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Archive for My Life – Page 8

A Grand Old Ship Holds Memories

by Beverley
July 29th, 2011

My friend David Patrick Columbia’s New York Social Diary continually comes up with memory-stirring articles for me. Earlier this week he did an article on a benefit held by the SS United States Conservancy in Philadelphia. The Conservancy was established in 2004 to refurbish and repurpose the ship of that name that was launched in 1952 and retired  in 1996. The benefit was held aboard the SS United States now moored at the Corinthian Yacht Club outside Philadelphia near the Delaware River Pier.

Picture postcard showing the SS United States. Sold on ship for passenger and souvenir use. Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

The gala sounded very grand with a dinner straight off the first class menus from the days when the ship sailed back and forth across the Atlantic. The profits from the event are going towards creating a museum aboard the SS United States. This ship was the largest ocean liner ever made in the United States. Original cost was $78,000,000. It was a very grand ship indeed. As elegant in every way as the Cunard Line ships making the same Trans Atlantic journey. Although through the years my favorite ships were the French Lines Liberte and Ile de France and the Italian Michelangelo, the SS United States has a very warm spot in my memories.

My parents and I sailed on the second crossing of the SS United States in 1953.  We traveled by train from Los Angeles to New York City where our journey began.  Our large wardrobe trunks, packed carefully in Los Angeles, somehow magically were sitting in our staterooms when we boarded the ship in New York.  What a difference from today’s travel, dragging suitcases on wheels behind us with bags hanging around our necks as well.  It was THE way to travel. You unlocked the trunk and the gowns were all hanging neatly on hangers (you dressed for dinner very grandly every night except first night out and last night before landing).  Drawers held everything else in the most orderly fashion.  And one could keep track of  the places they  had visited by the interesting labels hotels in the various countries you visited offered with their hotel stationery.  These were plastered all over the trunks. Two more things only a memory now, luggage labels and piles of hotel stationery for your use!  And of course when you disembarked there was no worry.  Sturdy porters took charge of the trunks and made sure they were waiting in your hotel room by the time you got to London from Southampton. Oh so very civilized.

Beverley Jackson on the SS United States with flowers & trunk

Me surrounded by some of bon voyage flowers sent to me in my stateroom.

There were  going away parties in your stateroom for those visitors who came to see you off. I joined forces with my parents for our party held in their stateroom that had both a bedroom and a sitting room so was much larger than mine. But I had many more flowers in my stateroom which was an important part of sailing. Until I entered the stateroom and saw flowers everywhere I confess I was apprehensive that maybe no one would send me flowers. But all my beaux came through! My parents received mainly bottles of champagne and large baskets of exotic fresh fruits and special chocolates wishing them bon voyage. Among my friends in New York who came to see me off were an interesting couple from Pakistan, Amir and Anar Fancy. Amir, the son of the major tycoon of Pakistan, was and possibly still is a close associate of the Aga Khan. Sadly through the years I have lost contact with them. But I have happy memories of our friendship and their last visit to me in Los Angeles.

Aboard SS United States David Morgan & Amir and Anar Fancy

Three of my friends who came to see me off: The late David Morgan and Amir and Anar Fancy.

Then came the time when the party must end. “All Ashore Who Are Going Ashore” blasted over the loud speaker. Hugs and kisses and good wishes and requests of things to please bring back, and off the visitors went down the gangplank. While we stood at the railing looking down they were now on firm land waving up at us. The orchestra was playing (interesting now while none of these farewell visits and parties aboard ship are possible due to strict security measures, whenever a Crystal Cruise ship sails from a port over the loud speaker they play Louis Armstrong singing What A Wonderful World — I cannot hear that song any more without reliving sailing out of places like Elba, Cartagena, Yokohama, Santorini, Shanghai and best of all Istanbul at midnight under a full moon. Sing on Louis!)

Back on the SS United States about to sail.  Steam was now billowing out of the two red funnels, the band was playing,  everyone was waving and shouting last minute words you really couldn’t hear and there was a veritable net of brightly colored paper serpentine thrown by us at the railing to the waving friends below.  It was rather a bond between us and those we were leaving behind.  Then one heard the grinding of the anchor being hauled up, the churning of machinery deep within the ship in full action and soon we were sailing past the Statue of Liberty with the skyline of New York City fading fast from our view.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life

They Play Polo In Moscow Too

by Beverley
July 24th, 2011

The invitation read:

Moscow Polo Club vs. Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club Exhibition Polo Match 5:00 pm followed by a Beluga Vodka Celebration.

Now who could resist an invitation like that! This was a fun relaxing event played on a field without grandstand so it was casual seating on chairs or grass — and that Beluga Vodka Celebration started before the match so it was an exceedingly relaxed event! They poured a lot of Beluga Vodka before this late afternoon event was over. There was no printed programs but I did spot friends Ken Barry and Wesley Ru playing for Santa Barbara and a very pretty young girl with long blonde ponytail was playing for Moscow along with her proud Russian father. Many young female Santa Barbara spectators showed no local loyalty it must be noted and were rooting for an exceedingly handsome young professional Argentine player on the Moscow team!

Cossack Horsemen

Cossack Horsemen

The Russians played and rode well, but Russians have always been great horsemen. After the fall of Czar Nicholas II in 1917 when the White Russians (Russians loyal to the Czar) fled the country they generally ended in Shanghai, China. It was the one place these stateless refugees without passports were accepted. It was very difficult for most of them to make a living. Men and women who in some cases had previously borne the titles of dukes or counts, duchesses or countesses owning palaces with hundreds of servants and serfs, found themselves working as taxi drivers, bus drivers, body guards for rich Chinese afraid of kidnapping, prostitutes, or doormen, waiters, chefs, entertainers in the many glamorous Russian cabarets found in the French Concession. From these night spots so popular with expat westerners came the sounds of Russian balalaikas playing mournful songs like Otchichornya as the towering White Russian doormen in full costume helped them out of their automobiles. Inside former Cossack officers performed wild saber-flashing whirling dances and groups of Russian gypsy violinists serenaded at their tables. Affluent members of Shanghai’s foreign community feasted on great bowls of finest caviar from Vladivostok and such Russian dishes as sturgeon pouched in liquid of dill pickles served with a sauce of Madeira and wild red cherries. They drank vast quantities of French champagne or chose from 40 kinds of vodka in these fabulous Russian cabarets.

However for many former cavalry officers in the Czar’s armies horses became their livelihood. These men became the riding instructors in Shanghai. If western or wealthy Chinese children were sent off with their amahs for riding lessons, it was from the super strict former Cossack officers they learned.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life

If She Were British She’d Be A Dame – A Very Special Dame!

by Beverley
July 19th, 2011

The last fan letter I wrote was to Orson Welles when I was about 12 years old. Actually it was for him and Joseph Cotten.  I was totally mesmerized by their superb voices on the radio show Mercury Theatre on the Air.  Well I think now enough years have passed that I can write a second fan letter so here goes……….

Marilyn Horne, Barbara Cook & Me

Left Marilyn Horne, center Beverley Jackson, right Barbara Cook

To Marilyn Horne, a woman I respect and admire beyond possible words.  For years before we became friends, like every music lover in the world, I worshiped her for her magnificent  voice.  Now that we are good friends – that means I can call her Jackie instead of Marilyn – I positively worship her for being the kindest, warmest, finest human being imaginable.  To sit in on one of her Master Classes and see how lovingly she treats each student.  How much she cares.  How much she wants to help them reach their full potential.  No screaming and belittling as I’ve seen others do when conducting Master Classes.  She is all praise and encouragement.

This past week I had the pleasure of attending Opera Scenes at the Music Academy of the West with her 2011 young students performing magnificently in scenes from among others Puccini’s La Rondine act 1 and Rossini’s L’italiana in Algeri Act 2 duet. What an exciting afternoon of incredible voices with so much promise for the future this proved to be.

Every summer Marilyn Horne is here in Santa Barbara working night and day with her students at the Music Academy. And the rest of the year she is involved with music festivals and so many other activities all over the world. If she is needed she is there no matter how many hours in airports and planes it might require. Most special in her life is the time she devotes to her beloved daughter and grandchildren. But she is there for her friends as well. As busy as she is there is always a shoulder to cry on, a caring person to listen. Marilyn Horne brings laughter as well as warmth, honesty and true caring to all.

Since it has been close to 70 years between my two fan letters, I guess we can consider this my final one.  Jackie, I couldn’t have ended my fan letter writing career with a finer more worthy human being!

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life

The Lady Liked Pink

by Beverley
July 14th, 2011

During the late 1970’s and 1980’s spring and fall I rented a delightful tiny mews house in London from my friend the late Jan Sterling whom many of you will remember from her Hollywood films. This was a very happy and very active time in my life. I moved in a fascinating very wide circle of theatre people, artists, titled aristocrats, the jet set, as well as my fascinating neighbors in the very short street where my mews was located. Our street was Kinnerton Street located in the Belgravia section of London. On Kinnerton Street we had an iron monger, a top ranked Indian restaurant, four pubs, a fish monger, some important theatrical people and even Lord Louis Mountbatten had a house at the end of the street.

And if there weren’t enough interesting people in our own street we could go around the corner to the Berkeley Hotel and find a whole new group of interesting visitors to London there. One particular day I lunched with my dear friend the late Fleur Cowles at the Berkeley. After a very long gossipy lunch we were out front waiting for Fleur’s driver (I had only to cross the street and turn the corner and I was home) when a pink Rolls Royce drove up. Now I’ve seen pink Rolls in Hong Kong, every color there, but in London a pink Rolls? It stopped right in front of us. The driver in pink livery got out, opened the back door and buried beneath a pink fox throw over her lap sat a lady entirely dressed in pink hat to shoes.

“Barbara Cartland?” I asked Fleur. I mean, who else could it have been. “Yes,” she said smiling. “And you are about to meet her.” And indeed I did. I was so fascinated by the pink scene before me I could barely acknowledge Fleur’s introduction. That was the day I met the legendary lady in pink, the late very famous Barbara Cartland who published 723 books in her lifetime and supposedly left 160 unpublished manuscripts when she died.

By The Way
This blog was started to sell my new book and I keep going off on other topics. Please do check out The Beautiful Lady Was A Palace Eunuch at Amazon.com
Acknowledgement:
Kathleen Fetner, Technical Advisor and Friend
Categories My Life
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