“His whole depiction of Los Angeles, the city—you can practically smell the dry rot and hear the termites gnawing away at the timbers, and the bums on skid row putting down their muscatel bottles, and the whole thing.”
Hugo Friedhofer (quoted in Linda Danly, Hugo Friedhofer: The Best Years of His Life)


Since the paperback edition of
The answer came when Sinatra sang “Send in the Clowns,” the show’s next-to-last number. Not only had I never before heard that now-standard ballad, but I didn’t even know who Stephen Sondheim was, being a small-town boy who lived far from Broadway. Yet I was stunned by the seriousness of both the song and Sinatra’s performance, which seemed to come from another world infinitely far removed from the ring-a-ding-ding midlife-crisis antics that I’d found so offputting. “You know, there really must be something to this guy,” I told myself, and resolved on the spot to dig deeper into his music.
Mrs. T and I have flown the coop and are celebrating the seventh anniversary of our glorious wedding by eating lobster—her favorite food, for which she appears to have an unlimited appetite—and listening to the sound of the ocean at an undisclosed location somewhere on the coast of the United States.