Friday, May 29, 2009

Acme Flea Circus This Weekend- Hastings on Hudson

Pardon the shameless commercial interruption, but my show, the Acme Miniature Flea Circus will be performing at the Hastings-on-Hudson Popcorn and Puppet Festival on Sunday May 31. Showtime is 3:20 pm

The Festival runs 3-5 pm at the MacEachron Waterfront Park, 1 River Street, Hastings-on-Hudson. The park is right next to the Hastings-on-Hudson Metro North Station., about 30 minutes from Grand Central, and about 3 stops from the downtown Yonkers line.

other performers include
The Sourdough Philosophy Circus ( Bread and Puppet Theater)
Soup
Puppet Junction
Cosmic Bicycle Theatre
The Himilayas Band

Tickets: $8 for adults, $5 kids, $30 for families of 5 or more.
(rain location: Hastings High School Gym)

For more info, including directions, visit: http://www.rivertownsguide.com/puppet.php or http://www.trainedfleas.com

Up and CLOWN "Closing Party" Exhibit 5/31 5-8 pm

Jim Moore's exhibit Up and Clown (talked about here) will have a closing party on Sunday May 31 from 5-8 pm. Come check it out if you get the opportunity, and may I mention-- freeroll!

SB Digital Gallery
125 East 4th St.
212 979 7239
(1 block east from Kraine Theatre)

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Toronto Clown Festival June 4-7, 2009

The Toronto Festival of Clowns aims to bring together clowns and physical theatre artists of all disciplines and backgrounds and provide a common space to showcase their work.

Now entering their 4th year, the festival continues to encourage the risk and exploration of the clown, hosting new and established works that inspire and delight.

Past festivals have hosted some of North America’s top clowns, including David Craig (Roseneath Theatre, Napalm the Magnificent), Eric Davis (Red Bastard), Dean Gilmour (Theatre Smith-Gilmour), Sue Morrison (Institute of Canadian Clowning) and John Turner (Mump & Smoot).

All tickets $10 except Masters of Clown $20
for more info visit:
http://www.TorontoClown.com
festival@torontoclown.com
647 504-7873



READ INTERVIEWS WITH PERFORMERS

2009 TORONTO FESTIVAL OF CLOWNS LINEUP

chaotica
Chaotica
When:
Thursday, June 4, 2009 to
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Where:
Toronto Festival of Clowns

6:30pm, Thursday June 4
8pm, Saturday June 6

CHAOTICA reveals the madcap adventures of Alice, a stressed out artist caught in a nightmarish board game that transforms her into different versions of who she thinks she wants to be. But this isn't your usual parlour game. Strategies both comic and brutal force Alice to confront her fears and desires, until she realizes who is really in control of her destiny.

SPENT 1
Spent
When:
Thursday, June 4, 2009 to
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Where:
Toronto Festival of Clowns

8pm, Thursday June 4
6:30pm, Sunday June 7
Did somebody say Crisis?!
On September 26, 2008, two execs went to sleep with their hopes and dreams tucked safely in the bank. The next morning as the alarm buzzed, they wiped the sleep from their eyes and awoke to find everything gone! was it a dream?... a nightmare? It was a crisis!!

Clown Chowder
Clown Chowder 2009 TFOC
When:
Thursday, June 4, 2009
9:30 PM
Where:
Toronto Festival of Clowns
9:30pm, Thursday June 4
The final evening of Owen Anderson's clown cabaret.
40
Big Girls Don't Cry
When:
Friday, June 5, 2009 to
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Where:
Toronto Festival of Clowns

8pm, Friday June 5
6:30pm, Sunday June 7
A new show from the creator of "Joe the perfect man."

Futility
An Exercise in Futility/And now a message from Mr. Mr.
When:
Friday, June 5, 2009 to
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Where:
Toronto Festival of Clowns
6:30pm, Friday June 5
8pm, Sunday June 7
Double bill from Nathan Schwartz and Michael Rubenfeld.
Clown Masters
Masters of Clown 2009 TFOC
When:
Friday, June 5, 2009
9:30 PM
Where:
Toronto Festival of Clowns

9:30pm, Friday June 5
The festival gala showcase of clown masters who have made a great contribution to the physical theatre community. Featuring Giuseppe Condello, Leah Cherniak, Helen Donnelly and Mark Andrada.

Lunacy Cabaret_fesso
Lunacy Cabaret 2009 TFOC
When:
Saturday, June 6, 2009
9:30 PM
Where:
Toronto Festival of Clowns
9:30pm, Saturday June 6
Toronto's wildest clown cabaret at a special west-end location.
Grotesques
Bouffon Show 2009 TFOC
When:
Sunday, June 7, 2009
9:30 PM
Where:
Toronto Festival of Clowns
9:30pm, Sunday June 7
One of the few chances in North America to see an entire cabaret of bouffon characters.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Roberto Benigni does Dante

NY Times Article about Roberto Benigni, who is apparently a Dante scholar, and is performing next week in NY in a very short tour of a Dante show, “TuttoDante,” a monologue about Dante’s “Divine Comedy” that mixes literary insights with off-the-cuff political jokes. In Italy, where he has been doing the show regularly for three years, it has drawn more than a million people. Sounds a lot like my Italian hero Dario Fo.

Great quote from the article:

“Only comedians can talk about death, life, God and Virgin Mary,” he said. “If was a tragic actor, I couldn’t allow myself. But with this accent I can do it. I can talk with death in person because I am a clown. Yes. And I am proud to be a clown — very much.”

Here are the North American Tour Dates:

May 26 2009 - San Francisco - Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall
May 30 2009 - New York - Manhattan Center
June 3,4 2009 - Montreal - St. Denise Theatre
June 6 2009 - Boston - Berklee Performance Center
June 7 2009 - Toronto - Casino Rama
June 10 2009 - Quebec City - Grand Théâtre de Québec
June 12 2009 - Chicago - Harris Theater

Find out more about the show at http://www.tuttodante.it
















FULL ARTICLE BELOW:

Funnyman Takes on Dante’s ‘Comedy’
By BEN SISARIO
Published: May 22, 2009

Roberto Benigni leapt up with a riff on the 26th Canto of Dante’s “Inferno,” in which fraudulent advisers are engulfed by flames that scorch them. “It’s like landing in Los Angeles or Manhattan, full of little lights like a skyscraper,” he exclaimed in his frenetically choppy English. “Dante describes the lights like fireflies, like a farmer who sees billions of fireflies. And every single firefly is hiding a fraud — people like Madoff. Very cunning, very shrewd. These people are hiding inside the flame because they are hiding in life. The Florentines, you know, they invented finances.”

The delivery is familiar: Mr. Benigni, of course, is the endearingly manic Italian comedian whose Holocaust tragicomedy, “Life Is Beautiful,” won three Oscars in 1999. But for Americans, at least, the subject of Mr. Benigni’s latest project is almost incongruously new. Next week he will begin a short North American tour of “TuttoDante,” a monologue about Dante’s “Divine Comedy” that mixes literary insights with off-the-cuff political jokes. In Italy, where he has been doing the show regularly for three years, it has drawn more than a million people.

“We need to have the nerve to understand why a man with a big nose 700 years ago had the heroic shamelessness to write,” Mr. Benigni, 56, said in an interview the other day at a Manhattan hotel. “Really this is the most daring, bold poetry ever. In 2,000 years of Christian poetry they never surpassed this. They never produced such a scandal of beauty. Never, never, nobody.”

Mr. Benigni’s love of poetry has never been a secret. In “Down by Law,” the 1986 Jim Jarmusch film that introduced Mr. Benigni to American audiences, he cites Walt Whitman and “Bob Frost.” Collecting his Oscar when “Life Is Beautiful” won best foreign film in 1999, he quoted Dante and Blake (after climbing over the seats and blurting, “I want to kiss everybody!”).

“This face that he puts forward as a sort of clown is only a very small percentage of Roberto’s personality,” said Mr. Jarmusch, who also cast Mr. Benigni in “Night on Earth,” from 1991, and in a segment in the 2003 compilation film “Coffee and Cigarettes,” and who remains a close friend.

“TuttoDante” (“Everything About Dante”) introduces Americans to the savant-intellectual side of Mr. Benigni. In each performance he recites a canto in Italian from memory, with detailed explications of poetics and history in English.

For this tour, which begins in San Francisco on Tuesday and comes to the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York next Saturday, Mr. Benigni will perform Canto V from “Inferno,” with the story of Paolo and Francesca, the adulterers who spend eternity tossed by gales of lust.

“He’s a natural scholar,” said Robert Hollander, the Princeton professor. “He calls, and we just talk about Dante. He calls from Rome and says, ‘Bob, what do you think about this passage?’ ” Mr. Benigni wrote a preface for an edition of “Inferno” translated by Mr. Hollander and his wife, Jean, in which he asks whether Dante has been receiving royalty checks in Purgatory.

Mr. Benigni says he sees himself primarily as an entertainer, not a teacher. That means a lot of political jokes, often about his old nemesis, Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister. Mr. Benigni mocked him relentlessly during Mr. Berlusconi’s first term of office in the 1990s, and he clearly relishes the chance to banish Mr. Berlusconi to Dante’s depths.

“You know, Berlusconi, he passed a lot of laws just for him, just for one man,” he said. “So maybe his punishment could be to build for him a circle in hell, but very personal, just for him: ‘Eh, this is just for you, Mr. Berlusconi!’ ”

“TuttoDante” could also be seen as a kind of purgatory for Mr. Benigni, or perhaps a way out of one. Since “Life Is Beautiful,” which grossed $229 million around the world, his movie career has stumbled. There was no shortage of offers from Hollywood, but Mr. Benigni said that most roles were Italian stereotypes like the pizza man or the Mafioso. He was even urged to make a “Life Is Beautiful” sequel.

“Never in my life will I do this,” Mr. Benigni said, shaking his head.

So he continued making movies in Italy, but with mixed results. “Pinocchio,” in 2002, was a moderate hit in Italy but did poorly elsewhere. Mr. Benigni’s decision to cast himself — then 50 years old — as the puppet boy struck many critics as perverse. “The Tiger and the Snow,” from 2005, which Mr. Benigni also directed, did even worse at the box office.

“Maybe sometimes I have been wrong with some movies,” he said. “Anyway, I try to do my best. I was sincere. I was honest. But I am sure this path that I took is the right path.”

After “The Tiger and the Snow” he began to devote himself to the Dante readings. And although he said he is eager to return to filmmaking (“I would like to make not a divine comedy but a comedy”), Dante is his foreseeable future: requests for the show, he said, keep pouring in, from Korea and Japan, from South America, from towns in Italy he has not been to yet.

“Only comedians can talk about death, life, God and Virgin Mary,” he said. “If was a tragic actor, I couldn’t allow myself. But with this accent I can do it. I can talk with death in person because I am a clown. Yes. And I am proud to be a clown — very much.”

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Think Foolishly: Tips From a Pro

Drew Richardson, the Dramatic Fool, is hard at work again.

His blog, Think Foolishly, is currently featuring his takes on how to Think Foolishly. He's got 60 great tips across five categories on how to create a clown logic for your work, how to enhance, create, or otherwise extend a clown routine in a logical and foolish way. He's currently on #18, so you've still got plenty of time to read all of the tips before they overwhelm you.

With tips like # 13: Give Up and #12 Never Give Up, you can see that you are in for a little bit of a blender ride. Although he doesn't specifically say so, I think it's safe to assume that you probably shouldn't do ALL OF THESE AT ONCE. (although that might be very funny) But as one of my teachers Daniel Stein would say, "If you follow all of the rules of great theatre, you are guaranteed to make mediocre theatre."


If you are looking to transform one of your clown ideas, try approaching the problem from one of these 60 ways, and see if that changes how you are feeling about your potential clown idea. If that approach isn't working for you, try another. Maybe even try two at once. After all, you've got 60 potential keys to unlock the secret to your new routine, and one or more of them might solve the problem. Well, right now there are only 18 ways, so maybe you should just wait 40 days before doing anything else... then come back to your creative difficulties (if you can remember them)

Read his blog here: http://www.thinkfoolishly.com
Find out more about Drew's work: http://www.dramaticfool.com

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

All Will Learn to Wear Bowlers: Pig Iron Clown Workshop in NYC

PIG IRON THEATRE COMPANY presents
A CLOWN WORKSHOP

with Quinn Bauriedel and Geoff Sobelle in New York City

WHEN: Wednesdays (June 10, 17, and 24) 2:30 - 5:30 PM
WHERE: The Brecht Forum 451 West Street
COST: $125


Pig Iron Artistic Director Quinn Bauriedel and Company Member Geoff Sobelle (creator of the international hit all wear bowlers) invite you to join them in an investigation of the world of the clown.

What gets revealed when you stand alone in front of an audience?
What pleasure can be found with the smallest mask in the world?
In what discipline are you the world's leading expert?

With little else than a red nose and the body that you inherited, the workshop will exploit each participant's unique sense of humor and way of uncovering the absurdity of being a human being on this planet. Take a leap into the unknown territory of your own lunacy.

To register, contact Quinn Bauriedel at quinn@pigiron.org

Pig Iron Theatre Company has been creating original performance works in Philadelphia since 1995, making plays about live music, dead people, neuroscience and thwarted love affairs through a unique method of collaborative creation and with a signature physical approach to character.

Past collaborations have included work with the legendary director Joe Chaikin, playwright Adriano Shaplin, choreographer David Brick, and composer Cynthia Hopkins.

Pig Iron's work has been seen at theaters and festivals in London, Edinburgh, San Francisco, Italy, Poland, Ukraine, Brazil, Germany, Ireland, Romania and Peru. The company's original works have met with critical acclaim and awards, including a 2005 OBIE; most recently, Pig Iron's Chekhov Lizardbrain was hailed by The New York Times as one of the top 10 theatre events of 2008. In September 2009, Pig Iron will premiere Welcome to Yuba City, a comic exploration of the mythic American West, at the Philadelphia Live Arts Festival.


Find out more about their work at www.pigiron.org

Saturday, May 16, 2009

CONEY ISLAND BOOM-A-RING THIS SUMMER.

The Greatest Show On Earth hits the boardwalk this summer for the very first time in its 139-year history! SEE DATES


Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey presents THE CONEY ISLAND BOOM A RING, an action-packed seaside circus spectacular where the energy bursts out of the ring, into the audience and bounces back to electrify the Ringling Bros. performers. Get a one-of-a-kind, up-close and personal experience as you sit just feet away from international performers, thrilling acts, and amazing animals!

The uniquely talented Justin Case will have you gasping and laughing with his extraordinary and hilarious bicycle daredevilry, leading an amazing cast of aerialists, acrobats, and comics. You'll be on the edge of your seat as you experience the thrills of seeing a family of motorcyclists race at speeds of 65 miles per hour in the Globe of Steel, a daring never-before-seen crossbow demonstration that takes archery to a shocking new extreme, and a gravity-defying performance on the whirling Wheel of Steel high above the arena floor.

The amazing animals will leave you mesmerized; miniature acrobatic Dachshunds jump, roll, and dance in perfect synchronization, beautiful white tigers offer high-fives, and majestic Asian elephants dance elegantly around the arena floor.

THE CONEY ISLAND BOOM A RING is a rare NYC summer time experience that engages all the senses and offers Children Of All Ages a day at The Greatest Show On Earth they never imagined possible!

Arrive an hour before show time for the All Access Pre-show - FREE to all ticket holders - and meet Ringling Bros. performers and animals, learn circus skills and enjoy a taste of the circus before the show even starts!

BUY TICKETS

SEE ALL TICKETMASTER CIRCUS TICKETS

SEE RINGLING SHOW-PAGE

Friday, May 15, 2009

Gamarjabat at the New Victory Theatre May 9-24.

Gamarjobat is an award-winning comedy performance group comprising two Japanese comedians, Ketch! – who sports a red mohawk – and HIRO-PON – with a yellow mohawk.. The duo perform a variety of sketches, including mime and physical comedy. Their performances are wordless.

Although they are not particularly well-known in their native Japan, they have found success performing in the United Kingdom, winning awards at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.

They have also appeared on television in the UK . In February 2009 the BBC broadcast a TV pilot Ketch & HIRO-PON Get It On.

They are making their U.S. flipper-flapping debut in their new show, ROCK ‘N ROLL PENGUIN at the New Victory Theatre in NY May 8-24. In support of that show, they've been doing some antics and other stuff in and around Times Square.

Find out more: New Victory Web Page

GAMARJABAT WEBSITE: (English version) http://www.gamarjobat.com/en/index.html

VIEW A VIDEO OF THEM BELOW

Friday, May 08, 2009

Pat Cashin's clownalley.net is back up!

And although he lost all of his archives (at least as if this date) he's making up for lost time. He's published 27 posts since April 15. I'm lucky if I made 27 posts this year!

I hereby award clownalley.net the Spy vs Spy Most Prolific Clown Blog Award.
It comes with no cash prize, simply a "well, done, old chum. Well done."
Delivered in a classic English accent.

http://www.clownalley.net

And completists, please note. The image above was the original spy vs. spy cartoon. This award does not have any connection or collaboration with the real spy vs. spy. Any resemblance is strictly coincidental.

So now, let's hope those archives come back!

Thursday, May 07, 2009

Cruel & Unusual Comedy at MOMA (NY) May 20-June 1, 2009

Cruel and Unusual Comedy: Social Commentary in the American Slapstick Film

May 20, 2009–June 1, 2009



Gratuitous Violence: No Turn Unstoned
Wednesday, May 27, 2009, 7:00 p.m.
With piano accompaniment by Ben Model
  • Deep Sea Panic 1924. USA. Directed by Roy Del Ruth. With James Parrott. 12 min.
  • Their First Execution 1913. USA. Directed by Mack Sennett. With Ford Sterling. 10 min.
  • The Phoney Cannibal 1915. USA. Directed by Charles E. Ward. With Lloyd Hamilton, Bud Duncan. 10 min.
  • The Counter Jumper 1922. USA. Directed by Larry Semon. With Semon, Oliver Hardy. 18 min.
  • Cold Hearts and Hot Flames 1916. USA. Directed by John G. Blystone. With Billie Ritchie. 20 min


Animals and Children: No Harm Done
Friday, May 29, 2009, 4:00 p.m
With piano accompaniment by Ben Model
  • An Elephant on His Hands 1912. USA. Directed by Frederick Thomson. With George Ober. 10 min.
  • Cat, Dog, and Co. 1929. USA. Directed by Anthony Mack. With the Our Gang kids. 18 min.
  • Mind the Baby 1924. USA. Directed by Al Herman. With Pal the dog. 18 min.
  • The Knockout 1923. USA. Directed by Len Powers. With the Dippy-Doo-Dads. 10 min.
  • When Summer Comes 1922. USA. Directed by Roy Del Ruth. With Billy Bevan. 18 min.


The Machine Age: Mack Sennett vs. Henry Ford
Monday, June 1, 2009, 4:00 p.m.
With piano accompaniment by Ben Model
  • Lizzies of the Field 1924. USA. Directed by Del Lord. With Billy Bevan. 18 min.
  • His Bread and Butter 1916. USA. Directed by Edward Cline, Hank Mann. With Mann, Slim Summerville. 18 min.
  • Get Out and Get Under 1920. USA. Directed by Hal Roach. With Harold Lloyd. 18 min.
  • Squeaks and Squawks 1920. USA. Directed by Noel M. Smith. With Jimmy Aubrey, Oliver Hardy. 18 min.
  • Neck and Neck 1924. USA. Directed by Fred Hibbard. With Lige Conley. 18 min.

Friday, May 01, 2009

Interview with Dominique Serrand

A video interview with Dominique Serrand, one of the principals of Theater de la Jeune Leune, a Minneapolis theatre which recently closed.

Jeune Leune was known for their physical theatre-- I believe that Serrand or one of his partners studied with Lecoq, and others in the company studied with Carlo Mazzone-Clemente of Dell'arte. Also, Chris Bayes either taught or performed there (or maybe both)



The 34 minute interview is quite interesting, and well worth viewing.
(Thanks to Mike Daisey for the heads up.)


http://www.vimeo.com/2880009