Archive for the 'quote of the day' Category

Quote of the day: REINVENTION

May 27, 2015

REINVENTION

Anna Leonowens, apparently addressed as “Sir” in the Siamese court, was…adept at reinvention. Conversant in Hindi, Marathi, Sanskrit, and Persian, to take on the role of royal governess she adopted the clipped tones of a dyed-in-the-wool English school ma’am. She had not yet stepped foot in England and remains the only foreigner to have lived inside the court of Siam.

The truth about Anna Harriet Emma Edwards, as she was christened, is buried beneath a palimpsest of fictions, many of which she herself propounded…Born in Bombay in 1831 to an Indian or half-Indian mother, who was thirteen years old when she married, and a father who was a lowly employee of the East India Company, Anna later doctored her biography so that her maiden name became Crawford, her birthplace Caernarfon, in Wales, and her father’s rank that of a major. “The most important thing in your life,” she noted, “is to choose your parents.” That observation, which might have been made by Oscar Wilde, was typically resourceful. At the age of seventeen, Anna married he sweetheart, Thomas Leon Owens, and they moved to Australia, then Malaysia, and finally to India, where, in 1856, he died, leaving behind an impoverished widow and two young children. For many women in her position – poor, unprotected, not entirely white – the only direction would be down. Remarriage was the only viable option, but Anna, who would never marry again, instead worked her way upward as a widow. Blending together her deceased husband’s middle and last names to form the exotic “Leonowens,” she elevated his status from clerk to English army officer and knocked three years off her age…
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Practical in her ambitions, Anna Leonowens sought neither to propagate new religion nor to purify the earth, but she did win her soul in a harem consisting of nine thousand children, wives, sisters, consorts, and concubines. As well as teaching rational thought to the King’s eighty children and English grammar to his scores of wives, she introduced both underwear and silverware to court life and advised His royal highness on matters of state policy. After five years, she left Siam – a court built on what she dramatically described as “slavery, polygamy, flagellation of women & children, immolation of slaves, secret poisoning and assassination” – and immigrated to America, via England and Ireland. Ever restless, Leonowens then crossed Russia and settled for a time with her daughter in Nova Scotia and her grandchildren in Germany…

Few women lived as inventively as Anna Leonowens, who blew about the globe like chaff…In 1870, she wrote her memoir, The English Governess at the Siamese Court. Seventy years later, the book was turned by Margaret Landon into the best-selling novel Anna and the King of Siam, which was itself transformed, in 1951, into the legendary Rodgers & Hammerstein musical The King and I.

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It is fitting that a shape-shifter like Anna Leonowens should find her life story morphed into so many genres. And equally fitting, for a woman with her sense of theater, that she should count among her nephews a boy named William Pratt, who would grow up to be the actor Boris Karloff!

–Frances Wilson, “A Woman Adventurer,” Lincoln Center Theater Review, Spring 2015

Quote of the day: DEVICES

May 17, 2015

DEVICES

I was in the recording studio the other day. I’d hired five musicians. We were in the studio for seven or eight hours. One of the musicians was 100 percent committed, no interruptions. He will be hired again. By contrast the bassist stayed on his phone throughout the session, doing social media. He will only be hired again if I can’t find someone else.

–producer and trombonist Delfeayo Marsalis

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Quote of the day: CHANGE

May 13, 2015

CHANGE

[Kenji] Yoshino, a leading progressive thinker about civil rights, is the Chief Justice Earl Warren professor of constitutional law at New York University Law School. The story of his title helps explain why he wrote this book [Speak Now: Marriage Equality on Trial]. When the law school’s dean offered him the chair, Yoshino explains, “Chief Justice” wasn’t part of its name. He declined it as a Japanese-American: Warren, as California’s attorney general during World War II, had approved the internment of Japanese-Americans. A few days later, the dean called again to point out that, as chief justice, Warren apologized for the internment, then to offer Yoshino the chair with the full title. “Wouldn’t it be great,” the dean asked, “if your chair embodied how much an individual can grow over a single lifetime?” Yoshino [pictured below] accepted the position.

–Lincoln Caplan, New York Times Book Review

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Quote of the day: BIRTH CONTROL

May 4, 2015

BIRTH CONTROL

Since strong anti-birth control laws in Massachusetts and in many other states made it impossible for [G. D. Searle and Company, who first produced a contraceptive pill] to conduct the large study of humans required by the FDA, it turned to Puerto Rico, which already had a long history of governmental birth control programs. The pseudocolonial island of Puerto Rico became the most important clinical site for testing the Pill outside the national disciplinary institutions of the asylum and the prison and functioned as a parallel, life-sized biopolitical pharmacological laboratory and factory during the late 1950s and early 1960s. During the cold War period, Puerto Rico would become the United States’ biggest pharmacological backyard. The island was the invisible factory behind the Playboy mansion and the white liberated middle-class American housewife.

–Beatriz Preciado, Testo Junkie

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Quote of the day: CITY

April 13, 2015

CITY

The secret of life in the big city is wear a suit, because you can take a shit anywhere. Folks are, like, “Hello, sir, welcome back!”

–Paul Feig

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