Thursday, October 04, 2012

Lummox Press: An Anthology of the Best of the Small Press Due out Nov. 2012!



Found Art




To spot a diamond bit

among crushed beer cans

and rusty cars

is to find truth

in this man-made world.



Roseanna Frechette



Lummox Press announces the inaugural issue of a new annual magazine/anthology entitled LUMMOX, due out in Nov. of this year. The first issue has the work of over 160 poets in it and features SPECIAL SPOTLIGHTS on poetry from all over the US and beyond! Guest Editors Georgia Santa Maria (ABQ, NM), Jane Lipman (Santa Fe, NM), Biola Olatunde (Nigeria), Don Kingfisher Campbell (San Gabriel Valley, CA), Doug Holder (Boston area), Ed Nudelman (Academia), Jaimes Palacio (OC poets), Jane Crown (International), Marie Lecrivain (LA Poets), Mike Adams (Colorado area) and Ryan Guth (Mid-South) represent their areas with gusto! In addition to all this, the poetry from all over the US, Canada and the world is represented by both known and unknown poets. There are essays on poetry; reviews of poetry; 2 interviews with a couple of SoCal movers and shakers: G. Murray Thomas & Rick Lupert! There is also a Tributes section to fallen poets. On top of all this there is also artwork by Robert Branaman, Mark Hartenbach, Claudio Parentela, Norman Olson, James McGrath and Raindog. All this for just $25 (shipping included) when you buy direct from the Lummox Press website!



Reserve a copy at: www.lummoxpress.com/journal.html scroll to the bottom of the page for the Pay Pal button or directions to pay by check.

Images of America: BOSTON’S DOWNTOWN MOVIE PALACES




Images of America


BOSTON’S DOWNTOWN

MOVIE PALACES



by Arthur Singer and Ron Goodman

Arcadia Publishing

Charleston SC

Copyright © 2011 by Arthur Singer

Softbound, 612 pgs, $21.99

ISBN 978-0-7385-7631-2





Review by Zvi A. Sesling



In his introduction to Boston’s Downtown Movie Palaces, Arthur Singer notes that the book is, “a ticket, a ticket through time to visit these places in their heyday.” And Singer

keeps the promise. Beginning in 1775 when Faneuil Hall was made into a theatre by the British forces led by Gen. John Burgoyne, the book provides prints, photographs and informative captions to carry readers a little known historical aspect of Boston. There are fires, the first theater with electric lights (under Thomas Edison’s supervision), the inventor of Vaudeville, and a thorough, fascinating history of Washington Street, then Boston’s Broadway, the Modern Theatre, the Orpheum, Loew’s State Theatre and Back Bay theatres, the Metropolitan, Keith Memorial and Paramount theatres. And while the history is an interesting step back in time, the photos are even more fun. So is the scurrying views of Brookline, Somerville, Dorchester, West Newton and other local theaters that were “rescued” and could now be listed as “survivors.” For those old enough to remember original theaters, knowing they are alive and doing well is a thrill.

And the sad demise of great old movie houses like the Saxon, Pilgrim, RKO Keith Memorial, and others. I can remember the Franklin, Morton and Oriental in Dorchester and Mattapan, all gone, though there was an attempt to revive the Oriental in Canton with it twinkling star and floating cloud ceiling. I am told it did not last either.



However, let me say that Arthur Singer and Ron Goodman have provided a great slice of nostalgia and a big chunk of history which is a captivating read. When it is coupled with photos of the past, result is successful and well worth having on one’s bookshelf.

Monday, October 01, 2012

Review of SEQUENCE 8 By Amy Tighe






Review of
SEQUENCE 8
By Amy Tighe
Performed by Les 7 doigts de la main
Directed by Shana Carroll and Sebastien Soldevila
Presented by Arts Emerson, commissioning partner
Cutler Majestic Theatre
219 Tremont Street, Boston Theatre District
September 27 thru October 7, 2012
Recommended for all ages
Tickets from $25-$79
available through ArtsEmerson.org
 or 617-824-8400


Your heart is a generosity.  It beats alone in your own body and in tandem with every other heart on this planet. 

Experiencing SEQUENCE 8 is as intimate and as generous as feeling your own hopeful heart when it finally connects to the beating of our global heart.  The combination of classic circus performances, precisely choreographed and inspired dance and superior acrobatic skills by 8 young artists, all sly masters in their disciplines, simply opens us to a new future.  The troupe, called Les 7 doigts de la main, relies on personal strength, focus and endless joy from the individual artists and a seamless collaboration with one another.  There is almost no high tech technology, the circus props have all been used for hundreds of years in circuses and street theatres, and an elegantly simple set design creates a night of transformation for all. 


Years ago when a lesser circus came to town, at the Boston Garden, you could go and watch the animals out back.  You couldn’t get close to them, but it was better than the zoo.  I was a clown wannabe at the time, and hung around as much as possible to feed my  facepaint  fantasies.  The tigers were housed in the back. There were four baby tigers, less than a year old in a cage together. You could get really close to them and I spent hours watching them. 


 I raised kittens, and was familiar with the play all felines share.  But this was different.  I was witnessing “play” in its original form, an element as necessary as oxygen.  The tribe of tigers were fascinated with everything and attached to nothing.  One watched us humans as we watched her, while she indifferently chewing on a sibling’s ear, and at the same time  another sibling was capturing her tail between his large  clumsy paws.  Then in an instant, they would change, stalk and pounce on the imaginary gazelle in their cage in unison before they collapsed into corners to wash themselves ferociously.


Sequence 8 was sort of like that, only better.
Les 7 doigts de la main is a Montreal based troupe. Their name is a play on words – instead of the unison of five fingers on one hand, they describe their troupe as having “beautifully awkward dexterity” whose “initial goal was to bring circus to a human scale.”  Watch out.  They do it.  
This is NOT Cirque du Soliel or Ringling Brothers.  Yes, many of the feats are similar to what you have seen before—a lithe gorgeous young woman performing scary circus miracles in a ring above the crowd, elastic acrobats throwing themselves through impossible openings, adorable powerful young men scootling up poles as easily as most of us breathe.


But here is what is different: This troupe takes us into their hearts while they play. The evening starts off with a moderator thanking us for being there. After all, he says, they would not be performers without an audience.  And, he adds, “you wouldn’t be much of an audience without the performers—you’d be sitting staring at an empty stage, right? “


And that’s when it starts—the performers have declared  “Tag, you’re it!” Surprised, you are caught and so you just run.  They draw you into to their performance, whether it is doing a double somersault on a bouncing balance beam, or soaring through the theatre while being catapulted by a see-saw, you are there.  Tag, you are it, catch them if you can.  And if you can’t, it doesn’t matter because they have taken us all in to become baby tigers at play. We are led back to engage with the archetype of original play and deep innocence.


The sense of intimacy and familiarity is profoundly crafted into each artist’s performance.  You don’t really watch these performers, you experience your connection to them as they twist, catch, fly and question common sense.  Hanging upside down on a trapeze by just the top of your foot is something we have seen before, but when this troupe performer does it, the entire audience is arching their foot with him and feeling the breeze in their hair as he swings.  We exhaled as one when he landed.
My well dressed neighbors in the seats next to me tell me that they just feel love when they watch Les 7 doigts de la main.  They feel the love between the performers and they feel how the performers love their work.  I am surprised at this, a middle aged couple talking so freely about love after the show.  But, it is the first circus I have ever seen to receive a spontaneous standing ovation, so perhaps more than just my section neighbors feel it.


We talk about youth, about being twice the age of who we have just seen, I think we might go on a diatribe about regrets from our own lives and the yoga classes we should really get back to…..  After all, the audience is mostly older tonight

.
But we don’t. Something has changed. We have witnessed mastery:  the strength of practicing a feat over and over until your body can catch a colleague dropping from 8 feet and throw her to another’s waiting arms without anyone missing a heartbeat.  We witnessed a group of artists not only create and inhabit a world of total interdependence, but play effortlessly and generously within it.  We have felt them open to us as playmates.


As I leave the theatre, I ask the dyed cherry-red-haired 20-something patrons who sat at the top balcony, if they felt the immediacy of the performers.  I also ask two tiny Russian women, who are “a leetle over 70, some” tottering as they leave, what they thought.  Each and everyone replies “I felt  them” as they unconsciously touch their hearts.  “But that leetle girl,” continues my tiny Russian new friend strongly, “I worry for her.”


Sequence 8 is an intimate and intelligent invitation to experience our collective heart.  Go, and play, and be ready to hear your heart open.