Saturday, September 14, 2013

Sabering the Moments

A couple of weeks ago I got to check off two bucket list items in one evening. On August 30 we got to go to the Hollywood Bowl to see John Williams conducting a tribute to Henry Mancini and Blake Edwards, hosted by Blake Edward's wife, the iconic Julie Andrews. Being both a sci-fi geek and a closet Sound of Music groupie, it was a not-to-be-missed opportunity. I slipped out from work when no one was looking and was able to pick up the family in time to get to the Wilson Park shuttle bus service with time to spare. John Williams always draws a crowd, so the bus was packed. We got seats, but ended up having the kids sit on our laps to free up space for others. It was a hot, bouncy, jolty trip, but we made it without incident, which considering the traffic our Mario Andretti impersonator of a bus driver had to negotiate, was actually an incident in and of itself.








Our seats were in the supplemental oxygen section, which is much better than the low-earth orbit seats we typically get. The kids were all hyped up. They love John Williams music and were all a twitter talking about dinosaurs and Ewoks and unshaven guys with whips. I explained to them that the fun Star Wars music would be at the end of the concert. The first half would be music from movies they probably had never seen. Figuring they wouldn't know or care, we didn't explain much about the Blake Edwards tribute that would be the first half.



After John Williams came out and conducted his never-fail National Anthem, he introduced the evening's narrator, Julie Andrews. The name meant nothing to the kids, but as soon as Ms Andrews came out on stage and was featured in the jumbo-trons scattered throughout the amphitheater, L's eye lit up.

"Daddy," she said. "She looks an awful lot like Maria from Do-Re-Mi!"

"Yes," I agreed. Then she greeted the cheering crowd and launched into the program.

"But Daddy!" L interrupted. "She sounds more like Mary Poppins!"




The kids sat patiently though the first half, enduring Victor/Victoria themes and music from Breakfast at Tiffany's. They were all squeals when John Williams cranked up The Pink Panther theme and the jumbo-tron showed classic Peter Seller's clips. When the lights came up and people started stampeeding to the restrooms, I reminded the kids that the moment they were waiting for was upon them. As I walked with N to the men's room, he was dancing and weaving in and out of the crowd humming John Williams themes and singing snippets from our favorite Moosebutter Star Wars video.

"Kiss a Wookie; kick a droid!
Fly the Falcon through an asteroid,
Till the princess is annoyed..."

I got several encouraging grins from other nerds, impressed that I was raising my child right.

We soon retook our seats and the lights went down. And then, as they say, that's when the magic happened. Over the stage Harrison Ford dodged rolling boulders and ET crested the moon while John Williams whipped the LA Philharmonic into a frenzy of French horns and fanfares. I started to get concerned because N was singing along so loudly, but then I noticed that most of the 40-somethings sitting around us were too, so I stopped stressing. The movie screen spiraled with sweeping aerial shots that only Steven Spielberg could film and John Williams could orchestrate. The audience oohed and ahhhed like they were watching fireworks. I think some of them were even getting teary. (I had a problem at one point with some dust getting in my eye for a bit, but I doubt many of the others had that excuse.)


And then, after a moment's utter silence to highlight the contrast, a blare of trumpets rocked the amphitheater as the John Williams launched into the Star Wars main theme and the audience recoiled back as if driven by a wind of brass. Then, you could almost hear the electric sizzle as all across the bowl thousands of light sabers ripped into action. As Williams pounded out the screwy cacophony of trumpet rhythms and percussion blastings that make up the theme, light sabers careened and clashed across the bowl floor in syncopated swirls of purple and green and red.



Three encores later and utterly exhausted, we made our herdlike way through the mass of humanity (with a few Wookies and other unidentifiable species thrown in) down the slopes and stairs of the Hollywood Bowl to our waiting buses. After a final Falcon-like ride through the alien landscape of late-night LA and South Central we landed at the Torrance Spaceport in Wilson Park. There was no fight left in our Padawans when we finally tucked them in.



Sunday, September 8, 2013

The Rime of the Ancient Parenter

Last week I issued L a challenge. I left this note on her bed when she wasn't looking.



A short while later I saw her darting through the house, avoiding my eyes, but all a glow with a smirk on her face.  I went in to my bedroom and found my note on my pillow.  "Deal!" was hastily written across the bottom.  Just about every night since then I've found poems of varying length left for me on my bed.  N, captivated by the excitement, has even left me a few.  



See Me Mimi

To Mimi
A poem by L

I don't have much time to
ryme, but I can try. See me Mimi.
I can try, only if you do not cry.
See me Mimi here or there you
can see me Anywere! The End


Mom and Dad

My Mom is good my Dad is
bad. He is mean. He bites!
Even mice are scared of him!
When we have Ice drinks He takes
them away. He is BAD! My
mom is good. She is great!
She met me on a date!
My mom is Good. My Dad is
bad!

Dear Dad,
You're not bad, just
bad and dad ryme.
My mom is good. My Dad is good to!

I love you (Get it?)
L


The Flag

What's the flag's name.
I guss it needs
a name tag. I love
this flag. Whats
the date? Its
the 8th I cant
wait.


Here's one from N:

Rime Time

To mom and Dad

It is time to rime with crime. I want a lime.
It is time to rime with sit. He bit me and Hit me
He ust [used] a cit [kit] to nit [knit] a mit [mitt]
It is time to rime with dog look a log in the fog with a hog that has a nog in the fog



I Left My Heart North of San Francisco (Part 4)

The evening we got back from Napa we got word of a special treat in the making for K. “Mr. Tom,” Christine’s husband, was able to wrap up his Southern California duties early and had caught a flight from L.A. to San Francisco and would be joining us for dinner. K adores Mr. Tom, so it was kept a secret from her as a surprise. At dinner time we all walked downtown to McNear’s restaurant where we subtly got a table with one extra seat. As we were seated and reviewing the menu Mr. Tom came walking in. In an instant a shocked K leapt out of her chair and up into Mr. Tom’s arms and clung to him like he was saving her from ravaging wolves. Between K and Mr. Tom, and our kids chatting Miss Christine’s ear off about their Napa adventures, the dinner had a lively buzz throughout, and continued on the walk home as Mr. Tom and Miss Christine literally had their hands full with a gaggle of kids clinging to them and chattering on.

Miss Christine's grapes
Later that evening, after everyone but Stacy, Hiroko and I had gone to bed, and we were sitting around the kitchen island I got to try a cream liqueur I’d never seen before: Fulton's Harvest Pumpkin Pie Cream, a rich, sweet Bailey’s like liqueur with a lot of warm fall spices. It was phenomenal and it was all I could do to keep it to a polite sample. I mentioned it to Christine the next morning and she said it was a pretty hard-to-find bottle and whenever they could find it they bought out the lot!



Alas, the next day was Friday, our drive home day. We had no specific timeline to meet, so we lolly-gagged as much as possible – another leisurely breakfast with Christine’s mystical fruit and sausages, another couple hours of pool play, some poolside reading and chatting for the adults. It was, I think, the most stress-free end-of-vacation day I’ve ever had.

Note the sausages of infinite deliciousness
at the head of the table.





"Cue the John Williams theme... NOW!"

"Buddy," Miss Christine's right-hand man.

K!  Behind you!!!  <dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun>


A novel idea with a few noted shortcomings.

A better approach?




After breakfast and while the kids were playing in the pool or piled on Mr. Tom, I took advantage of the quiet to explore the house again. I’d been all throughout it during the week, but more or less in a utilitarian way – I saw the rooms only because I was passing through them to get somewhere else. I took some time this morning, however, to slowly walk through the house and the grounds and enjoy the rich architecture, detailed design and overarching sense of peace and away-ness that pervaded it all.




Deer scouting!  Christine has a family of deer
that live on her and her neighbor's property.





The original carriage house behind the main house.




Scrollwork detail



The coveted turret room.




Typical Petaluma morning fog. What a
difference an hour or two makes!




The carriage house attic.

Exploring the carriage house.


  
Miss Christine's fantastic apples.

The formal dining room could have been the setting
for innumerable Agatha Christie plots.




Col. Mustard in the Drawing Room with a Candlestick

Ladies, you should only go up or down this staircase if you are
wearing  a caftan and holding one of those long cigarette extenders.

For example...



Tiffany windows are distributed thoughout the house,
including a phenomenal suite ascending the staircase.


Hiroko's turret room.




"Daddy, I'm ready for my close-up now."



Eventually we could stall no more, so we emptied Balch Castle of the sizable freight we’d planted there and said our goodbyes. I remember thinking what a truly unique vacation it had been – by far the least troublesome and hectic one we’d spent together. The little anxiety we had about what to expect as we drove up had dissipated within minutes of our arrival. Christine (and then Tom), who barely knew us, had made us feel so welcome and free and included, it was rather stunning. N had summed it up well on our very first day there. We felt like royalty staying in Christine’s Castle.










Homeward bound.




In the late hours of the night, after the seemingly unending drudgery of I-5 through the San Joaquin Valley and dropping off Hiroko and K in Torrance, we finally staggered through our doors. Our unpacking consisted only of emptying the car into the house. As I was about midway through the extraction of the multiple strata of suitcases and carry-on bags, I found another little surprise. Surreptitiously tucked in among our mounds of luggage was a fresh bottle of Fulton’s Harvest that Mr. Tom had smuggled aboard while we weren’t looking. It’s seal didn’t last the night.