Marlene Wagman-Geller

"As far back as I can remember, it was always on my bucket list, even before the term bucket list was coined,
to be a writer. It was a natural progression to want to go from reading books to writing one."
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Who Shot J. R.? (1936)

Who Shot J. R.? (1936)
Apr 17, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
   Dynasty, the 1980s soap opera, reflected the glitz and greed of an oil-rich family from Denver. Catherine Oxenberg, who played the role of Amanda Carrington in Dynasty is a real-life princess. She hails from a nonfictional European dynasty that makes the Carringtons seem like the Waltons.

The Worst of Times (1761)

The Worst of Times (1761)
Apr 16, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

Chapter # 1: The Worst of Times  (1761 )

        Charles Dickens’ epic novel, A Tale of Two Cities, is a love story set against the fiery backdrop of France and England during the Reign of Terror.  A nonfictional heroine whose life was likewise enacted in Paris and London during the same epoch is equally riveting, though it has been regulated to an obscure chapter of this tumultuous time.

           There are many exclusive clubs which dot the glitterati capitals of the world which provide open sesame solely to the possessors of blood of blue or pants with deep pockets. And yet there is one such rarefied enclave where entry is even more exclusive: billions of dollars cannot buy entry. Membership is by invitation only; Mother Teresa is one of the few who have declined. British royalty and rock royalty, as well as American presidents have long entered. In our more liberal milieu admittance is less conventional. Orange is the New Black actress Laverne Cox became is first transgender inductee. In answer to where is this place the answer is its establishments are found throughout the world; in answer to who began this novel emporium is a woman whose life was as fantastical as her glittering guests.

          Anne Made Grosholz had to deal with the twin challenges of becoming a new mother and a widow when Joseph, her German husband, died from gruesome wounds incurred in the Seven Year War two months before his daughter Marie was born. To add to the dire situation, her spouse’s salary had been her sole source of income. To provide for herself and her infant she obtained a position as a house-keeper to Dr. Philippe Curtius in her hometown of Strasbourg. The physician became so fond of Anne-he claimed to be a big fan of her casseroles- he brought mother and daughter along when he left France to return to his native Switzerland. There developed a lifelong bond between Marie and Curtius, who she called Uncle and he served as surrogate father.

      Like many medics of the time, Curtius made anatomical waxes, but his were exceptionally skillful, especially when it came to replicating the textures and hues of human skin. Hence, Marie was raised in a household where it was not unusual to see random body parts. Word of his talent spread and Louis XV’s cousin, the Prince de Conti, offered patronage. Finding the royal opportunity too great a position to pass up, Dr. Curtius, Anne, and six-year-old Marie left for Paris.

           From her earliest years Marie was enraptured with the art of wax works and became an eager protégée. The minion ultimately supplanted the master and at age 17 she was creating her own models. While other teenaged girls were courting eligible boys, Marie was busy immortalizing contemporary luminaries such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Benjamin Franklin. Her firsts complete sculpture was of Voltaire who joked that at his age every mask was likely to be a death-mask. She liked to remark the three men were frequent dinner guests at the Curtius table, and that Rousseau enjoyed her mother’s cooking.

        By the early 1780s, Curtius and Marie had so impressed the French populace he set up a ‘cabinet de circe’ ‘wax exhibition’ at the Parisian entertainment hotspot: the Palais Royal. It featured the crowned heads of Europe so visitors felt the thrill of mingling with the upper echelons. This proved such a resounding success he staged another at the Boulevard du Temple, the Caverne des Grands V

Here's to You (1940)

Here's to You (1940)
Apr 15, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

Chapter Ninteen   1940   Here’s to You

   

 The most iconic jersey in baseball history is emblazoned with number 42: Jackie Robinson wore it when he dared dream the impossible dream. But the number not only symbolizes a pivotal moment in the Civil Rights Movement-it represents an enduring love story.

       Rachel Annetta Isum was born in Los Angeles on July 19, 1922.  The city was infected with racism: a nearby theater required blacks to sit in the balcony and an adjoining hamburger stand refused non-whites service.  Despite the bigotry surrounding her family, her parents provided stability: violin lessons, visits to the Huntington Museum and attendance at the local Bethel African Methodist Church. An indelible childhood story from her father related how he had grown up in Chicago where his parents had lived in a rental for forty years after which time they were evicted. His message “a key to one’s own home provides the only key to security.” They intended for her to get that key through  education.

Following graduation from nearby Manual Arts High School, Rachel won a scholarship from a civic group and entered UCLA.  At university she not only became the first of her family to attain a degree; she also became the tireless teammate of a man whose shadow was to stretch far beyond Ebbets Field.

     UCLA’s few African-American students congregated in the corridors of Kerckhoff Hall, where Rachel first laid eyes on Jack Robinson, a four-sport letterman. He favored crisp white shirts to showcase the color which he refused to view as a badge of shame. Rachel was interested-as were many girls- but felt she would never be the homecoming queen to the BMOC. Nevertheless, in a nod to ‘hope springs eternal’ she would arrive early in her beat-up Ford V-8 to accidentally bump into him. They were introduced by a mutual friend and Jackie was taken with Rachel’s beauty and dignity.  For their first date Jack, (as she called him,) invited her to a Bruin football dinner at the Biltmore. She was eighteen years old and nervous-she had never been on a date or a guest at a hotel. Sheathed in her first black dress, purchased from the May Company basement, she danced the foxtrot throughout the night with her BMOC.

          To their mutual dismay, in 1942 Jack moved to Honolulu to play semi-pro football. Realizing Rachel was “the one” he wrote daily love letters and sent a weekly box of candy. Rachel declared her love but said she would not marry until she became a nurse and he obtained a position as a high school coach. Jackie left Hawaii two days before the bombing of Pearl Harbor and true to his middle-name (Roosevelt), he enlisted in the armed forces. The couple had a major spat when Rachel wr

Untameable (1862)

Untameable (1862)
Apr 10, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

   The 2009 film, The Rum Diary, based on Hunter S. Thompson’s novel of the same name, provided the venue where Johnny Depp met Amber Heard. Their relationship ended in an acrimonious divorce and an infamous defamation trial. Yet the original rum diary began with Bacardi Rum, the brew created by Facundo Bacardi.

Camp Betty

Camp Betty
Apr 08, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
The name “Ford” conjures the product which rolls off Detroit’s assembly lines, the Californian addiction center, the Omaha-born American president. However, there was a Ford whose bouffant hair and prim exterior belied an interior far from docile. Despite whatever storm in which she was at the center, she was always Gerald’s first lady.

Nothing Very bad (1837)

Nothing Very bad (1837)
Apr 07, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
   Pandora’s Box unleashed all the evils into the world; in contrast, a robin’s-egg blue box delivers heavenly objects of beauty. Although Tiffany & Co. is an iconic jewelry emporium, Charles Lewis Tiffany remains a shadowy presence.

The Importance of Being Constance: Mrs. Oscar Wilde

The Importance of Being Constance: Mrs. Oscar Wilde
Apr 06, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
The 17th century fictional Hester Prynne was forced to wear a scarlet letter for running afoul of Puritan Boston; her life closely paralleled the 19th-century nonfictional Irish writer, Oscar Wilde, who thumbed his nose at the rigid rules of British society before Queen Victoria’s un-amused eyes. In both cases, they were more sinned against than sinners. But there is one who was more sinned against than all: Oscar Wilde’s little-known wife.

Phenomenal Woman (1928)

Phenomenal Woman (1928)
Apr 04, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
   People oftentimes view the past with nostalgia, highlighting the good times and letting dust settle on the bad. The second decade of the 20th century-the Roaring 20s-is remembered as a never-ending party. In contrast, under the hilarity the Ku Klux Klan attained the highest membership in its history and Jim Crow reigned in the South.

Never Just a Title (1951)

Never Just a Title (1951)
Apr 03, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

 

“Here I am with all this talent bottled up inside of me and you’re always sitting on the cork.” Lucy Ricardo

   In mid-century America, the sit-com mother served as the happy homemaker; in contrast, Lucy of I Love Lucy was, in modern parlance, a hot mess. Rather than the helpmeet of her husband, she was usually neck-deep in self-made mayhem. What redeemed Lucy, and made her as distinctive as her flaming hair, was she dared to dream of becoming a star, to break free from the confines of her New York apartment. 

A Monument to Me (1925)

A Monument to Me (1925)
Apr 02, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
In 1938, the first Action Comics introduced the world to Superman; the cover featured the Man of Steel holding a green Chrysler aloft. The car derived its name from another man of steel, Walter Percy Chrysler.

Crown Jewels (opened in 1949)

Crown Jewels (opened in 1949)
Apr 01, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

Crown Jewels
“It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man

in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.” – Jane Austen

 

Jane Austen’s House

 Winchester Rd, Chawton, United Kingdom

 

             Jane Austen’s nephew observed of his aunt, “Of events her life was singularly barren, few changes and no great crisis ever broke the smooth current of its course.”  Although Jane may have had a seemingly placid existence, she never left England; she nevertheless had her share of sunshine, of storm. 

T.G.I.M. (1962)

T.G.I.M. (1962)
Mar 29, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
   In the 2003 episode of The Simple Life, Paris Hilton, claiming she had never heard of Walmart, asked if it was a place where “they sold wall stuff.” Although Paris does not frequent Walmart, millions do, oblivious to the fact that Samuel Walton, (the last three letters of his surname and the word ‘mart-’abbreviation for market), served as the namesake of the megastore.

The Kent State Pietá (1970)

The Kent State Pietá (1970)
Mar 29, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
At one point everybody has felt they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. The saying proved tragically true with the teenager immortalized in the Kent State Massacre photograph. The stark image made Mary Ann Vecchio an unwitting symbol of a turbulent time.

The Kent State Pietà (1970)

The Kent State Pietà (1970)
Mar 29, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller
At one point everybody has felt they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. The saying proved tragically true with the teenager immortalized in the Kent State Massacre photograph. The stark image made Mary Ann Vecchio an unwitting symbol of a turbulent time.

The Comedy is Over (1948)

The Comedy is Over (1948)
Mar 27, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

     The Italian opera Pagliacci revolves around Canio, the clown; what gives the lie to his smile is his tears over his wife’s adultery. Insane with jealousy, he murders both his faithless partner and her lover. Life imitated art in an Italian soap opera in a crime of fashion.

Anything But (1912)

Anything But (1912)
Mar 25, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

“I would rather be a free spinster and paddle my own canoe.” Louisa May Alcott

 

Orchard House, 399 Lexington Road, Concord Massachusetts.  
        Some of America’s greatest authors, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau, slumber in Sleepy Hollow, a Concord Cemetery. Another notable grave belongs to the mother of young adult fiction, Louisa May Alcott.  If, in Spoon River Anthology fashion, Louisa spoke from the afterlife, her story would involve her family, immortalized in her novel, Little Women..  

The Next Morning (2005)

The Next Morning (2005)
Mar 23, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

“My life is full of mistakes. They’re like pebbles that make a good road.” Beatrice Wood

 

8585 Ojai-Santa Paula Rd. 

Ojai, California 93023

 

   In medieval Florence, Beatrice Portinari served as Dante Alighieri’s guide in his masterpiece, The Divine Comedy. In 20th century California, Beatrice Wood inspired a pivotal character in James Cameron’s blockbuster, Titanic. 

    

A Joy Forever (1766)

A Joy Forever (1766)
Mar 22, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

The staccato bark, “Going, going, gone!” followed by the banging of a hammer, signifies the sale of a coveted object to the highest bidder. Christie’s has conducted awe-inspiring auctions, many which would have astounded its founder, James Christie.

Huff and Puff (2005)

Huff and Puff (2005)
Mar 21, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

          The press barons of yore were alpha males whose giant shadows shaped the way the world received its news: Joseph Pulitzer, William Randolph Hearst, Harold Ross. In the 21st century this glass ceiling was shattered by an infusion of estrogen when a Greek Colossus bestrode the shores of media.

Is There Still Sex? (1994)

Is There Still Sex? (1994)
Mar 20, 2023 by Marlene Wagman-Geller

     Before the four female Musketeers of Sex and the City went on the hunt for men, money, and Manolos in Manhattan, there was the real-life party girl, Candace Bushnell, the inspiration for Carrie Bradshaw.