Brenda sent some snapshots she took about 1991 or '92 of a party on the porch
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Squeeze Box Gifts
Suggestions for the accordion-playing Hobos on your list:
This gift, although perfect, costs over $200.
Should have bought some when they were new.
A Japanese woodblock would be nice too
Old sheet music
A framed cartoon
Everybody would probably appreciate an Accordion Babes calendar
Click here:
http://accordionpinupcalendar.com/
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Pirated Photos
Steve has posted some photos of Dalton on his Flickr page.
Emily, a fellow guard
Click on this link to see his page of Friends and Family
Click on the photo
Then right click (if you have a PC)
and you will get a choice of sizes.
Click on large, right click to save it and you can print it if you like.
Hobos at the Museum
Thanks to Steve.
Zydeco Tougeau
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Murals at Liberty Hall
When the Millsteins and Oldfather partnership renovated the Opera House in the 1980s they commissioned several artists and craftsman to decorate the interior.
Several artists painted the interior murals of what was renamed Liberty Hall.
Dennis Helms did most of the work visible in the theater.
The saturn imagery was designed by Tamara Brown. It appears on the ceilings and in the carpet.
It's difficult to know which paintings Dalton did. Tommee writes:
I remember going in there while all that work was being done. I don’t know what all Dalton did in there, but yes, he did work on the ceiling in the theater. The day I was in there there was a big scaffold set up and Dalton was up there working.Sort of like Michaelangelo. Isn't that area called the proscenium arch?
Maybe the starry nebulae in the balcony...
and right over the stage...
The doorway to the Little Theater
The clouds in the banquet room?Dalton and Bryan did the interior of a Mexican restaurant on Massachusetts in the '80s, but it didn't last long and the murals were painted over.
See a story about Liberty Hall and a short slide show of the interior at the Kansan website:
http://www.kansan.com/news/2009/apr/30/ashes_immortality/
Newspapers in the 1920s on the sidewalk
http://www.eyeonkansas.org/neast/douglas/0904_liberty.html
http://www.andycurry.info/index.htm
A building history (not fact checked) The current building is on the site a building remodeled in 1882 by J. D. Bowersock as the Bowersock Opera House. He'd built the dam and owned the powerhouse by the river---Rebuilt in 1911 after a fire and reopened as the Bowersock Opera House in 1912. In the 1930-50s it was the Jayhawker Theater.
In the 1960s the basement was the Catacombs, an atmospheric bar. In 1965 the theater opened as the Red Dog Inn, and for awhile it was a disco called Bugsy's. When the Millsteins and Charlie Oldfather bought it it had been abandoned for awhile. Susan said there was a year-old cake on the piano.
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