Showing posts with label gorgeous. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gorgeous. Show all posts

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Kim Coles!


Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, 'Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous?' 
Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. 
 We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.
Marianne Williamson, A Return to Love: Reflections on the Principles of "A Course in Miracles"  

Happy Saturday!
I'm here in Denver after an incredible time in Palm Springs and Los Angeles...but looking forward to getting home and embarking on the next chapter of my life.
Yesterday morning, I had breakfast with one of my favorite comedians, Kim Coles...looking amazing! The above quote from Mariane Williamson sums up Kim Coles perfectly.  Kim calls herself a magical manifestor. You are about to see that she truly is. We had actually met before having appeared in a benefit years ago produced by my dear friend, Sara Berg, who also happens to be Kim's sister-in-law. Sara’s  husband, Cliff Coles, is the baby brother of Kim Coles.
Kim flew in the night before from a busy trip to New York. Kim was impressed that my interview did not consist of the usual interview questions. She feels,  I am happy to say, that I am on to something. We sat down and our conversation was all over the place as we waited for breakfast to arrive.  We were like two old friends with a lot to say and limited time! She had a tele-conference at noon and we had to make our way to the airport for our flight to Denver…where I am now.  Sara and Cliff, I hope that the two of you will learn a few things about Kim from this interview. I even think that Kim learned a few more things about herself.
The first live show that Kim remembers seeing as a child was The Mikado. She remembers the awe that she felt when she discovered  that the actors weren’t really Japanese but that their look was created from make-up! Her Girl Scout troop went. She was like 9 or 10. She was so in awe.

Kim says that she cannot cook to this day because her mother would shoo her out of the kitchen for asking too many questions. She would then go and watch television. She became, as I was, a child of television. Carol Burnett, who she really credits for her desire to go into show business and Lucille Ball and Bugs Bunny.  She wanted to be Carol Burnett and Lucille Ball when she grew up. Cut to the first season of In Living Color...when Kim appeared on that show, it was the closest to Carol Burnett that she feels she ever became.Being a sketch comedy show, she played different characters. She realized that she had manifested that dream. She didn't plan for it; she fell in to it. It was a blessing.

Kim was exposed to the arts growing up. They lived in Brooklyn. She went to plays, concerts, PBS on Sunday afternoons. Her mother was a teacher and her father loved music. She remembers watching Peter and The Wolf on PBS. Sunday afternoons were a big deal.  She didn't see a lot of the "bigger" shows like Dreamgirls and Pippin. There was a lot that she didn't see but she was aware of theatre and of music and aware of that thing called "show".

Kim's first time on stage was as a plus size model. People that she was working for found out that she was funny. She was dabbling in stand-up at the time. And one night, the emcee for the show did not show up, they were running late. This was in the days before cell phones would have alerted everyone to what was going on. The designer said, "You're funny. Get up there and entertain everyone." And she was like humana-humana-humana...but she went out there like a trooper. Her big routine at the time was a medley of Roots! Roots was one of the first mini-series. Every night something amazing happened in the plot line and by the end of the week...from the theme music to "Behold Something Greater than yourself"...from Kunte Kinte being captured to Kizzie..."Don't take my baby away."

Stand-up comedy was where she first began to make a living in this business. Showtime at The Apollo first established her as a comedian to be reckoned with. She did succeed first time at bat. She was fearless and she didn't know what the rules were and therefore she did well. She didn't get her first heckler to many years later. She decided that she wanted to be a "prop comic". She got a battery operated wall light, a touch light that you would put in your closet. She tied it around her waist and covered it with her dress. She would scratch in her "private area" and it would light up. She would apologize by saying she had "pubic lights" as the audiences would be asking each other if she really said what they thought she had just said. "Excuse me everyone, I really do need ointment!" The reaction was always hilarity. She would twirl a baton and drop it...whatever would get a laugh. 

As with all my blogs, we touch upon the importance of arts in education. Kim says we are ALL creative beings. And kids have it in spades! They have imagination; it is so important to foster that imagination. Imagination never dies. Kim knows that she is who she is today because of her exposure to the arts growing up. With arts in education, you can take up drawing in school, learn to play a musical instrument, learn about plays and shows, read plays, and you learned about LIFE through Shakespeare and other playwrights. It is so important to feed that imagine to our young. It helps to build and foster their minds. It never dies and it is at its best when we are young.

Because of my involvement with Carol Channing and hers and my involvement with the Foundation, I always ask about Carol and what she means to those I am writing about. Today is no exception. Kim says Carol is one of a kind and there is no one like her. So undeniably Carol Channing. Kim had the opportunity to meet Carol at a party given by the William Morris agency. Both Carol and Kim were clients at the time.

Every year a big party was given in which each agent could bring one client. And that year, Kim was chosen. Major stars and major agents and someone took Kim over to meet Carol. And there she was in all of her Carol Channing glory: the hair, the eyes, and lashes, the lips, the epaulets. Kim says she was so warm to her, "Yes, I think I recognize your face!"  Kim says maybe she did, maybe she didn't. But she didn't feel for an instant that she didn't. Kim says she was so gracious. And she didn't realize until that moment, perhaps now as we do this interview, people want to be acknowledged. And the two worst words you can say to Kim right now are "Remember me"? And Kim doesn't want to say, "No, I'm sorry I don't". Kim meets hundreds of thousands of people in her travels and from time to time someone will come up and say, "Remember me?"  Kim says, "Can you refresh my memory?" and even if she doesn't remember, she'll say "It's so nice to see you again!" Kim doesn't want to lie. She genuinely wants to remember you.
It was that Carol moment that turned Kim around. Again, maybe Carol remembered her, maybe she didn't.  That is a gift that Carol possesses. Kim said she felt acknowledged, she felt "touched by an angel", and she realized that's what people want, and that's what Carol gave Kim. You CAN'T remember everyone you meet. Kim has a friend who does a routine on that situation: "Remember me? We met last St. Patrick's Day and I was in green and it was in the forest."

Kim's most recent appearance was in New York this past week on Showbiz Tonight on CNN with AJ Hammer who Kim says is adorable in person. He was warm and charming.
Kim was there to talk about the recent Paula Deen scandal. Kim feels that Paula has the prettiest eyes in show business. We both hope that Paula comes through all of this with flying colors. The diabetes AND the scandal for not announcing her diabetes prognosis earlier. We both want to see her succeed and win for all of us.   Kim says there are some who feel that those of us in show business are jaded, but we still want to be treated with kindness. And when you meet those celebrities and you realize they are "regular" people, it is heart warming.  We ALL want to be treated with kindness. When you meet a Whoopie Goldberg and she is genuinely warm, you are moved by that. Kim  first met Whoopie in her orthodontist's  office and Kim started to hyperventilate. Rather than thinking Kim was crazy, Whoopie treated her with REAL kindness. It was a lovely experience for Kim. Kim still feels that awe when she is in Whoopie's presence. Kim recently met Ralph Fiennes and had the same experience. Kim feels, as I do, when she is in the presence of truly talented people, it is "I'm not worthy, I'm not worthy, I'm not worthy". It is hyperventilation time. I told Kim that sitting in the same spot the day before was George Chikiris and we both get it! I would feel the same way if I got the opportunity to meet Doris Day! I just want to tell Doris what she means to me. Just to say Thank You. Kim has had that moment with her fans as well. The arts and these artists touch us. THAT'S what it is all about. From watching the masters do it with her, she has learned how to put her fans at ease.


When Kim saw Whoopie on Broadway in her acclaimed one woman show, the show that had made Whoopie a star, for Kim, it was Carol Burnett and Lucille Ball...now there was Whoopie! And Kim felt there was a genuine place for her in show business.

Kim is returning to stand-up THIS Sunday! She is reclaiming her comedy crown. She took her crown off and sat it down and a lot of girls picked it up. Kim says its ok for them to share it, but it is time for her to put it back on!  When she started in stand up, she was one of a kind. There weren't many women like her.  She is not a woman who hates men, she doesn't hate herself on stage, she doesn't talk about how awful her life is. There goes a LOT of material. For Kim, it's about joy, and love, and laughter. That's what I love about Kim. Now, that she;s 50, earlier this month, she says there are "flashes" (pun intended) to pull upon.

Kim feels her biggest success in show business, the sparkling jewel of her career so far was the five seasons she spent on Living Single. I happen to LOVE that show and still watch it!

Kim's lowest low was not as low as some people might consider. It was when she was fired after one season on In Living Color....However, it did free her up to go to Living Single!  Kim felt that she was going to be the new Carol Burnett...and within one year she was gone!  It was due to the fact that there was a hierarchy...and Kim was very low on the totem pole. The work was not always distributed fairly. It was not always distributed to ability and/or skill. It was sometimes due to last name! Kim understands that NOW. If she had not had that experience, she would not have been able to go on to Living Single...where she was at the top of the totem pole! To get the full contrast. Kim feel it was an amazing experience.To go from the experience during In Living Color of thinking things were unfair to succeeding fully with Living Single. She would go home and rehearse to come back the next day to someone else's name on the sketch.  She would experience herself sitting in her dressing room and crying. She also feels that she did not bring her full self to this. Because she felt that it was so unfair, she was too busy complaining about how unfair things were. She cut herself off.  She felt that she couldn't fight this, she couldn't win, so she just shut down. Kim is good with all this now.
Another low point for Kim was being booed on stage! She opened for Bobby Brown. And Bobby Brown never showed up. It was an outdoor concert in Atlantic City. Maybe 5,000 teenagers. She went out to do twenty minutes and it was about to rain. That east coast feeling when you can feel the rain before it arrives. The kids gave her twenty minutes and they were done with her. She said her thank yous and goodnights and promptly left the stage. She walked back stage and the promoters told her to go back out, that Bobby was not there. She said "What!?!?!" She had just done twnty minutes of material when she only had eighteen. It was the worst thing she could have ever done. The audience was already through with her. She had no more material. The audience began to boo her in echo. "Boo! Get off the stage". They began to chant "We want Bobby!"  Kim kicked off her shoes, and said, "Here's the deal. You're booing me" and did the cardinal sin, she told them Bobby was not there. Something you should never do. Now, the audience is in an uproar. Kim screamed back, "You have some nerve booing me. I'm going to be a star. I just booked In Living Color! I'm about to go out to Hollywood and you shouldn't have booed me because I was the show! Bobby is NOT here!" The promoters were upset. Kim ran off the stage, one of the guys in the band grabbed her shoes, which she left in her haste. Thank God she had already been paid! As she left, the sky opened up with a Noah's Arc type of rain. "Little Black girls hair was shrinking and all the white girls looked like wet rats. As I walked into my hotel room, I said that's what you get for booing me. Now, I'm off to Hollywood and stardom!"


The one change Kim would like to see in the industry is for the old fashioned sitcom to come back. That is Kim's milleau. That is her favorite thing to do. She wants writers on set. Doing the lines and having them say, we can improve upon that. She had that with Living Single. 4 day a week schedule. Get it down. Your summers off. Jokes with the crew. The lighting guy who puts a special light so that when you open the door, you are lit in your own lighting. The lighting guy for Living Single got an Emmy nomination every year. He was lighting six different skin tones. And the food. Thank God that TV Land has picked up that mantle. Kim is going to be pitching a new show idea to them.

Kim says she is very happy about where she is right now in her career. She's happy with who she is. She's getting a chance to be Kim Coles on TV. She is hosting shows. She is going around the country and speaking. She would love to do a sitcom. Although she would love to play a character, she is glad she gets to be herself, also. She was just on The Chew (The View with food). She has two things that I will scoop as soon as they materialize!

Kim is dying to do Dancing With The Stars. I want to see that dream materialize! She has been in the running a couple of times. She knows it is hard work. She wants to experience that journey, to dance with Maxim, to shake her groove thing. She wants the sparkle, the marabou, all of it!


Kim says she never dreamed this high. Kim has a life coach who tells her, "Don't remain positive, remain powerful." So find where you're powerful.  And her thing is stay in the good side of the room! So here's the deal...On the bad side of the room is where everything is that something bad happens. "I have a cold, my knees knock, I don't sing very well, my car is not working." On the good side of the room is that I'm funny, that I make people happy, that I'm tall, that I have a lovely smile, that I have good skin...stay your ass on the good side of the room. It doesn't matter that I could stand to lose a few pounds. Where am I magnificent? Stand in your magnificence at all times. So when I'm feeling a little so-so, I need to focus on where everything is working, and I have to stay powerful."

Kim says the inter-web is here to stay. Facebook and Twitter are definitely being utilized by Kim. Find your niche and tap into that utilizing social media. We can all help each other out. Collaboration is what it is all about.


If a genie was to grant Kim three wishes, they would be a lovely perfect soul mate, Indris Alba types to the front of the line!, more wishes, and Dancing With The Stars.  


I asked Kim to tell me the turning point in her career. She said. 'I'll tell you the point I felt HOT and the point I felt NOT. The point I felt HOT was when I got booked on Live with Regis and Kathie Lee. I felt I had ARRIVED. I love Regis. NO ONE can touch him. And the moment I felt NOT was years later when the same show said No to me."


It is time for Kim to be as HOT in all media as she is right now in my heart! I love you, Kim! Thanks for this!
NO COPY WRITE INFRINGEMENT INTENDED.  FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY!

Please do what YOU can to be more aware that words and actions DO HURT...but they can also heal and help!
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Tomorrow's's blog will be... CELEBRATING JOSHING AROUND starring JOSHUA WARR and JOSHUA DESJARDINS

Thank you, to all the mentioned in this blog!

  Here's to an INCREDIBLE day for ALL...with NO challenges!


Now, GO OUT AND DO SOMETHING FOR SOMEONE ELSE TONIGHT!

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TILL TOMORROW...HERE'S TO AN ARTS FILLED DAY!
Richard Skipper, Richard@RichardSkipper.com

Thursday, July 28, 2011

"I Aspire" A Celebration of Truman Capote's Famed Black and White Ball


"Beware of monotony;it's the mother of all the deadly sins."
_Edith Wharton, Anerican author (1862-1937)

Happy Thursday!
Light the candles...get the ice out...
I hope this finds you well and BUSY! I got up this morning and the above quote was the first quote I saw today and I love it! Many things can be said about me. Monotonous is not one of them. mo·not·o·ny/məˈnätn-ē/Noun
1. Lack of variety and interest; tedious repetition and routine.
2. Sameness of pitch or tone in a sound or utterance.

I'm planning a big event for October and I'm using Truman Capote's infamous black and white ball as my template. Only the positive aspects of course. Truman Capote was a literary legend, and two major motion pictures focused on how he created his masterpiece, In Cold Blood.
Flush with the bestsellerdom of In Cold Blood, which earned him millions, Capote decided to throw an extraordinary masked ball-partly in honor of his friend the Washington Post president Katherine Graham and partly to celebrate his own success at the end of the grueling process of writing the book-at New York's legendary Plaza Hotel. For several months, the most sought-after piece of paper in New York and jet-setting society was the tasteful white card bearing the words, " Mr. Truman Capote requests your company at a Black and White Dance." Capote boasted that he invited 500 friends but made fifteen thousand enemies-those who weren't invited.

The glittering roster of guests included Frank Sinatra and Mia Farrow, the young actress Candice Bergan, literary lions Norman Mailor and William F. Buckley, and various international crowned heads, Kennedys, Rockefellers, Vanderbilts, and Whitneys.

Social snubs and prickly rivalries, no doubt, swirled through the ballroom at New York's Plaza Hotel that night in 1966... on the night Benson photographed Truman Capote's notorious Black & White Ball. Tallulah Bankhead insulted Norman Mailer, Lauren Bacall spurned eager dance partners, and the host himself tried to physically block the exit when Frank Sinatra and then-wife Mia Farrow departed at midnight.

Desiring to keep the party mix interesting and unpredictable, Capote also invited people from the town where the murders from In Cold Blood occurred, publishing types, and even the doorman from the UN Plaza, his apartment building.

In PARTY OF THE CENTURY* THE FABULOUS STORY OF TRUMAN CAPOTE AND HIS BLACK AND WHITE BALL, Deborah Davis, in fascinating detail, captures the drama and excitement of The ball itself.
(Katherine Graham And Truman Capote)

If you opened your mailbox in the fall of 1966 and found this invitation in your mailbox, you knew you were on the "it" list: "In honor of Mrs. Katharine Graham / Mr. Truman Capote / requests the pleasure of your company / at a Black and White Dance / on Monday, the twenty-eighth of November / at ten o'clock / Grand Ballroom, The Plaza / DRESS Gentlemen: Black tie; Black mask. Ladies: Black or White dress; White mask; fan. R.S.V.P. Miss Elizabeth Davis, 465 Park Avenue, New York." This was the most coveted invitation of the 1960s, the card asking the recipient to attend the "Party of the Century", Truman Capote's legendary Black and White Ball.
One of the most iconic and memorable dinner parties ever thrown, the Black and White Ball still holds a special place in the history of American high society. This is its story.

Truman Capote is perhaps best known for his 1958 novella "Breakfast at Tiffany's" which was later translated into the Audrey Hepburn film classic of the same name.
(Jack Mitchell photographed Truman Capote in his United Nations Plaza apartment (above) in color and black and white for the Chicago Tribune Magazine. When Mitchell asked Capote why there was water in a vase containing artificial calla lilies, Capote replied "To make them look real, of course!" The blog is all about parties!
- Craig B. Highberger)

Already a well respected author and popular figure on the social scene by the mid-1960s, Capote's fame and status skyrocketed with the huge commercial success of his 1965 book "In Cold Blood", which would also later become a movie. "In Cold Blood" told the story of the brutal murders of a farmer and his family in Kansas, and despite some question as to how factually accurate Capote's account of the events were, the book is widely acknowledged as the first true crime book, thus launching the genre.
The success of "In Cold Blood" made Truman Capote a millionaire (although by his own account, the $2 million he made is less impressive when the six years spent researching and writing the book are taken into account), and helped to secure his place in high society.
(Tallulah Bankhead)

William Frank Buckley, Jr.

(November 24, 1925 – February 27, 2008) was an American conservative authorand commentator. He founded the political magazine National Review in 1955, hosted 1,429 episodes of the television show Firing Line from 1966 until 1999, and was a nationally syndicated newspaper columnist. His writing was noted for extensive vocabulary.

The Plaza Hotel in New York City is jointly owned by Elad Properties and Kingdom Holdings, a Saudia Arabia based corporation. It has been managed by Fairmont Hotels & Resorts since 1999.

The commercial and social success that Truman Capote achieved for himself was the pinnacle of the dreams of the young Alabama boy whose motto was, "I aspire". Capote was already a fixture on the New York social scene before the release of "In Cold Blood" and had a group of society ladies with whom he often dined known as his "flock of swans". Truman's blueblood "swans" included fixtures of American society: Babe Paley, Slim Keith, Gloria Guinness, Lee Radziwill (sister of Jacqueline Kennedy), C.Z. Guest, and Marella Agnelli. The socialites of New York affectionately referred to Truman Capote as Tru Heart or Tru Love, and he was like their favorite little pet (albeit one with a sharp tongue and an attitude).

To celebrate his grand achievements, Capote decided to throw a party. Not just a party, but the party, the one to which everyone who was anyone would desperately desire to be invited. He set the date for November 28, 1966 in the Grand Ballroom of New York's legendary Plaza Hotel. Capote wanted his party to be spectacular, to make a splash, and he set about making that come true. The event was much more than a party to Capote, it was performance art, and a childhood dream come true. Realizing that it would look better to at least pretend that the party was in honor of someone else, Capote designated Washington Post publisher Katharine (Kay) Graham as the guest of honor.

Speaking of the guest list, it is one of the most interesting parts of the story behind the Black and White Ball. Truman Capote was a skilled social climber and a master manipulator. When it was he who held the power, he decided to take the opportunity to make or break people socially. Capote taunted potential guests by saying, "Well maybe you'll be invited, and maybe you won't". He was fond of saying that when he threw his famous party, he made 500 friends and 15,000 enemies.
Some said that it was less about whom Capote did invite, and more about the people whom he consciously snubbed. Capote meant for the guest list to the Black and White Ball to become the 20th Century's answer to the famous "400" of the Gilded Age (an 1892 list of the four hundred members of high society who could fit in Mrs. Astor's ballroom on 5th Avenue), and in many ways it did.

An expert at self-promotion, Capote got the kind of publicity for his upcoming party that had never been seen before. People were desperate to score invitations to the Party of the Century.
Pleas were made, cash bribes were offered, and would-be party goers phoned so often that Capote was finally driven out of New York for a time. One of the few guests whose begging was successful was a man who told Capote that his wife had threatened suicide if she did not make it onto the "in" list. Not wanting to be the cause of a death (his own mother had been a suicide), Capote did agree to extend an invitation to the unfortunate woman and her husband.


(Gloria Guinness, William and Babe Paley)

Barbara "Babe" Cushing Mortimer Paley (July 5, 1915 – July 6, 1978) was an American socialite and style icon. She was first privately, and later publicly, known by the popular name "Babe" for most of her life. She was named to the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame in 1958.


Some women are born into their fortunes, others earn them the old fashioned way: they marry them. Lady Slim Keith fell into the latter category. Born Nancy Gross in Salinas, California, Slim was an unremarkable girl in a strict, unhappy home ruled by her bigoted father. Her difficult childhood was made more bearable by her mother, as well as the John Steinbecks, their neighbors and good friends.

Read more: Slim Keith - the Fashion Spot


(Gloria Guinness and her daughter, Dolores Guinness
both wearing Balenciaga. Photograph by Henry Clarke for French Vogue, 1957)
Gloria Guinness (August 27, 1912 – November 9, 1980),
born Gloria Rubio y Alatorre, was a Mexican-born socialite and fashion icon of the 20th century, and a contributing editor to Harper's Bazaar from 1963 until 1971. She was named to the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame in 1964.

Lee Radziwill:

PARTY OF THE CENTURY* THE FABULOUS STORY OF TRUMAN CAPOTE AND HIS BLACK AND WHITE BALL lavishly illustrated with photographs and drawings of the guests and their gorgeous and extravagant costumes, masks, and jewels and including the guest list, the recipe for the Plaza chicken hash served at the ball, and other memorabilia, this portrait of revelry at the height of the swirling, swinging, turbulent sixties will be the book of the season for anyone interested in American popular culture and the lifestyles and legacies of the rich, famous, and talented.

C.Z. Guest with her son

Capote carried a composition notebook around with him for weeks, working on the guest list. Names went on the list, names were removed, and some were placed back on. When the final guest list was complete, it included 540 people, of whom close to 500 ultimately attended the ball. To hear it told, though, quite a few more people were invited; there were plenty of social climbers who told their friends that they had been invited to the Black and White Ball, but had to be in London or Paris on that night (and then actually left the country to keep up the charade!). Their efforts were all for naught, however, as Capote "leaked" the guest list to the New York Times, which published it in its entirety the day after the party.


Thank you Truman Capote for creating a world we will probably never see again and thank you Deborah Davis for creating a fascinating look into that world with PARTY OF THE CENTURY* THE FABULOUS STORY OF TRUMAN CAPOTE AND HIS BLACK AND WHITE BALL !

WIKIPEDIA and PARTY OF THE CENTURY* THE FABULOUS STORY OF TRUMAN CAPOTE AND HIS BLACK AND WHITE BALL are MAJOR SOURCES of this Blog!

Also, Truman Capote's Black And White Ball



STAY HOME TONIGHT AND READ PARTY OF THE CENTURY* THE FABULOUS STORY OF TRUMAN CAPOTE AND HIS BLACK AND WHITE BALL Don't have it? Order it http://www.amazon.com/Party-Century-Fabulous-Truman-Capote/dp/0471659665 Relive this historic event
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Richard Skipper, Richard@RichardSkipper.com