By HELENA RUFFIN Special to the Palisadian-Post Shortly before my partner and I left on our annual trip to Paris, we read Brook Dougherty’s delightful article ‘Dog Days of Paris’ in the September 16 Palisadian-Post. Since she included a general description of the boutique where she met Marcel (the black-and-white French bulldog), we thought we’d take the article and go in search of this magnificent animal. ”I love the French. We knew that all we had to do was to walk in a few boutiques, show them the picture of Marcel, and inevitably, someone would know where to direct us. ”The first store Rose Greene and I visited on Rue St. Paul, I introduced myself and asked (in my own brand of pidgin-French) if the shopkeeper was familiar with this dog. She politely replied, in fluent, beautiful English, of course, ‘I am embarrassed to say but I don’t like animals, so I don’t pay attention to them. It is terrible to be French and not like animals. So forgive me if I can’t help you. You may want to check a few doors down. They have two dogs in there.’ ”So we left, giggling, and Rose ran on ahead while I meandered, trying to look like a shopper, not on mission. No luck in the next few stores. Then I looked up, and there was Rose, standing in front of a lovely gift shop, ‘Thym The’ d’Ailleurs…’. There indeed was Marcel in the arms of his owner, Christian. ”I showed Christian the article and his face lit up with joy and amazement when he saw Marcel’s picture in the Post. Very proudly he said, ‘Marcel has his picture in a paper in America!’ Marcel clearly knew something special was going on as he licked, barked and greeted us. ”He really was the special dog Brook Dougherty described. We left Christian and Marcel the article from the Post, and went on our way. Another bridge secured in Franco-American relations. ”(As a professional amateur photographer, Palisadian Helena Ruffin has been photographing animals, people, food markets and architecture of France for over 15 years. Selections of her collection can be viewed and purchased on-line at http://ruffprints.smugmug.com, or in person by appointment only. Contact: helena.ruffin@gte.net or 399-1200.)
Canyon Gas Applies for Historic Status

Even though Canyon Service in Santa Monica Canyon is currently closed down and the three vintage orange-and-white gas pumps have been removed for safekeeping, there is still a chance that the station could reopen in the next few months. ”On November 17, in a last-ditch attempt to save the oldest full-service gas station in Los Angeles, the Santa Monica Canyon Civic Association (SMCCA) applied to the L.A. Cultural Heritage Commission to have Canyon Service declared a Historic-Cultural monument. ”The commission is expected to make a decision within the next six weeks. Until it does, no one is permitted to demolish, alter or move the 1922 structure, which was recently fenced in. ”The week before SMCCA filed the application, Brian Clark, who had leased the gas station on Entrada Drive since 1995, found himself locked out. He came to work to find a chain-link fence surrounding the station and Clark was told by Monica Queen, who is selling the property, that he could call and make an appointment to collect his personal belongings. Queen had given Clark notice weeks earlier that the property had been sold and that the escrow could not close until he vacated the premises. ”Within an hour of receiving Queen’s permission to enter the site, Clark, who had restored the station, had several workers on the lot stripping the contents, taking away the vintage Coke machines, the neon lights, the restored gas pumps and the street sign’all of which he owned. His concern then was that as soon as escrow on the property closed, which he knew was imminent, there would be nothing to stop the new owner from demolishing the station. ”Hence the urgency to apply for monument status. ”Any site, building or structure deemed to be of particular significance to the City of Los Angeles, in which the broad cultural, political, economic or social history of the city or community is reflected or exemplified can be declared an Historic-Cultural Monument. Any group or individual can bring prospective landmarks to the attention of the Cultural Heritage Commission. Well-known monuments include the Bradbury Building, Watts Towers and Olvera Street. ”If SMCCA’s proposal is approved it would buy some time for the station’a one-year ‘grace period,’ in which the community could enlist more support. The SMCCA (which represents neighboring residents) already has the backing of Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski, the Palisades Historical Society, the Palisades Community Council, the Society for Commercial Archeology and the Route 66 Association. ”The property, which includes the service station and one of the last remaining homes of the Marquez family, the original owners of the Rancho Boca de Santa Monica land grant, is still in escrow with an unknown buyer whose plans are also unknown. The asking price was $2.3 million. The sale appears related to settling the estate of Queen’s mother, Angelina Marquez Olivera, who died in 2002. ”While the property is zoned R-1, there has been a conditional use permit since 1925 for the gas station to operate in this residential neighborhood. Clark, who was leasing for $2,000 a month, offered to purchase the property in September but was rejected by Queen. ”For now, the fixtures of the vintage station are in a storage facility.
DWP Finalizes Local Reservoir Project
Department of Water and Power representatives presented their final Landscape Master Plan for the Santa Ynez reservoir in the Palisades Highlands at last Thursday’s Community Council meeting. The reservoir, located off Palisades Drive, was built in 1970 and is the main water source for all of Pacific Palisades and parts of Brentwood. Besides the landscaping, improvements call for a floating hypalon cover to be installed over the 9.2 acre, 70-ft.-deep reservoir to meet an Environmental Protection Agency requirement that all open-air reservoirs be covered by 2007. The site plan for Santa Ynez is designed to camouflage the cover on the reservoir by integrating it into the rocky, sage-covered terrain. The plan also calls for adding native plantings and artificial rockwork, and repaving and coloring the perimeter and access roads. Work is expected to begin in June 2006 to meet the EPA deadline. Assuring that water quality standards and fire-fighting capabilities will be met, ‘the idea is to make the cover as unobtrusive as possible,’ said Glenn Singley, DWP’s director of water engineering and technical services. He and other department officials have been meeting with local residents and community leaders since June 2002 to devise an acceptable plan for the reservoir. Four color samples of the cover (ranging from grass green to black) have been laid out on the reservoir basin for several months. The preferred sample’dark green with barely noticeable black stripes which is on the far left of the display’was passed around at the meeting. ‘We have observed, after visiting other reservoir sites, that if the color of the cover is too light, it bleaches out,’ said Palisades landscape architect Pamela Burton. ‘The idea is for it to blend into the canyon, which the darker green will do.’ Council chairman Norm Kulla told the Palisadian-Post before the meeting that he had made several trips up Palisades Drive to view the samples on display from afar. ‘I observed the different covers in daylight, morning and afternoon, in fog, in rain, and with complete cloud cover, when I couldn’t see them because weather blocked them from view,’ Kulla said. ‘My eyes tell me the cover must have some color. My preference is a green found in military camouflage, to blend with the hillside. If the cover is too light or dark, it doesn’t blend into something resembling a canyon. So I guess we avoid very dark covers.’ There are two reasons for the reservoir cover, which is expected to cost $3 million: security (reducing the possibility of vandalism or terrorism) and to preserve the quality of the water when the planned chemical switch is made from chlorine to chloramine (a mixture of chlorine and ammonia), to treat the water. Studies funded by DWP show that chloramine exposed to sunlight contributes to algae growth, which can lead to health, taste and odor concerns. The proposed camouflage cover to protect the water in the reservoir, which can be seen from hundreds of homes in the Highlands, is considered an improvement over DWP’s original proposal which called for a light-weight aluminum roof. Herb Conrad, who acted as a water consultant to the planning committee, requested assurances from Singley that an adequate Operations and Maintenance Plan be put in place ‘and complied with,’ to ensure the quality of the water. Singley replied that the State Department of Health would require such a plan and agreed at the meeting to provide it to the community. When Singley was asked about how emergencies, such as brush fires, would be handled while the improvements were being done, he replied that arrangements would be made to also use the Chautauqua reservoir. That answer did not satisfy Paul Shakstad, chief pilot of L.A.Fire Department’s air operations, who pointed out that ‘grading needs to be done’ to accommodate the larger Erickson snorkel-equipped firefighting helicopters at Chautauqua (on a ridge between Temescal Canyon and Rivas Canyon). ‘And it is absolutely imperative that we have an adequate water supply. We need a hydrant and some kind of cistern,’ which would allow a helicopter to fill up in less than two minutes. When Singley offered to have a 3,000-gallon cistern placed on-site when necessary, Shakstad objected, saying ‘that would take too long.’ He suggested instead that a storage tank be permanently stored there with high-pressure pumps. Singley agreed and will meet with LAFD’s air operations unit and Bob Cavage of the Palisades community advisory committee in the next few weeks. The existing helipad and hydrant at the Santa Ynez reservoir will still be used for smaller helicopters.
Interfaith Thanksgiving Service

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
‘This evening reminds us that there is more that unites us than divides us in life,’ Rabbi Steven Carr Reuben said Tuesday evening during his welcoming remarks for the annual Interfaith Thanksgiving Service. Held this year at Kehillat Israel, the traditional celebration was hosted by the Palisades Ministerial Association and included representatives from the synagogue and six local churches. Accompanied by Dwight Stone, music director of the Community United Methodist Church, KI’s Beth Wasserman Rosenfeld sang the prelude and Didi Carr Reuben sang ‘We Can Be Kind.’ Another musical highlight came when Cantor Chayim Frenkel and basso Louis Lebherz reprised their rendition of ‘The Lord’s Prayer’ from ‘The Pearlfishers’ by Bizet. Lebherz, an opera singer and director of music for Corpus Christi parish, also led what he described as ‘the world premiere’ of the Corpus Christi Ave Maria Chorus when they performed ‘Give Thanks to Our God.’ ‘The choir [grades 5-8] has been together for only five one-hour rehearsals,’ Lebherz said afterwards. ‘But the kids are so enthusiastic and disciplined, it works.’ The homily was delivered by the Rev. Nancy Wilson of the Methodist Church (last year’s host), and the Rev. Charles Svendsen, interim pastor of the Palisades Presbyterian Church, read the Presidential Proclamation for Thanksgiving. Representing St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church, the Rev. Michael Seiler gave a Prayer of Reflection and the Rev. Peter Kreitler read ‘Cycle of Life’ from the Chinook Psalter. Two representatives from the Self-Realization Fellowship also participated. Lutheran minister Wally Mees was unable to attend because of illness. David Carter of the 37th Church of Christ, Scientist, sought donations for a Darfur (Sudan) relief offering at the evening’s conclusion.
Hofer’s Scrooge: A Farcical Imp
The revolutionary Scrooge role that Manfred Hofer landed in Theatre Palisades’ ‘Inspecting Carol,’ now on stage at the Pierson Playhouse, proved to be providential casting. In the comedy by Daniel Sullivan and the Seattle Repertory Company, which captures the unique oddness of a theater ‘family,’ Hofer relishes the part of the alternative curmudgeon in the classic Dickens’ tale. ”Emerging in a top hat, waistcoat, sans breeches, Hofer’s Scrooge whom we are told once spoke the entire role in Spanish as a protest over the U.S. involvement in South America, resembles an existential Cat in the Hat, spewing Marxist ideals. ”Tall and slender, narrow face, goatee and long hair, with his skinny legs popping out of his undershorts, Hofer’s Scrooge is farcical. An impish troublemaker with intelligence, he is always welcome in any scene. ”A native Palisadian, Hofer, attended drama workshops at Santa Monica College in the late 1980s, but says for the most part he learns from every show he does. Two years ago, he studied with actor/director Stephen Schilling in a master class at Theatre Palisades. ”Hofer has appeared in a string of Theatre Palisades productions, including most recently ‘The Best Man,’ and has appeared in the Morgan-Wixson Theatre productions of ‘Macbeth’ and most recently in ‘Sue’o.’ ”At times he has been guilty of overacting, perhaps in his eagerness to imbue every role with his remarkable focus and energy. This time, in ‘Inspecting Carol,’ he has found a role rich and broad enough to match his own willingness to invest it with spontaneity and intelligence. ”The play is about a theater company putting on Dickens’ Christmas classic and follows their riotous attempts to match their production with what they perceive the National Endowment for the Arts would deem worthy of subsidy. Because it’s a comedy, you can only imagine what pratfalls this disharmonious, but lovable troupe are capable of, which leaves the actors, under the steady but wise hand of director Sherman Wayne, plenty of leeway. ”In the second act, Hofer reverts back to reciting a portion of a monologue in Spanish, which sounds quite good to this reviewer’s ear. Each night that Hofer recited the lines, and reviewed that evening’s performance, he thought more and more of turning them into a cry for revolution, a la Che Guevara. ‘After each performance I try to think of how I could do things differently, better,’ Hofer says. ‘So I suggested the change to Sherman, and he agreed and said go for it. It allowed me to express the passion of the character and turn up the comedic response.’ ”Hofer has been involved with Theatre Palisades for many years, and as a graphic designer he has contributed his talents toward designing the posters for over 50 T/P productions. ”He is also a musician, and plays guitar with the punk/blues band The Leaving Trains. His day job finds him in the graphics department at the Palisadian-Post. ”’Inspecting Carol’ continues at the Pierson Playhouse through Sunday, December 5. For tickets, call 454-1970.
Scalia’s Second Blue Ribbon
Although she owns more than 200 cookbooks, when it comes to cooking pies, two-time Village Fair blue-ribbon pie contest winner Jan Scalia devises her own recipes. ”In October, Scalia won the Village Fair pecan pie contest. Since she placed first in the apple pie category the year before and third in 2001 in the same category, Scalia says she didn’t expect to win again. ”’I cried,’ says Scalia, whose three ribbons appropriately adorn her refrigerator. ‘I was so shocked.’ ”A Palisadian since 1987, Scalia lives in a guest house in the Marquez Knolls area, where she cooks her delectable pies in a table-top convection oven. ‘I’ve learned how to get everything ready in a small area. If I had a big kitchen, it wouldn’t be quite as hard, but at the same time, it wouldn’t be quite as much fun.’ ”When asked what separated Scalia’s pecan pie from the other entries, Arnie Wishnick, executive director of the Palisades Chamber of Commerce and 2004 pie judge, replied, ‘It’s the crust and [the filling’s] not too gooey.’ ”Soon after Scalia was awarded her second blue ribbon, she proclaimed her Village Fair pie contest days were over. ‘Why would you want to quit after winning first place?’ a friend asked. Scalia replied: ‘Here in the Palisades, it’s like a community. It’s not the Pillsbury bake-off. I feel like I have my blue ribbon and now it’s someone else’s chance to win.’ ”Scalia uses a bourbon cream sauce atop her southern pecan pie, so it’s not ‘just your everyday, run-of-the-mill pecan pie.’ She also toasts the pecans ‘to bring out their flavor.’ ”For her apple pie, Scalia uses Granny Smith apples exclusively because they retain their shape and have a varying combination of tartness and sweetness. ‘I will often sample an apple to see how it tastes and if it’s too tart, then I’ll add a little more sugar. I’m constantly monitoring ingredients and making modifications.’ ”Scalia says a pie’s crust is the most important element ‘because it kind of cuts and complements the taste of the pie’s fruit.’ She uses the same crust recipe for each type of pie she makes. Her crust-making secrets include using Dasani water and putting ice cubes in all liquid ingredients. ”Born in Rome, Italy, and raised in Monroe, Louisiana, the adopted Scalia grew fond of the Palisades after visiting her aunt and uncle’s home when she was 16. After earning a B.S. in nursing (with a clinical specialty in maternal child medicine) from Northeast Louisiana University, she returned to Los Angeles in 1980 to work at St. John’s Hospital, until health complications forced her to bow out. ”’Cooking is a lot like nursing,’ Scalia says. ‘You’re really giving a part of yourself to what you’re doing.’ ”Although Scalia believes that much of her cooking aptitude is innate, she also credits her culinary skills to her mother. ‘My mom held me off cooking until I was 12 years old,’ says Scalia, who has two younger brothers. ‘All she let me do was salads until I begged her to let me use fire.’ ”In addition to being a talented cook, Scalia is also a gifted singer. In 2001, she was selected to sing the national anthem at the Fourth of July fireworks show after Palisades Americanism Parade Association (PAPA) judges deemed her a cappella rendition the best out of other recordings submitted. ”Although pies are her specialty, Scalia, who enjoys watching the Food Channel, can cook ‘anything Italian’ and hopes to master Asian cuisine next. She’s also entertaining the possibility of opening a small catering service. ”Contact: 454-7581.
T.A. Barron Explores Merlin’s Childhood
by JACK KUHLENSCHMIDT Special to the Palisadian-Post You never knew what Merlin was like’before Arthur’before the glory. T.A. Barron has solved that dilemma. That is what we learned when T.A. Barron, the renowned children’s fantasy author, came to visit the fourth through eighth grade students at St. Matthew’s Parish School on November 9. He also told us the thrill of being published and the push you get to become better when you get that dreaded rejection letter. ”Mr. Barron says that he has always loved writing, but not always made a career of it. When he was leading a successful managing career, he left that job just so he could write children’s books. He did this was because he felt a pull towards writing, since it was what made him truly happy. ”As well as being a successful author, he also likes to hike and spend time with his wife and five kids. As Barron says: ‘The world around us is full of wonder, mystery, and surprise. It is ours to protect’and also to explore.’ ”When he visited our school, I thought it was interesting that he had a theme for his speech. His theme was that you can go anywhere when you read books’down to the sea (referring to one of the books in his ‘Adventures of Kate Trilogy’), or back to Merlin’s time. T.A. Barron has proved that you can do this with his books. In T.A. Barron’s books, he always has a young hero who has to find something inside his heart. For example, in ‘The Lost Years of Merlin’ series, the famous to-be wizard has to find pieces of what he lost when he washed up on the shores of the magical isle of Fincayra. In one book he finds his name, in another his mother, in another he meets his father, and many other pieces of the life he once had but forgot. ”All of those events take place in the five-part series when Merlin was anything but the famous wizard he is known as. Students in the St. Matthew’s audience wanted to know why they had never heard anything about Merlin’s childhood until these books came out a couple of years ago? Mr. Barron says that when he was writing another book, he had to research Merlin and couldn’t find anything on his youth. So, Mr. Barron simply created Merlin’s childhood, one page at a time, for his book ‘The Merlin Effect.’ ”Mr. Barron also shared about his most recent work, part of a new trilogy, ‘The Great Tree of Avalon.’ If you have any interest at all I encourage you to go out and pick up one of T.A. Barron’s books. You might find something inside of yourself that no one else can see. ”(Editor’s Note: Jack Kuhlenschmidt, 12, is a seventh grade student at St. Matthew’s Parish School who has read T.A. Barron’s five-book Merlin Series.)
Face to Face with Don Bachardy

For a man who describes himself as very shy, Don Bachardy nonetheless engages almost daily in an act of extreme intimacy, often with strangers. These silent encounters, always held in daylight, last many hours and involve no physical contact. Bachardy is a portrait artist, and his work depends entirely on the presence of live models. Each work is completed in a single sitting, with the departure of the model registering with Bachardy as “the breaking of a spell.” Bachardy’s all-consuming focus produces paintings charged with great immediacy and intensity. These works go far beyond reproducing mere likenesses, probing deeply and unflinchingly into the interior world of each sitter. Sessions, lasting from two to as long as nine hours, require the sitter to remain absolutely still while maintaining eye contact with Bachardy throughout. “It gives me direct access to their energy,” the artist told the Palisadian-Post during a recent interview in his Santa Monica Canyon home and studio. “In fact, their energy helps me do the picture.” Virtually every day for the past 45 years, Bachardy, exceptionally fit and energetic at 70, has immersed himself in portraiture, a niche he’s occupied throughout his artistic career. “I’ve never found anything as varied or challenging as working with another person,” says Bachardy, who adds that he’s done enough landscapes and still lifes to know they don’t excite him nearly as much. An exhibition of Bachardy’s portraits entitled “Celebrities, Friends and Strangers,” largely composed of recent work, is currently on view at the Huntington Library in San Marino. As the show’s name suggests, Bachardy’s sitters fit every classification, but the celebrity list runs the gamut of “Who’s Who” in Los Angeles, past and present. A past-her-prime Bette Davis famously quipped “Yep, that’s the old bag” upon viewing Bachardy’s 1973 portrait of her. Governor Jerry Brown shunned convention by commissioning Bachardy to do his official portrait, which now hangs in the California State Capitol Building. Sir Laurence Olivier turned down a request by David Hockney for a sitting, making the session he agreed to with Bachardy a charmed and nervous-making occasion. Hitchcock agreed to a sitting, then died before it could happen. Bachardy faithfully keeps a journal, including detailed accounts of sittings with celebrities. These entries are reproduced in “Stars in My Eyes” (2000), a book that shows off Bachardy’s talent as a no-holds-barred raconteur in addition to being a superb draftsman. Entree into the world of the famous–especially prominent artists and literary figures–came about when the 18-year-old Bachardy met Christopher Isherwood, the celebrated expatriate British author who was 30 years his senior. The two became lifelong partners, living together on Adelaide in Santa Monica Canyon until Isherwood’s death in 1986. The young Bachardy was introduced to Isherwood’s friends, people like Aldous Huxley, Dorothy Parker, W. H. Auden, Ana’s Nin and Francis Bacon, many of whom later sat for portraits. Isherwood was Bachardy’s first live model, a happening that inspired the young artist to formally pursue studying art at Chouinard in his 20s. In fact, Isherwood became Bachardy’s most frequent subject over the next 33 years, with hundreds of drawings and paintings produced. On the day Isherwood died, Bachardy spontaneously decided to spend the day drawing his corpse. “He was both my first life subject and first death subject,” Bachardy recalls in “Stars in My Eyes.” “He always took such an interest in the work I was doing,” Bachardy says. “That kind of encouragement is golden.” Bachardy credits his artistic awakening, largely driven by Isherwood, already a well-established writer, as the saving grace of their relationship. “We both knew staying together depended upon my making something of myself.” The seeds of Bachardy’s talent were planted during childhood in Los Angeles when, mesmerized by the giant images of actors he saw on movie screens, he began to draw these same faces by copying photographs he saw in magazines. Later, he dreamed of becoming an actor, but recognized how the profession “would have cost him dearly” due to his inherent shyness and the chancy nature of the business. “I realize my fundamental craving to be an actor is in what I do,” says Bachardy in his characteristically gentle, well-spoken manner. “My work is really a form of impersonation. I have an instinctive ability to identify with my sitter, which comes from those early years of moviegoing when I identified with the actors on screen. My portraits are really self-portraits in costume.” Bachardy’s earliest works were pencil and ink washes. He switched to strictly ink drawings in the late ’70s, eventually moving on to color using acrylic paint on paper by the mid-1980s. “He has pulled out all the stops on what this medium can do,” says David Koslow, the artist’s agent, referring to the remarkable, almost watercolor-like effect Bachardy achieves with acrylic paint. Lately, the artist has experimented with using a colored ground as the backdrop for his portraits. Koslow casts Bachardy’s art as psychological portraiture. “Like John Singer Sargent’s great work, Don catches the sense of the private person behind the public mask.” Subjects often remark to Bachardy “I look so sad” when seeing their portrait. “People are accustomed to smiling for photographs,” Bachardy explains. “Something fascinating happens visually when a sitter becomes tired and loses that public face.” Koslow sees that quality of Bachardy’s work–an overriding mood of reflection and melancholy–as symbolic of “a generation of Americans consumed by worry and grief.” When forced to choose one feature, it is the mouth Bachardy finds most revealing and open to artistic interpretation. “The soul resides in the eye, but the mouth gives access to personality and character,” says the artist, who resists overanalyzing a process he considers overwhelmingly intuitive. “One of the strongest aspects of Don’s painting is that he is completely ‘in the moment,’ says longtime friend and fellow artist Karla Klarin. “Don’s work is clear and beautiful and one can see his journey in each painting.” “Celebrities, Friends and Strangers: Portraits by Don Bachardy” continues at the Huntington Library, 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino through February 6, 2005. The artist will conduct tours of the exhibition on January 13 and 20. Contact: (626) 405-2146.
Time Out with… Vlade Divac

Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Los Angeles Lakers center Vlade Divac has owned a home in Pacific Palisades since 1990 and has spent the off-seasons here with his family ever since. After seven productive years with the Lakers, two in Charlotte and six in Sacramento, Divac signed with the Lakers as a free agent on July 20, rejoining the team that drafted him out of the former Yugoslavia in 1989. A herniated disc in his lower back caused Divac to miss the first 11 games this season, but he returned Tuesday night in the Lakers’ win over Milwaukee at Staples Center. Palisadian-Post Sports Editor Steve Galluzzo interviewed Divac last week after his first practice at the Lakers’ training facility in El Segundo. PP: Why did you decide to rejoin the Lakers after so many years? VD: It was a quick decision. I honestly didn’t think I’d come back here. I thought I’d finish my career in Sacramento. But when my agent told me they weren’t going to re-sign me, I told him I wanted to be a Laker again. I got a few other offers for more money but I like living in L.A. and I saw a chance to come here and help make the Lakers a champion again. PP: Do you see any similarities between this Laker team and the one you played on before? VD: It’s hard to compare without having played a full season. The players are all different and the game is different. But with [Coach] Rudy Tomjanovich we’re trying to get back to the up-tempo style that the Lakers were known for back in the Showtime era. One thing that is the same is the level of expectation here. Everyone in a Laker jersey expects to win and that mentality still exists. PP: Is there any added pressure having to fill the shoes of Shaquille O’Neal? VD: I don’t worry too much about that. When I first came to the Lakers I had to replace Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, so this is nothing new. All I can do is go out there and play as well as I can. I’m not Shaq and I don’t think the fans expect me to be him. Fans just want to see us win and if I can help the team do that, they’ll be happy. PP: How will your role be different in your second stint with the Lakers? VD: It’s totally opposite. Last time I was the youngest player on a veteran team and now I’m the oldest player on a young team. Back then I was still learning the game and the other players had to teach me certain things. Now I have to be the teacher and I’m looking forward to that. We have a lot of talented guys like [back-up center] Chris Mihm. He’s a bright young man who knows how to play and hopefully I can help him in some way. PP: Who is the best player you’ve played with in your career? VD: I guess if I had to pick one guy I’d say Magic Johnson. He was a great leader and he made everyone on his team better. That’s what I expect now from Kobe. He’s capable of being that same type of player and he’s going to have to be if we’re going to be successful. I feel lucky that I’ll be able to say I played with two superstars like them.’ PP: What is the best team you’ve played on in the NBA? VD: Probably my second season with the Lakers in 1990-91. We got to the finals and lost to the Chicago Bulls but that team still had Magic Johnson, James Worthy, Sam Perkins, Byron Scott, A.C. Green and [current Lakers’ radio analyst] Mychal Thompson. Those Kings teams of a few years ago come close, but I’d have to say that Laker team was better because we accomplished the most. PP: Who is the toughest player you’ve had to defend in the NBA? VD: Right now, of course Shaquille O’Neal is the hardest player to guard in the league because of his size and his power. It’s very hard to get good position on him and it’s practically impossible to move him out of the paint. You have to play him real smart. Hakeem Olajuwon probably had the best moves of any big man I played against. Guys like David Robinson and Patrick Ewing were difficult to defend, too, because they could hit the jump shot. PP: What does it mean to be a Laker? How is it different from playing for another franchise? VD: It is definitely special. The Lakers have a special place in my heart for several reasons. First, because they drafted me. So I’m grateful to them for giving me that first opportunity. But even more than that, it’s the people who run the organization like [Owner] Jerry Buss and [General Manager] Mitch Kupchak. They were here back then and they are still here. It’s nice to see a lot of the same faces. That’s one of the big reasons I wanted to come back here. PP: How much longer do you want to play professionally? VD: That’s a question not for me but for these two legs of mine. It all depends on how long they can move me around. If everything works out, I’d like to play for a couple more years and finish my career the way I started’as a Laker.
Frost’s Book Brings Bobby Jones to Life
There’s an old saying that sequels can seldom top an original. But author Mark Frost hits a hole in one with ‘The Grand Slam: Bobby Jones, America, and the Story of Golf,’ which he discussed last Thursday night before a captivated gathering at Village Books (1049 Swarthmore). Frost’s latest work comes two years after he published ‘The Greatest Game Ever Played: Harry Vardon, Francis Ouimet, and the Story of Modern Golf,’ a riveting account of the 1913 United States Open in Brookline, Massachusetts. ‘While I was researching that book I learned that Francis Ouimet had a dramatic influence on Bobby Jones’ career,’ Frost recalled. ‘In fact, without Francis, Bobby might have given up the sport completely.’ Revisiting the life and career of a golfing icon, ‘The Grand Slam’ tells the tale of Jones’ historic grand slam when he won the British Amateur Championship, British Open, U.S. Open and finally the U.S. Amateur Championship over a span of four months in 1930. ‘What Bobby did that year was so remarkable,’ Frost said. ‘In my opinion, it’s the single greatest achievement in the history of the sport, even greater than Tiger Woods winning four consecutive majors.’ ‘Mark is a really great storyteller,’ said Palisadian Richard Abrams, who attended the book signing and had Frost autograph several copies. ‘I haven’t read this one but I read the first one and his style is terrific. He really puts you in the moment.’ Abrams is a six handicap golfer and plays four days a week at Riviera Country Club. Asked what he admired most about Jones after hearing Frost talk, he said it was Jones’ love of the game. ‘As great a player as he was, Bobby never made a cent playing golf’ Frost said. ‘And when he was stricken with a life-threatening disease, he gracefully told a friend ‘In our game, you play the ball where it lies.’ He was never bitter and didn’t want anyone to feel sorry for him.’ An avid golfer himself, Frost dedicated ‘The Grand Slam’ to his wife, Lynn, and their 16-month old son, Travis. Frost recently finished producing a Disney movie of ‘The Greatest Game Ever Played,’ expected to be released next year. Signed copies of Frost’s books are available at Village Books: 454-4063.