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Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Deliberate Cruelty

Content warning for discussion of suicide

Earlier today, I finished reading Deliberate Cruelty: Truman Capote, the Millionaire's Wife, and the Murder of the Century by Roseanne Montillo.


The "millionaire's wife" is Ann Woodward, a Kansas-born New York socialite and former exotic dancer who married Billy Woodward, the heir of a banking family. On Halloween night in 1955, Ann shot and killed Billy in their home after they arrived home from a dinner party at which fellow attendees had heard them argue. The evidence seems to suggest that Ann murdered Billy. She always contended that she mistook him for the prowler who'd recently stolen cars and broken into garages in the neighborhood. Although the grand jury declined to charge Ann with a crime, she became a pariah in New York Cafe Society. 

Years ago, when I watched the movie Capote starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, I said I didn't think it was factually accurate that Truman Capote was present at the executions of Richard Hickok and Perry Smith. I was wrong, as Montillo states in her book. Harper Lee wasn't there, but Capote was, with his editor Joseph Fox. (Fox edited and published the extant chapters of Answered Prayers after Capote's 1984 death.) 

An insight shared by Kansas Bureau of Investigations agent Alvin Dewey and the movie Capote is that Truman Capote and Perry Smith shared and recognized similarities in one another. Both longed for their mothers' attention; both lost their mothers to suicide. Both were short-statured men, dreamy, thoughtful, and intelligent. Capote may have seen Perry Smith as a sort of dark mirror of himself.

Montillo's insight is into the ways in which Ann Woodward and Truman Capote mirrored one another. Woodward became a social outcast after the shooting of her husband. Capote was cast out of the society of his "swans," the society women who considered him a friend, in 1975 when Esquire magazine published his short story "La Côte Basque, 1965." It was transparently a fictionalized version of Woodward's story. She'd finally managed to live down her notoriety and create something of a life for herself in Europe by 1975, and the publication could do nothing for her but dredge up all of her worst traumas for a new audience. She died of an apparently purposeful Seconal overdose on October 10, 1975, around the same time the November 1975 issue of Esquire was released.

Sadly, Woodward's two sons both took their own lives as adults.

The final nine years of Capote's life saw him increasingly depend on prescription pills and alcohol. When his friend Joanne Carson found Capote dead in his bed at her home in Los Angeles, his death was thought to have been the cumulative effect of years of hard drug and alcohol abuse rather than the overdose of any particular medicine. Still, he'd spent his final years promising that the full novel Answered Prayers would be finished at any moment. In reality, a completed manuscript has never been found. His last nine years were creatively unproductive. His lonely ending was strikingly similar to Woodward's. 

On Tuesday, January 7th, I listened to this episode of the Most Notorious! true crime podcast.

The guest is author Gary McAvoy. McAvoy's nonfiction book And Every Word Is True explores the theory that Hickok and Smith were hired by an unknown third person to murder Herb Clutter. I ordered it from Barnes and Noble last night. 



So I will be reading more about Truman Capote and In Cold Blood in the near future. 

Thursday, January 2, 2025

Bummer January

This is a repost of some previous Pagan Spirits book blog content. It combines the original Bummer January post with the update.


January 3, 2014: Islamist extremists burn the Christian books of Al-Sa'e  Library in Tripoli, Lebanon.


January 5, 2015: Danish martial artist/model/actor Khan Bonfils is rehearsing for a London stage production of Dante’s Inferno when he collapses suddenly. Paramedics are unable to revive him, and the 42-year-old is pronounced dead at the scene.


January 6, 1977: Natalina Maria Vittoria “Dolly” Sinatra, age 79, the mother of singer/actor Frank Sinatra, dies when the private Learjet she’s taking to visit her famous son in Las Vegas crashes into the San Gorgonio Wilderness in southern California. Mrs. Sinatra’s friend Mrs. Anthony Carboni is also killed, along with the jet’s two pilots.


January 7, 2015: Two Islamist extremists target the headquarters of the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris. Twelve people are killed, including five cartoonists and two editors.


January 8, 1970: Actor George Ostroska, playing the lead role in a St. Paul, Minnesota, production of Macbeth, dies of a heart attack at the beginning of the play’s second act. Ostroska is 32 years old.


January 9, 1946: Poet Countee Cullen dies at age 42 of high blood pressure and uremic poisoning (kidney failure).

Countee Cullen in 1927. R. W. Bullock, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

January 11, 1879: The Birmingham Central Library in England catches fire and loses about 49,000 of its 50,000 books and other circulating materials.


January 12, 1965: Author Lorraine Hansberry dies of pancreatic cancer at the age of 34.

Lorraine Hansberry, likely at a welcoming event for the African-American Students Foundation in 1959 or 1960. Unknown author, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

January 13, 1908: One hundred seventy-one people die as a result of a fire that started during the intermission of a stage play at Rhoads Opera House in Boyertown, Pennsylvania. The audience was in its seats to watch a Magic Lantern show. A Magic Lantern machine was a technology somewhat in between a slide show and a movie projector, with slide-like images that gradually faded into the next image.

The gases used to run the Magic Lantern caught fire after someone knocked over one of the kerosene lamps being used to light the stage. The dead include 170 audience members and one firefighter killed while responding. This tragedy spurs the Pennsylvania state legislature to pass a variety of safety laws governing indoor public spaces.

Incidentally, the playwright of the drama being performed was Harriet Earhart Monroe. Mrs. Monroe was not present, but her sister Della Earhart Meyers was on stage as the narrator or chorus of the drama. Della Earhart Myers was among those who perished. Harriet and Della were the sisters of Samuel Stanton Earhart, who was the father of aviator Amelia Earhart.


January 14, 1898: Mathematician Charles Lutwidge Dodson, who wrote under the name Lewis Carroll, dies of pneumonia while suffering from influenza.

January 14, 1986: Actor Donna Reed dies of pancreatic cancer. She’s been diagnosed with the disease only three months earlier.


January 15, 2018: Limerick, Ireland’s alternative rock band The Cranberries’s lead singer Dolores O'Riordan (no relation to me) dies at age 46 after becoming intoxicated with Champagne and five small bottles of liquor and then accidentally drowning in a London hotel bathtub.

Dolores O'Riordan during a concert with The Cranberries on May 31, 2010. Poudou99, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

January 19, 1729: Restoration-era playwright William Congreve dies of complications from internal injuries he suffered in a September 1728 carriage accident.


January 23, 1943: Algonquin Round Table wit Alexander Woollcott, who regularly performed on the radio, appeared in a panel discussion about Adolph Hitler on CBS Radio. Listeners noticed he was uncharacteristically quiet during the discussion. 

In fact, Woollcott was having a heart attack. He wrote “I am sick” on a pad to paper to let the other participants know he needed medical attention. He died in the hospital a few hours later.


January 26, 2010: Boa Sr, an approximately 65-year-old woman of the Bo people on her mother’s side and the Jeru people on her father’s side, dies. She was the last fluent native speaker of the Aka-Bo language of Andaman and Nicobar Islands, part of India.


January 28, 1856: Robert and Margaret (called Peggy) Garner and their four children, an enslaved family running for their freedom along the Underground Railroad, shelter at the home of free person of color Joseph Kite on the west side of Cincinnati, Ohio. U.S. Marshalls, required by the cruel Fugitive Slave Act to track down escaping enslaved persons, surround Mr. Kite’s home and demand the surrender of the Garner party. 

To their horror, Peggy has attempted to kill her two sons and two daughters rather than seeing them returned to slavery in Kentucky. She’s succeeded in killing her second-youngest child, her 2-year-old daughter Mary. She’d intended to kill her children and then herself; the other three children were wounded but survived. After a trial, the surviving Garners were forced back into enslavement. Peggy Garner’s story became the basis of Toni Morrison’s novel Beloved.

January 28, 1960: African-American folklorist and novelist Zora Neale Hurston dies from heart disease after suffering a stroke.


January 29, 1933: Poet Sara Teasdale overdoses on sleeping pills, an apparent suicide. She is 48 years old.


January 30, 2006: 55-year-old playwright Wendy Wasserstein dies of lymphoma.


January 31, 1957: A Douglas DC-7B aircraft takes off from Santa Monica Airport on a test flight, accompanied by two U.S. Air Force Northrop F-89 Scorpion fighter jets. The role of the jets is to test the DC-7B’s radar capabilities. At 11:18 a.m. local time, one of the Scorpions collides with the DC-7B. The pilot of the Scorpion is killed in the crash; the radar operator ejects from the jet, and despite severe burns and a broken leg, survives. 

All four crew members aboard the DC-7B are killed when the craft crashes, partially into the grounds of Pacoima Congregational Church and partially into the grounds of Pacoima Junior High School, where a boys’ gym class is taking place outdoors. Three students are killed, and approximately 75 students are injured by falling debris. 

Among the witnesses of the mid-air collision is musician Ritchie Valens, 15 years old at the time. Valens himself will die in a plane crash two years and three days later. 

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

"Noel" by Linda Pastan

 

This is an affiliate link.

Like a single
ornament,

the red cardinal
on a pine

outside
the window

is our only
decoration,

until
the snow.

Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Victorian Christmas Horror

Merry Christmas Eve! We are blessed to be able to listen to a brand-new spooky Victorian Christmas tale read by author Carla Pettigrew this year. Enjoy. 

These are Carla's links from the show notes, should you wish to explore more about William Wilthew Fenn:

Strange Stories of Coincidence and Ghostly Adventure

Table of Contents

Bibliography

About the Author

Carla's Substack

Carla's Reddit

Support There Might Be Cupcakes Podcast on Spreaker

W. W. Fenn Building, Fenn School, Concord MA. John Phelan, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Monday, December 23, 2024

This Movie Could Have Been An Email

On Sunday, December 22nd, I watched Joker: Folie à Deux. I didn't enjoy it. I thought I would after roughly the first third, but it descends quickly into grimness after that.

It's a movie that could have been an email. That email would go approximately like this:


From: Todd Phillips

To: Joker Fanboys

Some of you undersocialized incels* took the completely wrong message from the first Joker film. In response, here are three pumps and an apology. Now fuck off forever, weirdos.

With all due respect, which is none,

Todd


*For a nuanced discussion of the so-called manosphere and its relationship to misogyny and male supremacy, please listen to Jamie Loftus's manosphere series on her Sixteenth Minute (Of Fame) podcast.


Todd Phillips, you directed Lady Gaga in A Star Is Born; you know she deserves better than to play the audience stand-in in your fan disservice film. You owe her another movie in which her character is a  well-developed and fully rounded human being with complex emotions.

Which is not to say that Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga played their roles badly. I feel they did the best the could with the material they were given. Their dance sequences were lovely. The material simply wasn't very interested in their characters as much as it was interested in pathologizing (certain members of) the audience of the first movie.

Given the recent folk heroization of the 27-year-old man accused of murdering the CEO of United Healthcare, this movie was badly timed as well as uninterestingly written. Americans aren't very much in the mood for a lecture about how the televised murder of a wealthy elite is the worst thing that could happen, more punishable than the daily degradation and abuse visited upon the poor and disenfranchised.

Wasn't one of the intended messages embedded in the first film that Arthur, an abused 7-year-old boy failed by the social safety net, unable as an adult to access the medicine (health care) that would help keep him emotionally stable, deserved real help with his problems? Wasn't Joker in part about institutional failure?

A movie about how individual responses to institutional failure are pathetic, useless, wasted efforts performed by doomed sociopaths is a bit bleak for the moment, Todd Phillips. Sure, no one wants to watch a movie where people from Arthur's neighborhood run for the local housing commission seats and work together to provide more low-income housing for Gotham City's poor.

Still, Lady Gaga was there when Vice President Kamala Harris was inaugurated. She needs a less grim, more hopeful project.

"Lady Gaga enters the inauguration platform as she prepares to sing a rendition of 'The Star-Spangled Banner' at the 59th Presidential Inauguration ceremony in Washington, Jan. 20, 2021. President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris took the oath of office on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol. (DOD Photo by Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Carlos M. Vazquez II)." Carlos M. Vazquez II, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons


Arthur Fleck's defense attorney is played by Catherine Keener. She was in Hamlet 2, a goofy comedy about high school musicals. The actor who played her character's romantic partner in Hamlet 2 was Steve Coogan, and Steve Coogan also appeared in Folie à Deux as a smarmy tv journalist. That appears to be a coincidence; I didn't see anything that said Keener and Coogan were both friends with Phillips or that Phillips had anything to do with Hamlet 2.

Keener, of course, also played Ms. Nelle Harper Lee in Capote. Always and forever fascinated by Harper Lee and Truman Capote, I happen to be reading Deliberate Cruelty: Truman Capote, the Millionaire's Wife, and the Murder of the Century by Roseanne Montillo. 

Everything always comes back to Capote, even the other movie I watched on the 22nd, Dear Santa, in which a middle school English teacher referenced To Kill a Mockingbird. And if that happens to pull once again at my Lucifer thread, then so mote it be.

___

A dream: Yesterday (April 25, 2016) I saw a screen capture from the "Book Job" episode of The Simpsons. In that drawing, a shelf of books about Southern vampires has one called Tru Blood. On the cover, Truman Capote is enjoying a blood martini.

Perhaps because of that cartoon doodle, I dreamed about Capote. In my brain's wacky scenario, I was in a 1960s prison with movie-Dick Hickok, as played by Mark Pellegrino.

I assume Perry Smith was also there, but I didn't see him.

Now, in theory, the male and female prisoners were supposed to be kept separate. In actuality, the prison looked a lot less like a prison and more like a coed dorm. My work detail involved cleaning rooms that women had vacated.

Ordinarily I was very scrupulous in my work. I didn't take any belongings left behind by the other women. But I take a small pink plastic bird and stick it in my pocket. I gave it to Dick because he told me he was saving up to buy a pigeon. He wanted to raise birds, like the Birdman of Alcatraz.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

My Top 100 Songs 2024: Top 20


19. "Folsom Prison Blues - Live at Folsom State Prison" Johnny Cash

18. "Gin House Blues" Nina Simone

17. "pocket poetry" Sara Diana

16. "Helter Skelter" The Beatles

15. "Cherub Rock" The Smashing Pumpkins

14. "Joke's On You" Charlotte Lawrence - this is on the soundtrack of the Birds of Prey movie and therefore somewhat Joker-related, and therefore included on my Folie à Deux playlist

13. "Want You Bad" Bite Me Bambi - ska cover of the Offspring song from the year 2000

12. "I Want a Little Sugar In My Bowl" Nina Simone

11. "1979" The Smashing Pumpkins - probably my 2nd favorite SP song, lyrics-wise. It genuinely captures, impressionistically, the feeling set of teen years fading into dawning adulthood

10. "Malibu" Hole

9. "Pink Pony Club" Chappell Roan

8. "Already Gone" Kelly Clarkson - I very specifically associate this song with fictional Vicky in "A Broken Man & the Dawn."

7. "Drunk In Love" The Dan Band - this tongue-in-cheek Beyoncé cover slotted nicely into the Destiel playlist

6. "Poet" Bastille - I know I've been listening to this writing-themed song at least since September, when I shared in this Linda Pastan post

5. "Spider Pig" Hans Zimmer

4. "Cruel Summer" Taylor Swift. I came late to this song, but I was hung over from watching Good Omens season 2 and the line "Devils roll the dice, angels roll their eyes" pulled me in. (The Aziracrow of it all, yes, but also Gabriel and Beelzebub. I thought Gabe and Bub made a nice celestial couple.)

Taylor Swift really is a very talented lyricist. The more lyrics I learned, the more I liked this.

3. "Crazy For You" New Found Glory - Madonna Louise Ciccone was coming up in too many of my playlists, so I banished her and made a playlist exclusively of Madonna covers. This happens to work for Destiel playlist too

2. "Ava Adore" The Smashing Pumpkins - these are my favorite Billy Corgan lyrics; there’s a lovely symmetry to them. I love the guitar parts, and I love Ms. D’Arcy Elizabeth Wretzky’s bass part at the end. 

1. "Joyride" Kesha

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

My Top 100 Songs of 2024: 30-21

30. "What's the Frequency, Kenneth? Live at the Palace 1999" - R.E.M.

29. "20%" Hans Zimmer - instrumental, from the Rush soundtrack, went onto my Daniel Brühl playlist

28. "Come As You Are" Nirvana

27. "II Most Wanted" Beyoncé, Miley Cyrus - this was my favorite song on Cowboy Carter

26. "Red Wine Supernova" Chappell Roan

25. "One Night In Bangkok (US club remix)" - Murray Head

24. "Ralph Wiggum" - Bloodhound Gang

23. "Wicked Game (Live, Acoustic)" Stone Sour - Destiel playlist

22. "Fake ID" Riton, Kah-lo - I first heard this one when Tit Elingtin had Sirius XM satellite radio in his car and we listened to the Chill channel the first time we drove down to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, to visit my cousin's son. That was Memorial Day Weekend this year.

Riton is a dj from the UK; Kah-lo is the Nigerian-born American singer

21. "Runaway Crush" Stella Soleil

https://thatwritererinoriordan.tumblr.com/post/697009137517723648/got-a-new-ls-450-aint-no-keys-in-this-doohickey