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Barnabas Press Looking to encourage people through my writings. I will be publishing poetry, performing arts works, and novels.

THE DIVINE USGlory sharedWithin the th*****meFather, Son, andHoly GhostWholly at oneNo need for othersYet They had in mi...
05/11/2024

THE DIVINE US

Glory shared
Within the th*****me
Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost

Wholly at one
No need for others
Yet They had in mind
Brotherhood with others

Thus the Word said
Let Us
Give light its being
Let Us
Divide the firmaments
Let Us
Fill it up with teeming life
Let Us
Make man a living being
We will
Judge it all very good.

Come the rift of non-believing
From the one who practices deceiving
And covets Your glory for himself
By separating us from You

The divine Us kept Your glory
And did and will keep us from him
Adding day by day to Your story
May our thanks and praise never dim.

RWOz2

The 1977 California Trip: Fox - Hello AnxietyThe day after our exciting day on the Paramount lot, we were looking forwar...
24/10/2024

The 1977 California Trip: Fox - Hello Anxiety

The day after our exciting day on the Paramount lot, we were looking forward to our next studio - 20th Century Fox.
We went through Westwood on the way to Century City and saw the Avco Center Cinemas owned by my first employer, GCC. They were playing Star Wars to blockbuster business. (The film was then in its third or fourth week, piling up record grosses all across the country). We were tempted to brave the crowds later, but held off.
The entrance to the studio back then was off Pico Blvd on a long side street that lead to the visitors’ parking area. Lining that street was a three story standing exterior set that was immediately recognizable. We could not help but rubberneck to take in the location where a song and dance number was performed and shot for Hello Dolly. [The facade must be gone now, as it is not visible on any of the satellite map sites I checked].
I do not recall where it was exactly that we reported to begin our tour, nor do I remember who it was that took us around. I have the distinct impression that we were on our own exploring the lot. But then again some one had to have been with us to tell us what we were looking at.
We made our way through the rest of the New York set that branched off of the street we came in on. Past that we came out on one of the studio streets that ran by a series of four stages on our left, and a rather odd looking building on our right. Some big rig trucks were parked parallel to it, sitting idle. The building looked like an exterior mock up of a train station, including a raised platform in front of it. It is probably the oldest building on the lot (and may have been moved from its original position). Tom Mix, the cowboy star who appeared in Fox westerns, kept his horses in this “barn.” He was the original owner of the ranch it sat upon. Fox purchased this property when their older studio lots in Hollywood proved too small.
With the exception of one film, not much was going on in the studio that day. We took a right and walked by some more stages, up to the area of the Tennessee Avenue gate. The bungalows kept for stars working on the lot were situated there. It looked for all the world like a neighborhood street from the thirties. That’s probably because they date from that period. A larger one on the corner was then the medical clinic for the studio, but had been the bungalow for the pint-sized savior of Fox during the Depression - the singing and dancing, cute as a button dynamo, Shirley Temple.
At this point of the tour, the lunch hour had crept up on us, for the next stop was the commissary (aka Cafe de Paris). I ran across a picture recently that was taken after a remodel in 1976, the year before our visit. It’s exactly as I remember it right down to those two big planters. The studio heads Dennis Stanfill and Alan Ladd Jr. were nowhere in sight, so they must have been in the executive dining room.
As I mentioned above there was one film in production - Mel Books’ High Anxiety. It just so happened that at the end of April they had been doing exterior work up in San Francisco and in the Hyatt Regency in particular, the very place we had visited just a few days prior. Now Brooks was set up in Stage 14 for interior work, which was on the other side of those NY standing sets.
I had located a history that put the lounge song number from the film on that stage (the scene in which Brooks sings the title tune to Madeline Kahn). That was not the setup we saw that day. It was very quiet as we walked down the alley to the open studio door. A quietness that whispered everyone was taking a siesta. As we looked through the door a simple setting of furniture was arranged against white walls - a glass topped coffee table in front of a sofa. Though there was probably no one within, I could not shake off the feeling that people were there in the shadows holding their collective breaths waiting for us to go away.
Come December when High Anxiety was released I finally understood what we had seen on Stage 14. It was the comic scene played out between Cloris Leachman (Nurse Diesel) and Harvey Korman (Dr. Charles Montague), in which the camera shooting up from under the coffee table attempts to follow the two as they converse, only to have its view blocked by their movement of the cups, saucers and plates across its glass top.
A little bit of film history. Alright, minuscule. But we didn’t need to see “stars.” Just being there was a thrill. (We did have a brief encounter when we returned to the lot in 1985, but that’s a blog post for another day).
So stay tuned.

The 1977 California Trip: Paramount - Guns, Grease, and Little HouseAnd not necessarily in that order.Our itinerary for ...
17/10/2024

The 1977 California Trip: Paramount - Guns, Grease, and Little House

And not necessarily in that order.
Our itinerary for this trip started with a visit to Disneyland. (I was a little nervous after locking the car and leaving it in the Donald Duck section of the parking lot, having it fresh in mind what had happened to us in San Francisco. No one bothered it. Passersby evidently had more things on their minds than our little Plymouth Arrow).
While Disneyland is always a highlight, I found my excitement building at the prospect of our pending tours of Paramount and 20th Century Fox.
Our destination the next day was Melrose Avenue in Hollywood. This was the era of Barry Diller, Michael Eisner and Jeffrey Katzenberg at Paramount. I was not acquainted with any of them (and they sure didn’t know me). Our entree into the studio was courtesy of Joe Vigil, recently promoted from booker to branch manager of the Seattle/Portland exchange, working out of Paramount’s San Francisco office. (I mentioned Joe in my Zefferelli post).
After passing the gate we were remanded into the care of an ancient security guard. (He reminded me of a skinny old codger from Central Casting. You know, the one you see in all those old westerns). We three made up our own little tour group.
Our route mimicked a big square, circling the inside perimeter in a clock-wise manner. First stop was a small set in its own little building. It was a western jail. And since it’s use was ubiquitous it may have been a permanent structure. The guard had us walk before him, and straight through the iron doors into the jail cell. With a chuckle he slammed the door behind us and locked it. While thus incarcerated he reminisced about other past denizens of the premises. He assured us emphatically that John Wayne himself had spent time on this set.
We journeyed over into the western end of the lot that had one time belonged to another film studio - RKO Radio Pictures. A whirl of activity had its epicenter in one of the sound stages along its main street. The stage was given over to a small film project just getting its start, Allan Carr’s production of “Grease,” being directed by Randall Kleiser. Judging by the size of the group crammed onto its floor, some kind of tryout or rehearsal was taking place.
At the end of this street an open sound stage door greeted us. Inside all was quiet and deserted. And cool, for not a single light was on. Farm tackle and wagon wheels were the order of the day. This sound stage was dedicated for interior work on the TV series “Little House on the Prairie.” Filming for the fourth season was then underway, but more than likely all the action was transpiring somewhere off on one of the movie ranches for exterior work.
Our guide walked us through the “New York streets.” Nothing was shooting. So we got a good view of the various locations each street represented - SoHo, Greenwich Village, Brooklyn, Upper and lower East Sides, etc.
Next he led us through an alley alive with flying sparks and the sounds of hammers on metal. I could call it “gasoline alley,” for several cars were being restored and fitted for use in the Grease production. Tail fins flashed their stuff.
Last stop - or the last thing I remember at Paramount - was a small building stuffed to the rafters with guns. Gatling guns galore hung from the ceiling; hand guns, rifles and machineguns were arrayed about the walls, (with firing pins removed, if recollection serves). On a return trip to the lot at a later date, I learned that this armory was no longer there, but had been moved off site in 1979.
We did not run into any “stars” on our journey, but we were nonetheless satisfied at our look behind the scenes.
Our aforementioned return to the Paramount took place in the fall of 2006, and I will cover that trip at its appropriate time, sometime in the future, so stay tuned.

The 1977 California Trip: We Left a Few Things in San FranciscoNot our hearts.It was the summer of 1977 and we had plans...
10/10/2024

The 1977 California Trip: We Left a Few Things in San Francisco

Not our hearts.
It was the summer of 1977 and we had plans. Plans to hit the road again for a vacation down California way.
Instead of flying this time we took our orange Arrow. With me driving of course.
We made the trip in stages, stopping the first night at the Mallory Hotel in Portland OR. We didn’t see much of the city. It was dark out, and on our quest to find a place to eat, we settled on a familiar name - Benihana’s Japanese restaurant. So that section of Portland and whatever was viewable from the off ramp to the hotel and the streets to get back onto I-5 were all we saw of the city.
We made good time from Portland through the rest of Oregon and into Northern California. We reached Vacaville in time for lunch at a restaurant in an olive orchard. My wife remembered this particular restaurant/tourist spot from a family vacation when she was growing up. She carries with her the memory of her dad grimacing when sampling a rather green olive. This time around she was the one grimacing - over my choice from the menu - gazpacho. I guess the thought of cold tomato soup put her teeth on edge. I thought it wonderful (the soup, not the fact that it made her grimace).
From Vacaville we made our way down to San Pablo Bay, skirted around towards San Rafael, and crossed the Golden Gate Bridge to our next destination - San Francisco. We checked into a motel somewhere along route 1, unloaded our luggage (except a couple of items) and went in search of dinner.
The Hyatt Regency at the Embarcadero Center was only four years old at the time, and a prime night spot. It had a revolving restaurant, the Equinox, on the top of its tower. We parked the Arrow a few blocks away up on Market Street, and were mesmerized by the impressive lobby of the hotel (like being in the interior of a pyramid) which we passed through on the way to the restaurant. [My wife is a great disaster movie fan, and shots of this particular lobby were recognizable, as it had been used in The Towering Inferno, three years before.]
We had a enjoyable meal. I can tell you that much, but don’t ask what it was, for what happened next completely overshadowed all else.
We each had had an adult beveridge with our meal, so we were a little fuzzy as we walked up Market to our parked car. We were puzzled by the sight of a loaf of bread sitting on the sidewalk beside the Arrow. My wife wondered out loud why our groceries were outside the car. We didn’t notice the broken glass under the bread, and were slow to realize that our car had been broken into and robbed.
We found a phone and called the cops. After giving them the rundown on our plight, they informed us that they could not come out to the scene of the crime, but if we wanted to come in to fill out a report we were welcome to.
We followed their directions to a small precinct house further uptown and made our report. Besides our groceries we were missing a couple other items: an 8mm Bell & Howell movie camera and dirty laundry in a paper sack. Sometime in the midst of this ordeal I asked urgently if they had a restroom. This sent me on another surreal sidetrack, as they had no public facility and referred me next door to a seedy bar/nightclub. I felt I was sleep walking through the rest of our time there. It was real “trippy.”
The next day was a Sunday and the memory of what transpired is all a hazy black cloud. Reality was settling in. Was our vacation over before it had begun? We needed a replacement for that backseat side window and where would we find one?
We had to wait until Monday. That’s when we raised a Chrysler dealorship, but they did not have that part in stock. Nor did any of the auto glass companies. Hope was offered, in that they could order it in - but it would take a couple of days. Desperate to save our vacation, I asked if there was something we could substitute, say something plastic. That set a light bulb off in the imagination of the auto glass specialist, and he referred us to a shop that dealt in plexiglass. On parting he suggested that we tell them to use the other window as a template to cut a replacement.
Which is exactly what we were able to do. And we were on the road again before lunch. With only an occasional whistling noise from our replacement “window.”

We have an enemyWho wants to get in our faceAnd block our trust in GodSo that all we seeIs the problemBe it temptationOr...
01/10/2024

We have an enemy
Who wants to get in our face
And block our trust in God
So that all we see
Is the problem
Be it temptation
Or adversity

Forewarned is forearmed
Remember next time
When he attempts
To eclipse the love of God
That God is always there
As is His promises evermore.

RWOz2

Me and My ArrowThere is something to be said about listening to your wife. In my case it was a hard lesson to learn. (In...
26/09/2024

Me and My Arrow

There is something to be said about listening to your wife.
In my case it was a hard lesson to learn. (In fact the learning never ends).
I loved my Plymouth Roadrunner, but with that V-8 engine (and its racing cam) it was a bit of a gas hog. No longer could you pull up to the pump and buy gas for 25 cents a gallon. Our buying power for that commodity had been cut in half with the rise in price. And the price showed signs of going higher.
Time to look for a more fuel efficient vehicle.
I am not sure if the ad campaign for the Plymouth Arrow led us to consider that vehicle or not. The tune has stuck in mind ever since whenever I think about the car. The marketeers had picked up the Harry Nilsson tune “Me and my Arrow” from 1971. It had been composed for the ABC animated Movie ‘The Point’ broadcast on 2/2/1971 as the theme for its hero Oblio, the pointless boy, and his dog Arrow.
Anyway I had made up my mind that this was the car for us. Gas efficient, a 1600cc overhead cam engine, four cylinder, with a clean sporty look (although the bright orange paint job let everyone know you were coming). And did I say gas efficient?
But there was a BIG negative, not for me, but for my wife. The Arrow had a stick shift. This didn’t bother me at all, that stick shift was a four speed. Can you say sporty? I could grind those gears like Steve McQueen in Bullitt.
But my wife didn’t drive a stick. And wouldn’t drive a stick. She made her feelings very plain. If I bought that car, she would never drive it. (She didn’t say I could never drive her in it).
But it was fuel efficient, was my argument. And within our budget. And brand new. Our first brand new car right off the lot. (And last brand new car ever as it has turned out - so far).
Regret was slow in coming. Not for the car itself. It was a great car. But the seed of bitterness sown with that one-sided decision poisoned our relationship.
True to her word, she never drove that car. And every car after that has had an automatic transmission.
So all you young husbands out there. Learn this lesson, and don’t fall on that arrow.

TALES FROM MY FATHERWhen my Father enlisted in the US Air Force in 1951, he reported to basic training at Lackland AFB i...
19/09/2024

TALES FROM MY FATHER

When my Father enlisted in the US Air Force in 1951, he reported to basic training at Lackland AFB in San Antonio TX. It was a rough time. The Korean conflict had just broken on the scene and over 100,000 men were crammed into a camp meant for 20,000.
Their uniforms were all WW2 issue - Army Air Corps khaki. The new blue uniforms for the recently separated service arm were not yet available.
In addition food was scarce and the men were always hungry. So after basic Dad was not unhappy to be assigned to the cooking school. All those similarly appointed made their way to Fort Devens in Massachusetts. There all the hungry enlisted men who had suffered through basic in San Antone were pleasantly surprised to see a mess hall flowing with “milk and honey.” Six weeks of training in their specialty ensued.
His first orders were for Larson AFB in Moses Lake WA which he reached via Payne Field, north of Seattle. Dad in his capacity as cook was assigned to an AC&W squadron (Aircraft Control & Warning). These were special radar units were a part of the Air Defense Command (ADC), set up to give early warning about the approach of enemy airplanes. These Washington State sites were tasked to be on the lookout for Bearcat Bombers expected to be coming over the pole from Russia (the USSR). A squadron each was placed at a series of a half dozen bases that ringed the atomic facilities at the Hanford nuclear reserve in the tri-cities area of the state.
Other ACW squadrons were mobilized for service in Korea to do the same function at the air bases there.
From Larson he was seconded to another base, but only spent one day there. He was told that someone had read his orders wrong and that he should have been sent to Colville WA instead. They turned him around, however, and sent him back to Larson, as the new base outside of Colville was still under construction.
Having time on his hands and being curious, my Dad got a hold of some maps and checked out where the town of Colville was located.
When the orders came through for the squadron to proceed to Colville. The Master Sargeant asked the men assembled if anyone knew where Colville was. Dad spoke right up and said he knew the way, the fruit of satisfying his curiosity earlier. So the Master Sergeant had the PFC join him in the lead car of the convoy as they headed for their new duty station.
They arrived in Colville hungry and pulled up in a line on Main Street. Having scoped out a place to eat, Dad again volunteered, this time to guard the cars and trucks. A lot of locals and looky loos stared in wonder as they passed the parked convoy, pondering what had come to their fair community. (There was very little in the local press about what the military was doing up on the mountain. Their equipment and mission was top secret).
They took the Tiger Road out of town, and over Squaw Creek up to the mountain where the base, at least as far as personnel goes, was ready. The radar installation had not yet been completed, but it would be soon.
Knowing that Colville would be the only place nearby to meet girls, my Dad came up with the following stratagem his first furlough there. Walking down the street he ran into some children, he opened his ploy by asking one of the boys if he had any big sisters at home. When the answer came back in the negative, he switched gears. Did he have a babysitter. Yes, he indeed did have one, and he led my father straight to the house where she lived.
My Mom answered his knock at the door. This being a small town out west in the early 50’s, if a man in uniform appeared on your doorstep, hospitality required that you invite him in. So she did.
She was home from school that day, looking after her younger siblings. Their mother had just passed away the week before. She entertained the young airman by playing the latest 45s on her record player. So the music of Eddy Arnold, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Patti Page and Bing Crosby’s version of Harbor Lights formed the sound track for their courtship.
They were joined in wedlock six months later. And for the shivaree (a quaint custom that takes various forms along the frontier in the US) he was made to push his new bride down Main Street in a wheel barrow.

Meet a New Character from the Fairy DiaryAvailable in ebook, paperback, and hardbound. Find it through the link below.ht...
14/09/2024

Meet a New Character from the Fairy Diary

Available in ebook, paperback, and hardbound. Find it through the link below.
https://books2read.com/u/3kwwzg

Noah sent out the doveDay by day after the rainNight by night she returnedUntil she found a place to rest.God sends out ...
03/09/2024

Noah sent out the dove
Day by day after the rain
Night by night she returned
Until she found a place to rest.

God sends out His Dove
Daily in His cleansing rain
Seeking an open heart
To give you peace and love and rest.

[Per p.d.f. 3/29/2012]

RWOz2

MERIBABELL RETURNSWith war looming between the two dwarf kingdoms, the High Fairy once again calls upon Meribabell and h...
27/08/2024

MERIBABELL RETURNS
With war looming between the two dwarf kingdoms, the High Fairy once again calls upon Meribabell and his friends to help. A dragon, hiding in the territory of the dwarves, must be tracked down. And its dragon egg must be kept from falling into the wrong hands. For if the adversary behind the undead trolls invasion gains control of a young dragon, he will be able to use it to discover the whereabouts of the Crack of Doom - the End of the Age harbinger entrusted to the care of the Faerie Kingdom.
Once again Meribabell’s ragtag band - fairies Rumble and Noralei, and the pixie Dunfallon unite with Merlin to protect their world from destruction. This time they have help from a new friend - Gibley the goblin.
https://books2read.com/u/3kwwzg

NEXT UP FROM BARNABAS PRESSWith war looming between the two dwarf kingdoms, the High Fairy once again calls upon Meribab...
20/08/2024

NEXT UP FROM BARNABAS PRESS

With war looming between the two dwarf kingdoms, the High Fairy once again calls upon Meribabell and his friends to help. A dragon, hiding in the territory of the dwarves, must be tracked down. And its dragon egg must be kept from falling into the wrong hands. For if the adversary behind the undead trolls invasion gains control of a young dragon, he will be able to use it to discover the whereabouts of the Crack of Doom - the End of the Age harbinger entrusted to the care of the Faerie Kingdom.

https://books2read.com/u/3kwwzg

Zefferelli at the Jewel BoxIt shouldn’t be surprising that I used to dream about my work. Probably every one does. But t...
15/08/2024

Zefferelli at the Jewel Box
It shouldn’t be surprising that I used to dream about my work. Probably every one does. But these dreams were the weirdest when it came to my job at Saffle’s Theater Service over on John Street in Seattle. In some respects they were like walking through an Ingmar Bergman movie.
In this particular recurring dream, the streets were empty, and I was wandering them alone. I moved in the silence, not a single person anywhere, and no vehicles either, just buildings and trees and other such landmarks. I would follow the familiar boulevard towards my workplace. But I stopped a block short, and took another street on a vector away from my goal. And then another turn brought me up a hill and over to Second Avenue. I felt awake and conscious - all was recognizable to me because it was the landscape across which I circulated for my job. And there was a deadline somehow involved in the logic of the dream, yet not binding, as time itself was slowed down.
My movements always came to an end over on a little section of Second Avenue between Bell and Wall Streets. There all the film distributor offices were huddled together in one little section that was called “Film Row.” And there also was the focus of the “fun” part of the job, the screening rooms.
There were two main venues on film row, where the screenings for new films were scheduled. Fox was the only distributor to have their own in-house screening room. I have absolutely no recollection of this screening room (my boss must have covered the few offerings there). I have been told that it was tiny and uncomfortable, and every seat had a bad view of the screen.
The other venue was a different story. The Jewel Box was a gem. (The choice of name was a genuflection to that old favorite choice for a theater name. If you’ve seen those old theaters with the name Bijou above the marquee, you’re were looking at something akin to the same thing - ‘bijou’ is French for jewel). It was built in 1927 by B. F. Shearer as a showcase for his theater equipment company.
With only sixty seats one might say it was the size of a shoe box, (compared to the theaters of that day - not now), but it was comfortable. One center aisle divided two seating areas. At the front there were individual theater seats, but as you moved to the back there were a series of booths - bench seats with their own long tables upon which you could place your meals, ordered up from the Rendezvous restaurant next door (a side door of the theater led straight into it). One might call the arrangement with the booths an early example of stadium seating, for each pair of them had their own riser.
The summer of 1976, I spent a lot of time at the Jewel Box viewing films. Here are a few titles:
In May- Food of the Gods (AIP) Marjoe Gortner
- Ode to Billy Joe (WB) Robby Benson
- Eat My Dust! (Parnell) Ron Howard
- Drive In (Col) a film made with Texas state tax incentives for the (what else) the drive in market
In June - The Great Scout and Cathouse Thursday (AIP) Lee Marvin
- Special Delivery (AIP) Bo Svenson and Cybill Shepherd
- The Outlaw Josey Wales (WB) Clint Eastwood
- Survive (Par) about the 1972 plane crash in the Andes Mtns and cannibalism
- Obsession (Col) Brian de Palma pulls a Hitchcock with Cliff Robertson and Genvieve Bujold
In July - St Ives (WB) Charles Bronson
- Squirm (AIP) man-eating worms
- Gumball Rally (WB) Michael Sarrazin
- Futureworld (AIP) sequel to Westworld
In August - Moving Violation (Fox) Stephen McHattie and Kay Lenz
- The Shootist (Par) John Wayne
- Car Wash (UN) Richard Pryor
- Winds of Autumn (Film Brokers) Jack Elam
- Drum (UA) Warren Oates, Ken Norton
[These movie “dreams” may have impacted somehow my “dreamlife.”]
One night we had the Jewel Box all to ourselves or rather all to our families, mine and my wife’s. And some few choice friends. I had arranged to rent it for my wife’s birthday party. (We all had dinner at the Spaghetti Factory before coming to the Jewel Box).
But what would renting a theater be without a movie? So I arranged for that too. I contacted Joe Vigil, my Paramount rep (and friend) down in San Francisco and ordered up a film title by one of my wife’s favorite directors, Franco Zefferelli. You may be familiar with his Shakespeare films “The Taming of the Shrew” and “Romeo and Juliet.” Along with our snacks and cake we sat down to watch “Brother Sun Sister Moon.” The film tells the story of the life of St Francis of Assisi.
I believe for a time this director’s films may have eclipsed Gone with the Wind as her favorite.

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