Like everyone else, I suppose, I’m not terribly surprised yet very sad today after the death of Whitney Houston, once a super-talented singer, gone way too young at 48. I had the pleasure of seeing her in person three times, very early on. The first time was before she even had a record deal. I think it was Eliot Hubbard, one of the music business’s eagerest early adopters, who encouraged me to check her out when she sang with her mother at a tiny club right around the corner from my apartment in the West Village. I wrote a tiny review of the show for the Village Voice. When her first album came out, I reviewed it for Rolling Stone, and Stephen Holden and I saw her perform at Sweetwater’s, a now-defunct nightclub near Lincoln Center. Probably not even a year later, Stephen reviewed her Carnegie Hall debut, by which time her meteoric ascent had begun — what I remember most from that concert was that she tore up “I Am Changing” (from Dreamgirls), getting a standing ovation in the middle of the song. After that, I was content to keep my distance and enjoy that glorious voice on record — my favorite memory being dancing on a party boat in Hamburg and hearing several thousand German leathermen sing along to “I’m Every Woman.” Those were the days, my friend….
Quote of the day: CHILDBIRTH
February 1, 2012CHILDBIRTH
She’s screaming like crazy….You have this myth you’re sharing the birth experience. Unless you’re circumcising yourself with a chain saw, I don’t think so. Unless you’re opening an umbrella up your ass, I don’t think so!
— Robin Williams
We have a secret in our culture, and it’s not that birth is painful. It’s that women are strong.
— Laura Stavoe Harm
From what I have seen…human birth is a joyful experience when properly rescued from arrogant male physicians who seem to want total control over a process they cannot experience.
— Stephen Jay Gould
Photo diary: Fifth Avenue
February 1, 2012Theater review: GOB SQUAD’S KITCHEN
February 1, 2012My review of Gob Squad’s Kitchen (You’ve Never Had It So Good) at the Public Theater has just been posted on CultureVulture.net. Check it out here and let me know what you think. I went in a little dubious about this show, which centers on recreating a number of Andy Warhol’s films from the mid-’60s, but came away impressed with its ingenuity.





