Performer: Difference between revisions
time, music, Additional credits |
New synopsis |
||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
== Synopsis == | == Synopsis == | ||
Lester Nafzger tells of visiting his mother in Columbus, Ohio when she | |||
was 81.<ref>She was born in 1907 or 1908, so this would be | |||
1988/9.</ref> She and Lester argue about the existence of hypnosis, | |||
which she rejects but Lester accepts, gets irreconcilably mad with | |||
him. | |||
3:40: Nafzger tells of his belief that if one sees 12 babies in arms | |||
12 days of good luck will follow. | |||
5:50: Nafzger tells of meeting his little brother Dickie for the first | |||
time when he's 3. It was the first of 26 ‘life reference | |||
points’ he's always remembered. | |||
12:10: Joe, speaking for the first time, asks if there are other | |||
events that didn't make the list. Nafzger mentions an auto | |||
accident and discovering that he had the power to manipulate Dickie. | |||
14:20: Joe points out that #21 was 2 songs Nafzger wrote for his | |||
new-born daughter, but he sang only one. They talk about this. | |||
15:30: They talk about today's weather. | |||
16:10: Nafzger says he likes to go to Barlow's (a bar). He | |||
stands between a tall guy and a short guy one day, which inspires him | |||
to list the heights of people he knows. | |||
19:10: Nafzger performs his theatre piece about looking for Jerry | |||
Rickshaw (a name he made up). No one knows him. They tell him to go | |||
away.<ref>One of the voices could be a woman's; Julie Renick is | |||
the only woman in the cast.</ref> | |||
22:30: Joe and Nafzger talk about what he wears when he performs. | |||
23:30: Nafzger performs, ‘Where's Charlotte?’ which | |||
sounds like a father trying to get his young daughter to come out of | |||
hiding. | |||
24:20: Joe says that he performed this at a club in Boca Raton. | |||
Nafzger says that it was after the club closed. | |||
25:00: They talk about audience response. | |||
25:50: Joe introduces his next piece, ‘My Teeth Are So Much | |||
Uglier Than Yours’, performed in Stockholm with the Miles Davis | |||
Quintet (they're all friends of his). | |||
26:30: Nafzger performs ‘My Teeth Are So Much Uglier Than | |||
Yours’ - a man morbidly self-conscious about his teeth. | |||
28:20: They talk about the nature of his work. | |||
29:30: He performs ‘Missing Barbara’, first performed in | |||
1987 at Soldier Field during halftime of a Bears-Vikings game. He | |||
doesn't know that anyone noticed | |||
34:10: He performs ‘Cartoon’ - 2 rude guys ogle women at a | |||
bar. | |||
36:00: He performs ‘Big band’: he's an emcee at a | |||
small club in upstate New York.<ref>He uses the name Lester Ainsley, which he also uses in the fast-piano segment of other shows and as the guy swallowed by a whale in [[A Landing Strip In The Jungle]]</ref> Someone told him that his mother had | |||
just died (though it wasn't true). The band's vocalist | |||
hadn't shown. He has to make patter in his absence. He mentions | |||
the recent death of his mother repeatedly. | |||
40:00: He tells of Boogie Boys, musicians who join bands to sabotage | |||
their performances. | |||
42:30: He tells of seeing a babe in arms in the town park that | |||
morning. (He lives in Woodstock.) | |||
43:00: His furnace room shares a wall with a movie theatre. They | |||
didn't make money showing art-house or mainstream films so they | |||
switched to porn. He noticed a hole in the wall of the furnace room, | |||
patched it, then noticed many more holes and cracks, spent months | |||
sleeping on a cot in the furnace room the better to patch them. | |||
51:00: He lists the weights of people. | |||
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width:100%; overflow:auto;"> | |||
<div style="font-weight:bold;line-height:1.6;">Legacy Synopsis</div> | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content"> | |||
*[[:Category:Lester Nafzger|Lester Nafzger]], on the phone, talking about his argumentative mother, 81. They have a tremendous dispute over hypnotism. | *[[:Category:Lester Nafzger|Lester Nafzger]], on the phone, talking about his argumentative mother, 81. They have a tremendous dispute over hypnotism. | ||
Line 38: | Line 120: | ||
*Lester tells of his struggle to close the nearly 100 holes in the poorly-built wall connecting his furnace room to a porno theater next door. Then we hear audio from a porn movie. | *Lester tells of his struggle to close the nearly 100 holes in the poorly-built wall connecting his furnace room to a porno theater next door. Then we hear audio from a porn movie. | ||
*Lester recites the weight of everyone he knows. | *Lester recites the weight of everyone he knows. | ||
</div></div> | |||
== Music == | == Music == | ||
{{Watermark (Enya)}} [3:32] | {{Watermark (Enya)}} [3:32] | ||
Line 56: | Line 138: | ||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
== Footnotes == | |||
[[Category:Scripted_Actors]] | [[Category:Scripted_Actors]] |
Revision as of 20:24, 13 January 2024
Series | |
---|---|
Work In Progress | |
Original Broadcast Date | |
1989 | |
Cast | |
Lester Nafzger, Julie Renick, Joe Frank | |
Format | |
Scripted Actors, Telephone, Mock Interview, 55 minutes | |
Preceded by: | Sleep |
Followed by: | The More I Know You |
"A month ago I visited my mother in Columbus Ohio."
Performer is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series Work In Progress. It was originally broadcast in 1989.
Synopsis
Lester Nafzger tells of visiting his mother in Columbus, Ohio when she was 81.[1] She and Lester argue about the existence of hypnosis, which she rejects but Lester accepts, gets irreconcilably mad with him.
3:40: Nafzger tells of his belief that if one sees 12 babies in arms 12 days of good luck will follow.
5:50: Nafzger tells of meeting his little brother Dickie for the first time when he's 3. It was the first of 26 ‘life reference points’ he's always remembered.
12:10: Joe, speaking for the first time, asks if there are other events that didn't make the list. Nafzger mentions an auto accident and discovering that he had the power to manipulate Dickie.
14:20: Joe points out that #21 was 2 songs Nafzger wrote for his new-born daughter, but he sang only one. They talk about this.
15:30: They talk about today's weather.
16:10: Nafzger says he likes to go to Barlow's (a bar). He stands between a tall guy and a short guy one day, which inspires him to list the heights of people he knows.
19:10: Nafzger performs his theatre piece about looking for Jerry Rickshaw (a name he made up). No one knows him. They tell him to go away.[2]
22:30: Joe and Nafzger talk about what he wears when he performs.
23:30: Nafzger performs, ‘Where's Charlotte?’ which sounds like a father trying to get his young daughter to come out of hiding.
24:20: Joe says that he performed this at a club in Boca Raton. Nafzger says that it was after the club closed.
25:00: They talk about audience response.
25:50: Joe introduces his next piece, ‘My Teeth Are So Much Uglier Than Yours’, performed in Stockholm with the Miles Davis Quintet (they're all friends of his).
26:30: Nafzger performs ‘My Teeth Are So Much Uglier Than Yours’ - a man morbidly self-conscious about his teeth.
28:20: They talk about the nature of his work.
29:30: He performs ‘Missing Barbara’, first performed in 1987 at Soldier Field during halftime of a Bears-Vikings game. He doesn't know that anyone noticed
34:10: He performs ‘Cartoon’ - 2 rude guys ogle women at a bar.
36:00: He performs ‘Big band’: he's an emcee at a small club in upstate New York.[3] Someone told him that his mother had just died (though it wasn't true). The band's vocalist hadn't shown. He has to make patter in his absence. He mentions the recent death of his mother repeatedly.
40:00: He tells of Boogie Boys, musicians who join bands to sabotage their performances.
42:30: He tells of seeing a babe in arms in the town park that morning. (He lives in Woodstock.)
43:00: His furnace room shares a wall with a movie theatre. They didn't make money showing art-house or mainstream films so they switched to porn. He noticed a hole in the wall of the furnace room, patched it, then noticed many more holes and cracks, spent months sleeping on a cot in the furnace room the better to patch them.
51:00: He lists the weights of people.
- Lester Nafzger, on the phone, talking about his argumentative mother, 81. They have a tremendous dispute over hypnotism.
- Superstition: counting 12 babies in arms for 12 days of good luck. Then, the 13th day.
- Lester tells us his 26 (and counting) definitive Life Reference Points, or 'linchpins', of his existence. Events that didn't make the list.
- Lester seems to know the height of everyone he knows. He's a numbers guy.
- Performances: looking for Jerry Rickshaw. Joe and Lester discuss the performance. What Jerry Rickshaw means to Lester.
- Where's Charlotte.
- My Teeth Are So Much Uglier Than Yours.
- Discussion of the role of an artist.
- Performances: Missing Barbara. Cartoon. Big Band.
- Lester describes the boogie boys: musical saboteurs.
- A serene mother-and-baby scene.
- Lester tells of his struggle to close the nearly 100 holes in the poorly-built wall connecting his furnace room to a porno theater next door. Then we hear audio from a porn movie.
- Lester recites the weight of everyone he knows.
Music
- "Watermark" - Enya (from Watermark, 1988) | YouTube [3:32]
- "River" - Enya (from Watermark, 1988) | YouTube [8:06]
- "Alternative 3" - Brian Eno (from Music For Films, 1976) | YouTube [19:46]
- "Aragon" - Brian Eno (from Music For Films, 1976) | YouTube [24:14]
- "All Blues" - Miles Davis (from Kind Of Blue, 1959) | YouTube [27:32]
- "The Plateaux Of Mirror" - Harold Budd - Brian Eno (from Ambient 2 (The Plateaux Of Mirror), 1980) | YouTube [30:59]
- "The Dream" - Ry Cooder (from Jazz, 1978) | YouTube [36:15]
- "New York, New York" [38:55]
Additional credits
The original broadcast credits state: "With Lester Nafzger, Julie Renick, and Joe Frank. Recorded by Bob Carlson and Jeff Sykes, and mixed by Jeff Sykes. Special thanks to Ariana Morgenstern."
Miscellanea
- In this program and in A Landing Strip In The Jungle Lester uses the name "Lester Ainslie".
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ She was born in 1907 or 1908, so this would be 1988/9.
- ↑ One of the voices could be a woman's; Julie Renick is the only woman in the cast.
- ↑ He uses the name Lester Ainsley, which he also uses in the fast-piano segment of other shows and as the guy swallowed by a whale in A Landing Strip In The Jungle