This evening’s featured cocktail is the Stinger, a cool refreshing drink for a balmy Bon Temps night that makes an excellent dessert cocktail and pairs nicely with rich chocolate desserts. Jane Bodehouse* considers it the ideal drink to end a drunken binge at Merlotte’s before Tara calls her son to come pick her up.
Ingredients
3/4 oz brandy3/4 oz white creme de menthePreparation
Pour the ingredients into an old-fashioned glass with crushed ice, and stir well.orShake the ingredients with ice cubes and strained into a chilled cocktail glass.
In their heyday, Stingers were the drink to end a night on the town in New York, and they even made it to the big screen in The Apartment, a movie about loneliness, sex, and booze, among other things.
Here’s the big True Blood connection. (You knew it was coming, right?) The director of American Beauty (written by Alan Ball) used it for inspiration, and Kevin Spacey dedicated his Oscar to Jack Lemmon’s performance. The Apartment hits all of Alan Ball’s favorite themes: reality vs. illusion, empty consumerism, loneliness, self-destruction, addiction, and hypocrisy. It’s been described as a dirty fairytale. Is that great, or what? I’m going to have to remember to use that line for True Blood. Don’t you think AB would like that?
Any way, Stingers are of interest to us for another reason. They are the drink of choice in the Cary Grant comedy, Kiss Them for Me, a movie Grant fought the studios to make because it deals with PTSD. In the film, Grant’s character is a Navy procurer. While on leave, he procures a luxury hotel suite for his buddies and fills it with women and booze. To get his mind off the war, he flirts with the fiancée of one of his friends, which results in her throwing her engagement ring in the face of her husband-to-be and Grant declaring his love by the end of the movie.
I know I don’t have to draw y’all the parallels at this point, so I’ll just end by saying, ‘I’ll have what Jane Bodehouse is having…and make it a double.’









Not Just a Pretty Face
by anna tsogyal
When I first saw this image of Talbot I wasn’t sure who it reminded me of, and then I remembered this from Derek Jarman’s film, Carravagio. A younger version perhaps?
Caravaggio was a 16th century Italian painter, born in Milan, who spent some time in Rome where he painted A Boy with a Basket of Fruit, on which the still from Jarman’s picture is based. There has been some controversy about whether Caravaggio was gay or bisexual; however he did become something of a gay icon, which would have appealed to Jarman who was both a painter and film director.
The fruit in this painting is not perfect, some of the leaves are blemished or diseased which seems to be unusual as most painters of the time idealised whatever they painted. Caravaggio painted other naturalistic still lifes, and the table decorations in Russell Edgington’s mansion have centrepieces of flowers and fruit that look as if they were inspired by a still life painting.
Connections have been drawn between Russell as the Celtic god, Lugus, and Talbot as his companion, Rosmerta, so I’d like to add another tale to the mix. It seems that Julius Caesar was responsible for connecting Lugus to Hermes, and others have included Lugh and Llew Law Gyffes as counterparts as well. The Welsh Llew Law Gyffes doesn’t seem to have as many parallels but there is an interesting story about him in the Mabinogion. He was forbidden to take a human wife so a woman called Blodwyn was created for him out of flowers.
We’ve already learnt from Alan Ball and Daniel Minahan’s Frenzy commentary that they took some of their inspiration for Queen Sophie Anne’s palace from Pasolini’s controversial film Salò which is an examination of the abuse of power.
Since one of the themes this season is political extremism, it seemed to be worth looking at other Italian and European films which might have provided some kind of inspiration, conscious or unconscious.
Pasolini was closely linked with the neo-realist school of Italian cinema and one of the subjects of neo-realist films was Italian fascism. The neo-realist directors included Bernardo Bertolucci whose film, The Conformist, was a exploration of the mentality of those who became fascist and the possible causes of their involvement.
The Conformist tells the story of Marcello, a young man living in Italy at the time of Mussolini, who is desperate to create the illusion of normality by rejecting his past, which includes a homosexual incident with the family chauffeur and a murder. Marcello joins the Fascist Party and his attempt to conform to society’s expectations includes marriage and later, on the orders of the Party, the murder of an anti-fascist professor. His story is told mostly in flashbacks and on occasion even those flashbacks have flashbacks. After the fall of the fascist regime Marcello is prepared to accuse others of his own actions to save his own skin in another attempt to conform.
The illusion of normality sounds to me a bit like mainstreaming and the flashbacks and the unsavoury past of the young man in question also reminded me of how the writers are telling Bill’s story. Both characters use the veneer of civility to hide their inner selves. Marcello uses the conventions of bourgeois society, and Bill the manners of a Southern gentleman.
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