State of the Arts

State of the Arts: November 30, 2010 Archive

Tuesday news and reviews

Posted at 9:23 AM on November 30, 2010 by Marianne Combs (0 Comments)
Filed under: News and reviews

Here's a look at what's making headlines in the arts world...

Dance

Coming soon: A 'Nutcracker' near you
- Caroline Palmer, Star Tribune
Whether you like your ballet traditional or avant-garde, you can find a version to suit your taste.

Walker Art Center presents a Choreographers' Evening full of pizazz
- Jay Gabler, TC Daily Planet
Sometimes, contemporary dance growls and barks at you. Other times, it wags its tail, jumps up in your lap, licks your face, and pees on you a little bit.

Art

Minnesota identity and art explored at Intermedia Arts
- Shelby Meyers, City Pages
With all the galleries, exhibits, theaters, museums, and other artsy-fartsy things around town, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to realize Minnesota is a goldmine for creative talent.

Music

Jayhawks to tour behind January reissues
- Chris Riemenschneider
With reissues of their two best-known albums coming in January, the Jayhawks have announced a short five-city tour that will culminate with another First Ave gig on Jan. 29.

Mavis Staples brings church to the Cedar on Sunday night
- Jon Bream, Star Tribune
It was the last show for Mavis Staples in 2010 and she was in good spirits - very good spirits -- on Sunday at the jam-packed Cedar Cultural Center.

Byron Gustafson, Brainerd native who managed performers, dies in New York
- Associated Press
The former managing partner of the firm that managed the careers and tours of performers from Suzanne Vega to Patti LuPone, has died in Manhattan. Byron Gustafson was 56.

Bob Dylan's handwritten lyrics to sell in NYC
- Associated Press
Bob Dylan's original handwritten lyrics for "The Times are A-Changin'" are heading for the auction block in New York City. They could sell for an estimated $200,000 to $300,000.

Holiday gifts: Bob, the Boss and Ol' Blue Eyes- Chris Riemenschneider, Star Tribune
The industry seems more focused on baby boomers in this year's offerings for music fans.

Theater

'Nativity' uncorks spirit
- Star Tribune
The tweaked holiday show returns with soulful flavor and zesty song.

Guthrie's revamped 'Christmas Carol' adds touches of comedy, cruelty
- Renee Valois, Pioneer Press
The new version helmed by artistic director Joe Dowling takes some intriguing liberties with the original under the influence of a couple of Dickens' fellow Brits -- playwright Crispin Whittell and lead actor Daniel Gerroll.

The Guthrie's A Christmas Carol: the good, the comedic and the poignant
- Claudia Haas, Examiner.com
The Guthrie Theatre unveiled their new Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol on November 19th. It's poignant. It's good for the holiday spirit. And it's funny.

At the History Theatre, "The Christmas Schooner" wobbles but stays steady on its course
- Bev Wolfe, TC Daily Planet
Song and family underscore the History Theatre's warm reprise of the holiday musical The Christmas Schooner.

A Fringe Festival fave returns with a holiday twist in 'The Harty Boys Save Christmas'
- Dominic P. Papatola, Pioneer Press
Reviving a shtick they first developed for the 2009 Minnesota Fringe Festival, Scrimshaw and Weinhagen have developed an hour-long, holiday-flavored toffee that parodies the young gung-ho heroes of Franklin W. Dixon's Hardy Boys novels and the Twin Cities cultural scene.

"The Harty Boys Save Christmas," thanks to Comedy Suitcase, at the Bryant-Lake Bowl
Jay Gabler, TC Daily Planet
The most magical moment in Comedy Suitcase's The Harty Boys Save Christmas had nothing to do with presents or snow or mistletoe: it was when a young child laughed out loud, with a contagious giggle, at a punch line involving Ayn Rand.

Deadpan stories of a department-store elf
- Lisa Brock, Star Tribune
Joe Leary plays Santa's helper in darkly humorous one-man show based on David Sedaris' "Santaland Diaries."

'Santaland Diaries' - Who knew humiliation could be so much fun?
- Quinton Skinner, Pioneer Press
Even in tight times, what can save us day to day is a wry, knowing laugh at the world, which this Frank Theatre production amply supplies.

Ordway gets grant for children's fest
- Pioneer Press
The annual Flint Hills International Children's Festival at the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts has received a $30,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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Video break: "Scattered flurries"

Posted at 11:38 AM on November 30, 2010 by Marianne Combs (0 Comments)
Filed under: Video

[scattered flurries] from felt soul media on Vimeo.

I admit it - as I got off the plane yesterday evening after a lovely vacation with family in Arizona, I felt a certain amount of dread. Even though I've lived half my life in Minnesota, I still feel like a stranger in a strange land when the temperature dips below 32F.

So as I searched for artsy videos for this week's video break, this lovely tribute to snow and skiing caught my eye. For all my transplant friends, here's a reminder of just how wonderful winter can be.

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Dancing to learn physics?

Posted at 2:13 PM on November 30, 2010 by Marianne Combs (2 Comments)
Filed under: Education

Dance-to-Learn_Monroe.jpg
Dance to Learn students at Linwood Monroe Arts Plus. Photo: Erin Gomach.

Can a tango teach the rules of action vs reaction? How about swinging your partner to experience the powers of centrifugal force?

Today 25 teachers from around the state are at the Ordway Center for Performing Arts learning how to integrate dance into the curriculum at their schools.

And by dance, we're not talking about 15 minutes of ballet inbetween math and English.

Instead these teachers, with help from staff at the Perpich Center for the Arts, will learn to use dance as a tool for understanding things like photosynthesis. The "Dance to Learn" program helps teachers to integrate the principles of dance with other areas of study, connecting ideas of space, time, shape and line with choreography.

Now in its third year, this year's program involves select schools in Richfield, Saint Paul and Minneapolis. A total of 16 classrooms are participating and include students in 3rd - 8th grades. Three of these classrooms are specifically focused on working with students learning English as a second language.

As the year proceeds, these teachers will receive seven to nine days of hands-on coaching at their schools. Ultimately over 1600 students will participate in multiple dance lessons.

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Not a retrospective - a Gilbert marathon

Posted at 6:20 PM on November 30, 2010 by Euan Kerr (0 Comments)
Filed under: Film


"That's a fancy word, retrospective," Melody Gilbert chuckles. "I'm too young for a retrospective really. I like to think of it as a movie marathon."

She is talking about the event this coming weekend at the Parkway Theater in Minneapolis where she will screen all six of her documentaries, made over the last decade.

These include "Into the Darkness" (seen at left, Gilbert's the one with the camera.) It's her portrait of the world of urban exploration.

There's also "A Life without Pain" which examines the consequences of a rare affliction which leave some children without the ability to feel pain, with often tragic results, and "Whole" the film about the little-known group of people who believe they should be amputees. Both films are emotion-packed and thought-provoking.

The Melody Gilbert Marathon is part of the Parkway's ongoing series showing the work of local filmmakers. When the theater staff talked to Gilbert which of her documentaries to screen they eventually decided just to show them all.

There was more than just an unwillingness to choose behind the decision.

"People always ask me 'what happened to the people on your films?'" Gilbert says. So the marathon is an opportunity for an update. Not only will Gilbert be present at all the films, some of the people in her films will be there too.

"At least one of the couples from "Married at the Mall" will be there -and yes they are still married." Gilbert made that film back in 2002, profiling couples who enter into the joys of matrimony at the Chapel of Love at the Mall of America in Bloomington.

"Every time I watch it it just makes me laugh," she says, " And it captures the joy that I felt the first time I made an independent film."

The marathon also includes a screening of "Fritz" Gilbert's film about Walter Mondale looking back on his political career, and "Disconnected" a documentary Gilbert made with a group of Carleton College students who followed a trio of scholars who tried to survive for a month without using computers.

There is also a chance to get a sneak peak of Gilbert's latest project, which she insists is "gonna be big!"

"The last couple of years I would say I have slowed down a little bit, where I am not obsessively making films that way I have for the last 10 years. I have been advising and assisting other people making their films," she says.

Two years ago she was approached by Phil Lawrence, who had been filming his experiences weaning himself off anti-depressants.after using them for 10 years.

Gilbert says it was amazing and intense to watch.

"And while he was filming himself going through which was essentially withdrawal, he also did interviews with people trying to understand how did we get to a place in our country, in the world really, where we are taking so many anti-depressants and don't know what that means."

Gilbert became executive producer for the movie which is now titled "Numb." She helped re-edit it and found a distributor interested in putting out the film. Gilbert will host a sneak preview for "Numb" at the Parkway on Wednesday December 8th to get audience feedback and to raise money to finish the film.

She's expecting a strong response. Gilbert says when word got out about the subject matter before another sneak peek, the screening sold out. There was also a long discussion after the film about the pros and cons of anti-depressants. Gilbert says it's a rarely discussed topic, but one which touches a lot of people.

"I asked folks in the theater, 'How many of you know someone who has been on anti-depressants, or has been on antidepressants yourself?' And every hand went up in the room."

Gilbert points out that "Numb" isn't part of the Marathon, but she hopes it will draw people who have had their appetites whetted by the six films in the big event.

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This activity is made possible in part by the Minnesota Legacy Amendment's Arts & Cultural Heritage Fund