Archive for April, 2012

Performance diary: ONCE again

April 10, 2012

Andy and I loved Once so much when we saw it in previews (on St. Patrick’s Day) that we immediately bought tickets to see it again (on Easter Sunday) with some friends. When we sat down, I was chagrined to find in the Playbill a notice that the male lead, the wonderful Steve Kazee, was out and that Guy would be played by his understudy, Ben Hope. After fuming for a few minutes, I decided to let it be an opportunity to experience something fresh! and possibly wonderful! And Hope was fine — quite a different performance from Kazee’s, and a little shaky out of the gate. Especially in the opening number, “Leave,” he overdid it with the understatement so that key words dropped out of hearing altogether. In his favor, he’s more of a reg’lar-looking Everyman with a nice voice, which suits the story about a street musician trying to give it a go. Ultimately, though, I did miss Kazee’s handsomeness and charisma and the chemistry he and Cristin Miliotti (below) have built up during the time they’ve been doing the show. But I still admired the show every bit as much as I did the first time around.


The curtain call morphed into the annual fundraising pitch for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS. David Patrick Kelly, who plays the da, stepped forth and gave one of the most eloquent and touching speeches of this kind I’ve encountered. He made it very personal by first calling out the names of four fellow artists “gone too soon” from AIDS (including Reza Abdoh) and asked us to honor them and our own dearly departed with donations to help others struggling with life-threatening illness. Love that David Patrick Kelly — a real mensch.

And then later, the sad news that Steve Kazee had missed the performance to be with his mother as she passed away that day, after a long battle with breast cancer. Condolences to Kazee and his family.

Good stuff online: LOUIE

April 10, 2012

I virtually never watch TV shows. I’m one of those snobs who looks down on it, except for the occasional class act, like The Sopranos or Six Feet Under. But thanks to my new Panasonic BluRay DVD player whose remote comes with its own dedicated Netflix button, I’ve joined the streaming revolution. Aside from Downton Abbey Season 1, what’s most delighted me is the half-hour HBO series written and directed by Louis C.K., the unlikely comedy success — balding middle-aged red-haired (can you say hot?) straight guy. He does some of the most amazingly wide open comic raps on straight men’s curiosity about gay sex, not mention race, parenting, and awkward dating.

I thought more of his episodes would be available on YouTube for free viewing, but the only one of my favorites currently at hand is the infamous “Poker”, in which a bunch of middle-aged straight guys interrogate their gay buddy about what goes on at sex clubs — not to be missed.

 

 

Quote of the day: WIT

April 6, 2012

WIT

Culture requires a natural aristocracy of talent
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Connoisseurship with a high degree of discernment makes the culture better.
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Wit is judgment. Wit is cold. Comedy is warm.
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Americans don’t like you to assume, presume, or judge.

— Fran Lebowitz, in the documentary film Public Speaking

Quote of the day: SOUL AND SPIRIT

April 4, 2012

SOUL AND SPIRIT

The upward and downward journeys support one another. Although distinct – even opposite – they are the two halves of a single path toward fulfillment and wholeness. While either journey alone is better than neither, the two together constitute a more complete spirituality.

Although opposite in one sense, soul and spirit are not in any way opposed to one another. They are – to borrow a phrase employed by depth psychologist James Hillman – “two polar forces of one and the same power.” We might call that one power the transpersonal, the sacred, or the Great Mystery. Spirit is the mystery of the One, of the Light, of eternal life. Soul is the mystery of the unique and the infinitely diverse, of the underworld and depth, of the dark and of death.

Soul shows us how we, as individuals, are different (in a community-affirming way) from everybody else. Spirit shows us how we are no different from anything else, how we are one with all that exists.

In relation to spirit, everyone has the same lessons to learn; for example, compassion and loving-kindness toward all beings, as Buddhism teaches. Our relationship to spirit makes possible the experience and expression of such universal transpersonal qualities as unconditional love, perennial wisdom, and healing power.

In relation to soul, we each have lessons as qualities as unique as our fingerprints. Hillman expresses the distinction between soul and spirit in delightfully and characteristically irreverent terms:  “Soul likes intimacy; spirit is uplifting. Soul gets hairy; spirit is bald. Spirit sees, even in the dark; soul feels its way, step by step, or needs a dog. Spirit shoots arrows; soul takes them in the chest. William James and D. H. Lawrence said it best. Spirit likes wholes; soul likes eaches. But they need each other like sadists need masochists and vice versa.”

— Bill Plotkin, Soulcraft

Theater review: 4000 MILES

April 4, 2012

My review of Amy Herzog’s 4000 Miles at Lincoln Center Theater’s Mitzi Newhouse has just been posted on CultureVulture.net. Check it out here and let me know what you think.