August 2011 Archives

Sam Norkin, a renowned caricaturist [he was the NY Daily News' Al Hirschfeld for over a quarter century], illustrator, long-time colleague and beloved friend, who created more than 4,000 published drawings until his recent death at 94.

aNorkin.jpgHe was an irascible raconteur, virtual enclopedia of anything theatrical and, up til the end, sharp as a tack. H
is art appeared in national and international dailies such as the Boston GlobeHerald Tribune, Toronto Star, Philadelphia Inquirer, and  Washington Post.

He was exhibited in galleries, Lincoln Center Performing Arts Library, Museum of the City of New York, Metropolitan Opera and Hudson River Museum.

Sam was a veteran member, former president and long-serving board member of Drama Desk. He created a lavishly-illustrated history of the DD in program size. A special DD award in his memory will be presented annually.

It will be strange to look up at intermission at shows [he also sketched opera and ballet, even Ringling Bros.] and not see Sam sketching away.

There will be a remembrance and tribute to Sam Norkin September 27 at 3 P.M. in the Bruno Walter Auditorium of the Lincoln Center Library for the Performing Arts.


Price Berkley

The founder/publisher of one of theater's most indispensable tools, Theatrical Index, Price Berkley, died Sunday. His absence on the theater scene had been noted for some time; but when you asked why, no one seemed to know. He wasn't the easiest person to get to know. Price was polite beyond measure, but that often seemed a cover for shyness or coldness. However, his contributions to the theater world are legion. It's that rare theater person who can live without Theatrical Index, which tells what's running, who's running it and who's starring; and what's coming, who'll be running it and who'll be starring. And what's out there on the road.

Throughout his life, starting in his teens, Price probably never missed a show. He had a great love for theater, which he called "the best friend I ever had." After a job with Earl Blackwell at Celebrity Service, the then show biz "bible," Price had the idea to create a publication geared specifically to the theater community. The first issue of T.I. was in November 1964. Its initial base was 16 subscribers. Price was a meticulous copy editor, always with a dictionary along side because he jokingly admitted he was a horrible speller.
 

He's Back, with New Musical

Mark Hollmann and Greg Kotis of Urinetown fame have had a very strong presence in NY the last couple of weeks with Yeast Nation: The Triumph of Life, their entry into the NYCFringe which Hollman describes as "as a  hilarious spin of Greek tragedy and Shakespeare, set in 3,000,458,000 B.C., where the planet's first creatures - the Yeasts - discover a force called love, and in the process  change the course of history." 

It has its last sold-out performance tonight. [No word yet if there'll be additional performances.] However, as a team, they've been absent since their megamusical futuristic farce - which started in the Fringe, moved to Off Bway and then to Bway for a long run - closed.


aMHollGKotENassour.jpg"Yeast Nation... is my first new score produced in New York since Urinetown," says Hollmann, "but Greg has had his plays Eat the Taste and Pig Farm produced off-Broadway, and his play-with-music, The Truth about Santa [doing music/lyrics] ran off-off-Broadway during the holiday season a couple of years ago." 

The writing duo spent their 20's in a little Chicago theater company and most of their "artistic connections" are in the Windy City. "Chicago is a natural place to gravitate for new projects," Hollmann points out. "With my old friend, Jack Helbig, I wrote a musical called The Girl, the Grouch and the Goat. We had a reading as a workshop production. G3, as we sometimes call it, went on to premiere at the University of Kansas in 2008. It has had a handful of productions, including one in suburban Chicago."

YN, with it's huge cast of 15, had its world premiere in 2007 in Alaska. "Yes, Alaska," Hollmann assures. The Midwest premiere was in Chicago in 2009. "Now, Greg and I feel, is the time to expose it elsewhere."
 

 

In 14 years, FringeNYC has presented over 2,400 worldwide performing groups and has launched numerous Off-Bway and Bway transfers, long-running downtown hits and regional theater productions including Urinetown.

From late summer 2001 to January 2004, it racked up nearly a thousand Bway performance; had 10 Tony noms, including Musical, won for Score, Book and Director [John Rando]. There were five DD noms, including Musical, Book and Music/Lyrics. 
 

aAHHarrisYeastJaySullivan.jpgUrinetown's success and the awards won changed their lives. "When it opened on Broadway, I was a full-time word processing operator for an investment bank and a part-time church organist," notes Hollmann. "When it had been running for about a year, I figured I could safely quit my day jobs to concentrate on writing. Our success also opened a lot of industry doors. We've had the chance to consider a lot of offers for new projects."

 

Re: Yeast Nation...: "We have no plans for an extended run," says Hollman, "but if some producers want to come along and transfer us, that would be great! It has been beyond a thrill to have Harriet Harris work with us. She's an incredible dynamo with this amazing, intense concentration and commitment to her work. Yet is the most pleasant, unassuming person you could want to have in the rehearsal room. We're so pleased and grateful that she joined us to create the role of Jan-the-Unnamed in New York."

  


New York Film Festival Line Up 

 

The two-week + Film Society of Lincoln Center's 49th New York Film Festival, September 30- October 16, is the essential showcase of the latest and best in American and international cinema, is shaping up.

 

The opening night gala is the North American premiere of Roman Polanski's Carnage, adapted from Yasmina Reza's 2009 Tony-winning play, God of Carnage. The much-anticipated Centerpiece will be Michelle Williams in in My Week with Marilyn, as seen through the diaries of Brit filmmaker Colin Clark, played by Eddie Redmayne. The Closing Night gala will be George Clooney in Alexander Payne's The Descendants, about the heir of a Hawaiian land-owning family whose life is turned upside-down when his wife is critically injured.

 
Pedro Almodóvar  and David Cronenberg will receive Gala Screenings of their latest: respectively, The Skin I Live In starring Antonio Banderas; and A Dangerous Method, starring Michael Fassbender, Viggo Mortensen, and Keira Knightley.


Clooney.jpgAs ever, the Fest has an amazing programming breadth: feature screenings with stars and directors, Masterworks programs [such as Jorge Luis Borges/Adolfo Bioy Casares' Invasion (1969); and the world premiere of the rediscovered/restored version of Jim Jarmusch's You Are Not I (1981)], event screenings and discussions [such as the panel Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark].
 
There'll be anniversary screenings of Wes Anderson's The Royal Tenenbaums [Gene Hackman, Gwyneth Paltrow and Angelica Huston], Japanese anime Spirited Away and Luis Buñuel's classic The Exterminating Angel [Mexico]. In addition, Chaplin's The Gold Rush with live accompaniment by members of the NY Phil, and William Wyler's Ben-Hur will be shown. 

Among the programs: Oliver Stone will offer a sneak peek of the first three chapters his doc, The Untold History of the United States, produced as a 10-part Showtime miniseries, with a focus on events leading to America's entry into WWII, the battles and the unjustly forgotten figure of VP Henry Wallace; and docs on indie legend Roger Corman; Brazil's bossa nova legend, composer/performer Antonio Carlos Jobim; critic/gay activist Vito Russo; and Frederick Wiseman's Crazy Horse, about Paris' legendary erotic cabaret.
 
A Fest highlight will be 20 Years of Art Cinema: A Tribute to Sony Pictures Classics, which will be followed by a screening of James Ivory's Howard's End  [1992]. Views from the Avant Garde will make its 15th anniversary. The NYFM, partnered with h HBO will host four HBO Directors Dialogues.

 

The NYFM selection committee is chaired by Richard Peña, FSLC program director;  Melissa Anderson, contributor, Village Voice; Scott Foundas, associate FSLC program director/contributing editor, Film Comment; Dennis Lim, editor, Moving Image Source; and Todd McCarthy, chief critic Hollywood Reporter.


In addition to screenings in Alice Tully Hall and the Walter Reade, the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center will become a exhibition venue.  
Tkt purchase begins September 12. For the complete line-up, schedules, special features and more information, visit www.Filmlinc.com/NYFF.



Last Chance

Hurry, hurry, hurry, you don't wanna miss a date with Death, Maury Yeston/Thomas Meehan/Peter Stone's Death Takes a Holiday, that is. This lush musical, playing at Roundabouts Off Bway Laura Pels has a "Bway" size cast: 14 [excluding understudies]. Performances end September 4 and there've been no announcements on a move. You probably won't see the likes of anything like it again Off Bway.

aDeath.jpg

Death also boasts an outstanding lineup of stellar performers: Kevin Earley [who took on the lead role in a NY minute when Julian Ovenden came down with critical vocal problems], Jill Paice, Michael Siberry, the stunning and handsomely-costumed Rebecca Luker [looking so vivacious she must be playing a duchess married to a much older duke], golden-voiced Matt Cavenaugh, Simon Jones, Linda Balgord, Max von Essen and, among others but certainly far from least, Don Stephenson, who has the incredible knack of stealing any scene he's in [here providing much needed comic relief].

 

In addition, Tony-winning costumer Catherine Zuber has outdone her usual brilliant work. The budget for this musical must be a record-breaker for Off Bway.

 

Then there's Yeston's music and lyrics and such tunes as "Roberto's Eyes," "Life's a Joy," "Alone Here with You," and "How Will I Know." There's one song that will test even the most astute musical theater expert: "Shimmy Like They Do in Paree," which though some have doubted has a melody that's an outright steal of the unforgettable "We'll Take a Glass Together" from Yeston/Forrest and Wright's Grand Hotel, performed by Michael Jeter and David Carroll. [Check out Jeter, Brent Barrett, who replaced Carroll, and the extraordinary chorus bringing down the house singing/dancing the tune on the Tonys on YouTube.]


 

Verdi's Il Trovatore Telecast

The 2009 Met premiere of David McVicar's production of Verdi's notoriously difficult to stage Il Trovatore won great acclaim from critics and audiences. This season's production garnered equal praise, and had the added opt to be seen worldwide last April in theatres as part of The Met: Live in HD series. The extraordinary leads are four of the world's most celebrated opera singers: Marcelo Álvarez, Sondra Radvanovsky, Dolora Zajick and Dmitri Hvorostovsky. They reprise their performances this Sunday at Noon in this Verdi fav on Great Performances at the Met, a presentation of THIRTEEN for WNET.

aaaIlTrav.jpgMcVicar brought great straightforward emotional power to this staging, which is visually inspired by Goya's The Disasters of War paintings. Sets are by Charles Edwards, costumes by Brigitte Reiffenstuel, lighting by Jennifer Tipton and choreography by Leah Hausman.

Renée Fleming is host and will interview the stars during the interval. Barbara Willis Sweete directs the transmission and Jay David Saks is music producer. Great Performances is funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Philip and Janice Levin Foundation, Joseph A. Wilson and loyal met sponsor Toll Brothers, America's luxury home builder. 
 

More Treasures from the Met Archives

 

aSonClassIlTravCD.jpgSony Classical, in partnership with the Met, continues its series of releases from the opera house's rich archives with the first time on CD of freshly remastered, live Verdi operas, all two-disc sets: Don Carlo [1964], Il Trovatore [1961], Rigoletto [1964] and Un Ballo in Maschera [1955].

They feature some of opera's most celebrated stars at the height of their vocal prowness: Franco Corelli, Robert Merrill, Zinka Milanov, Jan Peerce, Roberta Peters, Leontyne Price, Leonie Rysanek,
Mario Sereni, Giorgio Tozzi,
Richard Tucker and Marian Anderson. Conducting are Kurt Adler, Fausto Cleva and Dmitri Mitropoulos.
aSonClassBallo.jpg

Maschera is notable and rare because Ms. Anderson reprises of her history-making performance as the first African-American to sing a principal role at the Met in a broadcast that's her only complete opera recording. 

Trovatore, in which Ms. Price and Corelli made their house debuts, was captured a week after the performance that caused near pandemonion among fans.
 aaSonClassDoubleCavPag.jpg
 

Four sought-after live performances blaze with passion in their first ever release on DVD: Verdi's Otello [1978], Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana and Leoncavallo's Pagliacci [1978], Berg's Lulu [1980] and Mozart's The Magic Flute [2006]. 

 

Franco Zeffirelli's Otello stars Jon Vickers, Renata Scotto, Sherrill Milnes and Cornell MacNeil; Zeffirelli's Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci, Plácido Domingo, Tatiana Troyanos in the first, Teresa Stratas in the second; John Dexter's Lulu, Julia Migenes; and the whimical Julie Taymor's The Magic Flute, Nathan Gunn. Met M.D. James Levine conducts.

 

 

So You Wanna Rock?

 

Sheri Sanders' experiences working with students who made their way into rock musicals on Bway and tour and subsequent master classes on how actors best interpret rock songs to bring themselves into songs for auditions is now available to anyone anywhere. Her Rock the Audition - How to Prepare for and Get Cast in Rock Musicals [Hal Leonard Books; 224 pages; Trade, SRP $30] is the first book on how to audition for rock musicals. 

Sanders
outlines best methods to pick songs that create a dramatic arc, how to create appropriatearrangements and the basic tool of how to communicate to accompanists. Spot-on practical advice is given from such seasoned experts as casting directors Bernie Telsey and Jay Binder, choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler, M.D.s Steven Oremus and Alex Lacamoire and actress Kerry Butler. For more info:
www.Rock-The-Audition.com.

 

 

Playwright Obsessive Disorder

 

Once Eugene O'Neil's obsessive script stage directions were confined only to heated discussions amongst doctoral students. NY's Neo-Futurist group is changing all that with The Complete & Condensed Stage Directions of Eugene O'Neill, Volume 1: Early Plays/Lost Plays [1913-1917], adapted, condensed and directed by Christopher Loar.

"We've transformed O'Neill's stage directions from their dissertation prison to an eloquent yet obsessive and often controlling rip-roaring physical comedy," says Loar.

Run time is 99 minutes. The show includes the playwright's "sea play"Bound East for Cardiff as well as his first play, the one-act A Wife for a Life.

 

TC&CSDOEO'N... plays at the Kraine [85 East 4th Street, between 2nd Avenue and the Bowery] September 8 - October 1. Tkts: $18; $12, students with valid ID. To purchase or for more info, call OvationTix, (866) 811-4111 or visit www.nynf.org.

 


New to DVD

Starring Oscar and Emmy winner Dame Helen Mirren in her iconic and groundbreaking television role, Prime Suspect, Series 1 and Series 2 arrive on DVD [Acorn Media; SRP, ($25; in 2010, Acorn released a complete box set collection]. aaPS1.jpgMirren delivers a riveting performance as Detective Jane Tennison in this police drama broadcast in the U.K. on ITV and here on PBS [Masterpiece Theatre and Mystery!] to great acclaim and more than 20 awards, including seven Emmys, eight BAFTAs and a Peabody.

The series created by crime writer Lynda La Plante aired in seven stand-alone 90-minute installments [1991-2006). On rewatching Series 1, it's pretty obvious the tenacious, driven, and deeply flawed [though without a taste for booze instead of an addiction to chocolate] Jane Tennison rises through the ranks of Britain's Metropolitan Police against the opposition of male sexism and open hostility, immediately proving her worth solving horrific crimes.

Tennison was the inspiration for such female-driven TV series as The Closer, whose initial storyline bears a close resemblance to heR trials and tribulations.  Now comes a new American version, which appears expected [since it's being Americanized] and most decidedly different [would have to be since women have made such strides into breaking the glass ceiling], on NBC this month starring Maria Bello [A History of Violence].

Series 1 features Ralph Fiennes [if you don't blink], Tom Wilkinson [as Tennison's love interest] and, in a spectacular performance, Zoë Wanamaker.


aVera.jpgThe first four episodes of the vastly entertaining Brit crime series Vera, which appears will be an ongoing series [Acorn; four episodes/four discs; SRP $60] is mainly notable for the irrespressible performance of Brenda Blethyn [Little Voice, Secrets & Lies, Pride & Prejudice]. The two-time Oscar nom and 20-year stage veteran is cantankerous but savvy Northumberland detective DCI Stanhope. The series, unique because you'll never guess who done it, is based on  award-winning novels by Ann Cleeves. Featured as Stanhope's right hand is David Leon [RocknRolla] Guest stars include BAFTA winner Gina McKee [The Forsyte Saga, Notting Hill] and Hugo Speer [The Full Monty].

aUsualSus.jpgNew to Blu-ray: The superlative and gripping The Usual Suspects and Leaving Las Vegas are finally available on Blu-Ray [M-G-M Home Entertainment; SRP $20; Standard DVD, SRP $15]. Bryan Singer's Suspects [1995], Oscar-winning screenplay by Christopher McQuiarrie, arriving in a limited edition album of photos and trivia, is laudable for its extreme complexities and riveting cast: Stephen Baldwin, Gabriel Byrne, Chazz Palminteri, Kevin Pollak, Pete Postlethwaite, Benicio Del Toro, Giancarlo Esposito and, of course, Kevin Spacey in one his all-time stellar performances and one that won him an Oscar. The profoundly moving, even against its depressing storyline, Vegas [1995], starring Nicholas Cage, in his Oscar-winning performance and probably the best of his career, and stunning Elizabeth Shue is the story of a couple who find themselves while they are spiraling into oblivion. No surprise that Mike Figgis is writer/director [this is his uncut, unrated edition]. Powerful stuff, not for the faint-hearted. 

  

Tennessee at 100

 

Two highlights of the Tennessee Williams Centennial Celebration September 6 - 11 in Columbus, MS, will be a tour of his family home and Tandy Cronyn and Jeremy Lawrence starring in Precious Memories: Remembering Tennessee Williams.

 

Ms. Cronyn's mother, Jessica Tandy, co-starred in the original Streetcar Named Desire and revivals of Williams' Camio Real and The Glass Menagerie. She and husband Hume Cronyn were longtime friends of the playwright.

A Southern soul food supper will follow. A sidelight of the festival will be a "Stella Shouting" contest. For more info:
www.muw.edu/tennesseewilliams.



80s Song/Dance Explosion in A.C.
 

The hard-hitting, glitzy revue 80s Flashback is rocking A.C.'s Tropicana Casino/Resort showroom [through Saturday of Labor Day weekend]. The show, premiering from Quebec-based Groupe Bazz producers Mario Bazinet and Richard Massicotte [The Best of Broadway], might be subtitled And Dance Explosion. Four singers and 11 dancers deliver a whopping blast from the past with songs made famous by Gloria Estefan, Boy George, Hall and Oats, Whitney Houston, Billy Joel, Elton John, Bon Jovi, Cyndi Lauper, Madonna, George Michael, Olivia Newton-John, Lionel Richie and a spirited Michael Jackson tribute finale.

 

There're three standouts in the show: star-quality vocalists/dancers Manon Seguin and Bonnie Jordan [American and a former Rockette]; and the four musicians who play non-stop [they have a little added help with programmed strings]. Among show's heroes are the two dressers who handle the amazingly quick changes involving 150 costumes.

 

Tkts for 80s Flashback, $25 and $35, are available at the Trop box office, www.ticketmaster.com or (800) 736-1420. For showtimes and information [including a $139/double overnight package, inclusive of show tkts, two beverages and slot dollars]: www.tropicana.net. The Trop website also offers two-for-one tkts.


Foodies visiting A.C. for the weekend have an excuse to stay over an extra day: Trop's fourth annual Taste of the Quarter on Monday,  from 6 - 9. Savor five-star cuisine and beverages at 23 venues, including A.C. outposts of NY's Carmine's and the Palm. Admission, $30. Purchase at the IMAX box office or at www.tropicana.net
. The event benefits United Way/Atlantic county.

Money can't buy you love, but it can get you tickets to Beatlemania Now, hailed as a "extraordinary spectacular feast for the eyes and ears," at the Trop September 17 - October 5. Tkts are $34. Book at the Trop box office, Ticketmaster.com or by calling (800) 745-3000.

 

At the Movies


Looking for a cure from summer blockbuster 3-D fatigue? Help has arrived.

aHelp.jpgKathryn Stockett's best-selling novel The Help, set amid social and racial change in Jackson, MS in the explosive 60s of Freedom Riders, school integration and human rights violations/murder, comes to the screen [Dreamworks/Disney], adapted and directed by actor [Winter's Bone] turned director Tate Taylor, undertaking only his second feature film. It's become the sleeper hit of the season.


What makes the book so endearing are the characters. Stockett fully meshes them out in a way the film can't.  Moviegoers, as readers did, are going to fall in love with Ole Miss society grad Skeeter, played by Emma Stone, as she begins her career as a journalist. They'll admire Aibileen, portrayed by Viola Davis, for her tenacity; and Minnie, played by the ab fab Octavia Spencer [in a star-making, Oscar-nom worth performance] will steal the movie as she does the book. The fact that Davis and Spencer are Southerners is an asset to their portrayals, especially since they don't have to fake an awful dripping-with-magnolias accent.

Then there's Bryce Dallas Howard, as Hilly, the woman you can't help but despise; and Celia "White Trash" Foote, indelibly etched onscreen by Jessica Chastain, whom you'll be rooting for as you did in the book. 


Crazy Stupid Love [Warner Bros.]  isn't the typical brainless sex romp you might expect. Call it an "emotional comedy." It actually has a papable story, humor that's above fifth grade level and outstanding performances from Steve Carell [who'll have a good life away from The Office], Ryan Gosling, Julianne Moore, Emma Stone, Marisa Tomei and Kevin Bacon.

 


The Fright Night [Touchstone] remake had a lot to live up to if it was going to come even close to the original's performances by Chris Sarandon and Roddy McDowall as "Vampire Killer" Peter Valentine; not to mention its special effects. It mostly succeeds - helped by a budget probably 10 times the original's. Colin Farrell, now a bulked-up hunk, has a fun field day as a vampire. There's strong support from Anton Yelchin and Toni Collette. but David Tennant, seeming to channell Russell Brand, doesn't even come close to topping McDowall. The real 3-D effects are outstanding. Here's a horror flick with bite.  

 

 

The NY International Fringe Festival [FringeNYC], the largest multi-arts festival in North America, celebrates its 15th anniversary August 12 - 28 with a multi-cultural offering of 200 of the world's established and emerging theater troupes and dance companies. FringeNYC is a production of the
Present Company, under A.D. Elena Holy. Shows and events take place in 20 venues in Lower Manhattan.

FringeNYC, with attendance often topping 75,000, is NYC's fifth largest cultural event - just behind the NY International Auto Show, Tribeca Film Festival, NYC Marathon and NY Comic Con. The Fringe, one of the city's best theatrical bargains, is famous
for presenting work that reflects the energy and political and social mores of the contemporary world. 

In 14 years, FringeNYC has presented over 2,400 performing groups worldwide and has been the launching pad for numerous Off-Bway and Bway transfers, long-running downtown hits and regional theater productions including
Urinetown, Debbie Does Dallas, Dog Sees God, Dixie's Tupperware Party, Silence! The Musical, Matt & Ben Bash'd and The Irish Curse in addition to movies and a TV show.

FringeNYC shows run 2 P.M. - midnight weekdays; and noon - midnight,
weekends. Tkts are $15, advance; $18, at door and available at www.FringeNYC.org, by calling
(866) 468-7619 [9 A.M.-7 P.M.] or at the official box office, Fringe Central [45 Bleecker Street at Lafayette]. There're multiple show packages at $70 [Fiver Pass], $120 [10-show  Flex Pass]  and $500 [all-you-can-see Lunatic Pass].

 

aGregKotisMarkHollmann.jpgAmong eagerly-anticipated Fringe attractions are Yeast Nation: The Triumph of Life in the Fringe marks the long-absent creators of  Fringe, Off Bway and Bway hit Urinetown, Mark Hollmann and Greg Kotis [music/lyrics and book/lyrics, respectively], who've been busy entertaining in that other theater town, where Judy once saw a man dance with his wife, Chicago.

 

Urinetown racked up nearly a thousand performances on Bway; was nom'd for Best Musical, won Hollmann and Kotis a 2002 Tony for Score and Kotis for Book; and DD noms for Musical, Book and Music/Lyrics.

Coming direct from L.A., where it was a hit, is Chris Phillips' Elysian Fields which brings back to life Tennessee Williams' shy young Allan Grey of A Streetcar Named Desire; Sebastian Venable, the doomed aesthete of Suddenly Last Summer who's unable to escape his past; and Skipper, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof 's football hero "who refuses to give up fighting for the love of his cowardly best friend, even in the face of formidable rival" [Maggie, the Cat]. All were fatalities in the master's classics, but now have a platform to tell their stories.

So, you haven't had enough about the curse of Bway's most expensive musical ever? Well, there's always more. Especially in the Fringe. Travis Ferguson [book/lyrics] and Dave Ogrin [music/lyrics]'s rock opera The Legend of Julie Taymore, or the Musical That Killed Everybody! is a "comedy based on the rise and fall of director Julie Taymor" and events plaguing Spider-Man, where its promised you'll get a "Greek tragedy" behind-the-scenes expose.


aaCarnival.jpgFringe highlights - six shows arriving with buzz:

Direct from L.A. is Naomi Grossman's one-woman hit camp fest Carnival Knowledge: Love, Lust and Other Human Oddities"for mature audiences" and which runs one hour. Set on a carnival midway, Grossman chronicles her dizzying dating history. It plays at the Kraine Theatre [85 East Fourth Street, between Bowery and Second Avenue] August 18, 19, 20, 24 and 26. For more information, ww.naomigrossman.net.

 

The courage and humor amid the adversity of Australia's greatest natural disaster, "Black Saturday," 2009, when firestorms "equaling 1,500 Atomic bombs" come to life in Ali Kennedy Scott's The Day the Sky Turned Black. The solo play from Sydney, which runs 55 minutes, plays the IATI Theatre [64 East Fourth Street] August 14, 19, 24, 27 and 28. www.thedaytheskyturnedblack.com.  

 

Elysian Fields, co-directed by playwright Chris Phillips and John Michael Beck [A.D., L.A.'s Celebration Theatre, where the play premiered], runs 1:40 and will play the Kraine Theatre August 22, 24, 26, 27 and 28.  www.elysianfieldstheplay.com.

 

aaaEFieldsComp.jpgThe Bridge Theatre Company will present Nicolas Billon's Greenland, which won Outstanding Production, Audience Choice Award at the 2009 Toronto Summer Works Festival. It tells of the discovery of a new island off Greenland's coast after ice levels recede and how the discoverer's life is forever changed. Greenland, which runs one hour, will run at the Players Theatre [115 MacDougal Street, east of Sixth Avenue] August 12, 14, 17, 18 and 19.  www.thebridgetheatrecompany.com.

The Legend of Julie Taymore..., which runs 1:45, plays the Bleecker Theatre [45 Bleecker Street at Lafayette Street] August 12, 16, 18, 21 and 24. www.LegendOfJulie.com.

Pittsburgh's PigPen Theatre Company, which won the 2010 Fringe Award for Overall Excellence for PigPen, returns with The Mountain Song, the story of a carpenter traveling and overcoming many obstacles to attend his daughter's wedding though he doesn't know where it's taking place. The Mountain Song, which runs one hour, plays the Fourth Street Theatre [79 East Fourth Street] August 13, 18, 22, 25, 26 and 27. www.PigPenTheatre.com.

 

aAHHarrisYeastJaySullivan.jpgGreg Kotis directs a cast of 15! in the Chicago hit from Urinetown's composers Kotis and Mark Hollmann, Yeast Nation: The Triumph of Life, described as a  "hilarious" spin of Greek tragedy/Shakespeare, set in 3,000,458,000 B.C., "where the planet's first creatures - the Yeasts - discover a force called love, and in the process  change the course of history. It runs 2:30 and will play the Ellen Stewart Theatre @ LA MAMA [74 East Fourth Street]  August 13, 18, 21, 22 and 25. www.yeastnation.com.

  
For a complete listing of shows, venues, showtimes, directions and more information,  visit www.FringeNYC.org.


Andrea Bocelli in Free Concert with Philharmonic

aABocelli.jpgInternationally acclaimed tenor and celebrated worldwide recording artist Andrea Bocelli will perform a free concert on Central Park's Great Lawn September 15 with the New York Philharmonic. Conducting will be M.D. Alan Gilbert. The concert will be recorded in HD by THIRTEEN for WNET for PBS broadcast on Great Performances in the Fall.  Andrea Bocelli Live in Central Park will also be released on CD and DVD by his label Sugar/Decca in November.


Free ticket distribution begina at 9 A.M. Thursday, August 4, four to a person. Locations: Best Buy Theatre, 1515 Broadway, NY; BAM, 30 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn; Queens Theatre in the Park, Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Flushing; Paradise Theatre,
2413 Grand Concourse, the Bronx; St. George Theatre, 35 Hyatt Street, Staten Island. 


For more information, go to www.BocelliCentralPark.com.

 


At the Movies: Help Is On the Way

 

Looking for a cure from summer blockbuster 3-D fatigue? Help is on the way.

aHelp.jpgKathryn Stockett's best-selling novel The Help, set amid social and racial change in Jackson, Mississippi in the explosive 60s of Freedom Riders, school integration and human rights violations/murder, comes to the screen August 10 [Dreamworks/Disney], adapted and directed by actor [Winter's Bone] turned director Tate Taylor, undertaking only his second feature film.


The fact that the novel is fiction based on fact has eluded many readers, as it probably will moviegoers. The book that gets published in the movie never existed. It never could have happened in that era, no matter how courageous one might have been. Stockett's novel is the book of interviews, and she covers the spectrum.

However, except for a fleeting glance, one thing is missing from the book and film: The majority of Southern families treasured their maids/cooks. In many instances I am familiar with [and speaking from experience since I'm a Mississippian], a bond was created that lasted until the death of either party. Of course, I was never a member of the country club set, nor was I ever invited into the homes of the super rich - except to deliver groceries or collect for my paper route - so I don't know how they treated their help.

What makes the book so endearing are the characters. Stockett fully meshes them out in a way the film can't.  Moviegoers, as readers did, are going to fall in love with Ole Miss society grad
Skeeter, played by Emma Stone, as she begins her career as a journalist. They'll admire Aibileen, portrayed by Viola Davis, for her tenacity; and Minnie, played by the ab fab Octavia Spencer [in a star-making, Oscar-nom worth performance] will steal the movie as she does the book. The fact that Davis and Spencer are Southerners is an asset to their portrayals, especially since they don't have to fake an awful dripping-with-magnolias accent.

Then there's Bryce Dallas Howard, as Hilly, the woman you can't help but despise; and Celia "White Trash" Foote, indelibly etched onscreen by Jessica Chastain, whom you'll be rooting for as you did in the book.

As those hard-working, vastly underpaid black maids are forming a sisterhood alliance with Skeeter, there's all that Southern fried chicken! and that dee-lish pie ["What did y'all say is in it?"].

Check out The Help

 

Garland Retrospective through August 9

 

The 75th anniversary of Judy Garland's feature film debut is being celebrated by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Paley Center with Judy Garland: All Singin', All Dancin', All Judy, a huge retrospective that continues through August 9. There are several don't-miss films on the schedule. Screenings are taking place at the Walter Reade Theatre.


The Paley Center's comprehensive retrospective of Garland's television work,
Judy Garland: The Televison Years is being presented through August 18. For more information go to www.paleycenter.org.

 

A companion piece to the retrospective would be any of the numerous Garland recordings and bios, Lorna Luft's Me and My Shadow: A Family Memoir, Ronald Haver's well-researched A Star is Born, The Making of the 1954 Film and its 1983 Restoration and retrospective co-curator [with FSLC program director Richard Pena] John Fricke's Judy: A Legendary Film Career, to be published August 23 [Running Press]. 

For full schedule, ticket purchase and more information, visit www.filmlinc.com. Highlights:

aaJGarlOz.jpgToday, August 3 @ 4 P.M. - a rare opt to see The Wizard of Oz  [1939] on the big screen, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr, Jack Haley. D: Victor Fleming. Oscar winning Song [Harold Arlen, music; E.Y. Harburg, lyrics], Score [Herbert Stothart]. Special Oscar for Garland. Garland's characterization is one of most identifiable in film history, right up there with Chaplin.

August 4, 6:15 P.M. - For Me and My Gal [1942], Gene Kelly. D: Busby Berkeley; 8:30 P.M. - The Harvey Girls [1946], John Hodiak, Angela Lansbury. D: George Sidney.

JGarlandJudgement.jpgAugust 4, 2:30 P.M., August 7, 2:45 P.M. - Judgment at Nuremberg [1961], Spencer Tracy, Burt Lancaster, Richard Widmark, Marlene Dietrich, Montgomery Clift. D: Stanley Kramer

August 5, 2:15 P.M., August 9, 8:15 P.M. - A Star is Born [1954], James Mason. D: George Cukor; 8:30 P.M. - Till the Clouds Roll By [1947], all-star [June Allyson, Kathryn Grayson, Van Johnson, Lena Horne] Jerome Kern bio musical. D: Richard Whorf.

August 5, 6 P.M.; August 8, 2 P.M. - Easter Parade [1948], Fred Astaire. Score: Irving Berlin. D: Charles Walters.


August 6,
6:10 P.M., August 9, 1:30 P.M. - Summer Stock [1950], Gene Kelly, Eddie Bracken. D: Charles Walters; 8:30 P.M. - In the Good Old Summertime [1949], Van Johnson. D: Robert Z. Leonard.


August 7
, 10 A.M., "Movies for Kids" [$6 discount; children ages 4-12 must be accompanied by adult] - Gay Purr-ee [1962], animated feature of country cat in Paris. Co-written by animator/director, Chuck Jones. Score: Arlen/Harburg. D: Abe Levitow; 12:30 P.M. - Girl Crazy [1943], Mickey Rooney, June Allyson. D: Norman Taurog, Busby Berkeley. Score: George and Ira Gershwin; 6:30 P.M. and August 9,  3:45 P.M. - I Could Go On Singing [1963], Dirk Bogarde. D: Ronald Neame.Garland's final film; 8:40 P.M., August 8, 4:15 P.M. - A Child Is Waiting [1963]. D: John Cassavetes.

 

August 9, 6 P.M. - Meet Me in St. Louis [1944], Margaret O'Brien, Mary Astor. D: Vincente Minnelli.

 

For the retrospective, Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Paley Center acknowledge Warner Bros., the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science and UCLA's Film and Television Archive.


The Must-See, Restored A Star Is Born

 

Judy Garland in the 1954 musical adaptation of A Star is Born [Warner Bros.; available on DVD and Blu-ray] is one of the greatest one-woman shows and heartbreak dramas in moviedom.

Warners gave the film one of the most eleaborate premieres in Hollywood history. About the only Who's Who not there was James Mason, away on location. Then, after release with big box office, the studio butchered the film from 196 minutes to 182 minutes and then, to accommodate additional showings, 154 minutes. 

Now, after being meticulously restored by the late film historian Ronald Haver with deleted footage, audio tracks, and stills captured on set, the near masterpiece 176-minute version 
contains a movie buff's treasure trove of music, comedy and drama.


aaaStarIsBornClubSequence.jpgASIB marked Garland's triumphant return to the screen four years after being dumped by M-G-M [and being fired from the screen adaptation of Annie Get Your Gun and, even against Fred Astaire's wishes, Royal Wedding] following years of turmoil. 

George Cukor directed
this classic musical drama about the doomed marriage of a vocalist, Esther Blodgett, groomed for movie stardom by leading man Norman Maine. They fall in love, marry, and as her career ascends, his declines.

It costars James Mason [in the role Cary Grant turned down because he was concerned about Garland's "unreliability"], in undoubtedly his most stellar performance outside the U.K.; Jack Carson, as the studio hack you hate in, perhaps, the best performance of his career; and Charles Bickford as studio head Oliver Niles.
The screenplay is by Moss Hart, based on Dorthy Parker's 1937 original. It was nominated for six Oscars, including Best Actress [Garland was robbed!] and Actor; and won two Golden Globes, Actress and Actor.
 
ASIB has also
undergone cutting edge digital restoration to give audiences back the brilliant, saturated Technicolor palettes and an unbeliebably crisp picture. Heavy chemical staining that affected several portions of the film has been removed. This preservation has guaranteed the survival of this treasure effort. Without it, the film's original fragile negative would be near extinction.  
 

Cukor was smart to surround Garland with Mason and such reliable veterans as Carson and veteran character actor Bickford, in films since the late 20s. Among the film's highlights are Maine's courtship of Blodgett; Blodgett [now Vicki Lester]'s breakdown scenes with Niles; and, of course, the famous "I'm Mrs. Norman Maine" coda at the finale.

ASIB is a showcase for great Harold Arden and Ira Gershwin songs, now heard in Dolby. They include "The Man That Got Away," one of the greatest torch ballads, " "Gotta Have Me Go with You," "Here's What I'm Here For," "Someone at Last," "It's a New World" and another extended sequence "Lose That Long Face." 

aaaaASIBMalibuSequence.jpgOther tunes are "Swanee" [Gershwin], "You Took Advantage of Me" [Rodgers and Hart] and Garland's "Born in a Trunk" tour de force, a spectacular extended sequence that led to intermission in initial roadshow engagements. It was created by her longtime M-G-M pals Roger Edens and Leonard Gershe and added after principal photography was completed. Mega Garland fans for years have been divided over whether the sequence raised the film to another plateau or, because some felt it seemed to distract from the story, was a huge blunder.
  

It was Cukor's first musical, first color and first wide-screen film. A couple of these firsts, like shooting in the early stages of CinemaScope, befuddled the master and he made a couple of framing missteps. 

Garland's husband Sid Luft [father of Lorna and Joey] produced and maintained strong sway over Garland. He pretty much kept her on the straight and narrow - especially since the the film was being made by their production company. However, Cukor must have been frustrated, to say nothing of Garland, because after months of exhaustive shooting, Warner decided the film should be widescreen. After tests with their own anamorphic process were disappointing, they leased CinemaScope, only a year old, from Fox. Then, filming began anew.

Sadly, as filming wore on, Garland had extreme weight fluctuations, began drinking, and imagining illnesses. Though this must have been difficult for a pro like Mason, he never uttered a bad word about his costar and attempted to be a stablizing influence.

Made in 1953, a time when there were few roles other than servants or slaves for blacks. In the "Trunk" sequence, Edens put young black dancers front and center, and even have two doing a few steps with Garland, who proved to be an very good dancer.


New to Blu-ray

Marilyn Monroe, exhibiting her talent for high comedy, Jack Lemon, Tony Curtis and irrespressible Joe E. Brown headline one of screendom's classic madcap comedies, Some Like It Hot , co-written [with longtime partner I.A.L. Diamond] and directed by the master Billy Wilder. It's available on Blu-ray for the first time [M-G-M Home Entertainment; B&W; SRP $20; Standard DVD, SRP $15]. Also premiering [and available on DVD] are Clark Gable, Monroe, Montgomery Clift, Thelma Ritter [scenestealing as ever] and Eli Wallach in John Houston's sizzling drama The Misfits [M-G-M Home Entertainment], written by Arthur Miller. Sadly, Gable and Monroe's last films.


Trop Rock

The hard hitting revue 80s Flashback is rocking A.C.'s Tropicana Casino/Resort showroom [through Saturday of Labor Day weekend]. Four singers and 11 dancers deliver a whopping blast from the past with songs made famous by Bon Jovi, Culture Club, Whitney Houston, Michael Jackson, Madonna and Wham!  

 

Tkts for 80s Flashback, $25 and $35, are available at the Trop box office, www.ticketmaster.com or (800) 736-1420. For showtimes and more information [including a $139/double overnight package, inclusive of show tkts, two beverages and $20 in slot dollars]: www.tropicana.net. The Trop website also offers two-for-one tkts.


Foodies should grab tkts for Trop's fourth annual Taste of the Quarter on August 29,  from 6 - 9 P.M. Savor five-star cuisine and beverages at 23 venues, including Carmine's and the Palm [outposts of NYC restaurants] and P.F. Chang's, Cuba Libre,  FIN [seafood],  Il Verdi, Russian-themed Red Square and RíRá Irish Pub. Admission. $25, advance; $30, day-of. Purchase at the IMAX box office or as above. The event benefits United Way/Atlantic county.

The Trop boasts The Quarter, a 200,000-sq. ft. mega-million dollar dining, shopping and entertainment complex celebrating 1940s Havana [and replicating the Cuban capital's vibrant Old World streetscape]. In addition to the Havana Tower, with over 500 guest rooms, there's aspa, 20 restaurants, 20 shops, 15 bars/lounges, pools, Marketplace and IMAX Theatre showing the latest blockbusters. The only thing missing is Desi Arnaz beating out "Babalu" on the conga drums. As Havana was home to the original Tropicana Casino, destiny in A.C. has come full circle. 


A.C. is proud of its pristine beaches, boardwalk,  Caesar's Pier shops/restaurants and the more than 95 outlets at The Walk.

  

 

Movies on TV

 

Have you discovered WPIX, Ch. 11/Tribune Broadcasting's spin-off channels, This TV and Antenna TV?  Both are treasure troves of classic and vintage films and retro TV series [Soap, The Monkees, Burns and Allen, The Three Stooges].

 

The big problem with both channels is incessant commercial interruptions.

Shame on Tribune for missing the opportunity to do something really classic: a fresh approach to commercial breaks - instead of interrupting every seven - [in non-peak hours] 10 minutes for five - six minutes of a commercial barrage - sadly, as when watching programs on TV network sites, the same dozen over and over. Still, there are some winners and it's "free." Set your recorders and TIVO so you can FF through the commercials.

 

Friday, This celebrates Marilyn Monroe with a marathon of There's No Business Like Show Business [co-starring Ethel Merman], Bus Stop, How to Marry a Millionaire, Niagara [co-starring Joseph Cotton] and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes [opposite Jane Russell]. Sunday, catch a Mummy Marathon led off by the original horror flick, The Mummy [1932]. Coming August 8: The Rose [Bette Midler]; August 9, Belle of the Yukon [Mae West]. 

 

For schedules and to watch feature-length streaming movies, visit: www.thistv.comAntenna programming, check out www.wpix.com/entertainment/antennatv.


Coming Up

 

Don't miss the Film Society of Lincoln Center's 49th New York Film Festival, September 30- October 16. The opening night gala is the North American premiere of Roman Polanski's Carnage, adapted from Yasmina Reza's 2009 Tony-winning play, God of Carnage. Full slate to be announced soon. For the complete line-up, information and ticket purchase beginning September 12, visit www.Filmlinc.com/NYFF.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Tony Stevens: Great guy, greater loss

            Anthony Pusateri ~~ May 2, 1948 - July 12, 2011

He was the best, not only as a choreographer and director but as a human being. A sweet man with incredible artistic instincts who always had time for you. I loved Tony and his wonderful sense of self and incredible sense of humor. It was a pleasure working with and interviewing him on various projects over the years because he was the real thing: talent personified, but always humble and gracious. The most amazing thing about Tony was how he cared for others, and always had their backs. What an amazing career!


When I heard the news a week before his passing that Tony was in the hospital and in a coma, I couldn't believe it. Only a couple of weeks before, he was conducting auditions for a new show. I saw him and we chatted away.


The unexpected is always part of our lives.


Condolences to his family and the legion of friends who loved him.
 A memorial is planned for the Fall. 


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Categories

Monthly Archives

Pages

Powered by Movable Type 5.11

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from August 2011 listed from newest to oldest.

July 2011 is the previous archive.

September 2011 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.