Archive for the ‘Americans in Paris’ Category

A Day at the Races with Gina Rarick – Part IV

Saturday, May 5th, 2012
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Jockey Coming Back from Race

Jockey Coming Back from Race on Her Nervous Horse
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

After the horses left the starting gate, we left too, and walked over to the gate where the horses would return after the race. From our position on the racecourse, we were unable to determine which horse had won that particular race, but we did take a picture of the returning jockey whose horse had been so nervous at the start (see Part III for a photo of the nervous horse).

Winning Horse in Winner's Circle

Winning Horse in Winner's Circle
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

After each race, the jockey rides the winning horse into the winner’s circle where photographers and admirers gather around to take pictures. In the picture above, the jockey had already dismounted and walked away before we got a chance to photograph him. He didn’t stay to bask in the glory of victory!

Gina Demonstes the Hand Ride

Gina Demonstes the Hand Ride
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Gina had been telling us about a technique, called the “hand ride,” that jockeys use to get their horses to run faster, especially in the home stretch. Using a harness, she showed Monique how tightening the reins helps the jockey stay in harmony with the movement of the animal. At that point, the jockey shoves the horse’s neck forward with each forward movement of the neck during the gallop, giving extra impetus to the horse’s rhythm, making it run faster. For a video demonstration of the hand ride, follow this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QVHEoy1o_BY.

After watching a couple of thrilling races and feeling the excitement in the air, I decided to put my money down on a horse. I sensed that Lady Luck would smile on me that day.

Tomorrow: I win big at the racetrack!

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A Day at the Races with Gina Rarick – Part III

Friday, May 4th, 2012
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Gina Shows Us the Starting Gate

Gina Shows Us the Starting Gate
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

After taking us on a tour of the area where the horses warm up, Gina took us over to the starting gate.

What a Racehorse Sees

What a Racehorse Sees
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Gina told us that sometimes horses don’t want to go into the starting gate, in which case the jockey, sitting in the saddle, will pull on the horse’s tail to get it to move forward into the gate. We witnessed this a number of times. On one occasion, we saw a jockey pulling on the tail of his horse and somehow the horse made a movement, throwing the jockey off. The horse fell, rolling onto the jockey. Ouch! An ambulance pulled up immediately and the jockey was put on a stretcher and taken off the track. And so the race continues! No time to pause to mourn the wounded.

Recalcitrant Racehorse

Recalcitrant Racehorse
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Jockey Waiting for Her Horse

Jockey Waiting for Her Horse
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Standing behind and to the side the starting gate (but separated from the racetrack by a hedge) we could watch the horses and their jockeys prepare for the race. One jockey’s horse was nervous, so the handler walked the horse to calm it. The jockey waited, trying to keep warm in the cold air.

Jockey and Racehorse Move into the Starting Gate

Jockey and Racehorse Move into the Starting Gate
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Finally, her horse was ready. She mounted it and moved into the starting gate. Just in time, because everyone else was lining up.

Seconds before the Gates Open

Seconds before the Gates Open
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

There was a tense moment before the gates opened. And then suddenly…

The Start

The Start
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Out of the Gate

Out of the Gate
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

…they were off!

Tomorrow: Gina shows Monique how to make the horse go faster!

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An American in Paris – Jenna Thornton

Tuesday, May 1st, 2012
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Jenna Thornton, Manager of Première Pression Provence

To write this month’s Paris Insights, we interviewed Jenna Thornton, an American in Paris who is passionate about…olive oil! Read about her adventures in France and how her interest in the product developed.

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Bonne Lecture!

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A Day at the Races with Gina Rarick – Part II

Sunday, April 29th, 2012
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First Race of the Day

Before we left the grandstand for our tour of the racecourse with Gina, we watched the first race.

There weren’t very many spectators sitting in the grandstand, but just before the first race a group of people filed in and sat down in front of us. They were a well-dressed and lively crowd, and when the race started the kids among them began cheering wildly. After the race, they all got up and left, leaving the grandstand empty except for our group. I imagine that they were a family that had invested in one of the horses, and that they came that day to see how well it would run.

Races were spaced out throughout the day, so there was no incentive to remain in the grandstand until the start of the next race.

The Weighing Room

The Weighing Room
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Gina took us downstairs and showed us the weighing room, where the jockeys weigh in before hopping on their horses. She explained the importance of monitoring each jockey’s weight and the weight of the jockey’s saddle.

Pound for pound, Gina said, jockeys are the greatest athletes in the world. After a few years, most jockeys get weary of the strict diet that they have to follow. At that point, they have to decide whether they want to continue in that career.

Gina and Ultralight Saddle

Gina and Ultralight Saddle
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Gina showed us an ultralight saddle that some jockeys like to use. It doesn’t provide any comfort during the high speed, bumpy horseback ride. Ow!

Out of the Stable

Out of the Stable
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Walking the Horses

Walking the Horses
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

Before a jockey gets on a horse, the animal is brought out of its stable and walked. Gina took us into a restricted area where we saw horse trainers and their assistants walking the horses around in circles.

On the Way to the Track

On the Way to the Track
Photo by www.DiscoverParis.net

The jockey in this picture has been weighed and his horse is ready. On to the racetrack!

Coming up: A stageside view of the starting gate.

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Eat, Walk, Write—A Richly-detailed Travelogue of One Man’s Adventure in Paris

Saturday, February 4th, 2012
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Eat, Walk, Write by Boyd Lemon

Many of us dream of leaving all behind and traveling to a distant land to experience first-hand another culture, to engage with its people, and to learn another language.

Boyd Lemon had precisely that goal in mind when he retired from the legal profession at the age of 69 and set off for Paris, where he planned to live for two years. He made careful plans, but when he arrived in the City of Light he quickly discovered that things did not quite work out the way he had hoped.

The account of Lemon’s experiences in Paris unfolds as a richly-detailed travelogue giving fascinating insight into how a person’s mind works when faced with decisions that must be made when things go wrong. For example, Lemon evokes our sympathy with his description of the frustration that he felt when he realized that learning French was going to be a far more daunting task than he had ever imagined. He draws us in further as he recounts how his expectation to gain fluency progressively declined and how he realized that he could still enjoy living in Paris and learn from his many experiences there without being fluent in the language.

Lemon’s penultimate chapter entitled “Final Thoughts about Paris” provides helpful insight on the financial cost of moving there for a long-term stay.

Eat, Walk, Write would have benefited from a careful review by a professional editor, as there are numerous spelling errors (both in English and French) as well as occasional inadequate transitions from one paragraph to another. However, these oversights do not reduce the enjoyment of the book.

Readers thinking of traveling to Paris, whether for a few days or for a long stay, will benefit from reading this book. On the one hand, they will be inspired by Lemon’s descriptions of the city, the restaurants that he dined in, the food that he ate, the museums that he visited, and the walks that he took. On the other, Eat, Walk, Write serves as a warning to those who think that they will learn the language rather quickly once they get there.

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GEORGE WHITMAN IS GONE
Guest Blog by Michele Kurlander

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011
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George Whitman

George Whitman
Photo by Michele Kurlander

George Whitman is dead at the age of 98 and my Paris friends are all planning to join a cortege to his Père Lachaise funeral next week. I cannot join them, sadly, since I am imprisoned in Chicago by client obligations and financial circumstances and can’t return to visit Paris until January.

There are many of us for whom George has always been an integral part of Paris – and for whom his death is a tragedy of indescribable proportions, notwithstanding his age and recent stroke and the obvious inevitability.

George arrived in Paris in 1948. In 1951 he opened the now iconic Shakespeare and Company English language bookstore at 37, rue de la Bucherie – at first named Le Mistral, but later renamed after the famous bookstore that his friend Sylvia Beach had once run on rue de l’Odeon.

Sylvia mentored and supported the likes of Ernest Hemingway and James Joyce and even published Ulysses when no one else would touch what the world then considered a scandalous book. Like Sylvia, George has always given succor and literary encouragement to writers. He even offered young and impoverished authors a home in the store. He let them sleep on benches and behind bookshelves in exchange for duties such as book shelving, cash-register manning, and dish washing – and in exchange for following his rules, which included writing their biographies on a small portable typewriter for his archives, and reading one book a day.

He called them “tumbleweeds” and liked to quote Yeats, who wrote: “Be not inhospitable to strangers, lest they be angels in disguise.”

I, too, was once a momentary “tumbleweed,” though I am a middle-age lawyer, only a sometime writer, and not impoverished. Nevertheless, writing is my passion, and I like to dream that I live in Paris and write full time.

As part of that dream, I walked into Shakespeare & Company one day and, on a whim, asked George if even people my age could stay there. He asked if I was a writer and I demurred and admitted that I was not published. He again asked: “Do you write?” Of course I said I did – and spent a night with the current contingent of young and penniless writers in residence there. George actually found a small bed for me (because of my age, I guess) and I was not put to work in the store – but I did have to tap out my biography on that little typewriter and provide a picture for his archives.

My fellow residents taught me how to pitch a small stone at a window to be let into the door after George’s midnight curfew, and I woke the next morning to the hope of a writer’s life and the view of a beautiful new day lighting the turrets of Notre Dame just across a sliver of the River Seine.

I have returned numerous times – not to sleep there, but to see George, to get to know his daughter Sylvia – who returned to him in recent years after growing up in England with her mother (and whose full name is Sylvia Beach Whitman, after guess who?), to attend the Sunday afternoon “tea parties” where locals, tourists, and even the famous gather to eat cookies, share stories, and sip tea served by “tumbleweeds.” One Sunday, I found myself sitting next to George’s good friend, famous San Francisco beat poet Laurence Ferlinghetti.

Sometimes, I attend the Monday-night book readings, and sometimes just wander the narrow aisles, pick up a book or two, or sit upstairs in the public “library” to read or write.

Sometimes George didn’t recognize me, and sometimes he said, “Oh, there’s the Chicago lawyer.” Sometimes George was cordial, and sometimes…not so much.

I once tried to purchase a book about Gertrude Stein that George apparently thought should have remained upstairs in the “library” – where books are for customers to read, but are not for sale. It had somehow made its way onto the main floor shelves, and there I was trying to pay for it at the register. “You can’t buy that” he shouted at me as he tossed the book across the counter. He calmed down when I begged him to let me keep it for just a few days with a promise to return it. We made the deal.

I was standing late one night at the reception area of Hotel Marignan on rue de Sommerard when George walked in to ask if they had a cheap room available. He carried an old torn gym bag, and his hair was flying (probably from his latest “haircut” – with the flame of a candle), and for a moment (until he was recognized) the receptionist recoiled and tried to turn him away. George had, that night, given up his own bed above the store to a writer who had arrived unexpectedly.

It was at Shakespeare and Company, in the second floor “library,” where I first met my now great friend, author, and Paris historian Thirza Vallois – whose Paris books are not just walking tours but a wealth of historic information.

It was at Shakespeare and Company where I met my friend Jonathon, a young man from Ireland who writes pithy and quirky prose and who worked there for years. Many an evening, I sat near the cash register on a small bench against the shelves and talked literature, Paris, and just stuff with Jonathon. He left Shakespeare a few years ago to get a college education in London, and is now a rare bookseller in Paris.

The day after George’s death, Jonathan e-mailed me that he and 30 others had stood in the cold outside the store to watch as George was carried out, and that as he wrote his e-mail to me he was listening to My Way and tears were running down his face.

I understood the emotion.

I will miss George. We all will.

Shakespeare & Company

Shakespeare & Company
Photo by Michele Kurlander

Editor’s note: In 2006 George Whitman was awarded the Officier des Arts et Lettres by the French Minister of Culture for his lifelong contribution to the arts.

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What Would You Do If You Could Move to Paris?

Friday, August 19th, 2011
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Paris Insights - An Anthology: The Abridged Edition

What would you do if you could move to Paris? How would you spend your time once you got there? Read about one American’s experience in the French capital—learn how he found his calling and opened his own wine shop and restaurant.

This and other fascinating articles about the City of Light are immediately available for the price of a tweet in the abridged edition of Paris Insights – An Anthology.

Want to learn more about Paris? Click here to download the abridged edition of Paris Insights – An Anthology. It costs no more than the price of a tweet!

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Celebrating Independence Day at the Ambassador’s Residence

Friday, July 8th, 2011
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Independence Day was celebrated yesterday at the U.S. ambassador’s residence in Paris. The theme of the party was “California Cachet,” highlighting California as a tourist destination.

Center: Ambassador Rivkin
Left: His wife Susan
Right: His son William

Ambassador Charles H. Rivkin gave a stirring speech (in admirable French) about his hopes for the spread of democracy throughout the world.

Renée Fleming

American opera star Renée Fleming sang “America the Beautiful,” accompanied by the choir of the American embassy, The Dip Notes (not pictured).

Jenna Ushkowitz

Kevin McHale

Jenna Ushkowitz and Kevin McHale, members of the cast of the American television series Glee, each sang, accompanied by the U.S. Air Force band Check Six.

American filmmaker Zachary Taylor and co-founder of Discover Paris! Monique Y. Wells

Hundreds of invited guests, many of them VIP French, including senators and admirals, attended the party held in the garden of the ambassador’s residence.

Corporate Sponsors

French and American corporate sponsors provided accommodation, food, and beverage. Staff members of the American embassy provided various services, including welcoming the guests.

A good time was had by all!

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Big Turnout for Big-Bash Fifth-Anniversary Party Last Night

Thursday, July 7th, 2011
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Last night saw a big turnout for the celebration of the fifth anniversary of the founding of Richard Nahem’s Eye Prefer Paris insider’s guide to the city.

The event was held at Ô Château! wine bar, where Richard provided a generous number of charcuterie and cheese platters.

Richard Nahem and partner Vincent

Among the attendees were several bloggers, including:

Adrian Leeds of Parler Paris
Yetunde Oshodi of Like Home in Paris
Kim Petyt of Parisian Party
Colleen Shaughnessy-Larsson of Colleen’s Paris
Robyn Blaber of A Canadian in Paris
Monique Y. Wells of Entrée to Black Paris

Photographer Meredith Mullins, salon hostess Patricia Laplante-Collins, and chefs Eric Fraudeau and Diane Anthonissen graced the event.

Olivier Magny

Thirza Vallois

Mary R. Duncan

A number of writers were in attendance, including Ô Château owner Olivier Magny, (Stuff Parisians Like), Thirza Vallois (Around and About Paris), and Mary R. Duncan (Henry Miller is under my bed).

And, of course, yours truly, Tom Reeves was there, mingling with the crowd. The abridged version of my book, Paris Insights – An Anthology, is available on-line for the ridiculously low price of a Tweet. To learn more, follow this link: http://bit.ly/moWTFB.

A good time was had by all!

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Big Bash on the Seine Last Sunday Night

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011
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The Brothers Paris Spring Gala "AllStars" Band
From left to right:
Nicholas Horton, guitar; Hervé Samb, guitar
Sonny Troupé, drums; Allonymous, vocals
Mike Amoogum, bass; Toli Nameless, trombone
Jerry Leoni, keyboard
Video courtesy of Discover Paris!

A fantastic party took place last Sunday night in the French capital on the Seine River. Organized by The Brothers Paris, a group of African-American men who live in the City of Light, the event lived up to its high hopes and expectations.

Called “The Brothers Paris Spring Gala,” the party took place on a barge located directly across the river from the new Fashion and Design Center. It began shortly after 8:00 p.m. as guests arrived to take their places around dinner tables for a delicious three-course meal. Live music started almost immediately, with top-level bands and singers belting out rhythms until around midnight. After that hour, recorded music took over for dancing until 2:00 a.m.

Long-time Paris resident Tannie Stoval was inspired to organize The Brothers Paris shortly after the Million Man March that was held in Washington, D.C. in 1995. He began inviting African-American men who live in Paris to his place for dinner and conversation, and this private, weekly event has become a tradition. Many years later, the group is still going strong, and it recently decided to organize an open event to celebrate African-American culture.

And celebrate it did, in art, poetry, and music!

Master of Ceremonies Christopher Nisperos
(c) Discover Paris!

Guitarist Nicholas Horton
Singers Nat Jones and Joseph Langley
(c) Discover Paris!

Artist Ealy Mays
(c) Discover Paris!

Singer Enricque d'Shawn
(c) Discover Paris!

Trumpet Player Rasul Siddik
(c) Discover Paris!

Writer and Film Maker David Burke
and Gospel Singer Linda Lee Hopkins
(c) Discover Paris!

Bluesman Juju Child
(c) Discover Paris!

Left to Right: Gospel Singers Tori Robinson,
Unknown, Linda Lee Hopkins, Alex Sanders,
Richard Allen, and Sylvia Howard
(c) Discover Paris!

Watch the 36 minute video produced by Joseph Langley: