【Watch The Carnal Sutra Mat (1987) full movie】
Mrs. Parker and Watch The Carnal Sutra Mat (1987) full moviethe Pink Object
From the Archive
At the time of this interview, Mrs. Parker was living in a midtown New York hotel. She shared her small apartment with a youthful poodle that had the run of the place and had caused it to look, as Mrs. Parker said apologetically, somewhat “Hogarthian”: newspapers spread about the floor, picked lamb chops here and there, and a rubber doll—its throat torn from ear to ear—which Mrs. Parker lobbed left-handed from her chair into corners of the room for the poodle to retrieve—as it did, never tiring of the opportunity. The room was sparsely decorated, its one overpowering fixture being a large dog portrait, not of the poodle, but of a sheepdog owned by the author Philip Wylie, and painted by his wife. The portrait indicated a dog of such size that if it were real, would have dwarfed Mrs. Parker, who was a small woman, her voice gentle, her tone often apologetic, but occasionally, given the opportunity to comment on matters she felt strongly about, she spoke almost harshly, and her sentences were punctuated with observations phrased with lethal force.
That description comes from the introduction to Dorothy Parker’s 1956 Paris Review Art of Fiction interview, a document of unusual (sometimes harsh) honesty, and great humor. I’ve always tried to envision that scene: the writer, battling depression and alcoholism, her career (to her eyes) in twilight—and so was fascinated to run across this snapshot in the New York Public Library’s digital archive. It pictures Parker—petite, with signature chignon and bangs—in a distinctly midcentury room, seated on a dun-colored sofa with two poodles. Before her on a marbled coffee table is a fairly hideous arrangement made up at least in part of dried eucalyptus stems, which puts the viewer in the unusual position of being able to imagine the smell of the scene: eucalyptus and dog, with hints of coffee. (I assume coffee, rather than tea, although feel free to disagree.) The only real mystery—besides where she is, and who took the picture—concerns the pink plush thing on the stack of magazines. Hat? Chew toy? Lamb Chop? But then, as Parker herself wrote in Esquirein 1959, “In all reverence I say Heaven bless the Whodunit, the soothing balm on the wound, the cooling hand on the brow, the opiate of the people.” Update: a colleague feels strongly that it is a bedroom slipper “filled with either dog food or gold coins,” possibly the chocolate Hanukah kind.
Sadie Stein is contributing editor of The Paris Review, and the Daily’s correspondent.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Propaganda, Anti-propaganda
2025-06-25 21:53Diary, 1999 by Sloane Crosley
2025-06-25 21:15Nobody Writes Like Nancy Lemann by Susan Minot
2025-06-25 20:41NYT mini crossword answers for May 25, 2025
2025-06-25 19:48Popular Posts
Razors, Razors, Razors
2025-06-25 20:52Saturday Is the Rose of the Week by Clarice Lispector
2025-06-25 19:24Have a Carrot: Picture Books by The Paris Review
2025-06-25 19:15Americans Have More Guns
2025-06-25 19:08Featured Posts
What Happened in Vegas
2025-06-25 21:43Hello, World! Part Four: George Dorn by Sheila Heti
2025-06-25 21:23Love, Loosha by Lucia Berlin and Kenward Elmslie
2025-06-25 19:50Scorched Earth
2025-06-25 19:29Popular Articles
Working on Ourselves
2025-06-25 21:49Passing Through: On Leonard Cohen by Andrew Martin
2025-06-25 19:39A Night at the Library
2025-06-25 19:10Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (372)
Warm Information Network
Nothing to Do with Art
2025-06-25 21:52Wisdom Convergence Information Network
Softball Season by Sophie Haigney
2025-06-25 21:18Neon Information Network
Other People’s Partings by Peter Orner
2025-06-25 21:03Impression Information Network
Past, Present, Perfect: An Overdue Pilgrimage to Stonington, Connecticut by Henri Cole
2025-06-25 21:00Fashion Information Network
Propaganda and the Pundit Mind
2025-06-25 19:31