Create, Then Take a Break: 250 Anecdotes and Stories (Anecdotes Collections, #7)

This book contains 250 anecdotes and stories, especially about the arts, including dance. For example: 1) Fern Helsher worked as a press agent for Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers. As a former newspaper woman, she had many contacts and was able to get Mr. Shawn more and better publicity. Once, she went into the newspaper of a major midwestern city with publicity material, and the editor, who was a friend of hers, took her to lunch, where he asked, "What the hell are you representing a bunch of faeries for?" She replied, "They're not faeries, but let's not talk about them." She and the editor gossiped over lunch, and when she left, she gave the editor a package of photos, saying, "If you can do anything with it, fine. If not, OK." The next day photos of Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers were splashed all over the front page. 2) Dizzy Gillespie played with a trumpet that had an unusual shape. Its bell did not point forward but up—at a 45-degree angel. He says, "The truth is that the shape of my horn is an accident. I could pretend that I went into the basement and thought it up, but it wasn't that way." So how did the shape come about? A man accidentally sat on it, and the bell bent. It was 6 January 1953, the birthday of Dizzy's wife, and he played at the party for her. He liked the sound of the unusually shaped trumpet. He says that "when the bell bent, it made a smaller hole because of the dent. I couldn't get the right sound, but it was a strange sound that I got from the instrument that night. I played it, and I liked the sound. The sound had been changed, and it could be played softly, very softly, not blarey." The next day he had the trumpet straightened, but it missed the sound that the trumpet had had. He contacted the Martin Company and had an artist draw a trumpet with a bell at a 45-degree angle and told them, "I want a horn like this." They told him, "You're crazy!" Dizzy said, "'OK, I'm crazy, but I want a horn like this.' They made me a trumpet, and I've been playing one like that ever since." 3) A 1990s TV commercial for a Norwegian life insurance company showed two men meeting, then taking off in a glider. Seconds after they are in the air, two more men arrive—they are the instructors for the first two men.

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Create, Then Take a Break: 250 Anecdotes and Stories (Anecdotes Collections, #7)

This book contains 250 anecdotes and stories, especially about the arts, including dance. For example: 1) Fern Helsher worked as a press agent for Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers. As a former newspaper woman, she had many contacts and was able to get Mr. Shawn more and better publicity. Once, she went into the newspaper of a major midwestern city with publicity material, and the editor, who was a friend of hers, took her to lunch, where he asked, "What the hell are you representing a bunch of faeries for?" She replied, "They're not faeries, but let's not talk about them." She and the editor gossiped over lunch, and when she left, she gave the editor a package of photos, saying, "If you can do anything with it, fine. If not, OK." The next day photos of Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers were splashed all over the front page. 2) Dizzy Gillespie played with a trumpet that had an unusual shape. Its bell did not point forward but up—at a 45-degree angel. He says, "The truth is that the shape of my horn is an accident. I could pretend that I went into the basement and thought it up, but it wasn't that way." So how did the shape come about? A man accidentally sat on it, and the bell bent. It was 6 January 1953, the birthday of Dizzy's wife, and he played at the party for her. He liked the sound of the unusually shaped trumpet. He says that "when the bell bent, it made a smaller hole because of the dent. I couldn't get the right sound, but it was a strange sound that I got from the instrument that night. I played it, and I liked the sound. The sound had been changed, and it could be played softly, very softly, not blarey." The next day he had the trumpet straightened, but it missed the sound that the trumpet had had. He contacted the Martin Company and had an artist draw a trumpet with a bell at a 45-degree angle and told them, "I want a horn like this." They told him, "You're crazy!" Dizzy said, "'OK, I'm crazy, but I want a horn like this.' They made me a trumpet, and I've been playing one like that ever since." 3) A 1990s TV commercial for a Norwegian life insurance company showed two men meeting, then taking off in a glider. Seconds after they are in the air, two more men arrive—they are the instructors for the first two men.

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Create, Then Take a Break: 250 Anecdotes and Stories (Anecdotes Collections, #7)

Create, Then Take a Break: 250 Anecdotes and Stories (Anecdotes Collections, #7)

by David Bruce
Create, Then Take a Break: 250 Anecdotes and Stories (Anecdotes Collections, #7)

Create, Then Take a Break: 250 Anecdotes and Stories (Anecdotes Collections, #7)

by David Bruce

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Overview

This book contains 250 anecdotes and stories, especially about the arts, including dance. For example: 1) Fern Helsher worked as a press agent for Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers. As a former newspaper woman, she had many contacts and was able to get Mr. Shawn more and better publicity. Once, she went into the newspaper of a major midwestern city with publicity material, and the editor, who was a friend of hers, took her to lunch, where he asked, "What the hell are you representing a bunch of faeries for?" She replied, "They're not faeries, but let's not talk about them." She and the editor gossiped over lunch, and when she left, she gave the editor a package of photos, saying, "If you can do anything with it, fine. If not, OK." The next day photos of Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers were splashed all over the front page. 2) Dizzy Gillespie played with a trumpet that had an unusual shape. Its bell did not point forward but up—at a 45-degree angel. He says, "The truth is that the shape of my horn is an accident. I could pretend that I went into the basement and thought it up, but it wasn't that way." So how did the shape come about? A man accidentally sat on it, and the bell bent. It was 6 January 1953, the birthday of Dizzy's wife, and he played at the party for her. He liked the sound of the unusually shaped trumpet. He says that "when the bell bent, it made a smaller hole because of the dent. I couldn't get the right sound, but it was a strange sound that I got from the instrument that night. I played it, and I liked the sound. The sound had been changed, and it could be played softly, very softly, not blarey." The next day he had the trumpet straightened, but it missed the sound that the trumpet had had. He contacted the Martin Company and had an artist draw a trumpet with a bell at a 45-degree angle and told them, "I want a horn like this." They told him, "You're crazy!" Dizzy said, "'OK, I'm crazy, but I want a horn like this.' They made me a trumpet, and I've been playing one like that ever since." 3) A 1990s TV commercial for a Norwegian life insurance company showed two men meeting, then taking off in a glider. Seconds after they are in the air, two more men arrive—they are the instructors for the first two men.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940045082075
Publisher: David Bruce
Publication date: 11/12/2012
Series: Anecdotes Collections
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 190 KB

About the Author

I would like to see my retellings of classic literature used in schools, so I give permission to the country of Finland (and all other countries) to give copies of my eBooks to all students and citizens forever. I also give permission to the state of Texas (and all other states) to give copies of my eBooks to all students forever. I also give permission to all teachers to give copies of my eBooks to all students forever.

Teachers need not actually teach my retellings. Teachers are welcome to give students copies of my eBooks as background material. For example, if they are teaching Homer's "Iliad" and "Odyssey," teachers are welcome to give students copies of my "Virgil's 'Aeneid': A Retelling in Prose" and tell students, "Here's another ancient epic you may want to read in your spare time."

Do you know a language other than English? I give you permission to translate any of my retellings of classic literature, copyright your translation in your name, publish or self-publish your translation (but do say it's a translation of something I wrote), and keep all the royalties for yourself.

Libraries, download my books free. This is from Smashwords' FAQ section:

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"Yes! We have two methods of distributing to libraries: 1. Via library aggregators. Library aggregators, such as OverDrive and Baker & Taylor's Axis360 service, allow libraries to purchase books. Smashwords is working with multiple library aggregators, and is in the process of signing up additional aggregators. 2. On August 7, 2012, Smashwords announced Library Direct. This distribution option allows libraries and library networks to acquire and host Smashwords ebooks on their own servers. This option is only available to libraries who place large "opening collection" orders, typically in the range of $20,000-$50,000, and the libraries must have the ability to host and manage the books, and apply industry-standard DRM to manage one-checkout-at-a-time borrows."

David Bruce is a retired anecdote columnist at "The Athens News" in Athens, Ohio. He has also retired from teaching English and philosophy at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio.

SOME BOOKS BY DAVID BRUCE

Retellings of a Classic Work of Literature:

Arden of Favorsham: A Retelling

Ben Jonson's The Alchemist: A Retelling
Ben Jonson's The Arraignment, or Poetaster: A Retelling
Ben Jonson's Bartholomew Fa...

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