Jenny's Illustrated CVV
Diary
Thursday:
After months of work, CVV is finally at hand. I've
been unable to sleep well for several days with excitement.
At 4:00 p.m., Graham and I collected Colin and Zoe at the
airport, made a quick side trip to see our
name in lights
at the Venue and then home to relax a bit. The weather was
gorgeous and we sat out on the deck waiting for Helen and
Debby to call. I kept jumping up and checking the machine
every ten minutes. Did I mention I was excited?
We went down to the St. Paul Hotel to pick up Helen and
Debby. I was so chatty and excited that I got a bit lost
driving to the restaurant. If it weren't for Graham,
deciding to take the lead we'd have been half way to
Wisconsin. After a lovely meal at 128, with lots of catching
up and hearing stories about teenage Helen and Debby
(troublemakers!!) I attempted to drive them back to their
hotel. We did get there eventually, didn't we ladies? Colin
and Zoe were zonked out by the time I returned so I couldn't
put them to work in my
tote
bag and
album
assembly sweatshop as I'd planned. I went to bed around
11:30, and tried to sleep. Too excited. Do you sense a theme
emerging?
Friday:
I woke up totally pumped! I can't believe it's
Caryvention Day at last! I had tons of errands to
run and Zoe and Colin, troopers that they are, ran around
with me to grocery stores (wow, carpet in a grocery store
and free samples!) and the bank. After lunch we packed up
the first load for the St. Paul Hotel. We all checked in and
I was pleased to find a little note from Tabitha, the sales
rep for CVV from the hotel. I finally got to see the suite.
It really was a room with a view.
Graham and I took pictures
of our elegant surroundings.
I didn't want to leave it, but we had to go home and get
load two. Around 5 o'clock we returned to the hotel with
tons of stuff and began frantically trying to put everything
away and get ready for dinner. When the first guests
arrived, I couldn't stop hopping up and down. It was so
wonderful to see all
of you
again, and meet some of you for the first time. I made the
worst toast in the history of fermented beverages. We had a
cake
for April,
whose birthday was Monday.
We got away with a flock of wine and eventually played
our ice-breakergame: two truths and a lie. We learned
shocking facts about Vdeb...Also
we learned that Graham
likes cheese.
The fun gave way for a short while for the first-ever,
surprisingly productive Warbrides business
meeting.
Folks returned to their rooms to rest-up for a bit for
the midnight screening. Graham and I, our friends from town,
David and Gail and Claudia retired to the bar to await the
movie. Claudia came along and amused us with some dog tales,
and an unforgetabble image of her sitting and sipping a 7
and 7 while her dog runs on the treadmill.
On the way to Oak Street I had the first of many fiascos
involving taxi drivers, cab dispatchers. All I will say is I
think they are all drunk all the time.
Despite toothless smelly cabbies with no idea where
they're going, we managed to make it to the theater, just in
the nick of time. Vdeb took pictures of us watching the
movie. We said the "You remind me of a man" to sort of wake
ourselves up and the movie started. I think most of
us even managed to stay awake throughout. Seeing Holiday
with with the Warbrides was awesome. After another
fiasco with the cabs, we went back to the hotel to
try to sleep. It was 3
a.m.
Saturday:
I got up and put my hair in hot rollers (SPROING!) and
dressed. My biggest worry at this point was the fact that I
forgot my cufflinks at home. Little did I know...I was about
to have something much bigger to fret over.
We got
the bell captain to take about thirty pictures of the group
outside the hotel and then walked to the Venue. We arrived
just at 9:30 a.m., and front door to Galtier plaza was
locked. I started kicking the door. It wasn't my finest
hour. Luckily a side door was open and we made our
way in. Then disaster struck. I realized that I hadn't
brought even one of the three movies we were supposed to
watch that day... OOOOPPS. One of the movies was in my
basement, back home in Falcon Heights. Graham to the rescue.
He raced back to the hotel, got the car returned with the
movie in a half an hour. My hero!
During His Girl Friday, April went back to the hotel and
got the other two movies from Vdeb's room that we were going
to watch. April rules, by the way. After HGF, Rob Silberman
gave his talk about His Girl Friday and Big Brown Eyes,
which was very informative and thoroughly enjoyable for me.
Then we watched Big Brown Eyes. Some of us will never be the
same after that ventriloquism scene.
We had
lunch and by now we were more than an hour off schedule.
David Long was gracious enough to truncate his presentation
a bit so thatwe could still watch the third movie. I really
enjoyed his talk about young Archie in Bristol and it whet
my appetite for CV2004. I can't wait to hear more from David
in Bristol.
The third movie was My Favorite Wife. It was touted in
the album as the "The Mystery Movie," but I think eveyone
had figured out what it was by the time I started it. This
was one of the highlights of the convention for me to
finally get see this movie with the warbrides. I just love
it, it's so fun and I hope everyone enjoyed it as much as I
did. As usual I noticed more watching it on the big screen
than I would watching it on TV.
After the movie we headed out to buy up all David and
Ron Hall's pictures of Cary. I finally got a chance to chat
to Ron and had a moment to say hello and good-bye to Jolene
and her dad.
We slowly, in a daze made our way back to the St. Paul
Hotel. This really was Cary Grant basic training. It was a
fairly grueling (in a good way) day with three films, two
speakers, and lots little AV snafus that I won't go into
right now. As we searched for benches, Cheryl told us of a
magical land called Texas where margaritas come from of
slushy machines and they don't have any hills to walk up.
I'm thinking Houston 2005.
We had about an hour to relax before dinner so Graham
and I collapsed back in our room for a while. We took the
courtesy bus to Mildred Pierce and continued the now growing
tradition of being really off-schedule. Our food arrived
quite late, but everyone got fed eventually. I had
a great conversation with Esther, Laura and Debby discussing
the more surreal aspects of BBE, the delights of My Favorite
Wife and maybe even some non-Cary subjects.
After
Jonas, our driver, dropped the last of us back at the hotel
I raced back to the room to get the suite ready for the next
activities. We were another hour and half off schedule, so I
called Rob Silberman, expecting he'd say thanks but it's too
late to join you all now. To my surprise, he made it
and stayed through the festivities.
It was
hard-core conventioneer time. Lil Deb, who saved my bacon by
simply grabbing the check at dinner and putting it
on her card was hard at work in the suite trying to
count
all the cash everyone was giving her to pay for their
dinner. It really looked like you'd wandered into a
secret craps game to find Lil Deb on the floor with
pile of money and a look of bewilderment on her
face. But I think it all got sorted and it was time to
pull out the Carybucks (Can't spend those at the
Mall, kiddos) instead. This was my favorite
part of the convention, first because there was
nothing else for me to worry about for the day and
secondly because I had the best time. Cary Taboo
was genius. Thanks so much to Lil Deb for putting it
together for us. In the end, the Taboo game was a draw.
Tonya showed she's a true competitor as she was sort of
hunched over like she was in racing starting blocks
while doing her clues. We got a little
loud while playing, and had to be told to shush by the
hotel management. I spoke to Tabitha on Tuesday and
she said that we didn't even make the hotel police blotter
so I guess it wasn't too bad.
After Taboo the endless auction began. Three words:
suitable for framing. I have to thank everyone who donated
goods to the auction, especially OFL who's vast collection
kept us busy until 2:00 a.m. Ireally had a great time
playing auctioneer and let me just say that
you all showed your true colors as generous folks. There
were no fisticuffs, even. Cheryl would like it to go on
record as saying that the lack of Arsenic and old Lace
memorabilia was appalling. Yeah, but we had a Pride and the
Passion comic book. What more could you ask for?
Sunday:
The last day of a Caryvention is always bitter
sweet, with good-byes, fatigue and those last few
precious hours together. Somehow I managed to
sleep a bit Saturday night and woke up racoon-eyed
and bushy tailed (I had forgotten to take my make-up off
the night before, and I was getting about as much
sleep at night for the last week as La Stat, so it
was showing a bit). Graham helped me put breakfast
together and eventually folks sort of crawled in for
food. Except for Melanie--she seemed totally
unaffected by the late hours and was so perky that
I wonder if she doesn't have a future hosting a
morning show. She amused us with her tales of her cat
Stripe.
While
waiting for the bus to the Mall, I had a nice chat with
Esther in the lobby of the hotel. I confessed that
I was getting spoiled by the staff at the St. Paul
hotel and was going to expect my cats to wait on me
hand and foot when I got home. We made it out to
the Mall of America, Esther and Laura schlepping
their luggage, and met the other half of the group
at Planet Hollywood. The Mall of America is a surreal
place at best of times, but with my sleep deprivation,
the giant cereal boxes, men in
Lederhosen
and the mighty axe, were all too much. I'm fully
expecting flashbacks, sometime in the next decade.
Lunch went smoothly (hey, whaddya know, we were right on
schedule for once) and I bonded with Laura over our
mutual love for the Three Amigos. Then it was time
for our sad good-byes. As we walked out of Planet Hollywood
we decided to have one last group photo. There was a man
there with a fancy camera. I didn't really think much of it,
but after the picture, he said he was "from the St. Paul
Pioneer Press, you know, the paper that only costs a
quarter." No thank you, I said to him, as I thought he was
selling me a subscription. "No. I'm a photographer and I
just took your picture for the paper." Ahh well, if that
wasn't embarassing.
After
the photo Graham and I went shoe shopping, and met back up
with some of the Brides for rides on the roller
coaster, the mighty axe and more sad good-byes. Graham
and I went home and collapsed. He was such a
lifesaver so many times over the weekend I can't
count them all.
Monday:
Panic set in again as I tore the house apart looking for
the directions to the hotel in Davenport where we
were meeting Doug Miller. Eventually we got
ourselves sorted, Zoe
and Colin
arrived and we set out on big adventure. The drive
down Highway 61 was really lovely, however iffy
weather got at times. The phrase of the day: it's
lifting and brightening. Then it would cloud up and rain
again; repeat as often as you like.
We stopped for lunch at Bescobel, WI, got many stares in
the local diner and learned some interesting facts
such as "Squeeky
fresh curd"
is something you can eat, Bescobel is the home of the
Gideon Bible and that a grotto
is something you have to see to believe.
In Davenport (we were an hour an half late!) we met Doug
Miller,Brandon, the film booking manager at a large theater
chain, and a columnist named Bill
Wundram
from the local paper. We had a tour of the
Adler,
a beautifully
restored
music hall where Cary was to have played the night he died.
Doug told us about how Cary ran through
the technical set-up for the show, like an old pro,
checking the sound and lights himself (remember his
first job at the Hippodrome!) when he started to feel ill.
We saw the Green Room where he and Barbara were
during that time. Then we went over to the
BlackHawk hotel (Bill's comment coming into the
hotel was, "This place has really gone to the dogs!"
What a character Bill is!) and saw
the
suite where
Cary spent his final hours. I have to say that was
an eerie and sad experience for me. Perhaps I was a bit
over-tired, and emotionally exhausted, but it hit me
harder than I expected.
After a few tears and moments of quiet reflection, we
were onto happier places,
namely Archie's hot
dog stand
on the river front, where Cary visited the day before he
became ill. The stand has been flooded
numerous times and has since been renamed, "The Levee." Bill
and I are going to head a campaign to rename it Archie's.
Then we retired to the hotel bar for a drink. (Hey, I have a
nickname to be worthy of, afterall.) I showed Doug and Bill
some of my treasures from the convention. The
pajamas
that Lil Deb gave Graham and me were especially a
hit. Also Zoe and I got to pose with Helen's
pillowcase.
We chatted first to Bill for his story, and then to Doug
about what we had decided at the business meeting and what
we envisioned for the centenary, before we had to climb back
into our cage for the 400 mile drive back to Minneapolis.
Wow!
What a week-end this was. I can't believe it's all over. I
still feel in a daze I guess. I want to think each of you
again for making the trip and hope that you had a fun time.
I surely did and I hope that living on Nipper time for the
past three days hasn't permanently damaged your ability to
hold to a schedule.
-Jenny the Nipper
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