Thursday, April 29, 2010

RoboPop!


And the award for coolest idea for a birthday party goes to... Jenny Haight for her role in planning and executing Josh Windsor's Washington Ensemble Theatre birthday celebration!
Much thanks to both of them for making the theater exclusive to birthday guests and free of charge to all.
RoboPop! is the latest display of the Washington Ensemble Theatre's total awesomeness. You may remember me mentioning them before as the people that brought to Seattle a story of Sex, Death, and Meat in Hunter Gatherers. RoboPop! is a star crossed love story of the future and features music to jam to and glorious robotic dance moves.
The story begins by pointing out some obvious differences between humans and robots in a future where everyone seemingly gets along fine until order is disrupted and a war begins. The humans seek revenge after a robot dog kills one of their own and all are recruited to serve the queen who is larger than life and dons a dress made of teddy bears.
Hannah Victoria Franklin gives a Blade Runner-esq performance as the cold and beloved Teddy Bear Dress Queen who seems to be running out of time. And Libby Matthews is great as The Girl who must go against her own kind, mankind, for the sake of true love.
There are many highlights to this particular performance but I think my favorite came when the star robot had to be brought back to life and he (or she?) and The Girl were captured in a moment soundtracked by Spiritualized's Ladies and Gentlemen (see Playlist to the right).
For a production that had no verbal dialogue the themes of robot love and differences overcome shone through.
I won't ruin the end of the story but I will say that the ultimate conclusion was a Stripping Teddy Bear Dance Party Fight.
Happy Birthday Josh!
I love you Washington Ensemble Theatre!

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Bronson: Britain's Most Violent Prisoner




You know how people say that love will hit you as soon as you stop looking for it?

I could not agree more. I had given up all hope. Resigned myself to the sad fact that I would never again feel that special feeling. I had even asked around and attempted to be matched in order to find that certain connection. But nothing seemed to do it for me.

I mean I was seeing everyone from Oscar winners and nominees to indies and still I felt nothing.
Until now. My love came to me in the form of a twist on a true life story of Britain's most notorious prisoner, Charles Bronson. Renamed by his bare knuckle boxing manager, after the very famous star of the Death Wish movies, Charley Bronson is a total loon. The film had been sitting at the top of my Netflix for a few months now and only because I knew that it starred Tom Hardy.
* Sigh * Tom Hardy, whom I first fell in love with as Heathcliff in a Masterpiece Theater version of Wuthering Heights (also known as the most depressing and sadly relate-able story ever told). Then discovered that he had gone unnoticed by me in two movies that I have seen multiple times and basically adore, L4yer Cake and Rock n Rolla. He also has a brief and confusing role in a movie called Scenes of a Sexual Nature, which despite the title, is really only meh.
But in BRONSON, he is a God. I later read that he visited 'the queen's most expensive prisoner' when preparing for the role. And what a role it is. The man has been in prison for most of his adult life, 35 years. 30 of those years has been spent in solitary. And basically it seems as though he is just completely off the reservation.
In the film, psychosis and caveman-like qualities reign supreme. Not to mention, Hardy has added about 35 lbs of pure muscle to his build. And oh so British. So very British. Wonderful and British in that special 'I don't give a fuck' kind of British way.
Director Nicholas Winding Refn picks the perfect music and has impeccable timing. As a visual person, I even greatly appreciated the strange dedication to Bronson's prison drawings.
If you like Guy Ritchie movies, ultraviolence in the form of bare knuckle boxing, bad ass Brits, cool as shit music, or full frontal male nudity, you will like this movie. Really if you just like one of the aforementioned traits you should see it. But if you like them all then you will fall in love the way that I have.

Bronson = my kind of chick flick.


Article about Nicholas Winding Refn's newest movie Valhalla Rising

Friday, April 16, 2010

Black Women Conquer the West



Last night the Northwest African American Museum (less than a mile from my apt.) hosted a Central District Forum for Arts and Ideas panel discussion examining the roles that Black women had in conquering and pioneering the West. This was the final panel of the season in their American Heritage Series.
The panel was moderated by Dr. Stephanie E. Smallwood who received her PhD in American History from Duke University (home to the 2010 NCAA Mens Basketball Tournament Champions :) and included Associate Professor and author Dr. Lynn M. Hudson, writer and researcher Esther Hall Mumford, and principal of Browns Point Elementary School in Tacoma Patricia Moncure Thomas.
The discussion began with a short performance by The Hansberry Project of Pearl Cleage's Flyin' West, introduced with a reading by my former Persuasive Communication professor, Vivian Phillips. It was a portrayal of two Black women homesteaders and a conversation that involved dreams of land ownership and equality. Such a great and touching way to start an important conversation like the one that followed.
The discussion was all about the history of the West and the way that regardless of their importance, Black women tend to be left out of it.
As someone who is not Black or from the West I was amazed when this topic really hit home for me. Especially when Patricia Thomas talked about the work that she had done on her genealogy project and the importance of recording the stories of your own family and knowing your ancestry. Patricia has created a book of Moncure (her family name) stories and is her family's historian.
Another fascinating topic of the evening was that of stories and speculations surrounding 19th Century female entrepreneur of African descent Mary Ellen Pleasant also known as Mammy Pleasant. She worked on the Underground Railroad and was considered to be the Mother of Human Rights in California. Panelist Dr. Lynn M. Hudson is author of the book The Making of Mammy Pleasant. Very fascinating stuff!
Last night's panel discussion was not only a history lesson but a life lesson.
And today I begin taking a closer look at my own family's genealogy project.