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ARTS Picks: Spring for the Arts

Spring is here and it’s time to put a little art into it. Leading the charge is the Piedmont Council for the Arts (the only organization providing services for artists, arts organizations, and audiences in the Charlottesville area) with its annual Spring for the Arts gala. Old time fiddle and banjo player Mark Campbell provides musical accompaniment (along with PCA’s Rising Stars Award winners) to a silent auction, hors d’oeuvres and drinks, and a who’s-who in the creative community.

Wednesday 4/24 $40-60, 5:30pm. CitySpace, 100 Fifth St., NE. 971-2787.

 

http://charlottesvillearts.org/rsvp/

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ARTS Pick: Stan Winston Festival of the Moving Creature

Wild things

Chances are, your favorite creature feature stars the work of makeup and special effects master, and UVA alumnus, Stan Winston. The eponymous Stan Winston Arts Festival of the Moving Creature at UVA is the culmination of a yearlong workshop in which students bring their creative and engineering skills to life with help from visiting artists from The Stan Winston School of Character Arts in Los Angeles, founded by Winston’s son, Matt, in honor of his father’s lifetime dedication to all things creeping, crawling, and spectacular to look at.  Info at www.virginia.edu/arts/visual_arts/events/moving_creature.

Saturday 4/20 Free, 2pm. UVA Arts Grounds (festivities will continue at Nameless Field at 3pm).

 

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ARTS Pick: The Embers

Still glowing

With global warming now confirmed, the weather is sure to go straight to hot, with scorching beach-worthy weather breaking out any day now. Getting ahead of that first sunburn, The Embers are headlining Surf on the Turf, an inland beach bash complete with dancing, dinner, and drinks. The quintessential band of the sand has held a special place in the hearts and feet of sun worshippers coast to coast since 1958. They play bonafide beach boogie music and they dare you to try and stand still during the Shag dance lessons.

Saturday 4/13 $125, 6:30pm. Foxfield Race Track, 2215 Foxfield Track. 888 987-8727.

 

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ARTS Pick: Or,

Loosen the corset

The 17th-century never looked as wildly seductive as it does within the world of Aphra Behn. There’s a war in the background of Liz Duffy Adams’ Or, but more importantly, Behn—a spy, poet, and key feminist writer—moves in a social circle marked by cross-dressing and free love. As for Adams, the playwright toys with historical facts to highlight changing sensibilities, reconstructing the Restoration to include her own imaginative notions. But it’s this irreverence that brings attention to Aphra Behn’s crucial role, and that of the Restoration itself, in paving the way for open-mindedness.

Friday 4/12 $25, 8pm. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. 977-4177.

 

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ARTS Pick: The Memorandum

What goes around

If you think that bureaucracy and red tape are absurd, Czech playwright Václav Havel couldn’t agree more. And in his Soviet-era satire The Memorandum, everything from language to human sociality becomes ridiculous. When office worker Josef Gross finds a memo written in the supposedly efficient Ptydepe language that’s impossible to discern, he and his mates find themselves up against the forces of conformity as they attempt to translate its message. A struggle for authenticity in an increasingly dehumanizing world, Havel’s play is a product of its time, and remains relevant today.

Wednesday 4/10 $10, 7:30pm (2:30pm matinee on Sunday). Piedmont Virginia Community College, 501 College Dr. 961-5376.

 

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Circus trained: UVA drama’s Steven Warner prepares students for the big time

Sitting at his desk, amidst a cacophony of buzzing, clanging, and sawing backed by rock music, Steven Warner has an internal antennae that functions like a sixth sense. “Right now I hear screw guns going and table saws going. You know, you get tuned in to it. Even if you’re here in another room talking to someone or working on the computer, you’ll hear something that’s not normal and you’ll realize that someone didn’t use the tool right.”

Warner has led the UVA drama technical department since 2006, when he was lured from a dream job in Las Vegas where he’d climbed the ranks at Cirque du Soleil.

At UVA, he oversees productions at the Culbreth and Helms theatres, and will add the new Ruth Caplin Theatre to this list when it opens on April 18.

Warner and his team currently design and build the sets for an average of six shows over nine months, along with special events and side projects like the upcoming Stan Winston Creature Festival (April 20). His is an all-out job that requires vision through to the end.

“During the design phase is where a lot of decisions get made,” Warner said. “What colors? What size of set? Does it need an elevator? What color will the lights be? Does it need any atmospheric things like fog or rain?”

“Once all of those things are decided, we have a week to do working drawings and a budget, then start building,” he added. “We have a very short time window to actually create an instruction manual for building the show.” After six weeks of planning, five weeks of building, and 12 weeks of rehearsal, a typical show runs for two weeks and 10 performances.

“In theater, the aim is for people to walk out of the show and say that was a great production, not ‘that was a great set’ or ‘the acting was fantastic.’ It’s a huge collaborative effort,” said one of Warner’s graduate students, Mark Gartzman.

Soft spoken and direct, Warner is a West Texas native who speaks with a slight drawl and brings a calm intensity to his classroom and his work. “I think I instill a lot of confidence in them. They know that because of where I’ve come from and the background I’ve had, that I’m someone they should listen to. As long as I don’t mess that up, I’m in really good shape. I’ve always got their back, and I’m in their corner.”

Warner initially pursued a career as a sports coach, but found he was more at home when he volunteered in a theater department. While attending the University of Delaware’s drama graduate program, he interned at the Utah Shakespeare Festival and made important connections that would shape his career. “It’s a great foot in the door to entertainment,” he said.

Show business became fully embedded in his DNA when he went to work for Ringling Brothers circus. The romantic’s notion of running away with the circus was Warner’s real life for almost four years. He lived in a train car, learned everyone’s role, and immersed himself in every aspect of production, even handling the animals.

“When we were doing a baby elephant tour called Romeo & Juliet, they did an act in the center ring where they played with basketballs and put them into a hoop. To get set up, you have to wheel the hoops out quickly, because the elephants are right behind you. I looked back and the elephants were chasing me, and the crowd was laughing, and I was the clown for that show.”

The vast experience of touring with a circus paired with his drama education inspired Warner. “I saw a great correlation with theater and circus in Cirque du Soleil and what they were doing in Las Vegas.”

Warner worked for Cirque from 2000-2006 and his connections are now the gateway for UVA students to enter what he calls entertainment’s Ivy League at high-profile productions around the globe. “The internships are hard to come by. It’s very competitive. It’s tough to meet those needs. So, raising the level of the program here at UVA to the point where it’s acceptable to a company like Cirque du Soleil—it’s all about safety, rigging, automation, technology—things that didn’t exist for very long in entertainment.”

When Cirque du Soleil arrives with Quidam at the John Paul Jones Arena on Wednesday, it will be met by Warner, and his wife Brigitte (also a former Cirque employee), as part of its extended family. “You don’t realize how many family members you have until you do something like that,” said Warner.

Drawn to UVA by the Jefferson mystique, and a slower pace, the Warners chose Charlottesville as a place to settle down and raise their son, as well as to build Steven’s own legacy. “I fell in love with [Charlottesville] and really felt like this is where I wanted to end up, and be able to utilize the talents I’d learned being on tour and … gained from being in theater at the same time.”

Back in his office adjacent to the theater workshop, Warner is a serene presence as pipes bang on the ground and directions are shouted over the din. A ringmaster in his own right, he is always tuned in to the show unfolding around him. “You start to become very aware of things that you’d have never listened to before,” he said, and compares it to having an ear for bird calls.  “It’s really strange like that. You hear the details.”

 

 

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ARTS Pick: The Two Noble Kinsmen

Prison riot Even Shakespeare and John Fletcher knew that the rewrite of a Chaucer poem took some serious guts back in the early 17th century. Despite the potential for total demolishment of a poetic monument, the duo lets chaos run rampant in The Two Noble Kinsmen. What happens when two imprisoned cousins fall in love with the same beautiful woman only moments apart? Prison riots and a touch of madness, naturally. The knights toss their stoic fronts aside and duke it out across the stage in the unending quest for the holy grail of a fair maiden. Even centuries ago, love was a bit of a battlefield.

Through Saturday 4/6 $16-40, 7:30pm. The Blackfriars Playhouse, 10 S. Market St., Staunton. (540) 851-1733.

 

 

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ARTS Pick: RAW Road to Wrestlemania

Slammer time

In case the new Die Hard flick didn’t cut it and you still need your fix of action with little to no plot, World Wrestling Entertainment brings us RAW: Road to Wrestlemania a great one. All the big names, from the perpetually shirtless John Cena to the cleverly named The Miz and the mysterious Kaitlyn, are bringing the body slams, complete with a six man tag team match. The road is a brutal one, but the beat-down goes on.

Friday 3/22 $17-97, 7:30pm. John Paul Jones Arena, 295 Massie Rd. 243-4960.

http://www.wwe.com/videos/playlists/raw-highlights-march-18-2013

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ARTS Pick: Mostly Cyrano

Nasal passages: Although Edmond Rostand’s theatrical classic Cyrano de Bergerac needs no other proof of success beyond the introduction of the word “panache” into the vernacular, the folks over at Play On! have done him another favor. In local playwright Peter Coy’s take, Mostly Cyrano, a troupe of actors prepares to tackle the gargantuan piece only to have its themes resurface as probing questions about their own lives. Dueling over the existence of romanticism, honor, and selflessness modernity.

Thursday-Sunday 3/21-24 $5-17, 8pm. (2pm matinee on Sundays). Play On! Theatre, 983 Second St. S.E. 872-0184.

 

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ARTS Pick: Into the Woods

Tall tales
Broadway has a knack for re-telling classic children’s stories, and one of the early big ones was Into the Woods. Four County Players is mounting Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s multiple Tony Award-winning show in the continued celebration of its 40 seasons. Spinning new angles on fairy tales, the show combines the stories of Cinderella, Rapunzel, Jack and the Beanstalk, Little Red Riding Hood, and others, as they face the dangers in the woods—be that witches, giants, or themselves. The staging showcases Sondheim’s beautiful score, including the songs “Giants in the Sky” and “Children Will Listen.”

Through 3/24 $12-16, 8pm. Four County Players, 5256 Governor Barbour St., Barboursville. (540) 832-5355.