August 17th is the comic book birthday of Lois Lane. For whatever reason, that's her fictional birthday, with the year sliding around to keep her somewhere between 28 and 38ish. I tend to think of Lois as maybe a couple of years older than Superman.
Lois Lane is an ass-kicker, and has been since her first appearance in Action Comics #1.
don't just assume you can claim a spot on Lois' dance card
Today marks the birthday of Neil Armstong, the first human to step foot on The Moon.
Next time you're feeling cocky, just remember, Neil Armstrong walked on that shiny thing up there that's affecting the tides and spawning werewolves.
I know Armstrong passed years ago, but why not get him a present? He got you one. He went to THE MOON.
There's a Kickstarter going on that's already reached it's financial goal. The Smithsonian is raining funds to restore the spacesuit Neil Armstrong wore wandering around on THE MOON.
Now they're in stretch goals, and the big one is to raise funds to restore the Mercury suit for Alan Shepard, the first American in space.
Restored, we'll all be able to see these suits down at the Air and Space Museum in DC. Already a pretty fantastic place, but who wouldn't want to see even better space displays? And see the very suits of America's real life heroes?
Sure, you aren't helping some dweeb from BFE fund their dream project of a Yu-Gi-Oh fan film, but you are, you know, supporting things that actually matter and aren't a waste of time and resources. I mean, just... ugh.
If you're wondering why the Smithsonian needs to go to Kickstarter... well, (a) it's a publicly funded institution, and we haven't been great about funding public institutions the past decade or so, and (b) what money they do have could also be allocated to work on less high-profile items as well as the suit, so you're making the Smithsonian budget go farther (further?).
Today is the 64th Birthday of Lynda Carter, perhaps most famous for her role as Wonder Woman in the 1970's TV series.
We're big fans of Ms. Carter here at League HQ, and we hope she's twirling herself into a fantastic birthday.
In addition to still appearing on TV and in movies, of late, Lynda Carter has been lending her voice to a series of video games called The Elder Scrolls and has been singing in various venues across the country.
It's funny how the mass audience only remembers a few actors from says gone by. I am sure most people know the name Barbara Stanwyck, but as time marches on, I'm not sure how many folks know her by site or have seen her films. I haven't seen that many, and I tend to give a movie a chance if I know she's in the credits.
She's an amazingly versatile actress from an era when that wasn't always appreciated so much as playing yourself in different costumes and time periods (see: Judy Garland). But here's just a few highlights.
May 27th marks the 121st birthday of author Dashiell Hammett, a writer who's impact on the modern culture is nigh-incalculable.
I'm actually currently re-reading Red Harvest for the first time in fifteen years and will make my way back through The Maltese Falcon,The Dain Curse and a few more. And you really can't beat the short fiction of the Continental Op short stories.
And, of course, he was responsible for The Thin Man novel and assisted with the production of the movie.
Hammett had been a Pinkerton Detective, a career not so readily available in this era, but it set the stage for both the material of his fiction as well as the approach his detectives took. he served in both World Wars, drank too much, was a terrible husband and absentee father and a left-winger from jump. And he had a 30 year romance with Lillian Hellman. Like you do.
I'll be honest, I love this guy's work. His characters feel real and lived in, perhaps world warn and weary, but believably so, and his plots are just haphazard enough as the detectives sort through the mess they've stumbled into to feel believable when one is surrounded by liars with agendas. And he's got a snappy prose style.
Here's to Mr. Hammett on his birthday. Here's to one of the father's of American modern fiction in all its forms.
Today marks the 108th birthday of Marion Robert Morrison, better known as American icon John Wayne.
Wayne was a product of his times, and maybe not much of a philosopher, and most certainly held views that fell out of favor since his passing (but seem to get people elected in 2015, so what do I know?). Still, he's in a whole bunch of movies that I'm partial to, most of which also don't reflect my personal beliefs, but they do have their charm. goddamit.
Pictured above is Hondo, a movie I have seen no less than three times, and I could not begin to tell you what the hell it is about other than a man and his dog in the west. And that it was originally released in 3D for some reason.
If you want to see Wayne in a great movie but don't like Westerns (which, really, you should, but whatever) I recommend The Quiet Man. If you are a right-thinking American and enjoy a good oater, may I suggest:
The Searchers Stage Coach The Sons of Katie Elder The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
and McClintock!, if you'd like a little comedy in your Western
And probably a dozen more I didn't mention here. Here's to The Duke. You were a complicated fellow.
It's my B-day. A milestone b-day at that. I'm planning to take the day easy, read some comics, watch some movies, play with some dogs. Nothing too extravagant.
But it's also a time to ponder and reflect, and nothing helps you reflect more than Superman.
Oh, 70's humor. You were on the nose to the pointy of cruelty.
But nothing helps one ponder old age like a good Superman comic book cover.
Let's face facts... I work on a college campus. I am more than aware this is how the undergrads see me as I wander the halls. The notion that these whipper-snappers see me as anything other than someone who might know their parents is delusional. I never feel the need to try to pretend like I know what the kids are up to these days, because that's like your parents trying to impress you by going to see Billy Joel.
I, of course, see myself as older and wiser, telling these young punks how it should be done - and how it should be done is by doing it exactly how we did it in my day.
It's tough to top Billie Holiday. She's undoubtedly one of the most important vocal performers of the 20th Century, and certainly one of the most recognizable voices since recorded and broadcast music sprung into existence.
Today marks the birthday of Ms. Eleanora Fagan, born April 7th, 1915 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Holiday's biography also reads like the blueprint for a terribly depressing biopic, but it's also a remarkable American story.
This weekend I tried to watch Annie Lennox, who I have admired since I was a kid, perform her new concert, Nostalgia, on PBS, recorded in front of an upper-crust audience at LA's Orpheum Theater. And, while I understand that many performers sooner or later hit a point where they explore The Great American Songbook - Lennox performed a few of Holiday's standards, and I found the thing puzzling enough I turned it off. But, taking apart what was happening and for what audience could take a few hundred pages and a deconstruction of cultural appropriation that would leave nobody happy.
Strange Fruit and God Bless the Child aren't owned by Billie Holiday, but they're certainly part of her catalog, and I don't blame Lennox for wanting to emulate Lady Day, but... context. Billie Holiday's voice, song choice and expression were formed by what amounts to an extremely troubled youth (broken home - to put it mildly - and as a kid, she ran errands in a brothel) and young womanhood (prostitute by age 15). Holiday was part of the colorful jazz scene of Harlem from the early 1930's and onward (she was performing by age 17), and was playing with Count Basie and Artie Shaw within a few years. Even after some very public problems, she did manage to play shows at Carnegie Hall that were very well received.
March 25th of this year marks Jamie's 40th birthday.
She's a pretty super girl
It's certainly a mark all of us are aware of from the time we're kids. But when Jamie was 17, she was diagnosed with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (or, FSGS, for you amateurs out there). I won't belabor you with the details, you can read up on it here. In short, when you get diagnosed with anything at that age, a 40th birthday becomes something to celebrate.
If you can cast your memory back to a simpler time, when Bill Clinton was still in his first term, when Ace of Base ruled the airwaves and you had to be assigned the personality of one of the cast of Friends for some reason (I was the Marcel of our gang) - a much thinner The League was wooing an Aniston-coiffed Jamie.
March 23rd marks the birthday of Joan Crawford. She would have been 110 yesterday.
Complicated person, that Joan Crawford. I tend to really like her in movies, and I think I've shared here and elsewhere how much I like Mildred Pierce, in particular (but who doesn't)? Johnny Guitar is also worth a view if you want to see something out there on the edge of genre and expectation.
Happy b-day to a daughter of The Alamo City and one of the greats.
Alfredo reminds me it's the 82nd birthday of Michael Caine. And if you don't love Michael Caine, well, I don't want to know you.
Here, on his birthday, I recommend remembering not Michael Caine, who is doing well, thank you, but remembering that is a great joy to do a Michael Caine impression by watching a reel of Michael Caine impressions.