Monday, February 8, 2010

FTP Move

Vaudeville Rose's Blog is published by Blogger via FTP. I chose that method because I already had the domain and I thought it would be easier than trying to configure things with Blogger's Custom Domains.

Well, Blogger is going to stop supporting FTP near the end of next month. They're trying to be supportive about the move with the creation of a tool, but I'm still unable to figure out most of the fine points.

There's also the possibility that there could be more changes in the future to Blogger's Custom Domains that would make bridging the blog between two servers even more difficult.

Several people that I know have joined Custom Domains and it seems like Blogger is pushing for that and the XML Layout Template. In other words, I think they're trying to consolidate everything in one place and center on the newer XML markup language rather than straight HTML. That's Show Business!

It's also been hard to keep up with two blogs. So, I have my doubts that trying to move both Vaudeville Rose and Starlight Blog is worth the time and continued hosting.

I am going to move Vaudeville Rose back to Blogspot, back to its original home at http://www.vaudevillerose.blogspot.com/

I've already done a dry run and I've found that the biggest loss is the "Followers" gadget.

The pictures are still visible in most cases, but they're being called up from the VaudevilleRose.com domain, which I will probably close at some point.

In order to make this Vaudeville Rose blogspot blog viable, I'll move the pictures over to Blogger by hand. And I will need to start over with an XML Layout because I've caught the drift that the Classic Template will be eliminated at some point. If I have the time, I'll try picking it up again.

As for Starlight Blog, I am probably going to move it back to blogspot in some form and then to a new custom domain. I'll blog about that when I know more.

Thanks to Everyone!

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Sunday, January 17, 2010

Finian's Rainbow Closes on Broadway

"Finian's Rainbow" is a musical that originally came to Broadway in 1947, with music by Burton Lane, Lyrics by Yip Harburg, and the book by Yip Harburg and Fred Saidy. The original New York Times review can be found here.

It was revived on Broadway this past October and received good reviews like this one here from the New York Times. Still, the economic times are tough and the show closed this afternoon.

In it's day the political and racial satire of the show were enough to get it banned by South Africa during Apartheid. But today it's a little quaint.

My love affair with the show began long ago when I saw the movie on a school outing in 1968. You can find it on DVD at Amazon here if you have an interest in it. It starred Fred Astaire, Petula Clark, and Tommy Steele as the leprechaun.

A leprechaun??? A racial and political satire with a leprechaun?

Yes. What better way to serve cutting edge satire than with a bit of magic? It was the magic that got my attention in 1968 because I was still a child. But I grew to admire the racial lesson as well.

Finian's Rainbow is about an enterprising Irishman who comes to the United States with his daughter in tow. Before leaving Ireland he'd stolen a magical crock of gold from a leprechaun. And he intends to bury it near Fort Knox because he believes it will magically grow into an immense fortune.

Without this crock, the leprechaun is quickly becoming mortal, which he finds greatly upsetting and romantically confusing. He follows Finian to the U.S. disguised as a Christmas tree and pleads with him to return it. The leprechaun says in the hands of a mortal the crock is only good for three wishes and after that it will turn to worthless dross. And if that happens, he will never be able to return to fairyland.

Finian isn't moved by such things, however. He's managed to settle himself and his daughter in the mythical town of Rainbow Valley, in the mythical state of Missitucky near Fort Knox. And to him everything is going just as he planned. Some surveyors have leaked the word that there might be gold on Finian's property, so everyone in the town has been given loads of credit to buy all the things they've ever dreamt of. And Finian's daughter has found her true love in the young town hero of Woody Mahoney. Of course, all is not well in this mythical valley. There is also a racist senator who is trying to steal the land and its possible gold from the white and black sharecroppers who share it.

Not surprisingly, a couple of stray wishes are made over the magic crock, including one that turns the racist senator black. And that causes a great deal of trouble as Finian's daughter is accused of witch craft and is ordered to change the senator back or she will suffer the ancient punishment of burning. In the old days, the senator was played by the same white man in black face after his miraculous change. But we've graduated from that to having two men play the role. Which really works much better.

Since this is an old style musical, this all gets worked out. The main lovers Woody Mahoney and Sharon McLonergan (played in this revival by Cheyenne Jackson and Kate Baldwin) are married. The leprechaun Og (played by Christopher Fitzgerald) gives up fairyland for love and pairs off with Woody's dancing sister Susan (played by Alina Faye). The senator is changed back into a white man, but is a better person. And as for Finian McLonergan himself (played by Jim Norton), he goes off at the end to search for the mythical Glocca Morra, where he's still hoping to find the end of his rainbow.


My husband and I saw the current revival in October just before it opened. It attracted an older crowd, many of whom said afterward that they really missed old tuneful musicals like these.

As for me, I loved the magic of the piece as always and the music. But the property is a bit dated, even with the addition of having the senator played by both a white man (David Schramm) and a black man (Chuck Cooper). And having the role of a black woman named Dottie added (played by Terri White).

Ms. White's character served as a sort of secondary leader of the town, an older, wiser head to Woody's youthful foolish one. She's a Broadway veteran and it was clear that she was very well liked by the audience. She got to sing the meatier parts of "Necessity" and had several charming bits. It was always weird to me that a show with such a racial message had no black leads in it. But I guess that was because of the times. In 1947 the United States still had its own form of apartheid.

Still, I was surprised and pleased that the show did well in this recent revival. And I'm glad that I got to see it.

May we all meet in the land of magic and racial equality called Glocca Morra!

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"Behold the Dawn" by K.M. Weiland - A Guest Post

"Behold the Dawn" is an action packed story, touched with romance, religion, and forgiveness that takes place during the Third Crusade. It's written by K.M.Weiland of Wordplay (where you can find a rundown of her full book tour). She also has a website http://www.kmweiland.com/ where you can find some of her short stories and learn more about her previous book, "A Man Called Outlaw." And she has an archive of many of her works, especially her pieces on writing, at Scribd.

"Behold the Dawn" just came out in the beginning of last month and can be found on Amazon. For those of you who prefer ebooks, K.M. tells me there is a Kindle edition in the works as well. Which is great news for Kindle lovers like me. I've only just started reading "Behold the Dawn," and already I'm skipping ahead because I can't wait to see what happens.

But this is K.M.'s show. She's here with us today to tell us about her book and tempt us with an excerpt.

Take it away, K.M.!

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"Behold the Dawn" is the story of Marcus Annan, a tourneyer famed for his prowess on the battlefield, he thought he could keep the secrets of his past buried forever. But when a mysterious crippled monk demands Annan help him find justice for the transgressions of sixteen years ago, Annan is forced to leave the tourneys and join the Third Crusade.

Wounded in battle and hunted by enemies on every side, he rescues an English noblewoman from an infidel prison camp and flees to Constantinople. But, try as he might, he cannot elude the past. Amidst the pain and grief of a war he doesn’t even believe in, he is forced at last to face long-hidden secrets and sins and to bare his soul to the mercy of a God he thought had abandoned him years ago.

Annan was inspired, largely, by the real-life knight William Marshall, who was considered the “greatest knight who ever lived.” I read a children’s book about this son of a lord, who, because of his lack of inheritance as a second-born child, sought his fortune in the tourneys. I was instantly fascinated by these huge mock battles, which were repeatedly banned by the popes and yet remained wildly popular, and I began wondering how the lives of the competitors would have been shaped by their brutal and dangerous exploits. In Marcus Annan, I got to explore at least one answer to that question.


Excerpt:

All day she had stood near the boundary of the prisoner camp, watching the dust of the distant battle beneath Acre’s walls, listening to the muted cries of the combatants.

But now it was growing too dark to see, and as Lady Mairead drifted back toward the tent that had been set apart for her husband, William of Keaton, she watched the Mohammedans usher their latest prisoners through the cordon of guards.

They had brought back only a few today. In the long, sultry weeks since the capture of Lord William’s ship by the infidel blockade, Mairead had watched countless prisoners dragged or shoved into the camp. Thousands of people were confined here already: men, women, and children—mostly Frankish Syrians, the European natives of Jerusalem. By the count of one of Lord William’s servants, Saladin had 2,500 prisoners in this camp alone.

Holding the folds of her shawl to her breast with one hand, she crossed the dust of the camp to where the Moslems had dumped their score of prisoners in the midst of the growing crowd.

A Frank stepped aside and allowed her to stand at his shoulder. “If that is the extent of their prisoners, God be praised. The Christians will take Acre.”

“It is already taken,” said another. “You can hear that the battle is over.”

She scanned the bloodied faces. Most were French, most were wounded. The Turks threw the last of them into the group, then shouldered their way back through the crowd, shouting to one another in their own tongue. Immediately, the prisoners began their call for water.

Mairead sighed. It was always thus.

Pulling her linen shawl free, she went forward to bind the arm of a man—an archer by his livery—who held his hand to a shoulder wound. His arm was red down to his fingertips, and he swayed where he stood. His face had the blanched look of one who was slowly bleeding to death.

He stared ahead, unseeing, as she knotted the shawl over the wound. “God be with you.” She placed a hand on his grimy cheek, then moved aside to allow a Knight Hospitaler to take over.

She stood still, one hand trying to hold her long dark hair from her face, watching as the prisoners ministered to the wounded among the new captives. So many wounded, so many dying. The priests decreed that a Crusader’s death was only the unhindered passage of a redeemed soul into blessed Paradise and should be cause for rejoicing. But all she could see were the falling tears of faraway loved ones and the contorting pains of those who had not yet made it quite across Death’s threshold.

She did not often come to this part of the camp. Lord William, grievously wounded during their capture, preferred her to remain with him, sequestered from the heat and the throngs of strangers. Whenever the infidels brought forth their prisoners, she always watched from afar as other women tended their wounds.

But she had ached to be here, to staunch the endless flow of blood, to hold in her lap the head of a soldier whose wounds she might heal, unlike those of Lord William, who the monks whispered would never recover.

She drew in a deep breath, biting her lip to forestall the tears, and turned away. She had come to the Holy Land to escape her fears. But she should have known better. They had followed her here. They would always follow her.

She started forward, but trudged only a few paces before the sight of another knight arrested her. He lay on his back in the trampled sand, while two brethren of the Hospital struggled to remove his blood-crusted armor.

He was a giant of a man, easily head and shoulders above most in the camp, and the breadth and depth of his chest and arms bespoke a terrible strength. He had a strong, square chin, barely cleft, and a set to his mouth, even in sleep, that revealed an iron will. A white scar rived his right cheekbone and disappeared into the fair hair above his ear.

The blood-blackened hole in the mail above his left breast showed what it had taken to bring him down. The bodkin that had inflicted the wound was gone, pulled from his flesh by his Moslem captor or perhaps by his own hand. His face was pale, his breathing shallow, his body still.

She drew nearer and stopped at his feet. “He lives?”

The Knights Hospitalers turned to look at her. The one on the left inclined his head. “He lives, Lady.” His accent was unfamiliar, possibly from the southern regions of France.

The other, undoubtedly English, laid a knife to the knight’s tunic and slit it up the middle. “For now, he lives. He’s lost much blood.”

“That is why he sleeps?”

“Aye.”

“He is English?”

“I know not. His surcoat bears no symbol, not even a cross.”

She watched their ministrations in silence, feeling once more the bitter cold of anguish rise in the pit of her stomach. They tended so many! Why could they not save Lord William?

As the moon rose full and bright against the murky sky, she knelt and reached out her arms to the Hospitalers. “Please—let me help.”

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Synopsis: Marcus Annan, a tourneyer famed for his prowess on the battlefield, thought he could keep the secrets of his past buried forever. But when a mysterious crippled monk demands Annan help him find justice for the transgressions of sixteen years ago, Annan is forced to leave the tourneys and join the Third Crusade.

Wounded in battle and hunted by enemies on every side, he rescues an English noblewoman from an infidel prison camp and flees to Constantinople. But, try as he might, he cannot elude the past. Amidst the pain and grief of a war he doesn’t even believe in, he is forced at last to face long-hidden secrets and sins and to bare his soul to the mercy of a God he thought he had abandoned years ago.

The sins of a bishop.
The vengeance of a monk.
The secrets of a knight.

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About the Author: K.M. Weiland (http://www.kmweiland.com/) writes historical and speculative fiction from her home in the sandhills of western Nebraska. She is the author of "A Man Called Outlaw" and the recently released "Behold the Dawn." She blogs at Wordplay: Helping Writers Become Authors (where you can find a run down of her full book tour) and AuthorCulture.


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PLEASE NOTE that K.M. Weiland owns all copyrights to her work and the images shown here.

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Friday, October 30, 2009

The Splash Award


This lovely "Splash Award" award was given to me by Stephanie Faris of Steph in the City. She's an aspiring writer who's popular blog covers lots of topics. This month, of course, she's centering on Halloween. Give yourself a treat and head on over there. She's done a series of postings on ghost tales and Halloween costumes that are perfect for the season.

The Splash Award is given to alluring, amusing, bewitching, impressive, inspiring blogs. So I'm extremely honored to receive it. Lucky for me, I didn't have much trouble coming up with the 9 required blogs of the same description to pass it on to. The trouble for me is keeping it down to 9.


Brizmus of Brizmus Blogs Books not only reviews books of all kinds, she also recently introduced me to the Read-a-thon. LOL I never knew such a thing existed. I don't know if I'd have the energy to do it, but it sure sounds like fun.

C at Thoughts by Charity Joy Bell is poet, writer, and I think a philospher. Her work is full of hope urgings to pick yourself up again. She is a mighty spirit who will not be held back.

Danni of Romantic Harbor describes herself as a "bookworm and a romantic at heart." She has book reviews and author interviews on her website. I've found more than one good book suggestion on her site, especially in the paranormal genre.

Diana Evans Illustration and Design  is not only an illustrator and designer. As of this week she is also officially a published writer. Her book "The Sunflowers" came out this week. It's the first time she's done both the writing and the illustrations. Not too many people can do that.

Diane at My Gemstone Box is a jewelry designer who specializes in wire wrapping. The pieces presently in her Etsy shop are some of the loveliest I've ever seen. She is also a mover and shaker within the eSmarts Etsy Team. And she's always one of the first to figure out the latest blog gadgets.

The Fly in the Web of French Leave lives in France and has a very clear-eyed view of the world. Whenever I visit her blog I learn something new. Sometimes it's about present day life in France or the EU. Sometimes it's about history. But it's always interesting.

Jann of Phonix Rising Glass Art doesn't just work with glass. Besides designing jewelry, she does crocheting, and paints. She also spotlights other artists and supports them as well in her blog.

Maria of Personalized Sketches and Sentiments is an artist who writes about her work and her family, especially her children. But she has a special talent for befriending people, be they other bloggers or customers.

The Salitype Society is a group of ladies who gathered together for the love of blogging. They donate what they can to children oriented charities. And they blog about just about everything.

Thanks to all of your for having alluring, amusing, bewitching, impressive, and inspiring blogs! If you don't have time to do the whole award thingy, don't worry about it. Just consider it applause and take a bow!

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NEXT WEEK ON STARLIGHT BLOG and VAUDEVILLE ROSE:

K.M. Weilland  of Wordplay will be dropping by on Tuesday, November 3rd to give us some info on her new book "Behold the Dawn." I'll be cross-posting that to both of my blogs.

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LATER IN THE WEEK ON STARLIGHT BLOG:

Kristi from "Mom's Own Words" has given me "The Heartfelt Blog Award." This is a great honor because I try very hard to work from the heart. Since I gave "The Icing on the Cake Award" to just about everyone I know this week on Starlight Blog (LOL), I'm going to try and nominate 9 new blogs that I haven't given any awards to before. That will happen probably at the end of the week.

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Saturday, October 24, 2009

Jami Lola Denman, Jewelry Designer and Writer


The hardest part about writing this Spotlight on Jami Lola Denman was choosing which photos of her work to feature. She does such incredible jewelry design. I wanted to include everything! I especially admire her wire work.

Jami Lola has an Etsy shop under the name JamiLola, featuring some of the pieces you see to your left. She specializes in bold styles that will appeal to any diva looking to get noticed.


My favorite pieces of hers are like the one at the left. Where she takes a face and wraps it in wire and beads till it becomes a character. These faces are made to wear on the end of a chain or a ribbon. And they're guaranteed to make you the center of attention.

I've just begun wire wrapping, but I know I will never be able to do something like this. It takes a special kind of talent to see this in your mind and bring it into reality.

Jami Lola has a jewelry related blog where you can keep up with all her latest designs and see her past ones as well. It's also called Jami Lola. Besides selling on Etsy, she does the craft sale circuit. So look her up and see if you can meet her at a show and view her work in person.


Jami Lola doesn't only make jewelry, however. She's also a writer. She writes stories and poetry and you can get a sampling of her work at her blog, Wicked, Wild, Words - writings from the wild side. She's a fan of Gothic Novel Writing Month.

Her work is smooth and poetic. There's drama in there too, but her words still have a poetic feel to them. Every time I read read work, I can almost hear it being spoken. I wonder if she might do well with podcasting because her words roll so easily and gently off the tongue like spoken music. As a theatrical, I can't help but wonder if they shouldn't appear in a one woman show somewhere. They really should be performed.


JamiLola has a piece from her latest "Goth No" in progress on her writing blog. And I think it's really beautiful. I hope she's going to share the full thing with us at some point.

Anyone interesting in seeing even more of her writing should head on over to Scribd.com. She has 66 documents up there and writes under the name, Talula Rouge. (Now why can't I come up with a pen name like that! LOL) Plus, she's also got just about the best avatar on the face of the planet. I don't know if she designed that too, but I wouldn't be surprised if she did.


She keeps her work there on the shorter side. And she obviously has a lot of readers because at the moment she has over 8,000 reads in total for all of her works. I have no doubt that people go from one to another of her pieces, trying to read them all.

One of "Talula Rouge's" most popular pieces is an excerpt from one of her NANO novels. Its' called "Fat Girls Don't Cry, We Bounce."



But I'll tell you the truth. I'd have every bit as much trouble trying to pick out a favorite among her written work as I did trying to choose pieces of her jewelry to show here. There are just too many good pieces. And speaking as a one time would-be actress. I'd love to have words like hers to speak onstage.

Call her Jami Lola, or call her Talula Rouge, she's one gifted lady!

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PLEASE NOTE that Jami Lola Denman owns all copyrights to her beautiful jewelry designs and to her written works as well, including those written under the pen name Talula Rouge.

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NEXT WEEK:

Stephanie Faris of Steph in the City has given Vaudeville Rose "The Splash Award! This award is given to blogs that are alluring, amusing, bewitching, impressive, and inspiring, just like the mermaid pictured on the Award. Thank you so much, Stephanie, for this great honor! Vaudeville Rose will wear it with pride!

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NEXT WEEK AT STARLIGHT BLOG:

Maria at Personalized Sketches & Sentiments has given Starlight Blog 2 Awards. The first is "The Beautiful Blog Award" to be given to 15 newly discovered blogs. And the second is a brand new award invented by Kathie at My Net Finds. It's called "The Icing on the Cake Award" and both Maria and Katie gave these "Blog Hugs" to their entire list of followers.

I always try and copy the style of the person who gives the award. So, I'm going to try and do what Maria did, by doing a list of names with links, as far as Blogger allows. Some people use Google Accounts to comment and keep track of blogs, without actually having a blog. And some folks prefer to keep their blogs private. And some folks have lists of blogs. So, I'll try and pick the dominate blog if there's a list. And I'll put in links if I have them. If not, I'll just try and list the name that Blogger gives me.  I'll also try and include those who comment and follow, but aren't officially listed as "Followers" by Google Friend Connect. They're part of "The Icing on the Cake" too.

I'll be listing "The Beautiful Blog Award" winners in "list and link" form too like Maria did.

As with all the awards I hand out, if the winners don't have time to do the whole blog award thing (especially with the holidays coming) just take it as a "Blog Hug" in appreciation for all that you do.

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