Sponsor
 
A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor
Greetings:(11/18) Tom Woodside, Happy Birthday My Dear! Thrilled that we can celebrate with a ...  >>

KISS ME HELLO

THIS WEEK'S SHOW


November 22, 2008

This week on A Prairie Home Companion, live from the Fitzgerald Theater, we've got the inimitable singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and percussive dancer Kristin Andreassen; and a last minute addition, the reigning Miss Minnesota, Kaylee Grace Unverzagt will be with us as well. Also on the show, Jearlyn and Jevetta Steele together as The Steele Sisters. And as always, we'll round out the stage with The Royal Academy of Radio Actors; Tim Russell, Sue Scott, and Tom Keith; The Guy's All-Star Shoe Band with maestro Richard Dworsky, and much more.

POST TO THE HOST
Send your post to Garrison Keillor >>

HOW ABOUT LIVELY?

Post to the Host:
I loved your column on Barack Obama but what in the world did you mean describing Michelle Obama as "jumpy"?

Mary O.
St. Louis MO

--

She has a lot of physical energy, a lot of bounce. I don't mean she's nervous or anxious, just that she has a quickness and grace. I liked the word "jumpy" but can see how it might be taken another way. No, she is very cool, very much herself, not self-conscious, but like a lot of young people she hops and bops when she moves. It's going to be fun to have that young family in the White House, don't you think? That graceful way they walked out on stage in Grant Park on Election Night — didn't stride, didn't jump around or wave their arms, moved with quiet joy and grace, aware of how much the night meant to so many people. I truly admire that gracefulness and humility about them. So — okay, I won't say "jumpy" again. How about lively?

Permalink | Comments (1)

THE BRAMBLE AND THE ROSE

A couple listeners wrote in to identify the author of GK and Andra Suchy's duet of "The Bramble and the Rose" (listen | watch video).

Garrison,
On PHC this week you said you "Wish you knew who wrote this song," the Bramble and the Rose. According to Jody Stecher and Kate Brislin's CD "Our Town," it was written by Barbara Keith. It's a great CD, by the way, and I highly recommend it. Enjoyed the show.

Thanks.
Doug O.

Post to the Host:
I enjoyed arrangement of "The Bramble And The Rose" which Garrison mentioned that he wished he had written. It was written many years ago by Barbara Keith from Greenfield Massachusetts, a prolific song writer and performer who, along with her husband Doug Tibbles and his son John Tibbles, make up the group The Stone Coyotes.

Joe

Permalink | Comments (3)

YOU DESERVE NO LESS

Mr. Keillor,
After many years of listening, my wife and I will make our first trip to the Fitzgerald this weekend. We've never been to St. Paul before — what should we see on our way to the show, and where should we eat after?

It's our 15th wedding anniversary, which means it should be someplace special, but because 15 years on has us brimming with kids, pets and monthly payments of all kinds, not too expensive.

Liam C.
Milwaukee

--

Liam, we are deeply honored that you and your wife would go through all the rigmarole of arranging child care and farming out pets and make the long trek to St. Paul at a cold and dreary time of year, and though you are a proud man and likely to put up a fight, we are going to twist your arm and make you accept a gift certificate to the St. Paul Grill in downtown St. Paul. It's a good restaurant and the staff is friendly and you'll like it. After fifteen years, you deserve no less. The Grill is a bright spot downtown and from a window table you can see the statue of F. Scott Fitzgerald in Rice Park. He is standing, coat over his arm, as if waiting for his ride. Beyond him is the old courthouse with its lighted clock tower and across the square from it is the public library. On the hill above and beyond the courthouse you can spot the lighted dome of the St. Paul Cathedral up on Ramsey Hill with Selby Avenue running alongside it. If, in the afternoon, you want to climb that hill and walk up Selby, you'd want to step into Nina's Coffeeshop on the corner of Western & Selby to warm up, and if you go to the bookstore in the cellar below the coffeeshop, you will find a gift certificate in your name so that you can purchase a decent St. Paul guidebook to tell you more about the city. There's a nice little guidebook to Fitzgerald sites in town, if that interests you, one of which is W.A. Frost's across the street, a restaurant that used to be a drugstore where the impoverished young Fitzgerald used to buy his cigarettes in 1919 while he was working on the novel that made him famous. Or you can spend it on anything you like. I own the bookstore, Common Good Books, so it's no problem. Enjoy your time and my best to you both.

Permalink | Comments (24)

Read more Posts to the Host >>
Send your post to Garrison Keillor >>
Have a specific question or suggestion about the show? >>

Photos from the show
November 15, 2008
Fitzgerald Theatre, St. Paul, MN
(View slideshow in a new window)

Get Adobe Flash player
Audio Highlights

"The Bramble and The Rose" - GK and Andra Suchy
"How She Could Sing the Wildwood Flower" - Emmylou Harris
GK and Emmylou talk about her animals (Web site)
"Greazy Biscuit Breakdown" - Guy's All-Star Shoe Band
"Nightbird Eyes" - John Koerner and Shoe Band
Powdermilk Biscuit Break


The Archive

Recently added

November 15th, 2008 >>

All about the November 15th show from the Fitz, with Emmylou Harris, Spider John Koerner, Andra Suchy, and more.





Garrison Keillor talked about poetry, writing and his own relationship with the library at this month's "Talk of the Stacks" series at the Hennepin County Library in downtown Minneapolis. Minnesota Public Radio's Midday aired the speech.

Listen

The Man on the Radio in the Red Shoes

This independent feature-length documentary film by Peter Rosen goes behind the scenes at A Prairie Home Companion, and inside the imagination of the man who created it.

GK at Feinstein's in December

Garrison Keillor will be taking up a Sunday residence at Feinstein's in New York this December. He'll sing romantic songs, and maybe tell a New York story or two. With pianist Richard Dworsky.

LIBERTY

Liberty:A Novel of Lake Wobegon A national holiday in Lake Wobegon is always gaudy and joyful. But what is going on between Clint Bunsen and Miss Liberty?
Everyone is here—Pastor Ingqvist, the Sons of Knute, Sister Arvonne of Our Lady of Perpetual Responsibility and her ocarina band, the Norwegian bachelor farmers, Dorothy and the Chatterbox Café, Wally in the Sidetrack Tap—as crowds converge on the little town to celebrate American independence, even as the chairman of the event broods on the great question of the day: Shall we struggle on valiantly here or shall we burst the bonds and find beautiful life in the golden west?

RECENT COLUMNS: SOMETHING TO READ

The View from Mrs. Sundberg's Window

Take a Few Risks Along the Way
(11/18/2008)

Listened to the show Saturday and it was not bad. It was, once again, a little stretch of calm on the wild way. With the election and winter's arrival and the deer hunting opener all in the last week or so, it's tempting to say to heck with it all and hole up in the kitchen and bake all night and sleep all day...



RUSS RINGSAK

Tulsa Tonic
(11/18/2008)

A couple of highlights worth mention from the Mudcats Montana tour this last summer: We played in Butte where my brother Mick lives, at the Silver Dollar Saloon — he lives in the city but not at the saloon — on a Monday night...



A COLUMN BY GARRISON KEILLOR

Sitting On Top of the World
(11/11/2008)

Be happy, dear hearts, and allow yourselves a few more weeks of quiet exultation. It isn't gloating, it's satisfaction at a job well done...



THE JOKE MACHINE

PRETTY GOOD JOKES

Q: Have you heard my new statistics joke?

A: Probably.

This joke was sent in by Doyle S. of Eugene, OR. Thanks Doyle!

Your Invitation to Lake Wobegon

SCHEDULE/TICKETS

We'll be on stage at the Fitzgerald Theater November 21 and 22. Our post-Thanksgiving broadcast comes from Cincinnati on November 29. Then we finish out 2008 in the Big Apple, with shows at New York City's Town Hall on December 5, 6, 12, 13, 19, 20 and 27.

Subscribe: Newsletters and Podcast

Keep up with our every move by subscribing to our weekly newsletter.

Get a weekly dose of the News from Lake Wobegon with the podcast of GK's signature monologue.


YOU WANT FRIES WITH THAT?

English Majors CD Set Scripts and bits from A Prairie Home Companion celebrate the secret society of men and women who possess excellent spelling and punctuation skills. (You know who you are.) Selections include "The Six-Minute Hamlet," a tribute to Emily Dickinson, a Guy Noir adventure that exposes an MFA scam, a riveting "Professional Organization of English Majors" drama, and guests Billy Collins, Robert Bly, Roy Blount Jr., and Calvin Trillin.

FIRST PERSON

share your stories from home
Listener-submitted short stories or poems about their homes or lives — or whatever they fancy. Here are the latest:
How to Listen | Complete Show Archive | Contact us | The Writer's Almanac
  • News/Talk
  • Music
  • Entertainment