Kid Pan Alley brawl: Do the students who sang “Part of the 99” understand politics and economics?

It’s not banning "The Twist," but Kid Pan Alley’s director, Paul Reisler, came under heavy fire during the last week for performing a song called "Part of the 99" with Woodbrook Elementary students.

While detractors and supporters play their arguments out on KPA’s Facebook page and Weasel Zippers (a blog that takes credit for introducing the story), other conservative blogs have suggested partisan funding influences the Virginia-based nonprofit.

In the interest of healthy debate, C-VILLE took a look at two online discussions: the source of Kid Pan Alley contributions, and whether third graders are expected to learn and understand politics and economics. Here, some more fodder for the debate:

1. Some Kid Pan Alley contributors give to both parties

"If there remains any doubt about the political motives of Kid Pan Alley, just consider one source of its funding," writes a blogger on BigGovernment.com. "It’s the Virginia-based William and Mary Greve Foundation." The writer then explains that the foundation "is headed by John Kiser III, author of a book titled Communist Entrepreneurs."

However, it should be noted that Kid Pan Alley has more than one donor, and a few additional names suggest a more diverse funding network. Marc Benioff, founder of the cloud computing company SalesForce, also launched a charitable foundation that is listed by Guidestar as a top Kid Pan Alley donor. In 2008 alone, Benioff was listed as a contributor to Republicans including John McCain and Mitt Romney; Politico noted the same here.

2. In Virginia schools, third graders do study politics and economics

Amidst online commenters’ calls for "tar and feather" and "public hangings," some comments have asked whether third graders adequately understand the political and economic implications behind the lyrics. 

"They taught the little critters to compose songs about class warfare and political ideology between paste eating 101 and ‘Dora the Explorer,’" commented one.

However, according to the state Department of Education, Virginia expects them to understand both basic politics and economics. (Although, it should be noted that commenters also might take issue with the Department of Education.)

"Students should…demonstrate an understanding of basic economic concepts" and "explain the importance of the basic principles of democracy," according to the DOE.

This information is shared in the interest of creating a more nuanced debate over Kid Pan Alley and the "Part of the 99" song. Just as some donors may give on one side of a partisan line, others give on both. And while the song presents an economic idea that some might contest (and that KPA director Paul Reisler has taken credit for), third graders are expected by the state to know more than "paste eating 101."

Share your thoughts on the matter below.

PCA offering $500 stipend to lead hands-on workshops for youths

PRESS RELEASE: Piedmont Council for the Arts–– Piedmont Council for the Artsb(PCA) seeks proposals from Charlottesville-area artists interested in receiving a $500 stipend to lead a hands-on arts workshop with under-served youth. Workshops can involve any arts genre(s), including visual art, music, theatre, dance, film, and/or literary arts.

 

Selected artists will be paired with groups of K-12 students for short-term arts workshops. The artwork created during the workshops will be featured in May and August exhibitions at the CitySpace Gallery.

 

Artists should submit proposals for workshop curriculum within his or her artistic genre, in response to the creative prompt, "Telling Charlottesville’s Stories." Proposed workshops should be 2-6 hours in length, with the possibility of multiple workshop meetings. Individual artists should plan workshops for no more than 15 students. Collaborative, multi-artist projects will also be considered but should retain at least a 1:15 artist-to-student ratio to ensure quality artistic learning experiences. No more than 3 proposals may be submitted by one artist. All submissions must be received by February 6, 2012.

 

In February, a panel will select four proposals based on appropriateness and feasibility of workshop, past experience with youth, artistic excellence of work samples, quality of response to the creative prompt, and other criteria as defined by PCA staff. Selected artists will be notified by February 24.

 

Each selected artist or multi-artist project will receive one $500 stipend. Artists must cover the cost of their materials, but basic supplies may be available through PCA and partner groups. Workshops will be scheduled to take place in March, April, June, or July 2012.

 

This project is funded by the Bama Works Fund of Dave Matthews Band in the CACF, and will be promoted as part of Charlottesville’s year-long “Celebrate250!” event.

 

Submissions should include:

 

One-page cover sheet, outlining:
Name(s) of artist(s) involved, with a lead artist identified for collaborative workshops
Contact information (email, phone, mailing address) for lead artist
Any past teaching experience(s) by the artist(s)
Scheduling preferences for workshop, including time of day, day of the week, or month (March, April, June, or July 2012)

One-page description of the proposed workshop, outlining:
Workshop Title
Detailed explanation of the arts activity that will be taught during the workshop
Expected artistic outcome for students, if appropriate
Relationship between the arts activity and the creative prompt
List of materials needed
Preferred number and age range of participants (ex. 10-15 upper-elementary students)
Preferred length (in hours) of workshop activity
Any other logistical details important to the success of the workshop

3-5 work samples created by the artist or during past workshops led by the artist, with brief descriptions. (Digital images should be formatted as JPGs.)

Proposals may be submitted digitally to info@charlottesvillearts.org with a subject line of “Arts Inspire.”

 

Alternatively, artists may mail proposals to the address below. Please provide adequate postage and allow ample time for delivery. All submissions must be received by February 6, 2012.

 

Arts Inspire

c/o Piedmont Council for the Arts

P.O. Box 2426

Charlottesville, VA 22902

 

For more information, please email info@charlottesvillearts.org or call 434-971-2787.

Occupy Charlottesville lends support to local Citizens United protest

As part of an organizing effort to ignite popular protests over the Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission ruling during the campaign season, Move To Amend—an organization dedicated to "end[ing] corporate rule"—is coordinating a series of protests on the ruling’s second anniversary. Locally, it will have some help from Occupy Charlottesville.

This event will have more particular parameters than Occupy’s stay in Lee Park. The protest is slated for January 20, from 2pm to 5pm, in front of the U.S. District Court on West Main. According to an e-mail from locally based author and activist David Swanson, the local protest is "part of a nationwide action taking place at over 100 courts across the country."

Occupy Charlottesville issued its own call for participation on its website: "INVITE AS MANY PEOPLE AS YOU CAN THINK OF TO COME AND SHOW UNITY THAT CORPORATIONS ARE NOT PEOPLE AND MONEY IS NOT FREE SPEECH." For C-VILLE’s coverage of Occupy Charlottesville, click here.

Around the Bend: Do presidents make good neighbors?

Issues, character and experience aside, I believe the personalities of our presidential candidates have made an important and, in one case, a deciding difference. Put simply, undecided voters often may vote for the man they feel most comfortable with. The Democratic party has a number of nominees whom I think of as cerebral, even professorial.

Stevenson, Humphrey, McGovern, Mondale Dukakis, Gore and Kerry. All lost. The winners were more folksy, simple answers to complex problems candidates. Al Gore is the prime example. A very studious, diligent politician, steeped in government functioning he was far more qualified to be President than George H. Bush. Unfortunately for his sake, he was all to aware of the disparity and, in the third debate a hubris rose up,that was very off putting. People on the fence went for the "stop by for a beer " guy.

Continuing with this Presidential personalty theme, for the fun of it, I will project these men into my everyday life and speculate who I would prefer as neighbors. Not much is demanded of a good neighbor. Friendliness as we come and go, and occasional help when we are away. In most cases, good neighbors have never set foot in the others’ homes and they have never discussed politics.

Kennedy vs. Nixon: This is the biggest surprise of all. Newsman Bob Schieffer found Richard Nixon "the strangest man I ever met." Mary McGrory, cogent columnist, on learning of more Nixonian chicanery, headed her column,"Worse than We Thought." However, given the criteria for a neighbor, Nixon is ok. The doorman at the White House said that Nixon was the friendliest President. I can see that. This distrustful
introvert needed friends of sorts and chats with the doorman about the Redskins was safe. It’d be the same with brief exchanges in the driveway. JFK had a detachment, noted by many, and I think that it would show in this context. HIs charm was immense but he gives me the jitters. Besides, he’d always be on the go.

LBJ vs. Goldwater: My wife went to Barry’s home for an interview and found him very likeable and direct! Johnson was one crude character. In this case, not "all the way with LBJ"!

Nixon vs. HHH: Hubert, an irrepressible spirit. "When I wake in the morning, I say whoopee." (from a parody about Hubert). A welcome change after RMN moved out!

Nixon vs. McGovern: George loathed Nixon from their long association in Congress. To lose to him was galling, but it has nothing to do with this judgement. As mentioned in a previous column, I had personal contact with McGovern and was deeply impressed. And, who wouldn’t want to have a man of such integrity next door?

Carter vs. Ford: That White House doorman said that Jimmy Carter was the least friendly. I can see that. His highminded and sanctimonious stance on life. There was a coldness one saw in those eyes. Hard to measure up to his standards. Ask Rosalyn. Gerald Ford is the ideal neighbor of all these candidates. There is a guy you’d look forward to borrowing a rake from and shooting the breeze over the fence. A model
"good guy." No contest.

Reagan vs. Carter: Given the above about Carter and Reagan’s easy and limited affability, this also is no contest.

Reagan vs. Mondale: I would welcome the switch to Fritz, someone with more substance, and he is an upbeat sort.

Bush vs. Dukakis: George I is of the old patrician club of social grace. And, he would be game to throw a football around. Michael, probably a decent man, just seemed so wonk-like, so serious.

Clinton vs. Bush: A wife of a high school friend and a very guarded, conservative person, went to the Chappauqua hardware store and there was Bill! She had to admit that he was "very charming." You’ve got to go with Bill. It was not surprising that after the dust had settled, these two became friends. Both social pleasers.

Clinton vs. Dole: Wild Bill still wins. Dole is such a dour, cynical guy. Funny to a point, but a point of view to avoid after a while.

Bush 2 vs Gore: This is a tough one, but given the limited requirements for good neighborship, I vote for George. I don’t know if I could be comfortable talking with Al.

Bush 2 vs. Kerry: Recently seeing a documentary on John Kerry’s courageous, thoughtful, articulate stand against the Vietnam war makes me leap over my spare neighbor criteria. Having someone of his character next door is enough. Connecting optional.

Obama vs. McCain: In these two, one sees the contrast first presented. In John McCain I see a likeable guy but quirky and highly volatile. I would be on guard with him. In Obama, I see a very grounded and well-rounded person. I can imagine a very smooth relationship.

And the results? A surprisingly close race considering my obvious political allegiance. This complements a letter I wrote to the Daily Progress about my harmonious neighborhood. In 20 years, I cannot recall a political conversation with neighbors, a circumspection that is automatic. We have gotten on very well.
 

Johnathan Perkins acquitted during summer Honor Code trial

Two weeks ago, in an article about UVA Law School student culture in the wake of criminal charges filed against Joshua Peter Gomes, C-VILLE revisited the case of Johnathan Perkins. Prior to graduation exercises, Perkins, a black male, penned a letter to the Virginia Law Weekly, in which he alleged mistreatment by two white police officers. He later admitted the story was false, which led many to wonder whether he would face a confidential Honor Code trial and, if found guilty, expulsion from UVA.

Now, thanks to a letter from UVA Law School Dean Paul Mahoney (see below), we know that Perkins did face an Honor Code trial, but was acquitted, and ultimately received his degree. The statement appears below, in full:

"In May 2011, a member of the UVA community brought an Honor charge against Johnathan Perkins. Under UVA’s student-run honor system, a student found guilty of lying, cheating or stealing is expelled permanently from the University. The University withheld Mr. Perkins’ degree pending his trial and he did not participate in the graduation ceremonies.

"Over the summer, Mr. Perkins went to trial before a jury of fellow students. He was acquitted and has received the degree that had been withheld.

"The Law School has separately informed Mr. Perkins that it will furnish a statement regarding the Honor charges and underlying circumstances to any state bar to which he applies.

"Mr. Perkins has authorized the Law School to disclose the above information about his Honor proceeding."

One UVA Law grad told the Daily Progress that a confession from Perkins did not  "mitigate the fact of the public untruths." A coordinator with the city’s Dialogue on Race told C-VILLE that Perkins didn’t need "to create a lie to shed light on some of the concerns of the issue." C-VILLE e-mailed Perkins to request comment, but has not heard from him.

One item of note, as pointed out by AboveTheLaw: Perkins is not on the summary of Honor Code trials held during Spring 2011. And another: According to the summaries, the UVA Honor Committee held 17 trials during the last academic year (not counting Perkins, of course), and found seven students guilty. 

Play Name the Missing Chicken

We were out of town for quite a while over the holidays, and when we returned our house felt pretty out of whack. Mr. Green scene aptly summed it up: Nature had been busy taking over.

The wind had blown off one of the storm windows that top our cold frames in the garden, carried it 20 feet or so, and smashed it on the concrete patio. There was evidence of mice throughout the house (proving that, in normal times, our cat does quite a bit to keep rodents at bay—even though she sleeps about 23 hours a day). And our hot water pipes were frozen.

Most notably, though, we were down a chicken. Our flock of five now numbers four.
Conversation about this has centered on two questions. 1. What happened? 2. To whom?
The answer to the first question will remain shrouded in mystery. All we can do is speculate—maybe the missing bird got snatched by a hawk, or maybe she flew the fence and couldn’t figure out how to get back in to stay warm with her compatriots.

As to the second question, we hope to answer it someday, but it’s surprisingly hard to be sure who’s gone. Our identification of the five birds always relied on having all five of them within view, so we could say “No, that’s the big one, so that must be Vicky; that’s the black one, so that must be Antoine, except that one is actually blacker, so this must be Antoine and that one must be Bonehead” and so on. Now we can’t ever complete the puzzle.

Meanwhile, they keep eating, and they keep not laying. For the moment, then, maybe a smaller flock isn’t such a bad thing.
 

Categories
News

Can Charlottesville become a city by the river?

Since the beginning of time, a river was a community’s source of wealth and prosperity and today, cities like San Antonio, Texas and Savannah, Georgia have capitalized on the river running through their downtowns by making their waterfronts vibrant with shops and restaurants.


The city’s Parks and Recreation department is working to expand the trail system that runs from Riverview Park, under Route 250, and ends in a field off of River Road. (Photo by Jack Looney)

Charlottesville, too, has a river, but its riverfront is crowded with junkyards and empty fields. While lofty ideas of one day making the Rivanna River a central focus exist, seeing them through to reality has proven a lengthy and challenging process.
“There is something wonderful about a waterfront in Charlottesville, but if one were to take a poll, most residents would have no idea that Charlottesville had a riverfront,” said Bill Emory, former member of the Planning Commission.

Mayor Satyendra Huja said he would like to see the riverfront developed and become an economic engine for the city.
“I definitely think that the river can play a more valid role in our community,” he said. “On New Year’s Day I walked on the trails and I saw people of all ages, of all races walking and enjoying the path. It’s an important asset to our community that could become even more so.”

Huja said the river could become a priority for the new City Council, but before the city invests any money in it, new plans for the area need to be drawn in connection with the citywide comprehensive plan, which could take a couple of years.

Ideas about how to develop the Rivanna riverfront were included in an early comprehensive plan, said Emory. An outline for a Rivanna River Corridor Plan was presented to the Planning Commission in 2008 and included a timeline for the study of the area, possible next steps, and funding. The plan ultimately stalled.

“It would never occur to people who are standing on the Downtown Mall that they can walk down Market Street all the way to the river, have lunch in [Riverview] Park and from that point, you are less then a mile from the front porch of Monticello,” he said.

Historically, the Rivanna River was used as a central transportation route during the American Revolution. Today, the city’s Parks and Recreation department is working to expand the trail system that runs from Riverview Park at the edge of the Woolen Mills neighborhood, under Route 250, and ends in a field off of River Road.

Chris Gensic, the city’s park and trail planner, said the city plans to extend the trail north and is working to secure right-of-ways with about nine property owners. The process, he warns, may take a long time.
“We did a land swap this year and we now own a piece of land north of the current end of the trail,” said Gensic. “The land swap took four year to negotiate,” he said. “Once they are done, they are permanent, but it can take years and years.”

Francesca Conte, ultramarathon runner and member of the Rivanna Trails Foundation, would like to see the riverfront of the city developed with shops and cafés. “What brings life to an area is places people can use to connect to other places,” she said. “It would be great if the Riverview Park path had a better connection to other sides of town.”

According to Gensic, two major pedestrian bridges would be necessary for the portion of the trail to function as a transportation route for bike and foot traffic: one that connects Pen Park to Darden Towe and one that links Riverview Park to the new Martha Jefferson Hospital.

“To build a proper bridge, even just for bikes and pedestrians could be a $2 to $3 million project,” he said. He adds that the difficult decision will be choosing one of the two.
“I would imagine the Riverview bridge just became more important due to jobs that are now on the other side of the county,” said Gensic, referring to the hospital.

Categories
Arts

For American Shakespeare Center actors, life imitates art

It took John Harrell a few moments of head-scratching to recall the parts he played at the Blackfriars Playhouse last fall, possibly because he’s taken on over 100 roles in 75 productions during his decade or so with the American Shakespeare Center’s resident troupe. “It’s pathetic,” he said with a wry grin. “When you cycle through plays as quickly as we do, it feels like you have to reach far back into memory just to get to the recent ones. Or maybe I’m just getting old, and my brain is getting crusty. It helps to think of what costume I was wearing.”

John Harrell and Miriam Donald as Hamlet and Ophelia in a 2011 production of Hamlet. Harrell is the longest-running member of the American Shakespeare Center’s resident acting troupe, playing 100 roles in 75 productions over the past decade.

The laurel green, floral-patterned frock that Harrell wore as the shrewd and fabulous Lady Augusta Bracknell in The Importance of Being Earnest last fall comes to mind. When the ASC announced that Harrell and fellow troupe member James Keegan would trade off playing Bracknell in the summer and fall versions of last year’s show, the doting bloggers behind fuckyeahblackfriars.tumblr.com could barely contain themselves. “This is so exciting I just can’t this is beautiful and wonderful everything is perfect and nothing… Hurts,” the post read. “This. Is like Christmas.” It takes a particular kind of regional theater company to inspire an unaffiliated celebratory blog, and the effect that Staunton’s elegant reproduction of one of London’s most famous Rennaissance-era stages has wrought in theatergoers is nothing if not particular.

The sheer number of productions that the ASC has staged in its history is dizzying. Somewhere between the first—Richard III back in 1988, when the company was still known as the Shenandoah Shakespeare Express—and its upcoming retelling of the same rise and fall of the cynical Duke of Gloucester, the company has taken its commitment to preserving Shakespearean staging conditions and grown into an institution with its own time-honored traditions. Focusing on plays by Shakespeare and his contemporaries, presenting them house lights up, with minimal sets in the world’s only re-creation of the Blackfriars Theatre—these are the obvious traditions that come to mind. But there are others, more subtle, that have to do with spending your life playing Shakespeare’s characters and have been passed along between the troupe members who have called Staunton home over the years. If the Bard himself were telling the story of the American Shakespeare Center, he would do it through the actors.

A sort of homecoming
“It used to be a complicated story,” Harrell said of his life with the ASC. “But now, with time it seems to have grown quite simple.” Memory has a way of flattening things, and sitting with Harrell at Coffee on the Corner, one of the many local business that are younger than the Blackfriars Playhouse, it’s clear that a lot has changed since Harrell and his wife, costumer Jenny McNee, moved to town in 2002, the year after the theater opened.

Harrell attended James Madison University in the late ’80s and early ’90s, and became part of the Shenandoah Shakespeare Express when it was still essentially a college club, a handful of young actors who would pile into sedans and bring their shows to theater festivals and college campuses on the East Coast, sleeping on couches and dorm room floors during tours. After graduating, Harrell acted with Theatre Gael in Atlanta, and later in Charlottesville, where he co-founded Foolery, a physical theater troupe specializing in traditional clowning techniques. While he was away, the Shakespeare Express’s tours grew steadily longer, and its growing success led to sold-out runs at places like the Folgers Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C, and, finally, to support from an array of statewide and national endowments.

Allison Glenzer, shown here in the role of Zabina in Tamburlaine the Great, joined the American Shakespeare Center in 2001 after being inspired by a touring troupe’s production of Richard III, which she saw in the late ‘90s while still a student at Clemson University. (Photo by Tommy Thompson)

Harrell has since become the longest-running member of the ASC’s resident troupe. “We play by the same rules now that we lived by then,” Harrell said, of leaving a young, hand-to-mouth group of players and returning to a capital ‘I’ institution. “And rules are better for art than the untrammeled freedom of the blank page. We’ve got this frame that’s rigorous in some ways and loose in others, which makes for a kind of theater of collision.”

Whatever collisions happen on stage, Blackfriars offers actors like Harrell a kind of stability that is rare for professional players. “You can have a fairly settled domestic life here, if that’s something that interests you, and that’s pretty rare in theater. My wife and I are like any other couple juggling two kids and two jobs.”

Currently, Harrell is preparing to play Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing, and by the ides of March, 2012, he will have taken on six more roles when the five plays in the Actor’s Renaissance Season are all cycling through the Blackfriars stage on any given week. “You have to know when to take control of a situation and when to let go, and over the years we’ve accumulated people who are adept at that sort of constant negotiation,” said Harrell, of the Renaissance Season’s demands, which involve putting together a lineup of shows without a director, with only a few days of rehearsal time before each one opens. “Of course, saying that acting here requires advanced social skills is a proposition that’s easily disprovable,” he joked. “If you get 12 actors together, you’d be hard pressed to find a single set of social skills.”

Resident troupe member Allison Glenzer caught one of those early shows in the late ’90s, a performance of Richard III that came to Clemson University while she was studying theater there.

“They had a woman in the role of Richard III, and I was so enthralled by the first night’s performance that on the second, when I was working in the lobby, I spent most of my time looking in through the window.” A man who would later introduce himself as ASC artistic director Jim Warren, told her not to take the house lights being up as a sign that she couldn’t just walk in and take a seat.

In 2001, Glenzer joined one of Shenandoah Shakespeare’s touring troupes, and on the first day of her contract, got to don a hardhat and walk through the unfinished Blackfriars Playhouse, when the Stonewall Jackson Hotel up the street was also still under construction. In each show during her first tour, all but one of Glenzer’s parts in three plays were men’s roles. She and her castmates all wore the same black ensemble, and all of their props were in boxes at the front of the stage. When they weren’t acting, the players would sit onstage as a neutral part of the performance. “What I learned from that first tour was that it was all about the ensemble,” said Glenzer. “You had to really love it.”

René Thornton, Jr. as Richard Plantagenet in a 2010 production of Henry VI, Part II. (Photo by Tommy Thompson)

René Thornton, Jr., who landed an ASC audition in 2004 after a few post-MFA stints at other theaters and regional Shakespeare companies, took to Blackfriars because, in his words, “Your job as an actor in New York is auditioning. My job as an actor in Staunton is acting.

And the actor is primary here in a way that isn’t the same at places where set design or costuming or direction are primary. You’re less of a cog in the machine here. You are the thing, and your co-workers and compatriots are the thing, and that’s exciting and empowering, because as an actor, you want to be acting and you want to be in charge of interesting roles.”

Life imitates art
Ginna Hoben’s one-woman show The Twelve Dates of Christmas, which returned to the Blackfriars stage last winter for a second run, follows the love life of a single Manhattanite actress for a year, from one Christmas to the next. During the audience Q&A following its final 2011 performance, Hoben was asked about the dating scene in Staunton, because she had lived there in ASC resident housing during her three years with the touring troupe. Hoben’s answer wasn’t exciting—she had been in a long-distance relationship with the man who is now her husband during her time in Staunton—but Miriam Burrows, one of her feisty and supportive Twelve Dates backup singers, chimed in to say that she met her husband during her residency. For Burrows, it was an extreme case of life imitating art. Back in 2001, she played Hero in Much Ado About Nothing, and would eventually go on to marry Daniel Burrows, the actor who played Claudio, her love interest in the play.

Hoben said life among Blackfriars players imitates their art in other ways, too. “Occasionally you’ll be talking to someone and a line or an impetus from a show might float into you consciousness, and when you’re among other troupe members this happens almost constantly,” she said. “The interactions and the timing are always there between us, and we find ourselves speaking to each other in the same rhythms as our onstage lines.”

Actor and playwright Ginna Hoben as Mary in The Twelve Dates of Christmas. (Photo by Lauren D. Rogers)
 

When an audience member asked Hoben about the time frame in which she wrote Twelve Dates, she paused for a moment, wondering aloud whether it was during her first or second tour. “It was your first,” Rick Blunt called from a seat on the upper balcony.

In the late ’90s, Blunt finished his undergraduate in history on a Saturday and went to work for a telephone company the following Monday, climbing telephone polls in Chicago for seven years before deciding to go back to school to become a Shakespearian actor. He had acted in a few plays in college, but up to that point, claims that “all the acting I learned was from football coaches.” He enrolled in the Master of Letters/Master of Fine Arts in Shakespeare and Performance at Staunton’s Mary Baldwin College, and started acting with the ASC after his ninth audition. Blunt has since put in four years with the ASC touring troupe.

Blunt and Hoben played Rosencrantz and Guilderstern in Rosencrantz and Guilderstern Are Dead in 2009, but Hoben often feels like the roles are still with them. “It was three years ago, but occasionally Rick will just say two words to me and I’ll give him the response from the show. I may not remember the line consciously, but the rhythm of it lives between us, this invisible thing between two actors,” Hoben said. “You forget about it for a while, but it just takes a flash, maybe a position on stage or a turn of phrase, and it’s alive again. Rick mentioned this last time, he goes, ‘You know that part in Twelve Dates when you lie down on stage, perfectly still? Something about the position and the way you exhaled took me immediately back to R&G, the moment of the play where we did this same thing side by side.’”

The two were performing Rosencrantz and Guilderstern while Hoben was writing Twelve Dates, and to her, the performances of both are connected. “You’ve got to believe that those dramatic moments were part of my process when I was writing this play. If I didn’t have Tom Stoppard floating through my head, or a good punchline from Shakespeare, Twelve Dates might have been a totally different play.”

One role bleeds into another; Shakespeare’s phrases roil in the actors’ heads; and night after night they get their lines straight enough to face audiences with the houselights up. The first time you visit the Blackfriars Playhouse, it’s hard to notice anything else. You can see the actors…and they can see you.

“I had been acting for years, but when I got there, I immediately wondered why it felt so hard to keep up and do it justice,” Hoben said. “It took me a while to realize what a difference the lighting conditions made. New actors there, it takes them a while to figure out what tools are available to them in this particular space, and it takes a while to figure out the right balance between performance and direct address. Some people like the comfort of a fourth wall, darkness on the audience and the privacy that it affords. It’s predominantly the lights. It seems that simple, but the more complex answer is that when I can see an audience member’s face directly, it forces me to tell the truth. You can’t lie as easily when the lights are up.”

Working theater
I once heard it suggested that actors make great interview subjects, because they spend so much of their time as other people that they relish the opportunity to play themselves. But the “Talk Back” session following a performance of A Christmas Carol last month had me worried. René Thornton, Jr., who I was supposed to sit down with after the audience Q&A, looked too exhausted by his second show of the day to play even himself. When an adorable five-year-old raised his hand and asked the actors how they “know what words to say,” it barely drew a chuckle from him, and all of his answers were pithy and to the point. I realized it was wholly possible that Thornton was staring out of a post-show daze at a weekend of twice-daily performances of A Christmas Carol, rueing the interview that was about to rob him of a precious free hour.

Rick Blunt, shown here playing Bottom in a 2011 production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, spent seven years working for a telephone company in Chicago before deciding to devote his life to Shakespearean theater. (Photo by Tommy Thompson)

Blunt, who played the blithe, knowing Ghost of Christmas Present to Thornton’s ennervated Scrooge, broke down the feeling as we waited for Thornton.

“René’s working hard,” he explained. “He’s got two shows a day, six days a week, and rehearsals are a gauntlet. It’s tough to play Scrooge. He has a big row to hoe, every time.”
“Tough” coming from an ASC actor is a badge of honor. On more than a few days in the 2011 winter season, Blunt played two Christmas Carols with David Sedaris’ Santaland Diaries in between. For the two or so hours that make up Santaland, a recurring holiday favorite at the ASC, the stage was his and his alone, aside from the few audience members who, as in every show at Blackfriars, sat on stools in the wings, close enough to feel the spit fly from an aspirated consonant. You don’t think of actors as intimidating, really, but try interviewing one after you’ve just seen them perform.

My fears were quieted when Thornton walked over. He was, indeed, spent (when I later asked him what he does with his free time, he said “sleep”), but he was patient and gracious. It’s uncanny to sit down with someone after you’ve just spent two hours watching them trace an arc like Scrooge’s. As in last summer and fall seasons’ staging of Earnest, where he played John Worthing, the slightly more proper of the two Earnests, Thornton does stifled and curmudgeonly with such vigor that it’s deeply relieving to watch Scrooge change.
In A Christmas Carol, Thornton’s heated Scrooge and Blunt’s cool, gnomic Christmas Present made an odd pair. Seated together off stage, the effect is the same; they both laugh heartily and often, but Thornton’s diction is as perfect off stage as it is on, whereas Blunt is more of a salt of the earth kind of guy. Though both men have landed a spot in the pin-sized market of stable professional acting jobs, they took very different routes to get there. That’s the secret of the Blackfriars, I guess. There’s no curtain. The lights don’t go out. But the actors transform themselves from people who live in a small town to immortal characters, everyday, the way some people go to work for the telephone company. Like Shakespeare said: “All the world’s a stage,/And all the men and women merely players:/They have their exits and their entrances;/And one man in his time plays many parts.”

Categories
Arts

The Descendants

As director Alexander Payne’s movies have migrated westward geographically—from the Nebraska of Citizen Ruth, Election, and About Schmidt to California’s Central Coast for
Sideways, to Hawaii for The Descendants—his edge has considerably softened. By now, adapting Kaui Hart Hemmings’ novel with Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, Payne risks disappearing into his own sunset.

In The Descendants George Clooney plays a Hawaiian lawyer having trouble hanging loose on account of wondering what to do with a huge unspoiled coastal property that’s been in his family for generations, plus the impending death of an unfaithful wife (Patricia Hastie), and the renewed responsibility of raising their two daughters (Shailene Woodley, Amara Miller), each in her own way a proverbial handful.

In The Descendants, director Alexander Payne’s latest humorous study of the tragedy-stricken American male, George Clooney plays a Honolulu-based lawyer and land baron trying to re-connect with his two daughters after his wife suffers a boating accident. 

Although it takes some throat-clearing (or at least some of that throaty voiceover) to get this story set up, Payne settles soon enough into a pleasing ratio of humor and heaviness. The narrative course for Clooney’s character is a sequence not of plot obstacles so much as interpersonal negotiations—with himself, his wife, his daughters, with Robert Forster as a combative father-in-law, Beau Bridges as a congenial cousin, Nick Krause as a teenage stoner boyfriend, Matthew Lillard as an unlikely romantic rival, and Judy Greer as that rival’s sweetly credulous wife.

The movie seems very carefully cast, right down to its Laird Hamilton cameo, and the overall lack of falsity among the supporting players gives Clooney a lot to work with. He’s as subtle and strong as he’s ever been.

I’ve seen The Descendants twice now, and I liked it more on the second viewing, but also realized why I found myself watching it again: It was the holidays, and we needed something we all could agree on—something not too moronic, but also, importantly, not too challenging either. Later, when someone avowed disappointment and described it as merely a token of “the quality film,” I couldn’t bring myself to disagree.

The same holiday hibernation also brought another viewing of Fantastic Mr. Fox, which made clear a certain habit of Clooneyan line reading, an affectedly cynical tone of voice that can seem like a crutch. With this in mind, it’s intriguing to think that Payne turned Clooney down for the role that went to Thomas Haden Church in Sideways—a washed-up TV actor—on the grounds of Clooney quite obviously not seeming at all washed up.

The Descendants may not be too challenging, but that doesn’t mean it endorses complacency. Allowed to use not just his voice but the full weight of his charisma, Clooney makes maturation seem like something we all do, or hope to, instead of just a chapter title in some screenwriting guide. This is a grief-soaked and gently manipulative movie, but also a buoyantly humane one; Payne is such a specialist of real-seeming people that even George Clooney starts to look like one.

Categories
Living

Spice is nice

Spice is nice
In the doldrums of winter, there’s nothing like a little spice to awaken you from hibernation and whisk you away on a virtual adventure. These local dishes will take your taste buds on a journey from sweet to savory to spicy with stops in between.—Megan Headley

(Photo by John Robinson)

Chicken might seem a staid request, but at an Indian restaurant like Milan (pictured), tandoori chicken tikka is a must. The chicken, marinated in a tangy yogurt seasoned with cayenne pepper, cumin, garam masala, garlic, ginger, and turmeric, cooks in a hot clay oven and is served with sliced onions, limes, and cilantro chutney.

Making a decision can be tough at Pad Thai, where there are curries of every color (with your choice of tofu, beef, chicken, or pork). The Masaman curry combines dried red chilies, shallots, and garlic with spices like cumin, cinnamon, and nutmeg (among other ingredients) in a thick, stew-like dish that’s mild and slightly sweet with rich, toasty spices mingling throughout.

At the Korean House, spice is tamed with sweet in the dwaeji bulgogi, or spicy Korean pork barbecue. Tender pork is marinated in soy, brown sugar, thai chile paste, fresh ginger, dark sesame oil, garlic, and crushed red pepper before being grilled to sticky, charred perfection. Wrap in lettuce leaves with strips of cool veggies for a crispy, hot/cold combo.

Afghan cuisine is the fare at Ariana Grill Kabob House on West Main Street and the lamb quorma chalow is a combination of tender lamb chunks swathed in a warm and savory sauce of onions, tomato sauce, lentils, garam masala, cinnamon, cloves, cumin, coriander, and black pepper. Served with a salad, basmati rice, and Afghan bread and you’ve got a meal for $11.75.

Diva-licious
To find one of Charlottesville’s newest gourmet shops, just follow your nose. Smoky cumin and exotic cardamom lure shoppers into The Spice Diva, whose tiny space (it’s snuggled into the purple building off the Main Street Market) concentrates the aromas.

Owner Phyllis Hunter was thrilled to land in a corner of what she calls “foodie heaven” when she and her husband relocated from Virginia Beach in July. The trained singer developed a taste for freshly ground spices while performing with the Santa Fe opera, and vowed to open her own mini-bazaar after visiting a similar shop in Napa Valley.

With spices, freshness is everything. Bring in old, dusty jars for Hunter’s spice exchange. Worn-out powders will occupy containers by the window for decoration, and customers will get a 30 percent discount on freshly ground replacements through February 5. Jarred spices lose their potency after six months, so Hunter suggests buying in small quantities to keep your rack ultra-fresh.

The Spice Diva can fill small (and therefore less expensive) orders for saffron, truffles, and rare teas, and will suggest the perfect enhancements for any fresh seafood, organic meat, or nuts you might have picked up from the other market vendors.

It’s a new year—turn over a new leaf (bay or curry?) and let the Spice Diva help your supper sing.—Eric Angevine

Healthful seasoning
Certain spices can sprinkle on more disease-fighting benefits than most fruits and veggies. Here’s how to stock your spice rack (instead of your medicine cabinet).

Cayenne: A teaspoon or two a day contains enough capsaicin (an anti-inflammatory and antioxidant) to lower the risk of cancer and relieve headaches and arthritis by suppressing one of the body’s neurotransmitters for pain.

Cinnamon: One teaspoon a day contains the same antioxidant power as 5 ½ cups of broccoli and lowers blood sugar, triglycerides, LDL (bad cholesterol), and total cholesterol in people with type 2 diabetes.

Clove: A teaspoon contains enough eugenol and flavinoids to act as an anti-inflammatory, an anti-bacterial, and a mild anaesthetic.

Nutmeg: A few fresh grinds a day help with skin breakouts, mood, sex drive, digestive and sleep disturbances and act as a powerful antioxidant. It’s toxic in large amounts though, so don’t exceed one teaspoon in a day.

Turmeric: About 500-800 milligrams a day acts as a natural anti-inflammatory with a cancer cell inhibitor called curcumin that stops the growth of new blood vessels in tumors. It may also slow the progression of Alzheimer’s.