Saturday, September 7, 2013

Drama Critic's Tea



Peter Biskind, ed., My Lunches with Orson: Conversations between Henry Jaglom and Orson Welles (NY: Metropolitan Books, 2013), pp. 94-5.

OW: Let me tell you a story about George Jean Nathan, America’s greatest drama critic. George Jean Nathan was the tightest man who ever lived, even tighter than Charles Chaplin. And he lived for forty years in the Hotel Royalton, which is across from the Algonquin. […] He never tipped anybody in the Royalton, not even when they brought the breakfast, and not at Christmastime. After about ten years of never getting tipped, the room-service waiter peed slightly in his tea. Everybody in New York knew it but him. The waiters hurried across the street and told the waiters at the Algonquin, who were waiting to see when it would finally dawn on him what he was drinking! And as the years went by, there got to be more and more urine and less and less tea. And it was a great pleasure for us in the theater to look at a leading critic and know that he was full of piss. And I, with my own ears, heard him at the 21 [Club] complaining to a waiter, saying, “Why can’t I get tea here as good as it is at The Royalton?” That’s when I fell on the floor, you know.

Friday, August 30, 2013

Plasma TV Powder Drug Craze




The Post [South Africa]
29 August 2013


By BRENDAN ROANE

Johannesburg - Eight murders in three months in Alexandra allegedly have one thing in common: a plasma TV.

Unconfirmed reports indicate that a group of men, known as the Plasma Gang, are stealing the televisions to retrieve a powder which is being used in a dangerous drug cocktail. […]


Sowetan Live [South Africa]
30 August 2013



iafrica.com
30 August 2013


Article By: Gia Nicolaides, EWN

Police were adamant on Friday that a spate of plasma television thefts in Alexandra was not linked to the manufacturing of drugs. […]





The Independent [South Africa]
31 August 2013
By Noni Mokati




Eyewitness News [South Africa]
24 September 2013


Gia Nicolaides

JOHANNESBURG – Eyewitness News has conducted an experiment proving that the powder found inside plasma television screens cannot be used to manufacture drugs. […]