Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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Day Two Hundred Ninety-Eight

January 5, 2021 at 10:16 am by Claudia

If I had any nails, I would be biting them. This is a big day. Since we won’t know anything until tonight or even later, I’ll be busying myself with chores around the house, including a little dollhouse work.

Speaking of chores: Doug gave us (several months ago) their wireless router set-up, which was relatively new, as he had upgraded. Doug is the tech guy in that house. At the time, I was overwhelmed with things to do, including losing the tree in the hurricane, texting for Biden, etc. I’ve had the box with the router and a couple of satellite pods upstairs on the chair in the office for a long, long time.

(Our router was over 9 years old and kept cutting in and out and should have been replaced a long time ago.)

Yesterday, I decided to set it up.

It was not as simple as I had thought it would be. After removing the old router and connecting the new, I kept getting a red light, which meant it was not connecting to the modem. I tried everything. Finally, I called our cable provider but I was on hold so long (“We are experiencing a high volume of calls…”) that I hung up. I texted Doug and his suggestion was to call Spectrum (cable.) So I called again and after a long wait was connected to a very helpful guy who made sure the modem was working – it was – and had me try a few things. He finally suggested that I call Linksys, the maker of the router. So I did. Endless time on hold, getting hungrier by the minute, and finally a guy came on the line who was enormously helpful. He helped me to set it up. Since it had been used by Rick and Doug, it had to be reset and registered online and he had to keep checking all sorts of things. Same thing with the little satellite, which is in the kitchen. This took a long time. All told, I spent about 4 hours getting everything to work. The gentleman at Linksys was incredibly calm and patient and serious, and – in true Claudia fashion – I made him laugh a couple of times. (Don and I always go for the laugh.)

Anyway, after it was over I was exhausted. But, it works! And the connection is so much better and now we can use our phones in the kitchen which has always been a dead zone. Thank you Doug and Rick. And thanks to helpful tech consultants at both our cable provider and Linksys.

I’m the tech person, for want of a better word, in this house. I put things together, I figure out how to set up the Smart TV and the remotes. I do all the computer and WiFi set ups. Don doesn’t do so well with that, though I suspect he could. He knows I’ll take care of it. On the other hand, he goes up on the roof, shovels the snow, nails down a tarp on the shed roof, etc. We balance each other. I have no complaints.

I have one thing to share with you, which was a wee splurge. I saw this on the Etsy site of Tiny Dollhouse NYC and I marked it as a favorite. I looked at it every day. It was one of a pair and one day I noticed that one had just sold, which left only one remaining, so when I got some ad income at the end of December, I went for it. It’s for the future Beacon Hill dollhouse.

This chair. It’s made by one of the foremost miniaturists in this country, if not the world, June Clinkscales. I admire her work so much. This is a heavy, solid chair (the heaviest miniature I own) and it is impeccably made. It has a curved back. The fabric is toile. I’ll take more photos when I can get more light – it’s awfully cloudy and gray around here – but isn’t it exquisite? It looks awfully good in this room, but it’s earmarked for the Beacon Hill. My first piece for that project.

This is a real collector’s item and I’m very proud to be its caretaker. Oh my heavens, I sigh with pleasure each time I look at it.

I got some baseboard trim in the mail yesterday, so I’ll start to add that to the bedroom and living room of the English Cottage. It involves mitering corners, which I’ve only done once before in Don’s studio. I also have two beds arriving today!

By the way, in case you didn’t see it, I did another IG video a few days ago on the Modern Dollhouse because I realized I’d neglected to mention it. You can see it on my Instagram account.

Don released another single today – this one is Guess I Still Get Crazy. On a personal note, this is one of my top four favorites that he’s written, so I’m thrilled. He’s been singing it for years but has never recorded it. This one is a collaboration between Don and our friend Rob Edwards. Rob has his own recording studio back in San Diego. (Rob’s the one who sold me our big oak coffee table and helped us find our Craftsman rental when we were living there.) Here’s the link.

Hang in there today.

Stay safe.

Happy Tuesday.

Filed Under: dollhouse, Don, miniatures, music 43 Comments

Friday Thoughts

February 21, 2020 at 9:16 am by Claudia

Sunny, but boy, is it cold out there!

I can’t believe it’s already Friday, but here we are. We have to recycle today, buy groceries, and run a few errands. Not very exciting, but very necessary.

Last night, we tried 3 different series on Netflix and Amazon Prime. All of them were new to us. In each case, we watched about 5 minutes, turned to each other and said “No.” We ended the evening watching a couple of our favorite Dick Van Dyke Show episodes and felt much better. There’s something so comforting about that show. An amazingly talented cast, wonderful writing- it takes us back to our youth and all those nights sitting around the television set with our respective families. We need some comfort these days and that show makes us happy.

I also spent a good chunk of time watching Michael Jeter sing “Let’s Raise a Glass” from the musical version of Grand Hotel. Jeter gives one of the best performances I have ever seen in my years and years of watching and performing in musicals. Something triggered that memory yesterday and I found a clip of it being performed at the Tony Awards. I played it for Don and he was amazed, so much so that he had me play it again. And again.

I saw it live during its out-of-town tryout in Boston, where I was living at the time. I had very little money, couldn’t afford a ticket, but in a wonderful fluke, I won a ticket in a radio call-in contest. I loved the musical, but to this day what I most remember is Jeter’s electrifying performance. And I mean electrifying. He brought the house down. I have never seen anything like it. The audience shot to their feet at the end of the number, cheering and shouting. These were the days when standing ovations weren’t routine as they are today. Today, almost every performance gets a perfunctory standing ovation. In those days, you had to earn one.

If you are so inclined, google “Let’s Raise A Glass,” and “Tony Awards” and you’ll find it on YouTube. The reaction from the audience at the Tony Awards is much the same as the reaction in Boston. Jeter died much too young at the age of 50. He was enormously talented and brave and wondrous.

Okay. Duty calls. I must get going.

Happy Friday.

Filed Under: music, theater 34 Comments

Rain, Music & Movies

July 23, 2019 at 10:21 am by Claudia

Lots of rain yesterday, including a prolonged thunderstorm that seemed to go on for hours. It rained all night and into this morning. That’s fine with me, as my gardens and lawn needed it. It will start to dry up this afternoon. Hopefully, it will be dry enough to get some mowing in on Wednesday and Thursday – everything is overgrown because the excessive heat kept us from doing anything outside.

We didn’t get home from Sunday’s concert until well after midnight, which means I didn’t get to sleep until 1:30 am, which means I was tuckered out, and so I took the day off from posting.

We had such a great time! We rarely go out nowadays as we’re on a budget and find it less expensive to eat at home and watch movies on our television. But we bought the tickets for Tommy Emmanuel several months ago and were ready for a ‘date night.’ The concert was in Englewood, NJ at the Bergen PAC, a smallish and intimate space, a former movie theater built in the 20s. We got there a little early – it was still 95 degrees at 6 pm – so we found an Argentinian restaurant and ate spinach empanadas and grilled vegetables.

Tommy Emmanuel, if you haven’t heard of him, is a virtuoso guitar player who was mentored by the late, great Chet Atkins. Emmanuel hails from Australia, but as he informed us, just became an American citizen. He’s charming, a great storyteller, and a brilliant musician. He uses acoustic guitars and speakers. That’s it. He also uses percussion effects, but all of them are supplied by his hands rhythmically slapping the guitar. Honestly, I’ve never seen anything like it. He write some of his music, but also pays homage to a large canon of influences. He opened with ‘Blue Moon’ (I posted a little recording from that performance on my IG Stories if you’re interested. It won’t be there much longer.) He played the Beatles. He played Classical Gas. He played ‘Secret Love.’ His own compositions are beautiful. I couldn’t believe what he could get out of a guitar. Stunning.

We cheered and cheered and were inspired and elated and I’m a huge fan now. He’s also a teacher and has made lots of videos teaching his techniques, his fingering, his way of creating sound. Those videos are what Don has been studying for several months now. He tours all over the world – approximately 300 days of the year.

I had the best time.

If you are a fan of acoustic guitar and ever have the chance, I urge you to go to one of his concerts. You will love him.

Don had to get going early yesterday morning because he had to be in the city for an audition. I grabbed our huge grocery list and went to the store. And then I turned on the A/C – it was still muggy, though the temps were lower – and sat out the storms with a book in hand.

We watched Teahouse of the August Moon  last night on TCM. Neither of us had ever seen it, though I’ve seemingly always known about it. My initial response to “Should we watch it?'” was no, because Brando plays a role that should be played by someone who is actually Asian and I thought it might be cringeworthy. But we watched a bit of it and, even though casting a non-Asian in the role would never be done today, Brando was really, really good. His dialect was spot on. And he was funny, something we rarely got a chance to see from Brando. Glenn Ford and Eddie Albert were having a great time, supported by the great Paul Ford and a lovely and funny Japanese actress named Machiko Kyō. It’s a satire about the American occupation of Okinawa after WWII. It was surprisingly delightful.

We’re taking it easy today – hanging out in the cottage.

Happy Tuesday.

Filed Under: guitar, movies, music 18 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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