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Favorite mail of the week: A welcome face from the past

In this business, you learn to be wary of hand-addressed mail that arrives at your workplace, especially when the world "personal" has been penned in the corner and when there's no return address. Such items tend to be filled with something less than gushing compliments. (People are far more apt to contact you to complain about what you've written than say they enjoyed reading it.)

Early in my career in Florida, a piece of mail with the above-mentioned characteristics contained not just a block-lettered diatribe against my reviews of the local symphony, but, for good measure, an actual "Palmetto bug" (as Floridians like to call the gigantic cockroaches that inhabit the area -- one of them seems a gazillion sizes larger than the ordinary household vairtey up North). Luckily for me (less so for the poor creature), only the corpse remained after the letter had been through the mail, but the shock value was still pretty high.

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Then there was the time when, after writing about one of my favorite conductors, Wilhelm Furtwangler, and his controvserial years during the Third Reich, I got a 'personal,' no-return-address letter from a neo-Nazi organization suggesting that I should embrace the greatness of Hitler and his breed. Ah, but I digress.

As I said, I usually expect the worst. Such was the case last week, when a plain white, 9x12 envelope arrived, with my name and Sun address neatly hand-written, the word "Personal" on the side, and no return address. But my face brightened considerably when I opened it and discovered

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two photos from the dynamic comic actress Ruth Buzzi of "Laugh-In" fame.

She had somehow spotted my reference to her in a review of "On the Verge" at Rep Stage, and that, I guess, was enough to merit a response. All I had done was mention that Natasha Staley, one of the three excellent actresses in this production of Eric Overmyer's imaginative play, reminded me of Ruth Buzzi -- partly a coincidental physical resemblance, partly the amusing way she carried out stage business. (To tell the truth, I didn't think I'd even get that allusion past the editors, since it does rather date some of us.)

Well, many, many thanks, Ruth Buzzi, for the great surprise -- and for all the laughs over the years. I hope you're doing well. I also hope you don't mind my sharing your pictures with my valued blog readers, but I couldn't resist:

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