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Historically Modern

Modern architecture, the capital “M” kind, is now historic. “Modern” buildings can be considered for the National Register of Historic Places because they are more than 50 years old. Modernism, also known as the International Style, touted the development of universally valid forms with no connection to the decadent styles and outmoded materials of the past. The movement flourished from the early 20th century until about 1960. Though hailed by avant-garde architects and intellectuals as the panacea for society’s ills, Modern architecture was never a big hit with the general public, its intended beneficiary. Despite its resounding unpopularity, Modernism remained the darling of architects for many years.

In 1952, Memphis architects Lucian M. Dent and Alfred L. Aydelott built an office for their firm; a Memphis Press-Scimitar article described it as “a one-story office building of extremely modern design.” Aydelott used his considerable influence at city hall to get a variance to build the office in a residential area. The site on Peabody was just down the street from Mayor E.H. Crump’s Colonial Revival house.

Dent and Aydelott seemed to be a partnership of diametrically opposed architectural philosophies. Dent, involved in restoring Colonial Williamsburg, usually worked in a Classical and Colonial vocabulary. Aydelott was an early and devoted proponent of Modernism. The design they produced for their office melds the stylistic influences of both partners.

The site is bounded by garden walls which accentuate the corner location while screening the building from view. Both the office and the garden walls are brick. A serpentine wall along Florence Street was undoubtedly influenced by Thomas Jefferson’s design for the garden walls at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. But the undulating wall also strongly resembles swoopy ’40s and ’50s designs, such as kidney-shaped swimming pools, boomerang-patterned Formica, the golden arches of McDonald’s, and New York’s Guggenheim Museum. The almost-circular end of the wall forms a garden court at the entrance. The front door is sheltered by a deep roof overhang and partially enclosed by a high brick wall perpendicular to Peabody Avenue.

The interior spaces achieve the Modern ideal of integration with the outdoors: Full-height glass walls provide protection from the weather but no visual separation from the surrounding gardens. Dark terrazzo floors with their patterns of tiny stones emphasize the connection of interior and exterior spaces and materials.

Although built as an office and studio, this dynamic composition offers exceptional flexibility in its potential uses. The original office reception area functions well as a residential entry hall. The conference room, with two glass walls and one wall of long, narrow Roman bricks of a type favored by Frank Lloyd Wright, makes a splendid living room or home office. The large kitchen is minimally equipped but has plenty of room for more appliances, storage, and work areas. It “borrows” a garden view through a breakfast room/pantry room across the corridor that was the architects’ blueprint room. Three rooms that were partners’ offices would work equally well as bedrooms with full-width, ribbon windows.

The drafting room, a 30-by-50-foot space with wall-to-wall, 15-foot-tall, north-facing windows and a clerestory on the south side, could be an artist’s studio, a home theater, an exercise room, or open-plan office for six to eight people. It has fabulous light, a pleasant view of a quiet residential street, and a door that opens into the garden.

Dent and Aydelott’s office, although half a century old, offers a dramatic setting for a home, an office, a studio, or a combination of those functions, affirming the Modernists’ belief in the enduring value of flexible, “universal” design.

2080 Peabody Avenue

3,400 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths

$2,500/month, For lease by owner, 276-9070

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HOW IT LOOKS

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CITY BEAT

REGIONALISM AND THE RING

It may not be exactly what politicians and the chamber of commerce had in mind, but the Tyson-Lewis fight at The Pyramid shapes up as a prime example of four very different Mid-South cities joining forces for a common cause in a unique case of regionalism.

Memphis will host the fight and get most of the ink and a big boost to its hotels and restaurants. But it couldn’t happen without some influential neighbors in Nashville, Tunica, and, of all places, Dyersburg.

Tunica casinos will be the training camps for the fighters and entertain thousands of visitors and media. Fitzgeralds Casino announced this week that Mike Tyson will stay there. Lennox Lewis will set up camp at Sam’s Town.

Fight promoter Brian Young of Prize Fight Boxing is based in Nashville.

And now Dyersburg, the town 90 miles north of Memphis that was once known as “Little Chicago” for its wide-open ways, has gotten into the game. When First Tennessee Bank declined to issue a letter of credit for the $12.5 million site fee last month because of concerns about Tyson’s image, it was widely reported that another unnamed bank stepped in to take its place. Other reports referred only to unnamed West Tennessee investors.

The Flyer has learned from sources that the letter of credit for the site fee is being issued by an investment vehicle arranged by businessmen in Dyersburg, Memphis, and Tunica. The group includes highway contractor John Ford of Ford Construction in Dyersburg as well as others.

Ford is on First Tennessee’s advisory board in Dyersburg, according to a bank spokesman. Ford Construction has political connections to Nashville. Retiring state Rep. Ronnie Cole (D-Dyersburg), who has served in the General Assembly for 10 years, is vice president of the company. Contacted this week by the Flyer, Cole said he had heard “street talk” about Dyersburg businessmen backing the letter of credit, but he would not comment further.

Efforts to speak to Ford Monday and Tuesday were unsuccessful.

The fight financiers have tried to remain anonymous, and promoters have tried to protect them. Russ Young, brother of Brian Young of Prize Fight Boxing, said the letter of credit is “controversial” and the identity of the people behind it “is really nobody’s business.” Privacy is something the highway industry also takes seriously. In 1996, the Tennessee Roadbuilders Association got Cole to introduce legislation that would have restricted public access to financial records that contractors file with the state. Governor Sundquist vetoed it.

But controversy is no excuse for secrecy in this case, and it’s surprising that the media have played along for three weeks. After being spurned by Las Vegas, New York, Atlanta, and Nashville, Mike Tyson wound up in the arms of Memphis, thanks to promoters and Mayor Willie Herenton. There were no public hearings of any kind. The fight was a rumor one day, a done deal a few weeks later. In contrast, that other controversial local sports story, the new NBA arena, has been publicly vetted for a year.

For better or worse, Memphis will be the center of the sports world on June 8th. The fight will tie up downtown for the better part of a weekend, require the city to deploy hundreds of police officers and spend an untold amount of money on preparations and security, and, in the minds of many citizens, subject Memphis to international scorn and ridicule.

It could not have happened without the promoters and casinos, who stand to make millions. The promotion could not have happened without the issuers of the letter of credit, who also stand to make a handsome return on their bet. The letter of credit is controversial enough that Ralph Horn, the CEO of First Tennessee Bank, took considerable pains to publicly explain the bank’s decision not to issue it.

If that isn’t public business, then what is?

Because big-time prizefights are unusual in this part of the world, the term “site fee” is sometimes misunderstood. It is not paid either by or for the benefit of Memphis or The Pyramid. Alan Freeman, general manager of The Pyramid, likened it to a talent guarantee in the concert-promotion business.

“The investor makes a guarantee to the promoters of X amount of moneys to come from the live site, The Pyramid,” said Freeman. “What he gets for making that is a portion of the excess, if any.”

The Pyramid’s contract is with Prize Fight Boxing even though it is not the investor. Declining to discuss specifics, Freeman said Prize Fight Boxing may have a joint venture with the investors.

The Dyersburg connection highlights the extent to which Memphis is either a lucky or unlucky host of the high-stakes, controversial fight due to the machinations of outsiders. Even with the efforts of Herenton and Freeman, Memphis couldn’t have done it alone.

Tunica provides an additional 5,000 hotel rooms, gambling, and glitz.

Nashville’s unheralded Prize Fight Boxing has proven to be an able promoter, delivering a fight that many writers in the national media still think will be postponed or turn into a fiasco.

And Dyersburg came up with the money when Memphis, home to three major independent banks, did not.

(Care to respond? Write mailonthefly@aol.com.)

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BOXERS

According to an article in the London Mirror, Mike Tyson is tired of the boxing business and would likely retire were it not for serious financial woes. The article notes how unlikely it is that Iron Mike can defeat Lennox Lewis, due in part to a weak corner staff and in light of the recent, as-yet-unsubstantiated accusation that he pummeled a topless dancer. Trainer Tommy Brooks, who worked with Tyson for two years, was quoted as saying, Mike is his own worst enemy, which leads us to believe that the fighter’s next bout should be with himself.

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thursday, 18

Well, I m laughing and crying. Laughing about monkeys and crying about Grizzlies. Sincerely. I never in a million years would have dreamed that I would become so attached to a sports team of any kind, but I am emotionally distressed about the Grizzlies having played their last home game at The Pyramid for the season. Every game I went to was a blast, no matter if they won or lost. Of course, it was much better when they won, but even when they lost, they gave it a good shot. Regardless what you whiney people think about being ripped off and taxed for the new arena, the Grizzlies coming to town has been one of the best things ever to happen to this city. I think in stead of worrying about losing a nickel because of whatever taxes you think you re going to have to pay for the arena, you d better worry much more about the president s crooked buddies at Enron who want to build an energy plant here in Shelby County near Arlington. How sick is that? So there. I, for one, will miss the Grizzlies tremendously and hope they come back in the fall with a vengeance and no injuries. As for the mon keys, I am now obsessed with what s going on in Nikko, Japan, where the entire populace is petrified because wild monkeys are taking over and ruining their lives. According to a recent report, they are breaking into cars, homes, and shops and wreaking all manner of havoc. I particularly love the monkey that sits in the middle of the road to make the cars stop and then jumps on the hood and windshield demand ing food. That same sort of thing happened to me with a hooker once in a bad part of town while the engine in my Chevrolet Caprice Classic was overheat ing, and it was scary though not as scary as when the car actually blew up some time later in a Danver s parking lot. And then there was the monkey that snatched a brown bag from a tourist, whose group was surrounded by the pushy primates; the monkey grabbed it and ran up a tree, only to find that instead of food the bag con ained a souvenir horse, which he threw to the ground and smashed. It is so bad that special monkey patrols are canvassing the streets with nets and bananas tied to poles. My absolute favorite thing so far is this quote by Governor Akiko Domoto: Is it possible to give them birth control? I love monkeys, but, as governor, I have to do something. I have a fantasy that this is what the judges on the Food Network s Iron Chef are really saying while the dubbed English voice is comment ing on the balance be ween the sweet and sour in the sea weed-and-dried-fish concoc ions. You know, when the Japanese soap-opera star s dubbed voice is saying, Ah, yes, the chef s combination of tart lime zest and sweet basil oil is magnificent! she is real y say ing, What are we going to do about these crazy-ass monkeys? I think we should spank the monkeys! One can only dream.

Anyway, enough of this monkey business. Here s a brief look at what s going on around town this week. And there s quite a bit, so check the regular entertainment list ngs for the full lineup. There s an open ng reception tonight at 1700 Faxon for One Night Stand, an exhibit of works by Rhodes College students. Today kicks off the Memphis Black Writers Confer nce & Southern Film Festival at the Memphis Cook Convention Center, with African-American authors and producers sharing their works and honoring the 100th anniversary of Langston Hughes birth. Memphis internist and author Dr. Oakley Jordan is at Deliberate Literate tonight at 6 p.m. signing copies of his new medical mystery thriller, Death s Parallel; set in Memphis, it s the story of a physician who assists terminally ill patients in dying while a serial killer is on the loose. Tonight s Steak N Burger Dinner at Woodland Hills benefits the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Memphis. Today kicks off this weekend s Africa in April Awareess Festival downtown in Robert E. Church Park, honoring the Bahamas and featuring live music, food, crafts, and more. Sugar Hill recording artist John Cowanof the Newgrass Revival is at the Lounge. Bobby, Fred, & Hunky Rusty are at Alex s. And The Connells are at Newby s.

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PRESSURE ‘BOTH SIDES’ IN MID-EAST, CLEMENT SAYS

MEMPHIS– While participating Wednesday in observances of the 54th anniversary of the founding of the state of Israel, 5th District U.S. Rep. Bob Clement (here with Rabbi Yehuda Silver and Pace Cooper at Margolin Hebrew Academy) said in an interview that President Bush had remained too long “on the sidelines” as tension between Israelis and Palestinians mounted to the present dangerous pitch.

Clement, the only Tennessee congressman on the House International Affairs Committee and currently a candidate for the U.S. Senate, said the two sides had come close to an agreement during talks at Camp David during the last year of the Clinton administration and that currently beleaguered Palestinian Authority leader Yasafar Arafat had “missed a golden opportunity” for a peace settlement at the time.

Clement said that “all sides” had allowed the situation to deteriorate since then, and that “it didn’t help” when Bush came into office with a pledge to distance himself from Clinton-style personal diplomacy.

“The president has some qualified people on hand, but he was not as engaged as he should have been. I’m pleased that he’s more engaged now, but he’s got to apply more pressure and apply it on both sides,” said Clement, who maintained that no settlement was possible without the direct involvement of the United States.

The Nashville congressman, who is running as the consensus candidate of the state Democratic Party, spoke at the Margolin facility Wednesday afternoon and was scheduled to appear the Jewish Community Center for further observes Wednesday night.

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TRANSLATION: MEMPHIS

WEATHERTALK

Since we are pretty much strangers, and I’m not really in the political frame of mind at present (lest I go on for about 500 paragraphs) I figured it’s a great time to comment on the weather. Isn’t it absolutely gorgeous?

I sometimes wonder about weather talk. At any given moment across Memphis, or the US, or pan-ultimately, the world, how many people are having polite, largely innocuous little chats about the state of the weather? Thousands at the very minimum. Probably a whole lot more. (Not including the overabundance of eager weathercasters, who I bet know what temperatures they enjoy to the degree and aren’t satisfied unless the air is in that perfect, overly defined state.)

Talking about the weather, or course, is perfectly reasonable.

How many wars are fought over it?

Unless, of course, you start to analyze it further, and place politics and religion into the realm of being cultural applications of environmental factors (your forest is more fertile than mine, etc.) Then maybe all wars, at heart, are really about the weather.

But anyway, back to the innocuous reflection on the grand state of Spring.

Spring is a monster in Memphis. It’s like a living creature. I swear that I went to sleep one night watching the moon through a sparse tangle of branches out my window, slept about six hours, and awakened to a yard of fully blossomed trees outside my apartment. It’s as if there was an overnight marathon, in which the moon shouted “one, two, three, goÉ” and handed out prizes to the plants quickest to sprout by the break of sunlight.

That pretty much rocks, in my book.

And the best part of the whole thing is that the people start coming back out. The warm weather here is like a season-long version of a full moon, and everyone starts running around in circles.

Which leads me to a brief public service announcement. If you are one of those people who begins to run unbridled through the city as the temperature rises, please look in both directions when crossing the street. I’ve recently read that Memphis is one of the more dangerous cities for pedestrians, and this has to be correlative to the number of individuals that seem to enjoy walking right along the yellow lines in the middle of the road.

So what to do, amidst all of this temperate splendor?

Well first off, keep your eye open for the ongoing plethora of special events. From April through October, Memphis holds the honor of being the festival capital of the world. Crawfish festivals. Africa in April. The South Main Arts festival. The Great Wine Race. Memphis in May. Sudsfest. Parties in the Pinch. Artist markets. The fair. Elvis’ death week. The Jerry Lee Lewis birthday convention. The Cooper Young festival.

The list goes on and on, and frankly, is entirely too long to fully detail without my arms falling off.

It’s also a great time of year to walk around and watch people. For the third straight season, I have seen certain people emerge right around this time, wander about while the weather is right, and then disappear into the winter.

Go to the park. Drive up and down the street. You’ll find more characters than you could imagine.

Just a few weeks ago I was approached by a self-described “Redneck Irishman” with a bloody right eye and a yellow balloon who told me that he loved me.

There’s another man with whom I’m mildly obsessed that can be seen walking up and down Vance almost daily. He’s tall, and carries an air with him as if there’s some sort of ancient secret that he’s sworn to protect. I know that probably sounds ridiculous, but if you saw him, you’d know what I mean.

And if you’re searching for Memphis mementos, check out some yard sales. Sure, there are enough gift shops about to fill an entire mall, but why not seek out something that’s truly indicative of the city’s people. I enjoy nothing more than wandering from yard to yard, trying to imagine what secrets might live inside a home, based solely upon the “garbage” tossed out on the lawn.

This past weekend, for a grand total of thirteen dollars, and over the course of about a square mile of Midtown, I found a huge ornamental tapestry, a voodoo doll, a metallic Egyptian print on a fiber paper, two dresses, a pair of brown velour pants, a tee-shirt, paperback versions of The Serpent and the Rainbow, Watership Down, and The Tenth Man, as well as some really cool cloth napkins that I’m going to use to mat some frames.

So what are you doing inside, anyway?

Go out and play. Did I mention that the weather is splendid?

(Care to respond? Write mailonthefly@aol.com.)

Categories
News News Feature

CITY BEAT

REGIONALISM AND THE RING

It may not be exactly what politicians and the chamber of commerce had in mind, but the Tyson-Lewis fight at The Pyramid shapes up as a prime example of four very different Mid-South cities joining forces for a common cause in a unique case of regionalism.

Memphis will host the fight and get most of the ink and a big boost to its hotels and restaurants. But it couldn’t happen without some influential neighbors in Nashville, Tunica, and, of all places, Dyersburg.

Tunica casinos will be the training camps for the fighters and entertain thousands of visitors and media. Fitzgeralds Casino announced this week that Mike Tyson will stay there. Lennox Lewis will set up camp at Sam’s Town.

Fight promoter Brian Young of Prize Fight Boxing is based in Nashville.

And now Dyersburg, the town 90 miles north of Memphis that was once known as “Little Chicago” for its wide-open ways, has gotten into the game. When First Tennessee Bank declined to issue a letter of credit for the $12.5 million site fee last month because of concerns about Tyson’s image, it was widely reported that another unnamed bank stepped in to take its place. Other reports referred only to unnamed West Tennessee investors.

The Flyer has learned from sources that the letter of credit for the site fee is being issued by an investment vehicle arranged by businessmen in Dyersburg, Memphis, and Tunica. The group includes highway contractor John Ford of Ford Construction in Dyersburg as well as others.

Ford is on First Tennessee’s advisory board in Dyersburg, according to a bank spokesman. Ford Construction has political connections to Nashville. Retiring state Rep. Ronnie Cole (D-Dyersburg), who has served in the General Assembly for 10 years, is vice president of the company. Contacted this week by the Flyer, Cole said he had heard “street talk” about Dyersburg businessmen backing the letter of credit, but he would not comment further.

Efforts to speak to Ford Monday and Tuesday were unsuccessful.

The fight financiers have tried to remain anonymous, and promoters have tried to protect them. Russ Young, brother of Brian Young of Prize Fight Boxing, said the letter of credit is “controversial” and the identity of the people behind it “is really nobody’s business.” Privacy is something the highway industry also takes seriously. In 1996, the Tennessee Roadbuilders Association got Cole to introduce legislation that would have restricted public access to financial records that contractors file with the state. Governor Sundquist vetoed it.

But controversy is no excuse for secrecy in this case, and it’s surprising that the media have played along for three weeks. After being spurned by Las Vegas, New York, Atlanta, and Nashville, Mike Tyson wound up in the arms of Memphis, thanks to promoters and Mayor Willie Herenton. There were no public hearings of any kind. The fight was a rumor one day, a done deal a few weeks later. In contrast, that other controversial local sports story, the new NBA arena, has been publicly vetted for a year.

For better or worse, Memphis will be the center of the sports world on June 8th. The fight will tie up downtown for the better part of a weekend, require the city to deploy hundreds of police officers and spend an untold amount of money on preparations and security, and, in the minds of many citizens, subject Memphis to international scorn and ridicule.

It could not have happened without the promoters and casinos, who stand to make millions. The promotion could not have happened without the issuers of the letter of credit, who also stand to make a handsome return on their bet. The letter of credit is controversial enough that Ralph Horn, the CEO of First Tennessee Bank, took considerable pains to publicly explain the bank’s decision not to issue it.

If that isn’t public business, then what is?

Because big-time prizefights are unusual in this part of the world, the term “site fee” is sometimes misunderstood. It is not paid either by or for the benefit of Memphis or The Pyramid. Alan Freeman, general manager of The Pyramid, likened it to a talent guarantee in the concert-promotion business.

“The investor makes a guarantee to the promoters of X amount of moneys to come from the live site, The Pyramid,” said Freeman. “What he gets for making that is a portion of the excess, if any.”

The Pyramid’s contract is with Prize Fight Boxing even though it is not the investor. Declining to discuss specifics, Freeman said Prize Fight Boxing may have a joint venture with the investors.

The Dyersburg connection highlights the extent to which Memphis is either a lucky or unlucky host of the high-stakes, controversial fight due to the machinations of outsiders. Even with the efforts of Herenton and Freeman, Memphis couldn’t have done it alone.

Tunica provides an additional 5,000 hotel rooms, gambling, and glitz.

Nashville’s unheralded Prize Fight Boxing has proven to be an able promoter, delivering a fight that many writers in the national media still think will be postponed or turn into a fiasco.

And Dyersburg came up with the money when Memphis, home to three major independent banks, did not.

(Care to respond? Write mailonthefly@aol.com.)

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wednesday, 17

Ah, it s Wednesday. Better okay, I know, I m being obnoxious. Imagine that. The Grizzlies are playing San Antonio tonight, and I hope they kick some ass, and now I have to get out of here. As always, I really don t care what you do this week, because I don t even know you, and unless you can get me that Celine Dion special video so I can use it for torturing purposes, I m sure I don t want to meet you. Besides, it s time for me to blow this dump and go see if Fancy Feast makes labels in Braille.

T.S.