Friday, August 31, 2007

Dario Fo-- Fears of a Clown

An article about Dario Fo appeared in the UK newspaper The Independent recently. (article below, or read the article here.)

If you don't know Dario Fo, you should. He is an Italian satirist, playwright, theater director, actor, clown, and composer. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1997. He currently owns and operates a theatre company with his wife and leading actress Franca Rame. Franca is an amazing artist in her own right, and from an old Italian theatrical family that used to run a traveling marionette show.

The article talks about his recent failed run for Mayor of Milan (and the documentary that was made about his run, titled I Am Not A Moderate which was his campaign slogan.) (click title to see the website of the movie.)

Dario has written a number of fantastic plays (I'll be directing one of them WE WON'T PAY! WE WON'T PAY! in the fall at Fairfield University in Connecticut.)
To find some of his books, follow this Amazon link for Dario Fo

There is even some excellent footage of Dario Fo on You Tube.
(this piece is a famous commedia lazzi about a man who is so hungry that he eats himself (in Italian)




ARTICLE IN CONTEXT

Dario Fo: Fears of a clown

Heard the one about the Nobel-winning satirist who tried to launch a political career? Dario Fo, Italy's best-known anarcho-Marxist, talks to Geoffrey Macnab

Published: 28 August 2007

Who said a clown can't be mayor of a great city? Two years ago, when Dario Fo (the Nobel Prize-winning jester and satirist) launched a campaign to become mayor of Milan, one of his most vocal supporters was London's mayor, Ken Livingstone.

"I hear now in the papers of Milan that they say this man is too utopian, he is an idealist, he is lovely, but it will never work," Livingstone said at one of Fo's rallies. "That isn't true. A journalist said to me, 'Do they talk about Milan in London?' I said, 'If you elect Dario Fo, the whole world will talk about Milan. You have a chance. Take it!'"

Fo's campaign was serious, not a Screaming Lord Sutch-like piece of tomfoolery. Aged 79 at the time he became a candidate, he said he wanted to "dedicate my last years to my city, trying to make it smile once again".

Fo's candidacy didn't get far; he won a little less than 25 per cent of the vote to choose the centre left's candidate. Although the people warmed to him, the left-wing parties opted to support the former prefect of the city, Bruno Ferrante. The media didn't pay much attention either.

The story of Fo's campaign is told in a new documentary, I Am Not a Moderate (Fo's campaign slogan), which premiered at the Locarno Festival this summer. The title is telling. Fo doesn't do moderation. For more than 50 years, he has been scandalising and provoking the authorities. One might have expected the Nobel Prize for Literature that came his way in 1997 to make him more accepted in Italy, but he annoys contemporary politicians just as much as he did their grandfathers in the 1950s. Silvio Berlusconi detests him. Three years ago, Berlusconi's party, Forza Italia, sued Fo for defamation after performances of his satirical play, The Two-Headed Anomaly, a broad farce that started from the premise that part of Vladimir Putin's brain was transplanted into Berlusconi's head.

That tussle was another to add to all the battles the clown and satirist has fought. His targets have ranged from the Catholic Church to the Mafia, from the US government (which once barred him from the USA) to the Italian Communist Party, from anti-abortionists to the Chinese government.

On a hot August afternoon in Locarno, where he has come to support the premiere of the new film, Fo explains being attacked by powerful figures has never bothered him. "It is normal," he says serenely. "It proves that you are doing good." When I ask if he's ever felt that he would like to lead a quieter life, he roars with laughter. "I don't want to be an old man, looking at the sunset. That's a hateful idea, even if it is romantic. I prefer to be on the bank with the people, explaining to them what sunset is."

Fo, a surprisingly imposing figure, learnt his storytelling technique from the old folk and craftsmen in the town on Lake Maggiore where he was born and raised. When he won his Nobel Prize, he credited them with teaching him the "art of spinning fantastic yarns" that would fill listeners with laughter but then make them pause as they recognised the tragic undertow.

In essence, this is what his career has been built on – rowdy comic tales and satires in the Commedia dell'Arte tradition, always with bite, sarcasm and irony. The Nobel Committee suggested that he followed in the tradition of "the jesters of the Middle Ages in scourging authority and upholding the dignity of the downtrodden".

In person, Fo is a graver, more melancholy figure than you might expect. Through an interpreter, he gives concise, earnest answers to questions about the mayoral race. He doesn't hide his dismay at what has happened in his beloved Milan under its current mayor, Letizia Moratti, formerly a minister in Berlusconi's cabinets. "She hasn't solved any problems," he laments of Milan's first female mayor, adding that her programme wasn't "based on truth".

You can't help but wonder how Fo keeps his optimism. After all, 50 years of his gibes don't appear to have done much to change Italian politics. As a teenager, he was active in the anti-Mussolini resistance. Today, he is still fighting corruption in European politics. He says that he's fearful that further figures in the mould of Stalin, Mussolini and Hitler will emerge on the political stage, albeit in new guises.

When he received his Nobel Prize, he gave a droll but melancholy lecture entitled "Against Jesters Who Defame and Insult," in which he lamented the ignorance of young people. He recalled that he and his wife Franca Rame (the actress to whom he has been married since 1954) had been giving seminars at universities, but when they mentioned the 1993 massacre at Sivas in Turkey, they encountered only blank faces.

"We told them about the proceedings now in course in Turkey against the accused culprits of the massacre in Sivas," Fo says. "Thirty-seven of the country's foremost democratic intellectuals, meeting to celebrate the memory of a famous medieval jester of the Ottoman period, were burned alive in the dark of the night, trapped inside their hotel. The fire was the handiwork of a group of fanatical fundamentalists that enjoyed protection from elements within the government itself. In one night, 37 of the country's most celebrated artists, writers, directors, actors and Kurdish dancers were erased from this earth."

Not only were the students ignorant of the massacre; so were their teachers. The idea that such an atrocity could take place seemingly without anyone in Western Europe noticing continues to nag at Fo. "Making people ignorant has become an art, a science," he sighs. "Journalism is the science of not informing people."

It's understandable that Fo is so suspicious of the mass media. His work has always suffered censorship and interference. During his mayoral bid, TV stations simply ignored him. To find his audience, he has to meet them face to face. During his campaign, he staged a number of shows that fell somewhere between theatre and political rallies.

Often, when celebrities turn to politics, they become bores. Not Fo. Even as he has been busy provoking his enemies, he has never lost touch with his audience. A consummate performer, Fo has also established a huge following for his playwriting.

Accidental Death of an Anarchist and Can't Pay? Won't Pay! have been performed countless times at theatres all over the world. Both enjoyed West End runs and are frequently revived. Accidental Death was inspired by the true case of a suspect who was thrown from the fourth-floor window of a police station in Milan at the time of right-wing extremist bomb attacks. Can't Pay? Won't Pay! is about working-class women who rebel against rising prices by taking goods from stores without paying. These plays appeal to a general audience who wouldn't normally be attracted to the works of a self-confessed anarcho-Marxist.

Fo is as busy as ever. He's working on what he describes as "a story about Michelangelo, his philosophy and his way of life". It's one of a series about artists he has developed in recent years. It doesn't sound contentious, but it's safe to predict that he will find an angle that will upset someone or other. If it didn't, it wouldn't have Dario Fo's name on it.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Fringe Wrapup....


Gardi Hutter won the Overall Excellence Award for acting in the NY Fringe! Considering there were over 200 shows performing, I think that's an incredible feat. Congratulations, Gardi!

I saw 3 shows in the fringe this year, which is less than previous years-- All of them clown related (You can search this site for Fringe to see my show reviews). I meant to see two others, but one (Paul Rajeckas Notes From the Fatherland)[ READ THE NYTHEATRE.COM REVIEW ] I got closed out of due to the Fringe's strict No Latecomers Rule.

The other one (Antarctica) featuring Chris Lueck of the NY Downtown Clown Revue as the Enchanted Polar Bear, [READ THE NYTHEATRE.COM REVIEW ]I ended up having to miss because I had to do some last minute preparations for my show in DC, which ended up turning into an all day shopping affair, looking for just the right replacement props and tools.

And my shows in Washington DC went very well [CLICK HERE TO READ WASHINGTON POST ARTICLE]

Saturday, August 25, 2007

I'd like Fries with that... The Clown in Yonkers

This op/ed piece (titled appropriately, the clown in Yonkers) appeared in the Westchester Journal News. I felt like I needed to make some reference to it, as I am the clown in Yonkers! (although this particular editorial features a Red-headed clown who slings hamburgers (and a failed protest at the library)








The clown in Yonkers



(Original publication: August 25, 2007)

It's always amusing when protesters against (pick your cause) are outnumbered by reporters, photographers and, in the case of the anti-McDonald's protest Tuesday in Yonkers, uniformed and plainclothes police. Warning of an attempt to "brainwash" children into becoming lifelong McDonald's customers, the Rev. Scott Pellegrino mounted what turned out to be a one-person protest of an appearance by mascot Ronald McDonald, who read to children and handed out "Happy Meal" coupons to kids who read five books as part of a summer library reading club.

The Yonkers resident was easily outnumbered at Grinton I. Will Library by the 60 parents and children on hand to welcome the red-haired clown, whose employer sponsored the reading program. We are thankful there was no violence, as had been feared. Stephen Force, the library's director, requested a police presence and some half-dozen showed. "It was unclear from my communication with (Pellegrino prior to the visit) whether he intended to disrupt the program."

Brilliant move. Had the ordained minister failed to comport himself, the kids no doubt would have been on him in a child-sized heartbeat; woe is the protester who stands between a 4-year-old and her "Happy Meal." And what was Pellegrino bringing to the table anyway? Carrots? Peas? Broccoli? Maybe some business about impressionable minds, high-fat diets, the epidemic in childhood obesity? These kids know who salts their french fries and pours their chocolate shakes.

READ THE WHOLE EDITORIAL

READ THE NEWS ARTICLE

Performers.net


Since 1997, performers.net has been THE place online for international variety performers to meet, network and share ideas.

The focus of performers.net is primarily street performing, and there is a loud and raucous community of some of the best and the brightest. It's absolutely free to use, and set up as a bulletin board/forum. There are gig postings, a classified section, an opinions section, where people can dish dirt on festivals, pitches, stolen material, give advice on how to get a fuller hat, and review juggling equipment, sound equipment, and even marketing materials. There's also a library of articles, an online memoriam to past street performers, and a lot of other resources. Most importantly, there is a Green Room for online horseplay and jackpotting. (telling of tales). And there's quite a bit of that going on!

The forum was started by Jim of the Jim Show, a Boston area entertainer and computer savant who saw quite early the importance of the computer. He started a busking board on his own website, but when things started going fast and furious, moved it over to performers.net. He's had quite a lot of help from a number of people in keeping the board active and rolling, and although it hasn't quite grown as rapidly in recent years, it's a much loved community asset that Jim moderates and provides for the international community.

To find out more, or to start participating on your own., visit the website listed below:
http://www.performers.net

MORE SHAMELESS HYPE TO BELIEVE




My show was featured as one of the picks of the week for this week's Washington Post!

And a reviewer is coming on Sunday to the 4pm show to write an article about the show.

If you have any friends in the DC area, please let them know, and please have them come out to the 4 pm show. It'd be great to have a big audience for that show.

Full press release is available at http://www.trainedfleas.com/dcfleas.html

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Daredevil Chicken Club

The Daredevil Chicken Club is the combined talent and imagination of performers Anne Goldmann and Jonathan Taylor. Together with their extensive training in physical theater, circus, and clowning they continue to create unique performances that have been seen around the world. They have performed together on the street, on the stage and in the circus ring for the past nine years.

Their show features character driven physical theater and audience participation. A husband and wife team Mark and Svetlana Buttersworth share their story of being the best daredevil superstars the world has ever seen!(or so they imagine.) They combine absurd acrobatic moves, banana spitting feats, an eight foot high slackrope, and a Tango to make a 45 minute spectacle. This show has been performed in almost every environment, outdoor and indoor, and on three continents! This show is designed for ALL AGES.


Anne Goldmann has trained extensively as a gymnast, actor, circus performer, clown, and musician. She studied hand-balancing, acrobatics, and trapeze at the S.F. Circus School, and also trained with Sue Morrison at Clown Hall. She has toured North America performing Children's Theater; performed in many theater productions ranging from Shadow Theater to Musicals with Robots; written, produced, and performed in an award winning Clown show, 'Does This Mean Anything To You?'; and has performed in Cabarets and Street Theater around the globe.
Jonathan Taylor has trained in Physical Theater and Clowning, attending The Dell'Arte School of Physical Theater, Ringling Bros. Clown College, and at Clown Hall with Sue Morrison. He has performed in 10 countries from Circuses and Cabarets, to Festivals and on the Street. He is also a five year veteran performer of the Off-Broadway hit, BlueManGroup.


To find out more about the Daredevil Chicken Club, visit their website listed below:
http://www.daredevilchicken.com

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Robert Nelson, "The Butterfly Man"

Robert Nelson (aka The Butterfly Man) is the street performer's street performer. He's fast, funny, charming, a little rude, and very skilled at keeping an audience entertained. He's a fine juggler and unicyclist, but its his personality and persona more than his tricks that have made him nearly legendary in street performer circles.

A former research chemist at Vanderbilt University, Robert Nelson quit the world of science to pursue a dream of making people laugh. Mr. Nelson first metamorphosed into his Butterfly Man character in 1978 while performing at Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Soon after, he indelibly affirmed his commitment to performing by getting his butterfly tattoos. Since then he has been working around the world, performing on streets and stages and winning over audiences and performers. He has won numerous awards at festivals, and has been voted best performer at San Francicsco's Pier 39 multiple times.

His show consists of a number of typical juggling skills: unicycling, cigarbox and hat manipulations, fire-eating, ax-juggling, etc. But its his play and rapport with the audience, and his honest philosophical bent that makes him a one of a kind performer. He's also genuinely a nice guy, and is usually willing (sometimes too willing) to give a helping hand to new performers.

To find out more about Robert's work, please visit his website listed below: (it's a flash website, so you must have flash to use it)

http://www.butterflyman.com

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

1 Second Film Cabaret Opportunity.

If you are in L.A., and your act features at least one framable memorable moment, this might be a good opportunity for you.

I recently got this email, and thought I'd share.





The 1 Second Talent Show & Road to Oprah Cabaret

Are you in Los Angeles? Would you like an appreciative audience to
workshop new material?

I offer you "The 1 Second Talent Show & Road to Oprah Cabaret"

I'm looking for folks in LA with acts that are funny, beautiful, sexy
or surprisingly stupid...

The 1 Second Film, in residency at the Armory Center for the Arts in
Pasadena, is having a kick-off cabaret party for our Road to Oprah tour!

www.roadtooprah.com
www.the1secondfilm.com

We're trying to create a jubilant evening that has a
talent-show-for-adults atmosphere and will showcase a grab bag of
style and skill - bringing together both seasoned performers and
people who have just always wanted to get up on stage, even if only
for one-second!

The theme of The 1 Second Talent Show comes from the theme of The 1
Second Film: there are beautiful moments, perfect moments in life,
that would not be possible without everything that leads up to them.

Please note: Performances CAN last longer than one-second! They simply
should contain moments worth framing.

This event may be filmed as part of The 1 Second Film's making-of
documentary!

Details:

When: Saturday September 15
Where: Armory Center for the Arts Northwest in Pasadena

If you would like to perform, contact Sarah Peters ASAP or by August 30
818-636-4504
sarahrara@gmail.com

links:
www.the1secondfilm.com
www.roadtooprah.com

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Shoebox Tour- Jugglers

The Shoebox Tour was founded by Jay Gilligan, who had been performing in Berlin with Les Sept Doights de la Main. While performing in a very showy environment, he felt less connected to his audience and to his reasons for performing. He decided to produce a tour with a few friends that would get away from the glitz, and focus on the fun of performing with his very talented friends.

Now, the Shoebox Tour is committed to making contemporary and experimental juggling performance and techniques accessible to interested audiences around the world. Their final aim is to establish a cohesive and self-sustaining network of venues and areas of public interest that can support up and coming jugglers and help foster international exchange. Regional tours of various countries will be launched in an effort to get a grass roots organization secured, which can relieve and streamline the challenges in producing annual events that both artists and audiences can count on as a concrete and reliable source of inspiration, information, and community.


This year's tour features, Jay Gilligan, Erik Aberg, Marcus Monroe, along with special guests Komei Aoki, Masaki Hirano, and Sean Blue. All of them are fabulous jugglers and are well worth checking out. Most of these guys have wn IJA and other Juggling awards, and if they haven't, they probably should have!


They'll be performing in NY on Wednesday, August 22, 2007
at 7:00pm at the Pratt Institute, Brooklyn Campus. Memorial Hall
The show is free and open to the public.

OTHER TOUR DATES BETWEEN NOW AND THE END OF THE MONTH

August 22 NYC- Pratt Institute Memorial Hall, 200 Willoughby Ave, Brooklyn 7 pm FREE
August 23 Boston -MIT, Room 10-250 77 Mass Ave, Cambridge 8 pm $10
August 24 Philadelphia- Greg Kennedy's Studio, 6122 Greene St 7:30 pm $10
August 25 Pittsburgh- U.Pittsburgh, Frick Fine Arts Building 7 pm $5
August 26 Toledo, OH-- Toledo Zoo-- Amphitheater 7 pm FREE
August 27 Toledo, OH- Performer's School of Dance, 6801 W. Central, Suite 7 8 pm $10.
August 28 Louisville, KY- 1211 Long Ridge Trace, 7 pm price TBD

For more info about the Shoebox Tour, visit the websites listed below::
http://www.shoeboxtour.com

http://www.myspace.com/shoeboxtour

Thanks to Jeff Seal for the heads up!

Thursday, August 16, 2007

FRINGE REVIEW: Gardi Hutter's JOAN OF ARPpO


(PLEASE NOTE THAT ALL PHOTOGRAPHS IN THIS REVIEW ARE COPYRIGHT © 2007 BY PHOTOGRAPHER JIM MOORE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. USED BY PERMISSION.)


I saw Gardi Hutter's show yesterday, and can highly recommend it to anyone and everyone. The show is original, creative, playful, physical, and downright wonderful. You should definitely see it if you have the opportunity.

Gardi starts with a simple concept-- a set of washing machines on stage, and a large pile of clothes. Enter Gardi as an old washerwoman lady-- clown nose and stuffed body. She notices us and is slightly surprised by us, but then goes about her business. She reads a little from her book JOAN OF ARC & OTHER HEROINES, and starts to let her imagination go. By the end of the show she's fought in a war, caused the destruction of innocents, created and destroyed a golem made of clothes and a washerwoman's tub, and entertained the entire audience. In between she's explored a number of different comedy ideas, including getting stuck in her washer-tub, getting stuck in the washing machine, walking a tightrope/clothesline, and infinite hilarious variations on clothing and laundry gags.

Part of what makes Gardi's clowning so wonderful is her inventiveness and her openness. She takes simple ideas and makes them understandable, but does it in a way that continually surprises and delights. At the end of the show I was sitting there feeling inspired, and trying to figure out how I can make my show more like her show. And that is one of the best compliments that I can pay to this show-- it gives you license to let your imagination run wild.

Click on one of the dates listed below to purchase tickets online.

JOAN OF ARPpO
Gardi Hutter
Writer: Gardi Hutter - Ferruccio Cainero
Director: Ferruccio Cainero
Sloppy laundry woman dreams of becoming a heroine like Jeanne d'Arc, but lacking worthy enemies, she transforms her washhouse into a grotesque battlefield. A tragicomic parable of the today world with a tousled, fury, nasty, touching and poetic female clown.
1h 10m Lugano Switzerland Clown/Mask Solo Show
VENUE #2: The Cherry Lane Theatre
www.gardihutter.com
Sat 11 @ 9:30
Wed 15 @ 5
Thu 16 @ 9:30
Thu 23 @ 2:30
Sat 25 @ 12

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Billy The Mime

Billy The Mime is a clown, performer, and (obviously) mime who has garnered international attention with his show stopping appearance in the hit documentary THE ARISTOCRATS.

Billy's television appearances include The Jimmy Kimmel Show on ABC and Penn & Teller's Bullshit! on Showtime. He recently appeared at The 2006 New York International Fringe Festival garnering rave reviews and sold-out shows. He returned to New York for a Fringe Encore ¡§Best of the Festival¡¨ at The Lion Theater at Theater Row.

He presented five sold-out shows at the Montreal Just For Laughs Comedy Festival in 2006 and recently appeared at The Upright Citizens Brigade Theater in Los Angeles and New York. Other appearances include The Aspen Comedy Festival, The Revolutions International Theater Festival in New Mexico and a critically acclaimed seven week run at The Sacred Fools Theater in Los Angeles.

Billy has taken master classes with Marcel Marceau, in addition to studying with Flip Reade, clown and mask work with James Donlon and circus skills with Hovey Burgess at Ringling Brother's Barnum & Bailey's Clown College.

Billy will be performing a limited engagement of a new show America LoveSexDeath from Aug 23-Sept 29 at the Flea Theatre in New York City. The show will tackle controversial subject matter with such routines as JFK JR. We Hardly Knew Ye, Close To Her: Karen Carpenter, Slave!, World War II, Thomas & Sally: A Night at Monticello>, The Priest and The Altar Boy, The Abortion, Terry Schiavo, Adieu, A Night in San Francisco - 1979, A Day Called 9/11, Kurt Cobain: Why?, Christopher Reeve: A Super Man, Love & Death: OJ and Nicole, A Night with Jeffrey Dahmer and Virginia Tech 4/16/07.

To find out more about Billy's work, visit his website listed below.

To get tickets to his show at the Flea Theatre, call 212.352.3101 and mention code BILLYTM to get a $5 discount. You can also order online by visiting the Flea Theatre website listed below.

http://www.billythemime.net


Flea Theatre Press Release

Saturday, August 11, 2007

REVIEWS: Princess Sunshine and Out of My Mind

I'm reviewing clown shows of the Fringe, and saw two on the opening day (that was yesterday, Friday August 10) Although I didn't plan it like this, it turns out that these shows had a lot more in common than just the fact that the performers were clowns. Both of the shows are about clowns trying to find their way in the world.

(please note, as full disclosure, that I am friendly with people in both shows. Marvin Novogrodski and I have been friends for nearly 20 years, and Joel and Juliet Jeske are graduates of Ringling Clown College (as I am)

The first show Princess Sunshine's Bitter Pill of Truth Funhouse, is a parody of a children's entertainment show. Featuring a brightly colored set, two puppets, and crazy costumes, if you were to watch a video of the show, with the sound turned down, you might not notice that anything is amiss. Turn the sound up, and actually watch and listen, and you'll find there's a whole bunch of subversiveness going on in this show. Believe me, leave the kids at home for this show.

The main character, Princess Sunshine,(Juliet Jeske) is a former children's entertainer who is so jaded from doing her 6 birthday parties a weekend that she has decided to create a show that will "tell it like it is" and let kids learn to grow up with some tough love. Featuring characters like the crusty Uncle Fun, who teaches kids how to make a tin spoon shiv (Hey, ya never know)() and the Kommunist Klown (Juliet), who plays a tiny Russian guitar and sings about poverty, the errors of capitalism, and Appalachian teen pregnancy. The show also features the horniest and most lecherous puppet in the universe, Yakko Stinko, (played by Juliet's husband Joel, who was a featured clown in the last edition of the Big Apple Circus) who has slept with everyone in the show, and a hilarious anti-violence PSA that ends with the rabbit shooting the mountain lion in the groin (TJ O'Brien and Brenda Jean Foley, who play very able sidekicks and characters throughout the show)

This show is definitely worth seeing. It's in a tiny little theatre on the second floor (you have to enter through a weird little courtyard, and then up the metal stairs) There's only 50 seats or so, so get your tickets early!

The second show I saw Out of My Mind, deals with a similar theme, but it has a more serious feeling. The actor, dancer, and school performer Marvin Novogrodski is trying to figure out his life, and how he can cope with his crazy family and his conflicting feelings about them and his life. To do so, he brings his real-life hypno-therapist on the stage, Doug Vogel. Vogel leads Marvin through a series of NLP exercises, hypnotic moments, and important questions. Novogrodski tells stories about his family, and acts out some of his therapy sessions. At one point, he turns to the audience and says, "I'm a star in my own personal Pinter play."

The show is incredibly vulnerable and personal as he explores some of his innermost feelings about his family, his career, his relationships, and his therapy sessions. Both Vogel and Novogrodski are very likable and believable on stage. There are also some very funny moments, and even a brief (and very well done) juggling routine. The show has a non-linear feeling, full of short little moments that are well-acted. But if you look at it from further, you see a fairly linear structure. Marvin has a lot of charisma, and watching the show, I found myself recognizing my own situations and feelings in Marvin's. I highly recommend this show, not so much from a clowning perspective, but from a "wow!" perspective.

Click a date below to order tickets for the remaining shows.

You can also visit www.fringenyc.org for more information.

PRINCESS SUNSHINE
VENUE #12: The Independent Theater
www.princesssunshine.com

Sun 12 @ 2:30
Mon 13 @ 9
Sun 19 @ 7:30
Thu 23 @ 6:30
Fri 24 @ 1

---OUT OF MY MIND VENUE #2: The Cherry Lane Theatre
www.marvmarv.com

Tue 14 @ 9:45
Wed 15 @ 3:15
Wed 22 @ 4:45
Sat 25 @ 5:15

Friday, August 10, 2007

Sxip Shirey and his Hour of Charm

Sxip Shirey is a sound designer, performer, story-teller, curator, and real-life circus composer. He performs on a number of unique and bizarre instruments, some of his own devising, including the Obnoxiophone, the Industrial Flute, Mutant Harmonicas, and more. He is also the world's foremost champion of the Tampon as a musical instrument.

Sxip Shirey came to New York City when he joined The Bindlestiff Family Cirkus in the year 2000, This started him in a circus/theater direction and he composed music for Anti-Gravity and for the pyro-technic clowns of the Daredevil Opera Company, performing, composing and appearing at The New Victory Theater on Broadway, The Edinburgh Fringe Festival, The Kennedy Center and the Sydney Opera House. His gypsy-tango-klezmer-punk band The Luminescent Orchestrii tours internationally and is part of the wild Balkan scene in New York City, their track "Amaritzi" is featured on the new Putumayo compilation "Balkan Groove".

Sxip has toured the U.S. as support act for the Dresden Dolls and performed at their two days festival at the Round House in London England. In Adelaide Australia, his show was a hit at their biannual Fringe Festival. In New York City he performs and curates a high powered variety night called Sxip's Hour of Charm at Joe's Pub at the Public Theater. Last winter he composed music for Marsupial Girl by Lisa D'Amour for The Children's Theater Company of Minneapolis in a project developed with New Dramatists in NYC. He has also composed for works at the Ohio Theater, HERE, the Southern Theater and Inter-Media Arts in Minneapolis and has toured East Coast Colleges with the puppet theater piece Savage Nursery by Erin Orr developed through a grant from the Henson Foundation. He has also performed at The Knitting Factory, Tonic, Makor and many underground parties in Brooklyn.

Sxip's Hour of Charm will be making an early fall appearance at the American Repertory Theatre in Cambridge. The show will feature a number of New York variety entertainers, including the fabulous Una Mimnagh doing aerial stunts, Scott Davis as the "Red Bastard", and Bronx Cowboy AJ Silver. among others. Shows will run weekends from Sept. 14-30 Sept. 14-30 (Friday and Sunday at 8pm, Saturday at 7pm & 10pm) at the Zero Arrow Theater. For tickets call (617) 547-8300 or visit http://www.amrep.org

For more information about Sxip's work, please visit his websites listed below.
http://www.sxipshirey.com

http://www.myspace.com/sxipshirey

http://sxip.blogspot.com/

Monday, August 06, 2007

Clowns in the NY Fringe

This is the time for Fringe Festivals, so thought I'd feature some shows that will be performing at the upcoming NY Fringe Festival. If you know anybody else that fits the bill, I urge you to add their particulars into the comments field below.


The New York International Fringe Festival opens August 10, and runs through August 26. There are supposedly over 200 shows in the fringe this year, but only two listed in the clown/mask camp. Not sure if they don't do well in the box office, or people are afraid to say that they are clowns, or what. I perused some more, and found 4 pieces that I know have a fair amount of clown/physical comedy in them. (Although Marvin's show doesn't seem like it has physical comedy in it, I've seen it, and it does. It's one of the most honest and vulnerable/funny shows I've seen in a long time. DISCLAIMER: Marvin is a good friend of mine! )

You can find out more about all of these shows at www.fringenyc.org.

JOAN OF ARPpO
Gardi Hutter
Writer: Gardi Hutter - Ferruccio Cainero
Director: Ferruccio Cainero
Sloppy laundry woman dreams of becoming a heroine like Jeanne d'Arc, but lacking worthy enemies, she transforms her washhouse into a grotesque battlefield. A tragicomic parable of the today world with a tousled, fury, nasty, touching and poetic female clown.
1h 10m Lugano Switzerland Clown/Mask Solo Show
VENUE #2: The Cherry Lane Theatre
www.gardihutter.com
Sat 11 @ 9:30
Wed 15 @ 5
Thu 16 @ 9:30
Thu 23 @ 2:30
Sat 25 @ 12



Princess Sunshine's Bitter Pill of Truth Funhouse
Little Miss Angry Girl Productions
Writer: Juliet Jeske
Director: Mark Lonergan
Princess Sunshine, NYC's own burnt out performer for kids. The Princess and friends teach and sing about broken dreams, fairy tales that lie, and politics in a show for adults. Live music, puppetry, mixed-media. Darkly vaudevillian, campy and fun.
0h 55m Manhattan New York Comedy Clown/Mask
VENUE #12: The Independent Theater
www.princesssunshine.com
Fri 10 @ 5
Sun 12 @ 2:30
Mon 13 @ 9
Sun 19 @ 7:30
Thu 23 @ 6:30
Fri 24 @ 10


Out Of My Mind
Skull Session Productions
Writer: Marvin Novogrodski & Doug Vogel
Director: Marvin Novogrodski
Like watching an autopsy except Marvin is alive. My hypnotherapist and I peel back the layers in this soul-bearing and optimistic psychological-memoir. Observe hypnosis in action. Scenes transposed directly from therapy. I'm the star of my own private Pinter play.
1h 0m Providence Rhode Island Comedy Drama
VENUE #2: The Cherry Lane Theatre
www.marvmarv.com
Fri 10 @ 9:30
Tue 14 @ 9:45
Wed 15 @ 3:15
Wed 22 @ 4:45
Sat 25 @ 5:15


Notes to the Motherland
Rajeckas Theater of One
Writer: Paul Rajeckas & George L. Chieffet
Director: George L. Chieffet
Choreographer: Paul Rajeckas
"Altogether Extraordinary" raves BACKSTAGE Magazine about Paul Rajeckas' passionate, gut wrenching and often hilarious journey to unearth his family's secret during WW.II. A one man tour-de-force of physical theater reminiscent of the best of Keaton and Chaplin.
1h 20m Stamford CT Drama Solo Show
VENUE #1: The SoHo Playhouse
www.paulrajeckas.com
Fri 10 @ 8:45
Mon 13 @ 3
Sun 19 @ 3:30
Wed 22 @ 9:30
Sun 26 @ 12

Friday, August 03, 2007

Shameless Hype!: Flea Circus in DC August 26

Let me take a moment to shamelessly promote my own project!

Trained Fleas To Perform In Our Nation's Capital



==============================

SUMMARY:

WHAT: Acme Miniature Flea Circus at the Palace of Wonders

WHERE: Palace of Wonders, 1210 H Street NE Washington DC

WHEN: Sunday August 26, 2007 at 4pm and 8 pm. (4 pm is an all ages
show)
COST: $8
MORE INFO: http://www.palaceofwonders.com
MORE INFO: http://www.trainedfleas.com
CALL: 202-398-7469 (SHOW)

ELECTRONIC PRESS RELEASE: Press Release PDF (707K: must have Adobe Reader)
PUBLICITY PHOTOS: Press Images of the show

============================



Washington, D.C., 8/1/07


This summer, our nation's flea circus will not be performed in the White House or the Capitol Building, and will not feature any elected officials.


That's because this year, the flea circus will take place in Washington D.C's up and coming Atlas District, and will feature insects. Trained insects. Fleas, to be exact.



The show, the Acme Miniature Flea Circus, is an authentic Victorian flea circus that features trained fleas Midge and Madge who perform spectacular circus stunts as seen before (and on top of) the crowned heads of Europe. Midge and Madge will perform their star turn at D.C.'s wildest and wackiest venue, the Palace of Wonders on Sunday August 26.


Details magazine called the show "One of the top alternative circuses in the country." The New York Times said "The appeal is irresistible... Gertsacov is every bit the fantastical impresario, in his purple top hat and cash-register voice, introducing us to the wondrous insects itching (sorry) to perform" And the Los Angeles Times says that "Professor Gertsacov holds the audience (and the stars of the show) in the palm of his hand."


According to Professor A.G. Gertsacov, ringmaster and proprietor of the Acme Miniature Circus, flea circuses were popular entertainments during Victorian times, but had nearly disappeared since the advent of television. The last popular American flea circus was Professor Heckler's of Time Square, which left New York in 1957. The rumor is that Heckler thought that the nude shows were giving his fleas a bad name.


There are now only a handful of flea circuses still performing throughout the world. Gertsacov's is arguably the most famous. The Rhode Island native (now based in Yonkers, NY) and his amazing insect stars have performed throughout the country, and in Canada, Chile, and Brazil. He recently spent three months performing in Times Square, less than two blocks from where Professor Heckler once had his fleas. Gertsacov has also been filmed for documentaries on the History Channel, the Travel Channel, and numerous news programs. He's even been a question on Jeopardy!


Gertsacov's educated insect stars pull chariots, dance on a tightwire, and perform other circus-like stunts. While he does not reveal his method of training (a proprietary secret, he explains) , he assures the curious and the civic minded that he uses only methods of positive reinforcement to teach the insects their routines. "I treat them as if they are my own flesh and blood," Gertsacov says. "And in some ways, they are."

Professor Gertsacov will bring his minuscule marvels to perform at Washington's wildest and wackiest venue on Sunday August 26 . He invites all curious parties to come and see the show that was deemed one of the top shows of the world famous Spoleto Festival in 2004. But he asks that you leave your dogs and cats at home. Gertsacov quips, "I don't want anyone to steal the show."

Shows are at the Palace of Wonders, 1210 H Street NE in the Atlas District of Washington DC. Shows are at 4 pm and 8 pm. Admission is $8. The first show is for all ages. The second show is for over 21 only. (In this show, the fleas will perform completely nude!

PLEASE NOTE: At the 8 pm show ID's will be checked!)




For more information about the show, or to reserve tickets, call the Palace of Wonders at 202-398-7469 (SHOW)

Or visit http://www.palaceofwonders.com


For press information, photographs, or interviews, please contact Flea Master Professor A.G. Gertsacov at 401-351-2596 or visit the
flea circus website: http://www.trainedfleas.com.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Guest Post by Jeff Raz: Rhythms of the Road

Jeff Raz is the founder and director of the Clown Conservatory at Circus Center, San Francisco, CA. Their website is http://www.clownconservatory.org.

His personal web site is www.jeffraz.com.



Jeff was a teacher of mine at Dell'arte, and has been working as a clown, performer, actor, playwright, director, and teacher for over 30 years. For the last few months, Jeff has been performing the lead clown role in Cirque du Soleil's Corteo. Here are some of his reflections on his time with Cirque.

==========




Rhythms of the Road



I did my first performance as 'The Dead Clown' in Cirque du Soleil's "Corteo" on December 18, 2006; I did my 200th performance last week; I will receive my 'one year' jacket in October; my contract and my sabbatical will end in December, 2007.

Time is different on the road and this road-time has taken me a while to get used to. The first rhythm that got into my bones is the show rhythm - from make-up to warm-up to the cue to lie on the bed in the middle of the stage to the organ riff that starts the show; the ebb and flow of scenes, costume changes, checking props, intermission. Then the second act, flying the bike across the stage for the last scene, the bow and finally taking off the make-up four hours after I put it on. Unless it's a two-show day, in which case I eat, nap and get ready to start all over again.

At one hour before show time, the whole cast does a vocal warm up followed by a quick meeting where the 'artistic team' tells us about any changes for the coming show (there are always a few small ones, sometimes there are really big ones if someone is sick or injured). Then we play 'sticks'.

I love sticks. We stand in a circle, 15 to 50 of us, each person holding a 4' wooden doweling about 34" in diameter. We touch the floor to start, grounding ourselves. Anyone can throw a stick at any time to anyone else and everyone needs to be prepared to catch a stick from anyone at any time. It takes a kind of intense but soft focus; when I get too attached to the idea of throwing to a certain person or look to see if someone is throwing to me, I usually get surprised by a stick coming from somewhere else. Each day the game has a different personality - sometimes it feels like every hand is miraculously in the right place for every catch. Other days, it's a mess. 'Sticks' is a perfect metaphor for performing, especially in a complex show with performers almost constantly in the air and the audience seated on both sides of the stage.

After sticks, I have a half hour to do a physical warm-up. I am now used to stretching my 50 year old, ex-acrobat body right out there with a bunch of Olympic gymnasts half my age. But, I try not to bounce on the trampoline right after one of the cast members' kids bounce since I do the same moves as the 3 year olds. Some days I juggle, some days I do doubles acrobatics with a couple of the gymnasts, which is great for both my body and my ego.

At 15 minutes, I get my headset mic from the sound booth, get into my funeral costume - a grey suit of a mid-19th century design - and walk on the track under the bleachers over to stage left, shaking hands and saying 'good show' in as many languages as I can manage.

"Corteo" is the dream of an old clown; I dream of my funeral. The first scene is a funeral procession, the cortege of the title, with me lying on a bed center stage. Then the show spins into a series of 'idealistic' flashbacks, scenes from my life made rosy by time - four ex-lovers in 19th century lingerie flying on chandeliers, children romping on trampoline beds - and circus acts performed by the funeral guests.

In all, I have 16 entrances, some as short as walking across the stage chasing a pair of clown shoes and some full scenes - flying in a bed, getting a pair of wings from an angel, learning to fly and sailing up into the cupola at the top of the tent. I ride a bike through the air, play tuba and water filled wine glasses; I do scenes with a live marionette and a woman floating under 6 huge balloons. What I don't do is any circus skills, save for 5 seconds of juggling. The man who created the role is an actor, not a circus performer so, ironically, I'm playing a character called 'The Dead Clown' in a big circus tent for the biggest circus organization the world has ever known and it is an acting role.

The rhythm of a week is less complex - Mondays to rest; Tuesday, Wednesdays and Thursdays, after I make my tea, I iChat with my family, do chores and work in my 'office' - a MacBook, mobile broadband, a couple of little speakers and a cell phone are my office/entertainment center. It's summer, so most of my work is preparing for the Clown Conservatory to start in September; reviewing DVD auditions and getting the new students enrolled, reading evaluations of last year, working on curriculum, hashing out schedules, planning our annual retreat, hiring new teachers and more curriculum. Here in Denver, I get on my bike about a half hour before my call and get to the site in plenty of time for afternoon rehearsals and the evening show; Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays are two show days - mainly rest until it's time to get in make-up.

Denver is my fifth city with 'Corteo' so I'm now used to the rhythm from city to city: the easy first few days with only a couple of rehearsals and time to get used to a new site, a new apartment and a new city. Then the dress rehearsal audience that is loud and rowdy followed by a more staid opening night crowd that rowdies up at the after-party in the VIP tent. Then a month or two of nine show weeks before we get to the closing week. In the last week in every city, our population of 140 performers, technicians, cooks and other support folks suddenly swells to over 200 with local hires and 'fly-ins' (tear down/set up specialists from Montreal). On Wednesday, dozens of forklifts appear on site and creep closer to our tent every day. As the closing week progresses, things start to disappear - an awning goes, then the weight lifting set, the trampoline, chairs, the mats, half of the cafeteria, etc. The final show in a city always feels like a race - will we finish the performance before they take the tent down?

Immediately after getting out of costume and make-up, the performers strike the insides of the artistic tent, including the dressing consoles, costumes, drapes, etc. I love this time - 60 folks working hard and fast, huge boxes flying around, sweating and grunting to load a few of the 62 semis that move our show. It's like 'sticks' done with road cases. 45 minutes later, we're done. The tech crew and fly-ins will work all night and for 10 more days before Corteo is set-up in the next city. I say 'good bye' in as many languages as I can manage and head back to my apartment to pack for my week at home.

Corteo will open in LA in a month and we'll be in Southern California into 2008 - I'll finish up and be home for New Years. Then I will need to rediscover the rhythms of school and family.

2007 Jeff Raz www.jeffraz.com

Gaulier in NY

Internationally acclaimed clown and acting teacher Philippe Gaulier will conduct workshops in New York City during September.

Philippe Gaulier was a master teacher at the Ecole Jacques Lecoq in Paris before starting his own school in 1980. After ten years in Paris, he moved his school to London and finally, in 2002, back to France. The Ecole Philippe Gaulier is an important center for theatre training for students from around the world. Philippe's unique approach to actor training has influenced performing artists as diverse as Emma Thompson, London's Theatre de Complicite and Sacha Cohen's Borat and Ali G.

Workshops will include:

SPECIAL 2-DAY Weekend Workshopdays SEPTEMBER 15-16

An introduction to the teachings of Philippe Gaulier. This workshop will be a short version of the Ecole Gaulier foundational course Le Jeu. The basic relationships of actor/audience and actor/actor will be explored. MORE INFO



MORNING SESSION 2 weeks M-F weekday mornings SEPTEMBER 17-28

The morning session will focus on teachings from the Ecole Gaulier.
Specifically: Le Jeu, Bouffon and Melodrama. MORE INFO



AFTERNOON SESSION 2 weeks M-F weekday afternoons SEPTEMBER 17-28

The afternoon session will focus on Clown. MORE INFO




Courses will be held in New York City at an undisclosed location.
The morning and afternoon workshops are $750 each, or $1300 if you take both.
The weekend workshop costs $300.

The Registration Form

For further information email: Gaulier2007@gmail.com
or visit the website:
Gaulier in NY Sept 2007

"BOOOORRRIINNG!!!" Read an interview with Gaulier in Fast Company Magazine

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Elemental Theatre Collective's King Stag in RI


I've been hearing about these guys for a while, but didn't realize that they were Trinity Rep Conservatory grads. (I am also a Conservatory grad as well, admittedly a lot earlier than these guys (like 14 years!))

They are performing Carlo Gozzi's commedia masterpiece, King Stag through the month of August at venues around the state of Rhode Island. Admission is free. (although I'm sure that donations are accepted!)

If you are undecided about going, you can read this great review of their show in the Providence Phoenix.

KING STAG SCHEDULE

Sat 8/4, 6 pm - Clark Memorial Library - Carolina, RI- link
Sun, 8/5, 6 pm - Goddard Park - Warwick, RI - link

Sun 8/12, 6 pm - Foster Town Hall - Foster, RI - link
Wed 8/15, 6 pm - Louttit Library - West Greenwich, RI - link
Sat 8/18, 6 pm - WaterFire - Waterplace Park, Providence, RI - link


~ ABOUT ELEMENTAL THEATRE COLLECTIVE ~


Elemental is a theatre collective primarily made up of the Trinity Rep Conservatory Class of 2002. During three years of intensive learning and collaboration, they became determined to continue their growth as theatre artists together after graduation.

In the fall of 2005, they mounted their first full-length show in Providence, a critically acclaimed production of Tony Kushner’s incendiary A Bright Room Called Day. It was nominated for Best Production, Best Director and Best Actress by Motif Magazine that year.

They also produce an annual summer festival of short plays in Tiverton called Outbursts!

This outdoor summer tour of King Stag, is the next step for them.

To find out more about Elemental Theatre Ensemble, visit them online at the websites listed below.

http://myspace.com/elementaltheatre
http://elementaltheatre.org