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Call Me a Cab
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One of the things I like most about old movies (of which I watch a couple hundred a year), books, and even music is that I pick up little tidbits about life as it was lived back in the day.
For example, I'm currently reading Cornell Woolrich's 1932 novel "Manhattan Love Song," and there were, in the chapter I read at lunch, a couple of things that caught my eye and piqued my interest.
The two lead characters, Wade and Bernice, are having an affair, and Wade hasn't revealed to Bernice, who's no choir girl, that he's married. But Wade's wife Maxine pays a visit to Bernice, who confronts Wade the next time he pays her a visit:
See, I had no idea that wedding rings for men were uncommon in the U.S. as recently as the Thirties (or, for that matter, that they were common in Europe).
A few pages later, Wade and Bernice have decided to skip town (for reasons I won't go into here), and in a hurry, so Wade rushes home to pack:
This may not be an especially vintage approach, but I was intrigued by this very specific method of packing shirts, meant to keep the white shirts unsullied.
Anyway, I thought it might be fun for us to log any bits of info and insight we pick up while watching old movies and television programs and reading older literature. I've gleaned dozens of similar tidbits over the years, but won't try to recall them all now -- I'll start with just the above two. But I'd be interested to hear from the rest of the group.
For example, I'm currently reading Cornell Woolrich's 1932 novel "Manhattan Love Song," and there were, in the chapter I read at lunch, a couple of things that caught my eye and piqued my interest.
The two lead characters, Wade and Bernice, are having an affair, and Wade hasn't revealed to Bernice, who's no choir girl, that he's married. But Wade's wife Maxine pays a visit to Bernice, who confronts Wade the next time he pays her a visit:
"Wade," she said, shaking a finger at me, "you've been holding out on me."
"I have? What do you mean?"
"You see, in Europe," she laughed, "the married men wear rings just like the women do. It has its advantages."
"I have? What do you mean?"
"You see, in Europe," she laughed, "the married men wear rings just like the women do. It has its advantages."
See, I had no idea that wedding rings for men were uncommon in the U.S. as recently as the Thirties (or, for that matter, that they were common in Europe).
A few pages later, Wade and Bernice have decided to skip town (for reasons I won't go into here), and in a hurry, so Wade rushes home to pack:
"I began to pile shirts in like one of those three-decker sandwiches, colored ones on bottom and on top and white ones in the middle, where they wouldn't get dirty so quickly."
This may not be an especially vintage approach, but I was intrigued by this very specific method of packing shirts, meant to keep the white shirts unsullied.
Anyway, I thought it might be fun for us to log any bits of info and insight we pick up while watching old movies and television programs and reading older literature. I've gleaned dozens of similar tidbits over the years, but won't try to recall them all now -- I'll start with just the above two. But I'd be interested to hear from the rest of the group.