Friday, November 8, 2013

A View of the Pitkin House from Whales of August 1987


One view of the Pitkin House in 1987, we were standing at the point. Notes to come as continue the digitization of all the old files and photos. The old chap told us not to throw "any damn cigarette butts" on his yard. More to come.
I had a lousy camera that day but a better one the next day. At the small store by the dock, we sat and chatted with a Census taker who worked the islands in the Casco Bay. My son ran to pet a goose who did not want to be petted and extended its neck and tried to bite him. The island taxi didn't look all that dependable so we walked from the dock to the Pitkin House on the far side of Cliff Island. The island US Post Office startled me in its design. One must walk across a bridge over a rather steep gorge to enter the PO. The island's small church was vacant most of the time. We saw islanders emptying their lobster traps for Portland restaurants. More photos and notes to come.

James Patterson
  

Harry Carey Jr. and James Patterson at San Francisco Silent Film Festival 2006



James Patterson with Harry Carey, Jr. at the San Francisco Silent Film Festival 2006. Notes from the screening and comment with the Financial Times to be added soon.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Actress Lillian Gish, director Spike Lee and writer James Patterson

James Patterson with Spike Lee at MoMA for the Gish Award. October 30, 2103. Lee said the Gish Award of $300,000 would go a "Spike Lee joint."




Photo: Actress Lillian Gish, film director Spike Lee, supporting player James Patterson, MoMA, Oct 30, 2013.

"Would you believe that Lillian Gish starred in two of the most important films that impacted me while I was studying film at NYU? Those great films are D.W. Griffith's Birth of a Nation and Charles Laughton's Night of the Hunter. Isn't it funny sometimes how life works? How ironic life can be? God can be a trickster.

Peace and love to the Gish sisters and the Gish Prize Trust."

-Spike Lee
New York, 2013

Lee's NYU colleagues praised him for his "ferocity in filmmaking" and for taking film in a direction "Hollywood would not go."

In remarks, Lee said the telephone call notifying him he would receive the Gish Prize "was a good phone call to have" as he was fundraising for a new film.

While D. W. Griffith was "a cinematic genius" who "invented stuff we're still using" the film ["The Birth of a Nation'] was a recruitment tool for the Klan." (For about 75 years, according to a colleague at San Francisco State University Film Department.) Lee said his first film was "The Answer" about a black man who signed onto a remake of "The Birth of a Nation" thinking he could effect a better outcome.

A scene from "Do the Right Thing" (finger rings) was "straight from James Agee" in "The Night of the Hunter." (Moving from a scene of brutality to a scene of fragility. As in focusing on Robert Mitchum singing on the tree stump then on Miss Gish singing in her rocking chair while holding her rifle.)

Lee said his parents were instrumental in getting him interested in the arts. He said him mom was always taking him to museums when he wanted to play street games with his pals. "I was raised in the days when a kid did what his parents told him to do" and he went to the museums. He also went on movie dates with his mom.

In his NY Public School, he didn't mention which number, art was required and he played a musical instrument. "Art, music and gym are now off PS curriculum," he said. "Obesity has run amok in the African American community." He added, "The arts keep us humane."

The cash prize was "nearly $300,000" Ms. Elias said to audience applause. She also handed Lee the medal with Dorothy and Lillian's profiles.

Food was superb! Plenty of liquor! Unfortunately, I spent most of my time talking with friends from St. Bart's rather than eating and drinking. I talked with a woman who taught private school in Manhattan. Her husband worked for the Norman Vincent Peale estate in Manhattan. We had a brief conversation about Lillian's contributions to Guideposts in 1949 and 1982.

James Patterson

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Letterhead and Brochures Received.

brett.hldn@gmail.com < brett.hldn@gmail.com> Fri, Jul 5, 2013 at 2:42 PM
To: James Patterson <jamespatterson705@gmail.com>
Hi, Jim.

I'll send you some letterhead, but the brochures won't be ready until the end of August and our history brochure is being edited.

Look forward to seeing you in August.

My best,

Brett

Sent from my Verizon Wireless Phone
[Quoted text hidden]


James Patterson < jamespatterson705@gmail.com> Fri, Jul 5, 2013 at 6:31 PM
To: "brett.hldn@gmail.com" <brett.hldn@gmail.com>
Thank you Dr. Holden. I'll need to use a computer while I'm on campus. I assume the BGSU library has computers. Will I need a pass to enter and use the library computers? If yes, can you get a pass for me? I suggest we create a donor form for the LOC event. It can be a simple page a person will fill out and mail in a donation to the Gish Theater and it can have a phone number people can call to make a phone donation. What do you think? The blog is LDGish.blogspot.com. Postings to come. The Film Forum is screening a new restoration of Intolerance and I've been invited to it August 2. All this stuff will be on the blog.
 
 
James Patterson

San Francisco Examiner 400-word!! Review on Intolerance October 5 at the Castro Theater

Flawless restoration showcases D.W. Griffith’s epic, repentant ‘Intolerance’ 


click to enlargeIntolerance
  • Courtesy photo
  • D.W. Griffith’s 1916 epic “Intolerance” — including famed scenes of Babylon — remains awe-inspiring nearly a century after it was made.
By 1916, director D.W. Griffith had earned a reputation as “superman of the movies” on the success of his 1915 Civil War epic “The Birth of a Nation,” which glorified the Ku Klux Klan and depicted blacks in such brutally offensive images, many cities banned the film.
For his next film, Griffith had a breathtakingly original concept. “Intolerance,” screening once Saturday in a stunning new digital 167-minute restoration at the Castro Theatre, was not a huge financial success for Griffith but it influenced an industry and put an iconic sign on the Hollywood hill.

To see the film today is to marvel at Hollywood’s grandeur before Hollywood existed, and grandeur was still unknown except to Griffith.

“Intolerance,” which early critics said “advanced the art of the motion picture one step further,” boldly told four stories of intolerance from different epochs.

The stories are connected in short scenes as the legendary Lillian Gish, nearly wrapped from head to foot, patiently rocks a symbolic cradle with a Walt Whitman-inspired title card: “Out of the cradle endlessly rocking.”

The film opens with the “modern story” of young love amid labor turmoil and the harshness of poverty in early America.

“Intolerance” is also central to the film’s crucifixion of Christ and St. Bartholomew’s massacre in France.

The most famous images of early cinema come from the Babylon sequences. Griffith spared no expense to construct Babylon, including the famous Babylon wall over a mile in length and 200 feet high. The Babylonian sets were so massive it was almost impossible for early cameras to film them.

The famous Babylonian court scene with hundreds of people moving about and sculptures of winged elephants has provoked gasps and applause from audiences since 1916, and the scene is marvelously restored. Upon seeing the magnificence of Griffith’s Babylon, words such as “sweep” and “awe-inspiring” entered the lexicon of film criticism.

The battle scenes of “Intolerance” are not for the squeamish. During the siege of Babylon, the screen is filled with people being realistically crushed, speared and decapitated, though the headless body stands a bit too long. We see brief glimpses of frontal nudity in a bathing scene.

After the initial run of “Intolerance,” Griffith released the modern story and the Babylonian story as individual films. Reconstruction and previous restorations of “Intolerance” created new interest in the film over the years. This flawless restoration is the most exciting recent development in the film’s long life.

REVIEW
Intolerance

Starring Lillian Gish, Miriam Cooper, Elmer Clifton, Constance Talmadge

Directed by D.W. Griffith

Written by D.W. Griffith, Tod Browning

Not rated

Running time 2 hours, 47 minutes

Note: “Intolerance” screens at noon Saturday at the Castro Theatre, 429 Castro St., S.F.; tickets are $11.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Lillian Gish, James Patterson, Esquire, Bowling Green St. Univ. (Ohio) and Controversy of "A Happy life ..."

2 messages

Ralph Wolfe < wolferh1931@yahoo.com> Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 8:53 AM
Reply-To: Ralph Wolfe <wolferh1931@yahoo.com>
To: "jamespatterson705@gmail.com" <jamespatterson705@gmail.com>
Tuesday, 9/10/13, Hi Jim:  Thanks for letter to the Sentinel-Tribune. In all conversations and in print please use the official name of the theater: The Dorothy and Lillian Gish Film Theater.  James Frasher tells me that Miss Gish never said "A happy life is one spent learning, earning and yearning."  I think he would know better than any one else. Ralph


James Patterson < jamespatterson705@gmail.com> Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 9:36 AM
To: Ralph Wolfe <wolferh1931@yahoo.com>
The quote is on the Internet. If you Google Lillian Gish Quotes it will come up. The last I heard from the paper is they would not use the letter as it was too long. They wanted me to edit it but I never got back to them. I guess they finally decided to do. I'll take a look at it and see what  it says.
 
Cheers,
 
Jim Patterson
 
 
How many votes on this being the most famous quote by Miss Gish? Vote multiple times as I like metrics I can report.
 
James Patterson
Happy Life to All!

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

St. Bart's birthday for Lillian Gish


James Patterson, Writer/Speaker

766 Harrison Street Suite 211

San Francisco, CA 94107


 

“A happy life is one spent learning, earning and yearning.” Lillian Gish (1893-1993)

 

 
October 14, 2013

St. Bart’s
325 Park Avenue at 51st Street
New York, NY 10022

Dear Sirs,

I am writing to contribute $50 in memory of Miss Lillian Gish’s birthday October 14. It was a blessing to know Miss Gish and her life has been a constant source of inspiration to me. Kindly use the contribution in a manner that would honor Miss Gish’s love of learning, performing and worshiping.

The above quote is from Esquire December 1969. As I have written in the past, I frequently meditate on the quote in times of personal challenge.

At present, I am experiencing a difficult personal and professional crisis and I kindly ask for your prayers as I attempt to heal from great betrayal by persons I once respected.

Thank you for your prayers and for being my favorite church when I am in New York.

Prayerfully,


James Patterson