Paul Bowles & James Schuyler’s A Picnic Cantata (1953)

Paul Bowles & James Schuyler’s A Picnic Cantata (1953)

Bowles and Schuyler’s performance piece A Picnic Cantata: for Four Women’s Voices, Two Pianos, and Percussion (1954) is delightfully silly. It’s about a happy picnic that is intentionally nonsensical. The music by Bowles’ and the libretto by...
Nadine Gordimer’s The Lying Days  (1953)

Nadine Gordimer’s The Lying Days (1953)

It’s a tender moment when Helen Shaw and Joel Aaron climb a hill to picnic and enjoy the view. They do not bring food or picnic gear but sit on the rock facing the sun. They are good friends, not lovers, and Aaron soon will be leaving Joel for Israel. Helen...
Dylan Thomas’  The Outing (1954)

Dylan Thomas’ The Outing (1954)

Thomas’ life and marriage were tumultuous. So in November 1953, when Caitlin Thomas entered St. Vincent’s Hospital in New York looking for her husband, she expected a positive answer to her question, “Is the bloody man dead yet?” What she got was “Not yet,” for he was...
Andy Warhol’s Picnic (1955c.)

Andy Warhol’s Picnic (1955c.)

Warhol’s Picnic is an early work that lacks the pizazz of the later Pop paintings of the late 1960s.  Featured Image: Andy Warhol. Picnic (1955c.), watercolor, ink, gouache on paper.
Alfred Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief (1955)

Alfred Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief (1955)

David Dodge and Alfred Hitchcock had differing views on the character of John Robie, aka The Cat, and the hero of To Catch a Thief. Dodge disguised the thirty-four-year-old to look older and plumper; for his film, Hitchcock chose fifty-one-year-old Cary Grant to play...
P.H. Newby’s The Picnic at Sakkara (1955)

P.H. Newby’s The Picnic at Sakkara (1955)

Newby’s Picnic At Sakkara is a comic novel set during political and international turmoil in Egypt.   At the time of Newby’s action around 1946-47, the British were still in control of the Suez Canal, the Farouk regime was wobbling, and Egyptian nationalism led by the...

Elizabeth David’s Summer Cooking (1955/65)

David’s books are suffused with references to picnics. She could be informal or according to her whims, something she adopted from her youth, which she wrote about in Summer Cooking, “Picnic addicts  [like herself] seem to be roughly divided between those...
Henry King’s Carousel (1956)

Henry King’s Carousel (1956)

King’s Carousel “A Real Nice Clambake” is full of picnicky camaraderie and good spirits, but it takes a nose-dive when the news comes that Julie Jordan’s lover Billy Bigelow, botched robbery is dead. King is casual about having the actors...