The script makes no sense. This book brought tears to my eyes, joy to my heart, and a wicked longing to have been there during the earth-shattering event. But he is also still staked to the family business - a dumpy Catskills motel called the El Monaco that is being run into the ground by his overbearing parents, Jake and Sonia Teichberg Henry Goodman and Imelda Staunton. It was tough enough being Jewish - the antisemitism was rampant. He graduated from with a Bachelor of Fine Arts. The property was soon expanded into a motel. It was tough enough being Jewish - the antisemitism was rampant.
When the actual festival starts, he is back running the motel where he supposedly delivered a motorcyclist's baby in the parking lot. I found his home life, and his childhood pretty heartbreaking. The world changed for gays in the subsequent years, for the better, but has a long way to go. The world Interesting I saw the movie first which was pretty amazing. Tiber describes being present at the Stonewall bar as the riots commenced, and he describes the experience as a liberating one that changed his life. You never care about the main character and his relationship with his parents and Dimitri Martin never conveys anything but a blank look.
The spirit wins out in all respects over the flesh, though, and this tale is a triumphant and joyous one. Tiber didn't actually attend Woodstock because he was too busy running his parents' motel. The climate of fear and hatred in those times civil rights; gay rights; Vietnam; women's rights; the sexual revolution, etc. I've always been interested in the subject. But this is not a moral taleโin fact, the more conservative readership might even regard parts of the narrative as leaning towards the immoral, or even the amoral. Elliot, whose parents owned an upstate New York motel, was working in Greenwich Village in the summer of 1969. Perhaps most disappointing of all is that when the actual festival finally starts, Tiber never got to it.
My parents, having been alive during Woodstock but not living in the area, could still recall the news of the traffic heading to Bethel and how many people had experienced it. Compared to the weirdly dramatic emoting of his parents, it is, as one reviewer said, This movie is an unqualified disaster. It is not about Santana, Jimi Hendrix, Joan Baez, Crosby, Stills and Nash, The Grateful Dead and all of the dozens of other musicians with a message of the time. Elliott's indifference to rock and roll forces the filmmaker to create a period piece movie without a glut of corresponding music as shorthand for establishing time and place. He socialized with the likes of Truman Capote, Tennessee Williams, and photographer Robert Taking Woodstock is the funny, touching, and true story of Elliot Tiber, the man who was instrumental in arranging the site for the original Woodstock Concert.
As it turns out his parents own an old rundown motel in Bethel, New York where he also was the elected president of the Chamber of Commerce. Tiber left Bethel shortly after Woodstock and soon moved to , where he became a movie set designer. My family has been going there for over 50 and some witnessed Woodstock first hand. That's because Elliott Teichberg Demitri Music wafts over a lake teeming with skinny-dippers. The one shot of the mass of people is unconvincing.
It mostly gives him an excuse for more exaggerated stories about wild parties and battles with the locals and various stereotypical baddies. I love hearing my grandparents talk about the weeks when all the hippies invaded town. You never care about the main character and his relationship with his parents and Dimitri Martin never conveys anything but a blank look. There's also some drinking, sometimes to excess, in party situations. So you get page after page of a weird combination of gay celebrity name-dropping and bondage.
He even says he doesn't remember a single detail of what he did following his first acid trip. Here were these creative, talented people who were either famous or soon-to-be famous and were just as vulnerable, confused and unhappy as he. Many thought it would be about the glamour of Woodstock which it is not. A graphic tale of Elliot Tiber's coming-of-age in New York City in the 1960s and his involvement in the Woodstock concert via his work at the El Monaco-a hotel in White Lake where Woodstock Ventures and hundreds of hippies descended to camp out in the weeks and days leading to the historic musical event. It was enjoyable but not what I was expecting. I did love his parents' hotel from Hell in the Catskills. But he is also still staked to the family business - a dumpy Catskills motel called the El Monaco that is being run into the ground by his overbearing parents, Jake and Sonia Teichberg Henry Goodman and Imelda Staunton.
Tiber is gay, and he lived what he describes as a double life, pretending to be straight during his weekends helping his parents in Bethel, while living an openly gay life in New York City. Gays tended to quietly accept their fate at the time, Tiber says, but that all changed after the , which occurred at a bar in Greenwich Village on June 28, 1969. He painted a clear picture of feeling unloved, uncomfortable in his own skin, and never really knowing or understanding who he was or what he wanted. Compared to the weirdly dramatic emoting of his parents, it is, as one reviewer said, that they are not in the same movie. I would go to Woodstock and would be there for the fall of the Berlin Wall.
The close-minded try to fend off a societal shift by attempting to cancel the festival, but a determined generation prevails. Along with this book I recommend another book I read on the topic, The Road to Woodstock by Michael Lang and Holly George-Warren. Maybe some of people actually experiencing the concert as an attendee instead of one of the people who made it happen. But, the breakdown of how Woodstock happened, how it ended up in Bethel, how they managed to pull it off despite the challenges, is really, really good reading! That's because Elliott Teichberg Demitri Martin is always hanging around his parents, even after he takes his first tab of acid. Ang Lee does a great job of evoking that place and time. He could have left out the graphic descriptions of his sexploits and the dropping of names of people with whom he had liaisons, or could have if he'd pursued it.