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Being "B*tchy?

Started by Cassi, March 21, 2018, 07:34:23 PM

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Cassi

HRT since 1/04/2018
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Allison S

I think he's kinda creepy.. his eyes remind me of one my roommates. A confirmed creep if you ask me

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Natsuki Kuga

Quote from: Cassi on March 23, 2018, 01:10:58 AM
Is this woman from 100 years ago?
She's my goddaughter, if you must know.
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Cassi

Quote from: Natsuki Kuga on March 23, 2018, 02:31:06 PM
She's my goddaughter, if you must know.

Oh, then I must be viewing the wrong person.  Who I'm seeing is a Dorothy Parker who lived from 1893-1967 and was really really popular in the 20s.
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Cassi

Quote from: Cassi on March 23, 2018, 03:06:31 PM
Oh, then I must be viewing the wrong person.  Who I'm seeing is a Dorothy Parker who lived from 1893-1967 and was really really popular in the 20s.

Dorothy Parker
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Dorothy Parker

On August 22, 1893, Dorothy Parker was born to J. Henry and Elizabeth Rothschild, at their summer home in West End, New Jersey. Growing up on Manhattan's Upper West Side, her childhood was an unhappy one. Both her mother and step-mother died when she was young; her uncle, Martin Rothschild, went down on the Titanic in 1912; and her father died the following year. Young Dorothy attended a Catholic grammar school, then a finishing school in Morristown, NJ. Her formal education abruptly ended when she was 14.

In 1914, Dorothy sold her first poem to Vanity Fair. At age 22, she took an editorial job at Vogue. She continued to write poems for newspapers and magazines, and in 1917 she joined Vanity Fair, taking over for P.G. Wodehouse as drama critic. That same year she married a stockbroker, Edwin P. Parker. But the marriage was tempestuous, and the couple divorced in 1928.

In 1919, Parker became a founding member of the Algonquin Round Table, an informal gathering of writers who lunched at the Algonquin Hotel. The "Vicious Circle" included Robert Benchley, Harpo Marx, George S Kaufman, and Edna Ferber, and was known for its scathing wit and intellectual commentary. In 1922, Parker published her first short story, "Such a Pretty Little Picture," for Smart Set.

When the New Yorker debuted in 1925, Parker was listed on the editorial board. Over the years, she contributed poetry, fiction and book reviews as the "Constant Reader."

Parker's first collection of poetry, Enough Rope, was published in 1926, and was a bestseller. Her two subsequent collections were Sunset Gun in 1928 and Death and Taxes in 1931. Her collected fiction came out in 1930 as Laments for the Living.

During the 1920s, Parker traveled to Europe several times. She befriended Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, socialites Gerald and Sarah Murphy, and contributed articles to the New Yorker and Life. While her work was successful and she was well-regarded for her wit and conversational abilities, she suffered from depression and alcoholism and attempted suicide.

In 1929, she won the O. Henry Award for her autobiographical short story "Big Blonde." She produced short fiction in the early 1930s, and also began writing drama reviews for the New Yorker. In 1934, Parker married actor-writer Alan Campbell in New Mexico; the couple relocated to Los Angeles and became a highly paid screenwriting team. They labored for MGM and Paramount on mostly forgettable features, the highlight being an Academy Award nomination for A Star Is Born in 1937. They divorced in 1947, and remarried in 1950.

Parker, who became a socialist in 1927 when she became involved in the Sacco and Vanzetti trial, was called before the House on Un-American Activities in 1955. She pleaded the Fifth Amendment.

Parker was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1959 and was a visiting professor at California State College in Los Angeles in 1963. That same year, her husband died of an overdose. On June 6, 1967, Parker was found dead of a heart attack in a New York City hotel at age 73. A firm believer in civil rights, she bequeathed her literary estate to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Upon his assassination some months later, the estate was turned over to the NAACP.

A Selected Bibliography

Poetry

Enough Rope (1926)
Sunset Guns (1928)
Collected Poems: Not So Deep as a Well (1936)
Collected Poetry (1944)
The Portable Dorothy Parker (1991)
Not Much Fun: The Lost Poems of Dorothy Parker (1996)
Complete Poems (1999)

Prose

Constant Reader (1970)

Fiction

Laments for the Living (1930)
After Such Pleasures (1933)
Here Lies (1939)
Collected Stories (1942)

Plays

Close Harmony (1929)
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Natsuki Kuga

Quote from: Cassi on March 23, 2018, 03:06:31 PM
Oh, then I must be viewing the wrong person.  Who I'm seeing is a Dorothy Parker who lived from 1893-1967 and was really really popular in the 20s.
Fine. Just call me old. Quit beating around the bush and come on out and say it.
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Julia1996

Born in 1893??? That's not old. That's ancient! That's dirt old!
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
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Natsuki Kuga

Quote from: Julia1996 on March 23, 2018, 03:55:38 PM
Born in 1893??? That's not old. That's ancient! That's dirt old!
Finally, someone who appreciates me for who I am.
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Cassi

HRT since 1/04/2018
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Cassi

And that's her god-daughter, not her so add or subtract another 20-25 years and ya got 1867?  And she's older than that so she's Baga Yaga and I'm not referring to the Keanu Reeves character mention.
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Cassi

HRT since 1/04/2018
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RobynTx

Quote from: Cassi on March 23, 2018, 04:06:17 PM
Baba Yaga!!!!!!!!!

Don't you dare invoke that name. 😁


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Cassi

Quote from: RobynTx on March 23, 2018, 04:17:58 PM
Don't you dare invoke that name. 😁

But, she's old.................................................................

And Texans ain't a fear of any russkie witch!
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Cassi

And I thought she was so kewl when I was a kid reading about her and her chicken-legged house and big black cauldron she flew around in.  Julia needs to learn about her before she gets kidnapped.
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Julia1996

Quote from: Cassi on March 23, 2018, 04:29:55 PM
And I thought she was so kewl when I was a kid reading about her and her chicken-legged house and big black cauldron she flew around in.  Julia needs to learn about her before she gets kidnapped.
Kidnapped?  Oh no, that would be bad. My dad would pay a huge sum of money for the kidnappers to KEEP me. Lol
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
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Cassi

Quote from: Julia1996 on March 23, 2018, 04:49:19 PM
Kidnapped?  Oh no, that would be bad. My dad would pay a huge sum of money for the kidnappers to KEEP me. Lol

Nah, Baba Yaga would either eat you or turn you into a witch like her.
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Julia1996

Quote from: Cassi on March 23, 2018, 04:50:53 PM
Nah, Baba Yaga would either eat you or turn you into a witch like her.

Oh. Well being a witch would be fun. I could hex people and turn them into frogs or worms.
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
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Julia1996

Quote from: Cassi on March 23, 2018, 04:50:53 PM
Nah, Baba Yaga would either eat you or turn you into a witch like her.

I don't think I would be very good eating. I would probably be kind of stringy.
Julia


Born 1998
Started hrt 2015
SRS done 5/21/2018
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Cassi

Quote from: Julia1996 on March 23, 2018, 04:54:24 PM
I don't think I would be very good eating. I would probably be kind of stringy.

No, I think the opposite would happen as witches tend to like stringy young woman and children :(
HRT since 1/04/2018
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Cassi

#79
Quote from: RobynTx on March 23, 2018, 04:17:58 PM
Don't you dare invoke that name. 😁

Besides, it's "Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary,........... 3 times that invokes the witch :)

Or is it "Bitch", I tend to forget :)
HRT since 1/04/2018
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