collisionwork: (escape)
The time here in Portland, ME passes productively. I don't know what it is -- the increased space, the lack of distracting cats, a generally more relaxed mood -- but I get more work done here in less time than I do at home. Even with TV, which we don't have at home.

The production draft for George Bataille's Bathrobe is nearly finished; I'm hoping to be able to send it to the proposed cast tonight (I have to ask two new people if they'll be in that show, too; my original choices couldn't do it).

Some good constructive work on Spacemen from Space has happened. I won't be doing much more than outlining and structuring Spacemen here, maybe making up some dialogue fragments. I have a bunch of research material for that (I found a cheap DVD set containing 5 full serials) which is on the way to Brooklyn, and I want to go through all of that material before writing the show proper. Berit and I have been spitballing ideas and improvising dialogue together, and I have a better handle on the tone of the show.

I've set up a first reading for A Little Piece of the Sun for later this month (still need to cast one part, the young Andrei Chikatilo, for that one).

I have to get ahold of the three people I asked about being in Blood on the Cat's Neck who haven't responded to see if they're in or not, and if not, move on and finish casting it and set up a first reading.

And I've been able to have time to enjoy a little TV and some rented movies -- the Batman & Robin serial, Tom Schiller's Nothing Lasts Forever, the "Mystery Disk" from the David Lynch Lime Green Box Set (lots of interesting bits and pieces there), Von Trier's Europa (aka Zentropa) and Guy Madden's My Winnepeg (the last two are a GREAT double bill with lots of echoes). I've now got Samuel Fuller's White Dog and Fassbinder's Ali: Fear Eats the Soul to get through (I've seen almost no Fassbinder - only Veronica Voss - and have had little interest in doing so, but now that I'm directing a play of his I feel I have to get a couple of his movies in).

And meanwhile, back in the iPod, there are 26,107 tracks, and these ten came up this morning:

1. "Big Jack TV Show Promo – Buckinghams/Selective Seven/Critters" - TV Promo - Psychedelic Promos & Radio Spots, vol. 7
2. "Vanishing Girl - The Dukes Of Stratosphear - Chips From The Chocolate Fireball
3. "Slip, Slip, Slippin'" - Lou Millet - Sin Alley, Vol. 2: Red Hot Rockabilly 1955 - 1962
4. "Pirate Girls" - The Pinkos - The Pinkos
5. "Way Down In The Hole (live)" - Tom Waits - Big Time
6. "I Wanna Love Him So Bad" - Jelly Beans - Beat of the Pops 16
7. "Regime Of Coincidence, State Of Gravity" - Laibach - Kapital
8. "The Grass Is Greener" - Wall Of Voodoo - Happy Planet
9. "Rich Kids" - Rich Kids - Ghosts of Princes in Towers
10. "Prescription Blues" - Pajo - 1968

Of course, while I brought the camera up, I forgot the cable to connect it to the computer, so no photos from up here. Here's a leftover of Berit and Moni (two fuzzy heads) back home . . .
Getting the Requested Hug

So here's a cute cat video to fill out the "Friday Cat Blogging" part of the post -- kittens on a Roomba:


And for additional video fun, if you haven't yet seen this video of little David returning from the dentist after a tooth extraction, feeling and showing the effects of the medication he was given, here it is:


And a lot of people are making fun of the omnipresent commercials for the "Snuggie," billed as a "blanket with sleeves, and looking pretty much like a robe put on backwards. Honestly, I'm with Berit -- when we first saw the commercials, she said, "I can't decide if that's the smartest thing I've ever seen, or the stupidest." As we're people who like to snuggle under a blanket on a couch while reading books, we actually understand the attraction of building sleeves into a blanket.

But we also understand those who fall down on the "stupidest thing ever" side, like the people who made this:


And if you'd like to hear a President of the United States (not Richard Nixon) cuss like a sonovabitch, go on over to the Boston Phoenix's site, where you can download - HERE - some brief excerpts from Obama's audiobook of Dreams from My Father, where the then-future President quotes and imitates a foul-mouthed friend, "Ray," and doesn't spare the listener any of Ray's colorful vernacular.

Do as I've done - download the soundbites and drop them into your iPod to pull out and play in party mixes!

collisionwork: (chiller)
Damn.

Mr. Erich Lee Purkhiser, better and more properly known to the world as Lux Interior, lead singer of The Cramps, partner and/or husband of Cramps guitarist Miss Poison Ivy for 37 years, 3-D photography fanatic (most Cramps album covers are actually 3-D photos by Lux), possible coiner of the term "psychobilly," passed away this morning due to an heart condition in Glendale, California at 4.30 am. He had turned 60 this past October (UPDATE: Suddenly his birthyear has changed on a number of websites, and it appears he just turned 62 in October).

There's been a lot of change in the lineup of The Cramps over the years, apart from Lux and Ivy, but without both of them present, I'm pretty sure, that's it, no more Cramps. So here's four videos featuring six songs from across their career. Hope this gives you the taste for more; there's lots of it out there. Enjoy.

"Bikini Girls With Machine Guns":


"Muleskinner Blues":


"What's Inside a Girl?" / "Can Your Pussy Do The Dog?" / "The Crusher":


"Naked Girl Falling Down The Stairs":


Vaya con dios, Lux. Best wishes to Miss Ivy, hope she's okay.

collisionwork: (welcome)
Matt Gray has passed on news I'd missed regarding a proposed amendment to the economic stimulus bill that affects (or potentially affects) many of us in the arts and crafts (and some other potentially positively stimulated areas).

It uses some lovely weasel language to equate the Arts (and aquariums and zoos, for that matter), which, yes are not NECESSARY but which have been shown to actually provide economic stimulus (and eventual increased tax revenue) by equating these pursuits with a number of outright luxury fripperies ("zero-gravity chairs?").

Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) has introduced an amendment to prohibit funds in the economic stimulus bill from going to theaters and arts centers.

The language of the amendment, (Amendment No. 175, as filed) is, "None of the amounts appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act may be used for any casino or other gambling establishment, aquarium, zoo, golf course, swimming pool, stadium, community park, museum, theater, arts center, or highway beautification project, including renovation, remodeling, construction, salaries, furniture, zero-gravity chairs, big screen televisions, beautification, rotating pastel lights, and dry heat saunas."

This amendment may be offered as early as today, Wednesday, February 4th. Call your Senators today and urge a NO vote on the Coburn "Limitation of Funds Amendment No. 175." To reach your Senators, call the Capitol Switchboard at 202-224-3121 and ask for your Senators' offices.



Or if, like me, you have a phone phobia (though phoning is ALWAYS better than emailing), you can find your senators through the home page HERE and leave the message. Unfortunately, it appears that new New York Senator Gillebrand does not as yet have an online presence or comment form, so you have to call her office (202-224-4451).

Thanks for your attention.

collisionwork: (Default)
50 years ago today Buddy Holly died in a plane crash.

Here he is on American Bandstand (UPDATE: WRONG, see below) in 1958, performing one of my all-time favorite songs (h/t Neatorama):


UPDATE: The date and setting should have tipped me off, but that is DEFINITELY not American Bandstand above (which is what it was labeled on YouTube). It was used in a Bandstand video compilation, because, as Dick Clark explained, the actual footage of Holly from his show around that time was lost years ago. It is in fact from December 29, 1957, and as my Dad explains in an email:

American Bandstand!!! did you look at the clip?, the show is The Arthur Murray Party and it is Kathryn Murray the hostess of the show who introduces Buddy. You may remember that the Murray's lived in Rye when I was a kid, and I once bumped into Arthur (literally) on the street (his fault).

Thanks, Dad. I thought the background people looked a little too formal.

And continuing the fun with Stratocasters and young people theme for the day, here's Jeff Beck at Eric Clapton's Crossroads Guitar Festival, 2007, performing "'Cause We Ended as Lovers," with Vinnie Colaiuta on drums and the AMAZING 21-year old Australian bass prodigy Tal Wilkenfeld (h/t My Mom):


Enjoy.

collisionwork: (philip guston)
Well, Portland again, and as nice as usual.

Missed any other updates on Friday. It was a tiring drive up from NYC, and I just felt like relaxing, and then got into working on the George Bataille's Bathrobe script and good things were happening, and next thing I knew it was bedtime.

Much the same on Saturday. And I'm hoping for the same later today. Along with some movie-watching research.

For those who don't know, when doing one of Richard Foreman's plays - generally, there are exceptions - Richard prefers that you start with the text as he writes it, that is, just dialogue and occasional stage directions that he has written in one-page fragments, and then scrambled up and reordered and played with until he's decided that it's "a play," and then you create your own characters, settings, plot or action, etc. So I had a copy of Richard's typescript for George Bataille's Bathrobe (it's never been published in one of his book collections) and I transcribed the pages into the computer, along with some of the fascinating mung in Richard's notes around the typewritten text -- there were lots of handwritten corrections and alternative lines in the margins, and I've included everything I possibly could in my production draft as I could.

Reading over just the dialogue, elements of characters and story emerged, and gradually I had a list of characters (and actors I wanted to play them), a definite setting, a sense of how the feel and movement of the show would work, and the overall structure. However, I still don't know WHO it is saying WHICH line a good deal of the way through the script, so I'm now going through and figuring out all the details, assigning the dialogue to the correct characters, and writing in the stage directions so the actors will know what they're supposed to be doing.

On the other shows, A Little Piece of the Sun has 13 out of 14 actors cast, and I'm waiting for some promised recommendations to be emailed to me on the last actor (I got no one I know right for the part). I'm setting up a first reading for later this month on that one. The Fassbinder play, Blood on the Cat's Neck, has had it's production draft typed up and finished and has been sent to the proposed cast -- 7 of the 10 actors contacted are in; I'm waiting to hear from the other three (though two of them told me in person not long ago it sounded good to them).

So I just need to finish Bathrobe and Spacemen from Space, which I have to write from scratch, a main reason for coming up here to Maine, as I write better away from home.

I was also hoping the great big videostore in town, Videoport, would still have some of the tons of old movie serials they used to, so I could rewatch them as research for Spacemen, which is structured as a cliffhanger serial in six chapters. I had rented them all from the store about 10 years ago. But now? No dice - they were on VHS, and no one ever rented them, so they're long gone. The only serial they have now is the 1949 Batman & Robin, so I got that. I'll have to watch more of the serials I need to see online, which I find annoying and difficult to focus on.

So later, serial. Right now, a Random Ten from the 26,125 tracks on the iPod:

1. "Kidnapping" - Karl Heinz Shäffer - Stereo Ultra
2. "Ain't No Cure For Love" - Leonard Cohen - I'm Your Man
3. "Heavy Water" - Ray Davies, His Funky Trumpet & Button Down Brass - The Sound Spectrum
4. "To Win Your Love" - Laurie Wade's Cavaliers - Ugly Things #2: Australia's Indiginous Garage Dwellers
5. "So What!!" - The Lyrics - Nuggets: Original Artyfacts From The First Psychedelic Era, Vol. 3
6. "The Curse Of Millhaven" - Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Murder Ballads
7. "Berlin (live 1978)" - Lou Reed - Take No Prisoners
8. "Ultra Twist" - The Cramps - Flamejob
9. "Jailhouse Rock " - The End - Pebbles Volume 6 - Chicago 1
10. "Somebody Somewhere (Solo)" - Andy Prieboy - online single download

Looking for a sharable version of that last song, instead I found Edwin Vacek's excellent homemade/found footage videos for three other recent online song releases by Andy Prieboy, the second frontman for one of my favorite bands, Wall of Voodoo. He hasn't put out an album, unfortunately, since 1995's amazing Sins of Our Fathers (one of my very favorite records), but he's recently released 6 new songs (plus three variant versions) on his website, including the above song, and these three below (one of the songs not here, "Shine," to my pleasant surprise turned out to feature the other WOV frontman, Stan Ridgway, on harmonica!).

If you like 'em, think about picking them up from Prieboy's site.

"Pricks Up Front":


"Bands":


"Hearty Drinking Men":


The one bad thing about coming up here is that, despite having loaner cat Bappers and loaner dog Sasha here to enjoy, we still miss our own little monsters, even if we know they're being well looked after by Tante Christiaan and Unca Bryan:
H&M Pose, Look Away

I do have something like 10 videos saved up that I haven't shared as yet, so in lieu of new stuff the next week of so, I'll dole those out bit-by-bit. Back with those soon enough . . .

collisionwork: (Default)
Sorry for the week between posts.

I've been working on the scripts and casting for the four August shows.

Pretty much done with script and casting for A Little Piece of the Sun and the script and most of the casting on Blood on the Cat's Neck.

We're about to drive up to Maine for peace and quiet while I finish my work on George Bataille's Bathrobe and write as much of Spacemen from Space as I can.

Regular Friday post should should up later tonight.

Whee.

collisionwork: (boring)
And the year in seeing and doing stuff takes off hard this week . . . big entry, here . . .

This past weekend we put up Episode 10 of Bryan Enk and Matt Gray's Penny Dreadful serial at The Brick, which went just as well as all the other episodes, and played to another two huge houses (the first of which, as happens sometimes when you do this kind of serial work that veers wildly from the comic to tragic, and your audience is made up of a lot of friends, tended to laugh in inappropriate, sadly-emotional moments as well as at the actual jokes).

Berit was back co-designing the lights with me on this one, as well as running the board, which was good, as I had to reprise the part of George Westinghouse as a . . . dream? ghost? some other kind of supernatural spirit? . . . that appears to Nikola Tesla. Two more episodes to go, and a lot of plot to resolve -- we're all waiting to see how Matt & Bryan end this saga.

The episode summaries (through #9) and video recordings (through #8) are up at the page linked above. The next episode, I now see, has been given the title "The House Where Bad Things Happen," and I think that's actually a quote from me about the setting for the episode I directed (#5) which almost all took place in the house of a VERY dysfunctional family, where we look to be returning next time (my episode also came to be known as Penny Dreadful: Fire Walk With Me, which gives an idea of its mood, one I expect to come back next time as well).

Here, behind a cut, are my own usable photos from this episode -- if you're on Facebook, you can join the Penny Dreadful group for an even better collection from this episode (and all the others).

DON'T . . . BE . . . afraid . . . )



Wednesday, Frank Cwiklik and Michele Schlossberg of Danse Macabre Theatrics and Do What Now Media put up a special show, 0109, to celebrate ten years of making theatre in NYC. It was a collage of video and live excerpts from past shows, dance numbers, music, and a new extended comic sketch about how DMTheatrics makes theatre. There were several themed video presentations as well, focusing on aspects of the DMTheatrics style -- a collection of fight scenes, of girls dancing, and of lots and LOTS of cursing (how Frank could leave out my cry of "FOUL FUCKING WINDS!!!" from Bitch Macbeth in that montage however, I will never understand). I appeared in Bryan Enk's original part as "The Candy Butcher" in an excerpt from Who In the Hell Is the Real, Live Lorelei Lee?, which went quite well (it was supposed to be a big secret that I was appearing, but I think word got out a bit).

With the end of the evening came the onscreen announcement that Danse Macabre Theatrics (dead as a company since 2004) is once again back in business, with a list of upcoming productions. Bravo. More from them soon, I'm sure.

Yesterday was an overload of information, starting with an afternoon screening of Godard's Made in U.S.A. at Film Forum, which I had discovered was the last day this almost-never-screened film was playing in a new, restored 35mm print (I last saw this widescreen film in an atrocious, almost-unviewable, and quite incoherent and cropped 16mm print in 1988 or so). As often with Godard, whichever film of his I've seen most recently becomes not only my favorite Godard film, but one of my favorite films of all time, for a few weeks, so I'm still buzzing a bit from this one. I hope it gets a DVD release (Criterion? Please?) sometime fairly soon so I can see it again, preferably with its twin (shot, literally, at the same time), Two or Three Things I Know About Her (my FAVORITE Godard, and a film that changed EVERYTHING for me when I saw it at 17). At least as I saw it yesterday, Made in U.S.A. was a definite end to the crime-movie-loving Godard, a summary of everything he'd done in that style up to 1966 (though it almost has a sci-fi quality in being set two years in the future, in September, 1968), all mashed up and making very little sense except for cinematic sense. It is dedicated to Sam Fuller and Don Siegel, but no one, as far as I can tell, has ever noted the similarities to Siegel's 1964 remake of The Killers (here with Anna Karina in the Lee Marvin part), so I'll just say the Godard was certainly aware of the latter film.

The website The Auteurs has has a number of essays about Made in U.S.A. recently, the most recent being HERE. A good introduction to this great film.

As I said, Godard leaves me walking on air and open to all possibilities for a while after seeing his best films (especially if it's one I haven't seen in a long time), so today as I've been working and writing, I've had, once again, a mini Jean-Luc Fest in the background, with all of his films that I have a copy of (thus far, Contempt, Band of Outsiders, Alphaville, and after a break to do the Random Ten below, I'm onto Masculin-Feminine -- I may not get to the last, Tout Va Bien/Letter to Jane until much later this evening).

The Godard was followed (after dinner) by the new show from Stolen Chair Theatre Company, Theatre Is Dead and So Are You, which, I want to state immediately, was TERRIFIC and you SHOULD SEE IT. You've got one more weekend; follow the links.

It's about death, and it's very very funny, though maybe you need to be able to find the various thoughts about death both very funny and very disturbing (often at the same time) to appreciate it -- I found myself laughing a lot, but also torn and slightly upset by remembrances of human deaths I have witnessed in person or been near to, memories of the funeral home run by my grandparents and the bodies I saw there (which generally gives me a cold, dispassionate eye to mortal remains and cremains), and the increased sense of mortality that has hit me the last few years. A good mix of emotions for a show to give you, though I got the feeling that some people in the audience weren't as pleased by some of what was brought up. Whatever.

One reviewer somewhat dismissed the show as having been done before, and better, by some famous names (a dicey reason for critically dismissing anything, really; at a certain point you can dismiss anything, including masterpieces, as treading ground covered by earlier masterpieces), but what this reviewer was focusing on was far more the "frame" of the work rather than the actual content -- we are presented with an onstage wake conducted by a vaudevillian acting troupe for their fallen leader, who lies in a coffin at stage center (a coffin with many wonderful magic properties, as it turns out); a wake which fairly quickly is somewhat of a wake for Theatre itself. but once the discussion of Theatre as a dead art form is run through, we are taken to a deeper, darker level that is the real meat of the show, our feelings about Death Itself.

The cast, performing this series of acts, scenes, comedy routines, and monologues, is excellent top to bottom -- I was especially taken with Liza Wade Green, who could leap from cute and adorable to deeply creepy with just a slight change of posture and expression, and David Berent, who I know and have worked with at The Brick in his position as leader of The Maestrosities, but whom I didn't recognize at ALL here until I read his bio after the show (big change of character). But the whole group is splendid in their ability to handle both the humor and the scary stuff.

If I had any criticisms, they are that occasionally projection was a problem, especially in songs, whenever people turned away from facing downstage even a bit (the Connelly sucks up sound pretty well), and the episodic nature of the show, as a collection of acts (and I say this as someone who likes to occasionally create shows in episodes and recognizes this as a structural problem whenever you do it), means that you begin wondering more and more how many more "bits" you have to go, even if all of them are splendid, Luckily, right around the time you feel like you've had almost enough, an extended tour-de-force Romeo and Juliet sequence (with the dead body as Romeo) comes up, and is pretty obviously the penultimate section of the show when it does, so you're ready for the ending when it comes, right when it should.

Again, terrific show. Wish I could see it again, but I won't be able to for the rest of the run.

I should also mention that my old friend Michael Laurence's one-man show Krapp, 39 has re-opened, and got a great Times review today, which it richly deserves. Another one I recommend.

Today I worked on the scripts of Spacemen from Space and George Bataille's Bathrobe, which are coming together. I also now have almost completely made out lists of who I want for almost all the parts, so I can start contacting people about interest and availability if I haven't already (and SFS has wound up with a World Gone Wrong-like 21 people in the company in order to pull it off right! Whee.).

Tonight we see Stephen Heskett -- our George Amberson Minifer in The Magnificent Ambersons -- in Mike Leigh's Ecstasy at The Red Room -- it's mostly gotten great reviews, and Stephen's been singled out for praise repeatedly. Good.

Tomorrow, it's the new opera by Robert Ashley at LaMama, Made Out of Concrete. I also have a rehearsal with David Finkelstein of Lake Ivan Performance Group, who has asked me to join him in creating some improvisatory duets that he will, as he's been doing for a while, videotape and transform into experimental video pieces. Doing this kind of work is new, exciting, and scary for me, and it's affecting my acting and other art work in positive ways (always staying connected to the source of what I'm creating rather than ever treading water by letting my skill just go without grounding).

Then, Berit and I are trying to get away to Maine to relax a bit and for me to complete the scripts as much as possible. Maybe a week or a bit more.

Whew. Today's Random Ten, from 26,125 tracks in the iPod:

1. "The Lonesome River" - Bob Dylan with Ralph Stanley - The Bootleg Series, Vol. 8: Tell Tale Signs
2. "Julia" - The Beatles - The Beatles
3. "Shoot That Girl" - Hopelessly Obscure - 7" single
4. "10:30 Train" - Ugly Ducklings - Too Much, Too Soon
5. "Let Latin Commerce" - Sydney Dale - Dolce Far Niente - 27 Suave Cocktail Classics
6. "Le Grind" - Prince - The Black Album
7. "Standin' Round Crying" - Eric Clapton - From The Cradle
8. "Blue Jean" - David Bowie - Tonight
9. "Turkish Song Of The Damned" - The Pogues - If I Should Fall From Grace With God
10. "Angel" - Iggy Pop - New Values

And some kitty photos from today. Here's where Hooker's been almost all day -- as Berit says, "Being a kitty is SO tiring . . ."
Being a Kitty Is Tiring

Meanwhile, Moni lurks, waiting for an opportunity . . .
Moni Lurks

. . . to jump on Berit and demand attention while B is trying to play a video game (Godard film just visible to the right) . . .
Bugging Mom During Game Time

. . . which the little attention-grabber gets:
Getting Attention

And two final images, one from the terrific Lost City blog, a Woolworth counter menu from 1960:
Woolworth Menu

And the sunset two nights ago from our subway stop, Kings Highway, on the Culver line, looking across Bensonhurst from Gravesend, on our way to 0109:
Sunset Over Bensonhurst

More soon . . .

collisionwork: (welcome)
Tonight I'm helping out on a very special show at The Kraine. People seem to think I know more about it than I do, so to set some things straight and give it a little promo.

Danse Macabre Theatrics was Frank Cwiklik & Michele Schlossberg's theatre company from 1999-2004. The first show they produced was Girls' School Vampire in January, 1999 (it came back, at NADA, that October, which is when and where I met Frank & Michele).

That means this month is the 10th Anniversary of DMTheatrics. Tonight, at 8.00 pm at The Kraine, Frank & Michele are presenting 0109, which celebrates 10 years of work (with DMTheatrics and their more recent company, Do What Now Media).

As I was there for most of that time, and most of their shows, I was needed to help give this evening some necessary historical context.

If you were ever a part of the wild ride of DMT or DWN, there'll be something for you this evening, and if you were considering giving this evening a pass because you had no idea what the hell it was, what it is is something for anyone who was there, on the stage, in the house, or behind the scenes.

Again, a celebration of 10 years of work -- if you know Frank's work, you may have a tiny bit of an idea as to what such a celebration might entail.

I hope to see some of the old NADA faces there this evening.

collisionwork: (sleep)
The original show I have planned for this August, Spacemen from Space, is a serial play in episodes that parodies the form and content of old movie serials and other Space Opera and Monster movies, primarily from the 1930s and 40s. That, like the use of film noir in World Gone Wrong, is the surface layer, and, if you want to enjoy a pleasant, funny show, all you need look at.

Underneath, as WGW was really a portrait of a contemporary USA where something like the moral system of noir had taken over, so SFS is actually about anti-intellectualism in the USA, in many forms but most specifically in regard to science and scientific thought, using the Space Opera form - where all Science is cool, beautiful, misleading, and impossible - as the happy, pop-culture vessel for some deeper, angrier thoughts.

It's been fun watching and/or rewatching these old serials and movies I grew up loving -- comfort viewing -- which I often haven't seen since childhood. At the same time, as much as I love them, it is impossible to take some of the ideas in them seriously, of course. Unless, that is, you so desperately need to that you can turn off certain centers of judgment in your head. And then the trouble begins.

I've been reading some back entries on Craig Keller's Cinemasparagus site, which I've only occasionally looked at before, but will now be a regular reader of, and was struck by a paragraph and a half in his discussion of an independent film called Indigo, a fiction film about the phenomenon of the supposed "Indigo Children." It's a bit sideways to the main thrust of SFS, but it's somewhere, shall we say, in the spectrum of what I'm going for . . .

Indigo'ism is an ideology or conviction-system (keyword: system) like any other — Christianity, etc. Hence Stephen Simon's Indigo, founded on the ridiculous and assuredly outmoded principle that "the children" are innocent lambs who, withal, can point us in the direction of ego-chloroformed thought, unitchy/ants-less rolls in the grass, and Roubini-appeasing economic safeguards. Or so we'd be led to believe.

It says something about adults so adrift, and so shallow, that they experience repeated, even (let us say) post-

Vinelandian urges to stare backward into the (hindsought) blank slate of childhood, to chase the dream of the Holy Idiot, with the notion it will justify their own blankness of idea-actualization, or of actual ideas, and, in the parlance of regression, synch up with the discovery of some way 'out' from the piles and piles of traumas, disappointments, and outright abuse that they themselves have endured through their largely ineffectual, and/or hair's-breadth-from-abusive, bluebirdbrain'd (jackdraw'n? <— ink enough?) American lives.

And the list of things to be dealt with in Spacemen from Space grows and grows and grows . . .

collisionwork: (lost highway)
The reading of The Confidence Man last night went fine - smaller audience than we'd hoped, and a lot less reactive than when we last did it -- Danny Bowes reminded me that it was April 1, 2007 in Coney Island, and that the show had run about three hours with no intermission that time - yikes! - it was almost 2 hours 30 minutes last night.

B & I are off very shortly for an all-day dry tech to have Penny Dreadful Episode 10 ready for tomorrow. It's a big, complex one, with a cast of 21 and two entirely different "mini-episodes" within it. And lots o' tech. And I return, acting, as George Westinghouse (so I've already shaved my beard back to the Westinghouse chops, which also worked well for the Melville reading last night).

The video of Episode 8, for those watching or catching up online, is now online HERE. Saturday night's performance of Episode 10 is sold out, but there are still some tickets available for the Sunday matinee.

Quick Friday Random Ten -- if I get a chance later tonight, I'll try and put some links to the music in there (but I don't think I'll find links to too many of these songs . . .):

1. "Shadow Of Fear" - Last Knight - Psychedelic Disaster Whirl
2. "She's My Baby" - Mazzy Star - So Tonight That I Might See
3. "I Feel Fine" - The Beatles - Past Masters, Volume 1
4. "One Of The Boys" - Mott The Hoople - All The Young Dudes
5. "Bad Little Woman" - The Wheels - Nuggets II: Original Artyfacts From The British Empire And Beyond, Vol. 4
6. "The Day the World Turned Dayglo" - X-Ray Spex - Germfree Adolescents
7. "Is It Living" - Fems - 7" EP
8. "Chessboxin' In Suffragette City (feat. Wu-Tang Clan) - Man-Cat - The Rise And Fall Of Thuggy Stardust And The Hustlers From Mars
9. "Slave Of Desire" - The New Dawn - The 60's Choice
10. "I've Told Every Little Star" - Linda Scott - Mulholland Drive

And whaddya know? It's the return of Friday Cat Blogging!

Here, Hooker and Moni enjoy their current "favorite spot," one of their oddest - on the arm of, and endtable next to, the sofa, as Berit computes . . .
Computer, Berit, Cat Butts

Hooker in another favorite spot that gets him scolded and squirted with the water bottle - rolling around on the power cords for the computers and A/V equipment . . .
Hooker Likes Power Cords

And, hey, I actually got the little bastards to pose for a nice portrait . . .
H&M Pose, Stare

Gotta run - hope to see some of you at Penny Dreadful . . .

collisionwork: (mystery man)
I am in a reading this evening that looks to be a lot of fun -- I was in another reading of this (last year? the year before?) at the Coney Island Museum that went quite well, and I'm looking forward to doing this at the Metropolitan Playhouse (if not looking forward to going out tonight in this snowy weather, if it keeps up . . .).

Please come on out if it looks to be something good for you - it's very funny and pretty cheap.

**********

You are invited to a reading of Trav S.D.’s stage adaptation
of Herman Melville’s

The Confidence Man


starring Mr. Trav S.D. Himself in the Eponymous Sexpartite Role.

Is He One Man? Or many?
Or perhaps a manifestation of
That Malevolence Which Lives Beyond the Veil?

YOU DECIDE!

also, starring, as his many Dupes and Marks:

Danny Bowes, Salvatore Brienik, Maggie Cino,
Ian W. Hill, Roger Nasser, Robert Pinnock, Bujan Rugova

It’s all part of MELVILLEPALOOZA
at The Metropolitan Playhouse

220 East 4th Street
between Avenues A & B

Thursday, January 15, 9.00 pm

price: $5.00 (at first)
reservations: 212.995.5302

Your Seat Awaits.


collisionwork: (escape)
Patrick McGoohan, co-creator, lead actor, and primary force behind the classic TV show The Prisoner, has died at the age of 80.

Patrick McGoohan as Number Six


He'll be known - rightly, perhaps - most for that landmark 17-episode series . . .


. . . but he did plenty of other things in his career. I'm especially fond of his work as (in various combinations) actor, writer, and/or director on several episodes of Columbo, including a couple of the best ones (one of them is a season-ender that becomes almost as surreal as the final episode of The Prisoner -- Berit said when we watched it, "It's like the producers said, 'Who can we get to make sure this season goes out in the most weird-ass way possible? McGoohan!'"). The scenes where McGoohan and Peter Falk (who became great real-life friends) go up against each other, each taking on the distinctive acting mannerisms of the other as they play cat-and-mouse, are the high points of that other great show, for me.

The Village

But then, The Prisoner . . .


One of my Flickr friends, who goes by "moor_larkin," has a photostream that has been entirely dedicated to PMcG, his life, parts, and work, for some time now, with some great pictures of the man. You can see them HERE.
Patrick and KAR

The Prisoner is currently {sigh} being remade by AMC, but one nice side-effect of this happening is that, for the time being, all episodes of the original are available online for free, streaming at the AMC site, so check them out if you haven't.

And of course, to end this, The Times had their noted song and video from 1983:
I Helped Patrick McGoohan Escape


Be seeing you.

Tickle Me

Jan. 12th, 2009 01:13 pm
collisionwork: (sleep)
Hello Monday.

And here I am, fighting off a cold or something (my throat has surrendered and my nose is fighting valiantly but looks to be losing), trying to write a grant application I have to finish today, and doing a not-very-good job of it. And the apartment is drafty and though it seems bright outside I'm just getting dim gray light. And the bits of me that I've been seeing doctors about recently are not exactly hurting, but ARE causing an annoying, constant discomfort (nothing hideous or terminal, I assure you, just chronic, unending discomfort-occasionally-jumping-into-pain -- it appears I almost certainly have tarsal tunnel syndrome in my right foot, and there's other things I won't go into).

So I'm cold and achy and cranky and looking for laughs and some kind of relaxing comfort.

This makes me laugh. More so if I just play it over and over and over and over . . .


And this foreign ad for Swedish Fish - part of their "a friend you can eat" (?) campaign - charms because it has a kitten mewing in it, and I'm a sucker for that . . .


And to relax and go all Zen, I can stare into the endlessly deep expression on the face of The King as he seems to make a request of his 50,000,000 fans (who can't be wrong) on this 45rpm single sleeve:
Tickle Me Elvis

When I first looked at the above, I thought he looked forlorn, like he could use a good tickle (and how about a "Tickle Me Elvis" doll anyway? I'm sure it could produce some damned fine sounds). But the more I look in that kisser, the more I see a sly confidence. Even arrogance. "Go on, just TRY and tickle The King! See if you can!"

On the better side of the day, while the grant application has become impossible (time to throw it in and be better organized for this grant next year), bits of Spacemen from Space, which has been slow in coming to the Writer part of my brain, suddenly appeared today and I was able to jot some productive bits of that down. They weren't massive CONTENT parts, but they were major STRUCTURAL/TONAL elements which are exactly what I need right now -- once I lick the structure and tone, it's almost by-the-numbers.

The structure is a glass form that I need to know the shape of, and then I can blow it into that form. The tone is the kind of liquid I'm going to pour into that glass form once it's blown. I'm pretty clear now on the form, and I know the kind of liquid. Now I just need to brew those liquid contents.

The best cure I ever had for a cold like this involved incredibly hot and spicy Indian food and a gigantic glass of Jameson's whisky, neat. I don't have either of those handy, but I may attempt an alternate to that Indian/Irish cure today by going with a Chinese/Czech one and eating a large bowl of leftover spicy beef and onions (adding additional hot sauce and mustard) and drinking as much Becharovka as I can stomach (I have a full, unopened bottle in the freezer). If it doesn't cure this cold, it may make me stronger, or at least keep me in the state-of-mind to keep writing the fever-dream-like Spacemen from Space . . .

collisionwork: (Selector)
Work progresses on the four shows for August. About half of the cast of A Little Piece of the Sun is set. I'm also finishing up the script for George Bataille's Bathrobe (that is, I have Foreman's dialogue in a file and I'm going through and creating the characters, setting, scenes, and stage directions as they come to me, bit by bit), typing in the script for Fassbinder's Blood on the Cat's Neck and giggling way too much about my idea for the design for the card/poster for that show (based on the original picture of Fassbinder holding a bloodied photo cut-out of a cat for the original production), and watching old serials and Universal monster movies as research for Spacemen from Space (done with the Universal pictures, actually, and I'm currently enjoying a palate-cleanser of movie watching with my favorite Hitchcock and Bergman films).

I also have a couple of grant proposals to get done in the next two weeks that are mostly there. Big thing now for each is to put together a DVD (different for each proposal) of excerpts from my recent work. Not so easy to choose.

We'll be going up to Maine for a little bit soon to relax and write the actual script, or what we can right now, of Spacemen from Space. First, I have to design and act in the next Penny Dreadful episode, and act in a couple of other readings/events I've agreed to.

Nothing else really, so here's today's Random Ten . . .

1. "Pictures of Lily" - David Bowie - Toying
2. "The Big Big Whoredom" - They Might Be Giants - Then: The Earlier Years
3. "Waltzin' With Sin" - Bob Dylan & The Band - A Tree With Roots
4. "Hey There Jim" - Jimmy "Bo" Horne - The First Days of Funk - volume 1
5. "Lagerfeuer (Oswalt Kolle: Dein Kind, Das Unbekannte Wesen)" - Peter Schirmann - Birds Do It
6. "'The Good, the Bad, and The Ugly" ad" - radio spot - Psychedelic Promos & Radio Spots, vol. 8
7. "Just Passing" - Small Faces - Immediate Singles
8. "Gloomy" - Creedence Clearwater Revival - Susie Q
9. "The Trap" - The Music Machine - The Bonniwell Music Machine
10. "I Need It Just As Bad As You" - Laura Lee - Soul Diva Sessions

And for special added value today, some recent favorite videos.

David Letterman reviews George W. Bush's career:


A commercial - YES, IT'S REAL - that made Berit and I giggle like 5 year olds:


And when all else fails, animals doing things they normally don't = amusingosity:


Haven't been to The Brick in weeks! Time to go over and check in tonight on the show that's going to open there next week . . .

collisionwork: (Default)
As soon as I finished the second volume of Simon Callow's ongoing Orson Welles biography, Hello Americans, a copy of the first volume, The Road to Xanadu, showed up in the mail (I had ordered them both around the same time once I found I could get each one used, in hardcover, in good shape, for less than a dollar - the $3 for shipping on each was more!).

I'd borrowed the first volume from a friend and read it, but not too deeply I think, when it came out. Callow does a bit more psychoanalyzing of Welles in the first volume, some of which may be a bit of a reach (but far less so than most biographers), but he's just as often on firm ground (it becomes very VERY clear that Citizen Kane is just as much, maybe MORE, an autobiography of Orson Welles as it is an examination of William Randolph Hearst).

I personally have been compared to Welles more times than makes me comfortable. Granted, I was inspired on a lot of his career path by Kane (like so many others) and my first "serious" film book was Charles Higham's The Films of Orson Welles (bought for me around 1977 by my dad in a small bookstore connected to the Bleecker Street Cinema, when we had gone to see a midnight double-bill of Modern Times and The Great Dictator but it was sold-out -- I still have the book, though it's coverless and falling apart).

Most of the time though, the Welles comparison seems to be because I do a lot of things, am portly, and have a deep voice.

That said, the more I read about him in Callow, the more I do feel a kinship with him, and an understanding, and often not in ways that make me comfortable. Reading Callow on Welles' failings can make me stop, reread a passage, and wonder, "Uh . . . is that me, too?" So two passages that I looked at over and over again are today's "Inspirational" texts, or maybe more "Warning" texts. There may be more from this book to come - I'm only halfway through my reread of it now.

In the section on the critical response to the "Voodoo Macbeth," -- and the reviews, even the good ones (of which there are surprisingly few for this landmark production), are astonishingly snobby, shallow, closed-minded, and racist -- Callow is able to make a damned good point about Welles' work by reading between the lines of even these silly reviews. As someone who sometimes regards my job (and general strengths) as a theatre director (and artist in general) as being more in the realm of "editor," "conductor," or "arranger/orchestrator" rather than "composer" or "creator," this brought me up short:

. . . This is an assertion which is constantly made about Welles, his productions, other people's performances in his productions, and his own performances: that they lack poetry. There seems to be some truth in it. He had a passion for verse, but he wanted to eliminate Poetry from the classical theatre, considering it an obstacle to the life in the plays, a veneer that needed to be stripped away. And yet he was no realist. He wanted the majesty without the poetry, the tone without the music. What he offered instead was Orchestration; colour and sound, largely devoid either of meaning or of melody.

Hmmmn.

No, not sure this is me, or anything I'm doing, but there's enough there that's close enough to make me have to look closer at what I think I'm doing, what I'm actually doing, and any gaps there may be in between the intent and the result.

A little while later, Callow discusses Welles taking on Marlowe's Faustus, a part I quite happily played myself almost 17 years ago. I've done my share of Shakespeare, but I've never felt quite as sympatico with Shakespeare's lines in my mouth as with Marlowe's (though I prefer the plays of the former CONSIDERABLY more). The only major Shakespeare role I've played was Hamlet, quite frankly in most ways an easier role than Faustus, and while I had all the internal work down on the man, I mean I KNEW my Hamlet as a person, inside and out, I could never really get the words out quite the way I wanted -- I knew the rhythms and cadences, the meanings and intents and WHAT I was saying, but the tone and timbre escaped me . . . I wanted (and needed) to be a brass instrument (a trumpet in Act Two; I'm not sure what in Act One, something more mellow, french horn maybe), and instead I was low strings or woodwinds. I got through it okay (by the last two performances of four) but it wasn't what I wanted to be there, or should have been.

When you have one of those voices that gets you noticed and complimented just for its natural tone, and which you are naturally skilled at using in a variety of ways, you can become overconfident that your voice can do ANYTHING (you may also at first, as I did, get tired of the compliments and try to avoid using "that" voice -- when I did Faustus the director had to keep pushing me to "use the beautiful voice!" which I had begun to regard as some kind of "cheat"; I grew out of that). Of course, without the proper work, a magnificent voice can't do things it wasn't built for (after Welles told Olivier that his voice would never be deep enough to play Othello, Olivier spent a year doing vocal exercises to lower it so that he could do just that). A virtuoso bassoonist, demanded to play a passage for trumpet, will probably give you something lovely and impressive to listen to, but just not correct.

So, yes, this passage also made me think . . .

. . . As far as the verse is concerned, Welles might have been born to play Marlowe. As a Shakespearean actor, he lacked access to the pressure of the verse, and to its breathtaking variety; intelligent and beautifully spoken though his performances of Shakespeare invariably are, he is inclined to fall into a sonorous, monochromatic mode. He lacks rhythmic flexibility. What he has is superb tone and a wonderful command of legato, perfect attributes for what has been called Marlowe's 'mighty line': great arcs of verse that soar and swoop, arias independent of character or situation. This essentially rhetorical writing suits him perfectly, and he fulfils it as few other actors of our time have been able to do, a notable exception being the late Richard Burton, another rhetorical actor. Both Burton and Welles when they play Shakespeare attempt to make him rhetorical; it soon becomes dull, as if a singer were to attempt to sing Mozart like Wagner. All the bubbling and varied life becomes subdued in the attempt to make a splendid noise. Marlowe was his man.

Again, hmmmmmn. Something to think about . . .

collisionwork: (spaghetti cat)
And again, happy new year!

Berit and I have been continuing to hibernate at home for days, working on script stuff and other business for the year to come (and finishing up stuff from the year past).

I've been watching a lot of Universal monster movies from the 1930s-40s -- pretty much all of them in chronological order. It was slightly for research for Spacemen from Space, but mainly for my own enjoyment, though it was also re-igniting in my head an old project David LM Mcintyre and I had been discussing as our follow-up to the collage-piece Even the Jungle -- this one would have been called A Landscape of the Universal Horror and would have been a journey through the human-on-human atrocities of the 20th Century using the texts of horror movies made or distributed by Universal Pictures.

Sometimes I think about getting back to that, or the other one we considered, Bird/BRAINS, a retelling/combination of Chekhov's The Seagull, Ibsen's The Wild Duck, and Strindberg's The Pelican in an examination of the family unit in the last 100 years or so of World Theatre. I had this last idea around 1992 (when David did a deconstruction of Seagull, which I acted in, for his composition class with Anne Bogart), and I don't know if I mentioned it to A Certain Someone back in the late 90s at NADA, but that Someone went and did this very idea a few years later at Symphony Space. But that was for one night only, and I'm sure was a lot different than what I'd do with the idea (still pissed me off, though).

Of course, I never really licked certain issues with either of these projects, and I cannibalized the concept-setting of Bird/BRAINS for Ten Nights in a Bar-Room and the ending of Landscape of the Universal Horror for Kiss Me, Succubus, as well as other bits and pieces of them for other shows here and there, so I'll probably never bother actually making either of them anyway.

Yesterday, another old friend, Sean Rockoff, came by and we hung out and watched videos and laughed a lot -- more at our reactions to what we were watching than the videos themselves, as we were watching a bunch of 2-reel shorts Buster Keaton made for Columbia Pictures around 1938-40. They're TERRIBLE -- made by the exact same people who were making the Three Stooges shorts at the same studio at the same time, with all the same crew and supporting actors and everything. They feel like Stooges shorts that have had the Howard boys and Fine surgically extracted and replaced by Buster Keaton, which just doesn't work. I like the Stooges (I prefer Shemp vastly to Curly, however, who I have trouble watching), but Buster Keaton just DOESN'T work in that world.

There are still some great bits in the films, here and there (especially involving a comedienne named Elsie Ames who apparently annoys many Keaton fans, but DAMN she can take a punch or fall beautifully), but for the most part we were amazed at how while these films were recognizably "comedies," the humor was just missing.

We were laughing more at what I was finding on IMDb as I was looking up info about the people making or in these films, as everything I was saying sounded like something from one of the Firesign Theatre's "TV listings" parody pieces:

"Okay, that's Barbara Jo Allen who did several shorts with the Jules White unit at Columbia as the character 'Vera Vague,' a mean old spinster, who also appeared in the wartime feature Priorities on Parade, 1942, where she and comedian Jerry Colonna sang the Jule Styne song 'Cooperate with Your Air Raid Warden.' She also appeared in the shorts Clunked in the Clink, She Snoops to Conquer, Calling All Fibbers, and the feature Henry Aldrich Plays Cupid, the follow-up to Henry Aldrich Swings It."

The beginnings of another show were born in the midst of our hilarity, but that won't show up until 2011 at the earliest.

Tonight, off for dinner with family again. Here's today's Random Ten off the iPod, with associated links when I could find them:

1. "Theme" - Cibo Matto - Viva! La Woman
2. "The Old Crowd" - Lesley Gore - The Golden Hits of Lesley Gore
3. "Black Butter - Past" - The Strawberry Alarm Clock - Anthology
4. "I Don't Like Him" - Dave Travis & The Premiers - Sin Alley, Vol. 1: Red Hot Rockabilly 1955 - 1962
5. "On Earth My Nina" - They Might Be Giants - Long Tall Weekend
6. "Respect" - The Vagrants - Nuggets: Original Artyfacts From The First Psychedelic Era
7. "Fast Food Service" - The Plasmatics - Beyond The Valley Of 1984
8. "Hornet's Nest" - The Venturas - The History Of Texas Garage Bands In The '60s Volume 3: The AOK RecordStory
9. "Brakhage" - Stereolab - downloaded from somewhere
10. "Since I Lost My Baby" - The Temptations - The Ultimate Collection

We left our camera up at my father & stepmother's on Xmas, so we have no new photos of our little bastards. Here's a little photo booth shot from today of me and each of our cats. First Hooker, the big fuzzy guy, who had yet another epileptic fit this morning and wanted a hug . . .

Photo Booth - Me & Spazboy Again

And Moni, the little girl who just wanted to get away from me . . .
Photo Booth - Holding Still for Just a Moment

So in lieu of better shots of our own cats, two videos of some odd cat behavior -- the broccoli-loving kitten, and the running-on-a-slide kittens:




Have a warm weekend.

collisionwork: (scary)
Places come and go, small theatres and clubs open and close. Things move or vanish. Whatever, it happens.

It's when the ATTITUDE that went with a certain time and place and space going away vanishes that the problems happen. We all get old (we hope), and don't necessarily want to go out slamdancing anymore. But is the alternative to fall into Bobo tastefulness?

From an article in the Times on the closing of the great alternative music club, The Knitting Factory (which, yes, will be reopening soon in Williamsburg, but I'm not too sure how that will work out . . .):

No club seems to close without another sprouting up in its place, and Wednesday night was also the opening of City Winery, an elegant but cozy new performance space opened by Michael Dorf, who founded the Knitting Factory. (He left the company in 2003.)

City Winery, on Varick Street in the South Village, is the Knitting Factory’s opposite. Instead of a warren of cramped, dank rooms, it is a spacious 21,000 square feet with table seating for 350 and walls of wood and exposed brick. The opening-night entertainment was Joan Osborne, who sang bluesy soft-rock and wore a crimson gown. Upcoming shows include Boz Scaggs, Steve Earle and Philip Glass.

Mr. Dorf says the space is intended for music fans who have outgrown the dive-bar phase and want an elegant night out. Grapes are brought in, crushed and fermented on premises, and a membership program gives customers their own barrel in the basement. Clients include Lou Reed.

Kerianne Flynn, 41, who lives nearby in TriBeCa, said she signed up her husband, James, for a barrel for his birthday.

“There’s really nothing this sophisticated in the city,” Ms. Flynn said, “where you can see live music and have great wine, great food and be with grown-ups.”



Joan Osborne. Bluesy soft-rock. Crimson gown. Boz Scaggs. Steve Earle. Philip Glass. Elegant night out. Membership program. Crushed and fermented on premises. Barrel in the basement. Lou Reed. TriBeCa.

I like many, maybe even most, of these things, and I don't mean or want to fetishize "cramped, dank rooms," but the sheer fucking TASTEFULNESS of this "City Winery" thing makes Tonstant Wistener wanna fwow up.

Or at least somehow rig things so that sometime -- preferably maybe with Lou and Laurie enjoying the fine fine superfine fermented product of their personal barrel -- and a talented, sensitive-with-an-edge singer/songwriter at the piano onstage (accompanied on acoustic bass) -- through the I'm-sure top-of-the-line acoustically perfect and dynamically balanced sound system, the live music is suddenly replaced by the sound of Metal Machine Music. At top volume.

Of course, that work has achieved it's own form of Tasteful Respect. And almost sounds quaint today. Maybe "Surfin' Bird," instead? Nah, too "ironic." Beastie Boys? Le Tigre? Song-Poem music? The Spice Girls doing "Wannabe?" Rickrolling is over now - what could be the "rickroll" for this kinda crowd?

And a happy new year to you and yours . . .

collisionwork: (Default)
There's a piece in the Times this morning about Norbert Leo Butz's stepping in as Bobby Gould for Jeremy "Thermometer" Piven in Speed-the-Plow, concentrating on the difficulty he's having in learning ALL THOSE LINES in the couple of weeks he's had since graciously accepting the part and winding up onstage. The piece has already caused two vastly different (and as yet apparently unaware of each other) reactions in the Theatro-Blogging-Industrial Complex.

The Playgoer is very generous, as is the Times and almost everyone else, regarding Butz's problems jumping into the production so quickly -- he's had his script in hand for some of the show, and a prompter, though he's probably off-book by now -- and uses this as a starting place for a discussion of "Okay actors, how DO you learn all those lines?" (as he notes, the nauseatingly never-ending question we are all asked by everyone NOT an actor)

Mike Daisey is a helluva lot less forgiving on Butz, feeling that the time indicated in the article is MORE THAN ENOUGH for Butz to have gotten his act and lines together (Daisey has played this part himself a few years back, it should be noted, so he knows of which he speaks here), as it's not THAT long a part in a pretty short play, and he feels it's inexcusable for Butz to be holding a script onstage (let alone on Broadway).

I agree with one of these views a lot more than the other, but I'll get back to that at the end. First, an attempt at an answer to Playgoer's main question, based on my own experience and what I've seen in the many hundreds of actors I've directed and acted with, "How DO you learn all those lines?"

Um, wait, no. There's no ONE useful answer.

Okay, well, actually, there are as many different answers to this as there are actors and plays. Multiplied times each other. And for some answers, there are new problems.

For me (because I can only speak for myself), every play is different and requires different ways to learn lines. Some come easily, some don't. Sometimes you get almost the whole play down in a couple of days, and weeks later you're still shaky on one scene, which you've been working on non-stop, after opening night. Every play now requires me to find THE way THESE lines for THIS character are going to stay in my head. Sometimes I absolutely HAVE to be looking into the eyes of the other actors to remember my lines, and if you asked me to do them elsewhere I couldn't. Sometimes looking at the other actors will make me go up completely. Sometimes the monologues in a script pop right into my head and I can't get the dialogue. Sometimes the reverse.

I used to think that what made it different each time was the playwright's language - that some writers had rhythms and patterns that were easier to get stuck (and that verse was easiest of all). The easiest time I ever had learning a part in the last 15 years was in Kirk Bromley's verse play The Burnt Woman of Harvard in 2001, where I would show up to the first rehearsal of every scene completely on-book and by the time we'd have run the scene four or five times I would be completely off-book (to my amazement), for that section for the rest of the rehearsal/performance process! I thought it was Bromley's verse, but when I did another verse play by Bromley a few months later, I was completely at sea and struggling with lines for the entire run.

I'm beginning to think more and more that it's the character you are creating that dictates your relationship to your lines - if you and the character are in sync right away, maybe, the lines will be coming out of you properly . . . but this is a recent development.

The whole process changes as you get older - at least it did for me. From ages 15 to 25 I could learn an entire play (everyone's lines, not just my own) in a couple of days by reading it aloud a couple of times, and for years that's all I did to learn my lines, read my part aloud a couple of times (mumbling my cues as a lead-in), and show up to rehearsals knowing it. No problem -- I learned Marlowe's Faustus in a couple of days at age 24, word-perfect, this way (including the Latin, once I'd researched the pronunciation).

Then it started getting tougher, for whatever reason (sometimes I think my brain just plumb done got full), and they didn't just stick in my head like they used to. By the time I was 30, I had lost the ability to just know all my lines after a couple of repetitions, and, even worse, I had never learned any other technique to get them down.

For the last 10 years - ages 30 to 40 - line memorization has more and more become a torturous, terrifying process for me, most of the time. I can go through a script repeatedly, all day, for several days, each day working until I can do all of my lines for the whole play perfectly, and then wake up the next morning with over half of them gone. Terrifying. I am now almost always shaky, or worse, on opening nights, and I haven't found anything that improves matters consistently.

The closest thing to anything that works for me now, at least what works best, is to work alone in the actual theatre space -- since, more often than not, I'm acting at The Brick and I have access at many times when I can be there alone, I'm very lucky. I have to be on my feet, going through the actual blocking, over and over and over again, for many many hours. Preferably at least three 8-hour days. Doing the entire play. Over and over and over again. Alone, because if I get other voices in my head apart from the other actors' it'll screw me up. And that's BESIDES working on it at home, where I can sit down with the script and carefully think about interpretation and subtleties. The time on the feet in the space is just about DOING it, getting the lines into actual muscle memory, less than thinking about it.

It doesn't get me perfect, but it can get me close. When the time I have set aside to actually do this work gets taken away from me for various production reasons (which has happened on several occasions), I'll be lucky to get through the first two performances. After that, I'll be fine. Generally.

For some reason, when learning lines for audition monologues, writing the monologue out longhand is EXTREMELY good for getting them down. But it only works for monologues. Must be something about the short form and lack of dialogue.

As for others, there are actors I direct often who always show up for first rehearsal with their entire part learned (hiya Adam, Aaron) and often they know other actors' lines better than those actors (like I did when I was younger). They seem to have the "read it a couple of times and it sticks" method still going for them. I see more and more people listening to their lines and cues on iPods, and so far everyone I see doing that has been really good on their lines (okay - there's a method I haven't tried yet! maybe next time . . .), though apparently Mr. Butz has been doing that and still needed the script and prompter.

Working with dozens of actors constantly I see many ways of handling the job, and most people seem to have some consistent method for gradually getting the lines until they're all there by tech week. Actually, in regards to the people who get lines down early, I realize I have no idea how they do it -- it's only the people who, like me, have to work on it all the way through the process, who I wind up seeing backstage or in the dressing room or having a smoke or in some corner with their scripts or index cards or iPods or whatever.

Speed-thrus help a lot of actors, I guess, as they get requested often enough. For me as an actor, they are no help at all - unless I hear the rhythm of the lines around mine at proper performance speed and cadence, it's all just meaningless babble to me.

The ONLY consistent way I've EVER found for ALL actors to learn lines is through massive quantities of repetitive rehearsal, on your feet, with all the other actors, in the actual space where you'll be doing the show.

HOWEVER, there is a trade-off (besides the fact that you NEVER get anywhere NEAR that much rehearsal time) which is that the amount of time it takes to get to that level, linewise, begins to take its toll on many, many actors' performances. That is, there are plenty of actors (I work with more than a few, often) who get their performance early in the process (often before their lines) and it's a struggle to keep them working and interested in their correct performance, finding new things without them tearing apart what they already have perfect, while you also try to keep things balanced with the actors who will be discovering their performance all the way up through tech (of course, this is part of what a director's job is supposed to be anyway).

Also, you can be like me as a director (and actor) and find that - SOMETIMES! - a certain amount of uncertainty in a performance is often something to keep, that the slight quality of not being 100% on your lines actually brings a greater effect to a performance, a vibrancy and quality of real thought.

Unfortunately, it's impossible to do this on stage with any security, and one should never outright TRY to be uncertain on your lines onstage, but Marlon Brando's film-acting technique of NEVER learning his lines and reading them off cue cards always worked well for him -- Sheila O'Malley writes a lovely take-down of Peter Manso's silly bio of Brando HERE, where she challenges Manso's snide suggestions that Brando using cue cards all over the set was some kind of unprofessional "cheat" that makes him less of an actor; as she notes, if his "unprofessionalism" brought us Terry Malloy, Vito Corleone, and Paul from Last Tango, three of the finest pieces of film acting ever, maybe it's Manso and anyone who agrees with him who need to reexamine their definitions of "cheating" and "unprofessional."

That said, that's for FILM acting; stage is different. Very very different, almost a completely different craft. And you have to go out as best prepared as possible -- when Brando did stage, after all, he knew his damned lines, as one should -- though it turns out the actors in my play Everything Must Go had their difficult, repetitive dialogue hidden on many cheat sheets all over the paper-covered desks on the set, to a far greater extent than I realized for some time. Which must mean they generally pulled it off, I suppose.

Now, back to the specific case here of Butz taking over this part in two weeks and going out needing a script and prompter, Playgoer has some gentle words:

It's really, really tough for an actor to go out on stage like this. You think going out off-book is vulnerable already! But this, especially when your cast mates are long off book, must feel very exposing. But I must say I admire Butz' humility in letting his process show, if you will.

I appreciate Playgoer's empathy here, but it's actually the kind of thing that also gets my back up, talk about the "vulnerability" of actors (which can wind up extending to the treatment of actors as gentle, "gifted," almost childlike "simple" creatures). Sorry, no. It's not delicate work -- it can be the exceedingly difficult work of CREATING delicate, fragile things with blunt, large, heavy tools (because that's all you have available), but even under the best of circumstances it should not be work for the "vulnerable."

Yes, okay, there is deep, dark, often painful emotional work that has to go on in acting, often. Sometimes you DO have to be "vulnerable" in some way to connect with a part. But that's homework. That's between you and the play, alone, on your own, and has no business in the rehearsal room or at an actual performance. That doesn't mean you're not making it real when you do it onstage, that you're simply "imitating" something you've gone through for real before, but that you have learned to turn on the real feelings and focus them properly in the direction where the play needs to go when it needs you to because you've already worked it out for yourself. That's craft.

I can't imagine going onstage feeling "vulnerable," myself. The character may be vulnerable, and I may feel all of that completely as if it's my own, but there's always an actor in control of himself who makes every entrance onstage with the feeling of being superhumanly impervious, even when he is, in fact, not completely properly prepared to do it -- if there is an audience there waiting to see a show, it is my job to go out and do my part of it without fear (or, I would think, "humility"). No, I don't feel every actor can be (or needs to be) this ridiculously overconfident in doing their work (I need it), but there is a base level of competence I would expect of an actor that doesn't include feeling "vulnerable" as a craftsperson when doing their job.

Playgoer says that this must feel "exposing," what Butz's doing, but for me it would be the opposite -- like stripping down to do a nude scene that you HAVE to do for real to reveal instead a flesh-colored unitard with the naughty bits painted on.

Butz himself says, "I hate sitting around a table and talking about what a play might mean . . . I’m the person who’s always like, ‘Can we get up on our feet and just do it?’" While I DO think there is (with some plays) some virtue about table work, for the most part this is the right attitude. And would generally seem to me to be the attitude of someone who should be able to go out and play Bobby Gould off-book in two weeks. And if not completely off-book should be able to have something close enough in his mind to say that will get him to the next necessary plot point. If some of us (and yeah, I've had to do it, along with everyone else I know that's had more than a few classical parts) can pull some improvised blank verse out of our asses to get through going up on something, I think anyone playing Mamet on Broadway should be able to whip out a couple of lines to move on if they are in the same bag (and I say this as an actual BIG FAN of Mamet at his best - which Speed-the-Plow is not nearly, but whatever - who thinks you HAVE to get Mamet's language and cadences WORD-FOR-WORD correct, dammit! -- but in the real world of theatre production, practicality always trumps purity).

So, yeah, I'm a lot more of the same opinion as Mike Daisey: "The industry narrative going forward, as it is in the article, is that Norman [sic] Leo Butz is a saint for taking on a gargantuan task and should be applauded in any event, regardless of the results. But looking at the timeline and the facts, I think this kind of performance shouldn't be acceptable at any professional theater."

I'm not proud of the situations I sometimes put actors in my shows in, due to lack of rehearsal time or, in the case of this past Summer, still writing scripts up to three days before opening. I don't like doing things this way. But I AM proud of the fact that the actors I work with can handle it, and make the jumps they need to, and get the job done, beautifully -- one actor took over a part in my play Spell VERY close to opening, less than two weeks away, and had to speak large stretches of English and Spanish (neither of which were his first, native language), and pulled it off JUST FINE. Little shakiness in some things, noticeable to me as writer but not to the audience, generally, but no script in hand.

I REALLY would like to agree with what Daisey calls "the industry narrative" -- I mean "Yay, Theatre! Yay, Theatre Actors!" is always a cheer I'm happy to join -- but, speaking as someone myself who has made the same kind of dangerous leap, and both somewhat succeeded and massively failed at it in the past (and seen dozens of other actors in the same boat), I can't sympathize with someone who isn't making that leap, when Item #1 on the job description is "Dare. Jump now."

Now, excuse me while I go back to learning the substantial part I'm playing in one of my August shows (or rather, re-learning, as I played this same part in 2001 but have no memory of the lines at all). I'm hoping to be off-book before the first rehearsal. Ha. Ha. Ha.

collisionwork: (mary worth)
Paul Julian was primarily a background artist for the Warner Bros cartoon studio from 1940-1951 (almost entirely, it seems, with director Friz Freleng's unit).

I knew the name from credits, but wouldn't have had the eye to pick out his specific work until this past week, when Joe Dante posted the 1964 short animated film The Hangman, which was designed by Julian (who also co-directed with MGM cartoon producer Les Goldman), at the Trailers from Hell site. I can now clearly pick out Julian's distinctive style when I see it, which I turned out to know already from several places.

First things first - The Hangman is an interesting little piece, now more so for Julian's design than for the content. It's a visualization of a poem by Maurice Ogden that is basically an expansion of Martin Niemöller's more direct and lovely verse "First They Came . . ." Ogden's piece is a pleasant bit of liberal art-tripe out to state a message rather than express a singular point-of-view. Very 50s-60s bourgeois-suburban-concerned (a point-of-view I poke a lot of fun at, but at the same time greatly respect, as I believe it is, in the long run, responsible for a great deal of positive social change -- it's just so damned EARNEST and soppily WELL-MEANING! -- we could really use an equivalent social stratum today . . .).

Julian's design of the filmed poem elevates it several steps (as does the fine narration done of it by the great - and formerly blacklisted - Herschel Bernardi) into true horror and dread. Very limited animation used very well, and a lot more entertaining than the majority of what was being done in the USA in the name of "serious, adult" animation in the 50s-60s.

The print of The Hangman on the Trailers from Hell site is excellent, but unfortunately will only be up there temporarily (if it isn't already gone by the time you read this). It can also be seen on YouTube HERE, in a version stretched horizontally and tinted towards the blue, but with some proper color balance still present, and HERE, in proper aspect ratio but in a massively faded-to-red copy (which is probably closest to how several decades-worth of grade school students have seen it in old Eastmancolor 16mm prints). Ick. Worth watching anyway.

At the Trailers from Hell site, it is mentioned that Julian did the animated titles for several AIP films by Roger Corman. He's only credited with the work on Dementia 13, Attack of the Crab Monsters, The Terror, and Not of this Earth, but I'm pretty positive he also did the titles for Gunslinger and Swamp Women (aka Swamp Diamonds), which I know well from their MST3K versions (and which both also star the great, late, lamented Beverly Garland). UPDATE 5/3/10: Just checked back and many of the links in this are dead. I've replaced what I could, but while I found a BETTER, if still red, version of The Hangman, the Swamp Women titles now look pretty awful, and the Gunslinger titles start almost 8 minutes in at the link -- I've added links to the other Corman films as well, which also all start several minutes into the clips, and mostly look awful, sorry)

Some of the drawing in the Gunslinger titles doesn't look at all like his work, but most does, so it may have been a collaboration. These aren't exactly the greatest of films by Corman, but I've always been impressed that he thought enough of even his dopiest films to try and make at least some of the aspects of the production (titles, music, acting and screenwriting when possible) above-average for these sub-B-pictures. You don't hire someone like Julian to do titles for your movie unless you are somewhat serious about what you're doing.

Looking just at this later work by Julian, you wouldn't think "Warner Bros cartoons," and yet if you go back and look at his backgrounds for Freleng you will definitely see his distinctive style there (in his book on Bugs Bunny, Joe Adamson compares the painted skies by Julian in Bugs Bunny Rides Again to Turner, which would seem hysterically laughable until you look closely at the film and realize he has a point).

Even in something like Baseball Bugs, his line and color palette is recognizable. There's a lot of background jokes in this cartoon as well, not only the traditional use of names from around the studio, but there's also two billboards for "Filboid Studge" in the baseball stadium, which is a reference to a short story by Saki (H.H. Munro) - was Julian responsible for this literary reference? I would assume so (it's also the story of a poor painter being taken advantage of by a rich capitalist . . .)



Oh, and Julian was also the voice of the Road Runner - "Beep, beep!" as normally written, though it sounds more like "Meep, meep!" - which came from his warning sound to others as he ran down corridors at the studio.

After leaving Warners, Julian worked for UPA, the legendary studio founded in the wake of the 1941 Disney strike by a number of left-leaning animators, where a great deal of groundbreaking work was created that today seems important, gorgeous, and mostly pretty boring and unfunny (much of it wasn't meant to be funny, but the stuff that was wasn't either).

For me, UPA's high point (and yes, I know some could convincingly argue for Gerald McBoingBoing) is their famous 1954 version of Poe's The Tell-Tale Heart, created after HUAC had pressured the studio to get rid of many of the "Reds" on their staff, including John Hubley (who went off and made some visually-beautiful, well-meaning, deeply boring and dated films such as The Hole, Moonbird, and the insufferable Cockaboody), Phil Eastman - aka children's book author P.D. Eastman (who had formerly worked at Warner Bros with Ted "Dr. Seuss" Geisel on the Private Snafu cartoons) - and writer/voice artist Bill Scott (later the co-creator and voice of Bullwinkle).

Julian seems to have picked up the slack at UPA, designing the Poe film as a precursor to The Hangman with maybe a hair more style and a hair less dread:



Julian's style can also be seen in an earlier, 1930s WPA-commissioned mural he painted in the Fullerton, CA post office -- or is it the 30s, WPA mural-style that can be seen in the rest of his work? What came from the time and what from his training? -- he studied at Chouinard Art Institute, a precursor to CalArts; I knew CalArts was always big in animation, but I didn't realize that its history in animation went back so far as to include some of the biggest first-wave names at Disney and Warner Bros.

Looking back at all this, I keep wondering about where the contemporary equivalent is today, or if there even is one. UPA was created as an alternative to Disney - which, as much as other American animation studios of the 20th Century are now known and respected, at the time was The Biggest Game In Town By Far, the one that set the standard, that everyone looked at and reacted to. Other studios didn't "do" Disney only because they didn't have the resources, until UPA came along and did something new because they wanted to.

Today, while there are many contrary voices in animation (animator and animation historian John Kricfalusi being the best), the contrariness is centered on the idea that the major creators today aren't doing their jobs as well as in the past, and the ideal style would seem to be some kind of mixture of all the best principles of the major 20th Century animation studios (including UPA). But what about the artistic "other?"

I know where it is in theatre, and in some of the other arts, but where's that voice in American animation today that quietly works and says with the work, "There are other possibilities"? Where would a Paul Julian fit in today?

collisionwork: (Selector)
My friend Sean Rockoff sent me a link to a recent performance by The Damned on the Craig Ferguson show that I hadn't seen.

He remarked on lead singer Dave Vanian, who once "looked like what all the current crop of vampire-kiddies don't even know they're aspiring to -- an undead Elvis. The coolest thing to ever walk the earth, again."

And if you don't know what that look was, here's The Damned lip-syncing to their classic track "Video Nasty" on The Young Ones in 1984:


Sean remarked that Vanian is now a dead ringer for classic Hollywood character actor Lionel Atwill.

Well, damned if he isn't!

I have to say, if you're getting too old to be a young, cool, undead-Elvis punker, and want to keep your Gothic-horror image going, I'm not sure you could do better than the path Dave Vanian's decided to take. Here's the still-great Damned from a few months ago:



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