Three Anchor stories

New Haven’s legendary Anchor Bar closed last month, perhaps for good. Even if comes back under new management, as has been suggested, why would it be the same? Was Rudy’s? Was Bookworld? Was Kaysey’s?

The bar’s regulars and other supporters are tossing brickbats at landlords and managers for allowing the place to die. As someone who once oversaw a precious New Haven landmark (BookWorld on Chapel Street) and saw it crumble from my grasp, I know how complex and confusing a failing business can be, and how it’s too easy to blame the money people. Times change, and commercial businesses are dealt with differently than other landmarks. It’s inarguable that the Anchor Bar was a monument to old New Haven. But it had more competition than ever for the current-day hipster drink dollar, and that means something.

I stopped drinking over a decade ago, and basically stopped going to bars which didn’t offer local band shows. But before that, the Anchor was definitely a regular stop on my downtown rounds. I was there dozens if not hundreds of times, and can boil my most potent memories down to extraordinary encounters, good friends and creative fulfillment. All the other memories are gone, thanks to too many martinis made with bottom-shelf Clyde’s Gin.

1. Summer, 1995. Just a few months before he collapsed on a New York street corner and died, the eminent funny novelist and screenwriter Terry Southern (The Magic Christian; Candy; Flash and Filigree; Dr. Strangelove; Easy Rider) spoke at the Summer Lecture Series at Yale. The talk itself was disappointing, but directly afterwards a bunch of hardcore Southern fans (me, novelist Darius James, playwright/Weekly Reader editor Forrest Stone and others) strolled over to the Anchor, chosen for its probable appeal to the great Southern. I mostly stared at Southern that night, but the next day, in a different now-defunct New Haven bar, at the Colony Inn on Chapel Street, I spent three hours with the man discussing his word, sharing stories and even getting invited to his East Canaan home (though I never did take him up on that).

2. Dec. 31, 1999. Betty Buckley had just performed a concert at the Shubert. My old friend Cheryl McCloud had traveled from Boston to New Haven to see the show with me, and was staying (on my recommendation) at the Duncan Hotel. We chose the Anchor Bar as the place to ring in not just the new year but the new century. We were joined by Dan Perkins (Tom Tomorrow of the This Modern World comic strip) and Beverly Gage. My then-future wife, Kathleen Rooney, was visiting her mother in Massachusetts. She had squirreled a note into my coat pocket, with instructions to open it at midnight. It held a note and a quarter, with instructions to call her as the new year dawned. But the pay phone at the Anchor was on the fritz and I could only send her telepathic messages. This was the time of the “Y2K” computer scare, and technological breakdowns were on everyone’s minds. When midnight struck during our third or fourth Anchor cocktail, we joked that the best way to ring in 2000 would be to flick the lights off in the bar for a minute and freak everyone out, then turn them on again and celebrate, knowing what we hadn’t lost.

3. Winter, 2000. I was directing a production of Julian Barry’s play Lenny for New Haven Theater Company, at BAR on Crown Street. We had just finished auditions and adjourned to BAR’s BruRm to make the final casting decisions. I’m very collaborative at times like this, and was tossing ideas at all the designers, stage managers and crew. But the vibe wasn’t right. BAR would be a gracious host to the production for several weeks of rehearsals and performances, but wasn’t making it as a creative business office. So we rushed out in the cold over to the Anchor, where we could spread the actors’ resumes and mugshots and our own notes and charts around one of those big round booth tables. The place had the feel of a bar that Lenny Bruce might have drunk at, and had in fact been blessed for decades by the presence of Thornton Wilder. This was the red-vinyl vibe we sought. BAR had the dark theatrical environment we needed for our play. The Anchor had the inspiration.

Rock Gods #341: Adventures in Our Little Music Scene

Little Purple Flowers and Clear Rock raged at Vases Ristorante Wednesday, a rare live music night at the tony eatery. But once upon a time Vases was a rock club called Consequence. With that name and its shabby decor, Consequence didn’t last long, but the spirits of rock apparently linger. Vases is a classy joint with carpeting, white tablecloths, and wineglasses with the restaurant’s name etched on them.
So why were the band even there? Because Vases has one of the same co-owners, some of the same kitchen staff, and two of the same bartenders as Consequences had, they’re all in bands, and the live music vibe of the old place is still in their blood.
The band show took place over an hour after the restaurant had closed for the night. The tables were cleared and some of them were moved to create a basic stage area. It had a real after-hours feel. Plus a chandelier. A haunted rock ballroom.

Tonight: Stahr at the Bullfinch… College of One at Hamilton’s (Big Game Nite)… Friends of Enemies has a pro-government, distrust-of-authority slant that they feel is not only not contradictory but also rocks. They argue in favor of artist funding, saying it not only improves civilization as a whole but reduces the commercial compromises that artists without patrons must often make. They are at D’ollaire’s tonight. Go figure.

Riverdale Book Review

Betty and Veronica Comics Double Digest #230 features an old Dick Malmgren-drawn Sabrina the Teenage Witch story, “Super Duper Party Pooper,” in which Aunt Hilda is ruining Sabrina’s party with her withering distaste for the younger generation, until Cousin Ambrose “whammies” her into youthful exuberance. She picks up a guitar and plays the Archie song “You Make Me Wanna Dance” solo, then sings lead on “Bang-Shang-a-Lang.”
That early ‘70s story is immediately followed in the digest by an earlier Sabrina tale, “The Matchmaker, drawn by Harry Lucey. (Both stories are written by George Gladir.) Here, Sabrina resembles a young, white (and white-haired) Earth Kitt, while Aunt Hilda is at her most monstrously witchy, with a wart on her nose and beard stubble. I’m not generally a Dick Malmgren fan (his people are too static, one-dimensional and rectangular) and consider Harry Lucey one of the greatest artists in the history of comic books period, but I have to say that Malmgren has the better approach to Sabrina. Lucey’s work is so detailed it’s distracting. Malmgren plays up the absurdity and cartoonishness of the witchiness. However perfectly composed a Lucey panel can be—the coquettish Sabrina dashing upstairs while Hilda tells herself “Sabrina’s not too much in the good looks department,” or passersby Betty & Veronica zapped into fighting over an unwitting Harvey—there’s a lightness required here, and Lucey is acting like Sabrina’s Chilling Adventures is already a thing.

Charlie Chaplin Songs

I just read Peter Ackroyd’s excellent, purposefully pithy biography Charlie Chaplin: A Brief Life. I’ve read most of the major Chaplin bios, and Ackroyd gives you as full picture of Chaplin’s long career without getting too bogged down in any one area for very long.
Here’s a mixtape to read Charlie Chaplin to.

“At the Moving Picture Ball” by Joseph Santley and Howard Johnson. “Charlie Chaplin, with his feet/ Stepped all over poor Blanche Sweet/ Dancing at that moving picture ball.”

Katie Herzig, “Charlie Chaplin.” “Each of us has got a little Charlie Chaplin inside us sayin’ “Hey fellas why don’t we go where movies are silent and life is as big as the stage?”

Traditional skipping rhyme:
Charlie Chaplin went to France
To teach the ladies the hula dance
First on the heels, then on the toes,
Around and around and around you go,
Salute the captain and bow to the queen
Touch the bottom of a submarine.

Oldham Tinkers, “Charlie Chaplin.” A multi-verse extension of the jumping rhyme above.

“Charlie Chaplin,” World War I army marching song, sung to the tune of “Little Redwing.”
The moon shines down
On Charlie Chaplin
He’s going balmy
To join the army
But his little baggy trousers
They need a-mending
Before they send him
To the Dardanelles
The moon shines bright
On Charlie Chaplin
But his shoes are cracking
For want of blacking
And his baggy khaki trousers
Still need mending
Before they send him
To the Dardanelles.

Asher Roth, “Charlie Chaplin.” Happy little feet. I don’t want to try to drown whatever’s happening to me. I walk with out a sound, Charlie Chaplin on the beat.” This is actually a reference to Charlie Chaplin the much-sampled reggae star, not Charlie Chaplin the movie star, but the lyric could apply to either.

A video cover of Charlie’s gibberish song from Modern Times.

The Clown Archives: Charlie Chaplin Cover, The Nonsense Song from tim trick on Vimeo.

The lyrics to that Modern Times song, courtesy of http://www.rioleo.org/chaplin-modern-times-waiter.php, which also shows the lyrics of the original French song it’s aping, plus a translation of that French version.

Se bella giu satore
Je notre so cafore
Je notre si cavore
Je la tu la ti la twah

La spinash o la bouchon
Cigaretto Portabello
Si rakish spaghaletto
Ti la tu la ti la twah

Senora pilasina
Voulez-vous le taximeter?
Le zionta su la seata
Tu la tu la tu la wa

Sa montia si n’amora
La sontia so gravora
La zontcha con sora
Je la possa ti la twah

Je notre so lamina
Je notre so cosina
Je le se tro savita
Je la tossa vi la twah

Se motra so la sonta
Chi vossa l’otra volta
Li zoscha si catonta
Tra la la la la la la

“Modern Times,” J-Five. That Modern Times song is sampled extensively in this single, a big hit in France in 2004.

Chaplin’s been the subject of several musicals. The most recent Broadway one was Chaplin: The Musical by Christopher Curtis and Thomas Meehan, which had its New York debut in 2012 but regional productions dating back to 2006, when the show’s title was Limelight. There was a 1993 musical also called Chaplin that nearly made it to Broadway, starring John Rubinstein, but was mothballed and didn’t get a full professional production until 2012 in London. There was also a 1983 musical called Chaplin, starring Anthony Newley, that closed on its pre-Broadway tour and never made it to New York.

Chaplin’s greatest hit as a composer, “Smile,” has been covered by everyone from Nat King Cole to the cast of Glee to R&B/hip-hop diva Janelle Monae.

Rock Gods #340: Adventures in Our Little Music Scene

Best acoustics in town? A church. Several contenders here—really, any church. Folkies play there unamped. Hecklers come through crystal clear when grumbling from the pews, and that irony is delicious.

Tonight: Winged Euonymus at The Bullfinch… The Disenchanted at Hamilton’s (black-clad covers)… An Evening With Sunday Hats and Hair Store, the doo-wop gospel bands, at D’ollaire’s…

The "c" word: Criticism