Categories
Arts

Checking in with Denise Stewart







What are you working on right now?

A few things. I have a one-woman show called The Secret Lives of Little Girls that opens at the Lee Street Theatre in Salisbury, North Carolina, in March. I’m doing rewrites on that to get ready. Then I’m working on a screenplay with a screenwriting group that has some people in it you might know: Jen Downey, Christina Downey, Bree Luck, Phoebe Fliakos and Kate Bennis. We’re writing a comedy in the roundtable format and it’s really hilarious—we find it hilarious—and the process has been awesome. We meet a minimum of two hours a week, we do retreats—we actually call them “advances”—every six weeks to work on the script. Now I understand why comedy works in a group writing format. It’s a lot funnier.

 

What is your first artistic memory from childhood?




Renaissance woman: Local actress and writer Denise Stewart holds degrees in playwriting and theater, and splits her time between writing comedy, teaching wellness and delivering motivational speeches. 




I used to beg my teacher to let me do this character in class—this would be third grade—where I would paint a face on my chin and then turn upside down. I would flip over in a chair and do it. That’s kind of the “ham” side of you that comes out that can be irritating for a teacher, you know, trying to control that in a positive way. My teachers let me find a way to do it without really fussing at me too much.

 

Which of your works are you most proud of?

I played Dolly in Live Arts’ The Matchmaker last spring. Mendy St. Ours directed, and I felt that was one of my strongest performances in the past five years. I think this new piece will be my best piece—the solo show.

 

How do you prepare for work?

I like to do timed writings to start. I usually use an outline of what I’m going to do. In the first 10 minutes, I do a free write on one word that comes from what I’m going to write on.

 

Do you have any superstitions about your art?

I have a superstition about not giving out my work if I know there’s something I would change. In an MFA program you get workshopped, and if I had been lazy I would take something to workshop, people would make comments, and I would think, “I already knew that.” Then I thought, that’s not great discipline. 

 

Locally, who would you like to collaborate with?

I would really like to work with Boomie Pedersen. She’s the artistic director of the Hamner Theater. We’ve been in an industrial film together—a movie for Proctor & Gamble—but it was a very short thing. I would really like to act with her or be directed by her.

 

Tell us about your day job.

I own a business called Wellness Charlottesville, LLC. It’s a company that emphasizes whole-person wellness, specifically weight loss, body image work, and workshops for companies and individuals. I work with women who are really in an advanced place, who really don’t want to talk about losing weight. They want to talk about bigger issues of body work and body image. 

 

Tell us about a good book you recently read.

I just read the autobiography of Gandhi, but it’s my sister’s book. I have to return it and I don’t want to. It’s called Gandhi An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth. In my classes I’m trying to understand the lines between diet, and the truth about spirituality and food. On his first trip to England, people told Gandhi, “You’re not going to be able to not eat meat there!” He had promised his mother that no matter what happened, he would not eat meat, and he stuck to it. All the major religions use discipline with food as a way of going to the next spiritual level. He did a lot of experiments that helped me understand what I was asking of myself and other people to do. 

 

What would you do if you knew you couldn’t fail?

I would try to be the next David Letterman. I’d love to have some kind of daily radio or TV show with a variety-type format. That’s very deep in my idea of what’s funny, entertaining in that way. I actually think that probably is my absolute best venue. That would be my natural state.

Categories
Arts

Checking in with Patrick Costello







 

What were you doing when we called?

Eating lunch at Five Guys. They have a vegetarian option that I sometimes crave.




Hardly starving: In his art Patrick Costello reflects nature’s bounty, including everything from free standing structures to canned foods (pictured).




What are you working on right now?

I’ve just started drawing a positive for a large screenprint I’m going to do, and then I’m also printing shirts, trying to get ready for the holiday craft fairs. Last but not least, there’s a project that I’m working on in the longer term, that I’m applying for grants for now. Me and my friend Meg are going to walk from Tacoma, Washington, to San Francisco, California, canning food with people along the way. 

 

Tell us about your day job.

I am one-sixth of a collectively owned business called C’ville Foodscapes. We design, install and make frame vegetable gardens for people. I also do odds jobs to make ends meet.

 

What’s your first artistic memory?

I think my first artistic memory was actually performative. When I was younger I did a lot of drawing, I liked to draw horses and design—do you remember “Care Bears”? How they had little designs on their bellies? I would draw lots of little circular designs that I could tape on my belly. 

 

If you could have dinner with any person, living or dead, who and why?

I think I would like to have dinner with César Chávez, the farm labor organizer who did lots of organizing in California. I hope one day to be the artist version of him, in that he was such an effective organizer and he worked with farm laborers. I’d like to have a life based in creativity, and growing food and community organizing.

 

Item you’d splurge on?

Fancy cheese. 

 

Do you have any superstitions about your art?

I decide what I’m going to make, or think about what I’m going to make, and then go for it, and hope nothing goes wrong. I’ve had experiences with structures I’ve built falling apart mid-show, so I have nervous moments when I’m making a structure because I don’t want it to fall on anyone.

 

What is a concert, exhibit or show that has recently inspired you?

I’d say the Sharon Van Etten show at the Tea Bazaar. I saw that right before I started working on all the work for my show at the Garage, and I was like, “Oh, man. I just want to make art,” because she’s so talented. I also recently saw Allyson Mellberg-Taylor’s show in Brooklyn. It’s always inspiring to see my friends are making art that awesome.

 

Favorite artist outside your medium?

Somebody like Kathleen Hanna of Le Tigre. I like that she has done so many things in her career, worked with so many interesting people and continued to make awesome music the whole time. I also like that there’s a political awareness in her work.

 

Locally, who would you like to collaborate with?

Avery Lawrence. We have some ideas for screenprinted garden installation stuff. We want to make this installation where we can grow food and screenprint the planters. Maybe there would be a performative element to it. We both like to make masks, so we talked about having these kind of masked characters interact in a performance piece.

 

What would you do if you knew you couldn’t fail?

My honest answer would be that I don’t think about failing, I just assume I’m going to mess up a bunch and do it anyway. If I knew I couldn’t fail, I would probably be in a band on tour.

Categories
News

25 gifts under $25

Some folks say good things come in small packages. We’d like to amend that: When it comes to holiday shopping, we say good things come with small price tags. That’s why we’ve combed the city for the best gifts under $25, be they for mom, bro, BF or canine. Happy shopping!

 


 

 

 

CHIN-EASE
Kids’ chopsticks from The Happy Cook
For your wee foodie: Tiny fingers will have no trouble grasping these skewers, which help budding sushi lovers learn how to manage chopsticks properly.
($8.50, Barracks Road Shopping Center, 977-2665)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 


 

 

 

 

TRUNK SHOW
Men’s briefs from Urban Outfitters
Your fella can never have too many of these: Brightly colored and super soft, he won’t want to take them off.
($12 or 3 for $24, 316 E. Main St., 295-1749)

STRING THEORY
CLO Fortuna thong from Derriere de Soie
It’s tricky to buy undies for your special someone, but that’s why we like these lacy babies: They’re one size fits all. The elastic band adjusts just like a bra strap. Genius.
($20, 105 E. Main St., 977-7455)

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

STICKY FINGERS
Mike’s Honey from Market Street Wineshop
Produced in Barboursville, this sweet stuff is all-natural, all local and all delicious.
($7.99, 311 E. Market St., 979-9463)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

WORKS FOR THE WEAR
Russell Richards T-shirt
Wearable art from a local illustrator? Yes, please. Nab this cotton tee for a bike enthusiast, art lover…or someone who’s running low on clean shirts. (We kid!)
($19.99, russellrichards.com)

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

PIN PUSHIN’
Enamel pins from Antics
Vintage chic in coordinating colors is the perfect addition to any friend’s lapel.
($7.50-12, 103 Fifth St. SE, 293-9082)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

PIG PEN
Wool pens from O’Suzannah
How cute will a few of these look nestled in your kiddo’s pencil pouch? Try to resist assigning them names. Go ahead, try it.
($8.50, 114 Fourth St. NE, 979-9467)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

CONFECTION PERFECTION
16-piece custom assortment from Gearharts Fine Chocolates
Spread the love with a hand-picked (by you) collection of 16 flavors. But, a word to the wise: Get your order in early. These treats go fast.
($23, 416 W. Main St., 972-9100)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

FU FIGHTER
Candles from Patina Antiques, Etc.
Half-lion, half-dragon, Fu Dogs placed at the front of the house guard against unwanted visitors (e.g., visitors without gifts in tow).
($9, 2171 Ivy Rd. #5, 244-3222)

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

WORD WAGER
Mockingbird by Kathryn Erskine at New Dominion Book Shop
A National Book Award winner by a local lawyer-turned-writer, Mockingbird tells the story of Caitlin, an 11-year-old with Asperger’s, as she struggles with the death of her brother.
($15.99, 404 E. Main St., 295-2552)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

RETRO CHIC
Thomas Paul canvas cases from Rock Paper Scissors
How fun! These bags keep your modern technology safe, while harkening back to inventions of yore. We dig the silkscreened gramophone.
($14-25, 225 E. Main St., 979-6366)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

GOOD TO GO
Metal lunchbox from Blue Ridge Eco Shop
Just what every Earth-lover needs: A metal lunch pail to satisfy man-sized cravings. Shiny, stackable containers that hold everything from baby carrots to brisket.
($24.95, 313 E. Main St., 296-0042)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

LIT FROM WITHIN
Twig candle holder from Crème de la Crème
Sticks and stones may break your bones, but this candle holder won’t break the bank. Bonus: It’s got that whole I’m-snowed-in-at-a-log-cabin, rustic chic thing going on.
($14, North Wing, Barracks Road Shopping Center, 296-7018)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

SNIFF COMPETITION
Crazy Sticks solid perfume from Sustain
The best thing about these itty-bitty scented sticks? Roll one on the wrist and behind the ear to find out—the subtle scent lingers all day.
($20, 406 W. Main St., 244-0028)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

SHOOT FOR THE MOON
Moon Deluxe by Andrew Cedermark at Sidetracks
Evocative, edgy. No coincidence that Cedermark is the master of C-VILLE’s arts section.
($12, 218 W. Water St. #L, 295-3080)

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

PRETTY AS A…
Paper portrait by Eliza Evans
You could toss a photo in a frame from Target and be done with it, but that’s so impersonal when compared to a hand-painted portrait by a local artist.
($25, elizanevans@gmail.com)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

BOWLED OVER
Finger bowls from Caspari
Snag one of these sweet bowls for the woman who has everything. We can see one holding loose jewelry or change. Plus, they come in about 12 bazillion colors. Good luck choosing!
($12.50, 100 W. Main St., 817-7880)

 

 

 


 

 

 

TEAR IN YOUR EYEGLASS
Onion Goggles from Seasonal Cook
Shaped like glasses, these spectacles protect the wearer’s eyes from nasty fumes while chopping onions. The chef in your life will thank you.
($22.95, 416 W. Main St. #A, 295-9355)

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

WARM AND FUZZY
Faux fur pom pom beanie from Gap
Give this cozy cap to a friend, then ask her on a hot cocoa date.
($24.50, Fashion Square Mall, 973-5026)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

FALL FOR FLATS
Zippered flats from Francesca’s Collections
We’re loving the delicate, lighter-than-air shape combined with a rough, get-down-to-business zipper.
($24, Barracks Road Shopping Center, 296-9556)

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

SHINE ON
Superskinny glitter belt from J. Crew
For your favorite fashionista, a sparkly belt that magically makes any outfit runway-worthy.
($24.50, Fashion Square Mall, 975-2889)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

GET A TRIM
Corona Bypass Pruner from Ivy Nursery
A gardener’s gateway tool, this pruner carries a lifetime guarantee and is specially sized for smaller hands. Grip, trim, done.
($24.99, 570 Broomley Rd., 295-1183)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

GIVE A DOG A BONE
Tuff Enuff dog toy from The Dog & Horse Lovers Boutique
Virtually indestructible, this fleece toy can withstand the tough grip of Fido’s K9s. Bonus: You can take it to the lake. It floats!
($12.95, 503 E. Main St., 220-4540)

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

WINE ON
Chester Gap Cellars’ 2007 Viognier from Wine Warehouse
Crisp and dry, with honeysuckle and peach notes, Viognier is practically becoming the state white wine of Virginia. We especially like this beauty from Rappahannock County.
($19.99, 1804 Hydraulic Rd., 296-1727)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

HIKE IT UP
Best Easy Day Hikes by Bert and Jane Gildart from Blue Ridge Mountain Sports
A beginner’s guide to hiking the Shenandoah National Park, this pocket-sized book tops our list for its detailed description of each trail.
($9.95, Barracks Road Shopping Center, 977-4400)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
News

Dave Matthews Band; John Paul Jones Arena; November 19, 2010

I went to two rock shows this weekend. The first was the Coathangers, a girl-group from Atlanta that was all shaggy bangs and skinny jeans, bathed in blue light on the tiny stage at the Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar. My friend Andy called them an "angry inner city version of the B-52’s." They played songs like "Nestle in My Boobies," "Shut the Fuck Up" and "Don’t Touch My Shit." Five bucks at the door got me a nice dose of punchy street cred from a foursome that rolls in an Econoline and probably lives on espresso drinks and ramen noodles.

The Dave Matthews Band played the first of two final shows before taking a year off from touring in 2011. PHOTO BY JACK LOONEY.

Noodling was on my mind the next night on the way to see Dave Matthews Band at JPJ. I had heard "Ants Marching" earlier in the day at my dermatologist’s office, so as I lined up to enter (girls on the left, boys on the right due to same-sex frisking policies), I was vaguely dreading that this weekend’s "Dave" shows—a pair billed as the last until at least 2012—would be an elevator music demonstration played for local suburbanites who can still afford concert tickets.

Things looked up when the band, now seven strong with Tim Reynolds on guitar and a horn section, walked slowly onstage bathed in blue light to screams that washed over them for seven minutes before they played a note. Fans around me on the floor, mostly in their 20s and only a third of them sporting baseball caps, screamed every chorus if not every word of the 20 or so upbeat songs, mostly from this past decade as opposed to classic ’90s material. Hometown touches included an extended guitar duel on "#41" from Reynolds and band employee Joe Lawlor on a wailing Stratocaster, and additional horns on "Jimi Thing" by jazz man John D’earth and Trombone Shorty, who was in town with his crew to open the show. It gave the show a triumphant feeling, and both the band and its fans reveled in it.

I slipped out before the encore but it was not hard to find it nerdily documented online later in the night. Just like in the 10 or so other DMB shows I have seen since the early ’90s, Bob Dylan’s "All Along the Watchtower" was the heart of it, which reminded me that like the Coathangers, Dave and the boys still have not only swagger but rock credibility too.—Grippy Toulouse

Categories
Arts

Checking in with Rick Olivarez

What are you working on right now?







I’m trying to get some songs together for our next album. I’ve got something written and ready to go, and there are a couple of things that need a little fine tuning. There’s one tune in particular that I’ve been working on for over a year now. Actually, I was reading a biography of Chopin, and as he was composing works and fine-tuning them he called it “chiseling.” I can’t think of a better description. A little here, a little there—still not happy—I put it away and I come back a week or a month later and chisel a little bit more. 

 




As sure as the sun rises, The Olivarez Trio, featuring Rick Olivarez on guitar, fills the C&O with gypsy jazz on Tuesday nights.




Tell us about your day job.

I used to be a stone mason. I guess I am still a stone mason, but I’ve been so busy with the band. I teach music during the day, and that’s become my day job. 

 

What is your first artistic memory from childhood?

My aunt and uncle have, believe it or not, 17 kids, and the middle eight have a Baroque and Renaissance choir. As a little kid, I didn’t get what it was that they were singing. It continues to this day, and their children have continued on this family tradition. I remember listening to that when I was a kid.

 

Item you’d splurge on?

If I could somehow find my grandfather’s guitar. He had a great, old Gibson hollowbody guitar that he toured with. My cousin played it for a while, but it was stolen. It’s out there somewhere, I’m sure, but I don’t know where. If somebody out there had that guitar and I had unlimited funds, I would splurge on that. 

 

How do you prepare for work?

I play the first thing that pops into my head. Sometimes, it’s just mindless noodling, which I try to avoid, but I can’t help myself. I just go into that. Or sometimes there’s something new that we have been working on, a new song, I might go over that a few times. Quite often, Jeff Cheers [accompanying guitarist in The Olivarez Trio] and myself warm up before a show, and we’ll just play whatever. I’ll start playing a song and he’ll jump in and we’ll play and see what happens.

 

Do you have any superstitions about playing?

I’m kind of worried about picks. Thickness is a part of it. I swear some of them just have a different tone. Especially with acoustic instruments, if you perceive a tone as being pleasing to your ear, as a good tone, then you’re able to do more. If you feel as though it’s too harsh sounding, it’s going to go the other way. You’re not going to be able to do your best. My fellow guitar player friends just think I’m insane about it. If I find a good pick, I’ll want to buy a whole box of them. Timbre is a big part of it. 

 

What is a concert, exhibit or show that has recently inspired you?

I was in France this summer for the annual Django Reinhardt Festival at Samois-sur-Seine, France. Seeing the performances was great and there were a lot of people I admire there—Fapy Lafertin, Tchavolo Schmitt. But more so, it was great to walk around the campsite and hang out with Fapy, jam with them, or watch him jam with other big name guys. That was really inspiring. 

 

What would you do if you knew you couldn’t fail?

Hit the Blackjack table in Vegas. Honestly, if I knew I couldn’t fail, it may not be worth doing. There has to be a chance to crash and burn.

Categories
Arts

Checking in with Eliza Evans

What are you working on right now? 






I’m mainly working on my garden a lot, planting fall crops. I’m still doing a few house calls to do portraits. Portraits are the main thing I do, artistically, portraits from life, but I’m sort of taking a break. I was painting on the Downtown Mall, but now I’m doing a bunch of house renovations.
 



You may have seen a friend rendered in one of Eliza Evans’ charming, matter-of-fact portraits. Her show, “People and Trees,” was on exhibit last April at The Bridge/PAI.




Locally, who would you like to collaborate with? 
I think it’d be cool to get a whole bunch of people together who like to paint—and it doesn’t really matter who because I’m open to collaborate with anybody—but I think it’d be fun to do. Say you get 10 people and everybody paints everybody else, including themselves, and then have a show. Everybody would team up and paint each other at the same time. The final product would be so neat. Maybe my dad [painter John Borden Evans] would be in there, so you’d have 10 portraits of him in so many different styles. I think it’d be cool to get a child in there and different levels—to mix it up.
 
What’s your first artistic memory? 
My dad is a professional artist and he has been since I was born. He often paints with acrylic, which peels off, and he uses plastic containers for his palette. He’d get me to peel the paint off of them. I remember making little wire people with my grandmother—people out of wire, out of thin wire. She was a jeweler and so she knew how to do stuff with wire. Granny makes quilts and jewelry, she’s very artistic. My aunt, she’s also a painter. My brother’s a painter. Painting just seemed like the natural thing to do. 
 
Tell us about your day job.
I babysit two days a week, taking care of a 10-month-old. I also grow flowers and paint portraits.
 
What music are you listening to right now?
I’ve been listening to a lot of Dolly Parton lately, I have a collection of her greatest hits. I love all the pretty songs: “I Will Always Love You,” “Jolene” and “Touch Your Woman.” I read her autobiography and realized she’s such a feminist but you would never know it from looking at her. She has great stories to tell, and I love listening to her music.
 
Favorite artist outside your medium? 
Tom Waits. He’s so creative and so funny. He can touch on any human emotion and can experiment as far as he can in any direction, but he never takes himself too seriously. It’s interesting to listen to his earlier recordings. Then, he was like many painters—like Picasso, who started with realism—and then as they go on they get more wild, and push the envelope more. He’s probably written over 500 songs in his life, and they’re all so different. 
 
If you could have dinner with any person, living or dead, who and why? 
I’d like to go back in time and have dinner with Laura Ingalls Wilder, and have an old-fashioned American meal. It’d be interesting to see what kind of food they ate in early America, like acorn flour and things like that. It’d also be great to meet some native Virginians and see what they were eating, like wild mushrooms, and how they prepared their meals.
 
What would you do if you knew you couldn’t fail? 
I would cut down this tree that needs to get cut down outside my house. It’s half-rotten, and it’s kind of scary. I would like to not pay someone to do it, and do it myself. It needs to come down, half of it is dead. It could come down on my car anytime.
Categories
Living

This little piggie farm goes to market

Like that porkchop you bought last Saturday at the City Market, the career of a farmer has an expiration date. For Richard Bean, that date has come. The Double H butcher has announced that, as of two months ago, he and partner Jean Rinaldi have decided to start the next phase of their lives—one that includes a little rest. To do that, they’re putting the business up for sale.




Butcher Richard Bean (pictured), along with his partner, Jean Rinaldi, are selling Double H. He hopes to turn it over to a “young, up-and-coming couple. …We desperately need young farmers,” he says.




“I’m 66 years old, going on 100,” Bean says. It’s time for a vacation, something he and his partner haven’t had in 13 years. 

Bean says he and Rinaldi plan to keep their house and some of the farm’s 32 acres in Nelson County, but the new owners of Double H will get all the equipment, the livestock and even the business’ name, if they want it, in the turnkey deal.

“Because we’re pretty famous,” he says, “they’d be foolish not to try and copy some of that.” Bean refers to the legal trouble Double H faced in 2007, when he and Rinaldi were charged with 11 misdemeanors each for selling uninspected meat. (Those troubles have since been cleared up. As part of their plea agreement, the animals Bean butchers are killed in a USDA-approved facility and transported to Double H; they are no longer slaughtered on-site at the farm.)

Bean tells Restaurantarama there have been some parties interested in the business, and that they’ve started conducting interviews. In the meantime, he teaches a class in organic agriculture at PVCC, which he hopes will encourage more people to start farming. 

And the response from local restaurant clientele, like Hamiltons’ and The Ivy Inn? “The first thing is always a gasp,” he says, but his customers ultimately understand—he deserves the time off.

Plus, he reasons, “They lived before Double H, they’ll live after Double H.”  

Aw, shuck!

Cardinal Point Winery & Vineyard will host its Seventh Annual Oyster Roast this weekend, November 13 and 14. Past years’ demand has been so great, this year the Afton winery has brought in Deborah Pratt, a four-time World Shucking Champion. Her sister will also join for shucking backup. The two-day event includes live music by The Cashmere Jungle Lords and Jolie Fille. Visit cardinalpointwinery.com or stop by the tasting room to purchase tickets.
Categories
News

Virginia Film Festival 2010

This year’s Virginia Film Festival is going to be different. Less classic cinema. More new and independent flicks that reflect contemporary concerns. A snazzy new festival logo. Plus, they’ve established an additional box office at the Main Street Arena, so viewers don’t have to trek to Culbreth for a movie that’s showing Downtown.

But what stays the same—and this is the most important thing—is the spell of excitement that the festival casts over Charlottesville with four days of expert-curated films, bigshot special guests and glitzy parties. And given the vast selection of fun times, we know how hard it is to pick out which movies are must-sees—and which ones you don’t want to be seen at. In this feature you’ll find suggestions from our film critic, previews of new movies from Darren Aronofsky and Tom Shadyac and a rundown of this year’s festival, by the numbers.
 
When looking at the full schedule, don’t forget that a lot of local filmmakers are bringing the heat. Enjoy already acclaimed features like The Parking Lot Movie (Friday 9:30pm, Vinegar Hill) and World Peace…and other Fourth Grade Achievements (Sunday 3:15pm, The Paramount), but be sure to check out newer regional fare, like Vintage: The Winemaker’s Year (Saturday 6pm, The Paramount), about Virginia’s wine scene, and Beardo (Saturday 5pm, Vinegar Hill), a Harrisonburg-produced short documentary about a competition in Alaska that determines whose beard is the world’s finest. In the end, the choice is yours.—Andrew Cedermark

Dance Macabre

Darren Aronofsky brings his unique vision to a ballet thriller




Darren Aronofsky arrived as a fully formed auteur in 1998 with the low-budget, black-and-white film Pi. The film generated suspense—horror, even—through little more than a paranoid, migraine-plagued genius’ interactions with his jerry-rigged computer and a 216-digit number that may have had a connection to an esoteric mathematical formulation (the Fibonacci Sequence), may have been a Cabalistic interpretation of the Old Testament, or may have served as a way to predict the rise and fall of the stock market. Or, maybe not. It didn’t matter: The number was just a means to a disturbed ending. Aronofsky explored the descent of Max Cohen (Sean Gullette) into madness through an ever shifting lens that looked outward from a mind on the brink of disintegration to capture increasingly disjointed and surrealistic visions. The film wasn’t so much avant garde as it was guardedly avant: It introduced a talent who wasn’t afraid to experiment with everything from plot and narrative to lighting and camera angles, yet never gratuitously so. Even Aronofsky’s most daring shots served the larger purpose of generating psychological tension that’s only dispelled when Cohen takes a power drill to his temple.








Ballet and psychological terror collide in Black Swan, starring Natalie Portman, Winona Ryder and Mila Kunis. This acclaimed new film from Darren Aronofsky opens the Virginia Film Festival on Thursday. 

Aronofsky remains an obsessive filmmaker who makes obsessive films about obsession. He’s always taken on big themes—addiction in 2000’s Requiem For A Dream, mortality in 2006’s The Fountain, and the rise and fall of Mickey Rourke as Randy “the Ram” Robinson in 2008’s The Wrestler. But it is the little things that have distinguished Aronofsky’s filmmaking. With help from longtime cinematographer Matthew Libatique, he’s developed the right instinct for deploying clever filmic flourishes: the split-screen technique and rapid-fire montages in Requiem, the aggressive graininess of Pi, the hallucinatory textures and seamless fades that bind the three narratives in The Fountain, and the casual hand-held shots that give The Wrestler the feel of a documentary.  

The latter film earned Rourke an Oscar nomination and gave Aronofsky his first taste of mainstream success. It also created the inspiration for Black Swan (Thursday 7pm, Culbreth) Aronofsky’s new film, and put him in a position to cast Natalie Portman in the lead of what’s predicted to be an even bigger commercial breakthrough. Based around a New York City ballet company’s production of Swan Lake, Black Swan pits Portman, whose Nina is more comfortable in the role of the innocent White Swan, against Mila Kunis’ Lily, an understudy whose character better suits her for the role of the more devious, sensual Black Swan. Obsession takes over as Nina explores the dark side, succumbs to paranoia, and gives Aronofsky’s camera yet another opportunity to experiment with perceptual distortions and reeling realities. This is familiar terrain for Aronofsky, a director who seems most at home when his camera is peering into the twisted corners of the private hell he creates for his characters. When he introduced the film at the Telluride Film Festival in September, he did so with an open-ended apology. Presumably, he was trying to warn away anyone under the impression that a big star, a big budget, and a big ballet might have tempered his penchant for unpredictability or his preference for unhappy endings.—Matt Ashare

A critic’s picks

Sometimes it’s best to defer to the experts.

What to see? Well, everything, of course. But maybe you won’t have time for everything. So here’s a short list of suggestions. Never mind Black Swan (Thursday 7pm, Culbreth) and Casino Jack (Sunday 4pm, Culbreth) and I Love You Phillip Morris (Friday 9:45pm, Culbreth) and such. Yes, it’d be cool to catch those before their theatrical releases. But it’s also cool to catch other, stranger things that you might never see on a big screen again. Such as: 
 

Clockwise, from bottom right: Brazilian crowd-pleaser Elvis & Madona, Bogdanovich’s What’s Up, Doc?, Kurosawa’s The Bad Sleep Well, the Fierlingers’ My Dog Tulip.

At least one classic. As a 50th anniversary give-back gift to the gods of cinema, this year’s fest kindly reminds us how incredible it must have been when Billy Wilder’s The Apartment (Thursday 7pm, Newcomb), Akira Kurosawa’s The Bad Sleep Well (Thursday 8:30pm, Regal Downtown), Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless (Friday 7:30pm, Regal Downtown) Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita (Sunday 6:30pm, Culbreth) Michael Powell’s Peeping Tom (Sunday 6:45pm, Regal Downtown) and Robert Drew’s JFK documentary Primary (Friday 3:15, Regal Downtown) all hit theaters in the same year, 1960. Now, also incredibly, they’re all hitting theaters in the same weekend. We’re paralyzed with indecision here; the choice is yours. 
 
At least one film by Festival Fellow Peter Bogdanovich. The dandily attired Oscar-winning writer-actor-director-producer-historian-critic came all this way to talk shop, bringing along more than half a century’s worth of experience and, we hope, at least one of his signature neck scarves. Opt for the perpetually charming What’s Up, Doc? (Sunday 10:45am, The Paramount) Plot particulars—something about jewels, underwear, igneous rocks, secret documents and a quadruple suitcase switcheroo—matter less than the comedy and romance of manners by which prim musicologist Ryan O’Neal finds himself hijacked from sourpuss fiancee Madeline Kahn (in her delicious film debut) by breath of fresh air Barbra Streisand (yes, there was a time). 
 
At least one local highlight. We suggest Vintage: The Winemaker’s Year (Saturday 6pm, The Paramount) for purely practical reasons. First, as fun as it is to guess what Thomas Jefferson might make of how the whole democratic republic thing has turned out here, it’s even more satisfying to gloat over actually having mastered that which he never could: the making of fine wine from Virginian soils. Second, the festival’s presentation of this documentary includes a Virginia winemakers reception and a post-screening panel discussion moderated by C-VILLE Editor Cathy Harding. Cheers.
 
At least one foreign film about young romance—or maybe two. In Elvis & Madona (Friday 5pm, Regal Downtown) a proven LGBT crowd-pleaser from Brazil, the romance between a transgendered cabaret performer and a lesbian is, shall we say, complicated. And you thought the whole genre of romantic comedy had exhausted itself. By contrast, German director Maren Ade’s intelligent, beautifully observed and ultimately harrowing drama Everyone Else (Sunday 6:45pm, Vinegar Hill) is a naturalistic portrait of romantic disintegration that focuses on a young, attractive (hetero) couple on vacation in Sardinia. It’s as if the tradition of John Cassavetes were transposed to the key of contemporary young Europeans. We’re just saying these two would make a hell of a double-feature.
 
At least one surprisingly unsentimental animated film about the special bond between a sad, clever old Englishman and the Alsatian bitch he reluctantly adopted. O.K., we weren’t sure how to categorize My Dog Tulip (Sunday 2pm, Vinegar Hill), but wanted to be sure to recommend it. Paul and Sandra Fierlinger’s animated adaptation of British writer J. R. Ackerley’s memoir is a singular testament to true companionship, and yes, so unsentimental it’s almost shocking. With the voices of Christopher Plummer, Lynn Redgrave and Isabella Rossellini, and reportedly the first animated feature to be entirely hand drawn with paperless computer technology, it has special credentials. More important is that it is at once a complete delight for dog lovers and a complete surprise for people who might not be into movies that delight dog-lovers.—Jonathan Kiefer
 

Re-he-he-heeally.

Tom Shadyac gets serious with new documentary

There is a picture from 2005’s Virginia Film Festival of Tom Shadyac sitting in room 223 of the Cavalier Inn, his long mane dangling halfway to his ripped jeans. The room is trashed. It’s 7:45am.
 

Three years ago Tom Shadyac was injured in a mountain biking accident that nearly cost him his faculties. Now 95 percent recovered, he presents a documentary that’s more than a stone’s throw from the Jim Carrey vehicles that made him his name.
This isn’t the stuff of fantasy Hollywood all-nighters; Shadyac has stopped by the room to offer his services as a special-guest mentor for the Adrenaline Film Project, where crews are given 72 hours make an entire short film, from script to post. At one point in the encounter Shadyac corroborates a friend’s advice on the film, and the friend says, “Nobody believes me until I bring in a billion-dollar director.” Shadyac chimes in: “And that’s with a B, motherfucker.” 
 
That’s Shadyac’s signature sense of humor. He’s a Falls Church native and UVA graduate whose hilarious—and did we mention lucrative?—partnership with Jim Carrey produced Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, Liar Liar and Bruce Almighty. (Shadyac also directed Evan Almighty, one of the most expensive comedies ever made, in Albemarle County.) But he returns to the Virginia Film Festival to introduce a new documentary, I AM (Saturday 2pm, Newcomb Theater) that asks two fundamental questions: “What’s wrong with the world,” and “What can we do about it.” In it he interviews the likes of Desmond Tutu, Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn.
 
I AM is a product of an extended period in which Shadyac’s sense of humor was put to the test, after he was involved in a mountain biking accident that was “serious enough that I didn’t think I was going to live,” he says. “I developed post-concussion syndrome, which is a syndrome when the symptoms of a concussion don’t go away. Your brain essentially loses the ability to filter stimuli, which is one of its primary functions. And my brain lost the ability to filter sound and light. It becomes quite, quite torturous.” 
 
In the meantime, Shadyac had grown increasingly involved in philanthropy, even going so far as to purchase the First Street Church in Downtown Charlottesville in 2006 for $5 million after wrapping up Evan Almighty. “I was compelled to release a conversation that had been locked inside of me that I wanted to share with people,” says Shadyac. “That was the birth of I AM.” 
 
Are people ready for a serious Tom Shadyac film? It may help when pondering that question to think of Shadyac’s past films. Perhaps you enjoyed them for their silliness: When Ace Ventura slaps his breast pocket, it explodes with water, and he says, “Do not go in there.” Young Dave Chappelle’s “Women be shopping!” monologue from The Nutty Professor. Or in Patch Adams, when the gynecologists find that they must walk through an enormous set of lady-legs and a sign that says “Welcome, Gynos! At your cervix” to get into Adams’ institute. 
 
While indeed silly, these are the kind of comedies with heart that, it seems, are few and far between these days. Patch Adams was about compassion, The Nutty Professor about feeling comfortable in your own skin, and Ace Ventura was about…well, you get the point.
“I have screened I AM for a lot of people,” he says. “The most common response I get is, ‘I’m so thankful that you made this film because this has been something that’s been in me that I haven’t been able to express and nobody is talking about.’”
 
“It’s all a journey. My other films are kind of thematic parables, from a silly thing like Liar Liar, which is really about how the truth sets us free—whatever that is in our own life,” says Shadyac. “Bruce Almighty was an exploration of true power.”—A.C.
 

DUDE, WHERE’S MY THEME?

Five questions for Executive Director Jody Kielbasa

What film are you most looking forward to?

 

 

Jody Kielbasa’s second year at the Virginia Film Festival has been his first to enact his vision, which includes clear branding and a new emphasis on regional films and contemporary cinema.
 

Honestly, I’m really looking forward to the opening of Black Swan. That is one that I’ve taken on recommendation entirely—very high recommendation, in fact, it’s almost universally acclaimed. But I haven’t see that film, so I’m going to have the same discovery process that everybody sitting in the theater will have. That’s exciting. And nerve-wracking. Simultaneously.

No Theme? 

It’s certainly opened the floodgates for us, in terms of programming, allowing us to explore a much wider variety of themes, topics and issues, and to be much more current and contemporary in our programming. I think that’s what the festival should be about: The process of discovery.

The festival celebrates 1960 this year. Do you think 2010 is poised to be as good a year as 1960 was?

I haven’t seen it yet. Of course, a lot of the films that are likely to be nominated for Academy Awards this year, or for the award season in general, are likely to be coming out in the next few months. I haven’t seen those films, not a lot of them anyway, so it’s tough for me to say. 

What’s the biggest challenge of running the festival?

We ended our call for entries on September 15, and we had to announce our program on October 5. That’s really less than a three-week turnaround from that date, and then you have to make decisions about what you’ll drop or add. And then the guests you’ll bring in, which is very tough as well, because you’re trying to lock down their schedules and they have schedules that change. It’s a moving target.

What do you have planned for November 8?

Honestly, I’m going to be driving a pickup truck with my staff unloading all sorts of various and sundry parts of the festival for at least half the day. The 9th I might be on the golf course.—A.C.

 

Categories
News

Obama champions Perriello to crowd of true believers

 

“From the hills of the Piedmont, to the fields of the Southside,” sang the Perriello Pickers buegrass quartet at the start of a rally held Friday, October 29 for Fifth District Democratic incumbent Tom Perriello. And if familiar melodies began the evening, a familiar refrain capped it, thanks to a visit from President Barack Obama. Four days before the November 2 congressional election, Obama reminded an estimated crowd of 10,000 people—roughly 8,000 inside the Charlottesville Pavilion and more than 2,000 in the streets surrounding the event—that “political courage is hard to come by.”

Obama, who referred to Perriello as “one of the best congressmen Virginia has ever had,” told the crowd that Perriello has not always voted according to party lines, and places his allegiance to the Fifth District and Virginia first. In a speech that focused heavily on job creation and student support, Obama singled out Perriello’s American Opportunity Tax Credit legislation and told the crowd that “the only way to fight cynicism” was to vote on November 2.

Perriello faces a tough reelection fight against Virginia Senator and Republican candidate Robert Hurt, who appeared alongside Governor Bob McDonnell, Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling, Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli and House Minority Whip Eric Cantor during a Sunday stop in Charlottesville. “I need you guys to keep on fighting, and Tom needs you to keep on believing,” said Obama near the end of his speech, jacket absent and sleeves rolled to his forearms despite temperatures that hovered in the 40s.


 

Categories
Arts

Checking in with John Casteen IV

What are you working on right now?






I just finished a book that will come out next spring. When I was finishing the book I was working on one poem at a time, start to finish, individually, and I knew when I had to give the manuscript to the editor. So I was working out poems I had in mind for years, but had never felt ready for. So as the due date got closer there was a growing sense of urgency, of now-or-never. You’ve had this idea. Chase it down or don’t act like it’s a real idea. 

That’s different from what’s happening right now. Once I got the manuscript finished I started working much less methodically and in a more diffused way on poems. Probably the last six or seven poems are either in draft or note form and I’m working on a lot of different poems at the same time. It’s very different from what I was doing when I was trying to pound out the poems I had imagined for the book.

 

Tell us about your day job.

John Casteen IV is pictured with his cat Huck Finn. Casteen, who will release a new book of poetry in the spring, was among the mentors for the Southwood Photo Project, an arts outreach project that produced a book of photographs and poetry, which will be released at The Bridge/PAI on November 1.

My day job during the academic year is teaching writing at Sweet Briar College. My day job during the summer is volunteering. I volunteer through The Bridge. In June, I worked on the Southwood La Finca project, an arts-oriented community outreach through The Bridge. That and taking care of my children is my day job. 

 

What is your first artistic memory from childhood?

It’s funny you should ask because I’ve been thinking about that in conjunction with the Storyline project. The first artistic memory I have from childhood has to do with rhythm. Two rhythms specifically. One is the rhythm of a basketball on the ball court and the other would be the rhythm that you get from late-’70s, early-’80s hip-hop. Like Afrika Bambaataa, Kurtis Blow—people that nobody really thinks about anymore. Those protean songs. In their moment it was so obviously new. When I realized I was being made into an artist, I realized it because other people enjoyed things in a way that I didn’t, and I enjoyed things in a way they didn’t. I was always trying to figure out what I could do that would imitate the rhythm of basketball, or what I could do with language that would have swing like “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa or Rick James, The Ohio Players. For me, the big thing was, when I was a kid on Orangedale Avenue, I realized I could make language do things that music showed me. And that was huge for me.

 

Favorite artist outside your medium?

Uta Barth. She’s a German photographer. She takes pictures in which the photograph is all background, no foreground. The thing that would ordinarily be there—the object of desire—has been taken out of the image. She’s making a political statement about the way viewers perceive desire. If you think about it, in the J. Crew catalog, the thing in the foreground—the model staring off in the distance with a stoney, vacant look—that person and/or that person’s clothes is the object of desire. Their image tells you, “Want this.” Barth is stripping away everything that photographs typically tell us to want in such a way that instead of communicating through subject matter, she’s expressing through context. 

 

What’s your favorite building?

My favorite building right now at this moment is the old octagonal brick Expo Barn at the old Virginia State Fairgrounds in Richmond. They turned it into a NASCAR track. It’s this gigantic octagonal brick barn with three floors. It was all for, “Jim Smith built a new corn husker.”

 

Tell us about a book/painting/record/piece of art that you wish was in your private collection?

“Private collection” is so funny now because of the Internet. My first impulse was to say Cremaster Cycle by Matthew Barney, but you can get those anywhere. If I can’t have the Cremaster Cycle, I want a Richard Serra sculpture. 

 

Locally, who would you like to collaborate with?

Damani Harrison. I would listen to him read the phonebook. I’d like to write stuff with him.

 

What would you do if you knew you couldn’t fail? 

I would write prose. If I knew I couldn’t fail I would write prose.