, I was organizing everything and realized that I must have left it in the church!  Wow.  I'm considering giving them a call, but I was probably just going to give it away anyways (though I would have tried once selling it at Seekers' Books), and the irony of a dark book about criminals (called Angels) in the church book corner (I'm pretty sure they have one) appeals to me.  I was quite close to the end of this book and found an on-line pdf and just powered through the final chapter today.

So the tail end of Sept. will be me trying to finish Ignorance and then perhaps alternating chapters of Empire Falls and Auto-da-Fé, with Empire Falls being much more to my taste.  I will probably read some shorter novels as well, such as Gibbon's Ellen Foster, Kaysen's Asa, as I Knew Him and Jelloun's The Last Friend, though clearly this pushes me into October.  There is a small chance I will read a few stories from How to Pronounce Knife by Souvankham Thammavongsa, as I need to dig it out from a book pile before her reading at TPL.  I will also have to decide by late Oct. if I am definitely going to read Austen's Persuasion in Nov. (probably) and then Nabokov's Ada and Shteyngart's Vera, or Faith in Nov. or Dec. (less likely).

I saw quite a few movies over the month.  Out of Sight and Midnight at the Revue with Naked Lunch in a few more days, assuming I beat this cold.  I saw Kajillionaire at Paradise, and I enjoyed this a lot.  I think I must have seen a very different trailer, as I didn't realize how central Gina Rodriguez was to the plot.  I do think it was a bit unlikely that the parents would have enlisted her in the first place, risking bringing an outsider into their endless scamming and grifting, as they don't seem the type to really plan out far enough for the long con (that ended the movie).  Gina was just so beautiful and patient with Old Dolio (what an insane name for a daughter!).  I barely follow tv so didn't realize that she was pretty much a star by this time (after several seasons of Jane the Virgin), so I'm glad she agreed to do the movie.  What I didn't realize is that the writer/director was Miranda July, who is now much better known as the author of All Fours.  They actually had a completely offbeat video introduction by Ms. July, apparently shot on a camera in an airport bathroom!  If the Tafelmusik concert on Sunday had been shifted by half an hour or Pearls of the Deep (at the Paradise) had been half an hour later, I would have gone to that as well, though probably it is just as well I didn't try to do that as well.  

On Sunday I had also gone to the gym, bought groceries, then biked over to Carlton to see The Matrix, then stopped by work and put about an hour in on a proposal and picked up the tickets to the show, then biked up to Bloor to see Tafelmusik.  So it was a lot, even without trying to see one more movie.

In terms of $5 movies at Carlton, I saw The Breakfast Club earlier in the month and then the Matrix yesterday.  I see that Kiki's Delivery Service is coming back, but I think I'll pass, having seen this twice.  I probably will see Howl's Moving Castle again, assuming it is in rotation for Oct. or Nov.  It wasn't a $5 movie, but I saw Honey Don't! at Carlton, which I enjoyed, and then This is Spinal Tap II at Market Square on Sun.  My wife actually came along, and she hasn't been in a movie theatre in years!  I thought Tap II was good, though it is very much aimed at Boomers and Gen X who are starting to feel (along with Marvell) "Time's wingèd chariot hurrying near" and specifically that there are more grains in the bottom of the hourglass than at the top...  This picture is aimed at the aged still trying to recapture a bit of their former glory (and some of the shots of the actors from 40 some years ago are just painful to see what has happened to them; it's the same though even worse with Tim Curry post-stroke).  The younger generations complain about Tap II and just don't think the old geezers are funny enough...

On Sat. I also managed to see a documentary about Georgia O'Keeffe (overall very good but probably a few too many talking heads going on about her work).  I would say O'Keeffe is quite an important figure for me, in part because she was so important to my mother.  One of the very first major exhibits that I went to was the O'Keefe retrospective at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1988.  My father decided to pick up the catalog as a gift to my mother, and I eventually inherited it.  Over the years, I saw some smaller O'Keeffe exhibits, including one focused on her skyscraper paintings (might have been at AIC or the Whitney, but I can't recall), then an exhibit sponsored by the Tate that hit Toronto's AGO in 2017 (a little surprised I didn't mention it here at that time*), and then the O'Keeffe-Calder joint show in Montreal in 2024 (some photos of that here).  My mother would really have enjoyed that show.  I know that my mother enjoyed spending time in the U.S. Southwest, and I'm almost certain that she went to the O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, NM.  I think it's a museum I probably ought to visit, though who knows when I will be willing to travel south again.

I didn't see all that much theatre.  I did see The Welkin, which I thought had strong acting but I really didn't like the script and I checked out midway through the second act when there was just one too many plot twists (to say nothing of the endless sobbing over the strains of 'Running Up That Hill').  I was going to see Waiting for Godot this upcoming weekend, but pushed it back a week (and in fact am seeing The Green Line at Buddies earlier that same day!).  And The Public Enemy at Alumnae just before that.  It looks like I saw almost no theatre in Sept., though a fair bit in Aug. and then a fair bit is upcoming in Oct.  Instead, I mostly saw movies or went to the Rex or to other concerts.  I saw Haim quite early in the month, then James and Pulp in the same week.  (James was the best of the bunch, and if they had played 'Born of Frustration' it would have been the cherry on top...  They apparently are playing all the songs off of Laid at most stops on the tour!)  And The B-52s are this Wednesday, assuming I am healthy, so I really had better get off to bed now...

 

* What is particularly odd is that I clearly remember taking photos, particularly of her last paintings of Ghost Ranch, but they aren't in the folder with other 2017 photos.  Instead, I have photos (including some O'Keeffe paintings) taken in DC and Chicago on trips we took in 2017.  I even have looked in the 2018 folder, but nothing so far.  So strange.

Georgia O'Keeffe, The Shelton with Sunspots, NY, 1926