
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
MAGICIAN’S ASSISTANT
“ I met a woman once who was divorced from a professional magician. She hated this man with a passion. She used to appear with him in a baffling trick where they exchanged places handcuffed and manacled in a locked cabinet. I asked her how it was done. The divorcee and her feelings meant nothing compared to her loyalty to the magical profession. She looked at me coldly and said, ‘The trick is told when the trick is sold.’” Roger Ebert. Awake in the Dark (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2017). ** RAINMAKER RUGGLES' CANNONS AT THE BATTLE OF SHILOH "About midnight April 6, 1862, a driving rainstorm pelted the soldiers after a massive bombardment by Ruggles' Battery. After the war, Daniel Ruggles became an inventor, submitting several rainmaking patents that included the application of explosives. Perhaps Ruggles associated the downpour at Shiloh with the artillery fire he directed, and his experiences at Shiloh may have contributed to his rainmaking ideas. Gregory A. Metz. Attack at Daylight and Whip Them: The Battle of Shiloh (April 6-7, 1862). (El Dorado Hills, California. Savas Beatie LLC, 2019). **
GENTLEMAN’S GENTLEMEN: BASIL RATHBONE’S BUTLER Film-star Basil Rathbone (well-known to mystery fans for his many films about Sherlock Holmes) was well-served for a time by an almost perfect butler named Poole.. Unfortunately, the gentleman’s gentleman had one slight flaw: non his nights off, he was a foot-pad who used a pistol to hold-up wealthy Londoners walking home at night. Poole was finally caught and was sentenced to two years and nine lashes with the cat o’ nine tails for carrying a pistol. In his autobiography –In and Out of Character—-Rathbone writes” I never found out the whys and wherefores of his predilection for a Jekyll and Hyde existence. All I could get from him was that he had learned his technique from the movies: they had taught him what not to do! And he claimed with complete sincerity, that he had never hurt anyone in his life, and had always contributed liberally to organized charity. “Anonymous , of course,” he had said with a wry smile.” As for the reference to Jekyll and Hyde, I wonder if Basil Rathbone was aware of the fact that Jekyll’s butler was also a gentleman’s gentleman named Poole. **
SPIRITUALIST "It's a good time to be dead -- at least, if you want to keep in touch with the living. Almost a third of Americans say they have communicated with someone who has died, and they collectively spend more than two billion dollars a year for psychic services on platforms old and new. Facebook, Tik Tok, television: whatever the medium, there's a medium." Casey Cep. "KIndred Spirits" in The New Yorker (May 31, 2021) MUTTON SHUNTER Mutton-shunter – A policeman who seeing prostituted on a street shunts –or moves them along. Eric Partridge. A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English. CRIMINAL LAWYER “The criminal lawyer, like the criminal, is the enemy of Law and Order. The criminal attacks society head on; the lawyer is trying to set you free after you have been caught so that you can go out and steal some more. Whether he succeeds or not, he profits from your crime. The only way you can pay him is out of the money you ve got away with at one time or another, everybody knows that. It’s called his share of the loot, of course. It’s called ‘the fee.’ But that’s only because he has a license that entitles him to do what he’s doing,, and You haven’t. " Willie Sutton with Edward Linn. Where the Money Was (New York: Viking Press, 1976) ** QUIZ SHOW CHAMPION “The Quiz Champion is not a self-thinker. He is too busy trying to recollect the words and thoughts of others, which he has read and memorized. The Quiz Champion spits in the eye of thee music lover who wants nothing more than to spend a couple of hours listening to the Toscanini recording of Otello, but who is now burdened with a deep sense of guilt because he does not know (a) when the opera was first produced (b) who was the conductor, and ( C) the name of the soprano of the premiere.” Harry Golden. Only in America (1959)
DRAMA CRITIC
“Probably the greatest privilege enjoyed by a commercial drama critics
is not having to go the theatre during the summer. It is a comfort and delight
on a par with the mint julip and not fastening the collar button of a shirt when one is
wearing a necktie.”
George Jean Nathan. The Theatre in the Fifties. 1953
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I read this already
On Fri, Oct 29, 2021 at 9:53 PM PhillipsMiscellany wrote:
> louisprofphillips posted: ” OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA > MAGICIAN’S ASSISTANT “ I met a woman once who was divorced from a > professional magician. She hated this man with a passion. She used to > appear with him in a baffling trick where they exchanged plac” >
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Always new and interesting bits of trivia – I only wish I could remember things long enough to win on Jeopardy! You, my dear brother really ought to try out for Jeopardy!
Sent from Mail for Windows
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I didn’t get the “mutton” half of “mutton-shunter” so I looked it up.
Definition of mutton dressed as lamb
British, informal + disapproving
: a woman who tries to make herself look younger by wearing clothes designed for young people
Makes sense, hey, mate?
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My own personal George Jean Nathan quote is that “it’s the guest, not the cook, who’s the sole judge of a meal.” I am, therefore, please to give you four stars for the consistent pleasures you offer your readers.
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Thank you for being such a generous friend & reader!
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And for those who might not recognize the name Willie Sutton: He was perhaps the most famous bank robber of all time. He was a master of disguises, and broke out of jail three times during his multi-decade criminal career. The title of his autobiography came from the time he was asked why he robbed banks. “Because that’s where the money is,” Willie replied. Sutton always carried a gun, but didn’t fire one off in any of his holdups – mainly because it was never loaded. (“Someone might get hurt.”)
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Great Willie Sutton quote.
Re “The trick is told when the trick is sold”: Does that mean a magician will reveal a trick for a price? I thought they were professionally bound to never reveal a trick.
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