Posted at 7:11 AM on August 20, 2010
by Marianne Combs
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Filed under: Events

"A Gift for Planet BX63" by Off Leash Area
Let's hope for good weather this weekend, because there are lots of great outdoors events and festivals for the whole family.
Off Leash Area is bringing its highly physical theater to a garage near you. That's right, the theater company usually performs out of its own garage, but is now taking its performance of "A Gift for Planet BX63" on tour to residential garages in Minneapolis, Plymouth, Blaine, Brooklyn Park and Eagan. The show is billed as a melding of "The Little Prince" and "The Gods Must Be Crazy."
This weekend 13th Ave NE in Minneapolis is being transformed into the Nordeast Music Festival, with live music, a silent auction, chair massages and... a meat raffle. Bands to perform include the Hopefuls, Zoo Animal, the Roe Family Singers and Screaming Vermillion.
Kids of all ages are welcome to the "CARNiVAL DE WONQUE!" this Saturday. Presented by Patrick's Cabaret, the event includes lots of games that cost just 25 or 50 cents to play (ring toss, fish pond, etc), as well as a hula hoop contest and live music by The Brass Messengers.
This Saturday also marks the Red Stag Block Party, featuring live music all day (Heiruspecs and E.L.nO., among others), yet another hula hoop contest and great food that's locally sourced. A portion of the proceeds will go to the Ann Bancroft Foundation (the explorer, not the actress) to support microgrants to help young girls reach their goals.
And the mother of all festivals, the Minnesota Renaissance Festival gets underway this weekend in Shakopee. Feel free to wear your swords, knives, dirks and daggers, but leave the axes, claymores, maces, pikes and guns at home.
Huzzah!
Posted at 1:00 PM on August 20, 2010
by Euan Kerr
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Filed under: Film, People

Paul Reubens in Todd Solondz' film "Life During Wartime." (Images courtesy IFC films)
Director and screenwriter Todd Solondz says he was a little surprised when he found himself writing about people who originally appeared in his 1998 movie "Happiness,"
"I never imagined I would revisit those characters or storylines," he says on the phone from New York. "But that just goes to show my imagination wasn't fertile enough, because in fact, about 10 years later I found myself just writing the first scene of this movie which involves some of these characters."
"Happiness" explored the troubles of three middle class New Jersey families. Actually troubles is a weak word to describe the tale of child abuse, betrayal, and other sordid goings-on. A decade later Solondz decided there was more material to mine and explore.
The result is "Life During Wartime," a disturbing but compelling film which looks at how the characters have developed and changed (or not,) in the ensuing years. It opens in the Twin Cities this weekend.
Solondz (left) recast the characters, drawing in a host of very fine actors for the roles, ranging from Charlotte Rampling, Alison Janney and Ciaran Hinds to Michael Kenneth Williams and Paul Reubens,
All of the characters are flawed people, but with good traits. Some of them have behaved despicably towards people they love. Solondz' question is whether they can forgive and forget.
Central to this is Bill (Hinds) who is in prison for sexually abusing a family member. Solondz says pedophilia serves as a metaphor for all that is demonized, feared and loathed.
"It's hard to beat," he says. "I think most Americans would feel more comfortable having Osama bin Laden at their dinner table than a convicted pedophile, so it becomes a kind of crucible, a test in some sense for those of us in questioning the extent when we say we embrace humanity and love mankind, to say what extent are we capable? What are those limits? Because to be human, of course, is to recognize and to be defined by those limitations. It's a kind of moral exploration."
And Solondz' exploration does a remarkable job of drawing in the audience. The film is filled with twists, turns, and revelations. . As the multi-part story spins out we see each character in very different lights. Not everything is as it first seems - although a lot is. Everyone has much to forgive - and much for which to be forgiven.
Solondz says the situations he deals with in "Life During Wartime" may be unpleasant, but they are constantly in the media, so he thinks audience members are well aware of the issues. Looking for new ways to explore those questions in an accessible drama.is what interests Solondz.
"When I go to the movies, I do want to be provoked and engaged in fresh ways. That's what I look for. In a sense the movies can make you feel a little more alive for those 90 minutes, because they have the power to articulate things that remain unspoken even amongst our intimates."
He admits casting Paul Reubens in the film brought an added element given the actors much publicized fall from grace after an indecency arrest.
"You are not just aware of the talent, but also the so-called baggage that everybody comes with," he says.
"With Paul Reubens, he had read for me years ago for something else. And what I liked here was first of all being able to share with audiences some of what he is able to do as an actor which I don't think anyone had ever imagined. But beyond that his whole history lends a certain poignancy and pathos, and sorrow to his performance, which I think would be absent from most other comedic actors of his stature."
"Life During Wartime" has a Minnesota connection as it is produced by Minneapolis-based production company Werc Werk Works, which shot "The Convincer" in Minnesota earlier this year.
"They financed the film so I am very fortunate that during very difficult economic times they were able to pay for this movie," Solondz says. "Because I really don't think it would have been financed otherwise."
"Life During Wartime" has done well on the festival circuit, taking the award for best screenplay at the Venice Film Festival where it was also nominated for the best film.
When asked what he hopes people will take away from the film Solondz responds this way:
"I suppose in some sense with movies there is always one message that comes loud and clear to anyone who feels very responsive to a film, and that's 'you are not alone.'"
Posted at 3:16 PM on August 20, 2010
by Marianne Combs
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Filed under: Music

The Beatles press conference at Metropolitan Stadium.
Image courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society.
This morning I had way too much fun filling in for Gary Eichten on Midday, as we marked the 45th anniversary of The Beatles' visit to Minnesota for their single performance here (August 21, 1965).
Joining me in the studio was Jon Bream, music writer for the Star Tribune, and Jim McGuinn, program director for 89.3 The Current (our sister station).
We took a number of calls from ladies who were 12 or 14 when they went to see The Beatles, and remember that concert as one of their highlights. While we didn't have time to get to him, we did get a comment on-line from a guy who went to the show, as well, although one caller remembered the concert as being attended by "90% girls."
We played songs from their concert set list that year ("Hard Day's Night" and "Help!," among others) and we also talked about where you can still hear their influence in Minnesota bands (Jeremy Messersmith, The Hang-Ups, The Jayhawks, and even Prince).
If you didn't catch the show, just click onto the audio link above, and you can hear an excerpt from their press conference when a local reporter asks the hard-hitting question "how do you sleep with such long hair?" And Jon Bream talks about the time Paul McCartney offered him a joint backstage at a Wings concert (he swears he didn't inhale).
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