Manhattan: Shakespeare in the Parking Lot
So there we stood in the parking lot at the corner of Ludlow and Broome in New York’s fabled Lower East Side, watching a performance of Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure. It was a warm August evening and all the chairs were taken. Eventually we just squatted on the ground. I thought it would be some amateur effort but was pleasantly surprised at the caliber of the actors and the innovation of their production.
The play was staged by The Drilling CompaNY, an Off-Broadway troupe, which proclaims it is a jazz player that endeavors “to extend the same freedom in creation and production to theater artists that jazz extends to musicians.” The play performed that evening was truly Haryanvi in its intrigues and malafides. It got a bit uncomfortable after an hour of watching it and a Martini beckoned, so we left. It’s not like we didn’t know the end. We luxuriated in the performance, walked to a wondrous bistro: there to eat, drink and be merry with our daughter and her friend.
As we walked back to her place in Gramercy on that night in Manhattan, I couldn’t help marveling at her world of hard work and joyous play. As a twenty-something, our daughter lives this carelessly sophisticated life that is enviable. To live in Lower Manhattan, to have a good job, to have good friends, to shrug off care with awareness and compassion is a life devoutly to be wished.
Beneath her seemingly hard Manhattan exterior, she is good for a cuddly hug and nostalgia. “I’m not ready for this scenario,” I told her: a stereotypical situation when parents visit from the Old World and she takes care of everything. “Deal with it, Dad. This is a different America than when you lived here,” she said. Truth is both our daughters are “cool.” They get it from us because we defined “cool,” way back in the 1960s and 1970s.
It’s only a matter of time before they start saying “groovy” and “far out.” Already women are wearing long skirts and caftans; men are letting their shirts hang out rather tucked in. What they need to know is “whatever,” the coolest of all words today, was first articulated by Archie Bunker in the hit sitcom, “All in the Family.” He said that to a Latino woman character in the show, whose name he found unpronounceable.
Regardless, we spent a wonderful weekend with her. She had a problem because I like steak and burgers; her mother prefers exotic foods like tapas and sushi. “Ok, parents, you can visit only one at a time. I can’t handle these different tastes,” she said as we ended up in a low-grade Italian restaurant with terrible food and brown bag wine on MacDougal Street in the West Village, after much this and that.
Our first weekend in Manhattan was a revelation. Our daughter runs an enlightened home, small but neat and comfortable. We got an insight to her life, which seems to be a lot more about quality than quantity. It is so different than when we lived there in the seventies. She fits into the Manhattan life so easily, where we had to make certain painful adjustments living in Chicago. She was born in America but grew up in Delhi; in the past six years she has lived in Lower Manhattan , you’d think she’d always lived there.
And she ain’t never coming back, that’s for sure. That somewhat sad realization for us is tempered by the knowledge that she has a “Sholay” poster on her dining room wall. And that she went to the Independence Day parade and stood in line to have kulfi.
What a difference a generation makes!
Copyright Rajiv Desai 2009
11 comments:
Nice to know about your American connection although you're originally from India. It was a pleasure to read this piece. I came across it by chance. It seems almost like you are one of those professional writers, which is great. You have obviously worked on your craft: it runs smoothly. I am sure other readers also appreciate your insights. Awesome.
i have been MISQUOTED!!!!!
is this the sort of journalism they teach in OHIO?!?!?!?!?
My main man, Rajiv, I am a brother from the hood and came across your blog thanks to a brother from harlem. If you interested in food, you ain't seen nothin' yet until you sunk your teeth into Chicago's famous hot dogs and burgers. Just to the the University of Illinois (UIC) campus near the Illini Union and besides that there is a great restaurant, not for fine dining but the real deal. You gotta check it out with your wife and daughters, and you'll remember this brother for it. They make the best bugers and hot dogs in the world and they are famos for it. Brother, you won't know what cool is until you tase Philly's cheese steaks and lip-smacking finger lickin' good pizzas from Chicago. And I ain't talkin' about pizza hut. There are mom and pop genuine italianas in Chicago that serve the real deal in italian cuisine. You ain't seen nothin' yet, brother Rajiv. Go for it, my man!
Right on, brother. The 60s generation defined cool: I agree. It wasn't just about sex, drugs and rock and roll. Today's 20-somethings need to know that our generation made a phenomenol contribution to bohemia. It was a finer way of living that appealed to an aesthetic sensibility. Today's materialists won't know what this generation has contributed until they re-visit the past and transcend the surface reality of that era. The 60s was a great time to be a teenager or even in your early 20s. Things were moving and shaking and we were changing the world. The fact that we failed and turned into corporate zombies carrying brief-cases and donning three-piece suits doesn't alter the fact that at least we tried. And our world is a better place for it. Thanks, Rajiv, for the memories of the 60s. You are a damn good writer, bud (pardon the pun)!
Well, thanks for mentioning "All in the Family" and Archie Bunker.
Today's kids ain't got no clue about the great TV shows from the 70s and 80s in America. They don't make TV like that anymore. Let me refresh your memory, Rajiv:
Sanford and Son
The Rockford Files
Hawaii Five O
The Streets of San Francisco
Walter Cronkite (the most trusted man in America/ TV Newsanchor)
Beverly Hillbillies
Baretta
Bewitched
I Dream of Jeannie
The Lucy Show/I Love Lucy
Sesame Street
Happy Days, Laverne and Shirley
The Jeffersons
And the list goes on and on and on.
Those were the glory days of American TV and now we are witnessing the decline--that's clear. Those were the days, my friend. How time flies. Sad that your daughters grew up in another era, so would not be familiar with the shows from the 70s and 80s. I wish the current crop of teenyboppers and 20 somethings would take the time to revist the past and watch some of these golden oldies. They may enjoy it.
Thanks for the memories, Rajiv.
How come nobody mentioned Chicago's famous Greek food (gyros) made of skewered lamb/chicken/beef and mexican fare like tacos, tamales, nachos and burritos? East or West Chicago's the best, folks, and this comes from a guy who lives outta Texas.
louise, you are very kind, please continue to read my blog.
yo jericho, you are a person after my own heart. may you many more burgers and pizzas. i'm not sure i like deep dish pizzas.
whatever you like to eat, be sure to work out.
brigette, love ya.
but think about this...all the guys who said peace and love went on to work for investment banks and screwed the economy. that was indeed a good time with music and free love and we were going to change the world. our saving grace is we made it possible to elect a black man to the presidency.
steven,
you forgot saturday night live, mary tyler moore, bob newhart, three's company. and could you ever forget mash?
man, you and i are on the same plane. bless you.
harry,
i used to go to halsted on the near west side to gorge on great greek food. thanks for reminding us.
Post a Comment