Thursday, November 5, 2009

Lights, Camera, Action!

     As Uncle Jack has often said, there is never a dull moment in Bawlmer.  This week he and Mrs. U.J. have found themselves in the middle of a movie set---or more correctly---looking down on a movie set from their seventh floor balcony.  A movie production company from Hollywood has been on the Johns Hopkins campus this week filming location scenes for a new movie, as yet unnamed, about the origins of the popular internet phenomenon called Facebook.  A couple of nights ago they set up their lights and reflectors and cameras almost directly under Uncle Jack's condo and spent the next several hours shooting what appeared to be the same scene over and over and over again until they finally got it right.  It was interesting to watch for a while but then it became tedious.  Very tedious.  Movie-making is not always thrilling from the looks of it.
       Johns Hopkins is actually standing in for Harvard in this epic, much to the dismay of many students who felt that the administration should not have sold out to Hollywood just to make a few bucks.  Classy Harvard, with its zillion dollar endowment, would never stoop to allow a movie to be made in its hallowed precincts for any amount of money.  Facebook was actually dreamed up by a Harvard student who, when he cashes in on his invention, will be able to buy his own university if he is so inclined.
    Uncle Jack no longer remembers why he has a Facebook page but he does and he checks in on it once in a while just to see if anything interesting has turned up.  So far he is utterly baffled as to why it has become such a fabulous success on the internet. Google he can understand.  Facebook is a mystery.
      He and Mrs. U.J. returned to the historic neighborhood of Mt. Vernon on their way to a concert at the Peabody Conservatory one day this week.  They missed several streets on an earlier excursion, pictures of which appear below.


 This trio of triangular buildings at the corner of Madison and Tyson streets caught their eye, especially the tiny one in the middle. Early 19th century builders didn't let any space go to waste.


Tyson Street is one of the hidden treasures of Baltimore.  It's only a couple of blocks long but consists almost entirely of late 18th and early 19th century houses, all impeccably restored and extremely charming.


                                      More Tyson Street houses.


                   And still more---one of which is for sale, probably for a pretty penny.


                Yet another triangular house. The interiors must present challenges for the occupants.


This elegant old hotel on Tyson, once the residence of Wallis Warfield Simpson, later the Duchess of Windsor, is being rehabbed into what the developers claim will become the most prestigious hotel in all of Charm City when it opens next spring.


Eubie Blake, composer of the Charleston Rag and I'm Just Wild About Harry and jazz pianist extraordinaire was a native of Baltimore.  This museum in Mt. Vernon is high on Uncle Jack's list of places to visit soon.  It was closed on this occasion.


This was the scene of the filming as seen from Uncle Jack's balcony.  No sign of it remained the next morning.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The pictures and commentary you have posted on your blog show a wonderful city with much to do and explore. Perhaps one day Baltimore will be free of poverty and crime.

On a sad note, I just read an article about Detroit. "Detroit looks like a postapocalyptic nightmare." Sad, because this city in its present state, should not exist in the US.

emily said...

Pity they didn't need extras to play a couple of retired professors!
em