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When Paris Learned to Smile, and Other News
By
Dan Piepenbring
October 28, 2014
On the Shelf
Gerard Dou,
The Extraction of Tooth
(detail), ca. 1630.
“
The triumphs of late-eighteenth-century French dentistry
—professionalization, a commitment to canine conservation and oral hygiene, skill in making and installing artificial dentures—were a crucial element in the complex process … call[ed] the ‘Smile Revolution.’ Only when an open mouth was able to expose white teeth (or, failing that, white dentures), only when dental hygiene dispelled the miasma of halitosis, could a full smile exposing the teeth be countenanced.”
At eighty-five, Hedy Pagremanski likes to plant herself on street corners and paint
the disappearing buildings of New York
. She’s done more than eighty of them. “We have learned that whatever was, isn’t … I once went to the Landmarks Commission and said, ‘What buildings are coming down?’ And they said they never know until the wrecking ball hits. And that was about twenty years ago.”
Tony Kushner on Tennessee Williams
: “Because he was mining himself, his
self
, so endlessly, at some point what you call a kind of calcification of the heart manifests itself, and the self-mining becomes a kind of self-devouring, self-cannibalism, even; the business of putting your self and your inner life on stage over and over becomes a form of self-consumption.”
The French culture minister, Fleur Pellerin, has never read any of Patrick Modiano’s books—actually,
in the past two years, she hasn’t read any books at all
. “I haven’t had time to read anything in the last two years except for a lot of notes, legislative texts, and newswires,” she said. Some have taken this news poorly. “Nothing will uplift us, the soul is an illusion,” one commentator said.
Lubricious opening lines:
Do they attract or dispel readers
? (The opening line that prompted this debate is Christos Tsiolkas’s: “My mother is best known for giving blowjobs to Pete Best and Paul McCartney in the toilets of the Star-Club in Hamburg one night in the early sixties.”)
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