Author Archives: Alan Ilagan

Proud & Unbowed

Most of the time, the Lenten rose that has grown in our backyard for the past two decades keeps its flowered heads bowed down, drooping low to the ground and dangling like little mauve bells. This year, a couple of them deigned to raise their heads and defiantly look half-way up into the sky, and when that happens I try to get their photo, without throwing out my back. The crux of age and desire… these are dangerous waters. 

I’ve mentioned the Lenten rose a number of times here, and this may be the year I add another one to our garden. When it’s the only thing in bloom this early, it gains importance, and its beautiful foliage remains gorgeous all season long. (If ever it gets ratty, I simply snip it off and often a new set of leaves will emerge to take its place, especially if it’s early in the season.) 

At my parents’ home, there I a light cream version that lifts its blossoms a little more, carrying their heads a bit higher. I may look into that variety. These are enchanting plants on many levels. 

For now I’m going to take advantage of their bold streak this spring, and enjoy their mottled beauty. 

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Ronen Rubinstein

Coming out as bisexual is still very much a brave act, especially in the entertainment world, so whenever someone takes such a courageous step, I’m all for encouragement and support. This is Ronen Rubinstein, and he’s our Dazzler of the Day for taking that step. Rubinstein has appeared in ‘Orange Is the New Black’ and ‘9-1-1: Lone Star’ and looks to be adding plenty to that list in the near future. 

Continue reading ...

An Easter Extended Recap

We extended the Easter glory with a delayed Easter dinner yesterday, and the weather was so fine that I got a good deal of the yard cleared up this weekend (and about 25 lawn bags filled – we usually hit 40 per spring season). As such, the body and the mind are both exhausted. On with the recap…

For those who love a happy ending

Albany inspiration

The amazing Cloud Food Hall

The Lady and her Queendom.

When the clouds clear.

The battle of the Emmas looks to be glorious

Scilla signals spring

Flan overboard.

Portrait of a Lady by a gentleman.

Jonquility.

Be right back, Boston.

A sunny Easter celebration

Dazzlers of the Day included Eric Alán, Nicolle Wallace, Brian Centrone, Rachel Maddow, Shaun T, Cher, and Dan Levy.

Continue reading ...

Easter Delayed for a Sunnier Day

When Andy was scheduled to have his second COVID vaccine on Easter Sunday, the family graciously moved our socially-distanced garage gathering to the next week, and then we moved it up a day to catch the most gorgeous April weather of yesterday, and avoid the rain of today. Being flexible worked – a lesson learned the rough way through most of 2020, when plans were pulled out from us at the last minute. 

This marks the first garage get-together since last Thanksgiving, and for the occasion I switched out the hanging ladder of fall florals with this poppy-festooned circular mobile and some dangling paper flowers.  Soon enough the weather will be fine for outside terrace dining, and our family dinners will commence. 

This delayed Easter celebration was a delicious gathering of dishes and recipes that have sustained us through four decades of holiday dinners. I brought ambrosia, candied yams, and Key lime bars. There was sweet and sour fish, sliced ham, rice, mashed potatoes, green beans exotic, asado, spanakopita and starters of shrimp, deviled eggs, and mushroom knishes. It was a parade of holiday hits. The only thing missing was the jello salad. Aspects of spring threaded their way through it, and as we wandered through the desserts, everyone was happily full.

Desserts were the aforementioned Key lime bars, a homemade applesauce cake, and Gram’s old-fashioned profiteroles filled with ice cream. But better than any dining spread was the company, assembled again at our childhood home, as the sun spilled through the garage and the gardens slowly awakened from their winter slumber. 

I didn’t get the blue memo, but I got the pastels. 

Andy got the blue memo. 

It’s been way too long since I’ve seen these cherubs – and in just a few weeks they seem to grow a few more inches. Soon we will be setting up a day visit as we did in late fall. Now that the weather is finer, we can resume more regular meet-ups. 

Don’t forget that your family is gold.

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Dan Levy

Compelling testimony to the notion that comedic timing and dramatic brilliance runs in the family, this is Dan Levy as our Dazzler of the Day. His indelible turn on ‘Schitt’s Creek’ – not only as actor, but as writer, director, producer and executive producer – cemented his status as cultural icon, and his recent blitz of commercials seems to be priming the pump for his next artistic endeavor. (See also his Hunk of the Day post here.)

Continue reading ...

BRB

They’re having a rising season thus far, as the Boston Red Sox keep trundling along, and they have a series of home games in early June, the typical time Skip and I make our way to Boston for our annual BroSox Adventures. This year we are trying to resume the tradition after a year off when the world fell to pieces. There is much to catch up on – not just the changes the have come over Boston, but the deeper changes that a few quick meet-ups over the last year could never recapture. 

Much like my upcoming anniversary weekend with Andy, I’m not making detailed itineraries – this is no time to tempt the fates. Instead, a more general announcement will go out, because I’m finally feeling a genuine sense of hope and happy gatherings on the vaccinated horizon. 

That’s how this Sunday is vibing for me – hope and happiness and looking to the horizon. Even as the rains come – and we are badly in need of them – there are plans set not in stone, but in the wisps of Palo Santo smoke. Go Red Sox – we’re coming back, and it’s going to be a whole new ball game

Continue reading ...

Jonquility

A Saturday spring evening when the scent of jonquils is just barely in the air. I can’t tell if it’s really there, or if I just really want it to be. And so I squat down and bring a bloom to my nose, inhaling the delicate aroma, faintly sweet with a sort of tangy and tart base. I can’t describe it other than it smells like spring – impossible to capture or duplicate, and maybe that’s for the best. If they bloomed every day, and were commonplace at the florist, the way that they conjure spring would be blunted. 

Tomorrow the rains will arrive, as much a part of spring as they are cherished by the garden. If they get too rough, I’ll pick a few, as I did the ones seen here. Making it this far deserves some pampering, especially when they’re this close to the finish line. 

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Cher

Every now and then a Dazzler of the Day is crowned and I feel like it’s not enough, like it’s almost redundant to try to capture their magnificence in something as silly as a blog post, and then I remember that no matter how big you get, and no matter how many accolades you have already received, there is always grace in giving and receiving any sort of praise. And so we honor the already-award-festooned Cher as today’s Dazzler, and her accomplishments are too numerous and weighty to list out here, so I’ll let you recap your own favorite moments of this timeless diva, here are but a scant few of mine:

Favorite Song: ‘All Or Nothing’

Favorite Movie: ‘Mermaids

Favorite Album: ‘Believe’

Continue reading ...

Portrait of a Lady By a Gentleman

“Whatever life you lead you must put your soul in it–to make any sort of success in it; and from the moment you do that it ceases to be romance, I assure you: it becomes grim reality! And you can’t always please yourself; you must sometimes please other people. That, I admit, you’re very ready to do; but there’s another thing that’s still more important–you must often displease others. You must always be ready for that–you must never shrink from it. That doesn’t suit you at all–you’re too fond of admiration, you like to be thought well of. You think we can escape disagreeable duties by taking romantic views–that’s your great illusion, my dear. But we can’t. You must be prepared on many occasions in life to please no one at all–not even yourself.” – Henry James, ‘The Portrait of a Lady’

This is merely a holding space for an evening memory sometime in the not-too-distant future, a memory not yet made but happily on the hopeful horizon. As such, it is difficult to tell you what ‘Portrait of a Lady’ means to me, because I don’t yet know. I’ve worn it at home to get a feel for it, and to indulge in its dark beauty, but I’ve been holding back on fully experiencing it by melding it to a particular experience. What I have now is a slightly ephemeral experience, an amalgamation of a couple of try-outs in Copley Place back when one could test colognes, before the world hid safely behind masks.

It actually took quite a while before I decided to try it on me. The name didn’t quite appeal to my preferences. I’m all for ladies with an attitude, and portraits of ladies for that matter, but Henry James? Not my favorite. Give me Edith Wharton over James any and every day. However, in researching some quotes from the book, I am finding a new appreciation for his words. The same thing happened the first time I tried ‘Portrait’ as a fragrance. It wasn’t quite my thing, not in those early days, and not in my earlier years.

“One can’t judge till one’s forty; before that we’re too eager, too hard, too cruel, and in addition much too ignorant.” – Henry James, ‘The Portrait of a Lady’

Returning to it on a trip to Boston about two years ago, I released my issues with the name, embracing ‘Portrait of a Lady’ and trying it on as I made my way home one night. As I lifted one sprayed wrist to my nose and walked through the Copley Place Mall, I felt its mysterious pull, the incense-like smoke that so beautifully curled around the central notes of rose. For Christmas and Valentine’s Day I hinted at my desire for it, but when other lovely gifts arrived in its stead, I took it upon myself to treat my own desires. Like the complicated people Henry James grappled with, I didn’t want to depend on others, and maybe I needed a reminder that I could depend on myself. Whichever it was or wasn’t, I procured my own bottle and in the darkness of this past winter I held onto it, wondering if there would ever be a time when I would wear it out in public.

“The years have touched her only to enrich her; the flower of her youth had not faded; it only hung more quietly on its stem.” – Henry James, ‘The Portrait of a Lady’

More time, stolen away. More lost visits with friends and family. More lost everything. At certain ages, you feel how quickly it all goes. You sense the fleeting nature of our quick lives. By the time I had that precious bottle of beautiful fragrance in my possession, we weren’t even allowed to travel to Boston without a 14-day quarantine, and we were being cautious by not going out in Albany. Then I realized something I’d forgotten in my desire to be out spreading my sillage: I didn’t wear a fragrance so that others would admire me – I wore a fragrance because I loved it – loved the way it scented my space, loved the beauty of how it lingered in the air, loved the minor memories as they were culled and created. And so, on a recent April evening, after the day had given us a bright blue sky and a warming sun, after I had just begun working on the garden, I took my evening shower and sprayed a bit of ‘Portrait of a Lady’ and read over these passages from the novel. There was hope in the air – Andy had mentioned opening the pool, and I’d stopped by to see my parents and prepare for a delayed Easter dinner – and if that was the memory this scent would evoke, it would be enough.

“When you have lived as long as I, you will see that every human being has his shell, and that you must take the shell into account. By the shell I mean the whole envelope of circumstances. There is no such thing as an isolated man or woman; we are each of us made up of a cluster of appurtenances. What do you call one’s self? Where does it begin? Where does it end? It overflows into everything that belongs to us – and then flows back again… One’s self – for other people – is one’s expression of one’s self; and one’s house, one’s clothes, the books one reads, the company one keeps – these things are all expressive.” – Henry James, ‘The Portrait of a Lady’

Continue reading ...

Flan Overboard

You make flan your way, I’ll make it mine. 

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Shaun T

A request from my friend Katie, this marks the first time that Shaun T has been named Dazzler of the Day, and this fitness icon, whose website has all sorts of inspirational leads, clearly deserves all the honors we may bestow. He’s got a number of fitness programs to help anyone get in shape, but better and more important than that is his goal of helping people find joy in life. Healthy living leads to happy living. 

Continue reading ...

Scilla So Blue & Beautiful

As one of the smallest and most seemingly insignificant blooms in the garden, this tiny Scilla siberica packs enough of a punch for me to instantly catch its early bloom in the brown expanse of the backyard. Second only to the Lenten rose, these hardy beauties defy the early dangers of the spring season to dangle their lovely blossoms and coquettishly twirl in the slightest breeze. 

As hardy as they are small, they tend to multiply and increase into little colonies, no matter how much ill-treatment (or in my case neglect) they receive. I remember one Easter I stopped by Suzie’s house, and near the edge of the forest an entire carpet of these was in full glorious bloom – it looked like a little blue wave rolling onto the lawn. 

In other words, to make the strongest impression they should be used en masse. 

Continue reading ...

The Battle of the Emmas

I haven’t been this excited about a Disney film since ‘Mary Poppins Returns’, and I’m open to a new interpretation of Cruella DeVil by Emma Stone, especially if Emma Thompson is in it. A battle of the Emmas looks to be an exercise in scenery-chewing madness, and I am here for all of it. And the fashion – oh my goodness the fashion – absolutely to burn for.

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Rachel Maddow

In those glorious days before the former guy took his sham of entry into the highest office, Rachel Maddow was a pleasant and refreshing breath of intelligence on MSNBC, often ending her early programs with a cocktail recipe and toast. As the former guy’s nonsensical but dangerous brand of hate and sleaze worked its way into a rotting of America’s soul, Maddow became a voice of reason and defiance, and her role took on more and more weight as the world struggled to right the sudden proliferation of open and outright racism and evil. Throughout it all, she retained a steady and studied thoughtful guide through those treacherous waters. Her ratings reflected our hunger for such substance and stability, growing and expanding as the right and the reasonable did their best to resist. I’m not sure how we could have made it through that wretchedness without her. She easily earns her first Dazzler of the Day honor for helping keep us all sane at 9 PM. 

Continue reading ...

When Clouds Clear

These cloud photos were taken on Easter Sunday, as Andy and I made our way home from a brief visit with the parents. They sparked a bit of hope in me, and this morning I awoke feeling a similar reinvigoration. Outside the dining room window, I watched a gathering of the usual visitors, all out in full spring force. A pair of robins sparred and fluttered about a bit, while a squirrel poked around the fern garden. A cardinal and a blue jay would visit briefly – a flash of scarlet and a flash of blue – and a mourning dove sat perched on an electrical wire. 

Things are starting to awake in the garden. I’ve only made a minor start of clearing things out, as wintry weather remains a possibility. Thus far the means cutting down hundreds of hydrangeas stems to eep their height under control in the front yard. The old-fashioned Annabelle variety seems to do better when it’s sliced practically to the ground. 

The pair of fig trees in the garage has sent out full leaves already, but it’s much too soon to bring them outdoors. Soon, though, I’m hoping it will be safe. Soon…

Continue reading ...