On this date, May 31

Clint Eastwood is 75 today.

Peter Yarrow, the Peter of Peter, Paul and Mary, and the author of “Puff the Magic Dragon,” is 67.

Joe Namath is 62.

Walt Whitman, American poet, journalist, and essayist, was born on May 31, 1819, in West Hills, New York. His verse collection Leaves of Grass is a landmark in the history of American literature.

Whitman grew up in Brooklyn, New York, and at age 12 began to learn the printing trade. Over time he moved from printing to teaching to journalism, becoming the editor of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle in 1846. He began experimenting with a new form of poetry, revolutionary at the time, free of a regular rhythm or rhyme scheme that has come to be known as ‘free verse.’ In 1855, Whitman published, anonymously and at his own expense, the first edition of Leaves of Grass. Revolutionary too was the content of his poems celebrating the human body and the common man. Whitman would spend the rest of his life revising and enlarging Leaves of Grass; the ninth edition appeared in 1892, the year of his death.

Library of Congress

The Dionne Quintuplets …

were born in Corbeil, Ontario, Canada, 71 years ago today. Together, the five girls, at least two months premature, weighed about 14 pounds. They were put by an open stove to keep warm, and mothers from surrounding villages brought breast milk for them. Against all expectations, they survived their first weeks. Watch video.

According to the CBC:

Dionne QuintsWhen the quints are still babies, the Ontario government takes the sisters from their parents, apparently to protect their fragile health, and makes the girls wards of the state. For the first nine years of their lives, they live at a hospital in their hometown that becomes a tourist mecca called “Quintland.” The Ministry of Public Welfare sets up a trust fund in their behalf with assurances that the financial well-being of the entire Dionne family would be taken care of “for all their normal needs for the rest of their lives.”

Between 1934 and 1943, about 3 million people visit Quintland. The government and nearby businesses make an estimated half-billion dollars off the tourists, much of which the Dionne family never sees. The sisters are the nation’s biggest tourist attraction — bigger than Niagara Falls.

After nine years and a bitter custody fight, the girls rejoined their family.

There is still a mystery surrounding what happened to the money the Ontario government placed in a trust fund for the quints, though it’s believed that most of the funds went to pay for the many employees of “Quintland.”

In 1998 the surviving quints were awarded $4 million by Ontario.

Emilie died in 1954, Marie in 1970 and Yvonne in 2001. Annette and Cecile live near Montreal.

NewMexiKen has a vague memory of seeing the Dionne quints on display (so to speak) at the Michigan State Fair when I was a little kid. Perhaps only four were there, depending on when it was.

John Fogerty …

is 60 today. Fogerty was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993 with Creedence Clearwater Revival.

“In 1968, I always used to say that I wanted to make records they would still play on the radio in ten years,” John Fogerty, former leader of Creedence Clearwater Revival, said on the eve of their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In retrospect, Fogerty got all he wished for and more. Three decades later, Creedence’s songs – including “Proud Mary,” “Born on the Bayou,” “Bad Moon Rising,” and “Green River” – endure as timeless rock and roll classics. Under Fogerty’s tutelage, Creedence Clearwater Revival defined the spirit and sound of rock and roll as authentically as any American group ever has.

CCR’s cover of “I Heard It Through the Grape Vine” isn’t too bad either.

In his great book The Heart of Rock & Soul, Dave Marsh tells us:

Creedence Clearwater started out in the late fifties as just another Northern California high school band, formed by Fogerty, his brother Tom, and a couple of friends, Stu Cook and Doug Clifford. (They were called, among other things, the Blue Velvets and the Golliwogs.) They got a chance at recording for Fantasy, basically a jazz label, only because it happened to be in the neighborhood and the boys had found jobs in the warehouse. They got the kind of record deal you’d expect from that situation, one in which the label not only didn’t have to pay much in royalties but also controlled their song publishing rights.

Somewhere along the way, out of their own avarice and some bad judgment, Creedence was convinced to invest its royalties in an offshore banking tax dodge. Several Fantasy executives also poured money into the scam. Unfortunately, the bank they chose was a Bahamian shell called the Castle Bank, which went down in one of the great financial swindles of the century, leaving Creedence short more than $3 million and with huge overdue payments to the IRS (which stepped in for its bite once the scheme crashed).

Bitter, John Fogerty sued everybody including Fantasy. For the best part of a decade, he litigated but made no music. Meantime, his songs and records continued to generate huge income for Fantasy (which took its profits and produced, among other things, the movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest).

Fogerty was still pissed when he finally made another record, Centerfield, in 1985. The final track on each side was an unmistakable slug at Fantasy owner Saul Zaentz: “Mr. Greed” and “Zanz Kant Danz.” Zaentz, apparently feeling as vindictive as Fogerty, sued for libel, asking $142 million damages, then charged Fogerty with infringing on a Fantasy copyright-“Run Through the Jungle.”

Centerfield‘s first track, and its first single, was “The Old Man Down the Road.” Everybody who heard it remarked on its amazing similarity to “Run Through the Jungle.” And so Fantasy sued Fogerty for royalties plus damages for plagiarizing his own song!

Amazingly enough, the case actually went to trial and in the fall of 1988, John Fogerty spent two days on the witness stand with a guitar on his lap, explaining “swamp rock” and its limitations to a jury. Pressed about the similarity between the two songs, he finally snapped, “Yeah, I did use that half-step. What do you want me to do, get an inoculation?”

Even if Fantasy did, the jury didn’t. They acquitted him in early November 1988, and, having proven his skills in running through the modern jungle, John Fogerty went back to making his new record. Which he vowed would sound not approximately but exactly like Creedence.

************

Well, I spent some time in the mudville nine, watchin’ it from the bench;
You know I took some lumps when the mighty casey struck out.
So say hey willie, tell ty cobb and joe dimaggio;
Don’t say “it ain’t so”, you know the time is now.

Oh, put me in, coach – I’m ready to play today;
Put me in, coach – I’m ready to play today;
Look at me, I can be centerfield.

[Originally posted by NewMexiKen on May 28, 2004 — age updated.]

Seems strange …

but the actress Debra Winger and the gymnast Olga Korbut both turn 50 today. Winger has been nominated for Best Actress three times. Korbut is the Belarusian gymnast who, pixie-like, revolutionized gymnastics. She became it’s first TV superstar while winning three gold and one silver medals at the 1972 Olympic Games. For a few days she was the talk of the planet.

On this date

Winston Wolfe is 66. That’s Harvey Keitel. He was George Baines in The Piano, and nominated for an Oscar for his performance as Mickey Cohen in Bugsy. Keitel played Judas in The Last Temptation of Christ and Elvis in Finding Graceland.

A year ago NewMexiKen wrote about Richard Steven Valenzuela, better known as Ritchie Valens, Steveland Hardaway Judkins, better known as Stevie Wonder, and Joe Louis.

Wonder is 55 today. Valens would have been 64. Joe Louis was born on this date in 1914.

It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood

Buenos días Caballeros y Damas. It’s so clear this morning I can see the snow still on the top of Mt. Taylor 60 miles (96km) west.

Mike Wallace is 87 today. 60 Minutes is the only place where the average age is higher than that of the Catholic College of Cardinals.

Albert Finney is 69. He’s been nominated for an Oscar five times; no wins. Remind me to check out Tom Jones from Netflix.

Glenda Jackson is 69 today as well. She only has four Oscar nominations, but she’s won twice for Best Actress: Women In Love and A Touch of Class.

James L. Brooks is 65. Brooks won the Oscars for Best Picture, Director and Screenplay for Terms of Endearment. Broadcast News, Jerry Maguire and As Good as It Gets got him various nominations as well. For my money, I like his work as executive producer of Mary Tyler Moore and, of course, The Simpsons.

Candace Bergen is 59. Ms. Bergen was nominated for the Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1980 for Starting Over.

Billy Joel is 56. If you need a couple notes of Billy Joel, click here.

Sir James Barrie was born on this date in 1860. NewMexiKen thought Johnny Depp was superb in his portrayal of Barrie in Finding Neverland. Barrie may or may not have been like the character portrayed, but Depp got the sensitive wuss down really well. And to think, the year before he was a pirate. If they’d nominated Jamie Foxx for Best Actor for Collateral, he’d have gotten my vote. But now that I’ve seen the five performances that were nominated, I gotta go with Johnny Depp.

May 6

A year ago today NewMexiKen wrote about some pretty darn interesting things. Among them:

The Shining in 30 seconds with bunnies; Amadeo Peter Giannini, the founder of Bank of America and a hero in the aftermath of the San Francisco Earthquake; dreaming about Sigmund Freud (it’s his birthday); Willie Mays (it’s his birthday); Orson Welles (it’s his birthday); the Hindenburg explosion (it happened on this date in 1937); and about my son Ken (it’s his birthday). Happy Birthday, Ken

May 3rd is the birthday …

… of Pete Seeger. The writer of “Turn, Turn, Turn” and “Where Have All the Flowers Gone” is 86. (Of course, the lyrics to “Turn, Turn, Turn” are from Ecclesiastes.)

… of James Brown. The Godfather of Soul is 72.

… of Greg Gumbel. He’s 59. (Brother Bryant is 56.)

… and of Dulé Hill. That’s Charlie on West Wing. He’s 30.

The other animator named Walter

Walter Lantz was born on this date in 1899. Lantz was the creator of such animated characters as Andy Panda, Chilly Willy, Wally Walrus and the greatest cartoon character of them all, Woody Woodpecker.

Walter Lantz was nominated for the Academy Award 10 times. He received the Academy’s Life-Time Achievement Award in 1979.

Lantz.jpg

Click on the image above to visit lantz.toonzone.net for audio and video clips and lots of other goodies.

I said go, go, go, little queenie

Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith.

Her Majesty is 79 today. Her name is Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor. She signs Elizabeth R.

Birthdays and stuff

Justice John Paul Stevens is 85 today. He went on the Court in 1975.

Actor George Takei is 68. That’s Mr. Sulu of Star Trek.

Ryan O’Neal, the actor who played the part of Al Gore in Love Story, is 64.

Coach Steve Spurrier is 60.

Six-time Oscar nominee and two-time winner Jessica Lange is 56.

And, of course, Ron Howard’s brother, Clint, is 46.

33

Jennifer Garner turns 33 today, but more importantly, so does Emily, official younger daughter of NewMexiKen. Happy Birthday Emily!

Holy moly!

Bobby Vinton is 70 today. Here’s hoping his roses are still red, my love.

Oh, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is 58.

And, Peter Billingsley — you know, the kid who wants a BB-gun for Christmas so he can shoot his eye out — he’s 33.

It’s the birthday

… of Hugh Hefner. Hef is 79.

… of Michael Learned. Momma Walton is 66.

… of Dennis Quaid. Jerry Lee Lewis, Gordon Cooper, Doc Holliday, Sam Houston and, lest we forget, New Orleans Det. Remy McSwain, is 51.

… of Keshia Knight Pulliam. Rudy Huxtable is 26.

It’s the birthday

… of Hendley “The Scrounger,” Bret Maverick and Jim Rockford. That’s James Garner, 77 today.

… of Trapper. Wayne Rogers is 72.

… of Governor Moonbeam. Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown is 67.

… of Francis Ford Coppola. The Oscar-winning writer and director is 66. Did you know his first Oscar was for writing for Patton?

Russell Crowe is 41. The Barber brothers, Tiki and Ronde are 30.

It’s the birthday

… of Colin Powell. He’s 68.

Actress Bette Davis was born on this date in 1908. She died in 1989.

Conductor Herbert von Karajan was also born on this date in 1908 and he, too, died in 1989.

Joseph Lister was born on this date in 1827. His principle that bacteria must never enter a surgical incision was a breakthrough for modern surgery. Lister died in 1912. (One assumes Listerine is named for him.)

The first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame …

is 63 today. I Never Loved A Man, Respect, Baby I Love You, A Natural Woman, Chain of Fools, Think, The House That Jack Built, I Say a Little Prayer, Bridge Over Troubled Water — all great, but for NewMexiKen give me Aretha Franklin’s version of You Are My Sunshine.

From the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame:

Aretha Franklin, the “Queen of Soul,” remains one of the preeminent vocalists of the age, a singer of great passion and control whose finest recordings define the term soul music in all its deep, expressive glory. As Atlantic Records co-founder Ahmet Ertegun observed, “I don’t think there’s anybody I have known who possesses an instrument like hers and who has such a thorough background in gospel, the blues and the essential black-music idiom….She is blessed with an extraordinary combination of remarkable urban sophistication and of the deep blues feeling that comes from the Delta. The result is maybe the greatest singer of our time.”

Franklin was born in Memphis in 1942 and grew up in Detroit, where her father, the Rev. C.L. Franklin, was the pastor at the New Bethel Baptist Church. Aretha began singing church music at an early age, and recorded her first album, The Gospel Sound of Aretha Franklin, for the Checker label at age 14. Her early influences, however, included secular singers like Dinah Washington, Sam Cooke, LaVern Baker and Ruth Brown. She signed with Columbia Records in 1960, having been brought to the label by legendary talent scout John Hammond. However, her tenure at Columbia was an inconclusive one that found her dabbling in pop and jazz styles. In Hammond’s words, “Columbia was a white company who misunderstood her genius.”

With her switch to Atlantic Records in 1966, Aretha helped usher in an era of fresh, forthright soul music. It commenced with her first single for the label, “I Never Loved a Man (the Way I Loved You),” a salty, importuning number that unleashed the full force of Franklin’s voice upon the world. Her next triumph was “Respect,” a fervent reworking of an Otis Redding number that can in hindsight be seen as an early volley in the feminist movement and a signature statement of racial pride. Working under the tutelage of producer Jerry Wexler, engineer Tom Dowd and arranger Arif Mardin, Franklin rewrote the book on soul music in the late Sixties with a string of smash crossover singles that included “Chain of Fools,” “Think” and a memorable rendering of Carole King’s “A Natural Woman (You Make Me Feel).”

Birthdays and stuff

Houdini.jpgHarry Houdini was born on this date in 1874. The New York Times has posted their original obituary from when Houdini died in 1926 from peritonitis, which followed appendicitis.

Joseph Barbera, the cartoonist, is 93.

Annabella Sciorra, the actress, is 41.

Keisha Castle-Hughes, the Oscar-nominated actress (Whale Rider) is 15.

Dewey.jpgThomas E. Dewey was born on this date in 1902. He was the unsuccessful Republican nominee for President in 1944 and 1948. NewMexiKen has a vague memory of visiting Albany as small child, touring the capitol, and actually sitting in Governor Dewey’s chair. (He wasn’t there.)