MAME Glossary and Notes
Glossary
- Beekman Place
is a short street running north to south from 51st to 49th streets, on the east side of Manhattan;
it is just north of the UN headquarters and near the Trump Tower. Beekman was originally
spelled Beeckman from the name of a Dutch settler; one of his descendants built his
mansion there. [I, 1]
- There is a drink called
a Beekman
Place Cooler: combine 1½ ounce gin, 1 ounce sloe gin, 3 ounces
grapefruit juice, and ½ ounce sugar syrup in a shaker or blender with
cracked ice; shake or blend; pour into a chilled Collins or highball
glass; fill with club soda.
- There is also a Beekman
Place Cocktail: in an old fashioned glass, layer 1 ounce sloe
gin, then ½ ounce gin, then finally 1 ounce grenadine.
- St Bridget—The details of the life of Brigid of Ireland are
somewhat obscure. She probably lived in the late 5th and early 6th
centuries. She is patroness of Ireland and also of travelers. Her feast day
is February 1. Presbyterians do not pray to saints. [I, 1]
- Agnes Gooch is probably named for
St Agnes of Rome,
virgin and martyr, patroness of chastity (!), and also gardeners, girls, engaged couples,
rape victims, and virgins. The details of her life are also somewhat
obscure. At the time of the persecution under the emperor Diocletian, when
Christianity was outlawed and actively suppressed, she was a nobleman’s
daughter who was sought in marriage by various young men, but she refused
them all. For that she was humiliated, accused of being a Christian, and
martyred. (Her name in Spanish is Ines or Inez. The name
Agnes is derived from Greek meaning "pure" or "chaste";
it is similar to the Latin word agnus, meaning "lamb", and
she is often depicted in art with a lamb.) Her feast day is January 21, on
which day two lambs are blessed.
There is also a St Agnes of Assisi, St Agnes of Bohemia (referred to in the
song "Good
King Wenceslas"), and St Agnes of Montepulciano. [I, 1]
- Dixieland, or more properly, "hot jazz", is the earliest style of jazz that was known outside of
New Orleans. A hot jazz combo usually consists of a "front line"
of cornet or trumpet, clarinet or saxophone, and trombone, with a rhythm
section of piano, tuba or string bass, banjo or guitar, and drums. There are now three distinct styles of dixieland. The original
form developed in New Orleans around the turn of the 20th century, and was
revived beginning in the 1940s. Chicago style began around 1910 when New
Orleans musicians began migrating there. It features faster rhythms, string
bass instead of tuba, trumpet instead of cornet, guitar for banjo, and more
featured solos rather than an emphasis on ensemble. West coast Dixieland
began in San Francisco in the late 1930s and was a partial return to the
original New Orleans style. [I, 1]
- The people named in the script as Mame’s guest at her affair include the
following. [I, 2]
- A Lithuanian bishop would probably belong to the Roman Catholic
Church. However, Lithuania was part of the Russian Empire from 1793-1918.
(It was incorporated into the Soviet Union from 1940-1990.) So it is
possible that the bishop is from the Russian Orthodox Church.
- Floyd Gibbons
(1887-1939) was the war correspondent for the Chicago Tribune during World
War I, and later a radio commentator and narrator of newsreels.
He was known for his style of fast talking. He lost an eye at the Battle
of Belleau Wood in France: while trying to rescue an American
soldier he was hit by German gunfire.
- Marian
Anderson (1897-1993) was an American contralto and one of the
most celebrated singers of the 20th century. Although many European
opera companies recruited by many European opera companies, she
preferred to perform in recitals in the United States. In 1939, she was
refused permission to sing in Constitution
Hall before an integrated audience by the Daughters
of the American Revolution (DAR), so President and Mrs Roosevelt arranged for her to sing to an
open-air audience at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. to a crowd of more than 75,000 people and to a radio
audience of millions. Later she became the first black person (male or
female, American or foreign) to to perform at the Metropolitan
Opera in New
York City in 1955.
- Radclyffe
Hall (born Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall: 1880-1943) was an English
poet and author,
best known for the lesbian
classic The Well of Loneliness.
- Paul Robeson
(in full: Paul LeRoy Bustill Robeson; pronounced ROBE-son,
1898–1976) was an internationally renowned American
bass-baritone
concert singer, scholar, actor of film and stage, All-American
and professional athlete, writer, multi-lingual orator and lawyer who
was also noted for his wide-ranging social justice activism.
In 1930, Robeson starred in the title role in William Shakespeare’s Othello
in England, when no U.S. company would employ him for the part. He
reprised the role in New York in 1943, and toured the U.S. with it until
1945. His Broadway run of Othello is still the longest of any
Shakespeare play. He won the Spingarn Medal in 1945 for his portrayal of Othello. Robeson also
played the role of Joe, which was written for him, in the 1928 London
production of Show
Boat, and repeated his performance in the 1932 Broadway revival
of the show, the 1936 film version, and a 1940 Los Angeles stage
production. His rendition of "Ol’ Man River" is widely considered the definitive version of
the song. Robeson sang the song as written whenever he appeared in a
production of Show Boat, but in later recitals he made
alterations to the lyrics to transform it from a song of black lament to
one of defiance and perseverance
- Elsie de Wolfe (also known as Lady
Mendl: 1865?–1950) was an American interior decorator, nominal author of the
influential 1913 book The House in Good Taste, and a prominent
figure in New York, Paris, and London society.
- Roscoe
Conkling
"Fatty" Arbuckle (March 24, 1887 – June
29, 1933) was an American
illustrated
song slide "model," silent
film actor,
comedian,
director, and screenwriter.
Starting at the Selig Polyscope Company he eventually moved to Keystone Studios where he worked with Mabel
Normand and Harold
Lloyd. He mentored Charlie Chaplin and discovered Buster
Keaton and Bob
Hope. He was one of the most popular stars of the 1910s, and soon
became one of the highest paid, signing a contract to make $1 million a
year in 1918.
- Robert
Charles "Bob" Benchley (1889–1945) was an American
humorist best known for his work as a newspaper
columnist and film
actor. From his beginnings at the Harvard Lampoon while attending Harvard University, through his many years writing essays and
articles for Vanity
Fair and The New Yorker, and his acclaimed short films, Benchley's style
of humor brought him respect and success during his life, from New
York City and his peers at the Algonquin
Round Table to contemporaries in the burgeoning film industry.
- Mary Louise
Cecilia "Texas" Guinan (1884–1933) was a saloon keeper, actress, and entrepreneur.
The bartender in 10-Forward in the TV series Star
Trek: The Next Generation, played by Whoopi
Goldberg, was named for her.
- Alexander
Woollcott (1887-1943) was a wit, drama critic for the New
York Times, columnist for the The
New Yorker, and a member of the Algonquin Round Table.
He was the inspiration for the character of Sheridan Whiteside in the play The
Man Who Came to Dinner by George
S. Kaufman and Moss
Hart. The character of Waldo Lydecker in the 1944 film noir Laura
is also based on him. One of his best-known quotes is "All the things I
really like to do are either immoral, illegal, or fattening." Also:
"Many of us spend half our time wishing for things we
could have if we didn’t spend half our time wishing." And,
"There is no such thing in anyone’s life as an unimportant day."
- Bathtub gin was made in the United States during the era of
Prohibition, 1920-1933. The 18th Amendment to the Constitution and the
Volstead Act banned the sale, manufacture, and transportation, but not the
consumption of, intoxicating drinks. [I, 2]
- A canapé is a kind of open-faced sandwich: a cracker, or thin
piece of bread or toast, topped with cheese, caviar, anchovies, or some
other savory food. [I, 2]
- The Algonquin Round Table
was a group of New York writers, critics, actors, and others that met for
lunch at the Algonquin Hotel daily from 1919 to 1929. Eventually they were
assigned a waiter named Luigi, and started calling themselves "Luigi
Board". Later they met at a round table, and called themselves
"The Vicious Circle". Eventually the name "The Round
Table" stuck. [I, 2]
- St Patrick’s Day is March 17; the scene
takes place on December 1, 1929. St Patrick was born somewhere in Roman
Britain, and was kidnapped around age 16 and forced to work as a shepherd in
Ireland. He escaped, and return home, but he had a religious conversion. He
felt called to return to Ireland He was consecrated
a bishop, and preached all over the island. He dedicated springs and hills and other places that the
Irish people had already regarded as sacred and gave them Christian meaning.
[I, 2]
- The Spirit of St Louis is the name of the plane Charles
Lindbergh flew solo nonstop from New York to Paris May 20–21, 1927 to win a $25,000 prize. He
was then nicknamed "Lucky Lindy", and the Lindy
dance was named for him. His fame was so great that he could not write
checks: recipients considered his autograph too valuable to cash them! [I,
4]
- St Boniface (c. 680-754) was an
Englishman with the original name of Winfrid. He preached the Gospel
throughout the Frankish domains and became the first archbishop of Mainz,
the primatial see for Germany. He is called the Apostle to the Germans.
- St Frances Xavier Cabrini, also known as Mother Cabrini, was
the first American citizen canonized by the Roman Catholic Church. Born in
Italy in 1850, she founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of
Jesus, of which she became the superior general. Her good work came to the
attention of Pope Leo XIII. The pope urged her to go to America to work
among Italian immigrants there. She founded 67 institutions to care for the
poor, sick, and orphans in the United States, Europe, South America, and
China. She died in 1917 and was canonized by Pope Pius XII in 1948. Vera
must be a good actress to play someone so completely different from herself!
[I, 4]
- A recipe for a sidecar
is: 2½ fl. oz brandy, 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice,
1 tbsp Cointreau (or Grand Marnier or other triple sec), shaken with ice, and strained into a chilled
cocktail glass, the rim coated with sugar. (Some recipes use equal parts
brandy and triple sec.) Brandy is the traditional base of a
sidecar, but whisky or some other spirit can be used.
The Ritz Hotel in Paris claims to have originated the
drink. The Classic Cocktail,
Olympic Cocktail, Jack Rose, and Margarita are considered variations on the
sidecar. Other variations include: Chelsea sidecar (gin instead of brandy), rum sidecar, and
Pesco sidecar. [I, 4]
- Knickerbocker was the adopted name of Herman Jansen van Wyhe, a
Dutch settler of New Amsterdam. (In contemporary Dutch it would be spelled Knikkerbakker.)
Washington Irving used the pen name Diedrich Knickerbocker. Then
Knickerbocker came to mean a New Yorker. One of the first baseball teams was
the New York Knickerbockers. That is now the name of the New York NBA team.
It also means a kind of boy’s or men’s baggy knee-length trousers,
usually called Knickers. By extension it has come to mean women’s
undergarments. [I, 5]
- Bully, as used by such as Theodore Roosevelt, means
"excellent" or "splendid". The word chap is used in England much as guy
is used in the United States. I assume Babcock is so aristocratic that he
would use such words as bully little chap. [I, 5]
- Darien is a town in southwestern Connecticut. It is one of the
richest places in the United States, with a median home price of around $1
million. The locals pronounce the name of the town Dairy-ENN, with accent on
the last syllable. It is part of Fairfield County, the Connecticut county
closest to New York City. There is a Darien, Georgia, which is pronounced
DAIRY-un with accent on the first syllable. They were both (probably) named
for Darién, Panamá, where it is pronounced (something like) dah-ree-AIN. [I, 5]
- A typical recipe for a Martini is 3 fl. oz gin and 1 tbsp dry
vermouth, mixed with ice, strained into a chilled cocktail glass, and
garnished with an olive or lemon twist. Despite James Bond, most
mixologists prefer clear drinks such as Martinis stirred, never shaken.
(Shaking adds air bubbles to the liquid and clouds it.) This recipe uses a
6:1 gin to vermouth ratio. Some drinkers prefer a dryer version, 12:1, 20:1,
or as Patrick makes it, merely coating the glass with vermouth before adding
the gin. Winston Churchill is said to make it by pouring the gin while
merely glancing at an unopened bottle of vermouth; this is called a naked
martini. [I, 5]
- Mr Woollcott says somewhere
the sun is just below the yard-arm: a yardarm is long piece of
timber tapering slightly toward the ends, hung by the centre to the top of a
mast (upon which the square sails are traditionally hung). The suggestion
that one can have a drink as soon as the sun is over the yardarm is thought
to have its origins in the custom aboard ship whereby once the sun had sunk
enough over the horizon and no longer struck the yardarm officers could
retire below for their first tot of spirits for the day. The expression is
now used to mean around 5:00 p.m. or the end of the working day; i.e., time
to mix the drinks! (Whether this quote was actually by Woollcott, I cannot
verify!) [I, 5]
- Greenwich Village, or simply The Village, is a neighborhood on the
west side of lower Manhattan. During the late 19th to the mid 20th
centuries, it was known as a Bohemian capital, and
was the center of the Beat movement. The name was originally Dutch Groenwijck,
but the name was close enough to the name of the borough of East London.
Because of its Bohemian association, it has now undergone gentrification,
and today is mostly a middle-class residential area. [I, 5]
- Babbitt is the name of a novel by Sinclair Lewis published in 1922.
It is largely a satire of middle-class American life and culture. The
name Babbitt denotes one slavishly conforming to middle-class stereotypes.
[I, 5]
- Scarsdale, located in Westchester County, just north of New York City, is
perhaps the richest suburb in the country. [I, 5]
- lamé—an ornamental fabric in which metallic threads, as of gold
or silver, are woven with silk, wool, rayon, or cotton. [I, 5]
- A paddy wagon (also called a patrol wagon) is a vehicle for taking
arrestees to jail. The name comes from the use of Paddy as slang for
policeman, because so there were so many Irish policemen, Paddy being
a diminutive of Patrick. (Alternatively it might have been so named because
many of those being taken to jail were Irish, probably for drunkenness.).
[I, 5]
- Lindsay Woolsey—Lindsey-Woolsey is a kind of woven fabric with a linen warp and woolen
woof. The Bible specifically forbids Jews from wearing garments made of both wool and
linen: Thou shalt not wear a garment of divers sorts, as of woolen and
linen together. –Deuteronomy
22:11
[I, 6]
- A Bohemian, is, technically a Czech, Bohemia
being the old name of the western part of the Czech Republic. But gypsies
were assumed to come from Bohemia, so it has been used for a name for gypsy.
The story of Samson and Delilah is told in Judges
16:3-31. Samson marries the Philistine woman Delilah who betrays him to
the Philistines. So the name Delilah has come to mean a dangerous temptress.
John
Milton personified her as the misguided and foolish but sympathetic
temptress, much like his view of Eve,
in his 1671 work Samson
Agonistes. By the time of Camille
Saint-Saens’ Samson
et Dalila (1877) Delilah had become the eponym
of a "Delilah", a treacherous and cunning femme
fatale. See the article on Delilah
in Wikipedia. [I, 6]
- Jezebel was the
queen of King Ahab of the (northern) kingdom of Israel, as told in the
biblical 1 and 2 Kings. She was the daughter of the king of Sidon, and
actively promoted the worship of Baal in Israel. Her name has come to mean a
wicked woman. [I, 6]
- Much has been made of stockbrokers jumping out of windows after the
stock market crash in 1929. It turns out that there were actually fewer
suicides in the Depression than in the decade before. [I, 6]
- New Haven is one of the cities where shows would hold out-of-town
try-outs before opening on Broadway. The Shubert Theatre was named
for the Shubert
brothers, Lee, Sam, and Jacob, from Syracuse, NY, who were Broadway
theatrical producers and theater owners. They currently own or operate 16
Broadway theaters. [I, 7]
- Tiffany & Company is known for diamonds. Located at Fifth
Avenue and 57th Street since 1940, from 1905 to 1940 they were at 401 Fifth
Avenue, at 38th Street. Their store at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa was,
in 2006, their most profitable. [I, 9]
- Walgreens is the largest drug store chain in the United States.
Founded in Chicago in 1901, they operate in all 50 states, D. C., and Puerto
Rico. They really did not suffer during the great depression. [I, 9]
- Beauregard Jackson Pickett Burnside—all names of Civil War
generals. [I, 10]
- Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard was the first prominent Confederate general officer. He took command of the army in Charleston and
ordered the firing on Fort Sumter, beginning the Civil War. He was the victor at 1st Bull Run (1st Manassas). He was trained as an engineer
at West Point, and distinguished himself in the Mexican War. He was instrumental in keeping the Union army from capturing Petersburg in
1864. When Petersburg fell nine months later, he helped persuade other Confederate leaders that the war was lost. After the war he was
one of the few Confederate generals to become rich.
- Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson entered West Point with a very poor education, and started at the bottom of his class. But he studied
very hard, and graduated 17th of 59 in the class of 1846. He distinguished himself at the battles of Vera Cruz and Chapultepec in the
Mexican War. At the start of the Civil War, he became Colonel of infantry in Virginia of what became known as the Stonewall Brigade,
because of his policy of never retreating. In 1863 he was killed by Confederate soldiers mistaking his party for Northerners. Lee considered
his death a great blow.
- George Edward Pickett graduated last in his class from West Point in 1846, just after the Mexican War broke out. He distinguished himself
at the Battle of Chapultepec, hoisting the U. S. flag over the fortress. He is best remembered for
Pickett’s charge at the Battle of Gettysburg,
for which he never forgave Lee.
- Ambrose Everett Burnside graduated from West Point in 1847. In the Mexican War he arrived too late at Vera Cruz to be involved in the
battle, and ended up mostly in garrison duty in Mexico City. As a Union Army general in the Civil War, he conducted successful campaigns
in North Carolina and East Tennessee but was defeated in the disastrous Battle of Fredericksburg and
the Battle of the Crater. His distinctive
style of facial hair is now known as sideburns, derived from his last name.
- Crinoline is a type of petticoat or structure to keep a woman’
skirt in the desired shape. It was worn mostly in the 19th century, and
today is worn only as very formal dress. [I, 10]
- A mint julep
— start with a julep cup filled with crushed ice, add 2 tbsp sugar
syrup, stir well, add 3 oz bourbon, stir until ice forms on the outside of
the cup. Garnish with three large mint sprigs. Variations include a brandy
julep, peach brandy julep, Champagne julep, and Irish julep (use Irish
whiskey). [I, 10]
- A cakewalk is a style of dance developed among black Americans in
the South, probably in the time of slavery. The style probably originated in
slaves and later free blacks strutting around in mock imitation of
plantation society. It was done in contests, and the winner received a cake.
[I, 10]
- The black-eyed pea is a kind of bean of the species Vigna
unguiculata, brown with a prominent black spot. Originally from India,
it was introduced to the Caribbean, and from thence to the American South.
[I, 10]
- Grits is a food common to the South made from coarsely ground corn,
usually eaten as a porridge, hot or cold, and often fried. [I, 10]
- The Ritz is a hotel founded by Swiss hotelier César Ritz noted for
its ostentatious display. [I, 10]
- Georgia is known as the Peach State, Alabama the Camellia
State, and Mississippi the Magnolia State. Bougainvillea, pecan fries,
and chicken fries are other symbols of the South. [I, 10]
- The Robert
E. Lee was a Mississippi riverboat named for the Confederate
general and launched in 1866 for service between Natchez and New Orleans. In
1870 it won a famous race with the then speed record holder, the Natchez
VI, from St Louis to New Orleans. But in 1882 it caught fire. [I, 10]
- I came, I saw, I conquered is the English translation of what Julius
Caesar is reported to have written about a short war in 47 bc.
[I, 10]
- Pago Pago (usually pronounced "pahng-go pahng-go"
[IPA: 'paŋgo 'paŋgo] by
Americans, but "pahng-o pahng-o" ['paŋo 'paŋo] by Samoans) is the capital of
American Samoa. Shanghai is the largest city in China. Singapore
was established by the British East India Company in 1819, led by Sir
Stamford Raffles. It remained a British colony until 1963 (except for
Japanese occupation 1941-45) and joined the federation of Malaysia. It was
kicked out of Malaysia in 1965, and has since been an independent republic.
The Raffles Hotel was built in 1887 by four Armenian brothers in the
grand colonial style. It was closed for renovations 1989-91. [II, 1]
- Deb is short for débutante, from the feminine French word
meaning "beginner". It refers to a young lady who has reached the
age of maturity and is now introduced to society in her début. Originally
it announced that a girl was now ready to marry, and she was introduced to
eligible young men. This might happen at a débutante ball, at which several
young ladies were introduced, or at a coming-out party for her only, or her
and her sister. Under Babcock’s trusteeship, Patrick would probably be
introduced to débutantes, and expected to seek one in marriage. (It seems
likely that Patrick met Gloria Upson through their mutual acquaintance with
Babcock.) [II, 1]
- Horn is slang for telephone. The earliest telephones resembled
horns, as do outdoor loudspeakers even today.[II, 1]
- Dictaphone is a trademark, but has become generic, for a device to
record speech for later playback. The first such device was built by
Alexander Graham Bell in 1881. The Dictaphone® was first marketed in 1907;
it used wax cylinders to record. In 1947, this technology was replaced by
recording in a mechanical groove on a plastic belt. Later, this was replaced
by magnetic tape, and eventually, a hard drive. [II, 2]
- Typewriters were used from around 1870 to 1990, until being
replaced by word-processing machines and personal computers. [II, 2]
- Damon and Pythias were two friends in the ancient Greek world.
Pythias was sentenced to death by Dionysius, the tyrant of Syracuse. He asked
for permission to return home to settle his affairs. Dionysius refused,
until Damon volunteered to remain as hostage for Pythias. When Pythias did
not return at the appointed time, Damon was about to be executed when
Pythias returned at the last moment. Dionysius, moved, pardoned Pythias, and
both men remained at his court as his trusted counselors. The names Damon
and Pythias have become proverbial for steadfast friendship. MGM released a
film of this story in 1962. [II, 2]
- Daphnis and Chloë is an erotic romance written by the 2nd century bc
Greek writer Longus. Daphnis and Chloë are two abandoned orphans raised
separately by two shepherds. When they are grown they meet and fall in love,
but do not understand what is happening. After a number of adventures where
they are almost separated forever, they eventually get together. A modern
story based loosely on this is the film The Princess Bride. [II, 2]
- Amos 'n' Andy was a radio sitcom
and serial about two black Southerners
who move to Chicago and struggle to make a living there. The show was so
popular that movie theaters would stop the film for 15 minutes and play the
broadcast so that viewers would not have to miss the program in order to see
the movie. [II, 2]
- Peg o’ My Heart is a popular song written by Alfred Bryan and
Fred Fisher for the Ziegfeld Follies of 1913. [II, 2]
- Alice Babette Toklas (1877-1967) and Gertrude Stein
(1874-1946) were life partners
and hosted a salon in Paris that attracted many American writers, including Ernest
Hemingway and Thornton
Wilder, and such avant-garde
painters as Picasso
and Matisse.
[II, 2]
- Romulus and Remus are the twin mythical founders of Rome. They were
said to be orphaned, and were suckled by a she-wolf. When Rome was built,
they quarreled, and Romulus killed Remus. Romulus then became the first of
the seven kings of Rome. In the Aeneid, Virgil adds that the twins were
descended from Aeneas after he had fled from the fall of Troy. [II, 2]
- Blue Barron was the stage name of the band leader Harry Freidman
(1913-2005),
in the 1940s and 50s. His music was described as "sweet" rather
than "swing", being more sedate. [II, 4]
- A daiquiri
is a cocktail made of rum, fresh lime juice, and sugar syrup, stirred
or shaken, often with fruit and ice, served in a chilled cocktail glass. It
is named for the town of Daiquirí near the original Bacardí distillery
near Santiago in eastern Cuba. (Since the communists took over Cuba,
Bacardí has moved to Puerto Rico.) There is a legend that Theodore
Roosevelt and the Rough Riders first encountered the drink when they landed
near the town. But it was first popularized by Ernest Hemingway in the 1920s
in Havana. A frozen daiquiri is made in a blender with the above ingredients
and 8 oz ice and poured into a chilled wine glass. Another variation is the
banana daiquiri. A whisky sour and its variations can be considered
variations on the daiquiri. [II, 4]
- The bunny hug was an early 20th century style of dance done to
ragtime music mostly by young people. It probably originated in San
Francisco. [II, 4]
- Lindy hop and jitterbug are variations of swing
dancing. [II, 4]
- A rumble seat was an upholstered seat on some automobiles before
World War II, opened where the trunk is on most modern autos. The passengers
were outside the protection of the car’s roof, and thus exposed to the
elements. The name is short for rumble-tumble seat, located on some
(horse-drawn) carriages. [II, 4]
- Coonskin coats became popular as automobile coats in the early 20th
century, and were worn by fashionable college students. [II, 4]
- Rudy Vallee (1901–1986) was an American
singer,
actor, bandleader,
and entertainer. He was a pop superstar for his time, and he is perhaps best
known as a "crooner", one who sings softly, as into a radio
microphone, as opposed to a "belter", a voice needed before
microphones. (Other well-known crooners include Bing
Crosby, Frank
Sinatra, and Perry
Como.) He appeared as Mr Biggley in the original Broadway cast of How
to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, and reprised the role
in the 1967 film. He had a house on Pyramid Place in the Hollywood Hills,
and Mayor Yorty proposed renaming the part he lived on Rue de Vallee. [II,
4]
- A mountebank is someone who sells quack medicines or other such
things, as from a platform in a public place; by extension, any charlatan. I
suspect the authors of Mame are making a pun on bank for the
seat of Gloria’s family.
- The Schlitz brewing company was the largest brewery in the world,
beginning around 1902. They used the mottos "The beer that made
Milwaukee famous", "When you’re out of Schlitz, you’re out of
beer", and "Go for the gusto." During Prohibition they made
soft drinks and used a modified motto "The drink that made
Milwaukee famous." But in the 1970s the company attempted to increase production
while cutting costs by changing to a high-temperature (and hence high speed)
brewing process. (Lager beer is traditionally slow fermented from the
bottom, around 45º F for 6-10 days, and then matured over a few weeks.) The
new formula beer was unpopular, and sales declined. Schlitz was acquired by
the Stroh Brewing Company of Detroit in 1982, which was itself acquired by
Pabst in 1999. A reformulated 1960s style beer was reintroduced in 2008 in
select markets. [II, 4]
- The name Pegeen is an Irish variant of Peggy, or Margaret, and
means "pearl". The name is not common in the United States,
according to the census bureau. [II,5]
- The film title Reflected Glory does not appear in the Internet
Movie Database. The title may be a pun on Gloria’s name. [II, 5]
- Tallulah Bankhead
(1902-1968) was a controversial American actress and bon-vivant. Roles included
Constance Porter in Hitchcock’s
film Lifeboat and as the Black Widow in the Batman television
series. The character Cruella de Vil in 101 Dalmatians was partly based on her. [II, 5]
- Upjohn was a pharmaceutical company in Kalamazoo, Michigan. It was
acquired by Monsanto and today is part of Pfizer. Upjohn’s best-known
drugs before acquisition by Pfizer were Xanax,
Motrin IB, and Rogaine.
[II, 5]
- Sahib is originally an Arabic word meaning "master" or
"proprietor" that passed into Farsi and the major languages of
India. It was often translated "your grace." [II,6]
- Salaam is the Arabic word for "peace". It is used as a
greeting and is frequently heard in India. [II,6]
- Literally, the term antediluvian
means "before the Flood", i.e. the Flood of Noah’s time,
mentioned in the Bible in Genesis 6-8. Figuratively, then, it means
"archaic", or very much out of date. [II, 6]
- India in 1946 was on the verge of independence, which happened in
the summer of 1947. Unfortunately, independence resulted in the partition
of the country into India and Pakistan, with much communal violence, leading
to an estimated 500,000 deaths. Over 7,000,000 Muslims migrated from India
to Pakistan, and another more than 7,000,000 Hindus and Sikhs left Pakistan
for India. It would not have been a good plan for Mame and Peter to go there
in 1947! [II, 6]
- LaGuardia
airport (LGA), located in the Flushing area of the borough of Queens, used to be
the main airport for New York City, but in the jet age was superseded by JFK,
which was formerly known as Idlewild (IDL). JFK airport is located in the
Jamaica area of Queens. Today LaGuardia still is a major airport, handling
passenger traffic on short- and midrange flights. The airport was named
for Fiorello La Guardia
(1882-1947),
mayor of New York from 1933 to 1945; his life and loves are the subject of the
musical show Fiorello!
[II, 6]
- TWA was Trans World Airlines. 1946 was a big year for TWA. They
began flying the fast new elegant Lockheed Constellation, and also began
flying internationally, breaking into what had been Pan Am’s
"turf" as the United States’ sole international airline. Howard
Hughes controlled TWA in those days, from 1941 to 1956. Unfortunately TWA did not react well to deregulation in the 1980s, and went
bankrupt in 1992. Their assets were acquired by American Airlines in 2001.
Since the flight to India in 1946 was before the introduction of
commercial jetliniers (1958), it would take over 50 hours, with more than
one stop.
[II, 6]
Events of 1929
- May 14: Charlie Stowe was born
- October 29 was known as Black Tuesday, because of the large number of
shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange that day (16 million) and the
loss in value ($14 billion).
- Thanksgiving Day fell on November 28.
- Christmas Day was a Wednesday.
- The "sixteen shopping days till Christmas" would be December
9-24.
Index
drinks
locations
saints
- Updated 04/19/2010; revised 06/03/2012
- More on cocktails
- McQ’s theater home page
- Please send additions, suggestions, comments, or corrections to tf_mcq
<at> yahoo.com.