Archive for the ‘emily post’ Category

Re: improvisation with emily. post responses to me.

May 18, 2010 - 8:42 am 25 Comments

Improv in Class, 11/6/08

So, due to the tight schedule at the studio I work for, I hardly have time for things like this with my kids. Well, today a bunch of kids missed class, so I chose not to work on our competition dance and use the time to improve upon our improv!!

Enjoy!!

I’d LOVE some helpful hints for getting my kids to really move… a lot of them got out of the comfort zone believe it or not… before when I would say improv, they would all give me tricks, leaps and turns. Today, they didn’t do that, and I was so thrilled. They are finally GRASPING what it means to dance and not show a skill every 2 seconds. But yeah, anything to get them to reach even FARTHER out of their box would be great.
And if you like someone, say so! I love to hear your opinions.

Duration : 0:8:9

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I need help with a paragraph on emily post, what type of stuff she worte and a little about her that’s it.

May 16, 2010 - 3:16 pm 2 Comments


For many years a leading authority on socially correct etiquette from birth to burial, Emily Price Post (1873-1960) provided solutions to social problems. With a name synonymous with proper manners, she was a successful author, daily newspaper columnist, and radio commentator.

Born into a wealthy, socialite Eastern family, the date of birth variously reported as October 3, 27, or 30, 1873, Emily Price was the only child of Bruce Price, a distinguished Baltimore architect, and Josephine Lee Price. She was educated at home and attended Miss Graham’s finishing school in New York where her family had moved. She grew up in an era of footmen, servants, chaperones, and cotillions. A popular debutante, she married society banker Edwin Main Post in 1892 and had two sons, Edwin M. Jr. (1893) and Bruce Price (1895).

The Posts drifted apart, and although society frowned on divorce at that time her husband’s infidelity caused the marriage to end in a divorce in 1905. She asked no alimony since there had been a small crash in the stock market in which her husband had suffered a severe financial reversal. To supplement a small income and support herself and her sons, Emily Post wrote short stories which were published in the popular fiction magazines Ainslie’s and Everybody’s. She also produced several novels, the first–The Flight of a Moth–about a young American widow attracted to an unscrupulous Russian nobleman, which was published in 1904.

As a successful writer and a woman of social position she was encouraged by an editor at Funk and Wagnalls publishers to write a book on etiquette. Emphasizing the social graces, she wrote Etiquette–The Blue Book of Social Usage. First published in 1922, it quickly became a best seller, going through ten revisions and 89 printings and bringing her fame and fortune.

Post’s guiding precept was that good manners began with consideration for the feelings of others and included good form in speech, knowledge of proper social amenities, and charm of manner. She believed that there was a right or best way to do almost everything and that that was the way that pleased the greatest number of people and offended the fewest. Before her book had been out a month readers deluged her with questions the book had not addressed, and these formed the basis of later revisions. Originally written for the newly rich who presumably wanted to live, entertain, and converse like the wealthy, the heroine of later editions was "Mrs. Three-In-One," a wonder woman who performed the functions of cook, waitress, and charming hostess at small, informal dinner parties without a maid. Post also started a syndicated column of questions and answers which appeared in 150 newspapers and received as many as 26,000 letters annually at her New York office in addition to those sent to newspapers in other cities. During the 1930s she had her own radio program three times weekly which continued for eight years.

Although her advice on social behavior changed over the years, her Victorian upbringing made her reluctant to part, in later editions of the book, with the chaperone. She adhered to an earlier convention that considered it improper to visit a man alone in his apartment or to go on overnight automobile trips. Her "Blue Book," which was the American standard of etiquette for decades, was reported to be second only to the Bible as the book most often not returned or stolen from libraries.

Emily Post maintained her social position, travelled extensively in Europe, and always spent the hot summer months away from New York City at a home in Tuxedo Park, New York (designed and built by her father) and later in life at Edgartown, Martha’s Vineyard, in a summer home she remodelled. Besides her writings on etiquette, she wrote The Emily Post Cook Book (1951); The Personality of a House (1930), partly based on her experiences rebuilding and remodeling her summer home at Martha’s Vineyard; Children Are People (1940), much of it derived from hours she spent with her grandson; How To Behave Though a Debutante (1928); and other books. In 1946 she formed the Emily Post Institute to study problems of gracious living and relinquished a great deal of her work to the staff of the institute, headed by her surviving son, Edwin.

She remained active throughout her life, awakening early, but remaining in bed to devote time to letters and the daily column. She always made her first appearance of the day at luncheon, which was served promptly at one. The arbiter of American etiquette, whose name became a household word, died in her New York apartment on September 25, 1960, at the age of 86.

FURTHER READINGS
A book about her adult life, Truly Emily Post (1961), is a warm and sentimental remembrance written by her son Edwin. A biography appears in Notable American Women: The Modern Period (1980). Among many articles, see James Cate, "Keeping Posted," Univ. of Chicago Mag. (May/June 1972); Hildegarde Dolson, "Ask Mrs. Post," Reader’s Digest (April 1941); and Newsweek (April 25, 1955 and October 10, 1960). Her obituary appeared in the New York Times on September 27, 1960.

SOURCE CITATION
"Emily Price Post." Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols. Gale Research, 1998.
Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2008. http://galenet.galegroup.com.ezp.pasadena.edu/servlet/BioRC

Emily Post in UK – Germany – France?

May 13, 2010 - 7:05 am 1 Comment

Does anyone know if there exist a similar book as Emily post etiquette in UK, Germany or France?

Debretts in the uk

Playing Through with Peter Post: Golf Etiquette Episode 1

May 11, 2010 - 11:45 pm 1 Comment

Golf etiquette of walking on another golfer’s putting line.

Duration : 0:2:39

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i bought Etiquette by Emily Post… but is this book for the middle class?

May 8, 2010 - 4:02 pm 3 Comments

do rich people follow a different set of manners? while the middle class and other classes share the same ones?

No. Etiquette is supposed to be followed by all the classes. She wrote that book for everyone.

Retro Etiquette: Emily Post – Indie Food Channel

May 8, 2010 - 12:54 pm No Comments

Cool Classic Dining and Etiquette tips from Emily Post. Featured on the Indie Food Channel. http://www.IndieFoodChannel.com. Like it? Submit your own food video to the Indie Food Channel group or website.

Duration : 0:0:49

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Emily Post “Table Manners”

May 7, 2010 - 5:12 pm 25 Comments

An instructional video from the Emily Post institute instructing on Table Manners and Proper Etiquette at the dinner table. Narrated by the late great Mrs. Emily Post herself. A great refresher course of those who wish to improve his or her table manners.

Duration : 0:10:8

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Would Emily Post say it is better to use the word " wealthy"rather than "rich ?

May 7, 2010 - 5:12 pm 3 Comments

My step mother heard me say "wealthy" and said it is much more "correct" to say "rich." When my mother was alive she would say "never say "rich" use the word wealthy." UGH!So, what would someone like Emily Post say?(Just curious)

I don’t know about Emily Post, but prosperous might be more tactful than either wealthy or rich. In sociological terms, rich refers to earned prosperity and wealth refers to a degree of inherited prosperity that enables the recipient to contribute voluntarily rather than work to earn enough to live in comfort. Comfortable is another tactful way to refer to someone who is prosperous financially whether they have earned or inherited.