Tag Archive | "Storytelling"

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Scott Pilgrim Rules


Although the film is apparently tanking at the box office, I want to go on record as saying Scott Pilgrim vs. The World is an incredible, landmark film. Not only is it fun, smart and enjoyable, but it will probably be as much of a generational hallmark as Slacker was to Gen X.  In much the same way Slacker captured the meandering anomie and proto-hipster posture of the early 90′s, Pilgrim, with its clever integration of video game aesthetics and its uber-pastiche mega-meta-self-referentiality reflects the experience of being a young person today. But what makes it even better is that watching it doesn’t make you feel old, it reignites the sense of wonder and hope and possibility that is your early 20′s.

Based on a comic book series of the same name, Pilgrim is the story of a slacker-y boy who falls in love with a girl and has to defeat her seven evil exes. Simple premise. What makes the film so wonderful is that this simple premise -and dazzling special effects – hover over a storyline of simple truths and relatable scenarios. Michael Cera as Scott Pilgrim is lovably awkward and the cast of supporting characters are vivid and funny and, in their own 2D way, totally true. The film is the first film I’ve seen that really integrates the media-overload, non-logic aesthetic of into internet-style information age storytelling. Plus its fun.

Go check it out.

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Play Dead


The show is called "Play Dead," created by Todd Robbins ("Carnival Knowledge") and Teller (of Penn & Teller), opening Off Broadway in New York in November 2010. It’s produced by Alan Schuster ("Stomp"),Cheryl Wiesenfeld ( Steady Rain), and Frank Gero (Steady Rain).

The show is a thriller, a nerve-shattering mood piece, full of shrieks and nervous laughter as the audience is drawn in a haunted world. This is not a typical play, but a theatrical thrill ride — here and now in an "abandoned" theater — in which the audience is surrounded by ghostly sights, sounds, and even touches of the returning dead — all achieved by charming, diabolical storytelling coupled with extraordinary stage illusions.

Director: Krista Robbins Type: Theatre Union: Non-Union

For contact details and applications click here

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Fresh Voices Original Screenplay Competition


Fresh Voices Original Screenplay Competition
Fresh Voices Original Screenplay Competition seeks to discover and award the most promising and original voices in storytelling and position our winners for the greatest chance of success … (more)
DEADLINE: 09-03-2010.
PRIZES: $5,000.00.
ENTRY FEE: $45.00.
Added: 25-June-2010

For contact details and applications click here

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Five Questions for Greg Manley


Name: Greg Manley
Title/Occupation: Commissioner of the Circle Rules Federation
URL (s): www.circlerulesfootball.com

1. Where did you grow up and how did you end up where you are now?

I grew up in Oakland, California and came out to NYC for college.  Right now, I’m upstate working for my third summer with the Mettawee River Theatre Company as an actor/puppeteer.  I played sports my whole life, and I got bit by the drama bug when I was in 5th grade, so I spent a long time trying to reconcile those two interests.  Eventually, when I was in my last year at drama school, I looked around me and said “Hold up. Where did all the athletes go?”  So I made a sport in drama school and called it a play.  Sooner or later the athletes showed up.  The good news is the drama kids showed up as well.

2. Which performance, song, play, movie, painting or other work of art had the biggest influence on you and why?

I saw Hamlet performed at the Old Vic theater in London when I was 13.  It was unabridged, with no gimmicks, no great new concept, and no celebrities; just four hours of good acting and great storytelling.  It’s the best play I’ve ever seen, and it was goddamn Hamlet, the most overdone play in the world!  But it goes to show that doing something well (I mean really WELL) goes a lot farther than reckless innovation.  It’s the same with cooking.

3. What skill, talent or attribute do you most wish you had and why?

Languages.  I wish I could pick up languages really quickly.  Then I could be a chameleon.  I already have the ambiguously brown thing going for me.  If I could speak a bunch of languages, I could pass for Brazilian, Afghani, Persian, Indian, Egyptian; the list goes on.  There are plenty of practical uses I’m sure, but the best part would be all the insider information.  I ought to buy Rosetta Stone.

4. What do you do to make a living? Describe a normal day.

Christ.  It seems like my whole year happens in the summer.  So my normal days are only normal for about a season at a time.  I’m still acting occasionally, I teach afterschool sports invention and drama regularly.  I do some production management for festivals around NYC, and the rest of the time I work on the Circle Rules Federation from home or on the field.  Sometimes I’m doing all those jobs in one day, sometimes I’m just left to my own devices.  Money’s tight, but I manage to live a pretty lush life.  I’ve got a room that opens onto the backyard, where we have a nice garden with a hammock, and a firepit.  I guess a normal day is just waking up and making it happen.

5. Have you ever had to make a choice between work and art? What did you choose, why, and what was the outcome?

All those lines have been blurring.  Lately, I’ve been choosing Circle Rules Football work over acting.  So I’ve been in the peculiar place of having acting in theater as a backup job.  So my work is art and my art, (Circle Rules Football – the whole reason I’m doing this interview), is work.  Maybe that’s just not a very helpful distinction.   About a month ago one of my housemates who had started working for the Census said, “Greg, you’d better get a job now.  You’re the only one in the house who hasn’t filled out a W2 this year.”  I got pissed.  I think as soon as you consider your art your work, it is.

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Why “Live” Matters


You may have noticed that several of the past few posts referenced recent articles about the impact of the information age on cognition. Basically, they argue that we are thinking in a more scattered way, a shallower way, one that is characterized by distractibility. Those of you who follow this blog know this is something of a fascination of mine. I’m insatiably curious about how our minds are being changed by technology and how the world around us will be changed by our new modes of interactivity. I also think that it bears repeating that I believe that live performance, like reading, can be an antidote to the distractibility of the age.

I have had this conversation more times than I would care to count: why does the live experience matter? Usually it starts because we’re talking about waning audiences for the arts – especially theater – and inevitably it comes back to an existential question on why the arts matter, what does live art do that other things don’t and how can we increase audiences?

Its not just about storytelling. Movies and TV do that better, to be honest. One of the huge problems with most theater is that it is little more than poorly staged television – and why should someone shell out good money to see bad TV?

Its not purely about the live experience either. Sports do a much better job of exciting masses of people with shared experience. There’s something really exciting about sports that just isn’t usually there in the arts.

So what is it? I believe that there is some sort of cognitive process that goes into observing live performance that must be exercised. It has to do both with the nature of attention and the practice of empathy.

Imagination is something that has to be nurtured and developed. Concomitant with individual imagination is collective imagination or the suspension of disbelief. When done well – and that’s a big caveat right there – only live performance can make us collectively hallucinate and agree on seeing what isn’t there, together. Live performance activates the imagination, the collective imagination, in a way that no other human group experience, outside of religion, can do. And there’s something powerful in that.

Not to sound like a hippie but there’s something to the idea of sacred space, of changing our experience of time and place. Suspending disbelief is a collective act of faith, an agreement we make with each other to choose to believe in the unseen and invisible.

When we watch a film we don’t have to suspend disbelief because the experience is mediated, it is objectively a fiction, the disbelief is built in. We never forget that we are in a movie, we don’t have to forget. Also, watching a movie requires rapid image processing, a key component of distractibility.

When we watch something on the stage it requires patience. It moves slower. Also, onstage are live human beings so patently not what they are pretending to be that it requires an act of will to believe in the fiction. We have to work at it a little bit (sometimes a lot). We are creating a subconscious connection between ourselves and our fellow audience members, psychically triangulating with the performers – and if at any time the triangulation is betrayed, the illusion falls apart. The magic withers.

If live performance doesn’t attempt to activate the imagination, if it doesn’t demand of the observer an altered state and if it doesn’t offer, in return, some form of magic and surprise, then we are falling short of the mark.

Makers of live performance have a responsibility to be cognizant of the time-based nature of the art form and what it means to willfully engage in the suspension of disbelief. The more incredible a given situation, the more unreal, the more “other-than” a stage scenario is, the more likely it is to succeed in activating the brain. It is not just about entertainment, it is about hypnotism and attention and, just as importantly, about wonder.

People often ask me why I go see so much work and I tell them I’m like a junkie – I need a fix. Many, many times I don’t get the drugs I need – the drug of illusion and wonder and empathy. Many times I’m left with a simulacrum of an experience that suggests the transportional and transformative potential of art without actualizing it. But every once in awhile you see something that really, truly blows your mind and opens your consciousness in new ways. And that is golden.

In this age of distractibility nothing is more important than preserving attention and deep thought. Without it we lose history, we lose perspective, we lose introspection and we lose ourselves. Its a balancing act, but just like people do yoga and go to the gym to tone their bodies, we must go to live performance (and read) to tone our minds, to hone our minds, to get an intellectual and spiritual workout.

That’s kind of esoteric but I think if we want to justify the importance of the arts in our society we have to make a case for it not on some random, “its good for you” basis, but on some sort of solid, scientific ground about the ways it effects imagination and cognition, that it is good for individuals and society.

If anyone knows of any scientific studies about attention, cognition and live performance, I’d love to read them.

Thoughts? Please leave comments!


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Gerald Casel at Danspace Project


Photo by Ho Chang

Thursday night took us to Danspace Project for Gerald Casel’s new works “Fluster” and “Plot”. “Fluster” was a male trio and “Plot” a female quintet, both were accompanied by by original music by Matthew Meade and Kyle Olson, performed live by Matthew Meade on guitar and laptop.

I really enjoyed both pieces.  Culturebot’s regular readers will know that Maura Donohue usually covers dance, and with good reason. I find it incredibly difficult to write about. I have yet to learn how to properly notate the movement I’m watching or aptly describe the territories mapped. That being said, I found Casel’s work really enjoyable.  It was great to see dancers really dance – athletically with precision, passion and focus.

Fluster is described as exploring how the body copes with the subjective and ephemeral nature of the mind, particularly in states of confusion or agitation” and Plot “examines storytelling from the point of view of creators, performers and witnesses.”  I’d be hard-pressed to explain exactly how those dances do that, but I can say that from a strictly aesthetic point of view, Casel moves his dancers in clear shapes and patterns through the space, the movement sequences/phrases build on each other in interesting ways and the dynamics between the dancers are always engaging. They never seem over-emotional but they seem connected physically and psychologically. Its like elegant geometry. And the music was fantastic – spare but rich, a nice balance of acoustic/electric, melody and noise.

The run at danspace is over but I’m glad I got introduced to Gerald Casel’s work and I look forward to seeing more in the future.

Read Roslyn Sulcas’ review of “Fluster” and “Plot” in the NY TIMES.


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Big Art Group Takes Over at Abrons


Just got back from Abrons Arts Center where I saw Big Art Group’s THE SLEEP and FLESH TONE (preview). If you haven’t seen Big Art Group before, or even if you have, now is the time to go check out what they’ve been working on.  THE SLEEP is an amazing new adventure and collaboration with Theo Kogan, and FLESH TONE, while more like BAG’s previous work, looks incredible in Abrons’ huge proscenium space.

THE SLEEP mixes object theater, rock concert and BAG’s “real time film” techniques to bring you 55 minutes of psychedelic fascination and wonder. It is adapted from M. P. Shiel’s 1901 story, “The Purple Cloud,” in which a lone explorer races to the North Pole while a poison purple cloud covers the earth. His subsequent return to the remnants of civilization drives him into a crisis of being, in a classic “last man” adventure that eerily presages catastrophic climate change.  I was sitting there watching it and thought to myself, “This is the theater of the future.”  Theo’s voice is beautiful, the music is great and the overall aesthetic is storyless-storytelling at its best. By turns oblique and explicit, it is a captivating ride that allows you to construct your own narrative in the wash of images and sound.

Since FLESH TONE is technically  in previews, I’m not going to talk too much about it. It plays with gender and identity and the decay of modern society in ways that BAG has done before. Basically they’re returning to the green screen technology they used in previous shows, and have all the actors play all the characters, constantly morphing and lipsyncing and interchanging in surprising and unexpected ways. But where earlier shows using this technique occasionally veered into chaos this one stays on the rails, creating the appearance of chaos but it is incredibly tight and well-tuned. They’ve really mastered their technique and show their skill to best effect. And like  I said before, the size and scale of Abrons’ main theater really suits the operatic scope of BAG’s work.

I know this is a busy weekend but I strongly encourage you to go down to Abrons and check out one or both shows. THE SLEEP is at 7PM and FLESH TONE is at 8:30PM so you can see both in one night easily, with some time to linger in Big Art Group’s video installation while you wait.


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Culturebot Recommends LA Party


Just got back from the COLLAPSABLE HOLE where I finally got to see Phil Soltanoff’s LA PARTY. I saw a bit of it in PRELUDE but had to keep running back and forth. Then I couldn’t get in to see it at HERE during Under The Radar because it kept selling out. And with good reason. It is a really fantastic, hilarious, entertaining and surreal freakout of a show. The premise is simple. Dave, a hardcore raw food vegan, goes from NYC to Los Angeles to celebrate his friend/cousin John’s 30th birthday. Drug-fueled antics ensue. But the story is channeled through three actors, projections and loopy sound fx creating a real sensory thrill ride through a neurotic’s bacchanalia. The show is short – I think it runs about 40 minutes? – and the storytelling is riveting. Not to mention hilarious. Tickets are cheap and include free budweiser. Its a friggin’ steal! Go see this show!!

LA Party
@ The Collapsable Hole
146 Metropolitan Ave. (Berry St.) in Williamsburg, Brooklyn 11211

Feb 18 – 20 and Feb 25 – 27.
8pm with 10pm shows on the Fridays and Saturdays 19, 20, 26, 27.
ALSO a benefit show for Haiti on Sunday Feb 21 @ 5pm
TIckets are 15.00 cash only
Reservations: LaPartyCo@gmail.com


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Apollo - Internationally Renown Environmental Artist Named Director of Environmental Art (2010-01-04 - 2010-01-31)


Artists of America has named Apollo, the Internationally Renown Environmental Artist to be their Director of Environmental Art. Artists of America is a Non Profit Organization dedicated to making sure the next generation of Children have the Artistic opportunities as those who came before them.. Their Artist members reach out to their communities to set up programs and create a network of Professional Creative Mentorship. Some of their best programs work with kids at risk. Artists of America have programs that give foster children a year of art classes. They set up memorial scholarships for foster children, teaching them: music, dance, theater, drawing, cartooning, mural painting creative writing storytelling and book club membership and so much more. Apollo has been a Premiere Portfolio Member at absolutearts.com since 2009.
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Five Questions for Mike Daisey


Name:Mike Daisey
Title/Occupation: Monologist
Organization/Company:None—independent working artist
URL: http://mikedaisey.com

1. Where did you grow up and how did you end up where you are now?

I grew up in far northern Maine, around Fort Kent, on the Canadian border. It is an area that is very remote and very poor, though I trace my obsession with storytelling to the landscape and the people I grew up with. I went to college at a small, liberal micro-Ivy, also in Maine, and upon graduation moved far away from Maine to Seattle. In Seattle I found a garage theater scene that I used to discover the monologues, and began that work in 1997. I moved to New York in 2001 to further this work, and I live here today with my collaborator and partner, Jean-Michele Gregory.

2. Which performance, song, play, movie, painting or other work of art had the biggest influence on you and why?

More than any single work of art, it was a deep obsession with games, game theory and all the fields that spring from this that had the greatest influence on me today as an artist. The idea of games as a metaphor, and the systems of desire that they create, informs my work.

3. What skill, talent or attribute do you most wish you had and why?

I wish I had more patience and compassion; as someone who is inspired to tell stories that I feel my culture is not silent about, I’m nurtured by outrage and conflict, but I know that my character is deficient—my passions are very strong and can overwhelm my empathy. Most of the job of a monologuist is to listen, and I would like to work harder at listening closer and more deeply.

4. What do you do to make a living? Describe a normal day.

I make my living through my work, which means I am on tour with Jean-Michele almost half the year—so in a sense there are no normal days. But when doing shows the day revolves around the performance, so I get up late from working the night before, and spend the workday usually managing future engagements, meeting with my collaborator to do notes on the show, lining up PR and marketing—it’s daunting. The 40 hours a week that I once spent at an office job years ago is re-allocated to keep this career happening, and then the art itself is ladled on top—it takes a huge amount of work from both of us to make this life and work possible.

5. Have you ever had to make a choice between work and art? What did you choose, why, and what was the outcome?

The choice is made, as it is for all of us, every single day. The ongoing struggle is to make the art and work one and the same—but this world doesn’t make this easy. I have been doing all I can to choose art, and make that my polestar, but I will not know the true outcome until the moment of my death, and perhaps not even then. Orwell once said, “To see what is in front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle.” In the arts in America, at this moment in our culture, that is more true than ever.

—-

Mike’s show THE LAST CARGO CULT opens this thursday at The Public Theater.

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