collisionwork: (lost highway)
Luckily, it wasn't MY car.

I've been working 13-hour days getting the lights ready for Babylon Babylon - it's taken me a LOT longer than I expected to get them ready, as always happens when I have to do a considerable rehang on my own (I need to always multiply my estimated time x2 when a solo rehang is involved). Yesterday, I had to finish cabling, then focus all 28 lights being used in the show, which involved bringing up a light individually, running down the ladder from the booth, up the 12-foot ladder to the grid to focus (sometimes up and down several times as I adjusted my lighting "standins" - two extended mic stands with paper taped to the top) then back up the ladder to the booth. Repeat x 28. Big fun.

I probably looked pretty silly, too, as I had brought and was wearing my pyjama pants to work in, but no one else was going to be there, and it made it a lot more comfortable.

The show itself is still coming together, and is almost there. There are previews tomorrow night (which will be rough, but it needs an audience to move forward) and next Thursday (which should be fine and slick) before opening a week from tonight. I still have to go in and finish writing the cues, and make the fixes from what I saw last night. I'll try and take some pictures of the run tonight to share.

Oh, right, pictures! That's what I started the story about. So anyway, I was up on the ladder, focusing, when there was a car horn honking out in front that got more and more insistent, then just held down and wouldn't stop. I stomped down the ladder, and for some reason had the idea that it was our landlord honking - he's never done that, so I don't know why I thought this, but when I'm parked in the "free" space in front of The Brick sometimes (it's a former driveway, so there's no meter there, and you can stay there all day without paying or getting a ticket), he will come in and order me to move so he can have "his" spot for his big green Expedition - Berit always gets angry about this ("It's NOT his spot!"), and it's a pain, but well, he's the landlord. Best to stay friendly.

So I open the front door of The Brick and find myself looking at the landlord's car right in front, the alarm going off, with constant honk, lights flashing, and wipers going, and a GIANT plume of fire coming through a hole in the hood that it has obviously burned through. Impressive.

So I ran back inside and to the rear of the theatre (I know that, Hollywood notwithstanding, cars generally don't blow up, but seeing that much fire coming from one is unnerving) and called the FDNY. Someone probably got them before me, because almost immediately after, I could hear the hoses going, and thought it was safe to grab my camera . . .

Burning Car - Medium

Wish I'd gotten some with the actual fire, but oh well . . .
Burning Car - Close

I feel bad for the landlord, but at the same time there's that evil part of me with the tiny inward grin remembering all the times I was in the middle of a good rehearsal process and was interrupted with the yell that I had to move my vehicle, NOW! I told a couple of people about the past incidents and they shrugged and said "Karma."

(Berit, with a big "comic" take, called it "car-ma." ugh.)

So, back to the theatre, but first, todays random ten and cats - from the iPod today:

1. "Weird Nightmare" - Elvis Costello et al. - Weird Nightmare: Meditations on Mingus
2. "Where the Wolf Bane Blooms" - The Nomads - Children of Nuggets: Original ARTyfacts from the Second Psychedelic Era - 1976-1996
3. "Tear It On Down" - Martha Reeves & The Vandellas - Black Magic
4. "Brick Is Red" - Pixies - Surfer Rosa
5. "Life of Crime" - The Flatmates - Love and Death (The Flatmates 86-89)
6. "Ambiguity Song" - Camper Van Beethoven - Telephone Free Landslide Victory
7. "Power" - John Oswald (Deep Zen Pill with Brother Bam Shock) - 69 Plunderphonics 96
8. "Nice 'n' Easy" - Frank Sinatra - The Capitol Collectors Series
9. "Oil Gusher" - The Raymond Scott Project - Powerhouse volume 1
10. "Sexy Trash" - Electric Six - I Shall Exterminate Everything Around Me That Restricts Me From Being The Master

Wasn't able to take any new cat pictures with everything going on this week, but I have a couple sitting around that weren't the best from past weeks. Here's a nice pudgy Hooker-cat on a shelf, wishing I'd stop bothering him:

Hooker the Pudgepot

And with Moni on a chair, almost in their Yin-Yang Kitty pose:
Yin-Yang Kitties

Tomorrow morning, we have the first meeting/work session for Spell. Sunday, rehearsal for Penny Dreadful in the early morning and The Magnificent Ambersons in the evening.

I'm tired, but it's a GOOD tired.

Mixed Bag

Apr. 7th, 2008 05:26 pm
collisionwork: (vile foamy liquids)
Various and sundry:

The video and synopsis for the episode I directed of Bryan Enk and Matt Gray's Penny Dreadful is now online at this page HERE. If you don't know the story so far, it'd be best to go back and read the detailed synopses of the previous four episodes. Better yet, take the time and watch the really great videos.

Nice to see this record - I was stuck up in the booth so I couldn't really get a good view of the show - some great acting work here that I was only able to hope was happening - Becky Byers and Bryan Enk both shine in the close-ups. Dina did as good as job as I think could be done in taping this one (there are bits from both performances we did in the video, two different camera setups), but unfortunately due to staging and audience placement, this one winds up being not as good a video as the previous episodes - much more like a standard record-of-a-performance video than the others, which came out so surprisingly well. Oh well, the show's there.

Unfortunately, I've only been able to watch it without sound as yet - the computer I'm on up here has no sound, for some arcane reason, so I don't know how that worked out. I can check it on another computer when I sign off here.

Three excellent posts on the late Charlton Heston from Glenn Kenny, The Self-Styled Siren, and Mark Evanier - I especially like this quote from the last:

Mr. Heston's politics were not mine but I see no reason to believe they were anything but earnest on his part. People do change as they get older. I think the reason he so irked some was not that he "demagogued" but that he was the kind of speaker who sounds like he's demagoguing if he's ordering a tuna melt. Even if you didn't have in mind the image of him as Moses, he had a way of sounding like everything he uttered was chiselled onto stone tablets. It's what made him compelling as an actor, at least in certain roles...and made him seem uncommonly arrogant if he voiced a worldview you found questionable.

I really don't entirely agree with the philosophy behind this, but the man asked for it -- Uwe Boll was made aware of the fact that there is an internet petition up demanding that he stop making terrible TERRIBLE movies. He laughed at the fact that there were only about 18,000 signatures on it, and said that he would only consider it if it got to a million.

The petition is HERE. It's now up to about 64,400 names. Fans of videogames, horror, and films in general may do as they see fit . . .

And finally, Patrick Stewart gives a lovely, sharp interview to someone from New York magazine and includes an apparently serious threat to kneecap her if he's quoted out of context. Don't fuck with Sejanus, lady (or Gurney Halleck, for that matter).

collisionwork: (philip guston)
Well, here I am in Portland, Maine again, after a long day.

Sunday started with a 9.30 am meeting at Martin Denton's place to record a podcast for nytheatrecast - me, Jeff Lewonczyk, and Jon Stancato discussing our work in creating theatre that comes in some way from film with moderator Trav S.D. It wound up being a pretty cool discussion, but we only had enough time to scratch the surface of the subject - as Trav noted, the four of us could have had a fine old time talking about this for hours.

I'll note it here when it's posted.

Well, the day had actually started much earlier by dragging myself out of bed and packing and trying to make sure I didn't forget anything I needed and saying goodbye to the partner and the cats, which is hard enough to do, even for two days. Actually gets harder each time this happens, which I wouldn't have expected once upon a time.

After the podcast, Jeff and I drove over to The Brick for Babylon Babylon rehearsal (and as Jon was rehearsing at The Battle Ranch, he crammed himself in Petey Plymouth as well, among the overflow of props that fill it, as usual - not comfortable, but convenient).

I was there to see a runthru and figure out the lights - they had to start with quite a bit of work, so I only got to see about 2/3rds of a run before they had to split, but that was enough to figure out the light plot and most of the cues. Turned out, to my relief, to be a lot simpler than I expected.

On the other hand, I was surprised to discover the time I should have them ready was a little sooner than I expected, so I have to rush back to The Brick for Tuesday night's rehearsal, do the light hang after their run, then write all the cues, or do that the following day so they can run with lights on Wednesday night. Tight, but doable.

The show looks great, too - Jeff may have to cut some things for pace reasons, which made me wince, as he'll be cutting some great stuff, but for the overall rhythm and feel of the show it's the right thing to do - as well as for keeping this intermissionless show under the 2-hour mark. I'll really miss some of the deletions, though.

Out of there and on the road at 5 pm. The drive up to Maine was half-pleasant, half-not - I'd decided to listen to my chronological Rolling Stones playlist on the iPod, and got from the first 1963 recordings to halfway through Exile on Main St. in the 5.5-hour trip - sometimes I just like listening to a band or artist's work pretty much in its entirety, from start to finish, seeing how the work developed over time (though this playlist is missing, for some reason, "Sympathy for the Devil" and the Rice Krispies commercial they did in the early 60s).

The Stones' songs got pretty dark, though, just as the sky did and a heavy rain started, and wound up making the rest of the trip pretty creepy - driving on a pitch-black highway through Lowell, Massachusetts, with rain smears making everything ahead of me blurry and uncertain, as "Gimme Shelter" played (very loud) was both a beautiful and unsettling experience (the whole great Let It Bleed album was actually top-drawer "music-to-make-you-feel-deep-forboding" scoring for that part of the trip - luckily Sticky Fingers made things quite a bit lighter right as I crossed into New Hampshire).

And now I'm here, and after having drowsiness problems at the wheel once darkness fell, I'm wide awake and bored. Usually, Berit and I get our surfing-the-zeitgeist TV fix up here, since we don't have it at home, but the only things even slightly bearable on now are two films on Turner Classic Movies - Murnau's Sunrise followed by Godard's Contempt - two movies I own on DVD and have watched many many times, and (being, respectively, a silent movie and in French) not the best films to have as "background noise." Fox Movie Channel is playing Russ Meyer & Roger Ebert's Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, but I'm not quite in the mood for that classic right now, I think.

Tomorrow, the joys of dental extraction.

Wait a minute . . . even though they listed it as "letterboxed," TCM is playing a very bad pan-and-scan print of Contempt, scratched and nasty-looking, with English titles . . . oh, jeez, and it's dubbed. Well, screw that, over to FMC for some Meyer/Ebert action . . .

collisionwork: (mystery man)
And another week done gone by.

Tonight, more Ambersons work.

Tomorrow, no work on shows, but off to a gallery opening of drawings by Ivy Dachman, my stepmother, in Pound Ridge, NY.

Sunday, watch a runthru of Babylon Babylon to figure out the lights, and more work on Everything Must Go in the evening.

Monday and Tuesday are nominally "off," but there's work I have to do on the lights for Babylon Babylon, and it looks like I need to see a dentist about pulling these last two wisdom teeth, one of which is giving me some problems - and figuring out if it will actually be cheaper for me to drive up to Maine and have the dentist I see up there do it rather than go someplace local (which seems to be the case, but I don't know if I can take off for two days at this point and deal with Babylon Babylon work).

So while I variously use what I have on hand to deal with the tooth pain (advil, vicodin, etodolac, single-malt scotch), a Friday Random Ten, from the 25,630 on the iPod:

1. "Your Generation" - Generation X - D.I.Y.: Anarchy in the UK - UK Punk I (1976-77)
2. "Editions of You" - Roxy Music - For Your Pleasure
3. "When Under Ether" - PJ Harvey - White Chalk
4. "It Ain't Me Babe" - Johnny Cash & June Carter - Man in Black 1963-69
5. "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" - Bob Dylan - Blonde on Blonde
6. "Mirror Freak" - Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel - The Human Menagerie
7. "Copy" - Plastics - Welcome Plastics
8. "Enthusiastic" - David Thomas - More Places Forever
9. "Lone Soul Road" - Sainte Anthony's Fyre - Sainte Anthony's Fyre
10. "Feel the Pain" - One of Hours - Diggin' For Gold - Vol. 10: A Collection of Demented 60's R&B/Punk & Mesmerizing 60's Pop

That was a great Randomosity to get me pepped up and less-miserable (I have to try and remember that "Editions of You" can always make me happy-peppy whenever I need it)!

And here's the Friday Cat Photos -- Hooker resenting me bugging him this morning while he's trying to take a nap on one of Berit's clothes shelves:
Hooker, Shelved

Moni resenting Berit trying to hold her still this morning for a nice picture for the blog:
Berit Holds Moni Still

And the two of them, beyond resentment, having a nice nap together last night:
Peace on the Chair

Finally, two pieces of video humor. First, a silent piece of Flash animation imagining a phone conversation between a couple of pop stars:

P Diddy Calls Bjork About a Duet )



And this was apparently all over the net a few days ago, but it wasn't anywhere I saw it immediately, so maybe you missed it, too - a side of the Muppets I'd never seen before:

Beaker Sings Something Different )


(more info on this can be found HERE, if you need it)

Favorite quote from elsewhere today -- Warren Ellis and Ben Templesmith have an idea while chatting on Twitter (as reported on Ellis' site):

templesmith: I want Ray Winstone & Ian McShane in an hour long tv show where all they do is sit in a room & discuss how to kill ppl with cockney accents

warrenellis: we must write that show. Call your agents. It could be called THOSE BASTARDS.

templesmith: SOLD sir.

Back to work . . .

collisionwork: (vile foamy liquids)
Various things seen and done . . .

First reading last night of Richard Foreman's Harry in Love: A Manic Vaudeville, for my August production, with the comparatively small cast of six. Went well, and the cast is damned good and has a good time mixing outside of the work as well. Some fine single-malt scotch was poured at the intermission break (thanks, Josephine!) and we had a well-lubricated time. Amazingly, the reading lasted one hour and 47 minutes -- when we originally performed the show, it ran two hours and 50 minutes, plus two intermissions. WAY too long, but we were doing the premiere production, so I felt we should do the complete play. Foreman's first comment (besides thanking me for the production) was that if I ever did it again, I should cut it, so I did. I cut 25 pages, which was less than I had hoped to, but they must have been the right 25 pages, because I certainly didn't expect to lose an hour with that - but I'm glad I did. It'll run a bit longer in performance, with business and so forth, but not too much longer (plus one intermission). A good length.

Another image from the Modern Mechanix blog with a headline that caused some hilarity around this home:

Zeppelin on World Tour

The hilarity was actually more from the fact that the moment Berit and I saw it, we began singing the intro to "The Immigrant Song" together without a pause.

Here's the video trailer for the Piper McKenzie production Babylon Babylon, opening soon at The Brick, which I'm lighting (and I appear briefly in the first minute of this trailer):

On The Developmental Process )



There's also a blog for the show, HERE.

Jules Dassin, one of my favorite noir directors, has died at the age of 96. I've written enough obits recently, and plenty of people are paying tribute to this great filmmaker, so I won't go on about him too much.

He has been known best for many years for his later films Rififi and Topkapi. With the increased interest in noir (and fine rereleases from The Criterion Collection) the four great noirs he made, one a year, from 1947-1950, Brute Force, The Naked City, Thieves' Highway, and Night and the City, are now regarded as the best of his works. They are all essential noirs, and if you haven't seen them, I can't recommend them enough.

Consumer news: The new Region 1 DVD of Lynch's Lost Highway is pretty crappy and inferior to recent editions from France, England, and Germany - if you have a region-free player, go for one of those (I have the German edition, which is bare-bones and quite cheap, if you can find it).

Also, I'm making my way through the Complete Monty Python's Flying Circus 16-Ton Megaset DVD box set, and, besides looking better than I've ever seen them, the episodes are turning out to be more complete than I've ever seen them before -- I've watched every episode multiple times, on PBS, cable channels, VHS tape, laserdisk, and earlier DVD editions, I practically know them all by heart, and this new set has little bits and pieces throughout that have been sliced from the episodes for years. It's kinda weird (but great!) seeing these episodes for the umpteenth time and seeing new bits (and entire sketches!) that are brand-new to me.

Sean Rockoff told me that when he saw MPFC on channel 13 back in the 70s when they first ran it, there were still some Gilliam animations in a few episodes that have always been cut since (and I've read about them elsewhere) -- I'm expecting to see them show up when those episodes come around.

UPDATE: Nope. The three edited animation segments were still edited, even though lots of other little bits and pieces I've never seen before keep showing up (fewer and fewer as the series goes on). And while I'm glad to see all these pieces restored, it turns out that there's some other cuts/replacements as well - apparently for music rights issues (though for some reason, Graham Chapman's rendition of "Girl from Ipanema" in one episode is dubbed over with "I Dream of Jeannie With The Light Brown Hair," but is left in when sung by Cleese and Chapman in another).

I DID finally find one of the cut animation segments on YouTube, and here it is:

A Bad Connection on Line 422 )



We've wound up with a night off we didn't expect. More Python and ordering in take-out. Nice.

collisionwork: (Laura's Angel)
I had been thinking of posting some cute funny videos today, when I opened up the Times Arts section in my blogreader and was hit in the face by an obit headline for Paul Arthur.

That Times obit is HERE.

Paul was a Cinema Studies teacher at NYU/Tisch School of the Arts during my first two years there. I had two classes with him and spent a lot of time in discussion with him after his lectures. He was a terrific teacher and lecturer, a funny guy, who loved loved loved film and loved to talk film. I used to occasionally run into him at film screenings in the late 80s, after he left NYU - he always seemed to be present at any screening of films by George and Mike Kuchar, as I also was at that time, so we'd say hi and check in. I probably last saw him around 1990, but I've never since seen his name in print, on an article or mentioned in passing, without smiling and thinking fondly of him.

He was the lecturer in my first Cinema Studies class, the basic class that all students in the Cinema Studies and Film Production departments had to take (I was in the latter). He showed a mix of classic Hollywood, some foreign films, short subjects, and experimental films, and it was the last that especially caused him to be either endeared or hated by his students - mainly, the freshmen Film Production students, my classmates, who turned out to be some of the most closed-minded people around when it came to film.

This was late 1986. That doesn't seem like such a great time for film, maybe, but in my first term at NYU the films playing in New York that many of us students were running to see included Wenders' Wings of Desire, Cox's Sid & Nancy, Jarmusch's Down By Law, Laurie Anderson's Home of the Brave, David Byrne's True Stories, X: The Unheard Music, Lech Kowalski's D.O.A. (which apparently was from 1980, but it seemed to be getting some kind of "big release" again that term, taking over at the Bleecker Street Playhouse after Wings had left), and, of course, Blue Velvet. As well as the many many great double bills going on at all of the rep houses around NYU (there were more than there were first-run houses in the Village at that time, with Cinema Village, Film Forum, Thalia Soho, and Theatre 80 St. Marks all going strong, and the Waverly and Bleecker Street also joining in with midnight shows).

Now, besides the early negative reaction to some of what Paul Arthur was sharing, the other sign that many of my classmates were rather conservative when it came to new experiences in the filmic arts was how many of them just plain despised the Lynch film, and wanted everybody to know this, in as many classes as they could find a way to bring it up. It became apparent that while some of us were rushing out to see the films above, many of my classmates were having a fine time at other things that year like Ruthless People or Down and Out in Beverly Hills or Platoon or Ferris Bueller's Day Off or Aliens - some of which I really really like, but . . .

So, Paul showed a mix of things. At our first lecture, he showed Douglas Sirk's All That Heaven Allows as an example of how a big, glossy Hollywood entertainment could actually have a lot going on on many levels. He also started the lecture by pulling out a reel of 35mm movie film he had found discarded on the street, and encouraging us to come down at the break or after class and touch it, grab it, rip a piece of it off and take it home, taste it - saying that you couldn't really understand and love film unless you understood and loved the actual physicality of film, the actual strip that moves through a projector (to feel, as Tim Lucas once called it in another context, "the emotion of the emulsion"). I wound it in my hands and tore off a strip with deliberate brutality; I think I still have it in a box somewhere (it appears to be nature footage of a turtle crawling through grass). I think he showed an experimental short before the Sirk, but nothing that caused anything but bemusement in the majority of students (wait a minute, I just remembered - it was Stan Brakhage's Mothlight! - and he showed it twice because it's so short).

That changed the following week.

Before the feature on week two, Paul showed a short film by Peter Kubelka, and noted that we were going to see most of Kubelka's films over the course of the term - as he had made so few films, and most of them were very short, it would give us the chance to see almost all of one filmmaker's work, as well as the variety of other films we'd be seeing.

He then showed us Kubelka's film Arnulf Rainer. Now, Kubelka was commissioned to make a film about the painter, however, as was apparently the pattern in his career with almost all of his films, he got the money and commission by swearing he wasn't going to go off and do another abstract film, and then he went off and did another abstract film.

Arnulf Rainer consists of black leader, clear leader, white noise, and silence, cut into precise metric patterns (I believe the pattern in the sound is the reverse of the pattern in the images). Amazingly to me, someone has actually put it up on YouTube, though it's a pretty lousy print and copy (and there's absolutely no way that can replicate the sensory experience of seeing this projected on film on a great big screen, which is really the point of the piece):

Peter Kubelka's ARNULF RAINER )



Well, that didn't go over too well with the film students who wanted to be watching something a little more plot-driven (and Paul showed this one twice in a row, too, to audible groans). The fact that even if you don't like the Kubelka, you could learn something from it didn't occur to many of them - at a pure, basic level, it can teach you how suspense can be built through editing with nothing but black and white as images ("wait a minute, the screen's gone black for a while now - will the white come back? AH! There it is!").

Excerpts from some emails this morning to and from friend since 1986, and roommate 1986-1988, Sean Rockoff, who took Paul's intro course one year after me:

ME: . . . I remember you got Rear Window at your first class, and I'm trying to remember whether he showed Duck Amuck with that or not (I know that he showed that cartoon to both of our classes, and one of us got it before Citizen Kane, but I'm not sure which one of us it was).

I also remember he left halfway through the term while you were taking his course, and there seemed to be the feeling it was because he was being asked to dumb down his course for the film production students.


SEAN: . . . I know I got to see Duck Amuck in his class, and before I read the rest of your sentence I'd recalled it being paired with Citizen Kane, but I don't remember seeing Kane in the class. So I'm either remembering you telling me about it, or I've seen Kane so many times I just don't remember that specific one. Or, we both had the experience.

I do remember most of the class seemed to have an antagonistic relationship with his ideas of film as art (and he occasionally got angry with them as well). He tried to get across, in a frightfully short period of time, all the various concepts film could carry and all the different ways one could see and read any particular piece of film, and most of the class seemed to be there to learn how to make a commercial three-act movie. Not that there's necessarily anything wrong with that, but they refused to see any value at all in Arthur's not-exactly-revolutionary view that film could be so much more, and as students we should be exposed to as many different and challenging examples as possible. This reached a peak when we saw

Wavelength; there was very nearly a riot. I loved it, but the near-constant catcalls added a level to the soundtrack I don't believe was intended.

Of course, all those kids who saw absolutely no value in

Wavelength, being forced to watch it, any of society's resources being expended in archiving it, that the filmmaker was allowed to breathe the planet's air while making it, those kids are probably all making small fortunes producing sitcoms, and here I am, er, not. Still trying to raise funds to shoot a romantic comedy entirely on Reese's Peanut Butter Cups.

It wouldn't surprise me at all if he left because he was asked to dumb down the course, in response to complaints from those very students.


ME: Thanks - I'll include some of your thoughts in the post (your second paragraph puts a lot of what I was hoping to say together in a pithier way than I probably would).

Yeah, I think you got Duck Amuck with Rear Window at your first class, and I got the Jones cartoon with Kane halfway through the term - and we both got a riot during Wavelength (though I recall mine from the year before being more violent - people were throwing things at the screen and in the air by the end).

I remember Harry Elfont posting two pieces of photo paper on the wall in the first term 35mm photo class (where you and I met) - one unexposed and white, one exposed to full black, and saying it was a tribute to Peter Kubelka . . . which wound up becoming a mocking discussion of experimental film and Paul's "pretensions" from the class (in which, I'm sorry to say, Daniel Kazimierski

[Sean's and my teacher] joined in), and which made me want to rabbit punch our classmates in their respective necks.

Of course, as you basically note, Harry Elfont is now off in Hollywood making the candy-colored happythings he always planned on and we've got integrity and not much else. I think I've reached a state of peace about that at least.


SEAN: No Commercial Potential! The Present-Day Formalist Refuses To Die!

(I should note, in fairness, that Harry Elfont was always a really nice guy and I enjoy some of his candy-colored happythings a lot - and the photo paper joke was actually pretty funny, even if the feeling behind it wasn't)

And, yes, as mentioned above, about three-quarters of the way through the term Paul showed us Michael Snow's classic 1967 film Wavelength.

If you don't know the film, you can follow the wikipedia link in the previous sentence, or go HERE for more info, though there's some inaccurate information in both descriptions (the latter page also seems to include multiple clips from the film - only one of which I could get to work). Sorry, but I'll also have to describe it at some length to have some context for the reaction of Paul's class to it.

Basically, the film consists of "one shot" (which is really many many shots, broken up, shot on different days with different film stocks, exposures, and filters) - 45 minutes long - starting with a wide shot from across an 80 foot-long loft on Canal Street towards the wall and windows opposite:
from Wavelength by Michael Snow

Gradually, the frame moves across the length of the loft, coming in closer and closer to a picture on the wall, which was just barely a dot in the opening frame. Over the course of the move (some of which is done with a zoom, some with new camera placement) there are four "human events" which occur - two workmen bring in a bookcase and put it against a wall; two women enter, turn on a radio and listen to it ("Strawberry Fields Forever" - which I just realized had to have been deliberately put in later, as it wasn't released at the time the film was shot - I always figured it was what was actually on the radio), then leave; a man (filmmaker and theorist Hollis Frampton) enters in distress and falls on the floor, apparently dead; and a nervous woman enters and calls "Richard" on the phone to tell him about the (now unseen) dead body on the floor - she is played by critic Amy Taubin, who was married at the time to Richard Foreman, who (FUN FACT) told me personally that yes, he's on the other end of that phone call.
also from Wavelength by Michael Snow

The camera keeps moving. Night has fallen. Images are overlaid, repeated. The whole things is scored with the sound of an electrical tone - a wavelength - rising and falling, in pitch and volume, from almost inaudible to earsplitting. Eventually the frame reaches the other wall where (SPOILER ALERT!) the photograph fills the frame entirely - it is a photo of waves crashing on a beach that we have traveled the length of the loft to look at.

9:55 from near the end of Michael Snow's WAVELENGTH )



Okay. This isn't a film for everybody. I am aware of that. I completely understand why many, maybe most, people would be bored stupid by this. Fine. But I'd have thought a group of NYU film students would maybe be a tad more open-minded.

I had first seen Wavelength two years prior, when it was shown in a film class at my boarding school. I wasn't in the class, as I was a Junior and the class was only open to Seniors, but I was friendly with the teachers and they let me watch it as I had heard of it, was fascinated by the idea of it, and really wanted to see it. I sat through two classes and watched it twice in one day, loving it. And in fact, the students in the class all appreciated it as well, and it played great. The teachers were playing it in conjunction with two films they were showing in the course proper that they felt were referencing it in their respective final shots; The Passenger and The Shining. I think the comparison to the Antonioni film is dicey and pushing it, but once you've seen Wavelength next to the final shot of the Kubrick film it's pretty clear that Stanley was aware of the earlier film (especially in the way that once the photo in each film fills the frame, there are several slow dissolves to details of the photo).

So a bunch of Massachusetts boarding school students looking to get an easy grade by taking a film class as an elective Senior English class all liked the film. How about some NYU film students?

By 10 minutes in they were audibly upset. By 15 minutes in they were yelling sparsely. By 30 minutes the walkouts started, often accompanied by cries of "Bullshit!" Then things started being thrown at the screen (which was just a big concave concrete wall painted white in this basement lecture hall) - some empty coffee cups, a cup of ice, and a number of shoes and notebooks. Crumpled paper flew through the air. People started yelling nonsense sounds in a "la-la-la-la-can't-hear-you" manner.

The film ended and most of the audience walked out and didn't come back after the break. Some did and yelled at Paul during the discussion period ("That was just masturbation!"). After that and the class was over, I went down to talk to Paul (as a number of us always did at the end of class - we'd all usually wind up walking out of the building and on to 4th Street together, still talking over the evening's viewing). He was a bit stunned, and very disappointed, but it also seemed he was kind of amazed and pleased, with a glint in his eye, that a film - a film, for chrissakes, and one made almost 20 years ago at that point, a classic of the avant-garde, even quaint in 1986 - could cause such a visceral, violent reaction. There was something of joy in how we all felt - those who loved the film - that somehow this really really showed how powerful a film could be. It made you love the medium even more.

When I ran into Paul in the years after at the Collective or Millennium or where ever, he'd always take a moment to try and remember where he knew me from, and eventually get it with a smile: "Right, you were there at the Wavelength riot!"

As alluded to above, there were rumors around the school that Paul was being pressured to simplify his course and be a little less extreme in his film choices, for the sake of the poor delicate film production students - I have NO idea how true this was, but I do remember, even if he doesn't, Sean's account from the time of Paul's final lecture, where he said a few words about the film, a few words about teaching, then said, with some bitterness, "Well, that's that" and walked out of the lecture hall as the film started, never to come back.

But there were some of us who appreciated Paul Arthur, certainly, at that time and place. He helped me understand the JOY of film - of making, watching, appreciating, writing about, whatever, film with a great love of it in your heart, never distanced from it, never critical without empathy, never sneering at passion. His class also introduced me to Renoir's Rules of the Game and Wyler's The Best Years of Our Lives, as well as Peter Kubelka and Hans Richter's Ghosts Before Breakfast, for which I'll always be grateful.

I will miss the feeling I got when seeing his byline on a new piece in some film journal, and smiling, and remembering him. I'm glad I knew him when and where I did.

UPDATE: There is also a lovely classified notice from his family in the Times HERE - being from those who knew and loved him best, it captures the man I knew far better than I could. I had intended to describe Paul as "bearlike" at some point above and forgot, so I'm glad to see the bear listed here as his "talismanic animal." Extremely appropriate.

collisionwork: (philip guston)
Good screening of Ambersons for cast and friends last night. Having done a first reading of the full, original Welles version, the cast members were somewhat aware of what was shortened, cut, or reshot, and I could hear and see the small, angry, disgusted reactions around me - when it ended, someone, I think Natalie Wilder (who's playing Mrs. Johnson), called out "Bring on the boarding house scene!" - referring to the beautiful original final scene of the movie replaced by the awful hospital scene. I was a little surprised that the scene that everyone noticed was cut and was upset about was Major Amberson's final monologue before his death (which is faded to black about halfway through the uncut length) - nice to see that scene makes an impression.

Good discussions all around, and much appreciation of the fine acting in the film - except, as always for the performance of Tim Holt as George Amberson Minifer, which always splits people into those that love it or hate it (I think it's a fine performance by a good actor of a character that needs to be both horrible and likable at the same time - an almost impossible line to walk, which can only be done through casting a naturally likable actor in the part, and Tim Holt is a cold cold actor who does a great job of playing a real shit).

Tonight, more work on Everything Must Go. It's usually been a rule of mine for years now to always avoid rehearsing on Friday-Saturday-Sunday-Monday evenings, but with all these shows and the actor conflicts, there's no way to make that work this year.

from LP Cover Lover, again:

The White Family

collisionwork: (prisoner)
Last night's rehearsal went great. {phew}

I wound up with only four actors plus myself, but we set up the basic set, played the music, I described what ideas I had at that point, and immediately new, good ones began appearing, as the piece began to come clear.

Good discussions with the actors as well, and I'll have to be on my toes and keep up with them. I had planned one scene that took place out of the office setting where the rest of the show takes place, but had always been disturbed by leaving the setting for just the one scene - I figured it would work anyway, as the sequence is kind of a big, exciting, flashy one. I got called on that by an actor last night, who noted the structure and feel of the piece seems to demand the unity of staying in the office the whole time. And, yeah, he's right. So I have to rethink that scene. Dammit. The assembled came up with several good suggestions for that, but just starts in the right direction, no solutions.

My nerves have pretty much abated on this show - it opens way off on July 30, and in a few hours last night, I solved maybe half of the confusion in myself about what was going to happen in the "blank spaces." I also discovered I need to find two more songs to put in to make transitions work, and one other song I have in there may not work.

Now I'll see if I still have all the actors I thought I had for this show. I could do it with the ones I know I have now, but it's a bit heavy on the female side onstage right now, and that doesn't work right for this show.

25,597 tracks in the iPod - here's a Random Ten for this morning:

1. "Blue Velvet #1" - WFMU - station promos
2. "Fotomodelle" - Piero Umiliani - Svezia, Inferno e Paradiso
3. "I'm Gonna Dance All Night" - The Equals - First Among Equals - The Greatest Hits
4. "Walking Down Madison" - Kirsty MacColl - Galore
5. "Fiabla Bolero" - Franco Ferrara - Music Scene: Musica Per Radio - Televisione - Films
6. "Satellite of Love" - Lou Reed - Transformer
7. "Let's Go Away for a Mashup" - Totom - Bastard Pet Sounds
8. "Code Monkey" - Jonathan Coulton - Thing a Week Three
9. "Sequenza Psichedelica" - Piero Umiliani - Svezia, Inferno e Paradiso
10. "Crazy Sally-Ann" - Sit N' Spin - Enjoy The Ride

What th-? Real random, iPod. Two tracks from the same 60s Italian movie soundtrack? (which I think is some kind of softcore "study" of Sweden) Well, I guess that will happen on random.

And in the land of cat photos, here's Hooker and Moni curled up together last week . . .

Pile O'Kitties

And here's one from the last half-hour - Hooker has been sweetly curled up against and around my feet since I got up and got on the couch and computer, purring and making happy grunty noises and mushing his forehead into my toes. So I grabbed the camera to try and get a record of how adorable he was and can be. He stopped being adorable the moment after I took this and took a big chomp into my foot. Ow. I think you may be able to see the transition happening here from sweetness to BAD KITTY . . .

About To Chomp

Tonight, we show The Magnificent Ambersons (final 88-minute version, of course) on the big big screen at The Brick for cast members and friends who want to come by (if you're in the latter group and I neglected to email you, let me know). Tomorrow, more making stuff up on Everything Must Go. Looking good.

It Starts

Mar. 27th, 2008 12:19 pm
collisionwork: (red room)
Last night I went over to The Brick to see a bit of a rehearsal of Babylon Babylon, which I'm now designing the lights for (original designer couldn't do it).

I need to see a few more rehearsals to figure out how to make it work - I can do it with the instruments we have, sure, but I need to really buckle down on what to put where - can't be wasteful at all with instruments on this. The Brick is pretty much all opened up, with rows of seats against the walls, as Frank Cwiklik did with Bitch Macbeth in January.

Babylon Babylon in rehearsal

There's a low central platform, a big stairs/dais piece (the "holy ground") at one end (with projection screen to be bisecting it) and 16 small areas where people have a kind of "home base." Jeff tells me there's really just about 8 real areas to deal with isolating, which helps. I have 26 source-4s (two with I-Cues, two with color scrollers), with 3 others that are broken but fixable (I have the parts), 1 PAR can, two working birdies on floor stands (maybe another one or two fixable), another floor stand for the PAR or a source-4 (and I can always make more if I need them), and basically 31 dimmers (+1 for the house lights). I can make it look good, I'm sure, but I need to see how the whole show moves before I figure out how.

Babylon Babylon in rehearsal 2

23 out of the 32 listed cast members were there last night, including many friends and frequent collaborators. It'll be fun coming by to these rehearsals and seeing everyone without having to direct them or act with them for once.

So tonight is a first meeting for one of my August shows, Everything Must Go (Invisible Republic #2).

This show is to be "a play with and in dance," and is being built around the actors, so I don't have very much to it yet. A vague structure and setting, some visual, scenic, and choreographic ideas, and the characters I think the 13 actors will be playing -- assuming I have all 13 actors - some haven't replied or said anything to me since agreeing - sometimes vaguely - to do the show. Tonight I'm expecting 8, maybe 9 of the actors. Maybe. I'll see who shows.

I think the show will be about 75-95 minutes long, in one act, in two defined parts that take place in the advertising agency setting - either two days or one day split in half by lunch. I hope I don't lose any more actors (and I keep the one who's still checking schedule to see if she can do it).

Oh, and I have some music for this. Probably most or all of it, some may be added, some may be dropped. I like these songs basically for their sound, the way I feel movement flowing to them, and the emotional rise and fall of the action in the show as a whole as I see it - the only problem is that they are songs, with lyrics, and while the intensity and feel of the song as a whole is exactly what I'm looking for, sometimes the words are distracting, and would seem to impart meanings to the scenes they're intended for that aren't supposed to be there.

But I don't have anything better as yet for those scenes, so these songs will stay until anything better comes up (unlikely). I spent some of the morning burning CDs of the music to be able to give to the cast tonight. Here's what's on them:

PRESHOW:
1. "Anthology" - The Kay Gees
2. "Listen to the Band" - The Monkees

SHOW, part 1 (morning to afternoon, or maybe day one; I don't know yet):
3. "Jimmy Carter" - Electric Six
4. "Slug" - Passengers
5. "Down at McDonnelzz" - Electric Six
6. "Dry Bones" - The Four Lads
7. "Laughing" - Pere Ubu
8. "Transylvanian Concubine" - Rasputina
9. "Shannon Stone (mashup)" - Mark Vidler/Go Home Productions
10. "Not Yet Remembered" - Harold Budd & Brian Eno

SHOW, part 2 (afternoon to evening, or maybe day two; I don't know yet):
11. "The Coo-Coo Bird" - Clarence "Tom" Ashley
12. "Paradise Flat" - The Status Quo
13. "Maybe" - The Chantels
14. "In Every Dream Home a Heartache" - Roxy Music
15. "Uptight Maggie (mashup)" - Mark Vidler/Go Home Productions
16. "Episode of Blonde" - Elvis Costello
17. "Theme One" - George Martin
18. "Back of a Truck" - Regina Spektor

POSTSHOW and EXIT:
19. "Money Changes Everything" - Cyndi Lauper
20. "I Must Not Think Bad Thoughts" - X

I have no idea yet if this odd jumble of styles and sounds will mix in an interesting and ultimately coherent way, or simply seem scattered, disparate, and unfocused. I think it'll work the way I want it to, and unfortunately confuse some people, which I'd rather not do, but whatever. You can't make it work for everyone.

Tonight I'll play the music and watch how people move (several are trained dancers, of various styles, some are musical-theatre people with some dance, some are actors who move well, and there are a couple that I have no idea about, but they seemed to be needed in this world and I'll choreograph around however they move). Maybe set them up in patterns and see how they work visually. Think about words they look like they should be saying.

So much of me hates working this way, making it up as I go along, but I just know I have to do it this way right now.

From today until the August shows are done - 151 days - Berit and I will have a total of 27 days without a rehearsal or performance of one of our four shows - and never two days in a row except maybe between Ambersons performances in early June. And most of those 27 will be filled up with work to get the shows and space ready (as well as working on Babylon Babylon, Penny Dreadful, and The Film Festival: A Theater Festival). And then the two days after the shows are over will be spent getting The Brick spiffed up for this year's Clown Theatre Festival, followed by another 33 days straight of techs and performances for that festival (and Penny Dreadful again).

We finally get some time off September 29-October 17. Until then, we're pretty much busy every day on shows.

We're fucking nuts.

collisionwork: (Laura's Angel)
Three posts today? What's going on?

(A: I get frazzled easily by my giant multicolored Excel charts of rehearsal schedules and conflicts and need frequent breaks to keep sane)

I just read the New York Times obit for actor Richard Widmark.

He made a lot of movies in his career, and most of them, especially near the end, aren't exactly memorable (though he's great as the evil victim in Sidney Lumet's incredibly fun film of Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express).

At the start of his career, however, he was almost an exclusively film noir actor, and gave two of the best and deepest performances of the genre.

And no, neither of them is his famous debut performance as Tommy Udo in the noir Kiss of Death. Fine work, sure, but he really shone his brightest elsewhere (if not as distinctively in Kiss, for which - to his chagrin - he would always be best remembered "for a giggle").

He is in Samuel Fuller's 1953 Pickup on South Street as Skip McCoy, pickpocket - an amoral criminal who finds a spark of morality in himself by the end of the picture, enough to make him (to his own surprise) a hero - made believable only by Widmark's performance (which ensures that the spark remains only a spark, and not a wholesale redemption).

And he is so good as to be almost impossible to watch as low-level hustler (trying to become a big-level hustler) Harry Fabian in Jules Dassin's 1950 Night and the City. I've only watched this film once since acquiring it in my research for World Gone Wrong in 2005, despite thinking it's probably one of the very best noirs ever made. The reason I can't bear to go back to it is the pain I felt in watching the slow destruction of Widmark's character - a stupid, unskilled man who is somehow (well, through Widmark's performance) someone you can feel great empathy for. Maybe it's also because Harry Fabian may be one of the unluckiest characters in film history - despite his own lack of knowledge and talent, he nearly gets everything he wants, and it is only taken away from him by random, blind chance.

(in watching as much noir around this home as we do, the most regular statements uttered sometimes by me, and more often by Berit, when film-watching are "you poor bastard" or "you stupid bastard" or "you poor, stupid bastard" - for reasons that should be obvious to anyone who knows the genre well - I think this was said more during Night than any other film we've ever watched)

The film actually features a pretty amazing cast top-to-bottom - especially Francis L. Sullivan, Googie Withers, and the beautiful, haunted, and heartbreaking Gene Tierney.

I think I'll try and steel myself and watch Night and the City this evening, maybe Pickup too, if I have it (not sure about that).

If you haven't seen either, they're both worth it, and available on DVD in lovely editions from The Criterion Collection. Watch them for Widmark, who deserves to be remembered for things other than being well-impersonated by Frank Gorshin.

collisionwork: (comic)
From around the series of tubes, some links and images for the dining and dancing pleasure of you and yours . . .

First, an album cover that went up today on LP Cover Lover that I couldn't resist ganking and sharing (dig the song titles) . . .

Where There Walks a LOGGER . . .

Next, great comic artist Wally Wood's instructions to himself on how to spiff up a boring, talky, and badly-written story (which I got from Joel Johnson Has a Blog): "22 Panels That Always Work!!"

Wally Wood's 22 Panels

(note: You might want to see this larger, which you can, HERE)

Finally, as a big fan of the retro humor-art of Bruce McCall, I am very fond of the site Modern Mechanix, and have posted images and links from and to there before . . . but this may be my all-time favorite.

From the March, 1956 issue of Mechanix Illustrated, an article and splash page that asks an important question facing America . . .

Atoms for Peace

(again, can be seen larger HERE - full article is HERE)

Enjoy. Back to breaking down scripts into french scenes and scheduling for me . . .

collisionwork: (GCW Seal)
Finally got this uploaded . . .

At The Brick's 5th Anniversary party, back in December, Berit and I did a little live performance piece accompanied by a video playing behind us.

The stage was covered with sixteen chairs, evenly spaced in three rows facing the audience (5/6/5). As each of our pre-recorded voices alternated on the video, we would take turns slowly walking around the stage -- each of us ending our little segment by knocking over a chair, one-by-one, until at last the stage was covered with overturned chairs (some had been carefully tipped, some knocked, a couple thrown, and one smashed over and over into the ground and destroyed) and the two of us wound up facing each other over the last chair, which was not overturned, as the lights faded (we had created the light cues in the computer board so that Berit could start the DVD of the video and hit the go button on the light board 5 seconds later - then run down the ladder from the booth and to the stage to perform the piece - and the lights and video would sync up).

It was designed and intended completely as a live video/performance combo, so the video doesn't exactly work on its own (it's basically a slideshow of text with voiceovers), but I'm happy enough with it to share it with you. It was much liked by a number of people there (who might not want me to say so in public), and got a little heckling afterward as well ("More facile statements!").

I created the soundtrack and designed the overall piece. Berit created the text slides (from my design suggestion of copying Godard/Gorin's titles in Tout Va Bien) and put the whole thing together as a movie.

Here it is behind the cut. It's close to 11 minutes long.

Where Do You Stand? )



Enjoy.

collisionwork: (kwizatz hadarach)
My dear old friend David LM Mcintyre proposed to Ms. Sarah McKinley Oakes (who I don't know at all but assume is pretty awesome) a few days ago and was accepted.

David (aka, at various times, "Crazy Moondog" and "Jesus 'Too Tall' Christ") and I met on our first day at NYU in September, 1986, and were pretty well inseparable from then until his return to his homeland of California sometime around '94-'95. We acted in a lot of things together (including several years in the floorshow of The Rocky Horror Picture Show at the 8th Street Playhouse under Sal Piro's supervision), and he was a huge inspiration to me as a theatre director (I was primarily a stage actor and filmmaker back then) - without his lead, I never probably would have tried it. Actually, I'd say I'd certainly have never tried it.

We also wrote a collage-play together (from his original concepts) called Even The Jungle (a mixture of The Jungle Book and Apocalypse Now and pretty much the entire history of Hero mythology). It was first done under his direction in 1993, and I've directed it twice since in 1999 and 2000. I don't know if he still feels this way, but he once considered it the most important creative thing he had ever done or was likely to ever do, and I do indeed still feel that way.

His proposal is his own damned business - though I'm very very happy for him - and I wouldn't have bothered to mention it here for that reason, except that it showed up on Boing Boing this morning, which means it's pretty much a public thing now.

And why did David's proposal wind up on this internet "directory of wonderful things?"

Because he proposed to Sarah in ZERO GRAVITY!

David Proposes in Zero-G

Now that's flair!

collisionwork: (Ambersons microphone)
First reading of The Magnificent Ambersons by Orson Welles: A Reconstruction for the Stage on Saturday (nice full title, huh? well, I'm trying to be accurate). Went very well. As always, not all good actors are great readers, so it goes, and some actors just got the parts out of the gate, while some will need some more directorial attention before the characters are there. I played the full Herrmann score behind the appropriate scenes, and it sounded lovely.

We talked a bit after the reading about what was done to Welles' original 131-minute cut (which we'd basically just read the transcript of) to turn it into the 88-minute release version - I think the cast was a bit horrified to hear the details, including how it went from being planned as RKO's big 1942 Easter release, premiering in Radio City Music Hall, to winding up instead snuck-out on a double bill in June, 1942 with Mexican Spitfire Sees a Ghost (and an email this morning from actor Bill Weeden, who's playing Major Amberson, informs me that Ambersons was the bottom half of the double-bill, supporting the Lupe Velez vehicle!).

I was then asked by cast members about when was I going to stage the restored director's cut version of Mexican Spitfire Sees a Ghost? Now I want to get my hands on a copy of that film so I can use excerpts from it for either our pre-or postshow ("We hope you enjoyed The Magnificent Ambersons, please remain seated for our main feature, Mexican Spitfire Sees a Ghost, starring Lupe Velez!"). Unfortunately, the Mexican Spitfire series remains woefully unreleased on home video, though Mr. Weeden notes all the films were shown on TCM but a few weeks ago, so maybe they'll show up again - if anyone sees them coming, let me know . . .

Berit and I saw Notes from Underground at The Brick on Saturday night (it was great) and hung out for some time afterwards. We were getting ready to go when a brief question from Moira Stone's mother, Myrna, on what my next project was wound up starting me off on probably something like a 45-minute lecture on Welles, as I can be wont to do (I hope I didn't bore her too much, but she seemed interested and kept asking the questions that kept me going).

Hm. Every now and then it strikes me, with a strange mix of pride, embarrassment, and seething anger, that I know and can expound upon a ridiculous number of useless things accurately and fully. I'm fairly sure that if it was suddenly demanded of me, I could probably deliver a three-hour lecture on the life and work of Orson Welles off the top of my head, with great accuracy, attention to detail, and a fine number of interesting anecdotes and facts, including a few that only I seem to know or have figured out.

(Okay, for example? There's a brief shot of a fake octopus in the newsreel at the start of Citizen Kane. This is THE SAME fake octopus that Ed Wood used, badly, in his film Bride of the Monster. It also showed up in the John Wayne film Wake of the Red Witch, and I've read separately about the Kane/Red Witch and Bride/Red Witch connections, but nobody else seems to have caught the Ed Wood/Orson Welles link here otherwise. Or, probably, cares about it.)

I know enough about Welles (and other film/music subjects, but Welles is a good example) that I can't now read much on the subject without getting irritated that I know more than the writer does. I tried to listen to both the Roger Ebert and Peter Bogdanovich commentaries on the Citizen Kane DVD when it came out, but had to shut both off after 10-15 minutes when I got fed up with the factual inaccuracies both of them were spitting out -- Ebert in particular lost a lost of respect from me when he points to Joseph Cotten in the group of people in the screening room near the beginning and says "There's Alan Ladd as a bit player in one of his first films" (!!!). It's JOE COTTEN, for crissakes! The more interesting story is how this scene was the first filmed scene for Kane (in an actual RKO screening room; wonder if it still exists on the Paramount lot?), done as a supposed "test" before actual filming was to begin (at Gregg Toland's suggestion), and that's why you have actors in there from Welles' Mercury Players who also play other characters in the the film (besides Cotten, you can see Erskine Sanford in there, and supposedly writer Herman J. Mankewicz is in the group, too).

(Alan Ladd is the reporter with the pipe talking to Thompson at the end in Xanadu -- another fun fact: the reporter interviewing Kane in the first dialogue scene in the film - in the newsreel - is cinematographer Gregg Toland himself, which makes for a nice in-joke as Welles, onscreen as elderly Kane, keeps talking down to his offscreen mentor as "young fella")

Somehow it seems like I should be able to make a living from knowing all this crap. When I know more about Citizen Kane than Roger Ebert and Peter Freakin Bogdanovich?

Well, in any case, it's useful as long as it feeds my own work in some way, which it does.

So anyway, going through Wellesmania as I work on Ambersons has led to a couple of YouTube finds which I share below the cut here.

First is his 90-minute documentary Filming Othello. Well, not exactly a documentary . . . as Welles put it:

With F For Fake, I thought I had discovered a new kind of movie, and it was the kind of movie I wanted to spend the rest of my life doing. The failure of F For Fake, in America and also in England, was one of the big shocks of my life. I really thought I was onto something. As a form, [F For Fake] is a personal essay film, as opposed to a documentary. It's quite different -- it's not a documentary at all.

This film, Welles' last completed one, was created for German television as a companion to a showing of his film of Othello. I first (and last, until right now) saw it at the original Film Forum down on Watts Street in February of 1987 (somewhere there's an embarrassing cassette tape recorded by friend and roommate Sean Rockoff of me coming home from the screening and raving about the film to him, getting drunker and drunker on a bottle of peppermint schnapps as I do so - hey, I was 18, man!). I've been talking up this film to people for years, and have been extremely frustrated that since that screening it seems to have vanished from all outlets of distribution.

Well, now it's up at YouTube, in 10 pieces (which I've stitched together here in a playlist for you). If you have 90 minutes free, and the inclination to sit at a computer and watch an essay-film by Orson Welles, knock yourself out. There's more info about it HERE in the Films section of the Wellesnet site (which seems to be impossible to access from the front page, for some reason).

If you don't want to spend that much time, I've also put together the three pieces of Welles' 1958 half-hour television film The Fountain of Youth. Not his best work, but rare and interesting - I nice slice of his Mr. Arkadin-period editorial style.

And finally, for those of you who haven't seen it . . . a piece of the embarrassing side of Mr. Welles: The famous (and sad) rushes of the Paul Masson wine commercial where it appears Orson has been enjoying the product a little too much prior to filming. Oh my.

Filming Othello / The Fountain of Youth / AH, the French! )



Well now I'm having a mad posh to see Bogdanovich's The Last Picture Show again, which pays homage to Ambersons quite a bit at times -- Bogdanovich says he prefers that film (and Touch of Evil) to Kane, so it's no surprise that he grabs a lot from it for his film of a similar mood -- the entrance to the Christmas dance is an amazing replica of Eugene and Lucy's entrance to the ball in Ambersons, and the ending of Last Picture Show even takes an idea from the original, cut ending to the Welles film, playing a period comedy record underneath a quiet, sad scene of two people sitting near each other, unable to discuss their true feelings.

(Welles' personal contribution to the Bogdanovich film was, after PB had told him the plot of the film, remarking, "You're going to shoot it in black-and-white, of course?" Thanks, Orson.)

Amazing that I don't own a copy. I wonder how cheap I can find it for on Amazon? $11.50 including shipping? That's mine!

Oh, that reminds me . . . I never posted the answers for the films in my quote quiz that weren't correctly guessed. Here they are:

2. The Age of Innocence by Martin Scorsese
3. Bad Timing by Nicolas Roeg
6. Duck Amuck by Chuck Jones
9. How I Won the War by Richard Lester
12. Contempt by Jean-Luc Godard
14. THX-1138 by George Lucas and Walter Murch

9 out of 15 guessed correctly. Not bad, folks.

collisionwork: (Ambersons microphone)
Tomorrow we start work on the Gemini CollisionWorks shows for 2008. First reading of Ambersons. We will have 15 people out of the 18 people cast (and 21 people that we need) there. That's pretty good, considering how difficult it is to get everyone together with conflicts as they are (I'm going to have the Ambersons cast together in full a total of five times before we open).

Today I have to go get scripts copied and do some sound editing (since I'd like to play the Herrmann score under the reading, and some of the tracks run together in ways that won't work so well for that).

The scheduling seems to be working better than I'd anticipated. A couple of big problems have come up for a couple people, but mostly I'm getting responses back with either "Oh, here's a couple of conflicts that have come up since my last email" or "All looks good. Great!"

Of course, I've only got back 18 responses from the 43 actors cast in the four shows as yet, so I might be looking ahead to big problems, but for now I won't "borrow trouble," as Berit always reminds me.

Currently in the iPod, 25,512 songs. Here's what comes up this morning:

1. "Cha Cha Heels" - Eartha Kitt - downloaded from somewhere, god knows where, probably the WFMU website
2. "Ingen Visjoner" - Haerverk - Stengt pga av haerverk 7" EP
3. "Batucada Erotica" - Michel Colombier - Bananatico: European Airlines to Rio
4. "Sofa #2" - Frank Zappa - The Best Band You Never Heard In Your Life
5. "Repetition" - The Au Pairs - mix disk from Daniel McKleinfeld
6. "Burn Bridges Burn" - The Fugs - The Fugs Final CD (Part 1)
7. "Rene" - The Small Faces - Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake
8. "Stake Out" - The Negatives - Stake Out / Love Is Not Real 7"
9. "Picture of Dorian Gray" - The Futureheads - 1-2-3-Nul!
10. "Pick It Up (And Put It In Your Pocket)" - Stan Ridgway - The Big Heat

And this week's kitty photos -- here's Moni on the bed:
Moni and Paw

And with Hooker on Berit's suitcase:
Moni Lurks, Hooker Sleeps

And since I've still got a backlog of videos to share, behind the cut are three live performances from Mr. Iggy Pop. First, a 1977 rendition of "The Passenger" in Manchester, England (unfortunately it kinda peters out at the end as it cuts off with the transition to the next song). Then, a short and sweet performance of "I Wanna Be Your Dog" from a 1979 Old Grey Whistle Test.

And finally, Iggy & The Stooges from their performance at this year's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductions. Oh, no, they weren't inducted, yet again. However, that fine Detroit girl Madonna was, and she herself requested (apparently in protest at them being ignored again) that her hometown boys be the ones to perform her songs at the ceremony. So The Stooges performed "Burning Up" and "Ray of Light" for an obviously pleased Madonna and some confused-looking record company weasels (though there seems to be enough fans in the audience to give them a pretty good ovation at the end). The Stooges and Madonna. Below.

I'm So Messed Up, I Want You Here )



Enjoy.

collisionwork: (comic)
I am in the midst of trying to work out a schedule for my four shows -- The Magnificent Ambersons by Orson Welles: A Reconstruction for the Stage (June and maybe July), Harry in Love: A Manic Vaudeville by Richard Foreman (August), Spell (August), and Everything Must Go (Invisible Republic #2) (August).

There are currently 18 people cast (out of 21 I think I'll need) on Ambersons, a full cast of 13 on Everything (though I'm seeing if someone else can join us), a full cast of 12 on Spell, and a full cast of 6 (the easy one) on Harry in Love. 43 total actors currently (there are a few cast overlaps).

Trying to arrange a rehearsal schedule where I can get enough actors from any one show together to make having a rehearsal at all useful is mindbending -- Berit was a bit worried for me last night I think, as I would just sit for long periods of time looking at the Excel spreadsheets where I have potential rehearsal dates matched with conflicts and softly giggling to myself. When I'm faced with day after day of anywhere from one to sixteen actors unavailable, never leaving me with a good rehearsal group, I get a bit crazy.

That said, I worked a schedule out. I'm still "in the midst" of it all as I now have to type it out and send it to the casts and double-check to see that it works. And if I get enough new conflicts back the whole thing collapses like a furshlugginer house of cards and I have to start from scratch.

I need a break before embarking on the next stage of collating and typing and emailing the schedule info.


So to relax, I watch a Three Stooges short. And not just any Stooges short, but the one that's generally regarded in Stoogedom as the worst one they ever made. But I enjoy it, for a few reasons of my own:

1. It features Shemp Howard, not Curly Howard. I don't like Curly all that much (or any of the other third Stooges that joined Moe and Larry apart from Shemp, especially Joe DeRita, who lacked subtlety). I'll watch Shemp in anything.

2. It features a drunk Shemp hallucinating and seeing an immense cheesy pantomime bird.

3. It features the great Larry Fine in a rare central role, and not only that, he appears to be trying to parody (for no good reason) Marlon Brando. His lack of success in this impersonation instead creates a strange Brando/Fine collision unlike anything I've ever seen. Interestingly, this short was released only a few months after the film of Streetcar, so one wonders if Larry and/or the others saw Brando on stage, or were they just really churning these shorts out that fast (I suspect the latter).

4. My Junior-year film at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts - created in Reynold Weidenaar's excellent Experimental Workshop class - was titled "How Did You Manage To Steal a Car from a Rolling Train?" after a line of Moe's from this film (my film was written, co-produced, sound designed, and titled by my friend Sean Rockoff, a Stoogeaholic).

The director Christopher Carter Sanderson, when I told him where the title came from, and the response to the question from Larry, thereafter always seemed to regard the question and answer as some bizarre zen-ish "key" to my own psyche and personality. Make of that what you will.

I dedicated my film to Moe Howard and Andrei Tarkovsky. That's probably much more of a key to my inner life.

So here's the whole short behind the cut . . .

CUCKOO ON A CHOO CHOO (1952) )



And in other "humor," I greatly enjoyed this account of the 12-hour deposition of Mr. Aron Wider, CEO of HTFC, an independent mortgage investor whose company is being sued by GMAC Bank for allegedly selling loans that weren't properly underwritten. The fine behavior of Mr. Wider, as seen in excerpts from the transcript, is a fine reflection of the upright and honorable behavior that has made the financial structure of this country so strong and unassailable. There is a drier account (that does feature a few more fine fine superfine quotes) in a law journal HERE.

In non-humor, Paul Scofield died. I loved his work, but I never feel I saw him in anything as good as he was (even Brook's film of Lear, which seems hobbled by its stage origins) - from all accounts his real greatness was on the stage, and I regret never seeing him there.

Back to work. Excelsior!

collisionwork: (comic)
Oh, hey, that short film by Daniel McKleinfeld that I acted in and lit and wrote about HERE and HERE and HERE -- it's up online as one of the finalists in the contest it was created for.

It's now called Revenge of the Prom. It's five minutes long or so (there's a six-minute version that's a little bit better, I think, but it had to be cut down for the contest). The main page for the contest is HERE.

So please check it out and vote for our little horror-comedy, if you so desire. Thank you. Won't you?

collisionwork: (red room)
So Episode 5 of Penny Dreadful, "The Deb of Destruction," which I directed and designed, went by on Saturday and Sunday and went over quite well. I was really pleased with how it came out. We had good houses both shows, and it's a good thing we've now added the extra matinee for this monthly series - it was getting to the point of having to turn people away from the one Saturday night show, which we probably would have had to do this weekend without the extra show.
PD Title Projection

I really enjoyed doing this script, which had a bit of a Lynchian-Twin Peaks feel to it (one cast member called it Penny Dreadful: Fire Walk With Me) - good broad melodrama, scored with big loud Bernard Herrmann music from Hangover Square, White Witch Doctor, Beneath the 12-Mile Reef, and Citizen Kane (used most often for the scenes involving William Randolph Hearst, of course).

I was busy up in the booth running the show most of the time, so I didn't get to shoot many pictures of the show, but my camera was passed around on the floor (mainly in the hands of Matt Gray, I think), and a few shots came out okay.

Becky Byers was quite impressive as Abigail Pierce, the Deb of Destruction herself:
PD#5 The Deb of Destruction Thinks

The dialogue-free, tense dinner scene (which I scored with the aria from Citizen Kane) was, as expected, the highlight of the show . . .
PD#5 The Deb of Destruction Destroys

Unfortunately, we didn't get any shots of it from runthrus where it was done full-out to its VERY bloody conclusion.
PD#5 End of the Pierce Family

Apart from that, I wound up with just a few behind the scenes shots, like this of Christiaan and Bryan planning something . . .
PD#5 Christiaan & Bryan Plan

. . . this of our William Randolph Hearst and Abigail Pierce relaxing before cue-to-cue . . .
PD#5 Hearst and Abigail Relax

. . . and what I think is a self-portrait by Matt as Leslie Caldwell, Detective of the Supernatural . . .
PD#5 Matt as Leslie Caldwell

Apart from that, the UTC#61 shows at Walkerspace went down, and I got to see Cat's Cradle at least, and we ended the six-episode run of the sitcom for the stage 3800 Elizabeth at The Battle Ranch.

Now, Berit and I can move onward properly to our shows for the rest of the year: The Magnificent Ambersons, Spell, Everything Must Go, and Harry in Love.

Of course, I also have a sizable role in next month's Penny Dreadful, as it turns out. {sigh}

PS As mentioned in the previous post, I've been getting complaints from some friends and family about this page taking forever to load, not loading completely, or just plain crashing the browser (usually Firefox, it appears). I think this has something to do with the amount of photos and videos I've been posting. I've started putting the videos behind LJ cuts, and if that's not enough, I'll do that more with posts containing lots of photos. Let me know in comments if there's any improvement already. Thanks.

Just Play

Mar. 18th, 2008 11:25 am
collisionwork: (Laura's Angel)
Writer-director-producer of film and theatre Anthony Minghella has died in one of those tragic little random accidents of the world - complications following routine minor surgery. He was 54.

He directed three features that really impressed me as they were all in categories of film that I usually avoid as they drive me nuts, and he did great things with them: Truly, Madly, Deeply, The English Patient, and The Talented Mister Ripley. Three really really good films, those.

He also made a short film that I find most remarkable, as it shouldn't work at all. He directed Samuel Beckett's Play for the Beckett on Film project of several years ago.

Now I love Beckett, especially post-1963 Beckett. Play may be my favorite theatre text of all time (the other contenders for this are also Beckett: Not I and Rockaby). I am a bit fanatical in my feelings about how Beckett's work should be performed. I may be a theatre director who feels that directors should have a pretty wide latitude it terms of textual interpretation, sure, but that you only go as far as you can while remaining true to the text, or illuminating it in some way. With Beckett, sure, you can add things, if you like, and ignore stage directions. However, you should be aware that when it comes to Sam you almost certainly will be WRONG and MAKING BAD THEATRE. I don't think there's another playwright I'd say that about with complete certainty.

And to my mind, making a film of a Beckett theatre text is a BAD THING. Beckett write plays specifically for theatre and radio and television, and one film. And he understood all of those media. He also wrote prose and poetry and I'm nauseated by the apparently common idea that those works of his also belong on a stage. He did in each separate medium what worked best in that medium, and they should stay that way. No matter how well done, it is still Doing Well What Ought Not To Be Done At All.

That said . . . he did supervise a BBC TV version of Not I, which . . . ain't the play but it's nice to hear Billie Whitelaw's voice (and see her mouth) do it. And I do indeed have all sixteen of the Beckett on Film movies on tape and watch my favorites with some regularity -- there are only a couple of outright clunkers in the bunch (Footfalls and, unfortunately, Rockaby at the top of that list), a couple of boring versions of lesser works, a number of so-so films of excellent performances (Not I, That Time, and A Piece of Monologue especially), some good films that aren't altogether true to the plays but adapt them well enough (Mamet's version of Catastrophe, Charles Sturridge's version of Ohio Impromptu with Jeremy Irons) and two outright great films that find cinematic ways to adapt Beckett that really work (Damien O'Donnell's What Where and the Minghella).

So here, behind the cut, is Anthony Minghella's film of Samuel Beckett's Play, featuring Kristin Scott-Thomas, Alan Rickman, and Juliet Stevenson -- and I'll be putting most of my video and photo entries behind LJ cuts from now on, as I've been getting complaints about loading errors and crashes from people trying to look at my page (mainly with Firefox users, it seems) since I've been including more of these things here. Hopefully this will reduce the problems.

PLAY )



Enjoy. RIP AM.

collisionwork: (Great Director)
Not a lot of time for much of a Friday post - I need to be finishing the sound and video segments for tomorrow's Penny Dreadful episode.

We ran the episode twice last night in the space, and it looks and sounds great thus far. A "special guest actor" who will be appearing in the next episode came by to record a voiceover by his character that precedes him in this one -- the next episode, directed by Michael Gardner, is mostly a conversation between me as George Westinghouse and this actor as . . . someone else famous. I'm now growing my facial hair out so I can wind up with Westinghouse's distinctive walrusy look by next month - I'll trim it like that for the weekend of the show, then take the whole thing off and go to my new warm-weather look with no beard and lighter hair.

I have to get a little sound work and a lot of video work done now -- and in not much time if I want to see Cat's Cradle tonight. I realized only a couple of days ago that my sickness had knocked out all the opportunities for me to see any of the UTC#61 shows at Walkerspace, as I had Penny Dreadful all the remaining days. Tonight, I was planning on going into The Brick post-Notes from Underground and pre-teching the show before the tech proper tomorrow morning. Well, it's pretty bad form not to see any of the UTC shows (I am on the artistic board of the company, after all), so I'm going to try and make it to the show tonight, then rush over to The Brick and work there from 10.30 pm onward. If I wind up there past 3 am, I'll just spend the night and be there ready to go for the 9.00 am tech.

So here's the info about this cool show:
Penny Dreadful #5
at the Brick
575 Metropolitan Avenue - Williamsburg, Brooklyn
L Train to Lorimer / G Train to Metropolitan-Grand

Saturday, March 15 at 10.30 pm / Sunday, March 16 at 2.00 pm

with Becky Byers as Abigail Pierce, the Deb of Destruction
and Bryan Enk as Cyrus Pierce, Christiaan Koop as Martha Pierce, Aaron Baker as Battlin' Bob Ford, Matt Gray as Leslie Caldwell, Detective of the Supernatural, Maggie Cino as Emma Goldman, Mateo Moreno as Alexander "Sasha" Berkman and a Police Officer, Dan Maccarone as a Pinkerton Detective, and Trawets Sivart as William Randolph Hearst.
with The Voice of The Wizard of Menlo Park
and ??? as THE BLACK DRAGON!

written and produced by Bryan Enk and Matt Gray
direction, sound design and video by Ian W. Hill
costume design by Christiaan Koop and Matt Gray
light design and technicals by Ian W. Hill and Berit Johnson

Tickets are $10.00 - advance tickets available HERE


So, here's the first ten random from the iPod of 25,532 this morning, as Hooker circles me, determined to get onto a lap that isn't really there, and where he will just cause more trouble:

1. "Blue Monday" - New Order - Substance
2. "Head Held High" - The Velvet Underground - Loaded
3. "Skinny Minnie" - The Sonics - Psycho-Sonic
4. "Sweeney Todd, The Barber" - Stanley Holloway - Cannibals-a-Go-Go!
5. "Don't Fall Down" - The 13th Floor Elevators - The Psychedelic Sounds of
6. "Time Is On My Side (alternate version)" - The Rolling Stones - The Rolling Stones No. 2
7. "Batusi! A-Go! Go! - or - (I Shouldn't Wish To Attract Attention)" - Nelson Riddle - Batman - Exclusive Original Television Soundtrack Album
8. "Why Not?" - Frank Zappa - Civilization Phaze III
9. "Wayfaring Stranger" - Johnny Cash - American III: Solitary Man
10. "Check Point Charlie" - Eddie Warner - Le Jazzbeat! 2

And here's the only cat photo I haven't posted, of Hooker and Moni all cacked out on the couch:
H&M on the Couch

Back to work. See you at the show.

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