November 27, 2007

Flapper Girls at Wilson and Sheridan, Nirvana by Ben Hecht with 1922 Life Magazine Flapper

Life Magazine

Life Magazine

Purchase print here.




Flapper girls had their origins in the 1920s with the popular contempt for prohibition. The term referred to the “new breed” of young women who wore short skirts, bobbed their hair, listened to jazz, and flaunted their disdain for what was considered decent behavior. The flappers were seen as brash in their time for wearing makeup, drinking hard liqour, and smoking. This gorgeous painting of a flapper girl graced the cover of the February 2, 1922 edition of Life Magazine.

Novelist and prolific screenwriter Ben Hecht (1893–1964) grew up in Racine, Wisconsin. As a young man he moved to Chicago, where he became a reporter for the Chicago Journal and the Chicago Daily News and contributed to Margaret Anderson’s literary journal The Little Review. At the Daily News he wrote the sensational column “1001 Afternoons in Chicago,” where this short story about Uptown was first published (text courtesy Project Gutenberg). He later went on to write 35 books and more than seventy films.


***


The newspaper man felt a bit pensive. He sat in his bedroom frowning at his typewriter. About eight years ago he had decided to write a novel. Not that he had anything particular in his mind to write about. But the city was such a razzle-dazzle of dreams, tragedies, fantasies; such a crazy monotone of streets and windows that it filled the newspaper man’s thought from day to day with an irritating blur.
And for eight years or so the newspaper man had been fumbling around trying to get it down on paper. But no novel had grown out of the blur in his head.

* * * * *

The newspaper man put on his last year’s straw hat and went into the street, taking his pensiveness with him. Warm. Rows of arc lights. A shifting crowd. There are some streets that draw aimless feet. The blazing store fronts, clothes shops, candy shops, drug-stores, Victrola shops, movie theatres invite with the promise of a saturnalia in suspense.

At Wilson Avenue and Sheridan Road the newspaper man paused. Here the loneliness he had felt in his bedroom seemed to grow more acute. Not only his own aimlessness, but the aimlessness of the staring, smiling crowd afflicted him.

Then out of the babble of faces he heard his name called. A rouged young flapper, high heeled, short skirted and a jaunty green hat. One of the impudent little swaggering boulevard promenaders who talk like simpletons and dance like Salomes, who laugh like parrots and ogle like Pierettes. The birdlike strut of her silkened legs, the brazen lure of her stenciled child face, the lithe grimace of her adolescent body under the stiff coloring of her clothes were a part of the blur in the newspaper man’s mind.
She was one of the things he fumbled for on the typewriter—one of the city products born of the tinpan bacchanal of the cabarets. A sort of frontispiece for an Irving Berlin ballad. The caricature of savagery that danced to the caricature of music from the jazz bands. The newspaper man smiled. Looking at her he understood her. But she would not fit into the typewritten phrases.

“Wilson Avenue,” he thought, as he walked beside her chatter. “The wise, brazen little virgins who shimmy and toddle, but never pay the fiddler. She’s it. Selling her ankles for a glass of pop and her eyes for a fox trot. Unhuman little piece. A cross between a macaw and a marionette.”

* * * * *

Thus, the newspaper man thinking and the flapper flapping, they came together to a cabaret in the neighborhood. The orchestra filled the place with confetti of sound. Laughter, shouts, a leap of voices, blazing lights, perspiring waiters, faces and hats thrusting vivid stencils through the uncoiling tinsel of tobacco smoke.

On the dance floor bodies hugging, toddling, shimmying; faces fastened together; eyes glassy with incongruous ecstasies.

The newspaper man ordered two drinks of moonshine and let the scene blur before him like a colored picture puzzle out of focus. Above the music he heard the childishly strident voice of the flapper:
“Where you been hiding yourself? I thought you and I were cookies. Well, that’s the way with you Johns. But there’s enough to go around, you can bet. Say boy! I met the classiest John the other evening in front of the Hopper. Did he have class, boy! You know there are some of these fancy Johns who look like they were the class. But are they? Ask me. Nix. And don’t I give them the berries, quick? Say, I don’t let any John get moldy on me. Soon as I see they’re heading for a dumb time I say ’razzberry.’ And off your little sugar toddles.”

“How old are you?” inquired the newspaper man abstractedly.

“Eighteen, nosey. Why the insult? I got a new job yesterday with the telephone company. That makes my sixth job this year. Tell me that ain’t going good? One of the Johns I met in front of the Edgewater steered me to it. He turned out kind of moldy, and say! he was dumb. But I played along and got the job.

“Say, I bet you never noticed my swell kicks.” The flapper thrust forth her legs and twirled her feet. “Classy, eh? They go with the lid pretty nice. Say, you’re kind of dumb yourself. You’ve got moldy since I saw you last.”

“How’d you remember my name?” inquired the newspaper man.

“Oh, there are some Johns who tip over the oil can right from the start. And you never forget them. Nobody could forget you, handsome. Never no more, never. What do you say to another shot of hootch? The stuff’s getting rottener and rottener, don’t you think? Come on, swallow. Here’s how. Oh, ain’t we got fun!”

* * * * *

The orchestra paused. It resumed. The crowd thickened. Shouts, laughter, swaying bodies. A tinkle of glassware, snort of trombones, whang of banjos. The newspaper man looked on and listened through a film.

The brazen patter of his young friend rippled on. A growing gamin coarseness in her talk with a nervous, restless twitter underneath. Her dark child eyes, perverse under their touch of black paint, swung eagerly through the crowd. Her talk of Johns, of dumb times and moldy times, of classy times and classy memories varied only slightly. She liked dancing and amusement parks. Automobile riding not so good. And besides you had to be careful. There were some Johns who thought it cute to play caveman. Yes, she’d had a lot of close times, but they wouldn’t get her. Never, no, never no more. Anyway, not while there was music and dancing and a whoop-de-da-da in the amusement parks.
The newspaper man, listening, thought, “An infant gone mad with her dolls. Or no, vice has lost its humanness. She’s the symbol of new sin—the unhuman, passionless whirligig of baby girls and baby boys through the cabarets.”

* * * * *

They came back from a dance and continued to sit. The din was still mounting. Entertainers fighting against the racket. Music fighting against the racket. Bored men and women finally achieving a bedlam and forgetting themselves in the artifice of confusion.

The newspaper man looking at his young friend saw her taking it in. There was something he had been trying to fathom about her during her breathless chattering. She talked, danced, whirled, laughed, let loose giggling cries. And yet her eyes, the part that the rouge pot or the bead stick couldn’t reach, seemed to grow deader and deader.

The jazz band let out the crash of a new melody. The voices of the crowd rose in an “ah-ah-ah.” Waiters were shoving fresh tables into the place, squeezing fresh arrivals around them.

The flapper had paused in her breathless rigmarole of Johns and memories. Leaning forward suddenly she cried into the newspaper man’s ear above the racket:

“Say this is a dumb place.”

The newspaper man smiled.

“Ain’t it, though?” she went on. There was a pause and then the breathless voice sighed. She spoke.

“Gee!”—with a laugh that still seemed breathless—“gee, but it’s lonely here!”

November 24, 2007

Edgewater Beach Apartments

Before the city extended Lake Shore Drive, the Edgewater Beach Apartments, part of the Edgewater Beach Hotel complex, sat right on the shore. Below is an image captured from Google Maps, showing just how far the Apartments now are from the lake front. Click on image for a larger view.

November 21, 2007

Uptown's American Indian Center Hosts Successful Powwow

Chicago’s American Indian Center, located at 1630 W. Wilson in Uptown, recently hosted its 54th annual powwow around the theme “Honoring Our Tribal Nations.” About 200 dancers and 10 different drum groups gathered in Chicago to celebrate. Read about the event and learn more about the history of Chicago's Native American population by visiting Medill Reports and the American Indian Center. View historic photos of Native Americans in Chicago at the Library of Congress.



Thumbnail image of totem pole, 1929. To see full size image, go to the Library of Congress. Caption reads: "Image of a group of Native American adults and children wearing traditional Native American clothing and headdresses standing next to a totem pole on a field in Chicago, Illinois, holding up their hands toward to totem pole. A crowd is standing in the background." A replica of the totem pole is located at Addison and the Lake near the north tip of Belmont Harbor, where the bike trail turns into Belmont Harbor Drive going south; the original was returned to the Haidan people in 1985.

Clarendon Municipal Bathing Beach, Pavilion


What a gorgeous pavilion this was prior to renovation! Clarendon Municipal Bathing Beach, where Weiss Hospital now stands, could accommodate thousands of bathers a day.

According to the Chicago Park District, the beach was constructed in 1915, taking its name from Clarendon Avenue, which in turn was named for English statesmen Edward Hyde, the first Earl of Clarendon. The pavilion was completed in 1916. Clarendon was the largest bathing beach in the country, attracting 425,000 paying visitors the first summer and almost 2 million a year by 1929. It had two towers, separate locker areas for men and women, a playroom, and a laundry facility. It could accommodate more than 9,000 swimmers and had a promenade for thousands of spectators. It rented out bathing suits, towels, and lockers.

The beach was very popular through the 1930s. When Lincoln Park was expanded up to Foster Avenue, Clarendon lost its lake frontage. The city converted the building into a community center, "adding gymnasiums, club rooms, a playground, and an athletic field." A major renovation in 1972 resulted in the removal of the elaborate towers and roof tiles. Today, it holds a gymnasium, boxing ring, fitness center, and meeting rooms. Programs include after school sports, aerobics, and preschool activities.

You can get a thong, mug, or other unique items with this image through CafePress.

First Patient at Weiss Hospital, Marine Drive, Uptown Chicago

Comedian Jimmy Durante (right), was Weiss Hospital's first registered inpatient. For more historic photos of Weiss, go to Weiss History. Weiss is located at 4646 Marine Drive at Wilson in Uptown.

November 18, 2007

Matchbook, Planet Mars, 1117 Wilson Ave


Matchbook, Planet Mars, date unknown.
Dine and Dance Entertainment
Never a cover or minimum charge.
Choice Wines and Liquors
Beer on Tap
Longbeach 5536

Planet Mars was a popular jazz venue. According to several sources, it was where jazz legend Anita O'Day, who died in November 2006, had her first "legitimate" gig.


Killer on Argyle Street

A faceless killer is murdering the members of a car-theft ring, and Paul Whelan is hired to find a boy who may have seen the murderer, a man with a chameleon-like ability to change his appearance. Whelan’s search leads him to Argyle Street, the busy, exotic Asian strip at the edge of the Uptown neighborhood, where all the evidence suggests that the murderer may already have gotten the boy. Along the way Whelan learns that another man is involved, a boyhood friend Whelan had believed to be dead, and Whelan comes to believe that more than one person is involved in the murders.
Killer on Argyle Street is part of the Paul Whelan mystery series developed by Uptown author Michael Raleigh. His other books include Death in Uptown, A Body in Belmont Harbor, The Riverview Murders, and The Maxwell Street Blues. Raleigh currently teaches English at Truman College.

November 16, 2007

Uptown Theatre Clock Up For Auction


The preauction estimate of this wonderful clock is set at $35,000. It would be great if someone local can purchase it.

It's hard to imagine just how ornate the decorations of the theatre were--this is but one item of hundreds that graced the theatre.

From FRIENDS OF THE UPTOWN:

New owner sought for UPTOWN clock set

Friends of the late Joseph R. DuciBella, the noted designer and theatre historian from Chicago who died earlier this year, have related that his antique bronze clock and candelabra pair from the UPTOWN THEATRE, Chicago, will be auctioned from his estate on Sunday, Nov. 25, by Bunte Auction in Elgin, Illinois.

The large, heavy and now highly valuable ensemble decorated the UPTOWN's interior atop a large chunk of antique furniture in the Magnolia lobby near the first-floor ladies lounge, which has a French Renaissance theme.

Joe loved to tell the story of how different managers allowed him to take things of historical interest home during his tenure there and how they were amused that anyone would want them. (He worked for Balaban & Katz during his youth.) However, a reliable source says that Joe obtained the clock set after it had been bought from the theatre and moved along with UPTOWN WurliTzer theatre organ to the HOOSIER THEATRE, in Whiting, Ind.

The clock, Joe said, was missing pieces and did not work when he got it --nevermind that the three pieces were black as coal. Think of the accumulated tarnish and dirt of the theatre and the thousands of curious fingers that had touched it!

Joe also recalled how his mother shrieked when she walked into the bathroom and found all of the blackened putti that adorn the pieces soaking in the clean, white bathtub. Of course Joe cleaned the clock meticulously and had it restored to working order.

The clock set was one of the highlights of the dining room in his National Register home in Wicker Park on Caton Street that also included Mikado-styled light fixtures that were said to be from the Marshall Field Mansion. Joe was certainly proud of the clock and included it in all tours of his home and in the typewritten tour guide!

It would be a wonderful gesture if a deep-pocketed admirer of Chicago history and Joe's collection would find a way to keep it in Chicago and/or on display in some appropriate setting.

I recall listening to an 1990s taped interview of Joe at his
home wherein the clock's chime could be heard. It is both beautiful and haunting. I'm not exaggerating when I say that I felt it contained something of the soul of the building. The sound on the tape chilled and confused me until I figured out what it was.

The UPTOWN clock's ethereal chime is a gentle but articulate voice from an age that has long since passed, leaving few traces or memories.

Bunte Auction, Elgin, Illinois
www.bunteauction.com

Putti, defined.
http://arthistory.about.com/cs/glossaries/g/p_putti.htm

November 12, 2007

Sheridan Trust and Savings (Uptown Bank) to Be Designated a City Landmark


Thumbnail image of the Sheridan Trust and Savings Bank, Uptown, Chicago, 1924. If the building looks strange to you, that’s because it’s four stories shorter than its current height. Located at Broadway and Lawrence. Image courtesy University of Minnesota Libraries, Manuscripts Division, Northwest Architectural Archives.

City seeks landmark status for 13 banks: Designation would protect unique building

November 11, 2007

by David Roeder

Chicagoans know them as foursquare dependable anchors of old commercial streets and also the most ambitious architecture in their neighborhoods, except maybe for the churches.

They are the bank buildings, festooned with arches, balustrades, columns or soaring first floors. They were designed to convey security and permanence. Some even placed the bank vaults front and center so the customers could see exactly where the money went.

City officials believe they merit landmark status. Acting on a recommendation from city planners, the Commission on Chicago Landmarks has opened the landmark designation process for 13 bank buildings.

Article continues here.

November 7, 2007

Working Man, Studs Terkel

by Jonathan Messinger



LONG HAUL Terkel has a big story to tell.

At 95 he’s still a talker, still a writer and still the best combination of both of those—a raconteur. When I visit him in his Uptown home on a recent fall day to discuss his new memoir, Touch and Go, he receives me warmly despite feeling, in his words, “not well.” Sitting in a high-back chair, clad in his standard-Studs-issue checkered shirt but wrapped in a flannel bathrobe, he chats for nearly an hour, despite the obvious strain it causes him—evidenced by the wearisome coughing. When the photographer shows, Terkel mugs like a pro...

For complete story, go to Time Out.

November 5, 2007

Wilson's Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge, 1118-20-22 Wilson, circa 1930s



Matchbook from Wilson's Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge, 1118-20-22 Wilson, circa 1930s. What a swanky looking joint! The below image, captured from Google, shows the address today. It is just to the west of the Wilson Broadway Mall.


It's time for another 1930s cocktail. If you don't have absinthe handy, you can replace with anisette. (Although no longer available in the U.S., you can order absinthe online.)
NICK'S OWN COCKTAIL
1 dash Angostura Bitters
1 dash Absinthe
1/2 part Italian Vermouth
1/2 part Brandy
Shake well and strain into a cocktail glass. Add cherry and squeeze lemon peel on top.
Recipe from The Savoy Cocktail Book, 1930

November 2, 2007

Historic Bank Featured in Art Exhibit

Saving Grace

October 31, 2007

Some may see Chicago buildings as merely the backdrop for an infinite number of human dramas, but to artist Grace Lai, buildings themselves are a cast of characters.

Lai, 80, a Near North resident, loves buildings so much that they take center stage in her works done in pen and ink with a watercolor wash. An exhibit of 25 of her works is on display at Bridgeview Bank Uptown. The one-woman show is part of the bank's Artists Among Us program that showcases the work of Chicago artists.

"Grace has a great energy," said Tim Ryan, executive vice president and chief marketing officer of Bridgeview Bank Group. "She goes and parks herself outside of these buildings, pulls out her sketchbook and away she goes. She really makes people see the beauty of the outside of buildings that they must just pass by or drive by."

Lai's images of buildings are intensely detailed and aim to leave nothing out. Her painting of the Bridgeview Bank building, one of Uptown's signature buildings that dates to the 1920s, accounts for every brick and every design element on its facade. In her downtown cityscapes, she gives each skyscraper an allotment of windows, hundreds if not thousands of them, as close as possible to the real thing...

Read complete article at: Pioneer Press

November 1, 2007

Chicago Lords of Uptown

While surfing the Net one night, I found this site: Chicago Lords of Uptown.

It provides a brief history of the Sunnyside and Magnolia Set of the Almighty Gaylords, a Chicago street gang with roots stretching back to the late forties/early fifties.

Since living in the neighborhood, I've found that people love to talk about and somewhat glamorize the early gang history of Uptown, the "Al Capone was here" kind of stories, or else they will have a lot to say about Uptown's current gang problems. Very few talk about the times in between, and the groups that, for good or ill, made their mark on the neighborhood.

The Chicago Lords of Uptown were prominent from the seventies through the late nineties. From the site:

"Uptown was a battle zone! Today, Chicago's Uptown community is more known for its jazz clubs and coffee houses than its gang wars. This area is one example of how the City of Chicago is eliminating its ghettos—almost overnight. The cleanup effort is good for the city, but the blood lost here battling for these blocks should not be forgotten."

To learn more about the history of Chicago's street gangs, visit the UIC Chicago Gang History Project.
Graceland (1916)
by Carl Sandburg

Uptown-area resident Carl Sandburg lived at 4646 N. Hermitage, and it was in this house that he penned the famous Chicago Poems, from where this selection is taken. Sandburg was a bit critical of the money wasted on the lavish tombs of Graceland and of their upkeep.

TOMB of a millionaire,
A multi-millionaire, ladies and gentlemen,
Place of the dead where they spend every year
The usury of twenty-five thousand dollars
For upkeep and flowers
To keep fresh the memory of the dead.
The merchant prince gone to dust
Commanded in his written will
Over the signed name of his last testament
Twenty-five thousand dollars be set aside
For roses, lilacs, hydrangeas, tulips,
For perfume and color, sweetness of remembrance
Around his last long home.

(A hundred cash girls want nickels to go to the movies to-night.
In the back stalls of a hundred saloons, women are at tables
Drinking with men or waiting for men jingling loose
silver dollars in their pockets.
In a hundred furnished rooms is a girl who sells silk or
dress goods or leather stuff for six dollars a week wages
And when she pulls on her stockings in the morning she
is reckless about God and the newspapers and the
police, the talk of her home town or the name
people call her.)

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