Showing posts with label Oscar Levant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oscar Levant. Show all posts

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Oscar Levant: one-man band




Oscar, reclining and reflective, begins to dream. He dreams he is in a vast concert hall. . . 




. . . playing Gershwin's Concerto in F with his cigarette-stained fingers. . . 




. . . and conducting at the same time. . . (and he was a real conductor so he isn't just waving his arms)




. . . and likewise the  percussion, he's really playing (an early
 example of cloning, or else he accelerates himself to the speed of sound)






My personal fave, cuz he looks so sexy. . . 




     Cute with a gong (and doesn't he look a bit like Buster Keaton?)




"Bravo! Bravo!"



Monday, April 29, 2013

More degrees of separation




You shouldn't ought-a start looking at pictures of people like Caruso. . .

(Were we looking at Caruso?)




. . . cuz as soon as we start to look at pictures of people like Caruso, it reminds us of somebody else. . .




. . . who wasn't really a tough guy, but was pretty good at playing one. . .




Like-a-da so.

But then, there was this guy who really WAS a tough guy. . .





(but of course we all know he was framed)





. . . and den dis other guy who looks suspiciously like someone else we know. . .

one Charlie The Gent:




"Wow, Charlie."




. . .and then this really strange one, but the pinstripes match. . . he rode in a cab once. . . and as for social deviation, his penmanship is lousy. . .






. . . but the resemblance to Satan is indisputable. . .



Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Oscar Levant: and so, good night














Go gentle (unfinished)

If I should see you on a flickering screen
And hear you set your instrument on fire,
I want to reach into your silver time
And show you all my cockeyed, strange desire.

To love a man who’s gone into the mere
Who leaked away in 1972
It’s stranger than 



http://margaretgunnng.blogspot.ca/2013/04/the-glass-character-synopsis.html

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

OPTICAL ILLUSION: just stare at this photo for five seconds. . .


Best photo of Oscar Levant EVER






Taken by Richard Avedon, shortly before Levant's death at 65. It's all there in the face. The craggy survivor: stepped-on, grimly resolute, sweet-eyed as a child, and yet with the tinge of desperation. People didn't give up on him. I don't know personally if I could have stood being around him, but then you never know: depends on whether there was a piano in the room.



http://margaretgunnng.blogspot.ca/2013/04/the-glass-character-synopsis.html

http://members.shaw.ca/margaret_gunning/betterthanlife.htm

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Oscar Levant Follies: he sings! He dances! He plays the piano!











SO. Oscar Levant again. I don't know what it is. But I do. He was a famous genius, a famous crazy man, a crazy celebrity whom some say threw away a monumental musical talent because he wanted to be in the movies.

So he became the "Oscar Levant type", except that there was only one of them. I managed to get through his biography, A Talent for Genius, which is the kind of no-holds-barred, detail-packed, interviewing-everyone-who-ever-emptied-his-ashtrays treatment that I love. In fact it bookends nicely with the Marion Meade biography of Dorothy Parker, What Fresh Hell is This? (a Parkerism oft quoted by Sheldon Cooper on The Big Bang Theory). 





By the end of it I was slogging along, however, as his life descended into a drug-drenched miasma. He threw away his accomplishments and his happiness with both hands, and seemed to be relentlessly seeking oblivion. By some miracle - by the grace of God, or more likely his doggedly devoted wife June - he made it to age 65, the worst of his addictions and mental aberrations burned down to embers. But at his worst, he would meet with a "doctor" (think Michael Jackson and the propofol) in the middle of the night, literally in a dark alley so his wife wouldn't know, and be shot up with Demerol or phenobarbital. He told June once that all he wanted was to be "unconscious".




But that was nothing. Gasping and staggering out the other side of his biography, which I narrowly survived, I plunged into his Memoirs of an Amnesiac and nearly didn't make it at all. The last quarter of it is devoted to his "Walpurgis night" (I had to look that one up) of flailing hell, in which he speaks of his addictive desperation:

"I would have taken anything I could have laid my hands on. I was going to say that that was as low as I ever got, but I have since discovered that the pit is bottomless. There is no such thing as a lowest point."







































Amen, brother - unfortunately, I hear you, because I've dropped through the bottom more times than I care to admit. And it has had little or nothing to do with drugs - it's the Walpurgis night of the mind. It did not quite destroy Oscar, a fragile, vulnerable soul with a mostly-untreated heart condition and paralyzing stage fright. Somehow his wife kept him around  long enough for Candice Bergen to come and interview him for Esquire Magazine. Maybe she was just too beautiful at 25, and it overwhelmed him, but he lay down for a nap and died that day, his soul just floating away painlessly, as sweetly and  effortlessly as he once played the piano.


Saturday, February 2, 2013

They're here: Oscar Levant coloring pages!




These are all out of my own pencil. Close enough anyway. They beg to be colored, filled in like stained glass or those Tiffany shades I love so much. Why can't adults color? Especially when the subject is someone so strange and rare, a creature from an ancient and unlikely fable.






You can go wild here, as the stark outlines beg to be splashed with peacock hues. What color is Oscar Levant? Go listen to his music, hear his suffering, and find a shade to match.





Simple black-and-white line drawings boil a person's soul down to its essence. What was Oscar Levant but a scowl and a cigarette? The wringing hands tell the whole story. Color him the deepest indigo.





A publicity shot, almost smiling, but not quite. His smile was more of a grimace. At the end, his pain was a public demonstration. But of what?





Oscar with a mermaid tail, surfing innocence and ignorance with equal genius.





Should we leave this one alone? Oscar as a study in black and white, curled around the piano like a puppy around its mother, pointy fingers like claws, his face a Buster Keaton mask of tragedy.






These begin to look like James Thurber drawings, minimalist, or old computer printouts from the 1980s. Oscar Levant is not just pixellated, he has been rendered machinelike, broken down into wires and components and transistors. How did it happen? Like a Borg, he is only semi-human.




But he's in there somewhere, just waiting for his big comeback. Connect the dots.

The devil and the deep blue sea




There once was a man
Who was almost white,

But he'd only come out at night.




It made him glow,
But great was his woe,
"Cause he never could find the light.






Sometimes his world seemed made of snow,
And sometimes made of stone.




Though he knew he was s'pozed to be happy, 
He wished they'd all leave him alone.




Some people saw right through him,
And this filled him with dismay.





Sometimes he felt so transparent
It made him forget how to pray.




He was lost in a velvet painting
A trailer park was his home




. . . and 'cause no one knew
how to help him get through,
He completely dissolved into chrome.