New Orleans New Year’s

Can’t leave New Orleans without mentioning a little more about our trip. It’s just plain hard to leave New Orleans at all, and I’ve thought that every time I’ve visited. This was a great one week family vacation and I’d recommend a trip there to anybody who asks. We were supposed to fly out just after Christmas, but the Snowstorm that Stopped New York stopped us too. Our flights were delayed for days. We were at home, snowbound, with no jobs to do, and all I could think about was how much I wanted to be in New Orleans. I used to visit friends there frequently but hadn’t been back since Jazz Fest 1995, cue “Do You Know What it Means to Miss New Orleans?”

I spent these null days re-watching Treme and taking a virtual visit to NO. The extra time allowed a level of research I’d never done for a vacation before. At http://www.offbeat.com/ —one of the local music magazines — I found lists of all the bands in the many clubs the week we’d be there. I had some favorite places to eat that I wanted to return to — like Franky & Johnny’s, for crawfish as good as I remembered — but knew that I needed some up to date insight, and looked through a bunch of too touristy sites until I stumbled upon http://chowhound.chow.com/boards

I loved the food, but the music is what has stayed with me the most. We landed the morning of New Year’s Eve and headed out to Jackson Square for the free concert that night. I have never been tempted to be in Times Square for New Year’s Eve, but this was something else. We stood in front of the stage and danced in the street. Terrence Simeon and his zydeco band was the highlight for me, including catching some of the beads he kept flinging out to the crowd. N.O. Mayor Moon Landry showed up and played washboard on stage with one of the acts.

New Year’s Day we headed to the Rock ‘n Bowl to see Kermit Ruffins and his Barbecue Swingers. Being in New Orleans on a family vacation, Rock ‘n Bowl is the perfect place, ’cause there’s no age limit and you can really bowl if you want, and Kermit (and his smile) was the perfect way to start a new year. Later I bought a copy of his latest cd Happy Talk from a vendor in the French Market and I have been wearing the grooves out of it since. If you come see my storytelling show the title track kicks off the pre-show music, as a talisman for me as much as for the audience. Kermit, doing the jazz standard I like to request (whenever anybody asks):

I just finished reading Patti Smith’s poetic and uplifting memoir, “Just Kids”, and twice in the book she recalls her mother’s traditional wisdom regarding New Year’s, that the way in which you start the new year is the way you will spend it. If so, I’ll take it.

Bronx Zoo Facepainting – Opening Day – Rebirth

What a beautiful day it was to be at the zoo. Finally it feels like Spring is here, with warm enough weather to open our Transformation Facepainting concession, starting our 18th season of turning people into animals at the Bronx Zoo. After this tough winter it was great to be back at the zoo. Lorraine and I got there before it was open to the public in order to load in the equipment, and I’ve always enjoyed watching the zoo wake up and get ready for the crowds.

The artist we had scheduled for the opening day was Jennifer, and as soon as she was ready she had our first customer of the season, a cute little girl who she painted up as a penguin, an animal the zoo is featuring this year in it’s annual Run For the Wild fundraiser. As we were leaving, I was happy to see that her next customer was a man in his twenties, who was there  with just his girlfriend, it seemed, and no kids at all — it’s great when the adults get painted. Jennifer was turning him into a tribal-style grizzly bear.

http://www.bronxzoo.com/

Working at the zoo is really just an excuse to head over to Arthur Avenue and load up on Italian food supplies. Adding to the pleasure of the morning was discovering that De Lillo, my by-far favorite Pastry Shop, had just opened in a beautiful new, bigger location, with real room for tables. Now it’s possible to get in and out with out having to worry that you’re going to knock somebody off their chair with the packages in your hands as you squeeze by their table. So we sat before going shopping. Lorraine had the berry pie and I had the perfect pastry, a sfogliatella. Heaven.

http://delillopastryshop.com/

We got home in time for me to spend the rest of today gardening, which is the most essential way in which I experience this season of renewal. The stars lined up for me yesterday as well, for as I was out there in the backyard, turning over the earth as I expanded my vegetable garden, feeling the life coming back into the land,  the Rebirth Brass Band was playing live on the radio, on WNYC’s Soundcheck.

We were down in New Orleans around New Year’s Day, and I went to see the Rebirth Brass Band on their home turf for the first time, the Maple Leaf Bar — a transformational experience. I’d seen them before but never there, and I can still feel the energy of that loud, loud music going through my body in that packed bar as they went from song into song without pause, just driving the crowd on.

Facepainting — Tiger Variations

From the simplified formula of the direct mask-like transformation of a human face into a tiger face, an endless stream of variations can be generated by altering colors, styles and decorative elements without changing the basic tiger design —in which the human eyes become the tiger eyes, the nose the tiger nose, etc. (For the basic instructions, see the previous post “How to paint a tiger face”) In the working process, as I am facepainting a succession of tiger faces, I will approach each face with a stylistic change (such as “bolder lines” or “asymmetrical”) or a cultural inspiration (such as the swirling lines of Maori tattoo) and use that change in approach to create a new variation on the spot.

Tigers are the most popular request at our Bronx Zoo concession, and for some of the zoo’s special event weekends we have done entire days when all we paint are tigers, so we’re often exploring new ways to paint this iconic animal. In 2010, the zoo hosted a Run For the Wild event to raise awareness of the critical issue of declining tiger populations. Here’s the video of the faces I painted that day:  

More examples of tiger faces from 2010 and earlier zoo events.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As to why we should be turning people into tigers, David Brooks has some advice:

https://thestorybehindthefaces.com/2011/03/29/david-brooks-advice-for-facepainters/

For an amazing video on a fully realistic transformation into a tiger, here’s a video from the remarkable bodypainter, Craig Tracy: