
ON NOT BEING AFRAID OF THE NUMBER 13 IN NYC
"The idea of a Friday the 13th club, or of a club devoted to all forms of triskaidekaphobia, is not a new one. It seems to have originated in New York City on January 13, 1882, when the thirteen members of the Thirteen Club gathered in room 13 of the Knickerbocker Cottage at 454 Sixth Avenue (4+5+4=13) from 8;13 P.M. until 1 A.M. (the 13th hour) . The club's initiation fee was $1.13, monthly dues thirteen cents, a lifetime membership thirteen dollars. Members dined on the 13th of every month, toasted the health of Hermes Trismegistus (legendary hermeticist who was said to have been "the thirteenth son of a thirteenth mother") spilt salt, walked under ladders, and broke mirrors."
Jonathan Cott. Thirteen: A Journey Into the Number 13 (New York: Doubleday, 1997)
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CBS IN GRAND CENTRAL STATION iN 1939
“Hidden away above Grand Central’s main waiting room, CBS
had set up their first television studios in 1939, when a
shift from radio to the new medium was beginning to
look inevitable. Sidney’s studio was a room 40 feet by
60 feet, and its were visible below the statue of Mercury
that stands atop the southern facade of Grand Central.”
Maura Spiegel. Sidney Lumet:A Life (NY: St. Martins Press, 2019)
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SCOTT JOPLIN IN NYC "In January 1917, he was hospitalized and subsequently transferred to a mental institution, where he died four months later. Joplin was buried in a simple grave at St. Michael's Cemetery in Astoria, New York. As you enter the cemetery his grave is well-marked with a historical plaque on the right-hand side, fifty feet from the road." Scott Stanton. The Tombstone Tourist: Musicians (New York: Pocket Books, 2003)
Broadway had reached uptown to the southeast corner of 41st Street, where a place called the Metropolitan Casino was thrown up to house great concerts and comic operas. The joint busted out and the building at night with gas cans. One of them is dousing the joing with gas and the other is reading the insurance policy. They are about to have a candlelight ceremony when the owner reading the insurance policy clutches his chest. They don't have a dollar's worth of fire insurance. They turned it into a roller rink. Jimmy Breslin. Damon Runyon: A Life (NY: Ticknor & Fields, 1991).
GROWING UP IN THE BROWNSVILLE SECTION OF BROOKLYN
When I was eight I sang at a stag coming-out- of-jail party for a local hoodlum named Little Doggie. In the middle of my number, a man was shot dead at my feet. The Brownsville section of Brooklyn was a tough neighborhood in the 1920's, so I didn't think it was too strange. My first reaction was, is the program going to pay me my $3? Phil Silvers. This Laugh Is On Me: The Phil Silvers Story (with Robert Saffron, Englewood, New Jersey:Prentice-Hall,1973) from "THE TOP 10 SECRETS OF THE NEW YANKEE STADIUM" by BELLA DRUCKMAN in the blog "Untapped New York")
"Gino Castignoli, a devoted Red Sox fan, helped construct the new Yankee Stadium. However, he did so with suspicious intentions. On his only day working on the stadium, Castignoli buried designated hitter David Ortiz’s jersey behind home plate under feet of cement. However, other workers caught him before it was too late. The New York Post published a story about the incident that prompted an “excavation ceremony” to search for the shirt. After employing jackhammers to get the job done, the Yankees administration sent the jersey to Boston. Rather than drive the rivalry further, they turned this fiasco into good by auctioning off the jersey to raise money for the Jimmy Fund, an organization that raises money for cancer. The scandal attracted a lot of attention and the Yankees donated $175,000 to the charity."
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Fabulous collection of information one didn’t know (I didn’t know or never knew I didn’t know til now and now I wonder how I never knew …). Thanks, Lou, a great source of true facts…xxaa
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Dear Alison:
Thank you for your kind & generous response to my recent blog.
So few persons ever take the time to write.
With all good wishes,
Louis
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Great stories, Lou. You could fill a book with such stories–or maybe you already have? Next time tell the story of the Mailer-Breslin run for mayor. Mailer’s solution to juvenile delinquency in New York: jousting tournaments for at-risk kids.
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THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORTIVE RESPONSE & SUGGESTIONS.
JOUSTING EVENTS FOR AT RISK KIDS IS RIGHT UP MY ALLEY.
What did you title your story? EDITH PIAF SENDS HER REGRETS.
Love,
Louis
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Dear Louis,Where do you find these tidbits. Also, how is the baby doing?Love,April
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Dear April;
Sent you a photo to your phone. Mateo is nearing 6 weeks on Monday.
HOW ARE YOU DOING?
I should have a letter in the NY TIMES BOOK REVIEW this Sunday.
Love,
Louis
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I tried to leave a comment but the WordPress site wouldn’t recognize me. So I’ll just tell you: I loved the stories.
M
>
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Dear April;
Sent you a photo to your phone. Mateo is nearing 6 weeks on Monday.
HOW ARE YOU DOING?
I should have a letter in the NY TIMES BOOK REVIEW this Sunday.
Love,
Louis
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Every item was a revelation to this lifelong New Yorker. Many thanks.
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THANK YOU FOR BEING SUCH A GENEROUS & SUPPORTIVE READER!
Love,
Louis
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Dear Professor Phillips,
Your sense of humor and insights bring joy and lightness to these dark times. Thank you for your wisdom and sharp wit.
xx
Mac
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