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Feb 22, 2019
This week’s themeWords with presidential connections This week’s words OK sockdolager teddy bear watergate throttlebottom
VP Throttlebottom, Prez John P. Wintergreen, and the beauty contest winner Diana Devereaux
in Of Thee I Sing
Eureka Theatre, San Francisco Photo: DavidAllenStudio.com This week’s comments AWADmail 869 Next week’s theme Tosspot words A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargthrottlebottom
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A purposeless incompetent in public office.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Alexander Throttlebottom, a Vice Presidential character in
Of Thee I Sing, a 1931 musical comedy. Earliest documented use: 1932.
NOTES:
In honor of Presidents Day, this week we’ve been looking at words
with presidential connections. It’s about time we paid our
dues to Vice Presidents, too. VPs, by their very nature, are
meant to play second fiddle
though it’s not uncommon to
find an eminence grise in
that office. Here’s how the term throttlebottom came to represent VPs and
other similar (mostly) harmless figures. The first musical comedy to win the Pulitzer Prize, Of Thee I Sing, is a brilliant political satire that gave us today’s word. In this masterly operetta (music: George Gershwin; lyrics: Ira Gershwin; libretto: George Kaufman and Morris Ryskind), presidential candidate John P. Wintergreen runs a political campaign based on the theme of love. His National Party sponsors a beauty contest, with Wintergreen to marry the winner. Instead, Wintergreen falls in love with Mary Turner, a secretary at the pageant, and marries her on the day of his inauguration. Diana Devereaux, the contest winner, sues President Wintergreen for breach of contract; France threatens to go to war, since Devereaux is of French descent; and Congress impeaches him. Wintergreen points out the United States Constitution provision that when the President is unable to perform his duty, the Vice President fulfills the obligations. VP Throttlebottom agrees to marry Diana and forever etches his name in the language. USAGE:
“[Lyndon B. Johnson] wanted to be Vice President, both to position himself
as JFK’s successor someday and because he believed that he could convert
any job -- even Throttlebottom’s -- into a power base.” James MacGregor Burns; The Crosswinds of Freedom; Knopf; 1989. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Avoid the necessity of those overgrown military establishments, which,
under any form of government, are inauspicious to liberty, and which are to
be regarded as particularly hostile to republican liberty. -George
Washington, 1st US president, general (22 Feb 1732-1799)
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