In my next “Sightings” column, to be published in Saturday’s Wall Street Journal, I consider the case of G
Archives for 2006
TT: Almanac
“When I was a child, art seemed like a tunnel to me. At the end of that tunnel I could see light where the world opened up, waiting.”
Jerome Robbins, interview with Robert Kotlowitz (Show, December 1964)
TT: So you want to see a show?
Here’s my list of recommended Broadway and off-Broadway shows, updated weekly. In all cases, I gave these shows strongly favorable reviews in The Wall Street Journal when they opened. For more information, click on the title.
Warning: Broadway shows marked with an asterisk were sold out, or nearly so, last week.
BROADWAY:
– Avenue Q* (musical, R, adult subject matter and one show-stopping scene of puppet-on-puppet sex, reviewed here)
– The Drowsy Chaperone* (musical, G/PG-13, mild sexual content and a profusion of double entendres, reviewed here)
– The Lieutenant of Inishmore (black comedy, R, adult subject matter and extremely graphic violence, reviewed here)
– The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee* (musical, PG-13, mostly family-friendly but contains a smattering of strong language and a production number about an unwanted erection, reviewed here)
– The Wedding Singer (musical, PG-13, some sexual content, reviewed here)
OFF BROADWAY:
– Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living In Paris (musical revue, R, adult subject matter and sexual content, reviewed here)
– Slava’s Snowshow (performance art, G, child-friendly, reviewed here)
CLOSING SOON:
– Indian Blood (drama, G, reviewed here, closes Sept. 2)
– Pig Farm (comedy, PG-13, some sexual content, reviewed here, closes Sept. 3)
– Sweeney Todd (musical, R, adult subject matter, reviewed here, closes Sept. 3)
TT: Almanac
“I used to think that being mad might be rather fun. Inconvenient, of course, and awful, but quite exciting, with visions and things, and thinking the Russians were after you, and doing marvelous paintings. But it isn’t at all really, not my sort anyway. Nothing ever happens. And the other people are such bores. Those first…weeks I suppose they were, it was like being on holiday in a lousy hotel with it raining all the time and you can’t speak the language and let’s say you’ve lost your glasses and can’t read.”
Kingsley Amis, The Anti-Death League
TT: Almanac
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OGIC: Elsewhere
Around and about the internets (a list prone to updates throughout the day):
– Peter Suderman scratches his head at some critics’ favorable comparison of World Trade Center to United 93:
[Slate Senior Editor Bryan] Curtis sums up his feelings about WTC by saying that, in comparison to United 93, Stone’s movie is simply more “bearable,” and that’s why he could recommend WTC but not United 93.
This strikes me as exactly wrong. That Stone’s movie is bearable is what is most problematic and most disturbing about it. The day that his movie depicts was unbearable, terrible, gut-wrenching–it’s a day that should never be made “bearable” by the tidy formulas of Hollywood. Greengrass’ movie, indeed, was unbearable, a horror to watch. I’m glad I saw it, but I never want to watch it again. But it was the dread that Greengrass conjured, the impossible, sickening futility of 9/11 that made the movie so effective, so powerful, and so utterly right. Stone’s movie, in its lame adherence to convention, trivializes a day that was not and never will be even remotely conventional. There are many words one might use to describe 9/11 or representations of it, but bearable should never be among them.
– Tyler Green notes that Rockefeller Center is set to get its own Anish Kapoor sculpture. It’s pretty, but it’s no bean.
– Lizzie Skurnick, aka the Old Hag, talks poetry writing and reading in an interview at Blue Poppy:
I periodically re-memorize “Leda and the Swan”, “The More Loving One,” and Sir Thomas Wyatt’s “They Flee from Me…”, because, in my old age, the words do flee from me. Blake’s “The Chimney Sweeper” I like to recite, especially the first stanza. (“My mother died when I was very young/and my father sold me while yet my tongue” is a great rhyme.) My primary regret is that I was not an English boy born in 1906, forced to memorize reams and reams of poetry while declining Latin verbs. If there is a semi-sadistic teacher with one last Mr. Chips-y semester in him/her, I can pay.
I had a somewhat sadistic fifth-grade public school teacher, actually, who made us memorize everything from “The Walrus and the Carpenter” to the Declaration of Independence to “The Highwayman.” He made a little money on the side by selling popsicles after school, but only to the kids who had earned the right to buy one by successfully reciting that day’s passage from memory–weird guy, great experience. A few decades later, I’m still memorizing poetry, and I’ll memorize a good poem for nothing. (My all-time favorite hockey quote was uttered by the late great Red Wing Sid Abel, who once said “We play hockey for money, but we’ll play the Toronto Maple Leafs for nothing.”)
– Girish started it:
There are movies we encounter at certain points in our appreciation for the medium that become, almost by accident, little breakthroughs in our viewing life. They may not be great masterpieces–though they well might–but the important thing is that we have the fortune of meeting up with them at just the right juncture in our development. I think of them as “signpost films”: they take a territory that was previously foggy or unmapped to us and they suddenly make us see and learn something revelatory about this art-form that we love. These encounters make us exclaim, “So, that’s what this movie’s doing!” And it’s a lesson we take with us, carry over and apply, to hundreds of other films we will see in the future.
And now they’re talking about signpost movies at 2 Blowhards too, and other sites as yet undiscovered by me, I’m sure. This question will bear some thought before I can officially submit my own, but a couple of titles spring to mind right away: Jacques Rivette’s C
TT: Almanac
Maybe someday we can live on the moon
Because we can doesn’t mean we have to
Rockets may come, astronauts go
Nothing so precious as what we don’t know
Erin McKeown, “Life on the Moon”
TT: Just passing through
In case you’re curious, I wrote a good-sized chunk of Hotter Than That: A Life of Louis Armstrong last week, and I plan to do the same thing this week. I also have two Wall Street Journal deadlines to hit and five plays to see, one in Connecticut, one in Massachusetts, and three in New York.
Get the idea? See you later. Over to you, OGIC.