The film “Saturday Night Fever” opened in New York City on this date (December 14) in 1977. As assistant arts editor, I had the first read on the original manuscript, “Tribal Rights of the New Saturday Night,” written by British journalist Nik Cohn and illustrated by James McMullan, that appeared in New York magazine on June 7, 1976.
The magazine’s staff attended the film’s premiere and then we all headed off to Tavern on the Green for the first-night party and dinner. What fun!
We were not required to wear the platform shoes and the garish polyester outfits favored by the Bee Gees, who composed the score and performed the songs, and the disco dancers of the day.
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Mozart
The
35-year-old Mozart died on this date in 1791. “The greatest tragedy in the
history of music,” said the distinguished
musicologist H.C. Robbins Landon. In the months leading up to his death, Mozart
composed a prodigious catalog of swan songs: The Magic Flute, his final piano
concerto and string quintet, the Clarinet Concerto, Ave Verum Corpus, and the unfinished Requiem. Did any other artist ever finish on a more exalted note!
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