Just Sarah (1959)
You Can't Beat 1903
From time immemorial, relationships have often been expressed through gifts. Some, like Eve’s apple and the Trojan Horse, proved unkind to those who received them, while other gifts have been odes to romance. Few women have received as wondrous a present as Cosima Wagner did when Richard composed the Siegfried Idyll for her birthday. Tsar Alexander’s Fabergé egg gained mileage with his young bride, as did Burton’s 68-carat diamond to his ladylove. Resplendent as the symphony, the egg, and the ring may be, nothing could rival a son’s tribute to his mother.
Dorian Gray (1880)
Love Life (1947)
The Salt is Sugar (2013)
“Two hundred women, no phones, no washing machines, no hair-dryers, it was like Lord of the Flies on estrogen.” Piper
Television series centering on female friends? check; on family dynamics? check; on landing Mr. Right? check. Not until the arrival of Netflix’s dramedy, Orange is the New Black, did the small screen turn to the hell of incarcerated women.
A Band of Angels
Harriet Tubman Home (opened 2017)
180 South St. Auburn, New York, 13021
“There was one of two things I’ve got a right to, liberty or death. If I could not have one, I would have the other, for no man should take me alive.” Harriet Tubman
The old Negro spiritual holds the plaintive words, “Swing low, sweet chariot/Coming for to carry me home…” For the enslaved, home referred to heaven, the end of earthly misery. The Harriet Tuman Home is a testament to dreams do not have to wait for the hereafter.
Don't Forget Me
“I am happy to be alive as long as I can paint.” – Frida Kahlo
Museo Frida Kahlo (opened in 1958)
Londres 247, Colonia del Carmen, Coyoacán, México
In the early and mid-twentieth century, Coyoacán was Mexico City’s Montparnasse, Greenwich Village, and Haight Ashbury as artists congregated in its free-spirited enclave. And the queen of Boho, Frida Kahlo, reigned from her eclectic blue Casa Azul, (the blue a nod to the cultural tradition that it wards off evil spirits), now the Museo Frida Kahlo.
Don't Forget Me
Chapter # 9: Don’t Forget Me
“I am happy to be alive as long as I can paint.” – Frida Kahlo
Museo Frida Kahlo (opened in 1958)
Londres 247, Colonia del Carmen, Coyoacán, México
In the early and mid-twentieth century, Coyoacán was Mexico City’s Montparnasse, Greenwich Village, and Haight Ashbury as artists congregated in its free-spirited enclave. And the queen of Boho, Frida Kahlo, reigned from her eclectic blue Casa Azul, (the blue a nod to the cultural tradition that it wards off evil spirits), now the Museo Frida Kahlo.
Phenomenal Woman (1928)
Nyet (1939)
Seen the Glory
“The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched-they must be felt with the heart.” Helen Keller
Ivy Green
300 N Commons St W, Tuscumbia, Alabama (opened 1954)
It would be difficult to refrain from crying while watching The Miracle Worker. Tears flow along with the water from the pump as Helen cried out, “Wah! Wah!” Helen Keller’s birth house, Ivy Green, is testimony to prevailing over seemingly impossible odds.
Raymond's Secret (1997)
Roe v. Roe (1973)
There's No Place
"I am constantly having to make an upheaval for some reason.” – Sarah Winchester
Winchester Mystery House (opened in 1923)
525 S. Winchester Blvd. San Jose, California
How the West was won - or lost - depending on one’s perspective was determined by who wielded the Winchester Repeating Rifle. The heiress to the company’s fortune, Sarah Winchester, had a life bookmarked by guilt and guns.
The Devil's Horn (1840)
Jingle, Jangle Morning (1965)
Pentimento (1905)
“One sits uncomfortably on a too comfortable cushion.”
In 1968, country singer Jeannie C. Riley sang of the hypocrisy of her hometown who pointed fingers at the widowed Mrs. Johnson although they were guilty of worse transgressions. Sixteen years before, a playwright had socked it to a more powerful body than the Harper Valley P. T. A.
You Can't Beat (1903)
The Devil's Horn (1840)
In the film, Some Like It Hot, Marilyn Monroe, in the role of Sugar Kane Kowalczyk, revealed that blondes prefer gentlemen who wield saxophones; in the Clinton administration, the saxophone became the First Instrument; in The Simpsons, Lisa made the saxophone attractive to girls. These scenarios would not have been possible if not for Joseph-Antoine Adolphe Sax.
Starship (1965)

