Bottle For A Headstone

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Bottle for a Headstone [1]
Series
Online
Original Broadcast Date
December 6, 2004
Cast
Joe Frank
Format
56 minutes
Preceded by: Duplicity
Followed by: Fire

I stand before you an innocent man.

Bottle for a Headstone is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series Online. It was originally broadcast on December 6, 2004.

Synopsis

  • Joe in the courtroom defending himself against her accusations, but he knows absurdly too much about her home and lifestyle. His alibi: treating young children with horrific diseases, but his witness cannot appear because of a restraining order. Flirting with a juror. I object!
  • Later, defending himself against his incensed girlfriend: seducing his lovely female listeners, a tearful, intimate goodbye with his therapist...in a manly way.
  • Dreaming he's a diplomat at a reception. Smelling horrible, covered in urine and feces.
  • Intellectual conversations with a porn star.
  • His psychotherapist recommends necrophilia.
  • "Joe Frank is a character." A paradoxical loop: this is not my voice, I am only a mouthpiece for Joe Frank.
  • Father Malcom seduces Bertram, who has a revelation, then becomes mute and joins a motorcycle gang.
  • "You can best follow the instruction book on virtuoso piano playing by simply depressing the keys in the correct order."
  • Then Bertram becomes a mime and plays at Carnegie Hall. He's visited in the hotel by Veronica, who tells him of a scheme to manufacture artificial time. Then Bertram makes up excuses to try to end the encounter. Then: a knock at the door and it's her client--she's a hooker.
  • The nature of time. "Life is simply the punchline of a joke told backwards."
  • Then they killed Father Malcolm? (I lost track here, 40 to 50 minutes)
  • Ends with a rendition of 'Pull My Daisy', a poem written by Alan Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and Neal Cassady, music by David Amram, for a short film of the same name made in 1959 - this rendition comes from David Amram's 'No More Walls' album; the singer is Lynn Sheffield.

Music

Commentary

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Spblat

Killer loop at the beginning, hilarious opening sequence. Some great quotes in this one. Occasionally he lisps conspicuously. Why?

Footnotes

  1. Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and Neal Cassady wrote this poem, each writing alternate lines and only seeing the line before. Robert Frank and Alfred Leslie made a short film based on it. David Amram composed this musical setting. Lynn Sheffield sings this version.