On ‘Hairspray’s’ 25th anniversary, ‘Buddy Deane’ Committee looks back

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By Jessica Goldstein ( Washington Post, 1/18/2013)

If you were a teenager in Baltimore in the late 1950s and early 1960s, you watched “The Buddy Deane Show.” When the final bell rang you sprinted home from school, saddle shoes smacking the sidewalk, knee socks sliding down your shins, until you skidded to a stop in front of your black-and-white TV and turned to WJZ Channel 13 to watch Maryland’s answer to “American Bandstand.” Chances are you wanted to be on “The Buddy Deane Show,” whose stars were ordinary teens turned local celebrities. The Committee, as they were known, could do all the hot dances of the day: the Madison, the mashed potato, the pony. Faced with pressure to integrate the show, something the station (and some Committee members’ parents) refused to allow, WJZ canceled Buddy Deane in 1964.

Most people probably would’ve forgotten about “The Buddy Deane Show” ages ago had it not been immortalized by John Waters in his 1988 movie, “Hairspray.” In honor of the 25th anniversary of “Hairspray,” the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra is staging a concert production of the musical this week, narrated by Waters and featuring a full orchestra and vocalists. We rounded up Waters and almost 20 of the original Deaners and asked a handful to recount their days as the most famous kids in Charm City.

“The Buddy Deane Show” went on the air on Sept. 9, 1957 and became the most popular local show in the United States.

John Waters, writer and director of “Hairspray”: I was always obsessed by it. . . . I watched it for the fashion and for the drama, because Buddy Deane encouraged them to [date and] break up on film. I watched it like a soap opera. I watched and fantasized about it and made up stories about it in my brain.

Continue reading at The Washington Post.

Posted in 1960s, 1980s, John Waters, Oldies | Leave a comment

Happy Birthday, Edgar Allan Poe (1/19/1809)

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Posted in Baltimorons, Obituaries | Leave a comment

Esther Martin (1923 – Jan. 19, 2003)

By Brennen Jensen (Baltimore City Paper, 1/29/2003)

Esther Martin, owner and founder of the Club Charles bar on the 1700 block of North Charles Street, died Jan. 19 following surgery to correct the debilitating effects of diabetes. The 80-year-old Oklahoma native spent the lion’s share of her life in the Baltimore nightlife business–she went from hat-check girl at the tony nightclubs of the World War II era to being at the helm of her own watering hole for decades. Through an exhaustive chain of 12-hour days, she made innumerable friends, amassed a trove of outrageous stories (and blue jokes), and fashioned a life best described as an enigmatic study in contrasts. A roomful of celebrated novelists couldn’t conjure up such a character.

Martin was a driven businesswoman in the age of Father Knows Best. She was the salty-tongued proprietor of what was once dubbed “the scariest bar in Baltimore,” who served up selfless acts of generosity as readily as whiskey shots. She mixed easily with both the rich and famous and the down-and-out. She put on no airs and pulled no punches. Calling her a tough lady with a heart of gold sounds a bit cliché. But so be it.

“She’s my heroine,” filmmaker and frequent Club Charles patron John Waters said of Martin in a 2000 City Paper interview. “A great, great lady who was a huge influence on me.”

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Posted in Baltimorons, Club Charles, Nightspots, Obituaries | Tagged | 3 Comments

Suspected NY Cannibal Cop Salivates During Lady Lunch in Baltimore

‘My mouth was watering the whole time:’ Suspected ‘cannibal cop’ made sickening confession after lunch date with female friend ‘whom he planned to slow-cook and eat’

NYPD cop Gilberto Valle allegedly told friend online he wanted to eat his old college friend

By Matt Blake and Snejana Farberov (Daily Mail, 1/15/2013)

A federal appeals court has denied bail for a New York City police officer charged with conspiring to rape, kill and eat women after a prosecutor described how the suspect was allegedly salivating over the prospect of cooking a female friend.

‘My mouth was watering the whole time,’ Gilberto Valle allegedly told a friend on an online forum after he had lunch in Baltimore with a former college pal.

The disgraced NYPD cop later fantasized about slow-cooking and eating the woman, Assistant U.S. Attorney Hadassa Waxman said in court Tuesday.

In online transcripts cited by NBC4 Valle at one point tells a co-conspirator that his oven is ‘big enough to fit one of these girls if I folded their legs.’

‘I was thinking of tying her body onto some kind of apparatus…cook her over a low heat, keep her alive as long as possible,’ he is accused of saying in the July conversation.

Continue reading at Daily Mail.

Related: NYC “Cannibal Cop” Wanted Maryland “Girl Meat” for Thanksgiving — Baltimore or Less

Posted in 2010s, Baltimorons, Crime, Dining | 1 Comment