Monday, November 14, 2005

redux

the Degas House, featured in posts a few months ago, is listed as closed due to hurricane damage. it's a couple of miles up Esplanade from the quarter, I will see if I can't walk up there on Sunday to see what's become of it. I wasn't particuarly taken with it as opposed to somewhere else, but it would work as a good landmark. I remember the Frenchwoman, Betty, with whom I saw the place, was on her way to Indonesia, I belive it was, to take up a teaching job there. We had lunch afterwards at Cafe Degas (no relation) and we also went to Preservation Hall on Saturday evening, I wonder if Preservation Hall is open, can it be? no, of course not, closed indefinitely, no musicians, they're touring europe--the radio this morning mentioned that NOLA musicians are getting more work than they've ever had in their lives before. well, good on that. and i will see what's left.

this has all happened before. I watched the old Armstrong/Holiday movie New Orleans a month or so ago and there's a particularly moving shot of storyville being closed down, from whence the music goes out into the rest of the world and everybody thrives in Chicago. it's all happened before.

i'm goin' home

i simply cannot stand it, not one minute more, i'm going back to new orleans. Saturday, flying in for two days only this time, found a package, cannot wait for St. Charles to open in a month i'll drive back then, but for now i cannot wait. This weekend I am going home!!

Sunday, July 03, 2005

on my way


bright at the top of the stairs



On my way out today. Dennis tells me I should come back in August, there'll be some sort of writer's retreat maybe I can help with. I'm there. I will be there.

Saturday, July 02, 2005


doreen

The relics of St. Tootie are a rainforest of multicolored beads, sequins and feathers



Degas House


bed in the box room

the narrow hallway

Impression, breakfast

she was under the staircase

little dancer age 14

l'apotheosis du tootie

















Trinity


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madness

Goodby Chief Tootie Montana : NOLA Indymedia: "The destruciton of Iberville would not only be the destruction of desperately needed and disappearing affordable, inner city housing, but the destruction of a neighborhood as well. Originally constructed during the New Deal era, the thick, red-brick buildings represent one of the last, possibly in the nation, downtown African- American neighborhoods that is so close to the vibrant, central economic hum of an American city, This is where the jobs are, not in New Orleans east, no matter how much money is poured there into sagging cinemas that have little chance of recovery"

Friday, July 01, 2005


the one that got away

footish

Wednesday, June 29, 2005


Faubourg Marigny