Monday, May 25, 2020

Eltinge Chicken bake


For our holiday offering here is an alternative for grilling outside. It is a chicken bake chocked full of vegetables for you and your neighbors. We name it after the most famous American male actress in the first half of the Twentieth Century, “Eltinge”.


For a better tasting dish, roast the chicken first, then make the casserole. 




Ingredients:
1 lb. medium shells pasta, cooked and drained
3 chicken breasts bone-less, skinless
4 Tbs favorite salad dressing, (used a butter-garlic I found in seafood section)
1 can Cream of onion soup
1 can cream of bacon soup
½ cup sour cream
6 slices chopped cooked bacon
1 pkg frozen mixed vegetables
2 cups shredded Colby Jack cheese (8 oz)
Chopped parsley, if desired

Directions:
Heat oven to 375°F. Line a baking pan with foil.



Split each breast lengthwise horizontally. Rub with salad dressing and roast in pan for 25 – 30 minutes until temp reaches 165 degrees.
 After all you want the chicken to have taste, otherwise you could just use the canned stuff.


Prep the pasta. Let it cook for 10 minutes in boiling water, drain well.

Take the chicken out and cut it into 2 inch pieces. Lower the oven to 350 degrees.
Line a large baking pan with foil and spray it well.




While that cooks: do your bacon on a paper towel lined plate in the microwave for no more than 2 mins on high. Let drain on more paper towels. 



Cut into 1 inch pieces.

In large bowl, place the drained pasta, cooked and diced chicken, the undiluted cans of soup, and sour cream. Stir to combine.




Stir in the frozen vegetables and the cut up bacon. Pour mixture in pan; spread evenly. 



Sprinkle with 2 cups shredded mixed Colby jack cheese (8 oz).


Bake 15 to 20 minutes or until hot and bubbly. Let stand 5 minutes before serving. Sprinkle with chopped parsley if you wish. 



What a great meal for my Master Indy.

Now then since this makes so much unless you are serving a pot luck dinner, plan ahead.
Portion the left-overs in containers and freeze!


These can either be taken to neighbors or just used another day.

socialslave

To satisfy and restore.
To nourish, support and maintain.
To gratify, spoil, comfort and please,
to nurture, assist, and sustain
..I cook!

Please buy slave's cookbook:

The Little Black Book of Indiscreet Recipes by Dan White 


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Eltinge 



May 14, 1883– William Julian Dalton was born. He was to become one of America's biggest stage and film actors. He elevated the art of female impersonation. He never presented a caricature, nor over embellished image but rather an illusion of a woman.
Using the single name of Eltinge became the highest paid actor on the American stage. So popular was he that during the Korean War a troop ship was named in his, or rather, her honor.

The Eltinge Theater on New York's 42nd Street was designed by noted theater architect Thomas W. Lamb. He also had his own magazine, in which he advised women about makeup and promoted his cosmetics line, which was highly regarded for its cold cream. He even had a line of cigars!
Forgetting Julian Eltinge in American culture is arguably equivalent to forgetting an actor like Mark Wahlberg, or Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, two of the highest-paid actors in Hollywood in 2019.

At one point, Eltinge was absolutely everywhere, and his method of drag — going back and forth from male to female characters multiple times within a single performance — became a comedic trope that continued into the cultural mainstream for decades to come. 

With Eltinge, drag became a more cultural experience. At the height of Eltinge’s fame in particular, it lifted female impersonation to great respectability where it previously had very little.

Eltinge's career began when he was a child in Butte, Montana. Dalton was interested in dressing up early on, which his mother apparently accommodated. When he started dressing as a woman and performing in local saloons, however, his father found out and was enraged, so his mother sent him back East to Boston to live with her sister. He did continue to preform.
Eltinge soon became a professional, contracted actor, and made his stage debut in New York in 1904 with the play Mr. Wix of Wickham.

Eltinge would go on to play a set character throughout his career — men who had to dress as women to achieve their goals, claiming a massive inheritance, or what have you. Eltinge actively sought to lend a higher-class status to female impersonators, whose performances were often otherwise confined to dive bars.

Eltinge also sought to differentiate himself by cultivating an especially “butch” public image, because even a hint of homosexuality would have destroyed his career: He participated in staged boxing matches and lit cigars after performances.

Because it was said that Eltinge knew how to manipulate the press, rumors of his sexuality were mostly averted, though Eltinge was a lifelong bachelor. He designed many of his own garments and had a personal dresser.



During this time Eltinge began performing in vaudeville. Unlike many of the female impersonation acts that existed at that time, like Bert Savoy or George Fortesque, Eltinge did not present a caricature of women but presented the illusion of actually being a woman. He toured simply as "Eltinge" which left his sex unknown and his act included singing and dancing in a variety of female roles. At the conclusion of his performances, he would remove his wig, revealing his true nature to the surprise of the often unknowing audience.

Eltinge’s audiences were primarily entranced women. “Women went into ecstasy about him,'' the comedian W.C. Fields once said. ''Men went into the smoking room.'' And for those who were so entranced, the experience of seeing the performer was never a moral question of Eltinge’s sexuality, but rather a fascinating, magical illusion they wanted to see again and again.

There is a long tradition in entertainment that goes back to Shakespearean times. In fact, even further back to the times of ancient Greek Plays. Women parts on stage were played by men. In Elizabethan times it was against the law for a woman to appear on stage. In more modern times, for a man to dress as a women, even on stage, he had to be mocking them.

In their limited hetreocentric world, people ask why would a man want to look like a woman (a lessor person). Maybe that way a man could have deviant sex. If the object of his lust LOOKED like a woman. Thus an effeminate aspect was linked to being a sexual monster who was somehow “after our children”. In the early 1900s, In the UK especially, the homosexual took on very effeminate gestures as a way of “signaling” to others what they were looking for.

In popular entertainment appearing in drag often was a comedic tool. An obvious buffoon to make fun of. Around the turn of the twentieth century “drag shows” at least in the USA focused on over the top presentations. These were diva's; over-feminine, over made up, and over acted.

Eltinge however offered an illusion of becoming a woman! An image unique to the culture of the time.




Hollywood beckoned Eltinge and in 1917 he appeared in his first feature film, The Countess Charming. This would lead to other films including 1918s The Isle of Love with Rudolph Valentino.

His role in the film was again a double role with him playing both a male and said male in female garb.

By the time Eltinge arrived in Hollywood, he was earning on stage an unheard of $3,500 a week! 




By 1920, Eltinge was an intimate of the top Hollywood stars and a wealthy man. He built Villa Capistrano, one of the most lavish villa’s in the Hollywood area, where he lived with his mother and entertained lavishly. He also built a ‘dude ranch’ for men in Alpine, CA near San Diego.

After filming, Eltinge continued touring onstage and would do so until 1927.

Eltinge was one of many show business figures to be hit hard by the 1929 stock market crash. By the 1930s, the female impersonations that he had built his career on had begun to lose popularity, as did vaudeville in general. Eltinge resorted to performing in nightclubs. Crackdowns on cross-dressing in public – an attempt to curb homosexual activity – prevented Eltinge from performing in costume. His shows were always the epitome of good taste but this moral crackdown led to his decline.

Eltinge experienced a personal bout of depression, having spent lavishly on homes and cars with failed investments. Then in his 50s, he began drinking heavily when work became scarce.

Eltinge resorted to performing in nightclubs.
Passing away just before WWII, Eltinge leaves a legacy as one of the greatest female impersonators of the 20th century.
Though the details of his professional life are widely known, Eltinge's personal life is shrouded in mystery; mystery partly due to the passage of time, but really more likely to Eltinge's own hand. 


Aside from the graceful femininity he exhibited onstage, Eltinge used a super-masculine facade in public to combat the rumors of his homosexuality. This facade included the occasional bar-fight, smoking cigars, and drawn out engagements to women (though he never married). He was also known to physically attack stagehands, members of the audience and others who remarked on his sexuality.
As to his homosexuality, there is some question. Milton Berle and many others who worked with Eltinge believed that he was indeed gay. There is no existing record of a lover of either sex, though stories did abound.

The legal oppression prevented Eltinge from performing in costume.
At one appearance in a Los Angeles club, Eltinge stood next to displays of his gowns while taking on his characters.

Eltinge’s final performance was at Billy Rose’s Diamond Horseshoe Nightclub in New York City in February of 1941. He died ten days later at his apartment on West 74th Street. His death, like his much of his personal life remains a mystery, leaving behind a bustle full of questions and, undoubtedly, many spectacular black veils.

But who was Julian Eltinge? Today he would be a hybrid of Oprah, RuPaul and Cher, as he was the original one-named wonder: ELTINGE! He successfully branded himself not only with a namesake theater, but also a magazine (“Julian Eltinge’s Magazine of Beauty Hints & Tips”) where he offered make-up and lifestyle suggestions to his adoring fans of both sexes.

“it is not how much paint you put on, it is where you put it”.

An impossible persona to typecast, Eltinge greatest gift was perhaps his ability to not merely play a woman with complete believability, but to also somehow become one.  This is why audiences claimed him to be one of the greatest living actresses of his time.

The signature “reveal” ending of his act was the mainstay at Finocchio's Night Club of San Francisco up until they closed in 1999.

For Eltinge it wasn’t so much “an act” as a metamorphosis.







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