PROFESSIONSI DID NOT CHOOSE
LION TAMER
Isaac Van Amburgh --
The first lion tamer to make it big
in the UK was Isaac Van Amburgh. Born in
Fishkill, New York State, Van Amburgh
toured Europe between 1838 and 1845 and
achieved notoriety for his performances
with big cats.
**
"Methods of training wild animals vary,
although there are certain basic principles
that all trainers observe. I now use jungle-bred
animals almost exclusively. Having trained beasts
born in captivity, I am cured of any further
desire to make performers of such specimens.
In an emergency I sometimes have to fall back on
cage-born ‘raw material,’ but if possible I avoid
doing so.
I am taking up the point early in this
chapter because one of the popular fallacies
concerning my profession is that the trainer
can make his job easier by using animals born
in captivity.
Clyde Beatty, with Edward Anthony. The Big Cage.
(New York: The Century Company, 1933)
**
WALKING TOWELS
Flashback: Minsky occasionally would book into the
Gaiety legit dance acts known as ‘walking towels.’
They cooled off the heated men between the strip
acts. One of them was a tall, engaging,loose-limbed
tap and softshoe man, Dan Dailey.
Phil Silvers. This Laugh Is On Me, with Robert
Saffron (Englewood, N.J. Prentice Hall, 1973.
**
FILM PROJECTIONIST
Cinemactor Ronald Reagan gave from the heart
in introducing a reel of excerpts from Oscar
winning films of yesteryear: “This film embodies
the glories of our past, the memories of our
present and the inspiration for our future.”
When the film came on, it was running backwards.’
TIME (March 24, 1947)
**
PIRATE
“Contrary to the popular usage,which was
originally promoted by European governments
actively seeking to cast pirates unfavorably,
they were actually, often surprisingly good dudes.
They’d attack slave ships and offer a life of
freedom on the seas to captured Africans. They
disrupted the very nature of colonialism.
and people liked it. The pirates had a lot of
fans, especially in the colonies, where they
were viewed as exciting and liberating heroes
of the common people. Which makes sense, especially
when you know that these mariners were much more
about stealing from the rich (slave owners,
colonialists) and giving to the poor (themselves)
than about causing senseless chaos.
Sam Maggs. Girl Squad: 20 Female Friendships
That Changed History (Philadelphia: Quick Books,
2018)
***
SPY
Mildred Harnack was an American spy during
World War II. Along with her husband, Arvid Harnack,
she led a resistance organization in
Berlin, risking her life to leak information
from Germany’s Ministry of Economics, where he worked,
in hopes of defeating the Nazis. Despite nearly
escaping she was executed by guillotine in 1943
on Hitler’s direct order.
Kate Dwyer. “One Writer’s Obligation of Blood”
in The New York Times (August 13, 2021)
**
ATOMIC BOMB TESTER
“Shortly after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, Maj. Leslie R. Grove of the U.S. Army,who
directed the making of weapons, told congress that
succumbing to their radiation was ‘a very pleasant
way to die.”
William J. Broad. “The Truth Behind the
News” in The New York Times (August 10, 2021)
**
GYMNAST
“The Wolf Turn has been around for decades,
but recently it’s become a favorite in balance
beam and floor routines. A gymnast will get
into a squat position with one stretched out.
She’ll then stretch out her arms and wind them
up.Once she finds her balance, she’ll start
spinning. Finally, she’ll stop and return to her
original stance."
Antonella Crescimber. “Why the Wolf Turn is such a big deal’ on VOX (August 9, 2021)
**
JOURNALIST
NEW YORK NEWSPAPERS IN THE 1920s
The newspapers, the Journal and American, later
combined,were dedicated to ”noise in the news”
and had an editorial view of the world from
inside a bedroom, or at the rail of a police desk
at night. These tales were printed in newspapers
that practiced bribery, extortion, calumny, also
known as slander, and two kinds of lies, bald-
faced and by omission. Anybody on the staff
who performed an act without malice was
regarded as a dreadful amateur. There was
great confusion in the office, for sometimes
the sins being committed at typewriters
were greater than the ones being written about.
There was no situation so bad that a fresh
edition of the morning American or evening
Journal couldn’t make it worse. Yet the working
conditions were the best in the history of the
business, for nobody died at an
early age of the worse of maladies, seriousness.
Jimmy Breslin. A Life of DamonRunyon
(NY: Ticknor & Fields, 1991)
**
THE PROFESSION I CHOSE
Stuttering & studying
Luminous poets
As if they were chums,
Better than coin-changers,
Money pushers &
Entire universes
Of 9 to 5 drizzle
Soaking into souls
That so thoroughly
Absorb the dead & dying,
To skylark
With freewheeling melodies
Of human hearts
Keening with mysteries
That keep all of us alert
& on edge.
Louis Phillips
7 thoughts on “BITS & PIECES OF A MISPLACED LIFE: PROFESSIONS”
Great poem!
On Sat, Aug 28, 2021 at 10:37 AM PhillipsMiscellany wrote:
> louisprofphillips posted: ” OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA PROFESSIONS I DID NOT > CHOOSE LION TAMER Isaac Van Amburgh — The first lion tamer to make it big > in the UK was Isaac Van Amburgh. Born in Fishkill, New York State, Van > Amburgh toured Europe between 1838 and 1845 and achi” >
That macabre quote from General Groves motivated me to learn more, and I came upon a long—but fascinating article that used the quote as a title. If the subject of Hiroshima interests you, I suspect you’ll find the article gripping.
Hi – Will be reading your poem again…it has much to reveal. And the Breslin, Silvers: the behind-the-scenes of show business has always been wildly interesting.
Great poem!
On Sat, Aug 28, 2021 at 10:37 AM PhillipsMiscellany wrote:
> louisprofphillips posted: ” OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA PROFESSIONS I DID NOT > CHOOSE LION TAMER Isaac Van Amburgh — The first lion tamer to make it big > in the UK was Isaac Van Amburgh. Born in Fishkill, New York State, Van > Amburgh toured Europe between 1838 and 1845 and achi” >
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Nice poem at end!
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Hi Louis,
That macabre quote from General Groves motivated me to learn more, and I came upon a long—but fascinating article that used the quote as a title. If the subject of Hiroshima interests you, I suspect you’ll find the article gripping.
Murray
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/262859282_A_Very_Pleasant_Way_to_Die_Radiation_Effects_and_the_Decision_to_Use_the_Atomic_Bomb_against_Japan
>
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Hi – Will be reading your poem again…it has much to reveal. And the Breslin, Silvers: the behind-the-scenes of show business has always been wildly interesting.
Thanks, Allan
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Thank you to all the kind comments about the blog & my poem.
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Thanks for keeping all of us alert and on edge
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THANK YOU FOR BEING SUCH A SUPPORTIVE READER,’STAY WELL.
Love,
Louis
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