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    Dorothy Parker News Blog  
     

    New Parker Book Released

    Dorothy Parker: In Her Own Words is the title of the new book by Barry Day, out now from Taylor Trade Publishing. He uses Parker's stories, letters and verse to tell the tale of her life. Day was kind enough to take part in a Q&A for the site, read it here. All Parker fans will enjoy this book; you can order it here.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Friday, June 25, 2004 at 4:29 PM | Permalink

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    News Clips Collected

    Our press clips have been re-organized for easier viewing. These are only the ones we saved.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Tuesday, June 22, 2004 at 1:28 AM | Permalink

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    Sarasota Show Based on Parker Works

    Carolyn MichelCarolyn Michel brings Dorothy Parker to life in Jack Fournier's one-woman show, Dorothy Parker: One Foot in Scarsdale. Performances of the show, a part of Florida Studio Theatre's Summer Sideshows Series, begin June 30 in Sarasota's Gompertz Theatre.

    According to Fournier, the idea for a show about Parker started with a trivia question: “Who had the longest obituary, to date, in the New York Times?� The answer was Dorothy Parker. Her obituary was a page and a half long. This led Fournier to write a show based around Parker. After some audience input, he dubbed the play The Standup of Dorothy Parker. “It contained quips and jokes, but no depth of character,� says Fournier. Fournier was urged to re-write it and he did, which resulted in the one-woman show, Dorothy Parker: One Foot in Scarsdale.

    Dorothy Parker: One Foot in Scarsdale made its debut at FST in 1991, with Carolyn Michel in the role. Ms. Michel has appeared on Broadway with Sid Caesar, and has acted and directed in regional theatres across the country. In Sarasota she is going into her 14th season as a member of the Resident Acting Company of the Asolo Theatre performing in rotating repertory, and was an Associate Artist at Florida Studio Theatre for many years. FST audiences will remember her as the dog in Sylvia, as Lillian Hellman in Cakewalk, and in the one person shows, The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, Dorothy Parker: One Foot in Scarsdale and, most recently, last summer's Rose. Carolyn's FST Directing credits include: Alfred Stieglitz Loves O'Keefe, Crimes of the Heart, Billy Bishop Goes to War.

    For Fournier, working with Ms. Michel has been inspiring: "I knew that whatever I wrote, her perceptions would illuminate the script. It would be interpreted not only by the words but my visualization of the character. Carolyn will be forever, in my mind, the archetypical Dorothy Parker."

    Dorothy Parker: One Foot in Scarsdale will begin June 30 and run through July 10, 2004, with performances in the Gompertz Theatre, located at 1247 First Street in downtown Sarasota. Performance times are at 7:30 pm, with Sunday matinees at 2:00 pm. Tickets are $20-22 and may be purchased by visiting the FST Box Office in person or by calling (941) 366-9000.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Friday, June 18, 2004 at 4:00 PM | Permalink

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    Reminder about this week's events

    Author Marion Meade has a reading/book signing to promote her new work Bobbed Hair and Bathtub Gin on Thursday, June 10, 7:30 p.m. at Barnes & Noble (Broadway and 82nd). The book, about Dorothy Parker, Edna Ferber, Zelda Fitzgerald and Edna St. Vincent Millay during the Twenties, came out last month. We are arranging a cocktail party after the reading for those in DPSNY: we'll be going to The Dead Poet (Amsterdam and 81st Street). The public is welcome to attend.

    Then on Sunday, come celebrate the 85th anniversary of the Vicious Circle's first meeting. A walking tour begins and ends at the landmark Algonquin Hotel, 59 West 44th Street. Immediately following the walking tour guests have the option of having lunch at the Round Table. All info is here.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Wednesday, June 09, 2004 at 11:05 PM | Permalink

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    Algonquin to Close for Renovations

    The DPSNY was sent a press release today from the Algonquin Hotel about the big changes happening this month. Here it is:

    Matilda The Cat Takes Long-Awaited Vacation: The Algonquin Hotel Undergoes $3 Million Restoration & Closes For First-Time in 102 Years

    Legendary Hotel to Refurbish All Public Spaces & Guestrooms

    New York, NY – 6/2/04 – The Algonquin Hotel will be sending its famed resident cat, Matilda, off on her first-ever vacation when it closes for the first time in its 102-year history to complete a $3 million renovation.

    Starting June 27th, the literary landmark, which opened in 1902 and was the home of the famous Algonquin Round Table and the birthplace of the New Yorker magazine, will refurbish its public spaces and guestrooms. The work comes on the heels of a five-year, $5 million capital improvement project.

    “Staying open while completing this work would not have been consistent with the Algonquin’s reputation as an oasis of quiet civility in the center of our bustling city,� said General Manager Anthony Melchiorri. “The closing also enables us to complete the work speedily and efficiently, thereby permitting us to reopen at the end of July freshly prepared to welcome guests and visitors in a setting that maintains our traditions while enhancing our valued guests’ comfort and convenience.�

    The restoration will embrace all public spaces, including the world famous Oak Room cabaret, the Round Table Room, where Dorothy Parker and her witty companions met, and the legendary Lobby, frequented by legends of stage, film and literature such as the Barrymores, Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor and William Faulkner (who wrote his 1950 Nobel Prize address in his suite), among many others. One of the additions to the lobby will be wireless fidelity access. Tables and fixtures in the dining and entertainment outlets will be refinished, carpeting replaced and furniture reupholstered.

    All 174 rooms and suites will be updated to offer Internet connections, with most of the rooms also boasting new flat screen television sets and larger workstations. The decor will be brightened with vibrant new colors and designer fabrics in window treatments, furniture and bedding. Travelers will sleep nestled in the new all-white Algonquin Beds, featuring duvets and 350-thread count sheets. So confident is the hotel that the new ultra-comfortable beds will be a sleep-altering experience that they will be available for purchase. New artwork, in the form of innovative black and white photographs of the hotel, will grace guestrooms. Most bathrooms will offer more space and new vanities.

    What won’t be changed? The original and exclusive New Yorker wallpaper, custom-designed by New Yorker cartoonist Robert Mankoff, will remain a point of interest to guests as they stroll through the corridors. Complimentary copies of the magazine will greet guests as they enter their rooms and suites. Posted on tiny plaques outside guestrooms will be quotes from members of the Round Table.

    “Our goal,� says Melchiorri, “is for the hotel to look the same but feel better. If you sit on it, walk on it, or touch it, it will be restored or renewed. We are not changing the character of our rooms or our hotel, we’re burnishing it.�

    Algonquin Hotel Fun Facts:

    Matilda, the hotel’s resident cat, is quite the star. She is the subject of the book, Algonquin Cat, illustrated by Hilary Knight, the illustrator also of the famed Eloise books. Matilda roams the lobby, checks out incoming guests and visitors from her vantage point, makes friends with children of guests and makes sure to keep solo visitors company while they read or sip an Algonquin Signature Cocktail in the lobby. Matilda is deciding whether to spend her holiday in the South of France or a chic pet spa in Manhattan.

    The New Yorker’s legendary editor Harold Ross dreamed about creating a magazine “not for the lady from Dubuque� while on the staff of Stars & Stripes in Paris during World War I along with future members of the Round Table, Alexander Woollcott and Franklin P. Adams. He finally persuaded his fellow poker player (from the Thanatopsis and Inside Straight Club on the Algonquin’s second floor), Raoul Fleischmann (of the yeast fortune), to spend $25,000 to help him start the magazine, and several more installments of $25,000 from the generous Mr. Fleischmann helped get the New Yorker on its feet.

    The famed Algonquin Round Table officially began in 1919, when a serendipitous gathering of friends came together to celebrate the safe return of Alexander Woollcott from his service as a war correspondent, and the resumption of his role as resident drama critic for the New York Times. That lunch, in what was then the Pergola Room (the present Oak Room), was so enjoyable that the newly formed group—Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley, Woollcott, Robert E. Sherwood, Franklin P. Adams, Heywood Broun and soon thereafter Edna Ferber—met daily for lunch and soon moved into the main dining room. Until the early 30’s the Round Table group remained the most quoted circle of friends in literary history – wittier and less snobbish than Bloomsbury, less poetic than Catullus Circle in ancient Rome. With a decade of memories, the group slowly drifted away, some to Hollywood, some to playwriting, some to radio. The Round Table was the subject of “The Ten-Year Lunch,� Aviva Slesin’s Academy Award winning documentary of 1987.

    The Algonquin was named “one of America’s 10 Best Historic Hotels� by Historic Traveler magazine…further noting its historical contributions to the City of New York.

    For reservations and information please call 1-866-363-9011 or visit the hotel website.

    Posted by Kevin Fitzpatrick on Monday, June 07, 2004 at 1:15 PM | Permalink

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