Columbia Jewish Book Festival -- a Book Fest for Everyone!

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Columbia is not only a writers' town, it's a readers' town, too. And Jasper is always delighted to hear of interesting and engaging literary events.

For example, The Columbia Jewish Book Festival coming up on Sunday, October 20th through the 25th. Award winning author Mary Glickman is this year’s featured presenter. The festival also features film screenings, workshops, and children's activities and is open to all.

The Festival kicks off Sunday, October 20 with a screening of Shalom Sesame's "Mitzvah on the Street" followed by a showing of a film adaptation of Mitch Albom's novel "Have a Little Faith" at 3 pm.

Monday, October 21 features keynote speaker Mary Glickman at 8 pm. Mary is a South Carolina resident and her first novel, Home in the Morning, is in development for film by Jim Kohlberg, director of The Music Never Stopped (Sundance 2011). Her second novel, One More River, was a Finalist for the 2011 National Jewish Book Award in Fiction. She will be available to sign books after her talk.

A workshop about writing and publishing children's books is scheduled for 7 pm on Tuesday, October 22. This workshop will be led by Elaine Schiller August and Ronit Elk, both published children's authors. Participants are encouraged to bring their questions and any of their own manuscripts.

All events are free for JCC members; a donation of $5 is requested of non-members. The book marketplace is open to all. The Columbia Jewish book festival is supported by The Columbia Jewish Federation, The Jewish Cultural Arts Committee, The Kligman Fund for the Jewish Cultural Arts, the Katie & Irwin Kahn Jewish Community Center, and Thou Shalt Read.

Festival events will be held at The Katie & Irwin Kahn Jewish Community Center  at 306 Flora Drive, in Columbia. For more information go to www.jcccolumbia.org.

Symphony Review: The South Carolina Philharmonic's Premiere of Joan Tower's "Red Maple"

mw1_tower “I don’t do movements.” This blunt statement by Joan Tower belies the expansive seventeen minutes of Red Maple, her most recent work. Scored for solo bassoon and orchestral strings, the piece eschews splashy colors, heavy-handed percussion, and fanfarish settings, and comes across as an understated, even restrained, work. Allowing the bassoon to “shine,” as Tower puts it, is her primary concern. Commissioned by the South Carolina Philharmonic and the virtuoso bassoonist Peter Kolkay, Red Maple premiered on October 4, 2013, at the Koger Center for the Arts in Columbia, SC. Also on the program were a few war-horses – Tchaikovsky 4 and the “Triumphal March” from Verdi’s Aida that certainly offset the general quiet and initial nigh-solemnity of Red Maple.

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Peter Kolkay is one of the few among bassoon superstars (let that phrase reverberate for a minute) able to fill a concert hall while maintaining a luscious, mellifluous sound. In this respect, Red Maple succeeds wildly. The work opens with a descending three-note chromatic motif and an extended, languorous, almost-plaintive solo in a fairly high register – perhaps a reach back in time to the inner movement of Gordon Jacob’s bassoon concerto or the slower passages of Taafe Zwilich’s concerto. Kolkay’s robust, confident, and energetic performance carried the work – and if there was any doubt about Kolkay’s aptness for luminosity in lyricism, let it be laid to rest here and now.

The string orchestra accompaniment in Red Maple was alternately stately and buoyant, and well-played under Nakahara’s baton – yet, simultaneously, the scoring of the work seemed almost risk-averse. There were very few moments of percussiveness or novelty in timbre; retrospectively, the accompaniment plays it safer than what Tower normally brings listeners in large-form works. Very rare indeed is a string harmonic in Red Maple, and very rarely is the full potential of color between the strings, or between bassoon and strings, realized and exploited. Technical moments favored the soloist, of course, but even some of the flashier writing for the bassoon seemed restrained, delicate: in essence, everyone performed purely idiomatically, and this instilled in some listeners the idea that, perhaps, Tower had some tentativeness about the ensemble or the work in general. The strings remain in safe and comfortable ranges; other special effects are totally absent, from both soloist and strings. Granted, concerns of orchestration are paramount when composing for a bassoon and an ensemble, but the approach here is conservative at the peril of potentiality.

This is not to say, however, that the work was lacking: rather, Red Maple has a slow burn that gently draws listeners in and engages imaginations as it unfurls. The formal scope of the work, is an interesting conceit and clever play on the concerto form: just as autumn rushes in and sets forth a sense of urgency, so too does Red Maple, with an acceleration of contrasting ideas. The extended solo gives way to stilled string writing; from this slowness emerges faster sections, and these temporal variations alternate, each alternating section appearing to shorten in duration as the work moves toward its terminus. Tower works in three separate cadenzas and touches upon classical expositional ideas, and along the way there is a great deal of vivacity, with multiple gigue-like sections and rhythmically propulsive passages. An urgency-at-the-coda, last-breaths-of-Fall idea permeates the bassoon solo, as well: as the work progresses, the level of technical skill in the bassoon increases, departing with a flurry of smoldering flourishes that summarily test the mettle of the soloist. Kolkay blazes through these sections with vigor and aplomb.

Rare is the orchestra and the music director that takes a chance on a new premiere – let alone for a bassoon concerto. The South Carolina Philharmonic, music director Morihiko Nakahara, and bassoonist Peter Kolkay should be celebrated for employing Tower to create a new work, along with a consortium of other ensembles. Tower, likewise, should be thanked and saluted for taking up the challenge, especially for a premiere in a sleepy (yet culturally alive) town in the Deep and Dirty South. Red Maple will surely go into leaf as time wears on as Kolkay reprises his stellar performance beyond Columbia, SC. - Tom Dempster

USC Department of Theatre and Dance's Lab Theatre Brings Unique & Exciting Season - by Joanna Savold, Jasper intern

yellowman-1 USC’s Department of Theatre and Dance is always striving to provide unique and challenging performances, and the department’s Lab Theatre – set in the intimate “black box” theatre space on 1400 Wheat St. – has a lineup this fall that is no exception.

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This weekend the Lab will be presenting Yellowman. The Dael Orlandersmith play revolves around the romance of Alma and Eugene, two youths who grew up in rural South Carolina. USC undergraduate students Brandon Byrd and Raven Massey will be portraying the lighter-skinned Eugene and the darker-toned Alma, respectively. The characters will, through Orlandersmith’s poetic lines, confront the internalized racism and discrimination in their community and themselves. But these issues are not confined to the performance; Director Patti Walker is sure the play will compel the audience to look inward as well and – in realizing harbored prejudices – enable real change.

The department admits that the simple act of staging a production that requires African American cast and characters is a vitally important step towards giving students representation in the artistic community. Walker also chose to alter the number of cast members in the play, in a conscious effort to give more African American actors opportunities through the Lab production. The originally two person cast now counts in at ten, with eight talented undergrads besides Byrd and Massey who will play characters in the protagonists’ community: Tiffany Failey, John Floyd, Jalissa Fulton, Natasha Kanunaido, Eldren Keys,Jon Whit McClinton, Tiera Smith and Olander Wilson.

Yellowman will open October 10 and run through to Oct 13, showing nightly at 8 pm. Tickets are $5 at the door, and seating is first-come, first-serve, so get there early for the best spots in the house.

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This isn’t all the Lab Theatre has to offer this year; on November 22 and 24, students from across campus will be performing original acts created in the time-starved intensity of a play festival. Under the supervision of Robyn Hunt, this unique project will follow in the improvised footsteps of other play festivals, such as Paula Vogel’s creation at Brown University and the Sandbox One-Act Play (SOAP) Festival in Seattle. Within a week before the first performance night, interested students will ‘draw’ or be randomly assigned roles in the performances; actors, directors, stage managers, and playwrights will all be determined by chance. And then the fun begins. Participants will have only a short window of time to create a script, set a scene, and rehearse before finally performing their original shorts for a live audience. After the Friday night performance, they’ll do it again! A host of brand new acts will accompany the second night of the festival, offering audiences two unique nights with new plays by students each night.

Hunt says the goal of the festival is to create “brand new theatre,” to have performances that are completely fresh and different from what theatre-goers have experienced before. Like the festival’s title, whose words all ears took captive, the acts will capture the audience in the excitement of something just invented. Hunt looks forward to seeing students collaborate on the project, which is open to USC students of any major, grad and undergrad.

whose words all ears took captive will also be $5 at the door and is scheduled to start at 8 pm on November 22 and 24. Neither will be a night to miss!

For more information on the Lab's productions or USC's theatre program, visit the Department of Theatre and Dance's website: http://artsandsciences.sc.edu/thea/

-- Joanna Savold, Jasper Intern

 

Jasper's Two Cents on TwoSense

 

TwoSense Live

The Southern Exposure New Music Series kicks off its 2013-2014 concert season on Friday, October 11, with a 7:30 PM concert featuring the cello/piano duo TwoSense. A lineage of performances tracing its route through Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall, the Barbican, and Bang on a Can All-Stars, cellist Ashley Bathgate and pianist Lisa Moore will perform a concert of new and contemporary works by composers Martin Bresnick and Kate Moore, and two premieres of works by Jack Perla and Paul Dresher. The program spans from mercurial, angular pieces to jazz and world-music-inspired eclecticisms, all to be revealed by a duo of performers with wildly positive critical acclaim.

Before the evening’s concert, TwoSense will give a variety of talks and masterclasses, including a discussion of commissioning and performing new works from 1:10-2:00 PM in the USC School of Music Recital Hall (as a composer, I approve this message), and the composer Martin Bresnick will be giving a masterclass and composition talk from 2:30-4 PM, also in the USC School of Music Recital Hall. In addition, area artist Adrian Rhodes will have visual artwork on display in the gallery at the USC School of Music prior to the main event.

The concert and the events are part of the Opera-Tunity Foundation’s Celebration of Women Artists. All events are open to the public and free.

-Tom Dempster

Meet the 2nd Act Filmmakers - Pt. 4

2nd act single cam It's finally Film Festival Week!

I know this because I saw Jasper film editor and director of The 2nd Act Film Festival on television this morning telling Mr. Anderson Burns and the world the world that it was so.

Accompanying Wade was the talented Ebony Wilson who is not only one of The 2nd Act Filmmakers but who also just so happens to be celebrating her birthday today.

Here's a screen shot of Ebony from her film The Meeting that she'll be premiering Thursday night along with films from nine additional juried filmmakers --

Happy Birthday, Ebony! Smile!

And here are the remaining filmmakers whose work you'll be seeing on Thursday night! (Previous blog posts have featured the rest of Jasper's 2nd Act Film Fest squad.)

 

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Our Kickstarter campaign is complete -- and we made it! Thanks so much to all of you who contributed to this project. It means a lot to all of us involved.

Keep in mind that seating is limited so you may want to both get your ticket in advance  AND get to the theatre when the doors open at 6:30.

Special thanks to our sponsors:

Precision-Sponsor_Weblogo-finaldraft-wb_lo-res

WXRY_Web2nd act sponsor

 

 

Important Stuff About The 2nd Act Film Festival -- What you may not know ...

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  • The 2nd Act Film Festival was created to help bring a sense of community to Columbia, SC filmmakers.

 

  • The 2nd Act Film Festival was created to complement and support the already existing independent film structure in Columbia -- i.e., The Nickelodeon and those (like us) who love and support it.

 

  • 30 filmmakers applied to participate in the festival -- 10 were chosen.

 

  • Jurors included representatives from USC, the Nickelodeon, POV, One Columbia, and a private production company.

 

  • The 2nd Act Film Festival does not and will not charge local filmmakers to participate. (This is in keeping with Jasper Magazine's policy of never charging artists to perform, participate, publish, or exhibit.)

 

  • All participating filmmakers now have their screenplays registered in the Library of Congress as part of a compilation of all the screenplays published via the generosity of Muddy Ford Press.

 

  • Through the generosity of Coal Powered Filmworks, all participating filmmakers now have their films compiled with those of other participants on a limited edition DVD.

 

  • Both DVD and Screenplay Book will be available for purchase at the festival on 10/10.

 

  • Reserved seats to the festival can only be obtained via our KICKSTARTER campaign -- and that ends Sunday night.

 

  • Non-reserved seats can be obtained in advance via Eventbrite.

 

  • This film festival is a labor of love directed by Wade Sellers under the auspices of Jasper Magazine.

 

  • We did it for you, the filmmakers, and the Columbia arts community that we love.

 

  • We hope you'll join us on our mission to make Columbia, SC the greatest arts destination in the Southeast.

 

Thanks,

Cindi & Wade

 

Jasper Goes to Hopscotch: Day 3

Cousins - Raleigh Times Outdoor Stage

I got things started off at around 12:30 the final day, ready to kick things off at the wonderful outdoor stage right next to Raleigh Times, a wonderful beer bar that had outside tables and open doors that left the music waft right in.

First up was Cousins is a Triangle-area alt. country band that actually reminded me a bit of local favorites American Gun, although a bit more twangy and Southern rock-oriented (at one point I thought they were going to dive into the Allman Brothers’ “Whipping Post”). I hadn’t heard of them before and couldn’t find much information online, but really enjoyed the band’s electric, near punk rock charge combined with well-crafted tunes.

Lowland Hum - Raleigh Times Outdoor Stage

A Greensboro duo with a very Civil Wars-type vibe (all slow simmering romantic longing and tempestuous divvying up of the lead/supporting vocal parts) that were also pretty good. They had an interesting twist that I’d never seen before--explaining that they liked to listen to records while reading the lyrics in the liner notes, they offered little pseudo-hymnal books for listeners to follow along with, provided they return them afterwards.

Some Army - Deep South Bar

Another Triangle band, although one I was actually pretty stoked to see. They played a few shows in Columbia awhile back that I missed, but heard a bit of buzz about. Some Army is a pretty straightforward indie rock band, but one that loves the propulsive, sad-sack anthems of The National and the soaring choruses of early My Morning Jacket or a more contained, less overtly Brit. rock Coldplay. The band’s arrangements are also rarely straightforward, moving from folky harmonicas to psychedelic leads and layered keyboard arrangements, all undergirded by a rhythm section which is the key to the momentum and big moments that the band seems to effortlessly offer up. One of my favorite sets of the festival.

Doug Paisley - Raleigh Times Outdoor Stage

Paisley is an interesting folk singer/songwriter from Canada who a friend tipped me off to a few weeks before the festival. Although more alt. country-ish on record, live he has a quiet, soulful vocal presence and tightly wound guitar passages that served as a vehicle for his sharply observational songs. Think Guy Clark meets James Taylor, with a touch of Tim Easton thrown in good measure.

Mandolin Orange - Raleigh Times Outdoor Stage

This Gillian Welch and David Rawlings-style Americana duo (again, from the Triangle) has been putting out increasingly steady records over the last few years, building on the initial strengths of their guitar/fiddle/mandolin simplicity and their organic blend of two very different vocal timbres. As the songs have gotten more and more impressive, so have the arrangements, and the group now gets a full backing band and some help from a lead guitarist, creating a full-bodied sound that doesn’t detract from their original strengths, much like Welch and Rawlings were able to do on Soul Journey. My favorite moment of the set was a new tune called “Adam’s Song,” which was written in response to the Amendment One battle over gay marriage North Carolina recently faced.

Spiritualized - City Plaza

Spiritualized is, quite simply, a great band to see live. Mixing the psychedelic excess of the Polyphonic Spree with the rough and tumble melodic beauty of Velvet Underground, J. Spaceman’s rollicking and tumultouous recording and performing adventure is a fairly unique experience. Their set was a triumphant way to close out the City Plaza main stage for Hopscoth 2013.

Ryan Gustafson & the Dead Tongues - Memorial Auditorium

Gustafson has long been a folk-rock staple in the Triangle scene, and in the past I’d had him pegged as more of an alt. country guy, but this performance, featuring his local all-star cast in the Dead Tongues, had me thinking more of Lou Reed (either that or I was just on a kick where I compared everything I heard to Reed and/or the Velvets) and Bob Dylan, but it was wonderful to hear his graceful, well-spun compositions echo off the walls of such a gigantic room.

Scout Niblett - Kennedy Theater

One of the mini-themes of the festival for me, as it turns out, was women singer/songwriters who played solo or minimalist sets with electric guitars. Niblett, in a manner similar to Angel Olsen, Lady Lamb the Beekeeper, and Waxahatchee, had a sparse sound that helped her set feel all the more intimate for it. But whereas Olsen gave off notes of French folk in her fragile performance on Thursday, Niblett’s British accent came through (she’s from Staffordshire, England) in a few places, which in my mind gave it a more formal and brittle quality despite these sad, serious, and heartbroken tunes.

San Fermin - Fletcher Opera Theater

“This is what the National would sound like if they were a Christian band.” - Jonathan Sharpe. I’m not sure whether he meant it as a compliment or an insult.

Low - Fletcher Opera Theater

One of the sets I was most excited for when the weekend started, and, despite a late start time, it didn’t disappoint. The most amazing part of seeing Low play their songs is just how little they need to do it. I feel like even though they play quiet, elegant music, it’s cinematic in scope. Still an electric guitar, keyboards, and Mimi Parker’s barbones drum kit was all that was needed. Well, really all that was needed was Parker and Alan Sparhawk’s two voices.

John Cale - Memorial Auditorium

To be honest, I don’t know Cale’s solo music very well, so I mainly settled on this set based on his pivotal position in the Velvet Underground, where his use of the electric viola had a big impact on the group’s sound. Cale had a rocking band with him that tore through some driving, jammy art rock songs with touches of electronica, and I got the sense (again, I don’t know the material that well) that most of the songs were off his new solo record Shifty Adventures in Nookie Wood. It was a surprisingly cool set, although Cale stayed perched behind a keyboard the entire time I was there, a little disappointing for an experimental musician know for his instrumental innovations.

Sleep - Lincoln Theater

How many people picked Sleep as the last band to see at Hopscotch just to make jokes about “Sleep then sleep”? Who knows, but as band Sleep’s legend precedes themselves--a doom metal/stoner rock band who a decade ago recorded their third album as one continuous 60-minute song (“Dopesmoker”) that their major label refused to put out and took years to emerge in its intended form, the band reunited in 2009 after a decade long break from the project. I was really going for the experience, and I was not disappointed--the trio played riff-heavy, eardrum-rattling riffs and moved along at their own pace, plodding through psychedelic sounds and distortion while de-emphasizing lyrics and vocals. It was a suitably immersive sonic experience to end a festival that want to kick your butt and remind you how much awesome music is out there in the world.

Meet the 2nd Act Filmmakers - pt. 2

2nd act multiple cams We're taking the time leading up to the debut of Jasper's first ever film festival to introduce you to our filmmakers and let you in on a few of the behind the scenes machinations that go into putting on a film festival.

We've had a ball, but it hasn't all been easy.

We started out with 30 potential filmmakers who were interested in being a part of the festival. We gave them all specific instructions on what they should send us to let us -- and our jurors -- know they were ready to participate in a festival of the caliber we were hoping to create.  We were overwhelmed by the applicants! Luckily, we brought in some big guns to make the very difficult decisions of who to invite to participate -- Lee Ann Kornegay, Simon Tarr, Bradley Powell, Caletta Baily, and Janell Rohan.

Film editor and festival director Wade Sellers and I were so happy to have these guys in the studio so that we didn't have to make the cuts. It was a long and (sometimes) tense Saturday afternoon. But when the work was done and the finalists were all accounted for, we knew we had a special group.

Meet two more of our awesome filmmakers below.

 

Michael McClendon

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We hope you're as excited as we are about this new young group of independent filmmakers who call Columbia, SC their home. There's some extremely impressive talent here.

Please help Jasper support these filmmakers and the growth of their community by joining us on our Kickstarter campaign. There are some pretty nifty prizes available -- including reserved seats at the festival.

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Move to Kickstarter by clicking here. Thanks!

 

Math, science, history, unraveling the mysteries - a review of "Arcadia" at USC's Drayton Hall

Pictured, from left: James Costello, Melissa Reed, Leeanna Rubin, Trey Hobbs Caption: Theatre SC presents Tom Stoppard’s award-winning Arcadia, a witty and hilarious  intellectual puzzle about the unquenchable thirst for knowledge, September 27 - October 5 at  Drayton Hall Theatre.  Set at an English manor in both the early 19th century and present day,  Arcadia introduces us to two groups of characters -- the property’s original residents and a  modern-day band of scholars trying to unearth their forebears’ hidden secrets.  “... one of the most  exquisite plays of the 20th century” (The Independent).   Photographer: Jason Ayer Depth of talent both onstage and behind the scenes is showcased in Theatre South Carolina's production of Sir Tom Stoppard's Arcadia, running now through Saturday at USC's Drayton Hall Theatre. Often hailed as the most important work from one of the giants of contemporary theatre, Arcadia is both witty and cerebral, tackling esoteric issues through the seemingly frivolous interactions of some very eloquent, highly intellectual characters. It takes a lot of concentration to follow and fully appreciate every issue raised, and something will almost certainly go over the head of any given audience member, but the comedy and conflict of the ostensible plot, and more importantly how they're presented by some extremely capable MFA students, makes this a worthwhile endeavor for enthusiasts of drama, literature, and even physics and mathematics.

You'd be reading this a day or two sooner if I hadn't found myself attempting again and again to summarize what the play is about, and failing each time. Ultimately Arcadia is a play of abstract ideas, but I must stress that it's also rather enjoyable just as a surface comedy of manners. That surface plot alternates from 1809 to the present day in parallel scenes set at Sidely Park, the expansive estate of the Coverly family.  In 1809, aristocrats and poets (including an unseen Lord Byron) engage in flirtations and assignations; two centuries later, modern scholars attempt to unravel some of the secrets from that past via varying methodologies, and with varying success. Especially in the first act, Stoppard recreates the erudite, droll banter that we associate with 19th- century wits like Wilde and Shaw.

James Costello, as tutor Septimus Hodge, is perhaps best among the "historical" cast at capturing the affected manner and flowing speech of an earlier era, and his curly hair and rakish sideburns fit his character perfectly. He gets some of the play's biggest laughs, as when a jealous husband (an underused Josiah Laubenstein) demands satisfaction, and he notes that the wife in question required the same. Melissa Reed, as precocious Thomasina, is a bundle of academic genius, ladylike manners, scientific curiosity, and teenage hormones.  While a freshman actor could have been cast to signify Thomasina's youth, Reed is fairly petite, and has the mannerisms of a young teen down pat, so the audience benefits from the skills and insight of an adult convincingly playing a child.  Kate Dzvonik, as Thomasina's imperious mother, is a younger, sexier Lady Bracknell, as if played by a Dynasty-era Joan Collins. Dzvonik's bio indicates that she is a native of Kazakhstan, and you definitely realize that this isn't a British accent you hear, but the character is fairly blustery and histrionic, so Dzvonik wisely takes her time enunciating each word with precision. It's not a big issue, and who's to say that Lady Croom wasn't raised by some great-aunt in the court of Catherine the Great?  Make sure you follow everything she says, however, because hidden in her rants are some important plot details that re-surface later.

arcadia-3.jpg Pictured, from left: James Costello, Melissa Reed Caption: Septimus (James Costello) tutors precocious child-genius Thomasina (Melissa Reed)  while trying to avoid a scandalous confrontation in Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia, presented by Theatre  SC September 27 - October 5 at Drayton Hall Theatre.  Photographer: Jason Ayer

Among the modern day cast, Leeanna Goldstein Rubin commands the stage with a serene, nearly-unflappable stage presence as Hannah, a writer researching the estate's history as it pertains to literary figures.   Cory Lipman, as Thomasina's many-generations-removed relative Valentine, perfectly embodies a man of science whose passion for learning encompasses far more than sterile numbers. Laurie Roberts portrays Val's nubile sister Chloe, a young woman of great intellect and perception who makes valid points about the unpredictable nature of human sexuality and attraction as a variable in any attempt to quantify human behavior.  Chloe’s interest goes far beyond the academic or theoretical, however; her observations add an important dimension to an ongoing debate in both time periods about the nature of science and order, but the character is somewhat underwritten, and Roberts uses every trick in the actor's hat, from enticing poses to suggestive glances to a sensuous sashay, to enhance her every moment on stage.  Don't discount her dialogue, however, just because it's funny and provocative - as with Chloe's ancestor Lady Croom, much of Stoppard's themes are hidden somewhere in there.  I'll leave it to women in the audience, and especially feminists, to decide if her performance is a little too over the top. Speaking for myself only, I found her to be delightful, and would be quite happy to re-watch her performance on some continuous loop. Although this may not actually have anything to do with the play.

Trey Hobbs, as ambitious academic Bernard, has grown as a performer since doing a decent job in reasons to be pretty three years ago at Trustus. He is the antagonist for the nominal plot: he's attempting to "prove" that Lord Byron killed another poet in a duel at Sidely Hall, while the audience sees the actual events transpire in flashback scenes.  His role is the least sympathetic, but with the most lines, and Hobbs manages to impress as an actor while depicting a less than impressive character. He and the other principals are all second-year MFA students, and have played the leads in most of USC's mainstage productions over the last year. As a group, they're an impressive lot, with Rubin and Reed amazingly different from their roles as Lear's evil daughters last spring.  Scenic design is by Xuemei Cao, with costume design by Sean Smith, both also MFA candidates, and their work is as good as it gets in Columbia. While probably based on the original design from the UK and Broadway, the set is simultaneously elegant yet minimalist, while the costumes look as if they came from real people's closets, reflecting individual styles and fashion sense.  A straw hat worn by Rubin immediately reminds us that a vast (and unseen) country estate stretches outside, while narrow bootleg slacks worn by Lipman define him visually as a hip, contemporary post-grad.  Richly colorful  lighting effects, by faculty member Eric Morris, subtly shift from sky-blue to twilight-violet in the distance, indicating passage of time.

arcadia-2.jpg Pictured, from left: Leeanna Rubin, Trey Hobbs Caption: Two present-day scholars, Hannah (Leeanna Rubin) and Bernard (Trey Hobbs), try to  uncover the intellectual truths (and possibly scandalous secrets) of a 19th century manor in Tom  Stoppard’s Arcadia, presented by Theatre SC at Drayton Hall Theatre September 27 - October 5.   Photographer: Jason Ayer

If you still aren't quite sure what the play concerns, you aren't alone.  Armed with a love of Stoppard (I chose his early hit Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead for term paper topics in both high school and college) and a thorough study of both the advance press material and the director's guest blog, I still struggled to follow particular references and plot points, or absence thereof, no matter how skillfully the actors prformed the work. Eventually I had to sit down and read the play itself, as well as a couple of essays on its meaning and significance. Guest director Louis Butelli surely realized the material's inherent challenges, and his cast emotes and declaims the wordy text as if they're doing Shakespeare in the Park. They really do knock themselves out, ensuring that the audience has a good time even if a few things are lost in the shuffle, but I'm not sure that it was necessary.  (At intermission, a friend and lifelong theatre enthusiast asked "Why are they all shouting?")

One critic wrote of this work that it is easy to admire, but hard to love, and I can understand that.  Stoppard wants to present a comprehensive world view that encompasses both the sciences and humanities. At one point Thomasina perhaps speaks for the author when she observes that mathematics can define a curve like a bell, so why not like a bluebell, and then why not a rose?  Septimus adds another important point, that knowledge can never be truly lost, since it will ultimately be rediscovered in some fashion, while both Hannah and Valentine suggest that the details are less important than the actual search for knowledge; with the present day characters' research into the lives of their predecessors forming the storyline, we see these theories play out before us as they are proven true.  Bernard's suppositions fall flat, while surprisingly, a tragic, doomed romance is revealed, although never seen.  While everything from chaos theory, fractals, and thermodynamics, to the transition from the Classical to the Romantic Periods (in everything from poetry to landscaping) is fodder for discussion and analysis, I found myself wishing that there had been some greater revelation or conclusion, or a more dramatic and engaging resolution for the main characters in each era.  Four of Stoppard's works have won Tony Awards for Best Play, and many have enjoyed long runs on Broadway; Arcadia only ran for a few months, and lost the Tony to Love! Valour! Compassion! (also an enjoyable work, but not necessarily the greatest drama ever.) However admired it may be, critical reception has always been mixed. And it runs close to three hours with intermission added in. But that's the material.  This production, and these supremely gifted MFA students, do a great job.

By the time you read this, there will be only four more performances: Thursday and Friday nights at 8 PM, and Saturday at both 7 and, believe it or not, 11 PM. (One wonders if the script's cosmic implications and shifts in time might be impaired or enhanced by an altered state of consciousness.)  Is it for the general public?  Well, probably not.  Arcadia is a thoughtful and thought-provoking play, for people who want to be challenged while they are entertained.  But you absolutely won't see anything like this anywhere else in town, and as above, performances and production values are excellent.  Call the box office at 777-2551 or visit http://artsandsciences.sc.edu/thea/2014/arcadia.html for ticket  information.

~ August Krickel

Meet the Filmmakers for The 2nd Act Film Festival - pt. 1

2nd act single cam The 2nd Act Film Festival is a unique take on the curated film project. Presented by Jasper Magazine, its mission is to encourage and promote the growth of independent filmmaking in South Carolina.

We gave filmmakers the 1st Act and the 3rd Act (one page each) of a script. The filmmakers job was to write the 2nd Act and make the film. All films will screen at Tapp's Arts Center in Columbia, SC on October 10th, 2013.

Over the next few days we'll be introducing you to the 2nd Act filmmakers and filling you in on a few details about the event and all the local artists so generously involved in making it possible. Today you're meeting the team of O.K. Keyes and Alexis Stratton. Their film is called Crosswalk.

O. K. Keyes - photo courtesy of O. K. Keyes

 

Alexis Stratton - photo by Forrest Clonts

 

O.K. Keyes and Alexis Stratton

O.K. is a cinematographer from South Carolina. She has been the director of photography for a number of short films, and recently completed principal photography for her first feature, Her Tragedy. She is a graduate student in Media Arts at the University of South Carolina with a concentration in Cinematography. Her thesis is focused on exploring Southern queer narratives and the construction of gender and sexuality from behind the lens.

Alexis is a native of Illinois but has spent her life in many homes, from New Orleans to South Korea. She received an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of South Carolina and works as an educator for a non-profit organization in Columbia, SC. Her writing has recently appeared in Oyez Review, Ayris Magazine, and Bare Root Review, and she won the 2012 BLOOM Chapbook Contest for Fiction.

2nd act multiple cams

About The 2nd Act Film Festival

As part of Jasper's mission to cultivate the arts in Columbia, we decided that something needed to exist here, in our city, that specifically brought Columbia filmmakers together to work on one singular project. With that goal in mind, the Second Act Film Festival was

The Second Act Film Festival exists in two parts. The first is a film project which was created to challenge SC filmmakers with a unique and creative goal. The second part is the film festival itself. A one-night screening of all the films created by the filmmakers chosen by a panel of experts to participate in the project.

In early August of this year, the call was put out to SC filmmakers to take part in the 2nd Act Film Fest. This past week, ten filmmakers were chosen to participate. We gave them the first and last pages of a short film script that was written with the help of professional author Janna McMahan(1st and 3rd acts, respectively). All the filmmakers received the exact same script pages. It then became their job to write the second act and make the movie. All films will be screened at the Tapp's Arts Center for the festival on October 10th, 2013. All films will be compiled into a single DVD. And all scripts will be bound and published and submitted to the Library of Congress.

Funds raised from our campaign will be used to offset the cost of putting on the festival itself. These costs include renting the facility, printing, equipment rental, advertising, and other minor miscellaneous costs.

Please consider becoming an integral part of this project by supporting us --no matter how minimally -- on Kickstarter. We are less than $100 from our goal. Thanks!

~~~Visit our KICKSTARTER PAGE NOW~~~

-- cb

It's Time to Vote for Jasper's 2013 Artists of the Year -- Bios & Photos Below!

It's that time! Finally here! Time to vote for your choices in the five categories of Jasper 2013 Artists of the Year!

Thank you for your patience as we've worked to devise the best possible way for you to vote.

Here's how:

Read about your top three finalists in each category below.

Go to www.JasperColumbia.com and vote! It's that simple!

-Dance-

photo courtesy of Wayland Anderson

Wayland Anderson

During the period of September 2012- September 2013, Wayland Anderson has worked hard to share his passion for dance with Columbia and to give the city the great art that it both wants and deserves through performance, choreography and education. He has also sought to show the nation the huge amount of dance talent and creativity happening in our city. Recently promoted Soloist with the Columbia City Ballet, Anderson performed throughout the season originating roles in the spring 2013 productions of “Snow White” and “The Little Prince.” Guest performances include Ann Brodie’s Carolina Ballet’s production of Cinderella, Dance USC’s production “Ballet Stars of New York,” Griffin Ballet’s presentation of William Starret’s “Lion King” and the South Carolina Philharmonic’s performance of “Carmen.” Anderson’s choreographic efforts include “Nina Simone Suite” for the Columbia Summer Repertory Company, six works commissioned for Workshop Theatre’s production of “Songs for a New World” set on members of the Columbia Summer Repertory Company, “The River” performed in the Artists for Africa Gala, “Survivors” performed as part of “Body and Movement Explored” with the Columbia City Ballet, and a pas de deux created for Ballet Spartanburg’s DanSynergy. Anderson teaches regularly at the Columbia Conservatory of Dance. - BB

~~~

photo by Molly Harrell

Erin Bolshakov

Erin Jaffe Bolshakov spent the period of September 2012 – September 2013 growing the reach of VISTA Ballroom and continuing to enrich the Latin dance community in Columbia, South Carolina through classes, workshops and performances. She also worked to cement Columbia’s place in the national Latin dance community with performances at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina and in the La Milonga Rosa in New York City, New York. Her work with business and dance partner, internationally renowned Maestro Orlando Farias in her words,”brings us authentic Argentine Tango and Argentinean culture” as well as the respect of the Argentine Tango community. Some of her work this year includes performance and instruction during PASOS “Steps for Pasos” gala, choreography of an Argentine Tango for Palmetto & Luna Theatre group “La Tropa,” performances at the DNC in Charlotte and the La Milonga Rosa in NYC, hosting of a monthly Milonga or Tango dance club, and the Executive Direction of the fourth year of Mad Hot Tango Marathon and producer of the associated professional Tango show. - BB

~~~

photo courtesy of Terrance Henderson

Terrance Henderson

Terrance Henderson is a teacher, dancer and choreographer. He serves on the dance faculty at Columbia Ballet School and Southeastern School of Ballet. He is the director of the dance after school program for AC Moore Elementary and has been the long term artist in residence teaching dance and theater at Logan Elementary. This past season, Henderson’s choreography was seen in the Trustrus Mainstage productions of “Next to Normal,” “Ain’t Misbehavin,” and “Ragtime,” and in Henderson Brothers Burlesque Show as part of What’s Love 2013. With his new personal brand TO DANCE Inc., Henderson premiered an evening of original choreography titled “Hole in My Bucket: A perspective,” at the 2013 Rogue Festival in Fresno, California. Henderson worked with the Fuzion Dance Artist of Sarasota this August setting one of his solo works “That's Life,” and choreographed Dreher High School’s production of “Legally Blonde the Musical.”

~~~

-Music-

photo courtesy of Phillip Bush

Phillip Bush

While Phillip Bush may have only recently begun teaching at USC, he is no stranger to Columbia’s concert music world nor to South Carolina. During the 2012-2013 season, Bush has performed with chamber musicians and as a soloist at the Columbia Museum of Art, at the Kershaw County Fine Arts Center, with the Southeastern Piano Festival, and, of course, innumerably at USC. Bush has also performed across the state, and served as the Music Director for the Bennington Chamber Music Conference in Vermont, performed at the Colburn School in Los Angeles, and beyond, including a residency and numerous performances at the Fayetteville Chamber Music Festival in Texas. Still, more than half of his year’s performances took place in the Midlands, and his level of local engagement has spanned from directing student performances of Steve Reich’s Music for Eighteen Musicians to co-directing February, 2013’s concerts at Arts at Shandon. Bush’s presence in Columbia is perhaps understated, but certainly felt here – and definitely known beyond our borders. - TD

 ~~~

photo by Thomas Hammond

FatRat da Czar

Fat Rat da Czar (aka Darius Johnson) has long been one of the most prominent names in Columbia (and South Carolina’s) hip-hop scene, with nearly 20 years under his belt as a local MC. Still, he’s had an exceptionally busy year even for Mr. Johnson, who had a couple of important milestones over the October 2012-September 2013 period. November saw the release of Da Cold War 3, the completion of a trilogy of proper solo albums that defined him as a rapper lyrically going against the grain and forging his own artistic identity. Perhaps even more importantly, his unofficial status as a mentor for upcoming talent became a career, as he became a full-time engineer at the Boom Room, the Studio B at Columbia’s Jam Room Recording Studios that saw him working with everyone from hip-hop crew Grand Royal to the Americana folk trio Prairie Willows.

In between, Johnson not only landed prestigious opening slots for the likes of Killer Mike and GZA, he also traveled to Atlanta to perform at AC3, one of the nation’s biggest hip-hop festivals. He also played a pivotal role in The Gamecock Mixtape put together by Dinobrite Productions, and drops a powerful closing verse on the lead single “Ride With My Team,” a song whose music video when semi-viral upon its release and has over 112,000 views to date.

Perhaps more than anything though, Fat Rat is a hip-hop ambassador in a city and state still largely segregated musically as much as racially. Along with his musical partner Shekeese the Beast, he organizes and headlines hip-hop shows, but also fearlessly jumps on to rock and roll bills and fearlessly takes the stage at such unlikely events as the City Roots-hosted Mardi Gras festival.

In short, Fat Rat da Czar kept the fire burning in more ways than one for hip-hop in the Midlands last year. - KP

~~~

photo courtesy of The Restoration

The Restoration

For The Restoration, the past year has been an exciting one. The November release of Honor the Father followed up the widely celebrated Constance LP, demonstrating the band’s continued commitment to writing narrative concept albums that grapple with the history of the South both musically and lyrically. Honor the Father is “a narrative exploration of religious fundamentalism dressed with Dixieland and early rock 'n' roll,” according to leader Daniel Machado, and also functions as a murder mystery story with a revealing—and disturbing--conclusion. It’s worth noting the extensive use of musical forms here, as well as the complex structure of the climactic track “The Trial,” which features Biblical footnotes in the liner notes and sees Machado and others donning multiple characters’ hats over the course  of the song’s six minutes of exposition.

The record’s favorable reception cemented the band’s position as one of Columbia’s best active bands, which led to prominent appearances at the River Rocks festival this spring and the Bel Chere Festival this summer. The band’s work has also received some unusual academic attention, as their work has been featured in English classes taught at Spartanburg Methodist College. - KP

 

-Literary Arts-

photo courtesy of Jim Barilla

Jim Barilla

Using his own backyard as centerpiece and testing ground for thinking about urban wildlife, Jim Barilla put Columbia on the map for environmental writing this year.  His nonfiction book, My Backyard Jungle: The Adventures of an Urban Wildlife Lover Who Turned His Yard Into Habitant and Learned to Live With It, was published by Yale University Press this spring.  Barilla set out to turn his yard into a certified wildlife habitat, and the book documents that project.  Combining his reflections on his backyard with a rich understanding of environmental issues, the book also includes stories about bears, monkeys, and honeybees in cities around the world, yet Barilla always returns to his own backyard in Columbia as a critical place for thinking about our coexistence with animals. The book was widely reviewed—Publisher’s Weekly, Nature, BBC Wildlife, and elsewhere—with portions of the book published in The Atlantic, Places, and National Geographic online. The reviewer for BBC Wildlife said that Barilla “reminds us to ask what it will be like to engage with nature in a future in which most of us will live in cities.”  Or as a nomination put it, “His work asks us to think about our place in the world around us.” - EM

~~~

photo courtesy of Janna McMahan

Janna McMahan

In January, Janna McMahan published Anonymity (Koehler Books), a novel about homeless youth.  Gritty and based on extensive research, the novel tells the tale of a difficult friendship between a photographer and a homeless teenage girl in Austin.  Novelist Ron Rash called the novel McMahan’s best yet, and Real South magazine praised its gritty realism and its exploration of a situation in which “there are no easy answers for anyone.”  She also contributed “A Name You Can Yell” (yes, she’s talking about how you name a dog—or a kid?) in Literary Dogs and their South Carolina Writers, published by Hub City in Spartanburg just before Christmas 2012, and “Pat Conroy: Or How I Stalked My Prince of Tides,” in The Limelight: A Compendium of Contemporary Artists, published by Muddy Ford Press earlier this year.  Anonymity has led to speaking engagements in schools and community organizations about homeless youth.  Some Richland Library book clubs are reading the novel this fall, and in November, the Main Street library will host a community panel discussion on youth homeless in Columbia (Nov. 17, 3 p.m., Bostick Auditorium). McMahan says, “This has been a story with social impact, and I’m most grateful for how people are interested in the topic and actually taking action.” - EM

~~~

photo by Bill Rogers

Aida Rogers

This summer, Aida Rogers published what USC Press called a love letter to the state of South Carolina, her book State of the Heart: South Carolina Writers on the Places They Love.  The book includes 36 nationally and regionally recognized writers on the places they cherish—including novelists Pat Conroy and Dori Sanders and SC poet laureate Marjory Wentworth.  In the forward to the book, Conroy writes, "State of the Heart reminds us of what is best about South Carolina and her many gifted writers, the monumental power of this place to shape our memories into stories and then our stories into art.”  According to Jonathan Haupt, director of USC Press, the book “quickly became a media sensation and one of our best-selling regional books.”  Rogers herself said of the collection, “I think State of the Heart proved there's plenty of literary talent in South Carolina…. If the anthology does nothing but introduce them to readers, it will have accomplished something valuable.”  Rogers wrote about late Columbia artist Gil Petroff for The Limelight: A Compendium of Contemporary Artists.  That essay, she says, “allowed me to point out what's marvelous but invisible because we see it every day. There is extraordinary talent all around us, and I think it's important for a community to appreciate its own.” - EM

-Theatre-

photo by Rob Sprankle

Bobby Bloom

Bobby Bloom hasn't stopped to catch his breath very much this year as his list of accomplishments demonstrates. Bloom acted and or directed (specified) in the following: Red - Trustus Off-Lady Series at The Columbia Art Museum; The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged), directed and acted, SC Shakespeare Company at Rosewood Arts Festival; Next Fall, Trustus Theater- Thigpen Main Stage; The Christmas Doll - Columbia Children’s Theater;  A Year with Frog and Toad - Columbia Children’s Theater; The Whipping Man - Trustus Off-Lady Series/ NiA Company at CMFA; By the Way, Meet Vera Stark - Trustus Theater- Thigpen Main Stage; The Commedia Rapunzel - Columbia Children’s Theater; The Commedia Pinocchio - Columbia Children’s Theater; Ragtime - Trustus Theater- Thigpen Main Stage; Mother F***** with a Hat - Fight Choreographer - Trustus Theater - Thigpen Main Stage; The Three Musketeers - Fight Choreographer - Dreher High School; Ragtime - Fight Choreographer – Trustus Theater- Thigpen Main Stage; Bobby also serves as Co-director of the Trustus Apprentice Company and director of the Trustus Stage Door Apprentice Company. - CB

~~~

photo by Rob Sprankle

Terrance Henderson

Terrance Henderson’s hand is in just about every aspect of theatre one could imagine from teaching to directing to acting. Henderson is the director of the theater after school program for AC Moore Elementary and has been the long term theatre artist in residence at Logan Elementary. In the past year, Henderson has portrayed the roles of Dr. Madden in Trustus Theatre’s “Next to Normal” and most recently in the leading role of Coalhouse Walker Jr. in “Ragtime” also at Trustus . Terrance was also the co-creator and official emcee (Nauti Boogie) for the Henderson Brothers Burlesque Show as part of What's Love 2013. Henderson’s direction was seen in Trustus Theatre’s “Ain’t Misbehavin’” this summer.

~~~

photo courtesy of Vicky Saye Henderson

Vicky Saye Henderson

“My identity as a theatre artist is rooted in my work as both an actor and teaching artist,” says Vicky Saye Henderson. The past year has seen her perform in the following productions:  Next to Normal at Trustus Theatre; 5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche at Trustus Theatre; Songs for a New World at Workshop Theatre; Ragtime: The Musical at Trustus Theatre; Late Night Cabaret at Town Theatre; Kevin Bush's Off the Top of My Head Cabaret at Trustus Theatre;  Women at Heart (Palmetto Health's 2012 Heart Health Forum & Exhibition at the Columbia Metropolitan Convention Center for which she co-wrote and performed a dramatic presentation which educated women about the signs & symptoms of heart attack and showed them how to act quickly if faced with them. She also became Trustus Theatre's DIRECTOR OF EDUCATION (December 2012); started Trustus Summer Camp Series; renovated the Trustus Apprentice Company program to include 4 new Master Tracks in Acting, Musical Theatre, Improv & Sketch Comedy and Technical Theatre plus civic engagement projects, and created Night Owl Improv Series & the Actor Wellness Wheel Series. - CB

-Visual Arts-

Michaela

Michaela Pilar Brown

"September 2012 – September 2013 marked a period of significant growth and building," says Michaela Pilar Brown.  Following a critically received solo exhibition Whither Goes My Heart, at Columbia College’s Goodall in Fall of 2012, Michaela spent a great deal of time investing in Columbia’s art community.  She sits on the board of the Friends of African American Art and Culture, as the Programming Committee Chair, and recently joined the One Columbia public arts selection committee. Whither Goes my Heart was a mulit-object/image installation that told the story of family and home.  The work was well received and secured invitations to show at The University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee, Plecto Gallery, Medellin, Colombia, the Stanback Museum, South Carolina State University. Here is a list of exhibitions covering the year: June 2013 - Juried into in 2013 South Carolina Biennial, 701 Center for Contemporary Art;  June 2013, ONEx1, Columbia Museum of Art Group Exhibition; May 2013, The South Carolina Arts Gala, South Carolina Arts Commission Invitational group exhibition; April 2013, Install It III, Vista Artist Guild Outdoor City Wide Installation Group exhibition; October 2012, Whither Goes My Heart Solo Exhibition, Goodall Gallery, Columbia College. (photo by Forrest Clonts) - CB

~~~

 

photo courtesy of Thomas Crouch

Thomas Crouch

Thomas Crouch’s work was exhibited at Artfields, in Lake City SC as well as in Columbia at Art Bar Agora IV, Rosewood Crawfish Festival, Wine Down, Best Mattress, Devine Street Art Walk, and Carolina Hair Salon. He was a finalist last year for Jasper 2012 Visual Arts Artist of Year, writer's pick best artist in Best of Columbia in the Free Times. He showed at Tapps Art Center and spoke at High Noon at City Art Gallery, andhe also was honored at Lexington and Richland County Cultural Council Sponsor's Dinner Featured Artist. In Charleston he showed at the ArtMag Rose Ball Gala, gave a solo show at Michael Parks Gallery, The Gadsden, 807, and Pretty Girls group art show.

~~~

 

photo courtesy of Philip Mullen

Philip Mullen

The grass hasn't grown under Philip Mullen either. Take a look: SOLO EXHIBITIONS - 1/2013 MULLEN 2009–2012: Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum, Myrtle Beach, SC; 5/2/2013 MULLEN 2009–2013: 701 Center for Contemporary Art.  GROUP EXHIBITIONS -9//2012 -  Arts Council of York County, Rock Hill, SC; 10/7/2012 - An Artist’s Eye:  Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum, Myrtle Beach, SC.  PUBLICATIONS - 1/2013  MULLEN 2009–2012; 2/2013 -      The Limelight-A Compendium of Contemporary Columbia Artists, COVER ARTIST & Article on Philip Mullen by Cassie Premo Steele,  Muddy Ford Press;  2013 - Retrospective Michael Tice:  Introduction by Philip Mullen - New Lit Salon Press;  5/2013 - Bernard Kruseman Aretz:  Cover story by Chris Robinson,  Sara Schneckloth & Philip Mullen - Jasper Magazine May/June 2013; 2013 - Inside Acrylics by Phil Garrett:  One of nine artists included, North Light Books. MISCELANEOUS - 9/2012 - WIS film lecture; 10/18/2012 - 2012 Founders’ Exhibit:  Curator,Cultural Council of Richland & Lexington Counties;  11/8/2012 - Tapp’s Arts Center:  Lecture; 1/13/2013 - Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum:  Lecture;  4/2013 - Arranged private donation:  “Jane’s Wall” - Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum;  5/2013 - Arranged private donation:  “Floral with Easel” - Sumter County Gallery of Art;  5/26/2013 - 701 Center for Contemporary Art:  Lecture; 9/2013 - Arranged long term installation of “Seasons & Koi” - Riverbanks Zoo and Garden; 6/2013 - 2013 AHA Exhibit:  Curator, Cultural Council of Richland & Lexington Counties  and The Humanities Council SC. - CB

"The Musical Adventures of Flat Stanley" - Melissa Swick Ellington reviews the new show at Columbia Children's Theatre

stanley-logo1With a charming production of The Musical Adventures of Flat Stanley, Columbia Children’s Theatre brings to life a beloved character and his exciting escapades. I first learned about Flat Stanley when my visiting aunt arrived in South Carolina with a cutout of the character, which she photographed in various places for a grandchild’s school project. Decades later, I enjoyed sharing the “original adventures” book by Jeff Brown with my young daughter, indulging in a sense of wonder at the wide world and its possibilities. The whimsical nature of the Flat Stanley book series inspires lasting affection in readers; Columbia Children’s Theatre crafts a surprising and delightful world that entices theatregoers. As realized in the musical (with book by Timothy Allen McDonald and music and lyrics by McDonald, David Weinstein, Jonathan K. Waller, and Stephen Gabriel), the Lambchop parents enjoy a cozy family life with Stanley and his younger brother Arthur. After bedtime, the two boys take the audience on an exuberant “I wish I were” romp through cherished adventures (think Harry Potter and Star Wars) complete with light sabers and air guitar.  Stanley’s “star wish” leads to his dimensional transformation after a fateful encounter with a mysterious bulletin board.  He learns that the life of a “flat kid” has drawbacks (getting stuck in a tree when flown as a kite) as well as perks (mailing himself to Paris.)  Clever wordplay transpires in the script, such as the “porkchop” versus “lambchop” confusion that delighted my daughter.   Characters advise young audiences to “find a little adventure,” “write a letter and drop it in the mail,” and “make a star wish.”

Anthony Harvey as Stanley achieves genuine commitment to a child role without condescension, a true gift of a performance. He shares talents in physical comedy (the hilarious doctor’s exam) as well as an appealing voice, with a particularly poignant song while stuck in a tree.  Harvey handles the flat costume with admirable confidence – who knew Flat Stanley could shake maracas and rock a time step, not to mention a kickline? As Arthur, Riley Smith dives into exuberant antics that delight the young audience; he avoids caricature by offering lovable honesty and real sweetness. Actors demonstrate versatility in diverse roles: Evelyn Clary plays a wacky postal worker and a serene Mona Lisa, while Julian DeLeon moves convincingly from sincere father to bumbling physician to flashy entertainer.  Diane Gilbert, Rachel Glowacki, David Quay, Imani Ross-Jackson, and Elizabeth Stepp give vibrant portrayals of various characters that develop depth through nuanced ensemble work. Two different casts share the roles; additional performers are sure to be equally strong in a production of this caliber.    (That second cast includes David Quay as Stanley, Ruth Glowacki as Mrs. Lambchop, Toni Moore as Mr. Lambchop, Elizabeth Stepp as Stanley’s brother Arthur, and Taylor- Noelle Hammond as Mrs. Cartero.)

Meet the Lambchops - clockwise from top: Anthony Harvey, Diane Gilbert, Riley Smith, and Julian DeLeon.

“Why say it when I can show you in an extravagant musical number?” asks a Hollywood character; engaging songs and dances illuminate Stanley’s world with infectious vitality. Cindy Flach directs and choreographs her talented cast with creativity and ingenuity, and Paul Lindley II guides enjoyable singing voices with skillful music direction. The design team (Donna Harvey and Jim Litzinger) proves that Columbia Children’s Theatre really can take us anywhere: characters travel through the Lambchop home, a park, a doctor’s office, California, Paris, and Hawaii.  Lambchop family members’ costumes and even their tabletop décor reflect a patriotic red, white, and blue motif.   Forgotten lollipops stuck on top of the bulletin board illustrate the designers’ meticulous approach; details like these bring a child’s world alive onstage.  Go see the show to find out how acting, directing, and design can collaborate on laugh-out-loud visual comedy with particular effectiveness in Stanley’s museum experience.  CCT shows last season included marvelous puppetry (Knuffle Bunny, Goodnight Moon); Anthony Harvey’s puppet design maintains this high standard.  Stage managers Ruth Mock and Susan Hitt keep the backstage domain moving with fast-paced fluidity and seamless transitions. Visual effects are very well done, especially the picture frame imagery and the lasting impact of Stanley’s unique and astonishing flatness.

But what do the kids think? The children at the matinee I attended were rapt with attention throughout the show.  Light saber hijinks, surf music and “wipe-out” moves, sharp and sassy tap dancing, surprising mailbox revelations, and exciting pursuit of the “sneak thief” proved riveting for even the smallest viewer.  My own five-year-old daughter, while skeptical before the big transformation (“Is Stanley REALLY going to be flat onstage?”), became firmly convinced of the production’s integrity: “My favorite part was when Flat Stanley got flat. I really love and appreciate this show. I think kids will like the show because it is cheerful.”

The mind-opening power of travel, discovery of adventure through sending and receiving mail, and lasting love of family will resonate with audiences of all ages. Through the ongoing development of Columbia Children’s Theatre, Artistic Director Jerry Stevenson, Managing Director Jim Litzinger, and their collaborators make our city a better place – to learn as part of a welcoming community, to raise a family, to love the arts. Thriving theatre for young audiences produced with gratifying commitment to quality in all areas: who could ask for anything more?

The Musical Adventures of Flat Stanley runs through this Sunday, September 29. Call the box office at (803) 691-4548, or visit www.columbiachildrenstheatre.com for ticket information.

~ Melissa Swick Ellington

 

 

Directing Tom Stoppard's "Arcadia" at USC - a guest blog by Louis Butelli

So, here I am, about to eat dinner at Al-Amir restaurant in beautiful downtown Columbia, and prepare for one last, pre-tech run-through of Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia with the company of actors and artists at USC’s Theatre SC.  We’ve been on quite a journey to get to this point. Having spent weeks reading, studying, and blocking the play in a rehearsal hall, and then having spent this week on stage at Drayton Hall as the set grew up around us, we are now on the verge of sharing this play with the public. As the show’s director, I couldn’t be more excited. arcadia-3.jpg Pictured, from left: James Costello, Melissa Reed Caption: Septimus (James Costello) tutors precocious child-genius Thomasina (Melissa Reed)  while trying to avoid a scandalous confrontation in Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia, presented by Theatre  SC September 27 - October 5 at Drayton Hall Theatre.  Photographer: Jason Ayer

A little bit of background. I’ve been working as an actor, director, educator, and writer for the past 17 years. Back in 1998, I booked a job as an actor for a touring Shakespeare company which, at the time, was in residence at USC. For a couple of years, we would come to Columbia to rehearse, and then open our shows at the Koger Center before taking them all over the country. Those early years were very happy times, and it was through working for this company that I met director Robert Richmond, with whom I have continued to collaborate ever since, frequently at the Folger Theatre in Washington DC, where we have broken attendance and box office records, and been nominated for (and won!) several Helen Hayes Awards.

Here in Columbia, Robert and I created a theater piece based on Shakespeare’s Macbeth, called A Tale Told By An Idiot. A comic book-inspired mash-up of the Scottish play with the story of original English terrorist Guy Fawkes, it played at USC’s Lab Theater on Wheat Street, and featured the talents of USC undergraduate theater students. People loved it. Some years later, I founded a theater company, Psittacus Productions, in Los Angeles and chose A Tale Told By An Idiot as our inaugural show. Robert came out to direct, we opened as part of the first annual Hollywood Fringe Festival, then transferred to the Son Of Semele Ensemble Theater, where we sold out and extended. The press was excellent, and we received an LA Weekly Theatre Award for our efforts.

My point in all of this is that, for the past fifteen years, I have felt a deep connection to USC, to Theatre SC, and to the great city of Columbia. When department Chair Jim Hunter invited me back down to direct Arcadia, I jumped at the opportunity.

For me, Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia is a very special play. To begin, it appeals to two very distinct parts of who I am, both as an artist and as a human being, about which more will follow.

arcadia-2.jpg Pictured, from left: Leeanna Rubin, Trey Hobbs Caption: Two present-day scholars, Hannah (Leeanna Rubin) and Bernard (Trey Hobbs), try to  uncover the intellectual truths (and possibly scandalous secrets) of a 19th century manor in Tom  Stoppard’s Arcadia, presented by Theatre SC at Drayton Hall Theatre September 27 - October 5.   Photographer: Jason Ayer

In the play, we encounter two sets of characters inhabiting the same drawing room in anestate on the English countryside. The first set is living in the year 1809. We meet a brilliant 13-year old girl, her randy tutor, her elegant mother, and various hangers-on. The whole household is scandalized – one of the guests, a minor poet, has been cuckolded by the tutor. There are allegations, handwritten challenges to duels, love notes passed, all while the young girl makes an important mathematical discovery, many years before the rest of the world would catch up. Additionally, everyone is in a tizzy because of a visit from that most famous of Romantics, Lord Byron, who is lurking, offstage, throughout the show.

The second set of characters live in the year 2013 – or, at least, in “the present day.” Here on the estate, we meet the noble descendants of the family from 1809. There are three siblings – a twenty-something male who is an Oxfordian mathematician, a saucy teenaged girl, and a fifteen-year-old boy who hasn’t spoken since age 5. Visiting the family, to research her next book, is a thirty-something author. Into this idyll charges a hotheaded, fame-hungry professor in his late thirties. He believes he is on the verge of a new discovery that will shake the foundations of English literary studies, particularly on the subject of Lord Byron. Gradually, the artifacts left behind from 1809 start showing up in 2013, and we watch the present day characters getting quite a few of the details wrong…while inching ever closer to the truth.

Pictured, from left: James Costello, Melissa Reed, Leeanna Rubin, Trey Hobbs Caption: Theatre SC presents Tom Stoppard’s award-winning Arcadia, a witty and hilarious  intellectual puzzle about the unquenchable thirst for knowledge, September 27 - October 5 at  Drayton Hall Theatre.  Set at an English manor in both the early 19th century and present day,  Arcadia introduces us to two groups of characters -- the property’s original residents and a  modern-day band of scholars trying to unearth their forebears’ hidden secrets.  “... one of the most  exquisite plays of the 20th century” (The Independent).   Photographer: Jason Ayer

Certainly, the play is populated by very intelligent, hyper-articulate people, who spend quite a lot of time talking – about theory, about math, about landscape gardening, about art, about poetry. More interestingly, though, they also discover that no matter how sure one may seem about their place in the world, it is love – and lust, and the terrifying un-knowability of other people – that throws a wrench in the works every time. As the mathematician Valentine says in the play, these things are “the attraction that Newton left out.” They are the flies in the ointment of a deterministic universe governed by “free will.”

As I said, this appeals to me personally in two ways. First of all, I am a pretty huge nerd. I love teasing apart big ideas. I love intellectual sparring and heated conversation. I love to read, and I love to research. That said, I am also an actor and a flesh and blood male. As follows, I also love the irrational. I know what it is to feel swept up with passion. I know what it is to run away with the circus. This play presses both of those buttons for me, and I hope that it will for you, too.

“Well, good for him,” you might think in reading along. “But so what?”

My point, I suppose, is to say that, in coming to direct this play – or, in fact, any play – one must find a point of entry. One must attempt to answer the question “why produce this play, and why now?” In the current climate of economic fragility, global unrest, mass shootings, a shrill and polarized news media, and a deadlocked government, why would one choose to put on a play that is simultaneously a “big idea” play, and a classic English farce?

There are two potential ways of answering that question, one of which is complex, and one of which is…less complex.

The complex, or at least the “literary” answer goes something like this: Stoppard, particularly in this play, reminds me of two literary titans from the history of drama, Shakespeare and Chekov. To be a bit reductive, both of those playwrights were conversant in creating drama during times of – and through the lens of – great social upheaval. Shakespeare wrote sprawling, imaginative plays against the backdrop of Elizabethan England, a place full of religious conflict, wars against the Spanish, bouts of plague, and a linguistic explosion. Chekov wrote stories about families languishing at a remove from society and, ultimately falling apart, in the years directly preceding the Russian Revolution. Both playwrights are concerned with people wrestling with lofty ideas while simultaneously unable to escape some of the baser parts of their own humanity.

At nine years old, Stoppard, a Jewish, Czech national, moved to England with his mother and English stepfather who, according to the stories once said to young Tom, “Don’t you realize I made you British?” Having been displaced by World War II, and having embraced England, and indeed Englishness, Stoppard has created a literary world that is characterized by rapid-fire wit, philosophizing, and issues of human rights, censorship, and political freedom. And sex.

As for his literary debt to Chekov, one might consider his play cycle, “The Coast of Utopia, which addresses social philosophy in pre-Revolutionary Russia and won the Tony Award for Best Play. As far as Shakespeare goes, I suggest that one re-watch the movie Shakespeare In Love, for which Stoppard won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.

Intimidated yet? I certainly was!

Here’s the less complex answer. This play is really, really fun. Yes, it’s very talky. Yes, it’s very heavy on ideas. Yes, it isn’t packed with a huge amount of “event.” Sounds a bit like an episode of Seinfeld, no?

Seriously, though. When I think about the question of “why this play, and why now?” I keep returning to the Internet. One of the things that sets our little moment on earth apart from any other throughout all of history is the presence of the Internet – not just in our lives, but in our pockets, and on our nightstands, 24 hours a day, every single day.

When I think of my own propensity to click along, chasing a notion or idea from link to link, from graphic to video to article to image, ad nauseum – it reminds me of following Tom Stoppard’s characters as one idea leads to the next, and we bounce between 1809 and the present day, until those worlds collide and overlap in the last scene of the play.

And yet…this is a piece of theater. For me, what the theater does, that no other art form does, is bring a whole bunch of strangers together in real time, under one roof, to trade these ideas with artists themselves. We’re all breathing the same air. You can see and hear us, to be certain. But we can also see and hear you. You impact our performance. Moreover, without you, we simply couldn’t make this work of art come to life at all. In short, theater, by its very definition, needs you to be there with us.

I suppose that’s a really long-winded way of gently pleading with you to buy a ticket to see our show. We’ve all become sort of fascinated by the weird, time-traveling world of this play, and have started seeing little idea nuggets from this play everywhere we look – be it noticing the way the beautiful tendrils of milk stir into uniform color and heat in a coffee at Cool Beans, or the way the tree trunks extend to branches and into leaves and into veins-in-leaves ad infinitum while strolling along the Horseshoe.

You might like our show, or you might find it a spectacular bore. Regardless: if we can all share a few laughs, and you come away with some food for thought, and some things you might want to chat about with friends afterwards, or Google when you get home, then the experiment was worthwhile.

Won’t you come experiment with us?

To close, I’ll just say that working on this play has made me obsessed with fractals. I’m not a good enough writer to unpack fractal theory here, so I’ve included a link to a video animation (click HERE.)  In short, fractals are at the heart of the theory that our 13-year old girl discovers in 1809, and that our mathematician in 2013 extrapolates.

The video is another metaphor for Arcadia. Sometimes seeing a thing unfold makes more intuitive sense than hearing some nerdy director talk about it. So, click this link, and watch this video animation of fractals. If it exhilarates you, then you should definitely come and see our show.

Thanks for reading! See you at the theater!

 

~ Louis Butelli

Louis Butelli

Born and raised on Long Island, New York, Louis has spent the past seventeen years working as an actor, teacher, director, and writer. From 1998-2008, he was Artist-In-Residence and Company Clown for the Aquila Theatre Company. During that time, he played in over 25 productions of the works of William Shakespeare and other classical playwrights, appearing Off-Broadway, at major regional houses, on tour in the US to 49 states and across Europe; taught over 300 masterclasses; wrote, adapted and appeared in a new production of Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde. Other credits include Folger Theatre; La Jolla Playhouse; LA Shakespeare Festival; Shakespeare Theatre Co, DC; Alabama Shakespeare Festival; Yale Rep; Long Wharf; Orlando Shakes; Pasadena Playhouse; Two River Theater, NJ; Alpine Theater Project, MT; Seaside Shakespeare of Nantucket; La Scala Opera’s West Side Story in Milan, Beirut, Nagoya, Fukuoka, Osaka, and Tokyo; many others. TV: The Unusuals, and All My Children (ABC), Law & Order, and L&O: Criminal Intent (NBC). He is co-founder and Executive Director of Psittacus Productions, for whom he has produced A Tale Told By An Idiot (LA Weekly Theater Award), and CYCLOPS: A Rock Opera (NYMF Award for Excellence, 3 LA Weekly Award Nominations, Pulitzer Prize Juror Nominee) which played a sold-out and extended run at the 2011 New York Musical Theatre Festival, and the World Premier of the company’s latest show, A True History, which had a workshop at the Obie Award-winning Vineyard Theatre in New York City. He is honored every day he is able to go to work in the service of a great story.

Arcadia opens Friday, September 27 at USC's Drayton Hall Theatre, and runs through Saturday, October 5.   Show times for Arcadia are 8 PM Wednesdays-Fridays, 7 PM Saturdays and 3 PM on the first Sunday. Tickets for the production are $12 for students, $16 for USC faculty/staff, military personnel and seniors 60+, and $18 for the general public. Tickets can be purchased in advance by calling 803-777-2551 or by visiting the Longstreet Theatre box office, which is open Monday-Friday, 12:30 -5:30 PM.  Drayton Hall Theatre is located at 1214 College St.  For more information, contact  Kevin Bush at 803-777-9353, or bushk@mailbox.sc.edu.

Cast in this production are graduate acting students James Costello, Kate Dzvonik, Trey Hobbs, Josiah Laubenstein, Cory Lipman, Melissa Reed, Laurie Roberts and Leeanna Rubin, as well as undergraduate students Jason Fernandes, Grayson Garrick and Liam MacDougall.  Acting instructor David Britt will also appear in the production.   Graduate students Xuemei Cao and Sean Smith will design the set and costumes, respectively.   Guest artist Baxter Engle will create the sound design.  Instructor Eric Morris will design lighting.  Guest artist Todd Stuart will craft the show's intricate props.

 

Announcing the Jasper 2013 Artists of the Year Finalists in Dance, Music, Literary Arts, Theatre, and Visual Arts

Jasper leaf logo

With a total of 55 nominations, 20 adjudicators, and over 10 hours of deliberation behind us, Jasper Magazine is pleased to announce our top three finalists for the honor of

Jasper 2013 Artists of the Year

in

Dance, Music, Literary Arts, Theatre, and Visual Arts.

 ~

~Dance~

Wayland Anderson

Erin Bolshakov

Terrance Henderson

~Music~

Phillip Bush

FatRat da Czar

The Restoration

~Literary Arts~

James Barilla

Janna McMahan

Aida Rogers

~Theatre~

Bobby Bloom

Terrance Henderson

Vicky Saye Henderson

~Visual Arts~

Michaela Pilar Brown

Thomas Crouch

Philip Mullen

~~~

The above 15 artists were among 55 artists nominated by their peers and fans. Based on the information submitted with the nominations, a panel of judges selected the top three artists in each category to compete for the title

Jasper 2013 Artist of the Year.

Now the fun begins!

You’re invited to vote for your choice for Jasper 2013 Artist of the Year in each of the five categories by visiting Jasper's website

starting on Wednesday, September 25th.

There, you’ll find summaries of each artist’s accomplishments for the period of

September 15, 2012 – September 14, 2013.

The winners of Jasper 2013 Artist of the Year in Dance, Literary Arts, Music, Theatre, and Visual Arts will be announced on November 21, 2013 at the release of Jasper Magazine V. 003, N. 003 during Vista Lights. All 15 artists will be featured in the same issue of Jasper Magazine.

Go to www.JasperColumbia.com

and vote for your choice of Jasper 2013 Artist of the Year starting on Wednesday, September 25th

Voting ends on midnight, October 20th, 2013.

Rosewood Arts Festival -- by Deborah Swearingen

rosewood 2013 “Let’s start an arts festival.” These simple words came in the form of a bold proposal over drinks by local writer Arik Bjorn and Rockaways owner Forest Whitlark a little over three years ago. Out of this, a day filled with affordable artistic fun evolved.

The third annual Rosewood Arts Festival will be held Saturday, September 28th at 2719 Rosewood Drive, on the grounds of Rockaways, from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m.

Co-hosted by the Trenholm Artists Guild (TAG) and Rockaways Athletic Club, the festival features art in a variety of forms, including but certainly not limited to painting, jewelry, ceramics, and fabric art. As the festival has grown, more eccentric forms of art have been introduced. This year’s addition? Garbage art.

“Our vision has always been to have a neighborhood festival that benefits the artist,” said Bjorn, co-founder of the festival. For this reason, the Rosewood Arts Festival is affordable for vendors and free of charge for attendees.

Entertainment has always been integrated into the day, and this year, South Carolina Philharmonic Orchestra Musicians, the South Carolina Shakespeare Company, Tonya Tyner & Friends, Tom Hall & the Plowboys and several student groups are performing, along with a variety of other acts.

tom hall at rosewood

Competitions are held each year; one for best art and one for best booth but arguably the most well known – the Paint-A-Cheeseburger challenge. $150 is the going prize for the artist who can create the most impressive cheeseburger. In years past, painted cheeseburgers have been the only art form competing for the prize, but both gourd and ceramic cheeseburgers will be entering the mix this year.

The festival is sponsored by the City of Columbia, The State, Pepsi, US Foods, First Citizens Bank and Beverage South.

To find out more, visit “Rosewood Arts Festival” on Facebook.

-- Deborah Swearingen, Jasper Intern

A New Era Exploding at Trustus - a review of Ragtime (the Musical) by Jillian Owens

It was the music of something beginning. An era exploding.

A century spinning.

In riches and rags,

And in rhythm and rhyme.

The people called it Ragtime.

(L-R) Avery Bateman, Terrance Henderson, Marybeth Gorman, Luke Melnyk, G. Scott Wild

 

Ragtime (the Musical) - based on the E.L. Doctorow novel of the same name - is a story of hope and disillusionment in the face of the American Dream.  This dream is interpreted in many different ways by the many characters in the show, which opened at Trustus Theatre this past weekend.  Ragtime opens during the “Progressive Era” in 1904.  Industry is booming, and excitement is in the air.  This air is filled with the strange, new, simple, and syncopated music of Ragtime.  The music (by Stephen Flaherty) is catchy and tender, simple yet deep, with lyrics by Lynn Ahrens, and book by Terrence McNally.

Mother and Father have a kind, though sterile marriage.  When Father, played by G. Scott Wild, heads off to explore the North Pole with Admiral Peary, Mother - played by Marybeth Gorman - is left to tend to their son, large house, and business affairs.  When she digs up something very unusual in her garden, a chain of events are pushed into movement that will change the lives of her small family, as well as the communities around her.

ragtime2

Ragtime shines thanks to one of the most talented casts it could have possibly pulled together, consisting of many Columbia theatre veterans, as well as a few talented new faces.  There are no weak links in this production.  Terrance Henderson pulls double duty as the charismatic ragtime musician Coalhouse Walker and the show’s choreographer.  Vicky Saye Henderson plays the radical anarchist, Emma Goldman, with gusto, Younger Brother - played by Kevin Bush - is passionate about finding something to be passionate about, and Scott Vaughan’s appearances as Houdini, though short, are very charming.  Chip Stubbs delivers a beautiful standout performance as Tateh, with a voice that conveys all the determination, elation, and heartache of a poor immigrant father struggling to reconcile his dream of America with the reality of his new world.  Stories are intertwined and alliances are made and broken.  With so many characters and stories, you’re bound to find at least a few you can identify with.

(L-R) Terrnce Henderson, G. Scott Wild, Luke Melnyk, Marybeth Gorman, Avery Bateman; photo by Jonathan Sharpe

If you call the Trustus Box Office hotline, a friendly recording will inform you that this show has over thirty actors in the cast – the most they’ve had onstage at one time.  Upon hearing this, I must admit I was a little worried.  When Trustus tries to put on a large-scale show, it usually ends up being a mixed bag.  Their small stage can only hold so much spectacle, scenery, and cast members before things start to get cramped.

Fortunately, for director Chad Henderson, this particular big show doesn’t require a massive set or much spectacle beyond the talent of its actors.  That’s not to say the set is unimpressive.  Brandon McIver’s construction of his giant Statue of Liberty was well-documented on the Trustus Facebook page in the weeks before the opening.  This, along with fragments of early 1900’s Americana, are evocative of the period and theme.  The orchestra is small but skilled.  The costumes are period-accurate and lovely.

Between Henderson’s (Chad) stage direction and Henderson’s (Terrance) choreography, the actors don’t seem confined or cramped at all.  I would advise you to try to get a seat closer to the back as sight lines are a slight issue.  I can’t help but wonder…Is the success of Ragtime just the beginning of a new era of larger-scale productions for Trustus?  Are we ready for this “new music”?

~ Jillian Owens

 

 

Rockin' the Beehive - a review of "Beehive the 60's Musical" at Workshop Theatre by Melissa Swick Ellington

There are plenty of good reasons why Beehive - the 60's Musical has been brought back to the Workshop Theatre stage after a successful run fifteen years ago, and eight of them light up the performance with stunning vocals and infectious energy. Jocelyn Sanders and Daniel Gainey provide expert direction that shapes a fluid journey through 1960’s music, as the eight performers celebrate female singers and songwriters. While the first act presents a vivacious stroll through girl groups of the early sixties, the second half of the show really rocks the house with the rough, raw sounds of Tina Turner, Aretha Franklin, and Janis Joplin. Medleys combine excerpts of familiar favorites through fictional characters, as in the extended party sequence that features “It’s My Party,” “I’m Sorry,” “You Don’t Own Me,” and “Judy’s Turn to Cry,” among others. beehive2

The Beehive ladies excel at inviting the audience into their world, as the performers handle the audience participation segments with friendly enthusiasm. Valdina Hall, a consummate musical theatre performer and a cast member in the first Beehive production at Workshop, launches the show with confidence. Her warmth and magnetism permeate the occasions when she addresses the audience directly, one of the show’s many strengths. (I enjoyed the good fortune of attending Beehive as the middle member of three generations of girls who love to sing. My mother observed, “When Valdina is on stage, you just feel like everything is going to be all right.”) Jordan Harper’s exquisite yearning and soaring vocals illuminate “Where the Boys Are” and “To Sir With Love,” while Tameshia Magwood thrills with her stirring rendition of “Proud Mary.” Devin Anderson is a true powerhouse who fires up the stage in “One Fine Day,” “Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow” and “Respect.” The rest of the cast (Rayana Briggs, Roxanne Livingston, Brandi Smith, and Safiya Whitehead) brings versatile talent to a slew of musical numbers; the directors deserve commendation for insightful pairings of singers with songs.

The design team makes cohesive choices that support the production with efficiency and purpose. Randy Strange’s scenic design features dynamic visuals and useful levels, while Barry Sparks provides masterful lighting design. The placement of the excellent band onstage proves valuable, as the music (directed by Roland Haynes, Jr.) is front and center throughout the performance. The band’s presence also enables energizing interaction with the performers. Singers and musicians benefit from Baxter Engle’s effective sound design. Choreography by Barbara Howse-Diemer evokes the girl groups of the sixties, evolving through different movement styles as the decade progresses. Costume designer Alexis Doktor provides visual evidence of the decade’s social changes as the performers replace pastel florals with psychedelic miniskirts.  Expectation of impressive wigs and hairstyles comes with the territory in a show called Beehive, and this production does not disappoint. Bobby Craft’s expertise as stage manager keeps the energetic show running smoothly. Design elements work very well together; the lighting and choreography establish a definite shift in tone with “The Beat Goes On.” A few issues with clarity of spoken dialogue over band accompaniment early in the show and a couple of awkward transitions are minor quibbles in light of Beehive’s audience-pleasing power. My young daughter proclaimed upon leaving the theatre, “That was a great show!”

Beehive at Workshop Theatre delivers an entertaining showcase of 1960’s music through the considerable talents of eight versatile and hard-working performers. Beehive earned great buzz from responsive audiences on opening weekend and deserves to pack the house with sixties music lovers through the remaining performances. Be assured that this production is not a series of imitations of the original singers. These Beehive performers make unique contributions to create something that is at once both nostalgic and new.

Beehive the 60's Musical  continues at Workshop Theatre through Saturday, September 28, with curtain at 8 PM, except for a 3:00 PM Sunday matinee on September 22. Contact the Workshop Theatre Box Office at 803-799-4876 for ticket information, or visit www.workshoptheatre.com.

~ Melissa Swick Ellington

........................................................

Jasper   welcomes a new critic to our theatre team.  Melissa Swick Ellington earned a Ph.D. in Educational Theatre from New York University. She has directed or performed in numerous productions in professional, community, and educational theatres in New York and South Carolina. She taught theatre in K-12 and university settings for over a dozen years.

An Open Letter to Jasper's Advertisers

Rosewood Arts Festival ~ 701 Whaley

Columbia City Ballet ~ Trustus Theatre ~ Columbia College & the Goodall Gallery

Vista Ballroom ~ Ricky Mollohan & Cellar on Greene ~ Elite Framing

The Whig ~ USC Dance ~ Newberry Opera House

Doubletakes ~ House of Frames and Paintings 

Harbison Theatre ~ Columbia Marionette Theatre

Kristian Niemi & The Whiskey Fair ~ Sumter County Gallery of Art

Muddy Ford Press ~ First Citizens

Jasper leaf logo

Dear Jasper Advertisers,

I’m writing simply to thank you for supporting your local arts community and the magazine that covers it by advertising in Jasper Magazine – The Word on Columbia Arts.

Jasper Magazine is a home-grown labor of love, written, photographed, and published by local writers and artists for local writers and artists and a readership that welcomes and supports their works. We print the magazine in Columbia, too.

Over the past 13 issues of Jasper, we have covered the work of more than a thousand Columbia artists in our pages—musicians, dancers, poets, actors, filmmakers, set designers, costumers, novelists, painters, singers, sculptors, photographers, lighting designers, playwrights, choreographers, printmakers, ceramicists, directors, composers, conductors, fiction writers, and more.

Our Jasper Salon Series brings the likes of the cast, crew, and company members of Trustus Theatre, Columbia City Ballet and other artists and arts organizations to our studio where we deconstruct the process of creating art and enlighten audience members on how they can become more engaged in the arts they love.

Jasper also sponsors a monthly spoken word poetry event called Wet Ink, a Columbia-based book club, a writers’ group, as well as a yearly local book festival.

Our first film project, The Second Act Film Festival, debuts on October 10th.

In addition to promoting Columbia’s local art scene, we also show our appreciation to you, our devoted advertisers, by encouraging our staff and readers to patronize your businesses and organizations, as well as using our substantial social media presence to make it known that YOU SUPPORT THE HEALTH AND SUSTAINABILITY OF COLUMBIA ARTS BY SUPPORTING JASPER MAGAZINE WITH YOUR ADVERTISING DOLLARS.

You see, we see you as an important part of the Jasper Family because we know that without YOU, we couldn’t do what we do. And we are so proud of what we do! You should be, too.

Thank you for joining us on our mission to make Columbia the newest Southeastern arts destination. Thank you for entrusting us with your message to our readers. Thank you for being a part of the ever-growing, multi-talented Jasper Family.

On behalf of all of us at Jasper -- Thank You.

All my best,

Cindi

Editor, Jasper Magazine

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5 BROKEN CAMERAS Review by David Matos

5-Broken-Cameras  

Raw story, not flashy editing, is what makes the 2013 Oscar-nominated “5 Broken Cameras” (Best Documentary Feature) such a compelling film.  Told in simple cinema verité style, “5 Broken Cameras” follows the viewfinder of one Emad Burnat, a peasant-stock Palestinian in the West Bank village of Bil’in.  Acquiring a video camera to document the birth of his son Gibreel in 2005, Burnat finds himself witness to the growth of a nonviolent movement over the course of five years.  Confronted with the confiscation of nearly half of the agrarian village’s land to an encroaching Israeli settlement and a security barrier, the village of Bil’in wages weekly nonviolent protests against the wall separating them from their land and faces heavy-handed repression from the occupying Israeli army.  At times, Burnat’s camera protects him; at other times, it makes him a target, leaving him with the eponymous five broken cameras.  Burnat’s footage is unflinching, at times harrowing and often poignant.  The naked faces of oppression as well as hope and humanity are glimpsed in the gas grenade strewn streets and olive groves of Bil’in.

 

“5 Broken Cameras” was one of two films about Israel/Palestine vying for a Oscar among  a formidable shortlist that included “The Invisibile War,” “How to Survive a Plague” and the winning film “Searching for Sugarman.”  “The Gatekeepers,”  the other Oscar contending documentary on Israel/Palestine, features a decidedly top-down approach interviewing elite former heads of Shin Bet, the Israeli secret police, who speak frankly for the first time, whereas“5 Broken Cameras” is decidedly grassroots and bottom up, taking the perspective of humble Palestinian West Bank villagers who decide on a path of nonviolent resistance despite the costs in the face of military occupation.

 

In war, the first casualty is truth.  Burnat’s five broken cameras are testimony to that. “5 Broken Cameras” contains a seed of raw truth.  A collaboration between Burnat and Israeli filmmaker Guy Davidi, “5 Broken Cameras” also points toward the way out of the Israeli-Palestinian impasse, a modern conflict that is often mistaken as an ancient one, showing the Israelis and internationals who join in solidarity with the villagers of Bil’in in nonviolent resistance.  To cut through the misinformation on Israel/Palestine, many perspectives are needed: “5 Broken Cameras” is a good place to start.

 

Carolina Peace hosts a free screening of “5 Broken Cameras” Sunday Sept 15th at 3pm at Conundrum Music Hall located at 626 Meeting St in West Columbia, SC The film will be followed by talkback Q&A with David Matos, President of Carolina Peace, who traveled to Israel/Palestine in 2006 and 2009 with Interfaith Peacebuilders, and USC graduate Danya Nayfeh, who studied abroad in the West Bank in 2012.  The film is screened as a collaboration with the award-winning PBS documentary series POV and can be streamed on PBS website  through Sept 25th.  Carolina Peace is planning additional screenings across the state.

 

LINKS:

PBS POV: http://www.pbs.org/pov/5brokencameras/

Oscar Nominees: http://oscar.go.com/nominees

Carolina Peace: http://www.carolinapeace.org

Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/695326850495245/