Showing posts with label Merrill Black. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Merrill Black. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Crackup At Radio City

Rory Pryor, 21 years old, 1977
For a bunch of reasons my brother Rory was committed to the NYU Psychiatric hospital several times. When I visited Rory at NYU I entered the building heart broke.  There we were, two kids in a two kid family and I, the older brother, could do nothing to help him. Through the lobby, on the elevator, in the halls, on my way to his stark room or the visitors’ area I’d look around in awe. Thinking about how amazing it is if your brain worked nearly right and wondering how all these people lost their minds.  After going through a bunch of things I planned to say to make Rory laugh, after we hugged he turned the tables. He told jokes, he said it was OK and pointed out that he was the sanest one in the place (not true but it always made me feel better). As sick as he was, Rory tried to ease my pain. That made me love him very much.

Today, my friend, Merrill Black was published in The New York Times. Her story “Crackup at Radio City,” is terrific.  Her truthful bittersweet account of her stay in the same facility touched me with its humor and heart.  Thank you, Merrill, for bringing a strong memory of Rory back to me. 

Read Merrill’s two New York Times stories here.


The Wise Plumbers


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Our next City Stories: Stoops to Nuts storytelling show at Cornelia Street CafĂ© is January 10th @ 6pm. Please come down, I promise a good time.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Last Night's Show & My Aversion to Flash Cameras



Merrill Black, Saara Dutton & Blinky Pryor ~ City writers
Frank Flaherty, Editor, New York Times City Section & Blinky

Last night, 60 people came out in the rain to say goodbye to a true friend of New York City's neighborhood spirit. Merrill Black (it was her birthday!), Saara Dutton & myself read our City stories to our friends and members of the New York Times City Section staff. We are grateful they came down to root us on, and thankful to one of NYC's Finest, Andy, who played the bagpipes with grace and style.
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Thanks to the amazing generosity and hospitality of Joe Fischetti, owner of "17" the tavern restaurant at 17 Murray Street, everything about the evening was a success.
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Matt Haber, thank you coming down and acknowledging the City deserved a fine send off.
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Matt's article below, appears in this morning's New York Observer
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By Matt Haber
May 5, 2009 6:31 a.m.

On the rainy evening of the fourth of May, a small group of people showed up at 17, a bar in Tribeca decorated with Frank Sinatra's mugshot and one of those talking Rodney Dangerfield statues one might find in an Archie McPhee catalog, to celebrate the life and recent death of The New York Times' 'City' section

In keeping with the thing that brought them all there, the event, planned by 'City' essayists Saara Dutton and Tommy Pryor, was a small and slightly eccentric affair.

Mr. Pryor, 55, grew up in the city and only started writing five or six years ago. In February 2008, he contributed an essay about putting his mother in a headlock as a kid and another one about infiltrating the Yankees bullpen with his father.

Ms. Dutton said she was inspired to move to New York in equal parts by the city she saw depicted on Sesame Street and in SPY Magazine as a kid growing up in Honolulu and Seattle. She moved to New York three weeks after 9/11 and went on to write a piece for 'City' about Duane Reade's shopping bags headlined Sacks and the City and a few other pieces over the years.
"Truly, as a person who always wanted to move here, it's like our section," Ms. Dutton enthused.
Of the section's ending, she said, "I think it's incredibly sad."

Mr. Pryor explained that the event was originally planned as a wake—a loving, boozy, Irish-style wake—but that "out of respect" for the section's editors, it was reframed as a toast.

(While this party wasn't organized by the paper of record, Connie Rosenblum, the editor of 'City' since 1997, told The Observer by telephone earlier in the day that she wished she could be there. "I'm sure it's gonna be wonderful," she said.)

Part of the wonderfulness involved the hiring of a bagpipe player, who kicked things off with his rendition of "Amazing Grace" and made a pretty picture in a modified NYPD uniform including kilt and spats; the small group of attendees hushed up and the rest of the room, full of after-work drinkers, didn't seem to mind the pipes or the half- dozen digital cameras whirring away.
Before he started, The Observer asked the bagpiper—who wouldn't give his name—what he thought of the event he'd been hired to perform at. "A buddy of mine was supposed to do this but he called me at noon and asked me to do this for him," he said.

Did he know what the event was all about? "No, not really," he said with the sort of thick outer borough accent Tom Wolfe once examined in his New York essay Honks and Wonks.
When a reporter explained to him that it was a tribute to a section of The New York Times that had been discontinued, the piper admitted he didn't really read the paper much. "I'm an online kinda guy," he said.

Friday, April 24, 2009

A Hot Tip From Hildy Johnson & Walter Burns

“Walter, get down to “17” pronto. They’re saying sayonara to the City Section.”
“Hildy, this isn't just a story you're covering - it's a revolution. This is the greatest yarn in journalism since Livingstone discovered Stanley.”

"It's the other way around. "
"Oh, well, don't get technical at a time like this."


Come toast the best editorial team in New York with Saara Dutton (Mama D’s Arts Bordello), Merrill Black (contributing City writer), and Thomas Pryor (Yorkville Stoops to Nuts). They’re celebrating the New York Times City Section, reading neighborhood stories the City editors help craft. It's a free show with free appetizers.

A terrific duo, Barry Stabile & JJ Sadler, will call on the muse and play old school R &B tunes after the readings.

Hildy Johnson & Walter Burns will be there ~ right after they get Earl Williams out of the roll top desk.


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A Toast to the New York Times City Section

Monday, May 4th @ 7pm

"17"

@ 17 Murray Street
(one block west of City Hall)

City Artists

Saara Dutton, Merrill Black, Thomas Pryor
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Friday, April 10, 2009

Melodious Mothers




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From what I heard, The PS 77 Mother's Club was an Allied Force in Yorkville. They had regular events at the Yorkville Casino, so my grandmother, Ann Pryor Rode, spent a lot of time putting events together for the Cherokee Club and PS 77.
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Nan sang around the house but never belted out a tune in the apartment like she's doing above. She sang without embarrassment and that's good, because she sounded like Leo Gorcey's sister having a baby. But it never seemed to bother her when people made faces while she sang. It looked like everyone was drinking warm grapefruit juice.
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When Nan, got together with her friends to play Pinochle, I'd listen from the front room and make believe I was on the East River pier with the Dead End Kids. The whole gang, Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Bobby Jordan, Gabriel Dell and Billy Halop. It was easy to imagine, the card players sounded just like them.
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And you know what? I sound like Leo Gorcey too, and I sing without embarrassment. Yorkville does that to you.
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A Toast to the New York Times City Section show
Monday, May 4th @ 17 Murray Street @7pm

Come toast the best editorial team in New York with Sloane Crosley (I Was Told There'd Be Cake), Saara Dutton (Mama D’s Arts Bordello), Merrill Black (contributing City writer) and Tommy Pryor.We’re celebrating the New York Times City Section, reading our neighborhood stories the City editors help craft. It's a free show with free appetizers. Barry Stabile and JJ Stadler will play old school R&B tunes after the reading.
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Toast to the City @ 17 Murray Street, Monday, May 4th @7pm.
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Saturday, April 4, 2009

I Never Had a Dog As a Kid

Robert Benchley - "A dog teaches a boy fidelity, perseverance, and to turn around three times before lying down."
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I never had a dog as a kid.
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My brother, Rory, the human pretzel, could lie on his belly on the 517 East 83rd Street living room floor for five hours with one leg under him and another swung over his back. I'd look at him and my neck started to hurt. I couldn't touch my toes.
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We'd play this game when we were by ourselves. I'd put him in a headlock and keep him there while we walked around Yorkville, purposely covering his eyes, then make him guess where we were. Even if he guessed right, I'd lie and keep going. Rory never blinked, nor asked me to let him up.
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I never needed a dog.
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NY Times City Section Show:

Monday, May 4th @ 17 Murray Street @7pm

Saara Dutton, Sloane Crosley, Merrill Black & I are celebrating the New York Times City Section. We'll read our tales that appeared in the City. Stories, the City editors help craft. It's a free show with free appetizers. Please come to 17 Murray Street to toast the best editorial team in New York @ May 4th @ 7pm.
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Monday, January 5, 2009

A Beautiful Story

Merrill Black wrote a terrific piece in the Sunday Times City Section two weeks ago. It will take you five minutes to read, but it's spirit will touch you all day. Best investment return in town.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/21/nyregion/thecity/21plum.html?_r=1&scp=3&sq=wise%20plumbers&st=cse


This week, the City Section posted my letter to the editor on this well written tale.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/04/nyregion/thecity/04lett.html?scp=1&sq=wise%20plumbers&st=cse