the classics

We’re getting back into the swing of things around here.  Our new year routine is in order and our lazy winter break week is behind us along with all of the Christmas decorations now packed away.

We managed to catch quite a few movies over the holidays.  Most of the new ones are not even worth mentioning except for Lincoln.  Brilliant – the acting, the set, Daniel Day Lewis.  I loved every minute of it and was still thinking about it the next day and now, a week later.  Have you seen it yet?  I was also fixed on certain props specifically the antique chairs in the film.  I would love to know more about how the set was put together.

Sally-Field-Lincoln-photo: FoxNews

As for the classics…there are a few favorites worth highlighting not just because of the story lines but because of the brilliant vintage props and sets.  I found myself getting lost in the details at times.

It’s a Wonderful Life 1946

I love all of the glassware featured in Gower’s drug store in the beginning of It’s a Wonderful Life.  I am definitely having a moment with vintage labware.  Nerd alert.  Bust seriously look at all of the apothecary bottles and pretty labels and such.  I spy a fabulous typewriter back there too.

It's a Wonderful Life

Fast forward to the end of the movie.  Hopefully you know the storyline – it is one of my all time favorite movies!  I love George and Mary’s fixer upper.  Mary is the ultimate DIYer and look at how chic she is!

In this scene I was particularly drawn to the curves of the French chair George is sitting on.  Love. It.  The chair is both masculine and feminine all in one.  Also, in the background, something about the mounted framed butterfly collection caught my eye.  The collection is definitely right on trend again.

It's a Wonderful Life

Breakfast At Tiffany’s 1961

Oh Holly Golightly, what a character!  She’s got so much style both fashionably and in her apartment.  Check out her stack of white luggage!  Holly hides her phone in there you know.

Holly Golightly - Breakfast at Tiffany's

But Holly’s most iconic piece has got to be her claw foot bathtub turned sofa.  I love the color choices as well.  Holly is the original upcycler!  By the way have you watched Salvage Dawgs yet?  They repeated this exact project on one of their first episodes.

Holly Golightly - Breakfast at Tiffany's

A Christmas Story 1983

Can you believe I never saw A Christmas Story before this year?  Yeah, me neither.  I think we need to invest in the leg lamp for next year.  It’s a “major award”.

Anyway, I found myself smitten with the mom’s hot pink chenille bathrobe.  I want one just like it so I can wear it around the house all winter.  As I write this, I am wearing a much less fashionable bathrobe.  Too much information?

A Christmas Story

Beyond the fabulous bathrobe, the mint and white hoosier cabinet really knocked my socks off in this movie!  How wonderfully vintage is that thing?  Perfection.  And I spy melmac dishes in the cabinet.  Those vintage kitchen chairs aren’t bad either.

A christmas story kitchen

What classic movies did you catch over the holidays?  Did you find yourself coveting anything from the movie sets like I did?

Hope you’re settling comfortably into 2013…

freud and antiques at the arden theatre

Good morning!  For the last couple of years, I have been on a committee for “The Scene” at Arden Theatre in the old city section of Philadelphia.  “The Scene” is an event where professionals get together for an hour of networking, mingling, cocktails and hors d’oeuvres before select performances at a reduced ticket price.  The party continues with the cast at a local hotspot.

It is really a great time and I’ve decided to share this little extra curricular of mine today because I thought you may have an interest in the current production.

Plus, I’m giving away a FREE pair of tickets!

First let me tell you about the show and why you’ll want to see it…

On the day England enters World War II, Sigmund Freud invites a young C.S. Lewis to his London flat. Here, the father of modern psychology challenges a little known professor on the brink of literary fame. Freud’s Last Session imagines a collision of these two brilliant minds over love, God, and life.

The entire set is filled with artifacts and antiques to replicate Freud’s actual study which is now The Freud Museum in London.  You can read more about how the set evolved on the Arden’s blog.  Here’s a picture of the actual set as it looks today.

 

There are over 200 “artifacts” on the stage of Freud’s Last Session at the Arden. Of those, 18 are from the Penn Museum. The largest bulk of the remaining artifacts were donated by members of the Arden’s Sylvan Society.  However, that still didn’t complete the set so the props team had to do a little antiquing and DIYing of their own.

Is it just me or did you too always wonder how theater sets evolved?  I’ve learned that it can be quite similar to staging the rooms in your own home.  These professionals are creative and on a budget so they start by shopping their own stock.  Chris Haig, the Prop Master at Arden Theatre, shared a few of the behind the scenes secrets on how the set of Freud’s Last Session evolved.   

Two items specifically mentioned in the script and picked up by the characters needed to be built from scratch as finding them online or elsewhere proved impossible or too costly according to Chris. They are the Eros statue and the mummy bandages with markings from the Book of the Dead.

The replica Eros statue was modeled out of clay and painted to look like terra cotta.  The leg and hands were broke off just as Freud’s statue had been.

To create the mummy bandage, Chris’s team cut a muslin strip into a 4” width, aged them with a wash of brown paint and distressed them with darker brown tones along the frayed edges. It was also necessary to give them “embalming fluid stains” with watered down yellow paint as this is directly referred to in the script. Chris then copied the hieroglyphs and figures seen on the original using a fine point archival ink pen. After drying, the bandage was wrapped around a stained wooden dowel and placed in the center of a vintage mason jar. Did somebody say mason jar?

As for the antique furniture, there is a unique corner chair next to Freud’s desk that the team was absolutely dedicated to getting just right.  Chris scoured the internet, every prop rental house in the area and reached out to fellow prop masters nationwide with no luck. He came across a close match while antiquing in Lancaster however the chair exceeded the budget.  They wouldn’t settle for just any chair.  Finally, Chris found the correct chair right in Philadelphia from a local dealer’s personal collection!

It took 2-3 months to put the set for Freud’s Last Session together.  It sounds like Chris has an awesome job…antiquing, DIYing, staging!  I can’t wait to personally view the set and performance next Friday.

 I hope you’ll join us for “The Scene” where we’ll view Freud’s Last Session on Friday evening, November 16th. 

  • Leave a comment letting me know that you’d like to win a free pair of tickets to “The Scene” and the performance of Freud’s Last Session ($60 value). 
  • There will be an extra entry for you if you post a link to this giveaway on facebook or twitter. 
  • You have until Sunday, November 11th at midnight EST to enter. 
  • The winner will be announced on Monday, November 12th and your pair of tickets will be held at the Arden’s box office for Friday’s performance.

Good luck!  Who will you take if you win?

P.S. Sorry that this giveaway only pertains to my local friends.  I will make it up to you.  Promise.

(All images borrowed from Arden Theatre.)