FUN HOME Dramaturgy
FUN HOME Dramaturgy
FUN HOME Dramaturgy
8. Damask:
·
1.
a
figured
woven
fabric
with
a
pattern
visible
on
both
sides,
typically
used
for
table
linen
and
upholstery.
·
2.
short
for
damask
rose.
9. Irish
Linen
Irish
linen
(Irish:
Línéadach
Éireannach)
is
the
brand
name
given
to
linen
produced
in
Ireland.
Linen
is
cloth
woven
from,
or
yarn
spun
from
the
flax
fibre,
which
was
grown
in
Ireland
for
many
years
before
advanced
agricultural
methods
and
more
suitable
climate
led
to
the
concentration
of
quality
flax
cultivation
in
northern
Europe
(Most
of
the
world
crop
of
quality
flax
is
now
grown
in
Northern
France,
Belgium
and
the
Netherlands).
Since
about
the
1950s
to
1960s
the
flax
fibre
for
Irish
Linen
yarn
has
been,
almost
exclusively,
imported
from
France,
Belgium
and
the
Netherlands.
It
is
bought
by
spinners
who
produce
yarn,
and,
this,
in
turn,
is
sold
to
weavers
(or
knitters)
who
produce
fabric.
Irish
linen
spinning
has
now
virtually
ceased,
yarns
being
imported
from
places
such
as
the
Eastern
part
of
the
European
Union
and
China.
Weaving
continues
mainly
of
plain
linens
for
niche,
top
of
the
range,
apparel
uses.
Linen
damask
weaving
in
Ireland
has
less
capacity,
and
it
is
confined
at
very
much
the
top
end
of
the
market
for
luxury
end
uses.
Companies
including
Thomas
Ferguson
&
Co
Ltd
continue
to
weave
in
Ireland
tend
to
concentrate
on
the
quality
end
of
the
market,
and
Jacquard
weaving
is
moving
towards
the
weaving
of
specials
and
custom
damask
pieces,
made
to
the
customers'
own
individual
requirements.
Fabric,
which
is
woven
outside
Ireland
and
brought
to
Ireland
to
be
bleached/dyed
and
finished,
cannot
carry
the
Irish
Linen
Guild
logo,
which
is
the
Guild
trademark,
and
signifies
the
genuine
Irish
Linen
brand.
The
Irish
Linen
Guild
has
defined
Irish
linen
as
yarn,
which
is
spun
in
Ireland
from
100%
flax
fibres.
Irish
linen
fabric
is
defined
as
fabric,
which
is
woven
in
Ireland
from
100%
linen
yarns.
It
is
not
required
that
every
stage
from
the
growing
of
the
flax
to
the
weaving
must
take
place
in
Ireland.
To
be
Irish
linen
fabric
the
yarns
do
not
necessarily
have
to
come
from
an
Irish
spinner,
and
to
be
Irish
linen
(yarn)
the
flax
fibre
does
not
have
to
be
grown
in
Ireland.
However,
the
skills,
craftsmanship,
and
technology
that
go
into
spinning
the
yarn
must
be
Irish,
as
is
the
case
with
Irish
linen
fabric;
where
the
design
and
weaving
skills
must
be
Irish,
and
all
of
such
must
take
place
in
Ireland.
Finished
garments,
or
household
textile
items
can
be
labelled
Irish
linen,
although
they
may
have
been
made
up
in
another
country.
Irish
linen
does
not
refer
to
the
making
up
process
(such
as
cutting
and
sewing).
It
refers
to
where
the
constituent
fabric
was
woven
or
knitted.
10. Hepplewhite
Suite
Chairs
George
Hepplewhite
(1727?
–
21
June
1786)
was
a
cabinetmaker.
He
is
regarded
as
having
been
one
of
the
"big
three"
English
furniture
makers
of
the
18th
century,
along
with
Thomas
Sheraton
and
Thomas
Chippendale.
There
are
no
pieces
of
furniture
made
by
Hepplewhite
or
his
firm
known
to
exist
but
he
gave
his
name
to
a
distinctive
style
of
light,
elegant
furniture
that
was
fashionable
between
about
1775
and
1800
and
reproductions
of
his
designs
continued
through
the
following
centuries.
One
characteristic
that
is
seen
in
many
of
his
designs
is
a
shield-‐shaped
chair
back,
where
an
expansive
shield
appeared
in
place
of
a
narrower
splat
design.
11. Quixote
12.
The
Rococo
Revival
style
emerged
in
Second
Empire
France
and
then
was
adapted
in
England.
Revival
of
the
rococo
style
was
seen
all
throughout
Europe
during
the
19th
century
within
a
variety
of
artistic
modes
and
expression
including
decorative
objects
of
art,
paintings,
art
prints,
furniture,
and
interior
design.
In
much
of
Europe
and
particularly
in
France,
the
original
rococo
was
regarded
as
a
national
style,
and
to
many,
its
reemergence
recalled
national
tradition.
Rococo
revival
epitomized
grandeur
and
luxury
in
European
style
and
was
another
expression
of
19th
century
romanticism
and
the
growing
interest
and
fascination
with
natural
landscape.
During
the
later
half
of
the
nineteenth
century,
Rococo
Revival
was
also
fashionable
in
American
furniture
and
interior
design.
John
Henry
Belter
was
considered
the
most
prominent
figure
of
rococo
revival
furniture
making.
Revival
of
the
rococo
style
was
not
restricted
to
a
specific
time
period
or
place,
but
occurred
in
several
waves
throughout
the
19th
century.
13. 1970s
cameras,
tape
recorders,
clothes,
vacuum
cleaners,
diaries
TVs
sleeping
bags
toothbrushes,
coat hooks,
Village
Voice,
diners,
toolbags
14. Oberlin
College:
dorm
rooms
15. Li-‐Lac
Chocolates:
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates
is
Manhattan’s
oldest
chocolate
house
–
Since
1923.
They
make
old-‐world
artisan
chocolate
in
small
batches
for
exceptional
quality
and
superior
taste
–
using
original
recipes,
time-‐honored
techniques,
and
quality
ingredients.
Their
selection
of
fresh
chocolate
–
more
than
120
items
–
is
one
of
the
largest
selections
of
fresh
gourmet
chocolate
in
America.
Every
delicious
item
is
made
by
hand,
locally
in
New
York
City,
and
guaranteed
for
freshness.
The
history
of
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates
dates
back
to
1923
when
George
Demetious,
a
native
of
Greece
who
studied
the
art
of
chocolate
making
in
France,
emigrated
to
New
York
and
opened
his
shop
at
120
Christopher
Street
in
the
heart
of
Greenwich
Village.
During
the
1920s,
Greenwich
Village
was
a
destination
for
artists,
intellectuals
and
innovators.
It
was
in
this
context
that
Mr.
Demetrious
applied
his
chocolate-‐making
expertise,
creating
and
perfecting
his
recipes
for
such
items
as
Almond
Bark,
Butter
Crunch,
Hazelnut
Truffle
Squares,
Legendary
Fudge,
and
other
favorites,
steadily
building
a
loyal
customer
following
among
his
quirky
and
demanding
neighbors.
Over
the
ensuing
9
decades,
Li-‐Lac
became
a
New
York
favorite.
When
trendy
ingredients
and
mass
production
emerged
as
the
model
for
the
modern
chocolatier,
Li-‐Lac
remained
true
to
its
history
and
tradition,
eschewing
automation
and
trendiness.
Deemed
“stubbornly
old
fashioned”
by
the
Wall
Street
Journal,
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates
is
one
of
the
few
old-‐school
chocolate
companies
to
survive
into
the
modern
era.
Mr.
Demetrious
used
large
marble-‐top
tables
and
copper
kettles
to
perfect
his
signature
recipes.
He
employed
a
staff
of
dippers
and
packers
who
contributed
their
own
specialized
care
and
attention
to
detail
still
found
in
every
Li-‐Lac
Chocolate
box
made
today.
When
Demetrious
passed
away
in
1972,
he
entrusted
his
recipes
and
beloved
company
to
Marguerite
Watt,
his
devoted
employee
of
25
years.
Marguerite
carried
on
Demetrious’
high
standards
for
chocolate
making
until
she
retired,
selling
the
business
to
Edward
Bond
in
1978.
“Edward
Bond,”
Marguerite
would
often
say,
“is
the
quintessential
Southern
gentleman.”
On
many
occasions,
she
told
him
that
she
wouldn’t
sell
the
company
to
just
anyone:
“Whoever
comes
in
here
after
me,
will
be
seeing
to
it
that
quality,
caring,
and
commitment
still
count.”
Bond
was
her
man,
a
Mississippi
native,
who
relocated
to
New
York
City,
and
a
regular
patron
who
purchased
dessert
items
from
Li-‐Lac
for
his
catering
business.
Whenever
he
visited
the
store,
he
allowed
other
customers
to
be
served
first
so
he
could
stay
behind
and
visit
with
Marguerite.
During
the
years,
they
became
good
friends
and
she
was
convinced
that
Ed
was
the
individual
who
best
understood
the
importance
of
quality
and
respect
for
the
Li-‐Lac
tradition.
marguerite
offered
to
sell
him
the
business,
and
it
wasn’t
long
after
that
Bond
became
the
third
owner
of
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates.
While
upholding
the
company’s
tradition,
Ed
expanded
the
business
and
introduced
a
few
items
of
his
own,
including
Mr.
Bond’s
Special
Pralines.
he
also
acquired
a
large
selection
of
chocolate
molds
and
designed
Li-‐Lac’s
first
signature
floral
gift
box
packaging.
Loyal
to
both
Demetious
and
Marguerite,
Ed
kept
in
his
employ
all
of
the
devoted
staff
who
had
been
working
at
Li-‐Lac
since
Mr.
Demetrious
owned
the
shop.
In
1981,
Ed’s
sister,
Martha,
joined
him
in
the
chocolate-‐making
business.
For
Martha,
“it
was
love
at
first
sight!”.
She
quickly
learned
the
old
master’s
recipes,
perfected
his
techniques,
assisted
customers,
and
helped
Ed
with
day-‐to-‐day
operations.
Together,
Martha
and
Ed
developed
new
recipes
–
most
notable
the
Specialty
Truffles
that
are
still
a
best-‐selling
item
today.
Martha’s
efforts
were
recognized
in
1996,
when
her
recipe
won
an
award
for
the
“Best
Raspberry
Truffle
in
the
Tri-‐State
Area.”
With
their
dual
leadership,
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates
continued
to
grow
but
never
at
the
expense
of
freshness
or
quality.
After
Ed’s
death
in
1990,
Martha
Bond
inherited
the
stewardship
of
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates,
nurturing
the
business
and
maintaining
the
same
single-‐minded
focus
on
product
quality
as
Demetrious,
Marguerite,
and
Ed.
In
1999,
she
opened
a
second
location
in
Grand
Central
Market,
brining
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates
into
the
world’s
busiest
train
station.
When
rent
became
too
high
in
2005
to
continue
at
the
Christopher
Street
location,
she
had
to
make
the
most
heart-‐
wrenching
decision
in
Li-‐Lac’s
history.
After
eight
decades,
the
iconic
store
was
forced
to
relocate
a
few
blocs
north,
while
the
production
facility
moved
to
Sunset
Park,
Brooklyn.
The
move
was
difficult
for
everyone,
but
especially
sad
was
moving
away
from
P.S.
3
and
St.
Luke’s
Parish,
who
represented
three
generations
of
loyal
Li-‐Lac
customers.
Their
hearts
continue
to
be
touched
by
the
people
who
communicate
to
them
of
their
fond
memories
of
stopping
by
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates
on
their
way
home
from
school!
In
2009,
Martha
retired
to
Mississippi
to
be
with
her
beloved
grandchildren.
Today,
Li-‐Lac
Chocolates
is
in
the
hands
of
three
long-‐time
NYC
residents:
Anthony
Cirone,
Anwar
Khoder
and
Christopher
Taylor.
16. 1980s
phones
clothes,
stationary,
pens,
sketch
books
diaries,
duffle
bags,
back
packs
17. embalming
and
running
a
funeral
home:
Opening
your
own
funeral
home
requires
experience
in
and
knowledge
of
mortuary
services.
You
also
need
compassion
and
strong
customer
service
skills
to
work
with
families
that
need
help
making
arrangements
to
bury
their
loved
ones.
In
addition
to
business
and
marketing
expertise,
you
must
be
knowledgeable
about
different
faiths
and
the
funeral
and
burial
customs
of
each
one.
Obtain
Your
License
Most
states
require
funeral
directors
to
have
a
minimal
amount
of
college
education
in
mortuary
science.
An
associate
degree
in
funeral
service
education
is
commonly
required,
according
to
the
American
Board
of
Funeral
Service
Education.
In
addition,
many
states
require
you
to
obtain
a
funeral
home
license
administered
through
a
state
board
exam.
Before
you
seek
your
license,
check
with
your
state
about
apprenticeship
requirements.
Most
states
require
at
least
a
one-‐year
apprenticeship
under
a
licensed
funeral
director
before
taking
the
exam.
A
handful
of
states
require
continuing
education
classes.
For
instance,
Indiana
requires
funeral
directors
or
embalmers
to
take
10
hours
of
classes
every
two
years.
Secure
Space
As
you
look
for
space
for
your
funeral
home,
keep
in
mind
that
you
may
need
room
to
add
crematory
and
embalming
areas.
Refrigeration
is
another
requirement
for
embalming.
In
addition,
you
need
space
to
handle
body
preparation.
Other
necessities
are
a
reception
area
and
rooms
to
hold
funeral
services.
Selling
caskets
and
urns
requires
space
to
set
up
a
showroom.
You
may
also
want
to
offer
private
meeting
rooms
and
a
children’s
playroom
during
funeral
memorials
or
wakes.
Create
A
GPL
The
Federal
Trade
Commission’s
Funeral
Rule
requires
you
to
develop
and
hand
out
to
prospects
a
comprehensive
list,
known
as
a
General
Price
List,
of
the
services
and
products
you
sell.
Include
the
prices
of
individual
services
and
products,
such
as
embalming
fees,
transportation
of
the
body
to
the
funeral
home
and
memorial
service
arrangements.
The
FTC
also
requires
you
to
provide
specific
disclosures
to
your
GPL,
such
as
mentioning
that
alternative
containers
like
cardboard
boxes
are
available
for
use
in
cremation
services.
In
addition,
you
must
let
customers
know
they
are
not
obliged
to
buy
a
package
of
funeral
services
and
can
instead
purchase
their
choice
of
individual
services
and
products.
Offer
Pre-Arranged
Funerals
Pre-‐arranged
funerals
are
a
valuable
product
to
offer
while
also
providing
cash
flow
with
which
to
grow
your
business.
Before
you
start
selling
prepaid
funerals,
however,
check
into
state
regulations.
For
instance,
in
Tennessee
you
must
register
with
the
State
Department
of
Commerce
and
Insurance
Burial
Services
to
sell
funded,
prearranged
funeral
plans.
The
state
also
requires
you
to
obtain
approval
for
your
pre-‐need
funeral
contract
with
any
financial
institutions
you
plan
to
use.
Hire
Staff
As
a
funeral
director,
you'll
handle
a
variety
of
daily
activities,
including
working
with
families,
making
arrangements
on
how
to
handle
the
body
and
taking
care
of
the
administration
of
your
business.
If
you
plan
to
offer
embalming
or
cremation
services
and
do
not
have
the
experience
with
these
procedures,
you
must
hire
experienced
staff.
Hiring
a
part-‐time
receptionist
to
greet
and
direct
people
during
memorial
services
gives
you
the
support
needed
while
you
work
with
the
families
and
handle
last-‐minute
tasks.
Embalming
The
treatment
of
a
dead
body
so
as
to
sterilize
it
or
to
protect
it
from
decay.
For
practical
as
well
as theological
reasons
a
well-‐preserved
body
has
long
been
a
chief
mortuary
concern.
The
ancient
Greeks,
who
demanded
endurance
of
their
heroes
in
death
as
in
life,
expected
the
bodies
of
their
dead
to
last
without
artificial
aid
during
the
days
of
mourning
that
preceded
the
final
rites.
Other
societies,
less
demanding
of
their
greats,
developed
a
wide
variety
of
preservatives
and
methods
to
stave
off
decay
or
minimize
its
effects.
Corpses
have
been
pickled
in
vinegar,
wine,
and
stronger
spirits:
the
body
of
the
British
admiral
Lord
Nelson
was
returned
from
Trafalgar
to
England
in
a
cask
of
brandy.
Even
the
Greeks
sometimes
made
concessions:
the
body
of
Alexander
the
Great,
for
example,
was
returned
from
Babylon
to
Macedonia
in
a
container
of
honey.
The
application
of
spices
and
perfumed
unguents
to
minimize
putrefaction
was
so
common
a
practice
that
the
English
word
embalming
had
as
its
original
meaning
“to
put
on
balm.”
Generally,
however,
the
word
is
used
to
describe
a
less
superficial
procedure,
the
introduction
of
agents
into
the
body
to
ensure
preservation.
Embalming
by
arterial
injection
as
a
mortuary
practice
is
considered
to
have
begun
in
England
in
the
18th
century.
The
technique
had
actually
been
developed
in
the
first
half
of
the
17th
century
by
the
noted
English
physiologist
William
Harvey
in
experiments
leading
to
his
discovery
of
the
circulation
of
blood,
during
which
he
injected
coloured
solutions
into
the
arteries
of
cadavers.
Later
the
Dutch
and
German
scientists
Frederik
Ruysch
and
Gabriel
Clauderus
are
believed
to
have
used
similar
arterial-‐injection
techniques
to
prevent
cadavers
from
decomposing.
The
Scottish
anatomist
William
Hunter
(1718–83),
however,
is
credited
with
being
the
first
to
report
fully
on
arterial
and
cavity
embalming
as
a
way
to
preserve
bodies
for
burial.
His
discovery
attracted
wide
attention
after
his
younger
brother,
John
Hunter,
in
1775
embalmed
the
body
of
a
Mrs.
Martin
Van
Butchell,
whose
will
specified
that
her
husband
had
control
of
her
fortune
only
as
long
as
her
body
remained
above
ground.
To
meet
that
condition,
Van
Butchell
had
her
embalmed,
placed
her
fashionably
dressed
body
in
a
glass-‐lidded
case
in
a
sitting
room,
and
held
regular
visiting
hours.
The
demand
for
embalming
grew
in
England
and
particularly
in
the
United
States,
where
it
was
promoted
by
a
newly
emerging
group
of
undertaker-‐
businessmen
as
superior
to
the
customary
but
awkward
and
often
unsatisfactory
method
of
preserving
bodies
for
transportation
or
for
viewing
by
packing
them
in
ice
or
laying
them
on
“cooling
boards,”
with
a
concave,
ice-‐filled
box
fitted
over
the
torso
and
head.
Some
of
the
more
enterprising
entrepreneurs
exhibited
well-‐preserved
“cases”
in
the
windows
of
shops,
or
took
them
on
tour
so
that
persons
in
rural
areas
and
small
towns
could
see
the
latest
development.
The
U.S.
Civil
War
was
the
turning
point
in
breaking
down
public
resistance
to
“mutilating”
the
body
and
in
establishing
arterial
embalming
as
a
common
practice
in
the
United
States.
Although
the
government
had
established
national
cemeteries
for
the
war
dead,
it
freely
awarded
contracts
to
undertakers
and
embalmers
to
prepare
the
bodies
of
soldiers
for
shipment
home.
The
widespread
use
of
this
service
by
soldiers’
families
and
the
embalming
of
such
notable
dead
as
Pres.
Abraham
Lincoln’s
son
Willie
and
later
of
Lincoln
himself
brought
about
increased
acceptance
of
the
practice
and
even
caused
it
to
become
associated
with
patriotic
activity.
Early
practitioners
included
a
number
of
vigorous
salesmen,
including
Joseph
H.
Clarke,
a
road
salesman
for
a
coffin
company.
Impressed
by
embalming’s
possibilities
and
profits,
he
persuaded
a
staff
member
of
a
medical
college
in
Cincinnati
to
institute
a
brief
course
in
embalming
in
1882,
thus
establishing
the
basis
of
mortuary
education
in
the
United
States.
Embalming
remains
the
only
specific
skill
required
in
the
undertaking
business.
In
the
modern
procedure
of
embalming,
the
blood
is
drained
from
one
of
the
veins
and
replaced
by
a
fluid,
usually
based
on
Formalin
(a
solution
of
formaldehyde
in
water),
injected
into
one
of
the
main
arteries.
Cavity
fluid
is
removed
with
a
long
hollow
needle
called
a
trocar
and
replaced
with
preservative.
This
fluid
is
also
based
on
Formalin
mixed
with
alcohols,
emulsifiers,
and
other
substances
(like
embalming
fluid)
to
keep
the
body
temporarily
from
shriveling
and
turning
brown.
Arterial
embalming
is
not
permanent;
even
such
carefully
prepared
corpses
as
that
of
Lenin,
on
view
in
the
Kremlin,
must
be
given
periodic
renewal
treatment.
The
chief
purpose
of
embalming
is
rather
to
give
the
body
a
lifelike
appearance
during
the
days
in
which
it
is
being
viewed
by
mourners.
To
enhance
this,
cosmetics
and
masking
pastes
are
often
applied.
18. 1970s
Jackson
5
It's
difficult
to
believe
now,
but
Motown
Records'
Berry
Gordy
was
initially
hesitant
to
sign
the
Jackson
5—a
Gary,
Indiana
quintet
comprised
of
brothers
Michael,
Jermaine,
Tito,
Marlon
and
Jackie
Jackson—when
they
auditioned
for
his
label.
Not
only
did
Gordy
have
an
aversion
to
what
he
called
"kids
groups,"
which
was
a
problem
since
lead
singer
Michael
was
only
turning
ten
in
a
few
weeks,
but
Motown
already
had
another
young
prodigy,
Stevie
Wonder,
on
the
roster.
Still,
the
industry
legend
saw
something
special
in
the
young
vocalist,
what
with
his
James
Brown-‐esque
moves
and
soulful
performance
of
Smokey
Robinson's
"Who's
Lovin'
You,"
and
decided
to
give
the
Jackson
Five
a
record
deal.
In
1969
Gordy
moved
the
troupe
to
Los
Angeles,
where
they
lived
while
working
with
"The
Corporation,"
Motown's
in-‐house
team
of
songwriters
and
producers.
The
label's
early
tactics
also
included
aligning
the
group
with
the
Supremes—the
Jackson
5
opened
for
the
group
in
August
and
appeared
on
the
TV
show
Hollywood
Palace
when
Diana
Ross
guest
hosted—and
having
the
troupe
perform
on
The
Ed
Sullivan
Show
later
in
the
year.
As
it
turns
out,
this
strategy
was
genius.
In
1970
the
group's
first
four
singles
("I
Want
You
Back,"
"ABC,"
"The
Love
You
Save"
and
"I'll
Be
There")
peaked
at
Number
1
on
the
charts.
By
the
summer
they
were
headlining
arenas;
a
year
later,
they
had
a
Saturday
morning
cartoon,
TV
specials
and
merchandise
galore.
It
was
a
meteoric
rise,
but
the
Jackson
5
were
certainly
performance
veterans
by
this
point.
In
1964
the
group's
father,
Joe
Jackson,
saw
musical
potential
in
his
sons,
and
spearheaded
the
group's
formation.
The
brothers
spent
the
next
few
years
playing
talent
shows
and
making
a
name
for
themselves
on
the
circuit
of
black
theaters
and
nightclubs;
in
1967
the
group
even
won
amateur
night
at
Harlem's
famed
Apollo
Theater.
However,
the
Jackson
5's
true
lucky
break
happened
the
following
year,
thanks
to
a
string
of
shows
at
Chicago's
Regal
Theater
opening
for
Bobby
Taylor.
The
Motown-‐associated
musician
was
duly
impressed
by
the
young
band,
and
connected
the
dots
to
send
the
troupe
to
Detroit
for
the
deal-‐making
label
audition.
Natural
talent
and
Michael
Jackson's
preternatural
charisma
certainly
had
something
to
do
with
the
Jackson
5's
immediate
appeal.
However,
the
group
also
studied
contemporary
soul,
funk
and
R&B
greats—Sam
&
Dave,
Jackie
Wilson,
Marvin
Gaye,
Etta
James,
Sly
&
The
Family
Stone—and
were
indebted
to
the
vocal
group
stylings
of
early
rock
&
rollers
Frankie
Lymon
and
the
Teenagers.
These
nods
to
tradition
kept
the
Jackson
5's
music
from
sounding
like
a
novelty
and
gave
the
band
credibility.
Motown
also
made
sure
the
band
were
constantly
releasing
albums:
by
the
end
of
1973,
the
group
had
released
ten
LPs,
including
two
live
records
and
a
holiday
collection.
Both
Jermaine
and
Michael
Jackson
also
released
solo
work.
As
the
decade
progressed,
the
Jackson
5's
sound
reflected
current
trends
and
the
brothers'
move
toward
adulthood:
funk,
disco
and
more
mature
lyrical
content
became
a
part
of
their
music,
especially
on
1973's
sizzling
"Get
It
Together"
and
1974's
moving-‐and-‐grooving
"Dancing
Machine."
Still,
the
group's
popularity
waned,
and
the
Jackson
5
(sans
Jermaine)
left
Motown
for
a
deal
with
Epic
Records.
Now
recording
as
the
Jacksons
for
legal
reasons,
the
group
added
youngest
brother
Randy
and
teamed
up
with
legendary
producers
Gamble
and
Huff
for
1976's
The
Jacksons
and
1977's
Goin'
Places.
The
partnership
(and
a
pronounced
Philadelphia
soul
vibe)
revitalized
and
emboldened
the
group:
they
self-‐produced
and
largely
wrote
the
songs
on
their
next
two
LPs,
1978's
Destiny
and
1980's
Triumph,
both
commercial
successes.
With
Michael
Jackson's
solo
career
taking
off,
he
left
the
group
after
1984's
Victory
LP
and
its
accompanying
tour
of
the
same
name.
The
Jacksons
released
one
more
album
after
that,
1989's
poorly
received
2300
Jackson
Street,
and
then
went
on
hiatus.
Save
for
a
2001
reunion
on
a
TV
special
to
celebrate
Michael's
solo
career,
the
brothers
have
largely
stuck
to
separate
endeavors.
Inductees:
Jackie
Jackson
(born
May
4,
1951),
Jermaine
Jackson
(born
December
11,
1954),
Marlon
Jackson
(born
March
12,
1957),
Michael
Jackson
(born
August
19,
1958,
died
June
25,
2009),
Tito
Jackson
(born
October
15,
1953)
19. Irma
Hornbacher:
There
isn’t
any
information
about
her,
so,
I
assume
that
she
must
have
been
a
local
actress
in
the
Beech
Creek/Lock
Haven
community
theater
scene.
20. Mrs.
Warren’s
Profession
Mrs.
Warren’s
Profession,
play
in
four
acts
by
George
Bernard
Shaw,
written
in
1893
and
published
in
1898
but
not
performed
until
1902
because
of
government
censorship;
the
play’s
subject
matter
is
organized
prostitution.
Vivie
Warren,
a
well-‐educated
young
woman,
discovers
that
her
mother
attained
her
present
status
and
affluence
by
rising
from
poverty
through
prostitution
and
that
she
now
has
financial
interests
in
several
brothels
throughout
Europe.
For
years
an
aristocratic
friend
of
the
family
has
been
her
partner.
Vivie
also
discovers
that
the
clergyman
father
of
Frank,
her
suitor,
was
once
a
client
of
her
mother.
Mrs.
Warren’s
position
is
that
poverty
and
a
society
that
condones
it
constitute
true
immorality.
She
asserts
that
life
in
a
brothel
is
preferable
to
a
life
of
grinding
poverty
as
a
factory
worker.
Vivie
acknowledges
her
mother’s
courage
in
overcoming
her
past
but
rejects
her
continued
involvement
in
prostitution.
She
severs
her
relationship
with
her
mother,
also
rejecting
Frank
and
the
possibility
of
other
suitors.
21. Uta
Hagen
Uta
Thyra
Hagen
was
a
German
American
actress
and
drama
teacher.
Hagen
was
cast,
early
on,
as
Ophelia
by
the
actress-‐manager
Eva
Le
Gallienne.
From
there,
Hagen
went
on
to
play
the
leading
ingenue
role
of
Nina
in
a
Broadway
production
of
Anton
Chekhov’s
The
Seagull.
It
was
1938;
Hagen
was
just
18.
Primarily
noted
for
stage
roles,
Hagen
won
her
first
Tony
Award
in
1951
for
her
performance
in
Clifford
Odets’
The
Country
Girl.
She
won
again
in
1963
for
originating
the
role
of
the
Martha
in
Edward
Albee’s
Who’s
Afraid
of
Virginia
Woolf?.
She
taught
at
HB
Studio
in
the
West
Village.
Hagen
was
an
influential
acting
teacher
who
taught,
among
others,
Matthew
Broderick,
Sigourney
Weaver,
Liza
Minnelli,
Whoopi
Goldberg,
Jack
Lemmon,
and
Al
Pacino.
She
was
a
voice
coach
to
Judy
Garland.
She
also
wrote
Respect
for
Acting
(1973)
and
A
Challenge
for
the
Actor
(1991).
She
was
elected
to
the
American
Theatre
Hall
of
Fame
in
1981.
She
received
a
Special
Tony
Award
for
Lifetime
Achievement
in
1999.
In
2002,
she
was
awarded
the
National
Medal
of
the
Arts
by
President
George
W.
Bush
at
a
ceremony
held
at
the
White
House.
22. Herbie
Rides
Again
and
The
Love
Bug
Herbie
is
back!
And
this
time
Herbie's
leading
lady
is
award-‐winning
actress
Helen
Hayes,
out
to
save
her
beloved
Victorian
firehouse
home
from
the
wrecking
ball
of
greedy
real
estate
tycoon
Keenan
Wynn.
Herbie,
the
lovable
car
with
a
mind
of
his
own.
Dean
Jones,
Michele
Lee,
and
Buddy
Hackett
join
Herbie
in
this
revved-‐up
comedy
classic.
Jones
plays
down-‐on-‐his-‐luck
race
car
driver
Jim
Douglas,
who
reluctantly
teams
up
with
the
little
machine.
Douglas
thinks
his
sudden
winning
streak
is
due
to
his
skill,
not
Herbie's.
He
finally
realizes
the
car's
worth
when
a
sneaky
rival
plots
to
steal
Herbie
for
himself.
23. William
Morris
Wallpaper:
46. Rizzoli
Bag
47. Baryshnikov
book
from
the
1970s
48. Humectant:
retaining
or
preserving
moisture.
49. James
Joyce’s
A
PORTRAIT
OF
THE
ARTIST
AS
A
YOUNG
MAN
In
this
novel,
Joyce
sets
forth
the
childhood,
adolescence
and
early
manhood
of
Stephen
Dedalus,
a
character
who
represents
his
own
alter
ego
in
both
A
Portrait
and
Ulysses.
He
travels
through
Stephen’s
mind
and
soul
allowing
us
to
experience
his
mental
and
spiritual
development
whilst
witnessing
the
physical
changes
he
goes
through
as
he
matures.
Joyce,
as
part
of
the
early
twentieth
century
modernist
movement,
was
involved
in
reinterpreting
the
form
of
the
traditional
novel
as
plot
driven
narrative.
By
rejecting
traditional
narrative
form
in
A
Portrait,
Joyce
moved
towards
internalising
the
action
within
Stephen’s
mind;
a
movement
from
narrative
driven
plot
to
internalised
rhythmic
moods.
In
A
Portrait
of
the
Artist
as
a
Young
Man
what
happens
inside
Stephen’s
head
is
actually
more
important
than
what
happens
in
the
physical
world.
The
other
characters
in
the
novel
exist
to
further
display
Stephen’s
character
and
its
development
in
relation
to
their
own
singular
lack
of
artistic
awareness.
As
Stephen
gets
older
and
more
introspective
the
other
characters
become
less
well
defined.
We
get
quite
detailed
snippets
on
his
mother,
father
and
siblings
that
are
more
telling
in
their
brevity
than
in
their
detail.
This
novel
is
a
work
of
highly
polished
precision
writing,
lyrical
and
poetic
in
its
observations
of
both
poverty
and
intellectual
reverie.
50. Mavis,
Pearl,
and
Carol
in
a
barrel
over
Niagara
Falls
Fictional
version
of
several
people
who
attempted
this
feat
and
either
died
in
the
process
or
lived.
Numerous
objects,
both
natural
and
artificial,
have
gone
over
the
Niagara
Falls.
These
events
have
been
the
result
of
both
stunts
and
accidents,
some
of
which
have
resulted
in
fatalities.
The
first
recorded
person
to
survive
going
over
the
falls
was
Annie
Edson
Taylor,
who
went
over
the
falls
in
a
barrel
in
1901.
She
stated
that
it
was
the
dumbest
thing
she
ever
did.
51. Jean
Stafford
(born
July
1,
1915,
Covina,
California,
U.S.—died
March
26,
1979,
White
Plains,
New
York),
American
short-‐story
writer
and
novelist
noted
for
her
disaffected
female
characters,
who
often
must
confront
restrictive
societal
conventions
and
institutions
as
they
come
of
age.
After
graduating
from
the
University
of
Colorado
at
Boulder
(B.A.,
1936;
M.A.,
1936),
Stafford
studied
at
Heidelberg
University
in
Germany
(1936–37).
When
she
returned
to
the
United
States
and
settled
in
Boston,
she
painstakingly
completed
a
four-‐year
effort,
the
novel
Boston
Adventure
(1944),
which
presents
the
experiences
of
a
young
woman
who
leaves
her
working-‐class
immigrant
family
to
work
for
a
wealthy
Boston
spinster.
The
book
became
a
best
seller,
with
sales
reaching
400,000
copies,
and
its
publication
launched
Stafford’s
career.
Her
second
and
most
critically
acclaimed
novel,
The
Mountain
Lion
(1947),
reinforced
her
position
of
prominence
in
literary
circles.
An
examination
of
the
influence
of
gender
roles
on
identity
and
development,
it
details
the
coming
of
age
of
a
brother
and
sister
who
spend
summers
at
their
uncle’s
ranch.
Stafford
later
published
The
Catherine
Wheel
(1952)
as
well
as
children’s
books.
An
accomplished
short-‐story
writer,
she
contributed
frequently
to
such
journals
as
The
New
Yorker,
Kenyon
Review,
Partisan
Review,
and
Harper’s
Bazaar.
The
Collected
Stories
of
Jean
Stafford
(1969)
won
a
Pulitzer
Prize
in
1970.
Stafford’s
personal
life
was
marked
by
bouts
of
alcoholism
and
illnesses
and
by
three
troubled
marriages
(to
writers
Robert
Lowell,
Oliver
Jensen,
and
A.J.
Liebling).
52. Robert
Lowell
(born
March
1,
1917,
Boston,
Massachusetts,
U.S.—died
September
12,
1977,
New
York,
New
York),
American
poet
noted
for
his
complex,
autobiographical
poetry.
Lowell
grew
up
in
Boston.
James
Russell
Lowell
was
his
great-‐granduncle,
and
Amy,
Percival,
and
A.
Lawrence
Lowell
were
distant
cousins.
Although
he
turned
away
from
his
Puritan
heritage—largely
because
he
was
repelled
by
what
he
felt
was
the
high
value
it
placed
on
the
accumulation
of
money—he
continued
to
be
fascinated
by
it,
and
it
forms
the
subject
of
many
of
his
poems.
Lowell
attended
Harvard
University,
but,
after
falling
under
the
influence
of
the
Southern
formalist
school
of
poetry,
he
transferred
to
Kenyon
College
in
Gambier,
Ohio,
where
he
studied
with
John
Crowe
Ransom,
a
leading
exponent
of
the
Fugitives,
and
began
a
lifelong
friendship
with
Randall
Jarrell.
Lowell
graduated
in
1940
and
that
year
married
the
novelist
Jean
Stafford
and
converted
temporarily
to
Roman
Catholicism.
During
World
War
II,
Lowell
was
sentenced,
for
conscientious
objection,
to
a
year
and
a
day
in
the
federal
penitentiary
at
Danbury,
Connecticut,
and
he
served
five
months
of
his
sentence.
His
poem
“In
the
Cage”
from
Lord
Weary’s
Castle
(1946)
comments
on
this
experience,
as
does
in
greater
detail
“Memories
of
West
Street
and
Lepke”
in
Life
Studies
(1959).
His
first
volume
of
poems,
Land
of
Unlikeness
(1944),
deals
with
a
world
in
crisis
and
the
hunger
for
spiritual
security.
Lord
Weary’s
Castle,
which
won
the
Pulitzer
Prize
in
1947,
exhibits
greater
variety
and
command.
It
contains
two
of
his
most
praised
poems:
“The
Quaker
Graveyard
in
Nantucket,”
elegizing
Lowell’s
cousin
Warren
Winslow,
lost
at
sea
during
World
War
II,
and
“Colloquy
in
Black
Rock,”
celebrating
the
feast
of
Corpus
Christi.
In
1947
Lowell
was
named
poetry
consultant
to
the
Library
of
Congress
(now
poet
laureate
consultant
in
poetry),
a
position
he
held
for
one
year.
After
being
divorced
in
1948,
Lowell
married
the
writer
and
critic
Elizabeth
Hardwick
the
next
year
(divorced
1972);
his
third
wife
was
the
Irish
journalist
and
novelist
Lady
Caroline
Blackwood
(married
1972).
In
1951
he
published
a
book
of
dramatic
monologues,
Mills
of
the
Kavanaughs.
After
a
few
years
abroad,
Lowell
settled
in
Boston
in
1954.
His
Life
Studies
(1959),
which
won
the
National
Book
Award
for
poetry,
contains
an
autobiographical
essay,
“91
Revere
Street,”
as
well
as
a
series
of
15
confessional
poems.
Chief
among
these
are
“Waking
in
Blue,”
which
tells
of
his
confinement
in
a
mental
hospital,
and
“Skunk
Hour,”
which
conveys
his
mental
turmoil
with
dramatic
intensity.
Lowell’s
activities
in
the
civil-‐rights
and
antiwar
campaigns
of
the
1960s
lent
a
more
public
note
to
his
next
three
books
of
poetry:
For
the
Union
Dead
(1964),
Near
the
Ocean
(1967),
and
Notebook
1967–68
(1969).
The
last-‐
named
work
is
a
poetic
record
of
a
tumultuous
year
in
the
poet’s
life
and
exhibits
the
interrelation
between
politics,
the
individual,
and
his
culture.
Lowell’s
trilogy
of
plays,
The
Old
Glory,
which
views
American
culture
over
the
span
of
history,
was
published
in
1965
(rev.
ed.
1968).
His
later
poetry
volumes
include
The
Dolphin
(1973),
which
won
him
a
second
Pulitzer
Prize,
and
Day
by
Day
(1977).
His
translations
include
Phaedra
(1963)
and
Prometheus
Bound
(1969);
Imitations
(1961),
free
renderings
of
various
European
poets;
and
The
Voyage
and
Other
Versions
of
Poems
by
Baudelaire
(1968).
In
his
poetry
Lowell
expressed
the
major
tensions—both
public
and
private—of
his
time
with
technical
mastery
and
haunting
authenticity.
His
earlier
poems,
dense
with
clashing
images
and
discordant
sounds,
convey
a
view
of
the
world
whose
bleakness
is
relieved
by
a
religious
mysticism
compounded
as
much
of
doubt
as
of
faith.
Lowell’s
later
poetry
is
composed
in
a
more
relaxed
and
conversational
manner.
53. Plath
Sylvia
Plath
was
born
on
October
27,
1932,
in
Boston,
Massachusetts.
Her
mother,
Aurelia
Schober,
was
a
master’s
student
at
Boston
University
when
she
met
Plath’s
father,
Otto
Plath,
who
was
her
professor.
They
were
married
in
January
of
1932.
Otto
taught
both
German
and
biology,
with
a
focus
on
apiology,
the
study
of
bees.
In
1940,
when
Plath
was
eight
years
old,
her
father
died
as
a
result
of
complications
from
diabetes.
He
had
been
a
strict
father,
and
both
his
authoritarian
attitudes
and
his
death
drastically
defined
her
relationships
and
her
poems—most
notably
in
her
elegaic
and
infamous
poem
"Daddy."
Even
in
her
youth,
Plath
was
ambitiously
driven
to
succeed.
She
kept
a
journal
from
the
age
of
eleven
and
published
her
poems
in
regional
magazines
and
newspapers.
Her
first
national
publication
was
in
the
Christian
Science
Monitor
in
1950,
just
after
graduating
from
high
school.
In
1950,
Plath
matriculated
at
Smith
College.
She
was
an
exceptional
student,
and
despite
a
deep
depression
she
went
through
in
1953
and
a
subsequent
suicide
attempt,
she
managed
to
graduate
summa
cum
laude
in
1955.
After
graduation,
Plath
moved
to
Cambridge,
England,
on
a
Fulbright
Scholarship.
In
early
1956,
she
attended
a
party
and
met
the
English
poet
Ted
Hughes.
Shortly
thereafter,
Plath
and
Hughes
were
married,
on
June
16,
1956.
Plath
returned
to
Massachusetts
in
1957
and
began
studying
with
Robert
Lowell.
Her
first
collection
of
poems,
Colossus,
was
published
in
1960
in
England,
and
two
years
later
in
the
United
States.
She
returned
to
England,
where
she
gave
birth
to
her
children
Frieda
and
Nicholas,
in
1960
and
1962,
respectively.
In
1962,
Ted
Hughes
left
Plath
for
Assia
Gutmann
Wevill.
That
winter,
in
a
deep
depression,
Plath
wrote
most
of
the
poems
that
would
comprise
her
most
famous
book,
Ariel.
In
1963,
Plath
published
a
semi-‐autobiographical
novel,
The
Bell
Jar,
under
the
pseudonym
Victoria
Lucas.
Then,
on
February
11,
1963,
during
one
of
the
worst
English
winters
on
record,
Plath
wrote
a
note
to
her
downstairs
neighbor
instructing
him
to
call
the
doctor,
then
she
died
by
suicide
using
her
gas
oven.
Plath’s
poetry
is
often
associated
with
the
Confessional
movement,
and
compared
to
the
work
of
poets
such
as
Lowell
and
fellow
student
Anne
Sexton.
Often,
her
work
is
singled
out
for
the
intense
coupling
of
its
violent
or
disturbed
imagery
and
its
playful
use
of
alliteration
and
rhyme.
Although
only
Colossus
was
published
while
she
was
alive,
Plath
was
a
prolific
poet,
and
in
addition
to
Ariel,
Hughes
published
three
other
volumes
of
her
work
posthumously,
including
The
Collected
Poems,
which
was
the
recipient
of
the
1982
Pulitzer
Prize.
She
was
the
first
poet
to
posthumously
win
a
Pulitzer
Prize.
54. Hughes
Edward
James
(Ted)
Hughes
was
born
in
Mytholmroyd,
in
the
West
Riding
district
of
Yorkshire,
on
August
17,
1930.
His
childhood
was
quiet
and
dominately
rural.
When
he
was
seven
years
old
his
family
moved
to
the
small
town
of
Mexborough
in
South
Yorkshire,
and
the
landscape
of
the
moors
of
that
area
informed
his
poetry
throughout
his
life.
After
high
school,
Hughes
entered
the
Royal
Air
Force
and
served
for
two
years
as
a
ground
wireless
mechanic.
He
then
moved
to
Cambridge
to
attend
Pembroke
College
on
an
academic
scholarship.
While
in
college
he
published
a
few
poems,
majored
in
Anthropolgy
and
Archaeology,
and
studied
mythologies
extensively.
Hughes
graduated
from
Cambridge
in
1954.
A
few
years
later,
in
1956,
he
cofounded
the
literary
magazine
St.
Botolph’s
Review
with
a
handful
of
other
editors.
At
the
launch
party
for
the
magazine,
he
met
Sylvia
Plath.
A
few
short
months
later,
on
June
16,
1956,
they
were
married.
Plath
encouraged
Hughes
to
submit
his
first
manuscript,
The
Hawk
in
the
Rain,
to
The
Poetry
Center’s
First
Publication
book
contest.
The
judges—
Marianne
Moore,
W.
H.
Auden,
and
Stephen
Spender—awarded
the
manuscript
first
prize,
and
it
was
published
in
England
and
America
in
1957,
to
much
critical
praise.
Hughes
lived
in
Massachusetts
with
Plath
and
taught
at
University
of
Massachusetts,
Amherst.
They
returned
to
England
in
1959,
and
their
first
child,
Freida,
was
born
the
following
year.
Their
second
child,
Nicholas,
was
born
two
years
later.
In
1962,
Hughes
left
Plath
for
Assia
Gutmann
Wevill.
Less
than
a
year
later,
Plath
committed
suicide.
Hughes
did
not
write
again
for
years,
as
he
focused
all
of
his
energy
on
editing
and
promoting
Plath’s
poems.
He
was
also
roundly
lambasted
by
the
public,
who
saw
him
as
responsible
for
his
wife’s
suicide.
Controversy
surrounded
his
editorial
choices
regarding
Plath’s
poems
and
journals.
In
1965,
Wevill
gave
birth
to
their
only
child,
Shura.
Four
years
later,
like
Plath,
she
also
commited
suicide,
killing
Shura
as
well.
The
following
year,
in
1970,
Hughes
married
Carol
Orchard,
with
whom
he
remained
married
until
his
death.
Hughes’s
lengthy
career
included
over
a
dozen
books
of
poetry,
translations,
non-‐fiction
and
children’s
books,
such
as
the
famous
The
Iron
Man
(1968).
His
books
of
poems
include:
Wolfwatching
(1990),
Flowers
and
Insects
(1986),
Selected
Poems
1957–1981
(1982),
Moortown
(1980),
Cave
Birds
(1979),
Crow
(1971),
and
Lupercal
(1960).
His
final
collection,
The
Birthday
Letters
(Farrar,
Straus
&
Giroux,
1998),
published
the
year
of
his
death,
documented
his
relationship
with
Plath.
Hughes’s
work
is
marked
by
a
mythical
framework,
using
the
lyric
and
dramatic
monologue
to
illustrate
intense
subject
matter.
Animals
appear
frequently
throughout
his
work
as
deity,
metaphor,
persona,
and
icon.
Perhaps
the
most
famous
of
his
subjects
is
“Crow,"
an
amalgam
of
god,
bird
and
man,
whose
existence
seems
pivotal
to
the
knowledge
of
good
and
evil.
Hughes
won
many
of
Europe’s
highest
literary
honors,
and
was
appointed
Poet
Laureate
of
England
in
1984,
a
post
he
held
until
his
death.
He
passed
away
in
October
28,
1998,
in
Devonshire,
England,
from
cancer.
55. Jack
in
the
pulpit
also
commonly
called
Indian
turnip,
is
a
shade
requiring
species
found
in
rich,
moist,
deciduous
woods
and
floodplains.
A
long
lived
perennial
(25+
years),
it
will
spread
and
colonize
over
time
from
an
acidic
corm.
56. Winogrand
Garry
Winogrand
(1928–1984)
was
born
in
New
York,
where
he
lived
and
worked
during
much
of
his
life.
Winogrand
photographed
the
visual
cacophony
of
city
streets,
people,
rodeos,
airports
and
animals
in
zoos.
These
subjects
are
among
his
most
exalted
and
influential
work.
Winogrand
was
the
recipient
of
numerous
grants,
including
several
Guggenheim
Fellowships
and
a
National
Endowment
for
the
Arts
Fellowship.
His
work
has
been
the
subject
of
many
museum
and
gallery
exhibition,
and
was
included
in
the
1967
“New
Documents”
exhibition,
curated
by
John
Szarkowski
at
the
Museum
of
Modern
Art,
New
York.
57. Araby
A
short
story
by
James
Joyce
that
is
featured
in
The
Dubliners.
The
plot
follows
a
young
boy
who
is
similar
in
age
and
temperament
to
those
in
"The
Sisters"
and
"An
Encounter"
develops
a
crush
on
Mangan's
sister,
a
girl
who
lives
across
the
street.
One
evening
she
asks
him
if
he
plans
to
go
to
a
bazaar
(a
fair
organized,
probably
by
a
church,
to
raise
money
for
charity)
called
Araby.