Playing it like a waffle iron
by chuckofish

We made it to another Friday! And without much cuddling, am I right?
My routine is down to the bare bones, the highlight of my day being a daily walk in the spring sunshine (if I’m lucky). Not much else going on besides work.
I did manage to record and then watch two movies starring Clifton Webb, whom I have always liked.

Mr. Scoutmaster (1953) is a comedy about an effete television star (Webb) whose ratings are on the decline because he doesn’t relate to children. Somehow he is convinced by the local Episcopal minister (Edmond Gwen) to become the new Scoutmaster of a troop of incorrigibles. Of course, Webb really gets into being a Scout, buying all the stuff and learning all the rules–remind you of someone?–and hilarity ensues. There is a subplot involving a neglected child who desperately wants to be a scout that is quite effecting and, if I had not been watching with the OM, I probably would have broken down several times and wept.
They knew how make you cry in a comedy back in the day. The kid (George Winslow) was very good and the perfect foil for Clifton Webb.
Anyway, I recommend this movie whole-heartedly. Interestingly, the scout troop includes a couple of African-American kids and at the Court of Honor at the end of the movie a band of mostly Asian Boy Scouts plays. Even in 1953 the diversity of the Boy Scouts was on display and (subtly) applauded.
I also watched The Man Who Never Was (1956), a British espionage film about a scheme to deceive the Nazis about the impending invasion of Italy. The intricate plot entails releasing a dead body just off the coast of Spain, where strong currents will almost certainly cause it to drift ashore in an area where the Germans will find it and the secret papers it carries.
I had seen it before and it is definitely worth a re-watch. Clifton Webb plays Royal Navy Lt. Commander Ewen Montagu, who devises Operation Mincemeat and sees it carried out. A pre- Ben-Hur Stephan Boyd plays an Irish spy who nearly foils the plan.
I wrote about Clifton Webb in an earlier post and included some other recommendations if you are interested.
I have also been reading some Raymond Chandler, who supplies some ready diversion to the person with a rather scattered concentration. (I refer to myself.)
“Some days I feel like playing it smooth. Some days I feel like playing it like a waffle iron.”
– Trouble Is My Business
Today I will make my weekly visit to the grocery store for “cornmeal and gun powder and hamhocks and guitar strings” and then it’s back to the virtual salt mine.
Hopefully I’ll get outside to enjoy the spring sunshine.

Be encouraged! “I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” –John 16:33

Oh man, I love everything in this–the Liz Climo cartoon, the Chandler quote (most days I’m a waffle iron), and I wish I could watch the movie recs! Happy Friday!
Great movie recommendations! I definitely take the waffle-iron approach to life 🙂
Love everything in this post! I need a cuddle!
[…] Matthew MacFadyen), no violence to speak of and no sex. It was refreshingly normal. Back in 2020, my DP posted about an earlier version of the story that I have not seen, the 1956 film The Man Who Never Was […]