Archive for June 2010

Two screenings ONLY – “Still Bill” doco – Saturday, July 3rd – Eclectic Company Theatre

Bill Withers

This Saturday — two screenings ONLY – “Still Bill” -  July 3rd 2010, at the Eclectic Company Theatre.

Singer-songwriter Bill Withers once humbly opined about himself, “I think I”™m kind of like pennies. You have “™em in your pocket but you don”™t remember they”™re there.”

Can it be possible that – at the time he uttered these words – this marvelous singer didn”™t realize how unforgettable his voice and his hit songs truly were?

Born July 4, 1938, William Harrison “Bill” Withers, Jr. is an American musician with a distinctive baritone. This is a man who managed to overcome the affliction of a debilitating stutter and go on to attain a degree of fame, performing and recording from 1970 until 1985. Some of his best-known songs are Lean on Me, Ain”™t No Sunshine, Use Me, Just the Two of Us, Lovely Day and Grandma’s Hands.

According to wikipedia, his first single, Ain”™t No Sunshine, was released in September 1971, becoming a breakthrough hit for Withers and reaching the number six position on the U.S. R&B chart and number three on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

As reported in Rolling Stone magazine, when the thirty-one-year-old Withers recorded Ain”™t No Sunshine, his first chart hit, he was still working at a factory making toilet seats for 747 airplanes. Withers originally intended to write more lyrics for the portion of the song where he repeats the phrase “˜I know”™ twenty-six times, but the other musicians told him to leave it the way it was.

“I was this factory worker puttering around,” Withers said. “So when they said to leave it like that, I left it.”

Ain”™t No Sunshine has been covered by a staggering 140 artists, including Marvin Gaye, The Police and Sting, Otis Redding, Kenny Rodgers, DMX and – my favorite cover version – The Rockmelons, featuring Deni Hines. You can see a full list of the artists here.

Withers told Songfacts.com that he was inspired to write Ain”™t No Sunshine after watching the 1962 movie Days of Wine and Roses. He said that “I was watching…Days Of Wine And Roses, with Lee Remick and Jack Lemmon. They were both alcoholics who were alternately weak and strong. It’s like going back for seconds on rat poison. Sometimes you miss things that weren’t particularly good for you. It’s just something that crossed my mind from watching that movie, and probably something else that happened in my life that I’m not aware of.”

This new feature film documentary by Damiani Baker and Alex Vlack, “Still Bill,” puts the man and his music front and center.

You will want to see this film for an in-depth look at the man, to hear the wonderful songs and to fall in love with his music all over again.

Screening at The Eclectic Company Theatre

5312 Laurel Canyon Blvd., Valley Village, CA 91607.

Saturday, July 3, 2010 at 7 and 9 p.m.

Tickets are only $10.00

Phone: (818) 508-3003

Reserve online: bricketson@rocketmail.com

Report by Pauline Adamek

Femmes fatales, sin and vengeance — The Ornament and the Enchantress film series at the Getty Center

mata-hari-greta-garbo-poster1This weekend ONLY – the Getty presents The Ornament and the Enchantress film series, at the J. Paul Getty Museum at the Getty Center June 26th and 27th, 2010.

These classic femme fatale films complement the newly opened art exhibition, “The Spectacular Art of Jean-Léon Gérôme” – on display until September 12th, 2010.

Who doesn”™t love a lush harem, bejeweled dancers, chiseled slaves and epic tales of sin and vengeance? Indulge your appetite for romance, exoticism, sensuality and kitsch in The Ornament and the Enchantress film series, presented by the J. Paul Getty Museum in complement to the exhibition “The Spectacular Art of Jean-Léon Gérôme,” on view at the J. Paul Getty Museum at the Getty Center until September 12th, 2010.

This film series was inspired by the sensual, implicitly eroticized women in Gérôme”™s work, in which luxuriant odalisques are placed in opulently decorated interiors.  His paintings inspired Hollywood directors from D.W. Griffith to Steven Spielberg, and gave rise to the irresistibly larger-than-life enchantresses in Salome, Cleopatra, Samson and Delilah, and Mata Hari, the four films to be screened at the Harold M. Williams Auditorium at the Getty Center June 26-27.

Given Hollywood”™s Puritanism, it”™s no surprise that these femme fatales pay the ultimate price for their erotic inclinations. But when they go out, they go out with style!

greta-garbo-mata-hari-1931

The Ornament and the Enchantress is presented Saturday and Sunday, June 26th and 27th in the Harold M. Williams Auditorium at the Getty Center.

Admission is free, but reservations for each film are required. To make reservations, call (310) 440-7300 or visit the official site

Schedule of Films

June 26, 3pm

SALOME

(1922) Directed by Charles Bryant

Producer: Nazimova. Screenplay: Peter Winters. Based on Oscar Wilde”™s play. Cinematographer: Charles Van Enger. Art Director: Natacha Rambova. With: Nazimova, Rose Dione, Mitchell Lewis, Nigel de Brulier. 35mm, tinted, silent, 75 min. Live piano accompaniment by Michael Mortilla. Preservation funded by George Eastman House.

A fascinating early art film, SALOME is part Aubrey Beardsley”™s Art Nouveau illustrations and part narcotic-induced, decadent “˜20s Hollywood.

Stage actress and screen star Alla Nazimova is Salome, the biblical seductress who, bored by her uncle Herod”™s lewd attraction to her, turns her interest to the jailed John the Baptist who, of course, only has eyes for God. Played here as the ultimate femme fatale, Salome agrees to dance for Herod under one condition: that he bring her the head of the pious prisoner.

June 26, 7pm

CLEOPATRA

(1934) Directed by Cecil B. DeMille

Producer: C.B. DeMille. With: Claudette Colbert, Warren William, Henry Wilcoxon, Gertrude Michael. 35mm, 102 min. Preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive.

Laying the groundwork for the epic opulence and style of the type of film that would be categorized simply as DeMillion, the great producer/director here forgoes Shakespearian inclination for his preferred flavor of history: sin and sex with a moral chaser.

Cleopatra (Colbert) is seen kidnapped by her brother Ptolemy”™s minions and dumped in the desert warned never to return to Alexandria. Cleo has other ideas and knowing that Julius Caesar is to arrive to annex Egypt, she has herself transported home to be thrown at his feet. Caesar falls hard and fast and takes her back to Rome with the intent to wed. His speech doesn”™t go over well however, and now it”™s Anthony who Cleo must seduce and does so in the film”™s greatest set piece: The Royal Barge. Here art direction, costuming and spectacle converge in an intoxicating cabaret. Cue the chiseled oarsmen, the garlanded ox, the slave girls, some dressed in leopard, some clad only in seaweed as they wriggle on the deck to offer seashells full of jewels.  Anthony is hooked (who wouldn”™t be?) and remains with Cleopatra until fate intervenes.

June 27, Noon

SAMSON AND DELILAH

(1949) Directed by Cecil B. DeMille

Producer: Cecil B. DeMille. Screenplay: Jesse L. Lasky Jr., Frederic M. Franc. Cinematographer: George Barnes. Editor: Anne Bauchens. With: Hedy Lamarr, Victor Mature, George Sanders, Angela Lansbury, Olive Dearing. 35mm, 120 min.

Long before there were STAR WARS, E.T, or IRON MAN, before there was the “wide release” in the 16-theater Multiplex, there was Cecil B. DeMille and in every major city there was the grand movie palace. DeMille”™s films were cinematic events, the original blockbusters. He has been heralded as the first filmmaker to “give the public what it wanted,” and what it wanted was over-the-top costumes and sets, and epic storylines of love and vengeance, wrapped in a neat package of forbidden sins and piety. Muscular biblical kitsch, they don”™t make “˜em like they used to.

June 27, 3pm

MATA HARI

(1932) Directed by George Fitzmaurice

Producer: Irving Thalberg (uncredited). Screenplay: Benjamin Glazer, Leo Birinski. Cinematographer: William Daniels. Editor: Frank Sullivan. With: Greta Garbo, Ramon Novarro, Lionel Barrymore, Lewis Stone, C. Henry Gordon. 35mm, 90 min.

As a young woman, Dutch-born Margaretha Gertrud Zelle studied dance in Indonesia while stationed there with her husband in the late 1800s.  At 27 she left her family, took the stage name of Mata Hari, and scandalized polite Parisian society with her semi-erotic dance shows. Her act was very popular, but even more were her provocative photos wherein she wore nothing but a bejeweled bra and headdress. By the time World War I hit, she was close to 40 and less in demand as a dancer. She was, however, a popular courtesan with high-ranking officers and politicians. Her promiscuity and lifestyle gave rise to the notion that she was a spy, potentially a double agent, and she was eventually put on trial and executed.

Here Mata is a dedicated German spy with her eye on both an elder Russian General (Barrymore) and the young, goo-goo-eyed Russian flyer Rosanoff (Novarro). Shown to have all Paris at her fingertips, she hastens her decline in falling for Rosanoff. Blinded (literally) by love, Rosanoff visits the jailed Mata who is doomed, as a classic femme fatale, to a short but glamorous life.

The J. Paul Getty Trust is an international cultural and philanthropic institution devoted to the visual arts that features the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Getty Research Institute, the Getty Conservation Institute, and the Getty Foundation. The J. Paul Getty Trust and Getty programs serve a varied audience from two locations:  the Getty Center in Los Angeles and the Getty Villa in Malibu.

Visiting the Getty Center

The Getty Center is open Tuesday through Friday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. It is closed Monday and major holidays. Admission to the Getty Center is always free. Parking is $15 per car, but free after 5pm on Saturdays and for evening events throughout the week. No reservation is required for parking or general admission. Reservations are required for event seating and groups of 15 or more. Please call (310) 440-7300 (English or Spanish) for reservations and information. The TTY line for callers who are deaf or hearing impaired is (310) 440-7305. The Getty Center is at 1200 Getty Center Drive, Los Angeles, California.

Additional information is available here.

Sign up for e-Getty to receive free monthly highlights of events at the Getty Center and the Getty Villa via e-mail, or visit the official site for a complete calendar of public program.

Report by Pauline Adamek

Cal Phil – Summer Season – 2010

Maestro Vener with the Cal Phil at Disney Concert Hall

Kicking off more than a sparkling July 4th Celebration – the California Philharmonic launches its 2010 summer season at The Arboretum and Walt Disney Concert Hall with “America the Beautiful: A Powerful Patriotic Performance.”

Grammy-award winning singer and actor Brian McKnight and pianist Bryan Pezzone will appear as guest artists.

Saturday, June 26, 2010; 7:30 p.m.; The Arboretum
Sunday, June 27, 2010; 2 p.m.; Walt Disney Concert Hall

– ALSO —

Summer”™s coming”¦but that doesn”™t mean Disney Hall will go “˜dark.”™

The California Philharmonic shines a light on stellar composers, including Richard Wagner and John Williams, at its summer series at Walt Disney Concert Hall, beginning Sunday June 27th, 2010, with performances at 2 p.m.

***Check the official Cal Phil website for Arboretum dates.***

Lovers of great orchestral music are well aware that Walt Disney Concert Hall is one of Southern California”™s top destinations of choice throughout the traditional, Fall through Spring season. But what many may not know – and will be glad to learn – is that the music at the world-renowned venue does not stop just because it”™s Summertime!

The program is as follows:

AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL“”June 27

A Powerful Patriotic Performance Rhapsody In Blue “¢ 1812 Overture “¢ Lincoln Portrait”¨Â  Sousa Marches “¢ Appalachian Spring”¨ with singer and actor Brian McKnight, pianist Bryan Pezzone

ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER GOES TO ITALY “”July 11

Theatre”™s Best””From London to Rome Phantom Of The Opera “¢ Cats “¢ Evita “¢ Tosca “¢ Aida”¨La Traviata “¢ Jesus Christ Superstar “¢ Nessun Dorma  “¨with singers Angel Blue, Mathew Edwardsen, Ralph Cato and the Cal Phil Chorale

JOHN WILLIAMS & FRIENDS “”July 25

From the Cinema to the Opera House Star Wars “¢ E.T. “¢ Superman “¢ Schindler”™s List”¨Â  Lord of the Rings “¢ Wagner: The Ring “¢ The Terminal”¨ featuring Lasers by YLS, plus cellist Dennis Karmazyn and clarinetist Michael Arnold

FRANK, TONY & THE MAESTRO “”August 8

Cocktails to Classics Hits made popular by Frank Sinatra & Tony Bennett  “¨Saint-Saens: Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso”¨Â  Rimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade “¢ Elgar: Enigma Variations  “¨featuring the song stylings of Broadway star Kevin Earley, plus violinist Daniel Shindarov

BEETHOVEN & BROADWAY“”August 21

The Ninth Meets Broadway Magic Beauty And The Beast “¢ The Lion King “¢ Les Miserables”¨Â  The Music Man “¢ Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 – Ode To Joy”¨Â  Beethoven: Leonore No. 3 “¢ The Little Mermaid”¨ featuring singers Catherine Ireland, Marya Basaraba, Steve Grabe, Roberto Perlas Gomez and the Cal Phil Chorale

“Disney Hall but is not only one of the most beautiful and acoustically superior venues in the world but is easily accessible to major freeways, has convenient built-in parking and is close to major museums, great restaurants and other destinations,” says Mindy Kernc, Box Office Director. “We always suggest that patrons make the concert the centerpiece of an enriching and rewarding day trip.”

Kernc is not exaggerating when she describes an afternoon with Cal Phil as enriching. A highlight for longtime devotees of Cal Phil is the opportunity to attend the orchestra”™s “Talks with the Maestro” sessions in BP Hall at 1 p.m. prior to the concert.

“I look forward to every talk because that”™s just what it is – a talk,” says Cal Phil”™s founder and music director Victor Vener. “It”™s not a lecture. I can”™t stress that enough! The audience and I have a conversation. Ask any question about the music you wish, and I”™ll do my best to answer it and help make your musical experience even more vibrant.”

“You”™ll learn a lot,” adds longtime Cal Phil patron and Board member Grace Thompson. “Victor earned a doctorate in music performance from USC, so he knows music. But he also knows how to make music magical and fun”¦whether he”™s giving a “˜Talk with the Maestro”™ or is onstage. I sometimes wonder which is louder, the applause or the laughter. There”™s truly no experience like Cal Phil”¦as our packed halls attest.”

Subscriptions and tickets for Cal Phil at Walt Disney Concert Hall are available through Ticketmaster either online or by calling (800) 745 3000

The California Philharmonic will present its summer series at Walt Disney Concert Hall, beginning Sunday, June 27th, 2010, at 2 p.m.

***Check the official Cal Phil website for Arboretum performance dates.***

For detailed information on seating and pricing, visit the Cal Phil website or call (626) 300 8200

ABOUT THE CAL PHIL:

In 1995, Music Director and Conductor Victor Vener and a small group of enthusiastic, dedicated music lovers based in Pasadena, California founded The CalPhil Foundation. The Foundation, a nonprofit community benefit organization, supports the California Philharmonic in its quest to expand awareness of classical music, thus increasing the interest and support for great timeless music with wide audience appeal, from the classical and operatic repertoire to diverse genres of jazz, pops, Hollywood and Broadway.

Cal Phil presents twenty-four concerts per year in five different, but equally impressive, venues throughout Los Angeles County. These series include Cal Phil at the Walt Disney Concert Hall (downtown Los Angeles), Cal Phil at the Ambassador (Pasadena), Cal Phil Music, Martinis and the Maestro (Castle Green Hotel in Pasadena), Cal Phil Festival on the Green, and Cal Phil at The Mill (The Old Mill in San Marino).

– review by Pauline Adamek

Blood Red Lost Head Dead Falcon: The Niebelungen at Highways Performance Space

Blood Red Skull

Three performances THIS WEEKEND only – experience a mind-bending tale of magic, love, loyalty and revenge, in a crazy, collage-infused, mash-up performance piece presented by collision/theory.

Written and directed by Aaron Henne, this ambitious multi-media performance combines stunning visuals, cutting-edge design and breathtaking video footage created by Michael Manning and Lyn Gaza with live performance from a quintet of talented actors.

collision/theory’s Blood Red Lost Head Dead Falcon: The Nibelungen deconstructs the ancient Nibelungenlied tale — an 800 year-old German epic poem on which Wagner”™s Ring Cycle of operas is based — and re-shapes the story into a wild, multi-media performance piece.

collision/theory”™s Blood Red Lost Head Dead Falcon: THE NIBELUNGEN also references this tale of magic, love, loyalty and revenge. This mash up performance piece brings together projected animation sequences, video art, original music, live performance, movement sequences and lyrical language, to theatrically explore and explode this ancient tale.

Photo -- Brunhilde, played by Julie Lockhart, with artwork by Michael Manning and photography by Rene Gomez

This incredible theatrical and video artistic creation has been created in conjunction with the LA Opera Ring Festival 2010.

collision/theory’s Blood Red Lost Head Dead Falcon: The Nibelungen promises to be a truly unique, engaging, and exhilarating night of theatre. With only three performances, you truly don”™t want to miss out so order your tickets today!

Highways Performance Space Artistic Director, Leo Garcia, presents
collision/theory’s Blood Red Lost Head Dead Falcon: The Nibelungen

Written and Directed by Aaron Henne
Visual Design and Projections by Michael Manning and Lyn Gaza
Movement by Julie Lockhart
with performances by Julie Lockhart, Paul Vroom, Garth Whitten, Mark McClain Wilson and Diana Wyenn

Performances are:

Friday, June 25th at 8:30PM

Saturday, June 26th at 8:30PM

and Sunday June 27th at 7:30PM

Highways Performance Space
1651 18th Street @ The 18th Street Arts Center
(½ a block North of Olympic)
Santa Monica, CA

Ticket Information / Phone Reservations:   310-315-1459
purchase tickets online

Report by Pauline Adamek

Identify Foundation / ArtSeen Fundraiser Event

Identify - Amber and artUnder the stars, partying in Hollywood – luminaries of the Art World mingled with dedicated Animal Activists at an elegant party designed to launch the new ArtSeen website, in conjunction with Fabrik Magazine, as well as benefiting the Identify Foundation. The fundraiser party took place on Thursday June 10th, 2010 at the W Hotel in Hollywood.

The lively party featured a live DJ spinning cool and cutting edge tracks as well as delicious catering courtesy of the W Hotel”™s Delphine Restaurant. It was such a pleasure to sample so many tasty vegetarian options, such as Puy lentil salad and tabbouleh.

A highlight of the evening was the tantalizing presentation of a clip from the Identify Foundation”™s Mountain Gorilla Mission documentary – a two minute “sizzle reel” – which gave us an idea of the fine work the Identify Foundation is doing to save endangered species such as the Mountain Gorillas in Rwanda, Elephants in Chad and Panthers in Florida – all perilously endangered creatures.

Identify - Scott Ryan at the fundraiser

The projected footage was followed by an exciting live art auction featuring the works of several well-known Los Angeles artists including a work of art by one of the Identify Foundation”™s co-founders, Amber Arbucci. Twenty artists were featured, with nine pieces presented at the live auction.

THE SETTING:

The gorgeous event was staged in a fabulous open-air courtyard of the chic W Hotel, right in the epicenter of that glitzy entertainment capital known as Hollywood.

Guests and supporters lounged in the W Hotel”™s outdoor space, dubbed “Station Hollywood”, and partied under the stars, sipping cool cocktails and dazzling drinks from the full service bar. Lounging on the plush patio furniture, activists and art lovers were engrossed in friendly discussion in the enchanting moonlit courtyard.

Identify - group

THE CAUSE:

The Identify Foundation – Protecting our “modern day dinosaurs” one endangered species at a time.

ABOUT THE IDENTIFY FOUNDATION:

Founded by Amber Arbucci, Doyle Leeding and Scott Ryan, the Identify Foundation (aka “IF”) design missions to help save endangered species, address critical environmental issues and human rights issues.

In order to educate and activate the public, “IF” also connects scientists, researchers and advocates with their audience of supporters: local activists and philanthropists.

Through outreach, funding and an interactive portal (in development), the foundation connects these advocates in the field with their supporters online through project related visual media, project updates, and newly found data.

The Identify Foundation just completed their first mission in Rwanda to benefit the endangered Mountain Gorilla. Their tireless work continues with saving the Elephants in Chad and Panthers in Florida – all perilously endangered creatures.

Future undertakings include an (obviously) urgently needed Gulf Wildlife Rehabilitation mission, as well as a Pink Dolphin mission off the coast of Brazil and also some serious efforts to save the Great White Shark from extinction in September. The hard-working members of The Identify Foundation are dedicated to tirelessly preserving the lives of as many creatures as possible, preventing them from vanishing off the face of our beleaguered planet Earth forever.

Identify - Gorilla doc

THE WEBSITE LAUNCH:

A brand new website – ArtSeen – was launched, in collaboration with Fabrik magazine.

Established in 1993, Art Seen is a fine art consulting firm representing a select group of more than 100 artists from around the world.

They offer professional art procurement and advisory services to corporations, businesses, architects, designers, developers and private individuals. They work collaboratively with their clients to deliver excellence on a wide range of project types and sizes.

Art Seen provides original and limited edition artworks in a variety of media ranging from paintings on canvas to works on paper, sculpture and photography. Services include selection and acquisition of artworks, defining budgets, commissions from concept to completion, framing, art placement and installation.

Identify - painting on the block

THE LIVE ART AUCTION:

The live art auction featured the works of several well-known Los Angeles artists including a work of art by one of the Identify Foundation”™s co-founders, Amber Arbucci. Twenty artists were featured, with nine pieces presented at the live auction.

Hosted by Charity Winters, the live Art auction featured stunning paintings and photographs created by the following artists:

James Verbicky
George Kleiman
Todd Williamson
Miguel Osuna whose work includes stunning LA streetscapes and elegant freeway vistas
Ann Thornycroft
Rhia
Amber Arbucci
Michael Moon
Luc Leestemaker
Steve Burtch

At this highly successful and super fun launch party, a good time was had by all!

CONTACT INFO:

The Identify Foundation
ArtSeen
Fabrik magazine

identifyfoundation@gmail.com

Report by Pauline Adamek