sutherland
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Everything posted by sutherland
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Hello Sydneyboy - how is opera attendance in Australia? Here in the USA sold-out operatic performances are very rare and all the major opera companies discuss audience building as a priority.
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I would love, love, love to meet TripleXTransman but he does not travel much. For a while he was on Chaturbate quite regularly
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Has anyone met Eli in NYC? Eli_FTM - Pornstar Performer, Rentboy, Gay Massage in New York City, NY | RentMen RENTMEN.EU Pornstar Performer & Rentboy in New York City, NY - Eli_FTM: Let me show you a good time
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I have a good friend who lives in Brooklyn. Joan Sutherland, when she was in NYC, used to stay at the huge home of Martin Waldron on Prospect Park West. One day in the 1980s my friend was walking by the house and out emerged Joan Sutherland in an evening gown. The Spirit of Martin Waldron | Operavore | WQXR WWW.WQXR.ORG Blogger Fred Plotkin looks at the legacy of Martin Waldron, an only-in-New York character whose stately Brooklyn townhouse was a haven for opera stars and...
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Yes, she moved to Maryland a few years ago to be close to her brother George and his family.
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For $8,750,000 you can own the SoHo townhouse that was the home of Leontyne Price for several decades. It is located at 9 VanDam Street and has undergone a total gut renovation. Here is the sales ad: 9 Vandam Street | Compass WWW.COMPASS.COM 9 Vandam Street is a townhouse listed for sale at $8,750,000. This is a 5-bed, 5-bath, 4,576 sqft property. Here is the home as it looked a few years ago: Villager and Groundbreaking African American Soprano Leontyne Price - Village Preservation WWW.VILLAGEPRESERVATION.ORG While it is a well-established fact that our neighborhoods have attracted and been home to some of the most groundbreaking artists and art movements of the past...
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Marc in Calif - that is too clever for me to take offense
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Opera has always been financially challenging, even in the times of Verdi and Puccini when composers still gave the audiences hummable tunes. The era of Haydn being supported by Prince Esterhazy and Wager supported by King Ludwig of Bavaria had some merit
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Yes, Zeb Atlas, whom I hired many many times, was worth every penny
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Can anybody identify a historic operatic performance of the past 30 years? When I first took an interest in opera in the 1970s there were people, of an older generation, who seemed to say the only great singers were the dead singers. I am turning into one of them. I cannot think of any operatic performances since 1993 that quality as "historic". Let's look at other 30-year periods and their legendary performances: 1900-1930 (Caruso & Ponselle in Verdi) 1930-1960 (Callas & DiStefano at La Scala, Milanov & Tebaldi in the Italian repertoire, Melchior & Flagstad singing Wagner) 1960-1990 (Price, Corelli, Sutherland, Nilsson, Pavarotti, Domingo)
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Do you also remember that cheap silver curtain? aha ha
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Haha hah. I remember the punch bowl in the side room (no way I way going to drink that stuff). Back in the 1990's I had a job that required me to spend a couple of days in NYC, about 4 times per year. The Gaiety was always on my list of things to do. My first hire was Big Frank from Canada. He was a bodybuilder. Please send me a private message if you know that guy I'm talking about
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I heard Kraus sing in "The Daughter of the Regiment" with Miss Sutherland. He was amazing - nailing all 9 high-C in the first act aria. His voice also projected well up to the top balconies.
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I just watched some of his videos on youtube. Yes, he has a major talent. Let's hope he's not just a flash in the pan
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Peter Gelb is all about publicity and get the Met talked about and mentioned in the press. He probably enjoyed the protest. He doesn't give a damn about singing. The Metropolitan Opera is "Sony Upper West Side" since he brought all his cronies from Sony Records to the Met
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The same thing happened to me in Las Vegas, but with Derek Atlas. I set up a first-time session with him and he did not show up; I never contacted him again. I lived close to Vegas at that time so that could have been 4 visits (or more) a year.
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Thanks for reminding me of Antton Harri. I hired him a couple of times. A really nice guy and I liked his (mostly) hairless body.
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I, too, never met Mike Grey though I looked at his ad many times. I'm into the long-haired look, like the Chippendale dancers back in the 1980s. I regret not hiring him.
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I don't think that leaving money to family is a way to snare them into visiting you. It sounds like an employer/employee relationship - "do xyz or you don't get paid". My nephew and his family live in Great Britain and I don't expect him to come and visit me when I am 100 years old. The fact is I value my nephew a great deal and I want to give him this money as a gift.
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Are there solutions to the 5-year lookback period? Let's say I withdraw my savings in cash and give it to my family in cash. There is no paper trail between me and the recipients. If questions are asked from Medicaid staff about the withdrawn money I respond "I went to Las Vegas and I lost it on gambling and hookers". How can they prove that is not true? and my family keeps the cash and I get Medicaid
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If I were over age 60 (which I am), getting 5% risk free on $1 million or more is fine with me. That is why I now have very little in equities, as my T-bills and CDs are giving me 5%. A young person can take the risk with equities, assuming it can be held for 10+ years and the return will be closer to 8 or 10%.
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I have been on my soap box regarding this for years. Let's look at two guys in adjoining rooms at our local nursing home. Guy #1 sacrificed for years to save money and leave if for his children -he has to deplete it all for nursing home costs. Guy #2 (who earned the same salary as Guy #1) squandered all his money recklessly and now has a net worth of $5 - taxpayer dollars pay for the nursing home. Is that a fair system?
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You are correct. The average person spends 3 years in Assisted Living (which Medicaid does not cover) until going into a nursing home (which Medicaid DOES cover). As I age my plan is to give my money away to family until I am left with $400k to cover Assisted Living. Medicaid will kick in when I'm transitioning to a nursing home. An irrevocable trust is also something to look at since a nursing home cannot touch those assets. You just need a very trustworthy person to control the trust
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