Sunday, March 25, 2012

A Night on the Town, Tokyo, 1954

Two Drinks Each—Colorized detail of a photograph taken of my parents in a Tokyo nightclub in 1954. My dad was stationed in Japan in the early 1950s before being transferred to Germany where I was born in 1957. The entire photograph is great, see below, but this detail says a lot. Both of my parents are drinking what they always drank in later life, too, daiquiris for my mom and rum-and-cokes for my dad. I still have the tie he's wearing, so those colors are correct, but I guessed on the rest of the objects.

I was also able to identify my mother's Mikimoto pearl engagement ring, which I have in its original box. Pearls were definitely my mother's choice in jewelry all her life, be they necklaces, rings or brooches. I also recognize the Lucky Strikes cigarettes, their choice back then. I'm just surprised they're not housed in any of my parents many, many decorative cigarette cases. In fact, one of the more interesting "objets" in my collection is an unopened box of Lucky Strikes from the late 1940s, in a beautiful case from the Ivory Mart in New Delhi, India.

Original photo. My parents are on the left, next to a good friend of theirs, also in the Army. I'm guessing that this picture was taken by one of those classic nightclub photographers of that period.

5 comments:

  1. MY GOODNESS YOUR DAD WAS QUITE HANDSOME. NOW I KNOW WHERE YOU GET YOURS. MOM IS BEAUTIFUL ALSO.

    THANKS FOR SHARING YOUR MOM AND DAD WITH US TODAY.

    GRANNY

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  2. JUST SO YOU KNOW SOMEONE IS THINKING OF YOU.

    GOOD NIGHT CASEY.

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  3. Wow, you have the same jaw lines, eyes and eye brows.
    Your parents must have attracted a lot of attention, especially in those days.

    Did your dad met MacArthur?
    I saw his office when I was in Japan some 7 years ago.
    Time to go back!

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  4. You know, Woody, my dad was like so many of that generation after the war, they didn't talk about it much. I wish I had asked more questions, but he died when I was 28 so I hadn't matured enough to want to know about those years. I remember him saying that he wished MacArthur hadn't been "fired" and had been allowed to "finish" what he had started out to do. I think my Dad felt Viet Nam could have been avoided if MacArthur had kept his position. Not sure about that.

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