Month: June 2008

  • New Works 4 Weeks Festival

    Red Eye Theater’s New Works 4 Weeks Festival is well underway. After its Works-In-Progress performances last week, the festival heads into its Isolated Acts performances this weekend with Justin Jones’s Pinhead, a reaction to Bob Fosse’s All That Jazz. This new pseudo-auto-choreo-biography begins Friday, June 13 and runs through Sunday, June 15, with 8 p.m. performances on Friday and Saturday and 7 p.m. Sunday.

    From June 19 to June 21, Leah Nelson teams up with Roxane Wallace to present Techni-Colored Blues, a piece that moves and freshly examines identity in a Midwestern culture. Performances are at 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.

    The festival closes with a triple bill: Jules Weiland and Janelle Ranek’s C-Sick, Becca Barniskis’s The Queensberry Rules and Tisch Jones’s Up Against the World. The three pieces, which run June 26 – 28 at 8 p.m. nightly, explore varied topics like coping with Hepatitis C, boxing rules as metaphor, and life in the inner city.

    Tickets are $15 for Friday and Saturday shows and $12 for Thursday and Sunday shows. $8 tickets are available for students and seniors with a valid ID. Tickets can be ordered online at www.redeyetheater.org or by calling (612) 870-0309.

  • The Gin Game

    Bain Boehlke and Wendy Lehr are onstage together again in the Jungle Theater’s production of The Gin Game, which opened May 30. Set in a seedy nursing home, this Pulitzer Award-winning drama by D.L. Coburn examines the problems of growing old as two residents strike up a friendship during a card game. Boehlke and Lehr directed themselves in the production.

    Jungle Theater, 2951 S. Lyndale Ave., Minneapolis; 612-822-7063; $26 – $36; half-price rush tickets will be made available 30 minutes prior to each performance.

  • Augustus F. Sherman: Ellis Island Portraits, 1905 – 1920

    A revealing and fascinating set of images snapped by an untrained eye have been making the rounds through museums around the country and finally makes a stop at the Minnesota History Center starting July 4. "Augustus F. Sherman: Ellis Island Portraits, 1905 – 1920", a photographic series of newly arrived immigrants taken by an Ellis Island registry clerk gives viewers a compelling perspective on turn-of-the-century America and the diversification that has become a staple of our country’s past.

    The exhibit runs through September 21. Tickets are $10 for adults, $8 for seniors and college students and $5 for children aged 6 – 17. The cost is free for children under 5 and MHS members. The museum is open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesdays through Saturdays, noon to 5 p.m. Sundays and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on holidays and Mondays through Labor Day. The Minnesota History Center is located at 345 W. Kellogg Blvd. in St. Paul. For more information, visit www.mnhs.org.

  • Through the Looking Glass

    Local artist Jennifer Davis is exhibiting Through the Looking Glass, a series of whimsical and emotional narrative paintings that study the quirks of humanity, at the SOO Visual Arts Center’s Toomer Gallery beginning June 20. According to Davis, she approaches her work as an intuitive process. "From the confusing battles we fight within ourselves, to the familiar feeling of being lost in a crowd, each story is played out in a dreamland that somehow feels like home."

    The exhibit kicks off Friday, June 20 with an opening reception from 6 – 9 p.m. The SOO Visual Arts Center is located at 2640 Lyndale Avenue South in Minneapolis.

  • The Secret Fall of Constance Wilde

    The Guthrie Theatre presents Irish playwright Thomas Kilroy’s The Secret Fall of Constance Wilde, an exploration into the life of the wife of renowned writer Oscar Wilde, who had a highly controversial relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas during the marriage. Starring Sarah Agnew (of the acclaimed one-woman show The Syringa Tree) as the titular character, with Matthew Greer as Oscar Wilde, the play is a mix of fact, fiction, and speculation that brings to life the private world they shared. Puppets and live musicians will also be seen in the play’s transcendental world.

    The Secret Fall of Constance Wilde runs through July 11 on the McGuire Proscenium Stage. Marcela Lorca directs. Tickets are between $29 and $59, and can be purchased by calling (612) 377-2224 or by visiting www.guthrietheater.org.

  • The Once and Future Celt

    The acceptance of identity and the power of family is hilariously chronicled in The Once and Future Celt, Bill Watkins’s conclusion to his trilogy of memoirs. The tale begins when the 21-year-old narrator finds himself in the care of a band of Gypsies. As he begins to fall for one of the camp members, he learns that the Gypsies and the Celts are not so different as he experiences the prejudices they suffer in Britain.

    After returning to his parents’ home in Birmingham, England and dealing with his proud mother and secretive father, Bill departs to follow the call of the Celt, the hireath – really just an excuse to pursue a girl. As he explores and meets a variety of characters, he comes full-circle in his quest for identity and self-actualization as the Celtic revival of the twentieth-century begins to take hold.

    Following the acclaimed A Celtic Childhood and Scotland Is Not for the Squeamish, The Once and Future Celt is "a delightful and often touching book, full of sly rebellion." (Frank Delaney, author of Tipperary and Ireland.) Bill Watkins will be appearing at Magers & Quinn booksellers on Tuesday, June 17 at 7 p.m. for a book reading and signing.

    The Once and Future Celt is available now from Scarletta Press. For more information, visit www.scarlettapress.com. Magers & Quinn booksellers is located at 3038 Hennepin Avenue South in Minneapolis.

  • God for President

    What would the world be like if God were president? Local inspirational speaker and spiritual psychotherapist Lisa Venable answers that question in her first book, God for President: A Parable About the Power of Love. When disillusioned activist Sarah Rose retreats from Washington to her Minnesota hometown, she begins to wonder exactly what would happen if God were the leader of the free world. Soon a mysterious woman enters her life and recruits her to help in a campaign for the Oval Office. It is on the road to the White House that Rose is able to use love, not fear, to govern a country.

    In the tradition of The Celestine Prophecy, God for President is a reminder that no one person or party may have the corner on "right" or "the American way" and that using love is a better way to run a country than fear.

    Lisa Venable will appear at Magers & Quinn Booksellers to discuss the book God for President, now on sale from Conari Press.

  • August Moon

    Mira James, heroine and amateur sleuth of the Murder by Month mystery series, returns in local author Jess Lourey’s newest work August Moon. This fourth installment of the series finds Mira about to leave adopted home Battle Lake, Minnesota for good — until a high school cheerleader is murdered. The act is soon linked to a local pastor who runs an evangelical Bible Camp that gives Mira a "Stepford Wives meets Hee Haw" vibe. But in order to catch the killer, Mira must first confront darkness in her past.

    The Murder by Month series, which includes May Day and June Bug, has been praised by The Strand magazine as, "Sweet, nutty, evocative of the American Heartland, and utterly addicting." Lourey’s previous work, Knee High by the Fourth of July, was a finalist for the Left Coast Crime Lefty Award for humorous mysteries.

    August Moon is on sale now from Midnight Ink Books. Once Upon a Crime is located at 604 West 26th Street in Minneapolis.

  • Murder at the Bad Girl's Bar & Grill

    A murder in a south Florida retirement community would seem to be an event that is definitely out-of-the-ordinary. Add in a blind heiress loved by the town’s only cop, a former slasher film queen who runs a raucous Bar & Grill for the under-65, and a trio of Swedish circusfolk, and you’ve got yourself a good mystery. Acclaimed author N.M. Kelby offers up her fourth book, Murder at the Bad Girl’s Bar & Grill, which went on sale June 3rd. Library Journal has praised Kelby, a former Twin Cities journalist whose stories have appeared in Minnesota Monthly, as a cross between Carl Hiaasen and Christopher Moore, and Hiaasen described her as, "A natural-born storyteller who manages to be very funny and very wise at the same time."

    Kelby will be appearing the University of Minnesota Bookstore on Wednesday, June 25 at 4 p.m., and at Magers and Quinn Booksellers on Thursday, June 26 at 7 p.m. Earlier that day (Thursday), she will be speaking on the Write On Radio! program of KFAI: Fresh Air Radio 90.3/106.7 (11 a.m.).

    Murder at the Bad Girl’s Bar & Grill is on sale now from Shaye Areheart Books. Visit the author’s website, www.nmkelby.com, for more information.

  • The Man Behind Bigger, Stronger, Faster

    Thanks for taking the time
    to talk to The Rake. I throughly enjoyed the film.
    How did you get into film, particularly documentary film making?

    Well, it’s interesting, I didn’t
    ever want to make a documentary, but my brothers and I had been talking
    about the whole steroid issue, and I was already a filmmaker at the
    USC film school. I was also probably the only filmmaker who is
    a power lifter (I can bench press 500 lbs) so between lifting weights
    and making movies and it was the kind of the time to put them both together
    I guess.

    When did you decide that
    this was a documentary you wanted to make?

    Part of it came from talking
    to my brother Smelly about this guy in the locker room. He was
    laughing that this guy Andrew was on the juice and we started think,
    well maybe there’s more to this and we started discussing it.
    Before that my producer Alex and I were discussing doing a film together
    about the subculture of bodybuilding and body obsession but we really
    didn’t have our finger on what the subject matter would be, something
    to do with the gym you know? But it all kind of came together
    to be about steroids and American culture through talking to my brothers
    and talking to my producer.

    Tell me about the process
    of making the film, how did you bring people on board? How did
    you initially finance the film?

    Well it’s pretty simple, Alex
    Buono our producer worked out in Gold’s Gym with me and we were talking
    about this project. I was actually selling memberships there just
    to pay the bills (as a filmmaker you’re not always on the top of the
    world money wise) so it basically came about that he wanted to produce
    it. So I went over to his house basically every day and a friend
    Tamsin Rawady who is a documentary filmmaker got attached to the idea
    as well. We all started to develop the idea together as a team
    so we spent about 3 months writing the treatment and my producer Alex
    gave it to his agent rob who also represents Jim Czarnecki, the producer
    of Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11. Jim read the treatment
    and fell in love with it so he got on board to produce as well, but
    he lives in New York so he was more of a supervising producer.
    From there we basically went out and started raising money and Jim kind
    of served as our insurance policy to get the film done on time and make
    it all happen.

    How did the film change
    from inception to the final cut? Are their interviews you wanted
    to get but couldn’t? Any additional points you wanted to make?

    You know it’s funny from the
    original treatment to the final cut the film changed a lot and I’ll
    tell you the original treatment was so well written and thought out
    so the question was: how can we get this on film? So we went through
    this whole process of interviewing all these people and we thought a
    movie about steroids just wouldn’t cut it so we set it up to be about
    cheating in general. After awhile we realized that the steroid
    issue was so big and complex that we had to come back to it so we ended
    up cutting the film back so it ended up pretty close to the original
    treatment. As far as interviews, we obviously wanted to interview
    Arnold [Schwarzenegger], Hulk Hogan, and Sylvester Stallone but a lot
    of times there are some things people don’t want to talk about.
    It was something we just had to put our heads together and figure out
    how to tell the story without actually having those interviews.

    This film puts you
    and your family under a lot of scrutiny, how did you initially pitch
    the film to them? How do you think they will be impacted by the
    film’s release?

    Um, I used completely hidden
    cameras and they don’t know that I made the movie [laughs]. Basically
    my brothers wanted to talk, they had a story they wanted to tell and
    in talking to my mom I just said, "Hey, you know I want to do this
    movie about steroids," and she said, "Oh, so you want to involve
    your brothers, so I guess you’re going to talk about how you guys are
    all natural even though everyone else is taking steroids." I
    told her that there were actually a lot of things in the movie that
    she probably wouldn’t like and she said, "Yeah, I’m fine with everything,
    I don’t really care."

    You
    know I would always ask my mom to be in my projects and if I told her
    I needed someone to play the crook she would be like, "No I’m not
    going to be in it!" Now that I finally get her to be in one
    of my movies it’s actually quite a bit different different than she
    expected. I think in the end that if you really watch the movie,
    she likes the way it helps our family communicate.

    I was really struck by how
    exhaustive the film was in terms of the number of interviews you did,
    the lengths to which you went to make one point another, are there parts
    of the film that you would have liked to include but couldn’t for lack
    of time? What ended up on the cutting room floor?

    We had a cut that I thought
    was actually really good, it was 2 hours and 15 minutes which is really
    long for a documentary. You know I was watching Bowling for Columbine
    and noticed they could have cut a minute here and a minute there and
    put in other stuff. So when I tried to pack the documentary full
    of stuff at like an hour and 49 minutes it was way too full. Even
    now it’s kind of a dizzying pace but it’s just the right tone and you
    don’t get too confused. What I didn’t realize when I was first
    making the movie was that sometimes you just need to breath, you need
    a couple beats for people to digest the information."

    What’s next for you?
    Any more projects in the works?

    I’m working on a TV pilot about
    Gold’s Gym basically, it’s sort of the office with wacky characters
    that I’ve met in the gym over the years and the little situations that
    have come about. I’m also working on a documentary tackling the
    subject of obesity.