Enjoy
Friday, January 05, 2024
| George Tidball - Circa late 70s
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Ten more blogs and will have reached 6000
In spite of my advanced age I have a very good memory, for
names, places and useless facts.
I believe I know when waiters (that’s what they were called
in Vancouver in the 70s) when they began to use that one verb after serving your
food, “Enjoy”.
While George Tidball started his Keg ‘n Cleaver in 1971 on
Lonsdale in 1971 by the mid 70s when we arrived to Vancouver from Mexico City
there was a Keg in Burnaby near us.
We loved to go there because Rosemary loved the salad bar
and I enjoyed the synthetic bacon bits I put on my salad servings.
Racquet Ball was the sport du jouer and we could watch
players at it from our tables.
Today 5 January I wanted to write an upbeat and random blog.
I went into my files titled Taconite/Soriano and I saw the Tidball, George
file. I took it out as a week ago I invited my daughter Hilary to dine at the
Burnaby Keg. We reminisced with smiles but sadly discussed how Rosemary never
ate a big steak. In Mexico City they said she ate like a “pajarito”, or little
bird.
Being in the restaurant we knew we were but a few blocks
from our first home when we came from Mexico. It was on Springer Avenue very
close to Lougheed Highway.
It was there where I noticed three strange customs/ideas
about Canadians. We had made friends with a couple from our BMO Bank. I asked
Rosemary, “We are being invited for after-dinner drinks. What’s that?”
My daughters had a friend called Moira who lived in our
townhouse complex. We invited her often for dinner. What was strange to me was
that when our daughters were in Moira’s house in late afternoon they would send
them back when they were going to have supper.
I remember well that on Saturday evenings when we were
invited to a party (that does not happen anymore) we would get into our Mexican
VW and I would instantly turn on the radio knowing that CBC had a program
called Our Native Land and played Indian (then) Indigenous music. I would look at
Rosemary and tell her, “This is your music, you are a Canadian (I was still an
Argie)." Rosemary would frown and would tell me to turn it off.
Unfortunately, with her gone, she cannot enjoy, as I enjoy, CBC’s
Reclaimed that plays a varied mix of very interesting Indigenous music.
Being with Hilary at the Keg some 43 years later felt odd as
we looked around but enjoying our steaks (feeling guilty because of all my
vegan friends).
I did notice that:
1. There was no salad bar.
2. No racquet sports being played.
3. And our server never said, “Enjoy”.
I wonder what George Tidball make of the proceedings.
Laura Fay - Ecdysiast Supreme
| Laura Faye from Peoria,Illinois, September 1983 in Las Vegas
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Today is 6 January in which I personally celebrate the
Epiphany? Why? Read here. My Epiphany
I thought that I could write something that would be
positive and the fact that at my age of 81 I can still wonder with delight at
things.
I took this photograph of Linda Faye, from Peoria, Illinois
in 1983 in Las Vegas at the first (and last) stripper convention called The
Golden G-Strings Award.
I took many photographs including of the winner that
happened to be my friend Tarren from Vancouver.
There is something that always makes me return to this
photograph. It is not perfect. On the left you can see the back of another
woman. And yet there is a poise and elegance in this woman that amazes me every
time I look at it.
I know her name because my photograph was used in the
Chicago Sun Times and she is named.
After I came back from Mexico City in October I wrote this
blog of my inspiration to take street photographs there inspired by my respect
for the work of German photographer August Sander. He photographed all the
professions of his country for 50 years from beggars to Jews in 1938 you know
would not live much longer. His primary talent was his respect for the humanity
of his subjects. August Sander - Mexico City
Strippers in Vancouver were called exotic dancers and they
were differentiated from the term burlesque dancers, as the Vancouver variety
took all their clothes off. There is a term I rather like – ecdysiast.
Coined by writer and editor H.L. Mencken in 1940, from
ecdysis (shedding or molting), from Greek ekdysis (casting off), from ek- (out)
+ dyein (to put on).
For quite a few years, beginning around 1978, I photographed often
the Vancouver strippers. Many often cite men as mentors as the original mentor
named Mentor taught Odysseus’s son Telemachus.
For me, mentors can be from all sexes including all the new
modern versions. These strippers patiently posed for me as I learned to
photograph them. Just like live drawing teaches painters how the body looks in
different poses, taking photographs of a naked woman or man taught me to
photograph them with clothes on.
Quite a few of the exotics that I knew were fabulous
dancers, self-stylists, actors who had the self-confidence of Laura Faye.
Now this old man can look back at this image (lofty term?)
of Laura Faye with the knowledge that I was plain lucky. I took the picture (notice
the photographs on either side of that Kodak Tri-X roll) without knowing but there was something
in me that pushed me to click that shutter.
I am sure that if I met up with Faye now I would be able
to repeat that photograph, but this time knowing what I was doing.
My Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
Thursday, January 04, 2024
| Michael J. Fox - Leo & Me 1978
| | Brent Carver 7 Leo & Me group photograph - 1978
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As I look back on my life, something that in those early days
of January, is one of my customs, I think that somehow I have always been there
to record the passing of mankind through my personal life.
My Rosemary, our two daughters Alexandra and Hilary left
Mexico City with the idea of a brighter future in Canada. For a while it seemed
it was not going to happen. The only job I was able to find (even though I
thought I was God’s gift to man as a photographer) was to wash cars on
Tilden-Rent-a-Car on Alberni Street. I was soon promoted to counter clerk.
I don’t know exactly how this happened but sometime around
1977 the French CBC in Vancouver inaugurated their TV station. In those days
while there was no wall between the French and English side of the CBC building
on Hamilton Street there was a demarcation line of sorts. The folks on the
French side needed what was the called the station ID slide. They were offered
some by the English side. The offer was rejected.
When we had arrived to Vancouver we had quickly decided to
live in Burnaby so that our daughters could go to French Immersion schools in
Maillardville in nearby Coquitlam. And Burnaby was not that far from Vancouver.
It was in one of those schools where I met a now legendary French Canadian
called Jacques Bayou who told me to go to the French CBC and offer my services.
I was quickly dispatched to take photographic slides of
Vancouver. By some strange and lucky-for-me coincidence the English side hired
me to take still photographs of their then very popular variety shows and
programs that were called drama like Leo & Me that featured Brent Carver and
Michael J. Fox.
It was because of the CBC that I eventually became a
magazine photographer in Vancouver and my career took off.
I remember one day around 1977 when I went home and told
Rosemary, “Today at the CBC I found out that the province is pronounced New-fun-land. I
feel a bit Canadian today.”
A few years later I became a Canadian Citizen and I have
pride in being one. And most important I am proud of my CBC and what it does to
unify our sprawling country.
The CBC must survive all the cost cutting and be what it
was once a beacon for good TV programs and CBC Radio stations with more culture
to enlighten us on how lucky we are to live in this country.
Tying Up Loose Ends & Beating on my Own Drum
Wednesday, January 03, 2024
| David Breashears - June 1999
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Because I studied for four years in a Roman Catholic high
school in Austin, Texas I have an extensive vocabulary of American expressions
that I use often.
One that is in my mind these days is “tying up loose ends”.
Because of my advanced age I call people I have not spoken with or seen for
some years to apologize if I ever offended or simply (that American expression)
to touch base.
As a magazine photographer in the last century, and part of
this one, I was in an environment that rewarded excellence not only with good
money but with repeated work. There was lots of competition but thanks to pushy
art directors in Vancouver Magazine (Rick Staehling and Chris Dahl) and a push
but inspirational editor Malcolm Parry I went out of my way to take photographs
that were interesting because they were elaborate. I was soon working for many
magazines across Canada and eventually for the Globe & Mail in which I worked
with fabulous writers like Christopher Dafoe and John Lekich.
I know that when I die (statistically soon as I am 81) I
will do so with lots of intelligent information that might help anybody trying
to take good photographs. The only
action left for me is to “beat on my own drum”.
In the beginning of June 1999 I got a call from the Globe to
photograph an IMAX cinematographer who was going to be in town. Not only had
he climbed to the top of Mount Everest several times, he had finally done so
with a large IMAX camera to make a documentary.
How did I prepare? I studied the availability of mountain
climbing equipment at Mountain Co-op. I went to the Science World and borrowed
a strip of IMAX film. I decided to photograph David Breashears in a semi profile with no eye contact,
reminiscent of National Geographic photographs of heroic dreamers. I shot the
photograph in black and white and made an 11x14 inch print. I went to Mountain
C0-Op with a flash and softbox, a tripod and my Mamiya RB-67 loaded with
Ektachrome. I borrowed the mountain climbing equipment and photographed it shooting down.
What was my reward besides the good Globe money? They ran
the photograph really big on the front page of their Arts & Leisure
section.
Now photographers have few publications that will hire them
and if they get an assignment they will not try hard.
That is a pity.
Not Interested in Women but...& Marv Newland
The days after New Year’s are days where nothing much
happens. When I was a busy magazine photographer, I never felt guilty in not
doing anything in them. Now that I am not obliged to do anything except sleep,
wake up, feed Niño and Niña, rest, do nothing and then sleep again, I go through
pangs of anxiety that are awfully existential.
I know that I have to keep going as I do not know anybody
who would take care of my cats. And so I write.
At my age of 81 I must confess that this Latin macho is no
longer in the least interested in women. I smile when I see a woman wearing a
dress on the street. I hate what Lululemon has done to the female rear end. I
am tired of cleavage and I am not interested in either dromedary or bactrian
camels. I am only interested in one woman and she is my Rosemary. She is dead.
My extensive negative and slide files, not to mention my
digital files have at least 700 women wearing very little if nothing at all. Of
them and of my other files I think back to sometime around 1990 when Rosemary
and I were driving away from out Kerrisdale home to visit our Lillooet daughter. I told Rosemary, “We could hire and arsonist while we are gone. We would
return to our house that would all be burned to the ground.” She smiled and
said it wasn’t such a bad idea to have no posessions.
As I get older the idea of legacy becomes less important.
But thanks to inspiration by Joan Didion to write so I
can find out what I am thinking and Garry Winogrand who photographed things to
find out what they looked like photographed, I write and I take photographs.
I must tip my hat to my friend C who has nagged me to
photograph her since 2019 (I have photographed her 11 times). At one point, if
you realize I am not interested in women, be they dressed or undressed, you
must understand that I was becoming bored.
But I never got to that point as C’s nagging (a tad gentle)
made me think of new techniques and to take chances and do new things. I am now inspired by Didion,Winogrand and C.
While my peers show me sunsets on their phones I am happily
printing C’s pictures for her and for me to enjoy and realize that at 81 I am
still pretty good at what I do.
Thank you C.
The photo you see here I took on 2023 Halloween. I used my
digital Fuji X-E3 and I used a shutter of ½ second while I slowly moved my camera
from up to down. I focused on a mirror on the other side of my little studio so
that I could include myself. And today I had a visitor. It was my friend Marv Newland. He sat down on my studio bench and 5 minutes later he walked out of my office with an 8 1/2 by 11 inch print. We went to town and had lunch with MacLeod's Don Stewart and talked about books. Returning I left Newland at Miri's barbershop on Broadway (around the corner from my house). Newland, Christopher Gaze and I coincidentally get our haircut by the same Albanian.
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