Monday, July 25, 2005

The Round

For the benefit of those that didn't understand Munkee Girl's comment on the previous post, here's some background...courtesy of Wikipedia.org:

The Algonquin Round Table was a group of some of the most brilliant writers of the 1920s and 1930s, though it endured long after that.

They met for lunch every day at a round table at New York City's Algonquin Hotel and traded quips, many of them still repeated today. The group was formed at the suggestion of Dorothy Parker, who was living in the Algonquin Hotel at the time.

There was no formal membership, so people came and went, but the primary early members included Parker, Alexander Woollcott, Robert Benchley, George S. Kaufman, Edna Ferber, Franklin Pierce Adams, Oscar Levant and Harpo Marx. Others, from movies, theatre and letters, visited. Since some of the members were popular columnists who repeated some of the conversations in their columns, the quips got wide circulation. Sometimes they were unkind.

One story is that when Dorothy Parker was informed about the death of President Calvin Coolidge, she replied, "How can they tell?"

The lobby of the Algonquin hotel leaves their table set with namecards of the famous people who sat there. There is also a mural depicting one of the famous lunches.

And Peter is right about Bootsey Ackerman...but Bootsy Collins is a Funk Master.

3 comments:

munkee girl said...

Surely the general educated public knows what the Algonquin Roundtable is?!?!? I'm going to hope this is just Ken's usual good manners in making sure everyone is in the loop and not reflective of the inadequate preparation offered by today's education system.

Ken said...

Usual good manners...? Do you even know me?

:-)

munkee girl said...

Well, now, that response was certainly uncharacteristic. Swine before pearls, I presume...