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PRESS & WEB
MELISSINOS: “A MINOR LEGEND IN THE CITY OF LEGENDS”
By Jason Schoonover
1978 - CANADA HERALD TRIBUNE
ATHENS- It’s not often that an individual becomes a tourist attraction,
but this is the case with the poet sandal maker of Athens’ flee
market, Stavros Melissinos, to describe him as modest
legend would be closer to the truth.
An internationally acclaimed poet in his own right, he is also the sandal
maker to the likes of Sophia Loren, who has been wearing
his products since she filmed “Boy on a Dolphin” in local
waters, so long ago nobody wants to remember, the Beatles,
Rudolph Nureyev, Margo Fontain, Jacqueline Onassis, Anthony
(Zorba, the Greek Tycoon) Queen, George Peppard, Ursula Andress
and the late Joseph Cotton and Garry Cooper.
With a clientele like that, he must have been doing something right.
Melissinos’ tiny, unpretentious shop lies in the shadow of the
Acropolis, adjacent to Monastiraki Square. There you
can see the colorful, confused congestion of stalls, carts and shops making
up the large flee market, where such touristoria as pounded brass pots
and pans, imitation statues of Athena and postcards are bartered for and
sold. In an area where the drachma isn’t what it used to be, and
where it’s often best to beware of Greeks bearing gifts for sale,
Melissinos stands out as a soft sell merchant and craftsman offering for
sale at a reasonable price a quality product he produced with his own
honest labor.
He is situated at 89 Pandrossou, that narrow street, lined with narrower
shops, that is largely depended on the vacationing foreigner attracted
to the Greek life style. There, among the clutter and the smell of leather,
Greece’s best-known poet, playwright and literary translator mellowly
plies his trade.
The subject of all the attention is a balding middle-aged man softening
a bit around the middle, but with the happy, uncluttered eyes of a child
and a face as soft as the calve’s leather he tools with deft sureness.
Since he begun writing poetry in 1953 Melissinos has published 10 books
of poetry, many of which have been translated abroad. His works are in
the Harvard and Oxford University Libraries. He has been the subject of
attention on the B.B.C., the three American networks and, recently. In
conjunction with a visit by Miss Canada, on our own CTV As well he has
written a number of plays and has translated the works of many literary
greats into Greek. “Greek is richer than other languages and
often the translations are better”, he says.
His best known work, the 1959 Melissinos Rubayat, of
which all 127 stanzas celebrate something close to the lips of many Greeks
–wine- is on the curriculum of a number of major American universities.
He even applies his early army days study in radio repair to his art.
“There is a similarity between mathematics and poetry. They’re
close”
His Poetry is lyrical, tends toward an Omar Kayyam romanticism, and is
at once philosophical and simple.
He has reached the level where one of his works, the play “Chastity
Belt”, is banned in Greece for political reasons –a fact of
which he is quite proud.
Why does a man of such renown continue to work at a regular job?
“A writer who does nothing but write”, he replies
“is like the moon which gives off some light, but it’s borrowed,
taken from the sun. A writer needs first hand experience, which only working
in an other field can give him. Otherwise he is writing what he has read
in other books”.
How did he begin?
“I started writing poetry in the army. A friend wrote a poem
to his little girl and he had trouble with it and brought it to me. It
was very bad”, He laughs. “I wrote it for him and
he showed it to his friends. They all liked it very much and asked me
to write poems for them. Everyone thinks I am very good and so I continue.
Much of it then was love poetry”.
The designs of his sandals, much like his poetry, which is often influenced
by Greek mythology and history, are based on the footwear of such notables
as Plato, Pericles and Helen, sometimes with a little adaptation by Melissinos.
“My father sold rubber-bottom sandals when he started the shop
in 1927 and so did I when I took over in 1954. Then one day a lady brought
a nice pair, like these and asks ‘can you make me another?’
For practice I make two and hang the other on the door outside. It was
sold in half an hour. I took that as a sign”, he laughs.
“I made two, for, six, eight. They all sold very fast. So I
started to make only this type and then other sandal makers started to
open shops here and make my sandals. They saw a sign too” And
he laughs that constant, quiet, happy laugh again.
He tells of the first of many meetings with the Beatles. It was in 1968.
“First of all one of them comes, the intellectual one… Lennon.
He told me he found my works somewhere. Then they all came here, like
the Seven Dwarfs”, he chuckles, imitating them lining into
the cramped shop.
“They were bodyguards but we had to close the door because their
followers would have wrecked everything. They all bought many pairs”.
“My kids asked me later why I didn’t take their autographs.
I say, they should ask for mine! I will be around long after the Beetles!”
He laughs again.
The poetry books, unlike the sandals that line the walls are not on display.
But they are for sale. Just make an inquiry and a book appears and he
will be only too happy to autograph it.
Travelers keep returning every few years to trade in their old sandals
for new from the approximately 32 styles available. They also come to
visit. To some it’s a pilgrimage of sorts – For Stavros Melissinos,
the Poet Sandal maker’s shop is one of those rare delightful finds.
Even the most jaded traveler concurs.
And anyway, where else can you find sandals created like a poem that make
you feel like Apollo?
Terra
magazine
Poetas
y filosofos (in Portuguese)
Stavros
Melissinos & Jackie Onassis
German
newspaper (in German)
Eikones
Cover
of the Greek magazine Eikones
Skandinavian
newspaper
En poetisk
sandalmager
www.igougo.com
But there’s always room for shoes!!! Right?
And not just any shoes. Meet Stavros Melissinos, poet, shoemaker, and
jewel of a man.
Melissinos has been in business perhaps twice as long as I’ve been
alive, and he still comes to his small shop daily, working strips of leather
and soles of rubber into wonderful sandals and shoes which age like a
fine Margeaux.
Melissinos and I have a shared love for Greek mythology (although I'll
defer to his knowledge any day!). Ancient Greek religion, literature,
and history serve as a major influence on his work both as a poet and
a shoemaker. Many of his sandal designs are reminiscent of footwear seen
on red- and black-figure vases.
I had two pairs made in a light tan leather that’s since darkened
into a rich golden brown. The first was a basic strappy pair I knew I
could wear with jeans back home in NY. And the other, my favourite, is
an Athena-inspired pair featuring long leather cords that wrap around
the ankle or calf up to the knee. Both have thin rubber soles, which are
shockingly durable.
I had a month-and-a-half and three countries remaining in my trip when
I bought the shoes. I wore them constantly for the rest of the summer,
walking cities, hiking ruins, and mushing them daily into an overstuffed
backpack. Both pairs have not only survived, but are still in excellent
condition, and they are more attractive and comfortable today (9 months
later) than before. One pair just survived constant soaking in Thai long
tail boats!
Stavros Melissinos and his shop were highlights of my Athens stay, and
I encourage anyone to visit him. His sandals are inexpensive enough (about
$18 per pair last summer) to buy as gifts, and he makes them small enough
even for toddlers.
http://www.igougo.com/planning/journalEntryActivity.asp?JournalID=8679&
EntryID=15640
Matt Barrett /Athens Survival Guide
http://www.athensguide.com/poet.html
EVEN MORE SITES:
http://www.talkinbroadway.com/rialto/past/2000/7_27_00.html
http://myogleblog.blog-city.com/index.cfm?d=17&m=7&y=2003
http://www.greece-ontheweb.com/region_template.asp?lid=2&pcode=89090
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http://www.athensguide.com/poet.html
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http://www.athensinfoguide.com/shopping_poet.htm
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