NUMBTONGUE at Jam Room Music Festival by Bria Barton

The Jam Room Music Festival is set to open Saturday, October 14, and one act in particular, NUMBTONGUE, is preparing to perform independently for the first time at the event.

 

Inspired by the likes of Leonard Cohen, Bob Dylan, Emily Dickinson, and David Bowie—to name only a few of the countless creative minds that influence him—Bobby of NUMBTONGUE is an entity whose music and talents stretch beyond experimental. They’re bordering on the side of transcendental.

 

A self-described sugar addict with a tendency for sleepless days and nights, Bobby infuses and binds his music with pieces of deeply personal, historical, and natural.

 

He sat down with Jasper to discuss his recent album as well as his much-anticipated performance for The Jam Room Music Festival.

 

 

Q: A lot of your music on Exhumation had to do with your son and your feelings upon becoming a father for the first time. How has that dynamic been maintained (or not) now that he is a little older? How has that affected your writing process?

 

NUMBTONGUE: Becoming a father is certainly a sliver of what light Exhumation casts about me, but a sliver in a prism.  The theme thus far in the song that is NUMBTONGUE is largely one of self-fragmentation.  These songs are less an attempt to gather those fragments in a manageable whole as they are a building frustration at being unable to do so, mostly especially in a vacuum, alone. 

 

“The blind man blindfolded shuts his eyes, in the deepest cave, and it gets him high…” I say at one point.

 

So I fear saying that being a new dad is a dominant theme, as it may confound and confuse someone unaware of my aims. A hovering reality to be sure, that may help some listeners to know about me, but not required to understand what’s going on

 

Strangely most, if not all, of these songs began before I became a father. Records are about folding oneself inside out for all to see, and inevitably that part of my identity spills over, but often only as metaphorically parallel to the larger themes present. 

 

 I’ve said before in relation to this record that I haven’t fully processed becoming a father yet (not that one ever does), but it’s largely my inability to process such a blinding weight of self-identity (among many) that grips the other threads of me, each of which begin their own unspooling in the process. 

 

Who am I as a child and son?  

Who am I as a husband?  

Who am I as a citizen? 

Who am I as a sentient creature?

Who am I when truly alone?  

“Who am I that you would consider me?”

 

There was also an unexpectedly prescient tone of cynicism (for my personal life that is) present on the record, from a time when I was seeking merely to be more honest with myself, as someone prone to hope to a fault. 

 

Yet now I feel more fragmented and disillusioned than ever.  I told my mom recently that, “It’s not that I’m hopeless, I’ve just never hoped less.”  Which is an odd thing to say now as a father of two. 

 

But the year 2016 was a bleeding year for me for a number of personal reasons I won’t go into, and the burden of completing the nearly conceptually finished ‘Exhumation’ at the time without it becoming tainted by that dark year nearly killed my desire to complete the project entirely. The album was delayed for over a year.

 

It’s almost as if I’m only just now consciously processing what I was saying on the record without knowing I was preparing myself for an unforeseen fallout.  I finished it because I needed to begin the next chapter before anyone had even heard the first. So I’m grateful to have made this record for my future self to perform as an unexpected solace. It’s become quite the table of contents of things to come.

 

 

Q: Describe the logistical and creative differences between the experimental music you’re doing now and the “artrock” music you wrote with The Sea Wolf Mutiny.

 

NUMBTONGUE: In many ways Numbtongue is a culmination and continuation of the ideas explored in The Sea Wolf Mutiny. That may manifest itself in some unsatisfying ways to fans of that former project, but they shouldn’t necessarily be surprised.

 

The name NUMBTONGUE in part suggests this, in that I feel like I am saying what I was always saying, and in some ways it feels I’ve said nothing at all. I’m numb to the truth of it all because it’s all too real and overwhelming. I can’t feel it but I know it’s there, at once an inability to speak both from atrophy & overuse.

 

The primal idea of NUMBTONGUE, oddly enough, is actually pulled from a quote the very first drummer of TSWM Joel Eaton told me once. He left early on to live in NH but it always stuck with me.  He mentioned it in relation to some lyrics we were writing at the time during a rehearsal. I messaged him about it when crafting Exhumation trying to hunt down this quote that eventually inspired Track 6 “Disjecta Membra” as I couldn’t locate it on my own and never asked about it further at the time.

 

That track eponymously refers to the archaeological term for pieces of pottery recovered from ancient civilizations at dig sites, and he told me that disjecta membra poetae (or “scattered truth” if you will) was a phrased once used by a theologian-philosopher J. G. Hamann from his essay Aesthetica in Nuce: “The fault may lie where it will (outside us or within us): all we have left in nature for our use is fragmentary verse and disjecta membra poetae. To collect these together is the scholar’s modest part; the philosopher’s to interpret them; to imitate them, or – bolder still – to adapt them, the poet’s."

 

I would say that passage has been one of the key motives behind the themes of self-fragmentation explored in The Sea Wolf Mutiny and NUMBTONGUE.  I actually almost called the record Self Storage in light of the location it was recorded in. 

 

But the word ‘exhumation’ implied a resurrection of sorts, and ‘exhaustion’ as well, and I liked that it almost sounds like the word “human exhaust” in a sense.  More importantly, it is a rarely used form of a word normally saved for the context of exhuming a body, usually when investigating a crime or an archeological dig.  

 

In many ways, TSWM were trending in these NUMBTONGUE directions even before its hiatus, so this project was and is more an attempt to grow and stretch that sound we had found.  One with any knowledge of previous TSWM work will hear it’s hallmarks in NUMBTONGUE both lyrically and melodically.  

 

The themes of alienation; the shattering of the myth of self; yearning for a home I’ve never been to before; “do I actually control what I believe?”; searching for what ultimate reality we can all grasp as true together; and decrying my utter failure to gather the shards of us all to do so; “if heaven is there what is it like and who walks there? These are just a few things wrestled with here.

 

There is a meditation on Exhumation where I wonder “sometimes I wish we really could be born again” in a song that wanders in the dark while blindfolded hoping to bump into some kind of quantum god (Constant), and my son coos and whines in the background of a song about the flaws in our definitions of intimacy (Mirabal) that is as much about being a husband as it is being a bad friend or lover. These are very The Sea Wolf Mutiny subjects.

 

From a logistical standpoint, I decided to seek stylistic choices that pulled from my roots as a drummer at heart, learning to craft a song towards its moments of silence more effectively than I had before, seeking to serve that silence and space between the notes.  So I let songs be born from the drums and bass guitar more often then the process allowed in the previous band. This was as much about being different for it’s own sake as it was to serve the theme of fragmentation by starting with grooves only and almost no tones.  

 

I would also ask myself: “What can I get from almost nothing? What does it sound like to have just excavated guitar distortion like an artifact?” Because tonally I wanted to explore the more primal languages of rock and roll even further than I had so far.  This meant recording no guitar amps and plugging directly into an audio interface preamp, not only to keep quiet around my family but to get in touch with the raw electricity before any pedal or amp could touch the signal. I learned later this is called ‘console distortion’. 

 

I used to devote myself to a single instrument (piano) and single role as wordsmith and lead singer, but I decided I wanted to wear all the hats this time. Sometimes it’s easier to color inside your own lines instead of outside someone else’s. I decided to flesh out and build upon each rough draft layer by layer until I liked what I heard and it felt complete. The whole record sounds as if it’s a Salvador Dali painting drawn on notebook paper. 

 

It was interesting living into such a disembodied recording process: a bedroom holding my one year-old son recording vocals, a climate control storage crafting one song for seven hours straight, tracking back up vocals into a Mac mic while parked in my minivan as a train drove by. The list goes on.

 

For many of the more abstract moments, I felt like a foley artist for a movie sometimes in my gathering of sounds via my smartphone, specifically sounds of a scattered metallophonic quality: clanging children’s toys or wind chimes while some kids played by the pool. 

 

Technology available now makes one feel limitless, and I was interested in limiting myself within those limitless possibilities.  One way was to use only instruments nearby that I already owned, not buy anything new.  There was one element that nearly scuttled the whole thing: I recorded all synthetic drums save one tambourine.  However, I felt compelled to use one drum kit in logic pro to aid in my ‘sophisticated rough draft’ approach by keeping it intentionally boxed in, almost like it was the only drum machine I owned, so that anything that bloomed from it had believable roots. Since I had no drum machine and loved this one kit so much, I leaned in. 

 

There are drumbeats and melodies on Exhumation that date back to middle school for me.

I always dreamed of making a record alone: writing, recording, mixing, producing, mastering. I tend to write songs in a manifold way in terms of instrumental composition, but rarely would I complete them to the degree. So this record sounds like all of my private demos always sounded in my last band, I just decided to release them. So in a way my process is no different and this just where I’ve evolved to at this point.  It just so happens I needed to stop tinkering with it and release it into the wild, so here we are. 

 

I think of TSWM as it’s own experiment in deconstructing rock and roll, working out whatever my worldview was back then in broad daylight, meditations and prayers outsourced to other ears. All of which are present in NUMBTONGUE.  Another contrast was I wrote nearly everything from guitars and drums and almost nothing on the piano except for two tracks for the better part of 2 years. There was a comfort zone I wanted to challenge there in order to expand how I thought about rhythm, timbre and tone, since I didn’t have to feel trapped on a piano. I have however found my way back to the ivories of late. 

 

 

Q: You’ve never played JRMF with one of your own projects. How are you preparing to showcase NUMBTONGUE?

 

NUMBTONGUE: Practice, practice, practice.  I am eternally grateful for Danny, Steve, Phil and Adam diving headfirst into this abstraction of my self with me, as this music is interminably difficult to evoke live, even for it’s author.  I’m beyond proud of our efforts over the past 7-8 months to reify three years of work.  

 

 

Why did you want to be a part of JRMF?

 

JRMF has consistently honored the local scene next to many an indie juggernaut, and it seemed as good a time as any to finally present one of my own projects on it’s stages.  It’s actually odd it hasn’t happened yet.

 

What aspect of JRMF are you most excited about?

 

Performing on the same stage as GBV and HGM is pretty amazing. And sharing a bill with so many talented friends and scene mates (Valley Maker, The Lovely Few, King Vulture, Barnwell, Fat Rat) and having a chance to hear us all in a bigger way than normal always excites me. There’s no place like home.

 

What I’m looking forward to the most though is finally playing almost every track off of Exhumation in a live setting. And also, debuting a brand new song no one’s heard yet, a song you know is great, is forever my happy place.

 

What can the audience expect from JRMF and your performance?

 

They can expect a robust and sophisticated oeuvre from almost every artist performing. I can’t wait. As far as NUMBTONGUE, for those that have seen us live so far, there will perhaps be more keys present than usual from yours truly.  I’ve found myself returning to that home of late.  And it feels good.

 

 

 

REVIEW: Building the Wall at Trustus by Frank Thompson

“Your eyes can deceive you. Don’t trust them.”
- Ben (Obi-Wan) Kenobi, Star Wars

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  As is often the case in my experience with Trustus Theatre, I left Saturday night’s performance of Robert Schenkkan’sBuilding The Wall with a completely different story in mind. Just as their recent production of Barbecue had me humming a tune from Jekyll & Hyde: The Musical as I walked to my car, Building The Wall  left me contemplating the Star Wars saga, specifically the themes of redemption and the oft-blurred lines between good and evil.  This speaks well to the universality of the themes being examined this season at Trustus. If a new piece of work can activate the emotions and associations of the audience member, there’s an immediate sense of connection with the story. Not to get overly existential about it, but (with only a slight wink at the company’s name) it creates an immediate sense of trust in the script. Part of Trustus’ overall philosophy is that theatre is storytelling, and the story in Building The Wall is tightly and unapologetically told through two characters, each of whom is much more than our eyes reveal.

 

   Staged in Trustus’ “Side Door” black box theatre, Building The Wall is a touch claustrophobic and uncomfortable, especially pre-show, when one of the play’s two characters sits and waits for someone to arrive, for something to happen, or perhaps simply passes the long, boring day of a prisoner in solitary confinement. Rather than being drawbacks, the forced intimacy and uncertainty about the silent, orange jumpsuit-clad man onstage establish an overcrowded jail atmosphere, enhanced by subtle sound effects that go from barely audible to noisy and back to near-silence in no particular order or pattern. Director Jim O’Connor puts a masterful touch on establishing place and theme well before the show begins, and his skill remains on display through the next 90 minutes, which leave the collectivemoral vision of the audience inside a fun-house mirror room.

   The story is a simple one, but chilling in the way only a “this could actually happen” cautionary tale can be. Security guard Rick, played by J.B. Frush-Marple, is in prison in 2019, for crimes against humanity, and he is visited by a History Professor, Gloria (Lonetta Thompson), who seeks to understand his actions. Their initial meeting provides a stark contrast in visual types, with Frush-Marple bearing a strong resemblance to a taller, slightly leaner Hugh Laurie of House fame, complete with requisite stubble. He slouches and paces, as his emotions motivate him, and his jumpsuit immediately establishes “criminal.” Thompson, by contrast, is very put-together and professionally dressed. Given the sophistication of her vocabulary compared to Rick’s, there is clearly an education gap, but once again, the eyes (and ears) can deceive. Rick turns out to be far from the cornpone stereotype he first seems, and Gloria has much more to her than a “liberal female academic” stock character.

   During the interview, Rick tells Gloria a story many of us fear is all too possible. Following a terrorist attack on Times Square, the president declares martial law, and begins rounding up immigrants from multiple countries for deportation. Not understanding the incredibly challenging logistics of such an operation, the government sets up holding stations…which become tent cities and worse.  As this gruesome progression continues, Rick is all too aware of what’s happening, but needs his job for the insurance to care of his two children, at least one of whom has serious medical difficulties. Rick is a man caught in a place of terrible conflict.  Rick speaks with sincerity about his black friends, and the audience actually feels a touch of sympathy for this most unsympathetic (at first glance) character. Even when pressed about Muslim friends, he admits to not having any, but says he’s “got no problem” with them, commenting that “they kinda keep to themselves”. Don’t misunderstand – Rick is still a shitkicker Texan, and unlikely to join the ACLU, but there’s no hate in him, and certainly not homicidal tendencies. The more we get to know him, the more we understand his plight, and feel a begrudging sympathy for this lower-middle-class Sad Sack who seems to have caught every bad break life could offer, including taking the fall for “just doing his job”. Frush-Marples manages to capture the conflict between what one would imagine to be prejudices learned from the cradle, and new perspective brought about through the horrors he has witnessed.

   As Gloria, Thompson brings her signature coolness and poise to the role. One of the things I admire about her acting style is that she always seems to be the person in control of the situation, even when she isn’t. As mentioned above, Gloria’s use of academic terminology and an advanced vocabulary suggest a well-to-do, Ivy League type, yet she mentions her Ford Fairlane which has needed a full engine rebuild for at least a year, indicating that she is not as affluent as she may appear. This could easily have “knocked her down a peg or two,” but Thompson’s most effective combination of full acceptance of what we now know to be the life of a struggling teacher, combined with her utter calm (well, practically utter) at the raging, doubletalk, and moments of true sincerity from Rick establish her as the voice of calm and reason. It is Gloria with whom we naturally sympathize, yet even she loses her cool for a second or two here and there. Neither the demon nor the saint is fully without a drop of the other’s virtues, which kept bringing me back to the light and dark sides of The Force. I won’t beat the Star Wars comparison to death, but some strong thematic parallels are there.

   The set is simple, slightly cramped, and a bit harshly lit, as would be the case in a prison interview room. Props to Brandon McIver and Frank Kiraly, respectively, for these nice touches of verisimilitude.

   Building The Wall is a thought-provoking, frightening, and realistic play that will leave you thinking. Also, the entire show is performed in one act, so if you order an interval drink before the show, you’ll wind up hanging out and drinking it, chatting away to various production team members, while the company closes up shop for the night. I speak from experience.

   When I was a kid, one of my favorite comic books was a Marvel title called What If…, an anthology series, which featured monthly stories on how changes to canonical history would have changed the outcome. (“What If Spider-Man Had Joined The Fantastic Four”, as I recall, had a fairly tragic ending, and the writers weren’t afraid to make a hypothetical turn out badly from time to time.) In many ways, Building The Wall is a real-life version of that comic book. This is a What If… that has the potential to come true.  I responded to it both as a piece of political theatre and as a master class in textured acting from two talented, experienced, pros.

   It isn’t a night full of laughs, nor should it be, but Building The Wall is an important work with a message that needs to be heard. Bravo to Trustus for once again being unafraid to address controversial and sometimes disturbing situations and themes. This is “Grown-Up Theatre” at its best.

-FLT3

Tim Conroy's New Book Launches New Series for Muddy Ford Press

Join Tim Conroy early for pre-launch purchases

Tuesday at 5 pm at Immaculate Consumption

Festivities start at 6 pm

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Chapin-based boutique publishing company, Muddy Ford Press, announces a new series of books, The Laureate Series, with the publication of Theologies of Terrain by Tim Conroy, edited by Columbia poet laureate, Ed Madden. There will be a launch party for the book on Tuesday, October 10th at 6 pm at Immaculate Consumption at 933 Main Street in Columbia, behind the SC State House, at which Conroy will read from the publication. The event is free and open to the public.

“The purpose of The Laureate Series is to celebrate the tradition of poetry that is born to South Carolinians and to promote and honor the relationship between mentor and protégé, advocate and postulant, poet and poet,” says publisher Dr. Robert Jolley. Poets laureate in South Carolina are invited to work independently with a poet of their choice who has not yet had a book of poetry published. Muddy Ford Press will publish the new author’s book and provide her or him with a number of copies of the book, as well as arrange for readings and promotion of the book.

Muddy Ford Press approached Madden, who is the publishing house’s poetry editor, about the new series earlier this year and he agreed to work with Conroy on this publication. The poets worked most of the year on Theologies of Terrain. “Working with Tim on this project was a joy,” Madden says. “His poems were lovely already, but it was such a pleasure to take this journey with him, thinking about how the poems might work together as a book. This is a beautiful collection, and these are poems we need -- the perfect inaugural book for the laureate series.”

Praise for Theologies of Terrain has been abundant. 

“’In this dwelling of scars/the history of dirt is blood,’ Tim Conroy tells us in this excellent debut. There is sadness in these poems, vivid renderings of childhood abuse and of lives that ended too soon, but the beauty of the natural world is also acknowledged, as is the realization that memory offers consolation as well as sorrow, all of which leads to the poet’s hard-earned affirmation that ‘love has saved me.’ Bravo!”  Ron Rash – author of Serena, The World Made Street, The Risen, Saints at the River and more

“‘In the journey you inventory/all it is you carry,’ writes Tim Conroy early on in Theologies of Terrain. These fine poems map a complex and beautiful journey through loss, love, and, finally, revelation. They chart masterfully the complex hills and valleys of grief and memory. They probe at the edges of the mystery of family, maybe the landscape most full of hard, sometimes impassible terrain. There are many beautiful poems here, and we are lucky to have such a collection to map our own journeys.”   John Laneauthor of Fate Moreland’s Widow, My Paddle to the Sea, and more

“There are so many lovely things in this book. There are poems that break me and poems that resonate long after I’ve turned the page. I am delighted to help bring this beautiful book into the world.”  – Ed Maddenauthor of Signals, Ark, Prodigal: Variations, and more

Conroy is a former special education teacher, school administrator, and vice president of the South Carolina Autism Society. His poetry and short fiction have been published in literary journals, magazines, and compilations, including Fall Lines, Auntie Bellum, and Marked by the Water. A founding board member of the Pat Conroy Literary Center, established in his brother’s honor, Conroy lives and writes in Columbia, South Carolina.  “Ed is a poet of incredible instinct, knowledge, skill, generosity and vision,” Conroy says. “He gives the poet the gift of immersion into their work. I was fortunate beyond belief to have him as my mentor and editor.”

Tim Conroy, author of Theologies of Terrain

Tim Conroy, author of Theologies of Terrain

Full disclosure: Muddy Ford Press was the underwriter for Jasper Magazine during the first five years of publication. Editor Cindi Boiter also serves as associate publisher for Muddy Ford Press.

 

Rosewood Art & Music Festival - Tomorrow!

by Jenna Schiferl

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Alexandra White has been doing art festivals since she was four years old. She often accompanied her mother, who was an oil painter, to various shows and exhibitions from a young age. White is now an artist herself, specializing in acrylic and oil mixed media pieces.  Her work, under which she is better known by the name Abstract Alexandra, is displayed in galleries across the United States.  She has been an active member of the arts community for more than 20 years, and her accomplishments as an art advocate led to the creation of the South Carolina Artists group and the She Festival.

 

It only seems natural that White would eventually fill the role as the Visual Arts Coordinator of Columbia’s only micro urban festival.  The 7th annual Rosewood Art & Music Festival is slated to occur Sep. 30 next to Rockaway Athletic Club.  Festival Director David Britt explains that the phrase “micro urban” means that Columbia possesses desirable attributes commonly found in larger cities.

 

“The festival enjoys an array of talent, yet keeps an intimate feel. Its ethos is simple: celebrating art and community,” Britt says.

 

Founded in 2001 by Forrest Whitlark and Arik Bjorn, the vision of the festival was to create a free, inclusive space for artists and musicians within the Shandon and Rosewood community.

 

The festival is unique in more ways than one. In addition to being a micro urban festival, the event differs from others in that it exclusively focuses on fine arts.  As the Visual Arts Coordinator, White oversees artist applications and facilitates the selection process.

 

“Originality and artistic quality are the main, but not the sole criteria, used to select exhibitors and juried show artists.  Other factors such as; the clarity of images provided and their ability to be viewed online, also contributed to the decision.  Moreover, we like to include a variety of media, subjects, and artistic styles,” White says.

 

This year, the festival received over 100 exhibitor submissions.  Artists were able to submit work from a myriad of categories including digital art, pottery, ceramics, sculpture, photography, fiber, jewelry, wood, metal, glass, and installation, among other things. The submissions must be whittled down to only 50 exhibitor slots that are available.

 

“It can be hard because you don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings, but you can’t be everyone's friend. So you have to make a decision that’s best for the festival. And that’s what we do. We make decisions that are best for the festival,” White says.

 

After initial application, vendors are placed on one of three main festival maps.  She emphasized the importance of correct placement of artists in relation to their neighbors.

 

“You may end up being at a festival that you paid $800 to be a part of, and you’re next to people doing the same kind of work that you do.  I’ve always found that infuriating, that people don’t take the time to separate people and organize them,” White says.

 

She pointed out that without proper artist arrangement, it creates a chaotic and overwhelming experience for both the festival-goer and the exhibitor.

 

“It raises that anxiety and it raises that competition, instead of everyone working together as a common good within the community,” she says.

 

Both Britt and White mentioned that the Juried Show is what really separates the festival from similar events. The festival will give over $2000 in award money to the winners of the juried exhibit. A panel of 2-3 professionals within the art community will judge the works based on a detailed numeric gauge system.

 

Even with the festival 20 days out, White works with accepted artists each step of the way. She hosted a forum to answer any questions artists might have about the festival or the itinerary.

 

“It is an opportunity for artists to gain more insight about being in the festival, and gives them key points on how to successfully display and promote their work. In short: we take care of our artists!” Britt says.

 

The festival also boasts a stellar lineup of musical performances. Alarm Drum, Grace Joyner, and Debbie and the Skanks will perform on stage one, while Cletus Baltimore, Post Timey String Band, and Flat Out Strangers will perform on the second stage.

The festival features free admission and will kick off at 10 a.m. on Saturday. White offers a piece of advice for potential festival-goers.

 

“Come with a clear mind. Ask questions … Don’t ever feel like the artist is unapproachable, because all artists are approachable … Come with an eagerness to learn or just enjoy the surroundings and take it all in. Art is created to make us happy. It’s what makes us distinctly human,” she says.

Girls Rock Roulette 2017 - by Bria Barton

... some bigger girls are getting their chance to shine.

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An ensemble of rocker chicks is strumming, drumming and singing their way to New Brookland Tavern on Sept. 23 to show off what it means to have girl power.

 

Girls Rock Columbia is hosting Rock Roulette 2017, a fundraising event that goes toward funding their Girls Rock Camp and year-round programming.

 

Although Girls Rock strives to teach their younger members the splendors of music and self-confidence, on this night, some bigger girls are getting their chance to shine.

 

“At Girls Rock Camp, we always remind our campers that their most powerful instrument is their voice. It's really important to us that our adult volunteers and supporters have opportunities to use their voices just like our campers,” Jess Oliver, Girls Rock Columbia executive director, says. “We lead by example, so it's good to be able to empathize during camp week when we are asking them to do something that might be intimidating. This is a great opportunity for volunteers who might want to work on building up their confidence in front of an audience because they will have their band mates up there with them for support.”

 

Last month, the Girls Rock ladies were each assigned a band in preparation for Rock Roulette 2017. Over the last couple of weeks, their task has been to practice their instruments and compose at least one original song with their respective band members.

 

“I am most excited about the people who have never played an instrument. One of my band members is playing keyboard for the first time, and she showed up to rehearsal absolutely glowing,” Oliver says. “It helps me remember that, yeah, we are largely a summer camp for youth, but it's really important to empower each other too. We adults doubt ourselves sometimes and feel small and powerless too, so it's important to take the opportunity to do something brave and remember, ‘Oh yeah... I ROCK!’”

 

Those participating in Rock Roulette 2017 are also individually raising money for Girls Rock through their own Razoo links, which they have posted on their social media. Oliver encourages people to donate because every dollar goes “directly to Girls Rock Columbia's future programming.”

 

Oliver believes that the public should come out and support Rock Roulette 2017 because it might just be that inspirational push a person needs in order to step out of their comfort zone. Additionally, she says, “[Rock Roulette is] bound to be a fun and energetic night of community and positivity” and that the audience can expect to see “a lot of really big smiles.”

 

“I'm also really happy that we have some community members participating in Rock Roulette who have never volunteered with us,” Oliver says. “We want to continue to grow, and this is one way we can keep making connections.”

 

Rock Roulette 2017 begins at 8PM. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased at http://www.ticketfly.com/event/1559008. They will also be available at the door.

The Dance Season Starts (with Gamecocks Athletics) by Susan Lenz

Fall is my favorite time of year! It's a seasonal thing. The local dance scene gets kicked off and college football swings into action. The only thing better would be an event featuring both. 

Guess what? It's going to happen on September 23rd during the Gamecock vs. the LouisianaTech Bulldog halftime show. This summer, athletic band director Cormac Cannon teamed up with USC dance company director Susan Anderson to stage "Dancing with the Stars." Dance majors with partner basketball great A'ja Wilson, WIS weatherman Tim Miller, student body president Alex Lordo, and Anya Martin (the men's basketball coach's better half).  All involved have been practicing long hours.

Unfortunately, the Gamecock team will be in their locker room during the show. They'd be good dance critics.  Sixteen members took Susan Anderson's Dance Appreciation course over the summer. A'ja Wilson took it during her freshman year. At the University of South Carolina (like the mission of Jasper Magazine), interdisciplinary approaches are fundamental. That's team spirit!

So ... a-one-and-a-two and a Go Cocks!  Dance your heart out this season.

Later this week I'll be posting my impressions of Columbia Classical Ballet's first "Studio Series." It will be my first, real review. My hopes for the season are to initiate critical conversation about the experience of seeing dance performances as well as to inform the public of upcoming local dance events.

Susan Lenz is a full time, professional studio artist in Columbia, South Carolina. Her studio is located at Mouse House, Inc. at 2123 Park Street where she has both a studio for 3D sculptural and installation work and a separate fiber art studio. Susan's work has been juried into numerous national and international exhibits, featured in solo shows all over the United States, and shown on television and in print. She has been awarded six full scholarship art residencies and several "Best of Show" ribbons. She also serves as Jasper's Dance Editor. 

PHOTO Exhibit at 701 Whaley Promotes Conversations about RACE: Black & White Opens October 2nd

PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT PROMOTES CONVERSATIONS ABOUT RACE: BLACK & WHITE AT 701 WHALEY OPENS OCTOBER 2

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Even before Black & White opens, it will have already achieved part of its goal—to promote frank, intimate conversations about race and to act as a tool for discovering more about people in the community. The resulting 20 black and white photographs will be shown at the hallway: community art space at 701 Whaley, October 2 through December 10. A reception will be held October 8th from 3pm-5pm at 701 Whaley in the Granby Room. Drinks and food will be provided along with a performance by Indigo Soul, led by Terrance Henderson.

The portrait exhibit was created by photographers Dalvin Spann, who is a 36-year-old Black man, and Lee Ann Kornegay, a 57-year-old white woman. They envisioned it as a project that would challenge both themselves, as artists, and ultimately the viewers of their work. The two artists were hoping to learn new things about their subjects and talk about what it feels like to be Black or white in today's world. Each agreed to photograph 10 people of a different color.

Kornegay began taking photos when her mother gave her a Canon camera back in 1977. She works frequently in video and has made numerous documentaries about such topics as West Africa, the landmark civil rights case Briggs vs Elliott, and even 701 Whaley, where the exhibit is being held. Spann first started taking photos as a way to show samples of his visual art, then became a serious student of black and white film photography in college. He is a co-founder of Izms of Art, a collective of black artists.

Black & White developed from the desire to gain and promote a better understanding of people of different colors. The artists hope the exhibit will serve as a tool for moving race relations forward and in a positive direction by something as simple as getting to know each other. “For me,” says Spann, “Black & White is a representation of people who use their art form, profession, and life to cross over the boundaries of color. True passion of what inspires you should have no bearing on color, race or walks of life.”

REVIEW: Barbecue at Trustus Theatre - Frank Thompson

“There’s a face that we wear in the cold light of day.
  It’s society’s mask, it’s society’s way,

  But the truth is that it’s all a façade…”

 

-Jekyll And Hyde: The Musical

 

   When Frank Wildhorn penned the above lyrics for his adaptation of the classic tale of The Strange Case Of Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde over two decades ago, he probably didn’t anticipate them being used in the introduction of a review for a yet-to-be-written play about a family staging an intervention, but the song has been stuck in my head since seeing Friday night’s performance of Robert O’Hara’s Barbecue. As usual, Trustus Theatre has selected a multi-layered, thoughtful, and well-crafted piece of work to open the 2017-2018 season. It also happens to be hilariously funny at times, especially early on, as we are introduced to a series of social misfits gathering for a cookout/confrontation in hopes of persuading the meth-addicted Barbara (Christine Hellman and Devin Anderson) to get the help she desperately needs. Known also as “Zippity-Doo”, Barbara is the loosest cannon on a full deck; her would-be rescuers each have substance and/or personal issues, and the family is a nigh-stereotypical dysfunctional, lower-middle-class bunch.

 

   It would be impossible to adequately review the performance without revealing a few spoilers, so if you want to go in completely blind, stop reading now and take my word that Barbecue is well worth your time and money.

 

   If you’re still reading, I promise not to give away all of the surprises, but to avoid confusion, I’ll go ahead and say that each role is double-cast, with one family entirely African-American, the other entirely white. The two families are identically named and costumed, with only minor (or so it seems) differences between them. Both Barbaras are addicts, and the set-up for the intervention, etc., utilizes almost identical dialogue, with a few cultural colloquialisms and stylistic choices unique to each group. The first act alternates scenes between the groups, with a fairly close-to-real-time overlap until a big reveal at the end of the first act, at which point we realize that we’re watching a reality show onstage. (The TV series Intervention is actually mentioned several times). But which “reality” is real? Over drinks at intermission, several friends and I guessed what would happen as well as what was going on. We were all incorrect, which illustrates the artistry of the playwright in avoiding the obvious in a play populated by what seem at first to be two-dimensional characters.

   The show opens with a laugh-riot, profanity-laden, monologue by Christopher Cockrell as Barbara’s n’ere-do-well brother, James T., who wants nothing to do with any of it, yet is forced to set up for the party alone. Having seen Cockrell mostly in dramatic, serious roles, I was most impressed with his flawless comedic timing, as well as his ability to convincingly play a lowbrow redneck. It’s always enjoyable to see familiar faces in roles outside their personal norm, and Cockrell’s James T. is just that. Matching Cockrell’s stage presence and skill, Kendrick J. Lyles appears as the black James T., who, while slightly more laid-back, is the same scruffy, beer-swilling schlub as his white counterpart. One has a mullet, the other dreadlocks, but they’re both reluctant, unimpressed with the plan, and would rather be anywhere else.

 

   Krista Forster and LaTrell Brennan share the role of Barbara’s sister, Marie, who has plenty of her own secrets. As with Cockrell and Lyles, both performers manage to create the same character with just enough differences to keep things interesting. While each Marie is self-serving and hypocritical, Forster’s is a bit more aggressive somehow, with Brennan’s interpretation bringing out a slightly softer side. Rather than being a distraction, this adds another layer to the almost-but-not-quite-identical nature of the two families. One gets the idea that Marie is following fairly closely in Barbara’s footsteps, which is supported by slight differences in the two Barbaras that mirror the personality of each Marie. Kudos to director Ilene Fins for weaving such subtleties into the parallel universes.

   Trustus mainstay Elena Martinez-Vidal plays the white incarnation of Aldean, a chain-smoking opioid addict who is battling breast cancer. With her edgy, crass, and selfish nature, Aldean could easily be the most-disliked of this crew of undesirables, but Martinez-Vidal brings a raffish lovability to the role. She’s the cranky old aunt or neighbor lady whose nastiness is somehow endearing. Her counterpart, Mahogany Collins, is just flat-out hateful, with hilarious results. In the hands of a less skilled actress, this approach could have fallen flat, but Collins brings such sincerity to Aldean, you can’t help cracking up at her most venomous lines. This was my first time seeing her onstage, and I certainly hope it won’t be the last.

   Two more familiar faces on the Trustus stage, Dewey Scott-Wiley and Marilyn Matheus, provide what semblance of stability the family has in Lillie Anne, the harried organizer and driving force behind the intervention. It goes without saying that each of these seasoned pros turns in a solid, well-developed performance, but as an added layer to an already complex set of circumstances, the two Lillie Annes also helped define each family. Each has seen tragedy and loss, but seemingly from different directions. With Scott-Wiley’s Lillie Anne, there’s a slightly frantic quality which suggests a family in decline, while Matheus’ solid, no-nonsense Lillie Anne has the aura of someone who has pulled herself up beyond her beginnings. The script does not address the issue, but the performances suggest one person who is desperately trying to fix something broken, while the other is calmly determined not to let things get any worse.

   And of Barbara, herself? Well, that’s where things get complicated, and (SPOILER ALERT!!!!) once we discover that Hellman’s is the actual Barbara, the story splits open, and we see Anderson in her true identity: a successful singer who plans to conquer Hollywood by bringing Barbara’s story to life onscreen. (While in rehab, Barbara wrote a best-selling book about her experiences). In one of the show’s strongest scenes, the two play a game of cat-and-mouse over identity and reality, with Barbara claiming to have made up the entire story, which doesn’t seem to matter at all to the singer, who has her eyes on the Oscars and nothing else. Without giving away too much, I’ll just say that everything from race to sexual identity is addressed in the scene, with the overwhelming message being that reality is subjective and what you see isn’t always what you get. By the end of the scene, the two have merged in a way, and the audience is left wondering how many layers of deception and fakery just occurred, and if a “real” Barbara has faded into a pastiche of lies and re-writes. Hellman and Anderson manage to create just enough doubt about…well, almost everything. Watching their interaction and the game of one-upsmanship literally had me on the edge of my seat and figuratively doubting my sanity as each “revealed” something that may or may not have been true.

      By the end, all is made clear, but the path takes several more twists along the way, dropping in one or two more revelations that tie the two worlds together. The final moment of the show (which I won’t reveal) brought laughter from some, gasps from others, and a whispered-but-distinct “daaaaaaaamn” from someone in the row behind me. For a script which addresses and bases itself on relativism and skewed perspective, I can think of no better reaction. Barbecue is a fresh, thought-provoking, mind-twisting, funny, vulgar, and intelligent piece of theatre, with a strong cast and ambiguous storyline that leaves you scratching your head a little. It’s a perfect show for Trustus, and Artistic Director Chad Henderson is clearly committed to continuing the theatre’s goal of bringing new works of high quality to the stage. His opening night welcome to the audience included a tribute to his mentor, the late Jim Thigpen, whom I have no doubt would have taken great pride in Barbecue.

 

Frank Thompson is a graduate of The University of Alabama and Cumberland School of Law, who has made his home in Columbia since 2010. He has performed, taught classes, and/or directed with several local theatres, and co-writes a column for "The Good Life" blog for Goodwill Industries, along with his wife, Laurel Posey. His essay, 'Que, was featured in the 2014 edition of Fall Lines by Muddy Ford Press.

 

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A Review is Just One Person's Opinion: The Pavilion at Full Circle Productions

 

 

There is nothing in my training that qualifies me to be a theatre reviewer. My first two degrees are in Sociology and I almost have a PhD in History, which is similar to almost being pregnant or almost winning the lottery. But when our reviewer bailed on us at the last minute Tuesday night and it was too late to turn in tickets to see Full Circle’s production of The Pavilion at USC’s Lab theatre, I decided to take their seats and accept the challenge of giving one person’s feedback on their experience as an audience member at a play.  As a frequent theatre-goer to stages in New York and London and a rabid theatre-goer to stages local, the reality is that I’m probably no more or less qualified than most of you reading this piece.  And it can be argued that a review is just one person’s opinion, at worst or at best.

I went into the performance full of support for the newly organized Full Circle Productions, and left feeling the same way. Full Circle Productions is a small theatre troupe made up of many highly respected theatre professionals who are committed to providing exceptional theatre that challenges audiences with both the content and the execution of the art form. Issues of social justice are high on their list of priorities. Full Circle Productions also offers the kind of art experience that many of us thrive on – boutique, intimate, ephemeral. The kind of event that sometimes gives you chills because you know neither you nor anyone else in the room with you will ever experience the specific exchange of energy you are all experiencing at that moment in time. We don’t need fancy props or costumes or dozens of people on the stage for this; all we need is talent, sincerity, openness, and a moment in time. Kudos and thank you to Full Circle Productions for adding another opportunity for these experiences to Columbia’s theatre repertoire.

The Pavilion, written by Craig Wright, was nominated for a Pulitzer in 2005, but it didn’t win despite the very real chops Wright brings to his endeavor having written, in addition to several other plays, a number of award-winning episodes of Lost and Six Feet Under for television. Wright is a seminary graduate and his writing reveals a fascination with the kind of cosmic questions about the meaning and purpose of life and the existence of the universe that can leave one anything from amused to maddened.

The three characters in The Pavilion are charged with conveying to the audience that the pavilion in which they exist for this short night that is their 20th high school reunion is symbolic of time. The pavilion is scheduled to be demolished immediately after their reunion, leading us to understand that time is fleeting. A mistake was made 20 years earlier and the main duo of characters played by Lindsay Rae Taylor and Andrew Schwartz as Kari and Peter respectively, (Jennifer Moody Sanchez plays the narrator), ultimately debate whether we can reverse time with our actions and apologies and better plans. It is a contemplative play with difficult questions and while it does belabor the one point of their contention, it’s not difficult to translate that situation to any number of additional life quandaries.

Schwartz and Taylor provide really lovely performances. Schwartz is believably earnest in his desire and appears to be at peace with his mistakes and where life has taken him, recognizing the value of asking for a second chance but willing to take no for an answer. Taylor is genuinely miserable throughout the first act and when, in the second act, we think she may see a way out of her misery, the habits of twenty years make their ties known. But, yes, Taylor allows us to see the young woman full of hope and dreams that Kari once was.

Sanchez was saddled with an incredibly difficult part, or parts, to play, risking the chance of becoming annoying as she played the parts as they were written. Her character required the kind of virtuosic performance that I can see very few people being able to pull off without flaw. Someone like Mark Rylance comes to mind and, even still, the part just seems treacherous in that the character repeatedly interrupts the action of the others by pretending to blow some kind of cosmic dust on the action in a god-like fashion. Added to that, Sanchez plays a number of other parts for seconds here and there without benefit of a true costume change due to the timing of the script and the only way for her to make the audience discern the difference between Pudge and Denise and Angie and Carla and Kent and more is through somewhat exaggerated character traits and a variety of accents we are surprised to find in the small town of Pine City, Minnesota. Kudos to Sanchez for taking on such a tough challenge.

Production designer Nate Terracio gives us exactly what we need to know we are at a special event, but no more, which is a testament to the beauty of simplicity in design and, especially in South Carolina where, due to the lack of structural support for the arts, doing more with less is always to be applauded. And Robert Richmond, director of The Pavilion as well as director of USC’s department of theatre and dance and director of Theatre South Carolina, is the seed of this and many important pieces of theatrical art in Columbia and should be applauded, too, for his contributions to our theatre culture as well as for having faith in us as an audience to grow and appreciate new ways of seeing old stories and an earnest desire for the new.

 

The Pavilion runs at the Lab Theatre on Wheat Street through November 2nd and tickets are only $10 at the door.

- Cindi Boiter is the editor of Jasper Magazine and executive director of The Jasper Project.

 

Patrick Kelly - Project Director for SYZYGY: The Plays

Columbia has a sneaky-good arts scene and many people are only beginning to realize that. – Patrick Kelly

 

As curtain time for SYZYGY: The Plays approaches, The Jasper Project would like to shine some light on the person responsible for making this all come together – Patrick Kelly, who has served as Project Director over the past several months, overseeing selecting directors, planning all the details of sound and lighting and rehearsal and staging, and answering to almost three dozen theatre artists embarking on a brand new arts adventure.

We are incredibly indebted to Patrick for lending us his expertise and thought you might like to know a bit more about the guy who is bringing it all together.

 ~~

Jasper: Tell us briefly about how you got from Columbia to Chicago to NYC, and back to Columbia.

 

Patrick: After I finished undergrad at USC, I knew I wanted to pursue a career in theatre. I had several friends living in Chicago and knew the city had a large, proud theatre community. I took a quick trip there to check it out and loved it - it seemed much more accessible and welcoming than New York, and the Chicago theatre scene is focused on the ensemble - groups of like-minded people working together towards a shared vision. I spent four years acting, directing, interning, and training, and I’d recommend Chicago to anyone looking to immerse themselves in making theatre. While I was there, I was wanting to take the next step - to get a Master’s degree and the training I needed to make the most of a career in theatre - so I began applying to graduate schools. After a few years of trying, I was accepted into the NYU Graduate Acting Program. After school, I booked some regional work and struggled in the acting biz, but I continued to work on projects with my classmates, teachers, and friends. I always knew that I wanted to return to the southeast at some point and make theatre in places that didn’t have access to the arts in the way people in big cities do. I was looking for a way into teaching and an opportunity to teach at the college level in Columbia came up. I needed the experience, so I looked at the life I had in the city and thought about the life I knew I wanted. I thought, “Why wait?” and jumped on the job.

 

Jasper:  And what exactly are you doing now?

Patrick: I taught Theatre Appreciation for the last year and immersed myself in the theatre scene here in Columbia. I was invited to rejoin the company at Trustus Theatre and now I’m on staff at the theatre, serving as Production Manager. I’m also the General Manager of Lula Drake Wine Parlour.

 

Jasper: What shows have you been involved in since coming back to Columbia -- and what is on the horizon?

Patrick: I’ve appeared as an actor in last year’s Trustus Playwrights’ Festival winner Anatomy of a Hug and in this year’s production of Some Girl(s) at Workshop Theatre, and I directed this year’s production of Hand to God at Trustus. Up next, I’m directing next summer’s production of Boy About Ten at Trustus and I’ll continue writing for and performing with the Mothers - Trustus’s resident sketch and improv comedy troupe.


 

Jasper: What prompted you to take the position of Project Director for the Jasper Project's SYZYGY project?

Patrick: I’m passionate about new work for the stage, and about celebrating local artists and performers. Since this project features both, it was a no-brainer for me. I’m thrilled to facilitate the premiere of these plays and for so many local theatre artists to be seen.

 

Jasper: What have been your biggest challenges?

Patrick: Fitting the right people to the right project. Meeting the needs of 24 different people. Scheduling and running tech rehearsals for six projects in one day.

 

Jasper: Biggest rewards?

Patrick: Watching the birth of six brand-new works for the stage. Getting to employ so many artists at once.

 

Jasper: What do you think the audiences are going to be most surprised by when they see these plays?

Patrick: I think audiences will be most surprised with the diversity of voices represented not only in the writing but also on the stage performing it. Columbia has a sneaky-good arts scene and many people are only beginning to realize that.

 

Jasper: Why should people show up?

Patrick: It’s not every day you get to see six brand-new plays in one sitting.

 

Jasper: What else would you like to add?

Patrick: This is the beginning. Theatres are producing more and more new work and Columbia is catching the wave. Trustus Theatre will have three new works in this season alone. Expect to see more productions of new plays by local and regional playwrights. People want to see their stories and their issues reflected in their art and entertainment. Art makers are listening.

~~

SYZYGY: The Plays

Thursday, August 17th at 7 and 10 pm

Tapp's Arts Center

$10

For tickets to SYZYGY: The Plays visit https://www.tappsartscenter.com/event/syzygy-the-solar-eclipse-plays/

~~


Patrick Michael Kelly is a theatre artist and educator. Patrick holds a BA in Theatre from the University of South Carolina and an MFA in Acting from the Graduate Acting Program at NYU/Tisch School of the Arts. He also trained at the South Carolina Governor's School for the Arts and Humanities, The Second City, Victory Gardens Theatre, and Trustus Theatre. Patrick has performed and directed at theaters in New York, Chicago, and along the East Coast including La MaMa E.T.C., Virginia Stage Company, WNEP Theater, Arundel Barn Playhouse, Workshop Theatre of South Carolina, and Trustus Theatre. Patrick is a proud member of Actors' Equity and a company member at Trustus Theatre, where he also serves on staff as Production Manager. 

Playwright Cindy Turner Interviews Fellow SYZYGY Playwright Chad Henderson

"...We deserve to tell our own stories here in this city." - Chad Henderson

Chad Henderson wrote and directs Reese and June with Hope in a Bunker for SYZYGY: The Plays

Chad Henderson wrote and directs Reese and June with Hope in a Bunker for SYZYGY: The Plays

Artistic director for Trustus Theater, Chad Henderson has spent most of his theater career in the role of director, but for this Thursday's SYZYGY: THE PLAYS event, he is also a playwright.   His play, "June and Reese in the Bunker with Hope," will be one of six 10-minute plays performed at Tapps Art Center in Columbia.  Performance times for the six-play performances are 7:00p.m. and 10:00p.m on August 17; admission is $10.  Each of the plays anticipates and celebrates next week's solar eclipse by incorporating two and a half minutes of darkness in the plot.
 

Henderson has a bit of fun with the complications of his dual roles in the performance.  "Every time I've written something, I've directed it.  It's not a distrust of my work in other storyteller's hands, but...what self-respecting director wants to direct a play by an amateur named 'Chad Henderson'?  It's just not a name that screams 'literary.'"  In all seriousness, Chad greatly admires the solitary work of playwrights that then becomes highly collaborative work for theater artists.  "I'm thankful that I was asked to be part of this project as a writer.  Believe me, it was incredibly intimidating and made me approach theatre from a new jettison."  

Henderson overheard the first "rumblings" of the SYZYGY project while enjoying drinks at The Whig with Jasper's Cindi Boiter, whose brain child SYZYGY is.  Thinking it sounded fun to write a play containing a 2.5 minute period of darkness, he responded with thanks and commitment to participate. At first, he didn't know where to start.  In his younger days, Henderson wrote lots of scripts for movies, including a middle school slasher flick and a high school rom-com.  His most recent foray into writing was a musical theater adaptation of the concept album Constance, by Daniel Machado and The Restoration.  (A fully staged version will appear at Trustus in Spring 2018.)  With the SYZYGY play, however, he felt as if he would never get started, despite a looming deadline "barreling down the tracks at a tremendous pace."  Abruptly, he recognized the spark of an idea when he heard a news story about people making preparations for a nuclear attack.  

What audiences will see Thursday is his play about three people who have been stuck for four days in a bunker following a nuclear attack on Seattle.  Reese and June, a married couple who have enjoyed several decades of matrimony, are joined in the small space by their new neighbor, Hope.  "I actually wrote the play with three actors in mind," two of whom Henderson has worked with in prior performances over the years.  Bill Roberson, who incidentally has the line "Is there no decency?" in the film, The Patriot, will be playing Reece.  Playing his wife, June, will be Libby Campbell;  Henderson has been a huge fan of hers since he saw her perform Violet in August: Osage County.  Hope will be played by an actress whom Henderson has had a "huge director-crush" on since their days at USC, even pushing props around on stage just so he could see Marybeth Gorman Craig rehearse. Henderson says they all hit the ground running hard.  "We're laughing a lot, which is a good sign.  Having fun is a first step to a successful performance."  Henderson acknowledges that these three actors are experienced, which makes working with them a breeze. "I can't believe I was able to actually get them to sign on!  Lucky writer, lucky director, lucky guy."

When asked what he's most excited about, Henderson said, "I'm excited to watch audiences experience a story that I've written rather than interpreted."  He's also excited to see what other writers, director, and casts have created.  "The opportunity for people to experience theater is an incredibly healthy thing for Columbia.  My dream is that Columbia theater-fans will seek more and more original work--we deserve to tell our own stories here in this city."
 

As for the actual eclipse, once the SYZYGY project is finished, Henderson said he has not yet had time to listen to Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" in preparation, nor will he likely have a chance before Monday. "Total bummer."   He is, however, researching whether he can watch the eclipse through a magnifying glass--with approved promotional glasses that came free with his Catawba beer, of course.

~~~~

CINDY TURNER is a resident of Lancaster, SC, where she is a veteran high school English teacher. Although she has been a theater patron all her life, her play, One Another, written with Jon Tuttle, is her first play.

 

 

Lindsay Rae Taylor Directs Futuristic SYZYGY Play VISITATION by Nicola Waldron

On Aug. 17, the Jasper Project will debut six plays in honor of the much-anticipated total solar eclipse that will grace Columbia skies. One play in particular, Visitation by Nicola Waldron, will transport the audience to future times and provide social commentary on the ongoing struggles of today and tomorrow.

 

The director of Visitation, Lindsay Rae Taylor, is a New York University alumna and current second-year MFA Directing Candidate in the Theatre Department at the University of South Carolina.

 

“I believe that Nicola has written an incredibly important and thought-provoking play. I am inspired with what she created from the idea of the eclipse—a happening that is rarely witnessed,” Taylor says. “I love how she uses the eclipse to note the passage of time and the change that is possible in our world before, after, and during such a unique event.”

 

Taylor describes Visitation as a timely piece that is set in South Carolina during May 2078. The play centers on the story of a mother fighting for a better life for her daughter—away from a misogynistic regime.

 

“The characters witness a solar eclipse and reveal to us what has happened in our world since our 2017 eclipse,” Taylor says. “It addresses the state of our nation and the possible repercussions should we continue on our current trajectory—specifically the effect it could have on women in our society.”

 

Visitation is set to feature some familiar faces from the pool of theatrical talent in SC. Marybeth Gorman Craig holds an MFA in Acting from the University of South Carolina and continues to act regionally while also teaching, directing, and performing at USC. She plays Mother in Visitation.

 

Kelsie Hensley recently graduated from USC’s Theatre Department where she was a featured actor in last year’s season. She plays Grace.

 

Dr. Andrea Coldwell is an Associate Professor of English from Coker College as well a veteran actor of Coker’s main stage productions. She plays The Custodian.

           

“We have a real powerhouse group of ladies in our rehearsal room, and it has been invigorating watching Nicola’s words come to life,” Taylor says. “When I had my initial meeting with Nicola, I felt we were kindred spirits, and I feel that energy among all of the women involved.”

 

Taylor says she loves that Syzygy marries art with science and encourages audience members to find perspective in thinking of one’s own place in the universe. Although she looks forward to the performance, Taylor anticipates speaking with individuals afterwards to learn how the play’s various messages and interpretations resonate.

 

“The piece has an ambiguity that I find thrilling. Nicola’s idea is frightening and relevant, and the poetry of her language is served from the extraordinary voices of this cast,” Taylor says. “It has been an enlightening journey and we are so excited to share this story with an audience.”

By Bria Barton

Tickets are at -- https://www.tappsartscenter.com/event/syzygy-the-solar-eclipse-plays/

Tickets are at -- https://www.tappsartscenter.com/event/syzygy-the-solar-eclipse-plays/

Rocio Zalba Directs Julia Vargas' SYZYGY Play Visitemos a la Abuela - Performed Entirely in Spanish by Palmetto Luna's La Tropa

“This collaboration and inclusivity reminds us that art has no borders,” -- Rocio Zalba, director, Visitemos a la Abuela

 

Thursday, August 17th six ten-minute plays will be shown at Tapp’s Art Center each with approximately two and a half minutes of darkness to commemorate the total solar eclipse that will darken Columbia for the same amount of time on August 21st.

 

The Jasper Project invited six playwrights to create one of the unique plays to be performed at 7pm and 10pm with a free reception honoring the playwrights from 9-10pm.

 

Director Rocio Zalba will be directing the play Vistemos a la Abuela written by Julia Vargas. The play will be performed completely in Spanish by theatre troupe La Tropa including Lucy Jaimes, Ysaul Flores, and José Luis Gallardo. Zalba is a Spanish instructor at USC.

 

Zalba got involved in the Syzygy event when Ivan Segura of Palmetto Luna, a non-profit organization that works to create awareness of Latino art and culture in South Carolina, asked if she could direct the play.

 

“This collaboration and inclusivity reminds us that art has no borders,” says Zalba. 

 

The characters comprise a family which the play focuses on. La Abuela is played by Jaimes. The father and son of the Grandmother, Pedro, is played by Flores. And the son of the father, Daniel is played by Gallardo.

 

“The play is about the human disconnection that occurs when we make technology the only means in which we connect to others,” says Zalba. “This is demonstrated through the discord that occurs within different generations in a family unit.”

 

Because of the themes of family and connection in the play, the audience can relate to the play regardless of their knowledge of Spanish.

 

The need to connect with others is universal,” says Zalba.

 

Zalba is most excited about directing the two minutes and forty-one seconds of darkness in the play.

 

“Since our play is in Spanish and our audience may be mainly composed of English speakers, we had to figure out a way to communicate with our audience what is happening on stage without much dialogue,” says Zalba.

 

A limited edition, bound volume of the nine poems and six plays will be available for purchase to commemorate this historic time in the state’s history and culture.

 

Tickets to see the six plays are $10 at 7pm and 10pm on August 17th at Tapp’s Art Center.

by Karie Grace Duncan

Bakari Lebby Directs Jon Tuttle & Cindy Turner's SYZYGY Play, One Another

Bakari (Kari) Lebby - photo by Singing Fox Creatives

Bakari (Kari) Lebby - photo by Singing Fox Creatives

by Jenna Schiferl

 

In astronomy, syzygy is the alignment of three celestial objects.  The origins of the word date back to as early as Ancient Greece, where the word suzugos meant ‘yoked’ and ‘paired.’

 

As part of the upcoming total solar eclipse celebrations in Columbia, The Jasper Project is launching a three-part series featuring South Carolina’s top poets, playwrights, directors, and actors.  SYZYGY will kick off on Thursday, Aug. 17 with a poetry invitational and book release at the newly renovated Richland County Public Library Auditorium.  Later that day will begin the SYZYGY: THE PLAYS. Six local playwrights were asked to create a 10-minute piece with three actors or less.  The only other requirement was that each performance includes two and a half minutes of “darkness” to continue in the theme of the solar eclipse.  Finally, the project will conclude with SYZYGY: POSTMORTEM, a panel discussion and reflection led by playwright Jon Tuttle and Columbia Poet Laureate Ed Madden.  The discussion will delve into topics such as the processes of culture transitioning to art and its effectiveness.

 

University of South Carolina graduate Bakari Lebby will direct Jon Tuttle and Cindy Turner’s drama, One Another.

 

Jasper executive and editor-in-chief Cindi Boiter approached Lebby to direct the play, who was immediately on board.

 

According to Lebby, One Another is incredibly relevant to the current political climate.

 

One Another is about trust and privilege. I believe it is a very timely piece,” Lebby says.  “I'm excited for people to view this piece and contemplate its relevance to this country and them personally.”

 

Although the play is limited to 10 minutes, Lebby and his team are working to create a fully developed and cohesive storyline.

 

“We're working hard to flesh out a full true story,” Lebby says.

 

The three actors featured in the play are Akida Lebby, Jason Stokes, and Avery Bateman.  Lebby emphasized the impressive cast when asked why individuals should be interested in seeing the play.

 

“We have veteran Trustus Company members and my little brother, so I think it's worth seeing their artistic prowess,” he says.  “I'm very stoked and thankful for this opportunity, and I hope we keep pushing the boundaries of theatre, art, and the culture of Columbia.”

 

Ultimately, the night will be one with themes of alignment, synchronization, and of course – darkness.

 

SYZYGY: The Solar Eclipse Plays will be performed at 7 pm and 10 pm on Thursday, August 17th with a reception honoring the artists at 9 pm. Tickets are $10 and are available at https://www.tappsartscenter.com/

Playwright Jon Tuttle 

Playwright Jon Tuttle