Mostrando postagens com marcador Jay Brown. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Jay Brown. Mostrar todas as postagens

quarta-feira, 4 de maio de 2011

Molly Brown, 1867-1932: A Social and Political Activist Who Survived the Titanic

Source: www.voanews.com VOA Special English - Text & MP3
www.manythings.org/voa/people 

Molly Brown, 1867-1932: A Social and Political Activist Who Survived the Titanic

Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English. I'm Mario Ritter. And I'm Shirley Griffith.
Margaret Brown was a social and political activist in the formative years of the modern American West. Her biggest claim to fame was surviving the Titanic. This week on our program, we tell the story of the woman remembered as "The Unsinkable Molly Brown."
Margaret Brown lived an interesting life, but not all the stories about her are true. For example, a Denver newspaper reporter named Gene Fowler wrote that she survived a tornado as a baby, refused to attend school and chewed tobacco.
Fowler wrote about Brown and others in his book "Timber Line," published after her death in 1932.
Kristen Iversen is an English professor and author of "Molly Brown: Unraveling the Myth." She says the stories did contain some truth, though, which is that Brown went West to follow a dream and that dream came true.
In the 1964 movie "The Unsinkable Molly Brown" she was played by Debbie Reynolds.
The nickname "Molly" was largely a Hollywood invention, says her biographer. Kristen Iversen says Brown did not like it. The name "Molly" was often used as an insult for an Irish girl, and nobody in her own life called her that.
She was known as Maggie in her hometown of Hannibal, Missouri. She was born Margaret Tobin in 1867, two years after the Civil War ended. Her Irish-born parents had socially progressive beliefs.
At that time, American women could not own property or vote. They did not get much education. And they rarely traveled far by themselves. But during her lifetime much of that changed.
In 1886, Maggie Tobin left home for the town of Leadville, Colorado, to join a sister and brother who already lived there. Leadville had gold, silver and copper mines. At that time it was one of the fastest growing places in the country.
She sewed carpets and curtains for a local dry goods company.
She is shown singing in a barroom in both the movie and 1960 Broadway musical "The Unsinkable Molly Brown."
(MUSIC)
Here is biographer Kristen Iversen.
KRISTEN IVERSEN: "She did have a great sense of humor. She enjoyed being around people. But she was very serious, very motivated, very hard working type of person and really a kind of good Catholic girl her entire life. And that barroom saloon girl image is pretty different from the kind of person she really was. So one thing the myth does is it really diminishes that aspect of her life."
The story of her life became linked to romantic ideas about gold mining in the American West and the dream of getting rich quick.
In 1886 Maggie Tobin married James Joseph Brown, J.J. for short. He was 31 years old; she was 19. He was a mine manager in Leadville who developed a way to safely mine for gold deeper than before.
The popular story is that J.J. got rich soon after they married. Kristen Iversen says he did become rich, but not until they had been married for seven years and had two children.
In 1894 the Browns bought a house in Denver, Colorado. The popular story is that rich families in Denver society did not accept them because they had been poor and lacked education.
Kristen Iversen says Denver's most conservative social club did exclude them for a time. But she says the Browns were a big part of Denver society. Margaret became involved in social and political events, hosting dinners to raise money for charities.
She traveled around the world and sent her children to school in France. She learned foreign languages and took college classes. She also began to speak out for progressive causes.
She worked toward social change through the womens reform movement. She raised money for schools and the poor. And she worked with a judge in Denver to establish the first court in the country to deal only with young people.
In 1912 Margaret Brown was a passenger on the Titanic on its first and only trip. The huge ship hit an iceberg and sank in the North Atlantic. More than 1,500 people died, while just over 700 survived.
Brown was played by Kathy Bates in James Cameron's "Titanic." In this scene, she tries to get the other women in her lifeboat to go back and rescue people from the water.
MOLLY BROWN: "C'mon girls, grab an oar, let's go!"
CREWMAN: "Are you out of your mind? We're in the middle of the North Atlantic. Now do you people want to live, or do you want to die?"
MOLLY BROWN: "I don't understand a one of ya. What's the matter with ya? It's your men out there. Theres plenty of room for more."
CREWMAN: "And there'll be one less on this boat if you don't shut that hole in your face."
In real life, Brown is credited with keeping people's spirits up in the lifeboat until they were rescued by another ship, the Carpathia.
Later, she raised money to help poor immigrant women who had been passengers on the lower levels of the Titanic. She also raised money for the crew of the Carpathia. She became president of the Titanic Survivors Club and helped build a memorial in Washington.
So who started calling her "unsinkable?" Some say she described herself that way after the disaster. Kristen Iversen says that is not true. She says a Denver newspaper reporter first called her the unsinkable Mrs. Brown in a story. The New York Times called her the heroine of the Titanic.
KRISTEN IVERSEN: "The thing about the Titanic experience, what happened with the Titanic experience and the recognition she got from the New York Times in particular was that it gave her a platform from which to talk about some of the political and social issues --miners rights, womens rights, the development of the juvenile court system, that sort of thing. It gave her an international platform to talk about some of those things."
She actively worked for the right of women to vote in federal elections. Colorado gave women the right to vote in 1893, but that did not happen nationally until 1920. Brown ran for Congress twice in the early 1900s but lost both times.
The popular story of Molly Brown is that she was on the Titanic returning home to a happy life with her husband. In reality, their marriage had already failed.
Kristen Iversen says one of their major problems was that Brown was socially progressive and her husband was not.
KRISTEN IVERSEN: "He felt that a womans name -- and she wrote about his -- that a womans name should appear in the newspaper when she married and when she died. And Margaret Tobin Brown liked to see her name in the newspaper for a lot of reasons."
The couple never legally divorced because of their Catholic faith, but they did sign a separation agreement. J.J. Brown died in 1922.
During World War One, Margaret Brown went to France to help with the American medical ambulance system. She earned the French Legion of Honor for her work with the American Committee of Devastated France.
In the last years of her life, she traveled and performed on the stage. She also studied and taught acting. In 1929 she received the Palm of the Academy, a French honor, in recognition of her work in dramatic arts.
Margaret Brown died in 1932 while staying at the famous Barbizon Hotel in New York City. She was sixty-five years old. The discovery of a brain cancer after her death explained the severe headaches in the final years of her life.
In 1970, the city of Denver bought the house where she had lived. Each year about 50,000 people visit the Molly Brown House. They learn how a wealthy American family lived at the start of the 20th century. And they learn about the real Molly Brown.
To biographer Kristen Iversen, Brown represents other women who also worked for social progress but whose lives "are invisible to history." So what lesson is there to learn from the myth of "The Unsinkable Molly Brown?"
KRISTEN IVERSEN: "I think the story in some ways tells us what we want to think of ourselves as an American. That is, this kind of pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps, that with enough determination and hard work that you can transcend limitations of money or class or gender. And thats part of the myth and I think thats also part of the reality of her story.
"So its a very inspirational story. There are so many aspects of the myth that are not true. Yet I think the myth story itself speaks to her spirit and speaks to some of the ways we like to think of ourselves as Americans."

terça-feira, 11 de janeiro de 2011

Brixton: Multi-Cultural London



Welcome to Brixton

Source: www.speakup.combr
Language Level: Intermediate
Standard: British Accent


Jay Brown, a 38-year-old Black Londoner, set up a tour company and gave the British media a big surprise. Her company, Brixton Tours, offers tourists the chance to see an area that no one previously thought of putting on the tourist map, even if as she told me, everyone has heard about it:

Jay Brown:

(Standard British accent)

I got the idea for Brixton tours from travelling: I’ve been to Bali, I’ve been to Rio de Janeiro, I’ve been to India, I’ve been to Copenhagen, I’ve been…travelled quite extensively round Europe. And from travelling and meeting people and they ask you where you’re from, I was really surprised that most people had heard of Brixton from one way or another. So, from knowing that, I thought, “Oh, my God, people are so interested in where…” wherever you go, people are always interested in where you’re from and, with Brixton, I realised that I live in a place which is quite unique and quite special and has so much to offer.

THOSE RIOTS…

Jay Brown found that people around the world know two facts about Brixton. One is that it is a black area, a long-established Afro-Caribbean neighbourhood and a national symbol of minority culture, but Brixton is still a highly unusual tourist destination. The other characteristic of Brixton that everyone members is rioting. In 1981, and again in 1985 and 1995, local youths, fought battles who the police destroying building and cars and creating an enduring reputation for lawlessness. Not to disappoint expectations, Jay Brown takes her tours along the roads where these riots took place, although she says the area is now greatly changed:

Jay Brown:

On my tours I take people down the street where the riots actually happened to show them, and now you’ve got cafes, you’ve got internet store(s), you’ve got restaurants, you’ve got a shoe store called Elephant Foot for people who can’t find shoes in a particular size, but there’s so much. They’ve really invested in the area. And there’s lots of people starting business, because there’s lots of young people in this area as well. You know, it’s attracted musicians, artists, Brixton’s a very creative are and it’s very good for business, because people come here and set up, you know, little shops within the market of bigger stalls on the street. So it’s good: it’s entrepreneurial, it encourages people to be creative and Brixton’s a very creative area.

GENTRIFICATION

Investment, along with Brixton’s central locations and its convenient Underground station, have also attracted many entirely conventional uncreative middle-class residents, but it remains a great place for exploring more exotic cultures. Jay Brown’s tours also go pas the stalls of Brixton market, where an extraordinary selection of international produce caters for a remarkable cultural diversity. As well as Afro-Caribbean fruits like ackee, plantain and callaloo, there are Columbian specialities and African produce like giant land snails.

A NEW EXPERIENCE

Of course, not all these cultures welcome curious visitors. The athletic young drug dealers hanging out on street corners with their mountain bikes certainly do not welcome the attention of strangers, unless they are potential customers. Nor is this an ideal to take photographs with an expensive camera. But, having lived here for 15 years, Jay Brown, is sure that anymore touring the area with her has nothing to fear. In fact, in her company, she says Brixton is an essential part of any visit to London:

Jay Brown:

People should come on Brixton tour because it would get them out of the West End, which is really boring, and it’ll bring them to a place which offers them culture, music, food, entertainment, bars. There’s just so much here that people need to just leave the West End behind and head to south London and do a Brixton tour.

A troubled Neighbourood 

Brixton's streets reflect 200 years of London History. Over the last century it has been famous both as a community of actors and artists, and as an important retailing centre where the first British department store was built and where a shopping arcade was lit with eletricity for the first time. Today, however, Brixton is known for its Afro-Caribbean community. Since the 1950s - when immigrants from the West Indies were invited to Britain to help rebuild the economy shattered in the Second World War - Brixton has become a symbol of Britain' most colourful cultural minority. 

The new lives of early West Indian immigrants were often hard. Painful encounters with racism were almost inevitable and until 1976 there was no legal protection against discrimination.

The Riots

At times the hostility of London's white working classes became violent. Opposition to Britain's first wave of "mass immigration" come to ahead in August 1958, when mobs armed with knives and iron bars appeared on the streets in search of what they insultingly called "niggers." After several black men were beaten unconscious, armed gangs of West Indians retaliated with similar violence. Brixton has been devastated by riots on several occasions, in 1981 thousands of young Afro-Caribbean men reacted to aggressive policing by destroying buildings and burning cars. In 1985 similar scenes of destruction occured after a policeman searching for a robber broke into his house and shot his mother, leaving her permanently disable. Again in 1995 Brixton's street witnessed violent confrontations after the death of a black suspect in police custody.

LONDON'S MELTING POT

Today, despite problems with guns and crack cocaine, Brixton is calmer. Like the Notting Hill riots, which inspired the Notting Hill Carnival, Brixton's riots had positive long-term effects. By drawing attention to local problems, they inspired official efforts to combat racism and diminish poverty. In the years since the riots the West Indians community has also established itself as a valued element of national life. Black fashion now shapes all of Britain's culture, with Afro-Caribbean men and women making a prominent contribution in music, fashion, sport and entertainment. 

In recent years Brixton's association with the West Indies has also began to weaken. As the area lost its reputation for lawlessness, it began to attract a growing number of white professionals. Some locals resent their arrival, but they are just part of a growing diversity - a mix of cultures now being enhanced by an influx of French, Spanish and Portuguese-speaking immigrants from Africa.

BRIXTON GUIDES

For those of you wishing to discover Brixton's past, the Brixton Society visit http:www.brixtonsociety.org.uk publishes guidebooks and provides guides for walking tours. And if you want an insight into the lifestyle of Brixton's black community today, contact Jay Brown of Brixton Tours. Website: http://www.brixtontours.co.uk E-mail: jaybrixton@hotmail.com 

Tel:      +44 (0) 1843 840737
Mobile +44 (0) 7951 676 015