Yesterday, searching as always for some way to pass the
time, Susie and I stumbled on the lovely old 2009 movie Julie and Julia. For
those of you who are unfamiliar with it, the movie follows the early career of
Julia Child while simultaneously following the year in which Julie Powell
undertook to make all of the more than 500 recipes in Julia Child’s classic cookbook
and write about it every day on her blog. The incomparable Meryl Streep plays
Julia Child and a quite effective Amy Adams does the Powell role.
The movie took me back to my early days in Cambridge when
public TV was in its infancy and everything was in black and white. Julia Child’s
show, “the French Chef,” was of course the big hit on the Boston area public TV
station but there was also an exercise show that drew a large audience hosted
by Maggie Lettvin called “Maggie and the Beautiful Machine.”
Maggie Lettvin was the wife of a brilliant MIT scientist
named Jerome Lettvin, or Jerry as he was widely known. Maggie was tall,
slender, with a beautiful body which she put to good use in her public
television show. Jerry was a large, fat, rumpled mess of a man who looked like
a huge heap of clothes waiting to go in the washing machine. I was sitting in
Tulla’s coffeehouse one evening having a heated philosophical discussion with a
friend when Jerry, who was sitting at the next table, interrupted and joined
the debate. He was that kind of man. At some point – I cannot remember when – I
went to a party (a quite rare event for me) and in the middle of the evening
Maggie and Jerry walked in looking like a Cambridge/MIT version of Beauty and
the Beast.
In the movie, Julia’s husband Paul is played by the always
excellent Stanley Tucci who of course appeared much later once again with Streep
in The Devil wore Prada.
6 comments:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/de/Lettvin_Faraday_cage.jpg
Back in the day (early 70s) I sat in on Lettvin's (very very popular) course. He was pretty amazing. He gave a brilliant (and funny) lecture on his famous (and important) paper: frog's eye
a nice piece on him here
Dear Prof Wolff, I just watched your video on Rawls. I posted the following there:
Prof Wolff visited South Africa in the late 1980s and gave a number of spectacular lectures. He joined us in placard protests against apartheid. If I recall correctly, he joked at the time that he did not get arrested for protesting against the Vietnam War and was hoping that he could make up for it then. None of us got arrested, despite the protest being filmed by the police. What a privilege to have heard his lectures and engage him broadly on a range of topics. Hope he sees this and remembers the visit.
Thank you for making yourself available to so many aspiring or budding political theorists. You have no idea of the incredible impact you had on a generation of students at Wits University.
Dear Prof Wolff
I am now following your course on Kant and enjoying it tremendously. I also just watched Les Derniers Jours D'Emmanuel Kant (The Last Days of Immanuel Kant on youtube. See here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYGGHlgpdlw
And here a review in the New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-front-row/what-to-stream-the-last-days-of-immanuel-kant-a-physical-comedy-of-the-philosophical-life
I wonder what you think of this movie.
Best regards
A fan from the Netherlands
Speaking of movies and Stanley Tucci, I highly recommend The Big Night. It’s extremely well done with a great cast.
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