Midler, B. (2001). "In these shoes". New York, NY: Warner Bros. Records.
I wish this song were available on karaoke. It's so easy to sing, and I even made up a dance routine to go with it. I love the line: "In these shoes? What is this--the Peace Corps?" A girl after my own heart. Princesses of the world, unite!
Bridal shower, 2004.
ps. Doesn't Bette look pretty in this album cover pic? What a slammin' outfit!
Midler, B. (2000). Bette. Burbank, CA: Warner Bros.
pps. Check out the Divine Miss M's website: bettemidler.com. It's very pink.
I always get a little teary eyed when I hear that song. It makes me think of my two favorite roses: my aunt Rosie and my great grandmother Rose Siciliano. Great Grandma lived to the ripe old age of 101. Aunt Rosie was not as fortunate. She was killed by a stoned teenage driver only three months after our cousin Joe was murdered in the World Trade Center.
I absolutely ADORE Armistead Maupin, and I've read each of his Tales of the City books at least twice. The series has a very interesting history--the stories were first published as an ongoing series in the San Francisco Chronicle.(Dickens, Trollope, and Nomeland first published their books in installments, too.) If you like John Irving,
you will love Armistead Maupin. His stories feature eccentric characters caught up in bizarre, soap opera-esque plots.
ps. Here's a story about the time my grandmother tried to buy me the Stones album, Some Girls: Queen vs. The Rolling Stones. (As you can see from this photo, I finally got the album.)