State of the Arts

Flagship vs. Pirate ship

Posted at 12:28 PM on May 2, 2011 by Marianne Combs (0 Comments)
Filed under: Dance

One of the most rousing toasts given Saturday night at the Southern Theater's annual fundraiser came from Patrick Scully, of Patrick's Cabaret.

Scully elicited quite a few laughs when he mentioned the new Cowles Center for Dance, now under construction, and how it has advertised itself as the Twin Cities' "flagship for dance."

"That's funny," he mused, "I thought we already had a flagship for dance in the Southern."

(As the Southern's dance curator Laurie Van Wieren stated in her toast, since 1980 the Southern stage has been home to more dance than any other venue in the Twin Cities.)

"But then I realized," continued Scully, "that they're talking about a different kind of ship."

Scully said if the Cowles Center is indeed a flagship for dance, then the best analogy for the Southern would be a "pirate ship."

Scully, who got his start performing at the Southern, and who's queer-themed work has often been considered controversial, gives the theater credit for helping him find his voice.

"If we don't have a Southern for future misfits like me to find their voices, we will be less. Because it's those voices we most need in this world."

And so Scully raised his bottle and toasted "to the pirate ship."



Post a comment

The following HTML tags are allowed in your comments:
+ Bold: <b>Text</b>
+ Italic: <i>Text</i>
+ Link: <a href="http://url" target="_blank">Link</a>
Fields marked with * are required.


Comment Preview appears above this form upon pressing the "preview" button. Edit your comment and press "preview" again, until you are satisfied with your comment.

Your comment may not appear on the blog until several minutes after it was submitted.

May 2011
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31        


Master Archive

MPR News
Radio

Listen Now

On Air

On the Media®

Other Radio Streams from MPR

Classical MPR
Radio Heartland

Services

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