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    Dorothy Parker News Blog  
     

    Smashing Good Time at Parkerfest

    The first Parkerfest was a big success yesterday, more than 35 Dotheads attended the day-long event. I am creating a section about it, loaded with incriminating photos, so keep checking back. Thanks to all who attended, you made the day very special.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Sunday, August 29, 1999 at 6:30 PM | Permalink

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    Parkerfest Draws Close; We Get Press

    If you are sitting on the fence about Parkerfest, make up your mind. We have a lot of great people signed up for the SATURDAY event! The first SPEAKEASY is in place for some cocktails, a super-swank gin joint.

    We're also getting great press (thanks to VP Jill), including mentions in the New York Observer (a riot) and LA Weekly (very cool article). Check out these stories.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Thursday, August 26, 1999 at 8:14 AM | Permalink

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    Parkerfest Nears; Yahoo Picks Up Site

    Only four days until Parkerfest! Dot City was launched October 1998, yesterday I found out it was named a Yahoo! Pick of the Week and traffic spiked bigtime. Thanks! Here is what they have to say:

    "A mega-entertainment mall for the masses, Dot City is a $900-million complex devoted to the fabled Algonquin Round Table writer Dorothy Parker. Inspired by Dot City: Dorothy Parker's New York, an online guide to the sulphurous scribe's various Gotham haunts, Dot City Vegas has it all: dine at the $7.99 Dakota Buffet or clown around at Literary Critic Crash 'Em Up Derby. Is that legendary New Yorker publisher Harold Ross playing the ponies? Could that be the lauded New York Times Drama Critic Aleck Woollcott sucking down a free Corona? If they're witty, alcoholic, from New York, and not alive anymore, you'll find them at Dot City!"

    Within 24 hours, we got loads of cool e-mail, such as this one from Linda:

    Thank you for this site. Thank you. I have been a huge Parker fan and I live in the middle of Kansas! I would NEVER had got to see these things even if I could have made the trip. Your site is Tops with me.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Tuesday, August 24, 1999 at 10:45 AM | Permalink

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    Happy Birthday Dottie

    Today is Dorothy's 107th birthday. So have a drink today for her!

    In her honor, we now have a new page on the site, it is of the former office of The New Yorker. Take a look, and then read one of her New Yorker short stories tonight. There are also new photos of her home on West 68th Street.

    Just a week until Parkerfest! Make your reservations now!

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Sunday, August 22, 1999 at 12:21 PM | Permalink

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    Birthday Toast for Mrs. Parker

    Tomorrow is Dorothy Parker's 107th birthday. Born in West End, New Jersey, in 1893, be sure to lift your glasses and toast our favorite writer and wit. May we suggest a Tom Collins:
    2 oz. (1/4 cup) gin
    1 oz. (2 Tbsp.) fresh lemon juice
    1 tsp. powdered sugar
    lemon slice
    maraschino cherry

    Combine first three ingredients in chilled glass; stir well. Add three to four ice cubes; top with club soda, stirring gently. Garnish with lemon slice and cherry. Spout witty toast!

    Tickets are still available for the two Parker shows in town. (See review below for Social Note at the Algonquin). Laughter and Hope and a Sock in the Eye is Friday, Saturday and Sunday, August 27-29. It's at the Marlen Gallery, 674 Ninth Ave between 46 and 47th streets. Showtime 8 p.m. Tickets are $12. Reservation number is 874-5300 ext. 1395. The Saturday show is part of the Parkerfest day. Friday and Sunday are still open, so call now! How great is it that there are two Dottie shows in New York the same week?

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Saturday, August 21, 1999 at 3:23 PM | Permalink | Comments

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    LA Weekly Mentions Website

    L.A. Weekly has a nice plug for Dot City and Parkerfest. It is a very nice review of the site ("a well-conceived, highly navigable site of considerable Dottie-worship"), so check it out. A tip of the glass to writer Dave Shulman for the mention. And remember, there is a L.A. section of the site in the research stage now.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on at 11:30 AM | Permalink

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    Cast Conjurs Dottie in Gonk Show

    [PHOTO OF SHOW CAST]
    Hanging out in the Blue Bar at the Algonquin Hotel after the opening night of "Social Note" are (from left): Heather Bucha, George Demas, Jennifer Bayly, Christina Kirk and Bill Migliore.

    Any Dorothy Parker fan will be knocked out by the new Parker show, "Social Note", marvelously staged at the Algonquin Hotel. Leaving aside the historical significance of the show -- come on, they are staging it in the actual Oak Room, right on the very same spot as the Round Table -- it would be a dynamite show at a roadhouse in Peoria. This show is what Parker fans crave: great actors breathing life into Dottie's material.

    The cast is pure gold. There are three actresses and two actors to play all the parts. The star of the show is Heather Bucha, who plays the "Dorothy" with style and panache. Bucha has a spark and zest for the role that she sails through the evening. Bucha wears two hats: not only acting, she also adapted the material for the show. Director Ted Snowdon, who works wonders in the space, pulls it off well in what is really a long dining room.

    What is terrific about "Social Note" is the fire the cast brings to Parker's work. We've all read her stories over and over again. You can whip off her quips and quotes with ease. Know her best-loved verse and poems by memory, and can anticipate every upcoming word. But until you see it onstage, with real actors in costume and punching the words out -- WOW. It is one incredible evening.

    True, sitting in the old Algonquin (the place is 97 years old) is a cool experience. One is aware of all the history and ghosts around. You are drinking where Parker and Benchley once did 80 years ago! One actor after the show remarked how wild it was to spot hotel guests walking into the lobby, and seeing them carrying Parker books. Seeing "Social Note" was like living the perfect Dorothy Parker evening, and it made you want more than the 100 minutes they dished up.

    [PHOTO OF HEATHER & TED]
    Heather Bucha and director Ted Snowdon on opening night at the Gonk.

    From the fur-trimmed women's costumes and high heels, to the piano tinkling in the background, the mood was dead-on for a fun night at the theater. (One word of caution: tickets are a steep $40 a pop and drinks are about $10 each. This isn't a night at the Blair Witch Project).

    The gorgeous Heather Bucha opens the show with a selection of "Mrs. Post Enlarges on Etiquette" the hilarious piece from The New Yorker. She fills the room with Parker's presence. Is she channeling? I don't know, but the audience hung on every word.

    There are five short stories presented by the cast. "You Were Perfectly Fine" with George Demas as the boozer with the hangover from hell and Christina Kirk as the giddy girlfriend who puts up with his shenanigans. I really liked this couple. They remind you of those people at a bar who keep drinking and drinking and have no idea how hammered they are getting. Seeing this story set the "day after" will hit home with those who also imbibe and then can't recall the next day. Kirk was sweet as sugar and perfect.

    One of the standouts of the night was the great staging of one of Parker's most famous stories, "Dusk Before Fireworks" with Jennifer Bayly and Bill Migliore. He plays a classic Parker male character, the outlandishly stereotype of the playboy boyfriend. He is marvelous and Bayly is super as the put-upon gal pal.

    Hopefully some big shot movie casting director will drop by the Gonk and see Bucha rip into "Just A Little One" -- a solo piece that is just wonderful. She hits the story perfectly as the speakeasy flapper who gets sauced, lights up her date, bemoans her sad state of affairs, then comes around. The monologue was one of the most memorable parts of the show.

    The staging of "Here We Are" switched from the original setting of a train car to a hotel room, but this piece with Migliore and Christina Kirk was the standout of the night. So perfect. The honeymooning couple and their crazy arguments were both humorous and touching at the same time. They played the newlyweds convincingly and with passion.

    One of the best parts of the night was seeing Demas come out in drag as the aging stage star Lily Wynton in "Glory in the Daytime" -- and pulling it off so well. Bayly was the homely housewife and Bucha's silly socialite were killer to see.

    The cast also trotted out many Parker quips and anecdotes, some of them popular and some obscure. Bucha recited two of the most popular Dottie pieces, "The Red Dress" and "Coda" -- which ended the show.

    This is the kind of show that is keeping Parker's work out there in the public eye. Performed at the Algonquin makes sense. Try and see it if you can.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Tuesday, August 17, 1999 at 7:29 PM | Permalink

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    Parker Show in Oak Room

    How lucky can New Yorkers get? There are two Parker shows in the city this month. The Parker show at the Algonquin runs again this year from August 17 through the 28th. Tuesday through Saturday at 9 with additional shows on Fridays and Saturdays at 11:30. To make reservations call 212-840-6800.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Friday, August 13, 1999 at 10:56 AM | Permalink

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    Algonquin Joins Website

    In anticipation of Parkerfest '99, we have an updated page about the Algonquin Hotel. A must-see for all Dotheads.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Saturday, August 07, 1999 at 8:50 AM | Permalink

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    Parkerfest Draws Close; We Get Photos

    Click here for the latest news about Parkerfest '99. Make your plans to be in New York Aug. 28-29 right now!

    Good news from the Left Coast: fellow Parker fan Kurt VanderSluis has sent in photos of Dorothy Parker sites in Hollywood and Los Angeles. This is great for the site, because for 30 years Mrs. Parker lived out West while working as a screenwriter. Kurt went around town and snapped her former homes and haunts, just like we have here for New York. So keep your eyes open for these new additions to Dot City, coming soon. Thanks, Kurt!

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Thursday, August 05, 1999 at 10:46 PM | Permalink

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