Independence Day

Happy Independence Day, Friends! I took yesterday off so I'm back to work today - I'm doing some writing for my play-writing class at ESPA, I've got a rehearsal this afternoon . . .  Later, in a nod to the holiday, I'll make dinner for me and my husband and then we'll go up to our roof and see what we can of the fireworks.

This Summer is absolutely my busiest (hence the lack of blogging) and, arguably, my best-so-far as an artist.  Ultimately, I owe that to my own artistic Independence:  I've been lucky enough these past couple of years to really have the time and space to dig in, to improve my craft, to work towards doing more and more work that speaks directly to my interests and passions . . . to do the work of being an artist.  Like I am today.

I was persuaded by Malcolm Gladwell when he told us that the self-made individual is an American myth.  Nevertheless, I feel I owe a lot of my pluck, my drive and my determination to my American roots.  Happy Birthday, U.S.A.!

Shorties

I have two short performances coming up: 1. On Saturday, May 14 I'll be performing in a site-specific play called Flier as part of Special Sauce Theater Co.'s series of Flash Plays.  I'll be by the Chipotle on St. Mark's.  Check the Special Sauce website or contact me for more exact info if you want to check it out.

2. On Monday, May 16 I'll be performing in Hard To Love.  There are a number of performances curated into the evening, all of which promise to be charming/entertaining/delightful/awesome.  My piece is a 15 minute piece about a sandwich's rise to Hip-Hop stardom . . . Can a sandwich survive at the top?  Will I be able to rap and dance at the same time?  Come out to Bar 82 on Monday to find out!

Locker 4173b

Locker 4173b is the name of the newest and just-0pened New York Neo-Futurists' primetime show.   That means it's a full-length play(1) that starts at a "regular" play-starting time(2), written and performed in the Neo-Futurist aesthetic(3).  The conceit of the show is that the two writer/performers - Joey Rizzolo and Christopher Borg - (inspired by an episode of This American Life) bought a foreclosed storage locker at auction and, donning the mantle of modern/urban archaeologists, made a show out of it.  The show is funny and entertaining and thoughtful and poignant. I've seen it twice already and plan to see it again: it's really good.

Here is info about the show.  If you want a date, get in touch with me and we'll go together and then we can have drinks and talk about art . . . that's always fun!

Footnotes:

  • (1) "full length" as opposed to short form - like the 30 short plays in 60 minutes that comprise our signature show Too Much Light Makes The Baby Go Blind
  • (2) The show starts at 8:00 as opposed to 10:30 which is what time Too Much Light . . . starts every Friday & Saturday
  • (3) The Neo-Futurist aesthetic is non-illusory.  That means we are who we are, we are where we are, we are doing what we're doing and the time is now.  Here's a great essay that explains it all written by the founder of Neo-Futurism, Greg Allen.

Things that go bump etc.

Tonight I'll be in (on?) Staten Island shooting a short horror film.  In honor of horror, a short list of things that scare me:

  • Horror films (yes. I'd so much rather make them than watch them)
  • Bugs, especially big ones, especially flying ones.
  • Home Intruders (like, someone breaking into my house, especially if I'm home at the time)
  • Rubbery whole-face masks (sometimes they merely creep me out, it depends on the mask and the context)
  • Sleep No More (I think.  I'm kind of afraid to go see it . . .)

Lamb

Easter at my house is an, essentially, secular affair.  This year my mom, brother, husband and I gathered at my mom's house with my mom's two dogs, my brother's dog and our new dog for a low-key afternoon with some delicious crepes, some nice wine, and the traditional Lamby Cake!

This year's cake looks a little more forlorn than usual - the sadly tilted blue eyes, the slightly inclined head ("Don't eat me," it might seem to say) - but I promise you, it was as delicious as ever.  So are the leftovers in my 'fridge.

Summer!

I am so excited for Summer.  Here are my plans:

Hooray!

Now, back to work . . .

Physical Fitness for Dummies

I downloaded a free app for my iPhone called 100 Push-ups. It's so simple its genius: the app trains you, over the course of 6 weeks, to do 100 push-ups.  That's it.

I'm only in week one but I really love it and here's why: it's my ultimate fantasy of goal attainment.  The app tells me what to do (whatever number of push-ups in a set, how long to rest in between sets) and if i just do what it tells me, I'll reach my goal.  If only everything in life was like that!!

Here's the website which is chock full of info and will get you to the app (you can do the program off of the website, sans app, if you want).

Broadcastr

On Sunday, I participated in a walking tour (of sorts) up 2nd Ave. from Houston to 29th, listening to the New York Neo-Futurists' contributions to the new (and exciting!) Broadcastr app.  It was a beautiful day and it was cool to have the shared, albeit simultaneously solo, experience of walking up 2nd in a loose group, listening to the same content.

"Wait, What?!" I hear you say.  "What's Broadcastr?"  Well, if you click on the link above, you can find out on your own.  My take is: Broadcastr links audio content and location so that, wherever you go, you can hear content related to that place.  It's international and it's a free app for your iPhone.  I'm sure it's more . . . visit their website.

The Broadcastr content is available all the time which means that if you want to go do your own 2nd Ave. walking tour, you can go and listen to some (or all) of it any time you want.  You can also listen NOT walking up 2nd avenue, I believe, by finding the NY Neo-Futurists under "featured" on the app but . . . that's not as much fun, since the content speaks directly about each block up 2nd Ave.

This gave me the great feeling of being a tourist in my own city and I'm looking forward to the next time I AM a tourist and firing up Broadcastr to see what the locals have to say.

Stories

I was poking around the internet, as one does, and stumbled across this project from Penguin called We Tell Stories.  I can't find an official blurb on the website, but it seems as though Penguin commissioned six contemporary authors to create stories in new/digital forms - there's one based on google maps, a choose-your-own-adventure style, a mad-libs type fairy tale, one that's a blog, one that's written live - in response to an existing, traditional text.  A "classic." As someone who thinks more and more about different ways to tell stories, I'm enjoying it . . .

Check it out.

The Dog

If you saw Laika Dog In Space, you heard me sing in a Punk Rock fashion about wanting a dog.  If you didn't see that show, just trust me when I tell you that I have wanted a dog for a VERY long time.  And not quite two weeks go, I got one.  She's a pip.  

 

Name: Fanny Brice (because of the actual Fanny Brice who I know about from her work in radio, not from the movie Funny Girl . . . if you wondered)

Age: 4.5

Breed: Japanese Chin

Weight: 12 lbs

Occupation: Formerly a breeder in a puppy mill, Fanny Brice has now retired to a life of leisure as a kept puppy.

Hobbies: Sniffing things.  By "things" we mean EVERYthing.

To-do/Today/To-done

Just about the last thing I need to be doing today is anything NOT on my long-and-behind-schedule To-Do list, but I've been missing the Blog and I've been wanting to work towards writing shorter-but-still-coherent posts (a look back reveals that blogging me is too much of the long-winded, overly earnest part of me and not enough of funny/sassy me . . . stay tuned . . .) so here's hoping that keeping it quick helps me with that goal. So.  I got back from Chicago just about two weeks ago.  (I was there doing THIS.)  Since I've been back I've:

Today I need to:

  • Finish reading The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin by Gordon S. Wood (I'm a little worried I might not get all the way there)
  • Get props for tomorrow's gig at Sarah Lawrence College (list includes: material to fabricate "crown of thorns" sans thorns; dried spaghetti; canned spaghetti; "crap robot costumes," and wind up bunny rabbit)
  • Write some hip-hop
  • Take my jeans to get fixed
  • Get whatever I don't have that I need to make these scones (which I saw Ina make when I was at the gym the other day - nothing like thinking about eating while you're working out . . . what?!?!)

Tonight I See:

Tomorrow I:

  • Make Scones (and the rest of brunch)
  • Go to Sarah Lawrence with all of my props to perform Too Much Light Makes The Baby Go Blind

Sunday I see The Elixir of Love

And many many many times along the way, I take the dog outside where I stand on the sidewalk staring at her and forcefully, but quietly, say "potty. potty. potty. potty. potty. potty. potty . . ." over and over again.  House-training has made me into a crazy lady muttering on the street.

New Year! New City! New(ish) Show!

Hi Blog-Friends!  Happy New Year! The end of 2010 was hectic, carrying right into the beginning of 2011 but now I am writing to you from Chicago!  I arrived this past Friday night and I'm here for about two months to perform in Laika Dog In Space.  This is a show that I co-wrote and performed in at the Ontological Incubator in NYC in October '09.  It was one of the best experiences I've ever had as a performer - really fun material and, through both the material and the performance, an amazing connection with the audience every single night.  Now it's being re-mounted as a (the first!) co-production of the New York and Chicago (aka Original) Neo-Futurists.  After the first production closed, we did a bunch of re-working and re-writing and while I loved the show in its original incarnation, I think it's even better and really wonderful now.  So I'm excited to dive in again with our first Chicago rehearsal for the re-mount tonight!

Here's some info about the show

Here's some info about Laika

Here's the show page on Facebook. You can "Like" it no matter where you live and that'll help us out.

Here's the event page on Facebook.  Because maybe that's how you like to roll . . .

If you live in the Chicago area, I hope you'll come see the show! It runs Feb 3 - March 15.

If you have friends in the Chicago area, I hope you'll recommend our show to them.

Regardless of where you live, I hope you'll take a minute to think about Laika - a sweet little dog who gave her life (or had her life taken) to be the first mammal in space.

 

2 things

Thing One: The New York Neo-Futurists are having their/our annual benefit this coming Monday, November 8 from 7:00 - 10:00 PM.  I have been working very hard on the benefit.  It will be a fun party.  There will be charming people, delicious food, and delightful wine and cocktails to drink.  There will be a silent auction full of things that you and/or your friends and/or your family will want.  Things you will get for a lot less money then you would pay for them in the "real world."  There will be a live auction full of things that you simply can't get except for this Monday night at the Neo-Futurists benefit.  I am looking desperately forward to crawling into my bed on Monday night and sleeping late on Tuesday.  In the meantime, I hope you'll consider joining us at the party.  Info here.

Thing Two:

I just read this comic online.  I recommend it to you.  It will only take you three minutes.  I was pointed to it by this blog.

Classics are classic for a reason

It's been longer between blog posts than I would've preferred owing, primarily, to the following three things:

  1. I'm performing in Too Much Light Makes The Baby Go Blind through this weekend (Oct 29 & 30)
  2. The New York Neo-Futurists are having a benefit on November 8 and I am at the top of the planning pyramid.  Please come, by the way.  It would mean a lot to me.
  3. The Neo-Futurists also have a full-length show running right now called (un)afraid.  I'm not working on it directly, but as an ensemble member part of my job is to help support the show by seeing it and selling it.  It's very strong and interestingly both the same as and different from the, perhaps more-familiar, Too Much Light fare . . . check it out if you have time.  If you let me know when you're going, I'll probably be your date.  Unless you don't want that.

Life is great but I'm feeling a bit frayed and fatigued of late with all of the above plus the independent and serious pursuit of a regular acting career (submissions, auditions, gym) so when these videos came across my computer as I was enjoying my breakfast, they were just what I needed.  I'd rather think of these as "the new vaudeville" than the burlesque* and side/variety-show type acts I've seen carrying that moniker.  I also think these videos are a nice reminder that, while bells and whistles are great, an absence of bells and whistles can be just as effective, entertaining and, certainly, funny.  Enjoy.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17j3OBSnV_k]

*It should be noted that Eliza Skinner blogged my feelings about burlesque before I even had a blog.  If you don't read hers, you should.

Aquabib

Remember this AWESOME adopt-a-word website?  (I blogged about it a little while ago) Well, I just adopted another word: Aquabib.

It means "water-drinker" and since I am trying to be more of an aquabib it seemed both useful and a propos.

Aquabib also has a great example sentence: "aqua-bib by day, alcoholic by night - that's your grandfather."  Oh, snap!

Feel free to send me any words you discover that mean "naturally gifted in Pilates," "blessed with hair that is perfectly coiffed without styling," "completely immune to the Siren-song of popular television shows like 'Glee'," or "rises, fully rested, with the dawn" so that I can get to work on those aspirations as well . . .

Art: it isn't just for fun (an editorial)

Last night, I attended a fund-raiser for the Southern Center for Human Rights (SCHR) which is an organization that "provides legal representation to people facing the death penalty, challenges human rights violations in prisons and jails, seeks through litigation and advocacy to improve legal representation for poor people accused of crimes, and advocates for criminal justice system reforms on behalf of those affected by the system in the Southern United States." Basically, they do good work for a lot of people who don't have the means or the wherewithal to stick up for themselves.  At the event, people told stories about individuals sentenced to the death penalty who had been egregiously non-defended by the lawyers assigned to them; stories about people put in jail for minor crimes like loitering sitting in jails because, after the charges against them had been dropped, no one had bothered to tell the prison that they could be released; a story about a woman who got caught performing oral sex on her boyfriend in high school who, years later as an adult, was retroactively added to the sexual offender registry so that she could no longer live in the home she owned with her husband or work at her job because of the restrictions the registry imposed on her.  SCHR defends people who can't afford to defend themselves and they're not well-supported in the South, essentially, because they are a liberal organization working in a conservative part of the country.  Probably, you should consider making a donation to them.

All of the above got me thinking about the director Peter Sellars - about something he said.

Early this past summer, at the Americans For The Arts Half-Century Summit (where I was honored, along with other Neo-Futurists, to attend and perform at the summit as an Artist in Residence), I heard Mr. Sellars speak as part of a small panel (including the incomparable Liz Lerman) on the topic of The Role of the Artist In Society.  I can't recall what, specifically, kicked off the tangent, but he got to talking about this girls' prison he'd been to or learned about.  The strictest rules and most draconian punishments were imposed on these teen-aged girls including seemingly arbitrary rules like "you have to sleep on your back," "you can't cover your face/head while you're sleeping," "no mirrors."

They were affecting and startling stories - in that respect, not unlike the ones I heard last night - and Mr. Sellars was clearly affected.  He asked (I'm paraphrasing) "what if all of the artists decided to make art about the prison system for a year? what would that do for awareness? to change the situation?" (He asked it better in real life than I'm asking it here, but hopefully you get the gist.)

It's a question I've been thinking about ever since, and it came back to me last night: "what if all of the artists - or even just a fraction of all of the artists - decided to make art about the death penalty? or about the economy? or about the environment?"  What if just all of the artists in Atlanta - where SCHR has their offices - decided to make art about the issues SCHR is grappling with.  Would they find more community support?  Maybe just a more informed and literate dialogue about the issues at hand?

I don't imagine that everything would - poof! - get better, much as I realize that the death penalty, sexual offender registries, and juvenile offenders are complicated issues, not easily sorted out like so many misunderstandings.  Still, it seems to me that artists could have a role - a significant one - in bringing a better, and perhaps more nuanced understanding of these (and other) issues into the conversation that we - collectively, in our communities - are having about them.

To paraphrase Rogers & Hammerstein (in Oklahoma!): the artist and the activist should be friends.

This week in (my) art . . .

Here is what's on the creative docket this week:

  • prepare a scene from the play "dead man's cell phone" for my acting class
  • create a syllabus for a year-long after school class called "from page to stage" (which I signed on to teach just last week) and then start teaching that class (!)
  • write two site-specific short audio-plays for a cool project the Neo-Futurists are doing with this app that uses geo location to connect you to content (more on that down the road)
  • go on some auditions (?)
  • take my second ever Pilates class (I liked the first one)
  • start thinking about going back into Too Much Light Makes The Baby Go Blind next week (weekend of Oct 15/16)

Otherwise i get to:

  • buy baby gifts
  • go to the gym (X5)
  • deliver invites to the Neo-Futurists' benefit to the hands of our board, host committee and ensemble.
  • attend a benefit (not for a theater company)

Additionally I hope to:

  • cook some dinners
  • eat some pinkberry
  • watch something I like on TV
  • read my new book

I'm excited about this week!

Free Drawing Lessons

I very recently stumbled across drawing lessons on the New York Times' website.  They're in the blogs section. This seems to be the first, and this seems to be the second lesson in a series of . . . who knows how many.

During my senior year of college, I took a year-long "Basic Drawing" class which has, ever since, informed and enriched the way that I view fine art (going to museums and galleries being one of the things I most enjoy doing, by the way). More recently, I've been participating in a dance class that has opened up my ideas about and perceptions of movement more generally and which, I feel, much like my drawing class, simply helps my brain to be stronger (or maybe more flexible) by asking it to work in new and different ways.

So . . . I'm not saying that I'm going to draw along with the Times blog . . . but I'm thinking about it . . .