Posted By Daniel W. Drezner Share

Many years ago, at an extended family vacation, my mother insisted that she had seen the actress Christine Baranski while riding on a Bonanza bus between Hartford and Manhattan.  While she was quite inststent about it, the bus part sounded a little odd to the rest of the family.  A star of stage and screen on a Bonanza bus?  It seemed implausible.  For the rest of the vacation, therefore, my family had some fun with my mother, repeatedly:
  • Asking my mother when her hallucinations about Christine Baranski had started;
  • Insisting that Christine Baranski must be stalking my mother, and that at that very moment she ight be right around the corner;
  • Ending any story with, "and then, wouldn't you know it, Christine Baranski showed up -- in a bus!" 
I bring this all up because today I received an e-mail from my mother about this Ron Dicker story in the Hartford Courant.  It opens with the following sentence: 
Christine Baranski heard she got the part in the film version of "Mamma Mia!" while riding a Bonanza bus from New York to home in Connecticut.
I hereby officially apologize to my mother for ever doubting that she saw Christine Baranski on a Bonanza bus.  Sorry, Mom.
 

DAVID PINTO

11:53 AM ET

July 14, 2008

Kudos to Christine for being

Kudos to Christine for being energy efficient!

 

US GRANT

12:18 PM ET

July 14, 2008

Who is Christine Baranski?

Who is Christine Baranski?

 

ALKALI

7:25 PM ET

July 14, 2008

I saw Christine Baranski at

I saw Christine Baranski at the Broadway revival of The Crucible a couple of years ago. She was unaccompanied, and taking notes.

Perhaps everyone has seen Christine Baranski at least once; it's just that not everyone realizes it at the time.

 

ALASKA JACK

5:26 AM ET

July 15, 2008

Good story. My mom grew up

Good story.

My mom grew up in Iowa, and had a cherry tree in her backyard. Us kids all grew up in Alaska, where of course we never saw fruit-bearing trees. So every time she would start to mention the cherry tree, we would all jeer. "Oh SURE mom ... FRUIT growing on TREES ... riighhttt..." and cue the exaggerated eye-rolls, or alternately look at each other sadly shaking our heads and making the twirly-ear "crazy" gesture.

Good ol' mom.

- Alaska Jack

 

Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.

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