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CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS - February 2012

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Portland Playhouse
To Lose Church Space?

Does staging plays count as “community service?” Local government has said no, meaning Portland Playhouse may lose its “home church” tomorrow. Read the Playhouse’s plea.

submitted by Portland Playhouse

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The King Neighborhood Association and Portland Playhouse will be appearing before the City Council on March 1, 2012 at 3:30pm to appeal the Bureau of Developmental Service’s decision to not allow plays as a form of arts and community service. A nine-month application process culminated last month in BDS denying Portland Playhouse’s request to perform plays as part of their Conditional Use Permit for a Community Service Use. The Bureau allowed other components of the Playhouse application, but stated that “theater” can only be defined as a “Commercial, Retail Sales” operation.

The Portland Playhouse, a 501c3 not-for-profit organization, currently leases the old church at 602 NE Prescott Street and has been an integral part of the King Neighborhood for the last four years, performing culturally diverse plays from playwrights such as August Wilson. Portland Playhouse also provides ongoing classes, workshops, a summer camp, and humanities programming as a community arts center. The Neighborhood Association maintains that the work of the Playhouse is Community Service Use rather than Commercial Retail Sales, and that it is vital towards promoting and supporting arts and culture within the King Neighborhood.

The City Council meeting will take place March 1, 2012 at 3:30pm at City Hall (1221 SW 4th Avenue, Portland, OR 97204). The King Neighborhood Association urgently asks community supporters and arts enthusiasts to attend the meeting at City Hall and voice your support to allow Portland Playhouse to continue as a vital and necessary resource for arts in the King Neighborhood. The application is supported by RACC, Oregon Cultural Trust, Creative Advocacy Network, and The Urban League as well as the King, Sabin, and Humboldt neighborhood associations.

“We believe that the programming and vision of Portland Playhouse falls into line with the mission of the Urban League, whose mission is to empower African Americans and others to achieve social and economic equity and justice.”
—Midge Purcell, Director of Advocacy and Public Policy, Urban League of Portland

“Portland Playhouse contributes significantly to the cultural and social experience of King residents. It would be a striking loss to our community if it was denied the opportunity to continue operating out of the old church building.”
—Alan Silver, Chair of the King Neighborhood Association

“It is their place in the neighborhood as much as the quality of their work that impressed the panel reviewers who recommended this theater company for a grant. Because they saw that the two were intertwined, the work needing to be done in the neighborhood and presented there, with the neighborhood giving rise to the work.”
—Kimberly Howard, Trust Manager, Oregon Cultural Trust

For more about Portland arts, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

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striking the proper chord

Review: Shakespeare’s Amazing Cymbeline

Portland Center Stage’s masterful re-telling hits the plays emotional pressure points, even though the new piano-playing narrator occasionally strikes the wrong key

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Cymbeline

Photo by Patrick Weishampel

For our preview of Chris Coleman’s production from our January issue, click here.

Chris Colemon’s Shakespeare’s Amazing Cymbeline succeeds in making a rather difficult play not merely accessible, but perhaps even meaningful again. The play, which debuted last month in the PCS’s Ellen Bye Studio in the Armory, is an intensely personal and intimate re-telling, eschewing the stately pageantry of so many modern Shakespeare productions and focusing instead on highlighting its emotional pressure points.

The play opens with the Pianist, an elderly black man who shuffles in under the glare of a single spotlight. Uncovering a dusty old piano, he plays a few somber notes and begins speaking, hinting ominously at trouble to come.

As his opening words fade out, the stage lights brighten on a square, stone slab, set directly in the middle of the Armory’s smaller, underground Ellen Bye studio. It is here that most of the action of the play takes place—beginning with the exile of Posthumus, a man of lowly birth who has married the king Cymbeline’s daughter without permission. Posthumus departs hastily for Rome, leaving his heartbroken wife Imogen to her father’s ire. From here the plot quickly spins off in multiple directions: the Queen’s machinations to get her feckless son installed on the thrown instead of Imogen; Posthumus’ wager against his distant wife’s faithfulness; Imogen’s eventual escape from the castle into Wales; a battle for the very freedom of the kingdom; Posthumus’ pivotal forgiveness of the man who sought to destroy him.

All the while, guiding us through this Shakespearean labyrinth is the Pianist. His music is appropriately minimal—melodic, sorrowful, and sometimes shockingly dissonant—but all too often the Pianist’s spoken explanations of the action onstage feel unnecessary. While some of his interjections are indeed moving—and provide occasional comic relief—it is often as if he is playing the role of a musical Cliff Notes—repeating the action onstage, but not adding to the drama itself. As the play reaches its climax, the screenwriter’s maxim, “Show, Don’t Tell,” frequently comes to mind.

Part of the problem is that the Pianist remains a faceless character from beginning to end. He frequently alludes to the Bard’s thoughts and frustrations (or perhaps they are Coleman’s)—but we learn nothing of the Pianist himself. His tone and dry wit hint at past trauma, but beyond that, his pain (and our sympathy) remains unscratched. Walking out of the theater, I found myself longing to know who the Pianist really was—and, most importantly, why Cymbeline’s story meant anything to him. Juxtaposition—as opposed to clever explication—may have been a more successful tact for the Pianist to take.

But like Posthumus, I find it easy to forgive these sins. The cast and costuming are superb. The staging is exquisitely restrained. And who can forget the particularly realistic looking severed head toward the end of the play. On the whole, Coleman’s resurrection of Cymbeline is a masterful work and one that deserves much of the praise it has garnered so far.

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Tags: Theater, Review, Portland Center Stage

freakin' sweet, GOSH!

Exclusive Interview with Jon Heder of Napoleon Dynamite

Oregon native and star of Napoleon Dynamite talks about his new show, his career, and his sweet dance moves

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Dynamite

Photo by Martin Patail

Jon Heder may not be a household name. Yet. But you’d be hard-pressed to find someone who doesn’t recall his starring role in the 2004 cult hit, Napoleon Dynamite. The awkward small town geek with curly hair spawned a massive cult following, a million endlessly repeated catchphrases, and cemented Heder’s status as comedic magician. Since then, Heder starred alongside Will Ferrel in Blades of Glory, alongside David Spade and Rob Schneider in The Benchwarmers, with Billy Bob Thornton in School for Scoundrels, and has even been sampled in Jay-Z and Kanye’s hit rap collaboration N••••s in Paris.

Now, Heder and the rest of the Napoleon Dynamite cast are reviving the awkward world of Preston, Idaho in a new animated show on FOX (watch the trailer). The Salem-native was nice enough to sit down with us in his room at the Hotel Vintage Plaza and talk about the new show, his Oregon childhood, his religion, and his legendary dance skills.
—Martin Patail

How’s it going?
Good.

You’re just in Portland for the day?
Yeah, this is the very end of this press tour we’re doing. We went to Boston, Chicago, Dallas, and then Portland. It was funny because I asked my publicist, “So is Portland normally on the map for these kinds of press tours?” And he’s like “No.” But FOX organized the whole thing, and they did it because of my connection here. And I think that’s pretty cool of them.

Yeah, we usually get passed by.
(Laughs). Yeah, or they’ll go to Seattle and then make their way to somewhere like Ashland.

Did growing up in Salem prepare you at all to play Napoleon?
It helped, I think, in a way. Jared Hess, who wrote and directed the film, grew up in Preston. It’s like hot Idaho. We’re rainy Oregon. And Salem’s not small. Preston’s really tiny. But it helped that we still had similar upbringings. We’re both LDS. We had big families. We had younger brothers who we based so much of the character on.
Having a bit of the taste of small-town life really helped with getting the vibe of the character and the world that Jared created. Where we lived in West Salem it felt like almost farmland. It’s way up there. We had four acres. It wasn’t suburban living. I had what I like to think of as a very good, traditional childhood growing up. We’d ride our bikes around the neighborhood. We had a local lot that had forest where we could hike and hang out and catch crawdads.

Do you miss it?
I do. I live in LA now, and I love Oregon. I’ve always loved the hills and the valleys—everything about Oregon. The green, the wet cement. It’s very green and grey. I always tell people that this is where I’ll end up, or where I’d like to end up.

In Salem?
No, probably Portland. I’d love to live in Portland.

When was the last time you were here?
I normally come to Oregon at least once a year. My parents still live in Salem. And then we usually try to make it up to Portland for whatever. I love OMSI. I used to go there when I was a kid. So now that I have kids of my own I try to take them those places, like the Oregon Zoo. I love the Enchanted Forest, too. It’s cool to take my kids to places that I loved when I was a kid.

Tell me about the new Napoleon Dynamite show. What was the impetus for bringing all these characters back?
One of the cool things about the world and the movie, Napoleon Dynamite, is there’s the timelessness to it. Because there aren’t a lot of pop cultural references, we always get the question, “When exactly is this movie supposed to take place.” Well, it’s supposed to be modern day. We have the Internet, but we don’t have a lot of cell phones. It’s just the small town life in America where time freezes a little bit and not everything’s up to date. And so because of that, it’s one that you can probably find a new audience for every generation.

But we never really saw this as a movie with a sequel. Because that’s what everyone was asking for after the movie came out. You know, people, the general public, that’s what they want. And then of course, the snooty Hollywood-types like ourselves felt like it was an art piece. It was a special little independent film, and it’s hard to imagine a sequel to that. You give it a budget and some actual resources and you might lose some of that charm.

The only way to do this right is to get the original people involved. It would be pretty weird to have different people doing the voices. And that includes the director, Jared, who came on board and wrote the first couple episodes. It was pretty easy getting everyone back on board. It does have that same feeling of the film.

Is it carrying the themes of the movie forward or is it going in some different directions?
It’s essentially freezing that moment in time in the film and just going with the dynamics of the relationships. We have Napoleon in high school. Napoleon will always be in high school. He’s best friends with Pedro, who is president and will always be president. He’ll always have that question with Deb like “Are they together? Are they not?” They probably are soul mates but she wants more out of the relationship.

The only major change we made is Kip is not married anymore.

To LaFawnduh.
Yeah. Which is not to say LaFawnduh isn’t going to come back. But we wanted to keep this open. If he’s married, he’s a responsible adult, which he’s not. He’s living at home with Grandma. Uncle Rico’s living out in the backyard. I think with those dynamics there can be a lot of stuff we can do. We’re not going to see Napoleon through the years, graduating from college.

Tell me about the origin of Napoleon.
Jared had the general idea of the character. Not necessarily how he looked. But he drew so much from his personal experience. He was basically writing his two younger brothers and writing himself into it. And so when he brought me the script for Peluca [the short film on which the movie was based] I remember the first line was [Napoleon voice] “Gosh, I’ll do whatever I feel I wanna do.” I was like, “I get it. This is that crusty kid. It makes sense.”

The idea of the look for him was a little more after the fact. Jared’s wife was like, “Well, what do you think about giving Jon a perm? What if he had really tight, gross, curly hair? And maybe we should give him some glasses. That’ll make him even more pathetic.” And we went down to the local thrift store and went through some clothes. It was there that we created the characters. It just made so much sense. This was that awkward teenager who just doesn’t have a clue.

The one part of the movie that shows him as cool is the dance scene. Did you have to learn to dance?
No. That was something they wrote in because they knew I like to dance. Jared’s wife was like, “Jon, I hear you’re pretty good dancer. I’ve seen you boogie; it’s pretty sweet.” And I was like, “Well, I like to dabble.” I liked to mess around sometimes in front of friends and dance. But I did take pride in it. I won’t be modest. I wasn’t great but I did like to mess around.

Cut to two years later: after we had shot the short, they were like, “Okay we’re going to have you dancing in the movie as the climax. This is going to make or break the film.” It was a lot of pressure. I was like, “Oh, crap!” This isn’t just a silly little scene. This is the moment where everything comes, and he’s making the sacrifice for his friend. That’s the whole theme of the movie. Everything leads up to this. Napoleon’s been this loser. This has to be the moment where he lands a victory. He gets up there, and it’s quiet: no reaction from the audience.

Any other film would have gotten a choreographer to work with me. But they were like, “No, Jon, just figure it out.” So I just winged it. I danced three times and they took the best pieces from each of those.

Did you choose the Jamiroquai song?
Jared and I were really pining for Jamiroquai. We were both like, “That is sweet dance music.” When you’re shooting in independent film, you don’t know what you’re going to get the rights to. We thought Jamiroquai might be expensive. So we danced to three different songs. To that song and another Jamiroquai song, “Little L.” We danced to Michael Jackson, something off of Off the Wall. Just those three. And then we got the rights to Jamiroquai. And I think that was half our budget.

So you are Mormon. How, has that affected your career?
It has a great effect. I was raised that way. It’s who I am in my blood. I grew up doing this, or choosing not to do that. A lot of that is stuff that I choose not to do on the screen. Obviously, in acting you play characters that aren’t you. That’s the whole point of acting. But there are some things that you just aren’t comfortable with.

For example?
You know. (Pause). Sexual content. I wouldn’t be comfortable doing that because I don’t think people would be comfortable seeing me involved in sexual content [Napoleon voice].

But I take it project by project. It’s hard to nail down what “it” is. It depends on what the purpose of the content is on the screen. Is it there to tell a story or is it there to get a cheap laugh? Is it there to be exploitative? A lot of those things I have to take into consideration. There’s probably been some great opportunities that I’ve passed up but I don’t regret it. As long as you’re happy with the decisions you make, that’s what’s most important.

What are you most proud of?
Napoleon. I’m really proud of Napoleon. I mean, Blades of Glory was great. I really enjoyed doing this film that came out at Sundance this year, called For Ellen, which is my first dramatic piece. I really liked doing drama.

But Napoleon was the most fun. It was just such a cool experience. To start your career that way and make it with a bunch of college buddies. And experiencing that ride of seeing it go from nothing… I mean that’s a true success story, and it’s really cool to be a part of that.

Last question: What was it like being featured in a hit rap song?
(Laughs) You don’t think about it. I remember my manager saying, “Oh, you’re in this thing, by the way.” I’m like, “sure, why not?”

I’ve heard the song very briefly. I haven’t met Jay-Z or Kanye. But it makes me cooler with high school students again. Like if the high school students forgot about me, they’re back on board. I have some friends in high school, and they’re always like “Dude, everyone in school loves that.”

But what does this quote have to do with Nnnnnn in Paris? Like are they calling us that? I don’t get it. But it’s cool.

Tune in to Napoleon Dynamite Sundays on Fox at 8:30pm.

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ballet-ing the foundation

Slide Show: OBT Rehearses Giselle

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Before they glide across the Keller Auditorium stage in Giselle , Oregon Ballet Theatre’s “biggest, most lush production of the season,” dancers must, of course, rigorously rehearse. And in the attached slide show, we’ve got proof!

Poised like a marionettist beside the beautiful dancers, choreographer Lola de Avila demonstrates movements and corrects gestures until they become routine. Eventually she pulls back to let the magic happen on its own…but we suspect that her blue shirt is never too far out of the frame.

Thrilled to be working on the piece, de Avila recently revealed, “Giselle is one of my favorites…because it’s all about eternal things,” (Watch OBT’s interview video with her and Christopher Stowell to hear more.) In the same way that ghost maidens haunt the fringes of this German fairy tale, de Avila’s movements will surely linger with the dancers as they take the stage this weekend.

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quality quintet

Five JazzFest Favorites

As Portland Jazz Festival continues this week, we call out a few of the many can’t-miss talents.

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DEE DEE BRIDGEWATER
Feb 23, 7pm at Newmark To Billie with Love: A Celebration of Lady Day Note: Rush tix available day-of-show.

In this powerhouse performance, Dee Dee Bridgewater previews a Billie Holiday piece she may perform, and demonstrates so much of her mastery in one fell swoop! Using the instrumental intro to get into character, she mimes sultry streetwalker moves at the audience, bringing a theatrical presence to the subject matter before ever singing a single note. Midway through, she unleashes some percussive, rapid-fire scatting that—_sha’mon_—would almost seem at home in a Michael Jackson tune. And nearing the end, she crescendos into full-on gospel fervor, displaying her pipes’ maximum power before subsiding to a coy close. Throughout this gamut of variation, her tone stays wise, world-worn, and bittersweet—because, like the character portrayed in this song, jazz was not born yesterday, baby.

DAVE FRISHBERG AND REBECCA KILGORE
Feb 23, 9:30pm at Art Bar


“But wait,” you may say. “That’s not Dave Frishberg, it’s Rosemary Clooney of White Christmas and George-Clooney’s-Aunt fame.” Right you are—but listen to her heartfelt shout-out to this local jazz great. Despite penning several hits and collaborating with many legendary singers including Clooney, Blossom Dearie and more, Frishberg plays his fame pretty low-key. In outtakes from a PM interview last year, he expressed a preference for being a “side man,” and a reverent respect for his current collaborating grande dame, Rebecca Kilgore. Sample her singing style below, and if you want to see her and Frishberg together, they’ll appear at the Art Bar for FREE.

BILL FRISELL
Feb 24, 9:30pm, Crystal Ballroom For Portland Only: the Music of John Lennon, Speedy West and Jimmy Bryant

Portland guitarist Bill Frisell obviously has a varied program planned, not the least of which is a tribute to John Lennon that you can preview below. Meditate on the way this contemplative, simple, slow exploration gradually expands into ornately gorgeous complexity. A top recommendation of fest organizer Don Lucoff, this program promises to reward Frisell’s longstanding fans—and recruit new ones.

TRIO SUBTONIC
Feb 24, 9:30pm, Art Bar

Relatively fresh local faces Trio Subtonic recorded their first album “The Aqueous” in 2007, following it with “Cave Dweller” in 2009. Their 2012 album, “I’ll Meet You There Tomorrow” has a good-natured syncopated sway and catchy melodic hooks that recall to our ears some of the more ambient Peanuts soundtrack selections by Vince Guaraldi. Accessible? Yes. And all the better for it.

VIJAY IYER, PRASANNA, AND NITTIN MITTA
Feb 24, 5pm, Art Bar
Feb 25, 3pm, Crystal Ballroom Tirtha

There’s perhaps no modern percussion instrument more Western in origin than the piano, hearkening to gold-filigreed harpsichords lightly dusted in their baroque masters’ wig powder. The tabla, meanwhile, is so quintessentially Eastern, a single echoey strike is a universally-understood salute to the spice lands. Although almost everything in jazz has long since been tried, this instrumental combo, gelled by guitar and left in the highly capable hands of these ethnically Indian jazz masters, still feels novel and new. No wonder KMHD’s Matt Fleeger makes this trio one of his top picks and cites it as an example of new world-beat trends.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

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tune in

Y La Bamba’s Brand-New Tunes

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A rainy Monday ushers in a deliriously bright new record from local gypsy-folk fusion group Y La Bamba. While many fans understandably fixate on the band’s alluring frontwoman Luz Elena Mendoza, Y La Bamba’s sophomore effort makes more expansive use of all available players and voices—in fact, it’s not until track 3 that we even get Luz alone. Lush, lovely, and mystically rich, this album defies description. Best just to listen to Court The Storm

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visceral attraction

Win Tickets to Body Worlds!

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The unique and world-renowned anatomy display will only be at OMSI for a couple more weeks.

This contest has ended.

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titans of NPR

Radiolab and Prairie Home Companion Go on Sale this Weekend

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Radiolab_berkeley

Robert Krulwich on stage with Pilobolus in Berkeley for Radiolab Live: In the Dark (Jared Kelly/WNYC)

If NPR were Greek mythology, then Garrison Keillor would be a Titan, ruling the Golden Age of the radio waves, and Radiolab would be the young Gods, upsetting the celestial order. And they’re both gracing we mere Oregon mortals with their presence this spring.

Garrison Keillor will be recording an episode of A Prairie Home Companion on Saturday, June 16 at the Cuthbert Ampitheatre in Eugene. Tickets go on sale Monday, February 20.

And Radiolab will be doing their brand new live show at the Keller Auditorium on Saturday, April 28. Tickets go on sale Saturday at 10 a.m., although presales are available for OPB members.

I talked with Jad and Robert of Radiolab on Monday for a “5 Questions for” column that we’ll run in the April issue, but I wanted to share a little preview of what’s in store. It was the first time Jad and Robert had spoken since the birth of Jad’s second son on Friday, but after the baby gushing, we dived into what the show was about.

Paint a little preview for us: what’s the theme, and how are you going to bring an audio show into the visual world?

Robert: It’s called “In the Dark.” That’s the theme.

Jad: In the dark is where sexy time happens. It has that connotation.

Robert: But we’re not doing that. What we’re doing is our fantasy idea. This will involve: first, a comedian, Demetri Martin, who is the host. Then there’s a live score by Thao Nguyen. Then we have a team of dancers from Pilobolus. We’re going to take you on three adventures with musical breaks and funny stuff. It’s a variety show.

Jad: The great thing about a live situation is we can make it into an experiment. The first part experiments with what it’s like to emerge out of darkness from a tiny primitive eye into a full-blown eyeball. The second experiments with what it’s like to be blind. And the third part experiments with what it’s like to float through space and almost get fried by the sun.

Robert: Through inky darkness.

Jad: In the past our live shows have always been a derivative from the broadcast show. Like, come sit in a live theater and watch us mime the act of making radio. This is a different beast. We created it for the stage. We throw problems at Pilobolus, and they make some beautiful brilliant jellyfish out of six bodies.

Robert: At one point somebody is dangling in space from a Russian spaceship, and the dancers actually create the image of someone dangling through light tricks and odd postures. You see what they’re doing, but you forget, and it’s like they’re in outer space. What they came up with was sophisticated and strangely beautiful. The ending we hope is gasp worthy.

Jad: The first time we saw the ending, it was a gasp from Robert and I.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

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jazzed

KMHD Director Talks Jazz Fest

Matt Fleeger, Portland’s premier Jazz DJ, hips us to the upcoming Portland Jazz Festival and evangelizes this broad, dynamic, influential genre.

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Portland has long percolated a viable, if not highly visible, jazz scene. Veterans like composer Dave Frishberg, trumpeter Thara Memory, and a handful of other super-talents call our town home, while twentysomething bass prodigy Esperanza Spalding, (who used to rock Portland’s all-ages indie clubs before training at Berklee) snagged the Best New Artist Grammy last year from a stunned Justin Beiber. Still, a feeling persists that Portland jazz—and jazz in general—flies just slightly under the radar of new listeners. The 9th annual Portland Jazz Festival , primed to kick off this week, aims to cater to its base while enticing new ears, branding certain events to raise energy (“Dance Party”) and to champion regional acts (“PDX Jazz” series).

Culturephile caught up with authoritative local jazz tastemaker Matt Fleeger, Program Director of KMHD Jazz Radio, to find out what we should expect from the 2012 fest, and more generally, what jazz has to offer the next generation. (To hear more from Matt, listen to New Jazz For Lunch, Mon-Thurs, noon-1 on KMHD, 89.1 FM )

Who’s your favorite instrumentalist this year?
The whole line-up is just stellar this year, but the artist I’m looking forward to most is Italian trumpeter Enrico Rava. For one, Rava’s touring band is made up of some of the most serious players from Europe (including the virtuosic Trombone player Gianluca Petrella). But I’m mostly excited to see this performance because of Rava’s lush, dynamic compositions. Think Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue meets John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme.

Favorite vocalist?
That’s gotta be Dee Dee Bridgewater. She’ll be bringing her interpretation of Billie Holiday’s life and music to the stage of the Newmark Theater on Thursday, the 23rd. This is a phenomenal show – a must see for any Lady Day fans out there.

What are some of the latest trends in jazz music, and which acts from the 2012 lineup best illustrate those trends?
There’s a new sort of world-fusion happening in Jazz music. Vijay Iyer’s “Indo-Pac Coalition” is perhaps one of the most dramatic examples of a collective that melds classical ethnic styles with improvised music. He’s coming to Portland with his fusion of south-Indian classical music. This trio, called “Tirtha” features Iyer playing piano with classically trained tabla player Nitin Mitta, and guitarist Prassana.

What initially drew you to jazz music, and what do you now love most about it?
Personally, I got exposed to Jazz watching a skateboard video when I was a teenager. The music made me feel a certain way, cool, hip etc… My passion for Jazz continues because there’s always some “buried treasure” to be discovered in the record store, since so much of the recorded history of the music has never been digitized. Since Jazz is such creative music, new sounds are always being made, and the new crop of Jazz musicians these days are really doing special, innovative things.

More generally, what’s “to love”? What do you say to convert casual listeners into a deeper appreciation of the medium? Is there an emotional or societal need that only jazz music can fill?
Because Jazz is over 100 years old, it’s impacted – and been impacted by – almost every trend in popular music over the 20th century. I love it when someone tells me “I don’t like Jazz” because I know I can find something in that long, storied history that they can appreciate. Jazz music is flexible, it’s like a sponge – absorbing different musical styles, shaping them and making them different.

Also, Jazz is mood music. It can be mellow and calming at times, other times upbeat and driving. Because most of the music we play on KMHD is instrumental, we find that our audience in multi-generational. There’s something for everybody to like. When I’m turning someone on to the music, I always ask the question “What’s your favorite type of music?” because we can always find some Jazz that will connect with their current favorites. Even if they’re a Country fan!

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

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a new dimension of dance

Director of the Documentary Pina at Cinema 21

The Academy Award nominated director Wim Wenders will talk on Thursday, Feb 16 before Cinema 21’s final screenings of Pina

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Pina

The director of arguably the year’s most remarkable documentary, the 3-D dance film Pina, will be at Cinema 21 to introduce the film and answer questions next Thursday, Feb 16 in a special co-presentation between the theater and the Portland International Film Festival. Werner Herzog might have made the pioneering push of 3-D filmmaking into documentaries with his beautiful Cave of Forgotten Dreams, but Wim Wenders has ventured even further, exploding the boundaries not only between dimensions, but between film and performance. More than just a documentary or just a performance recording, his tribute to the late legendary choreographer Pina Bausch is a series of scenes of members of her dance company performing in both theaters and unusual outdoor settings, from the edge of a quarry to the inside of a tram, interspersed with interviews. And it’s earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary, in addition to winning the Best Documentary awards at the European Film Awards and German Film Awards.

Wenders will be at the theater to introduce the film and do a Q&A at the 7:00 pm screening and to introduce the 9:40 pm screening. This is the last day Pina will play at Cinema 21 before it moves on to Living Room Theaters.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

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twenty song insanity

Free Music from Menomena’s Danny Seim

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Menomena

Menomena’s Danny Seim undertook the Twenty Song Challenge: to record 20 songs in 12 hours. You can hear his results for free at the Menomena website. While his ultimate recording is more 20 fragments of songs that have been combined into one grand 30-minute medley of sorts, the fact remains that the man pumped out what sounds like the seeds of a fantastic album in a mere 12 hours. Twelve hours! We stand in awe.

If one were to interpret it as a musical stream of consciousness diary—for how could anyone record 20 songs in 12 hours and filter what they’re writing?—it sounds like Danny’s got a little positive psychology on the mind. If you’re feeling down this weekend, you might repeat these affirmative Menomena mantras: “Hating people is like burning your own house down” and “I will permit no man to narrow or degrade my soul by making me hate him.”

And for Menomena fans, grand news at the end of Danny’s note:

“Speak­ing of hot air, Menom­ena is in the final two weeks of record­ing our fifth record. More news on that front com­ing soon, I hope.”

Not bad for a Friday morning.

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l'a-MORE!

Valentine’s Day Planner

A packed week’s-worth of romantic arts happenings.

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Brittany Walsh shoots her cupid’s bow.

(Image by Thomas Good)

THURSDAY, FEB 9–FEB 14
Twenty Erotic Shorts: Trois! Four actors and two musicians from the Working Theatre Collective trot out a varied programme of 20 new vignettes, ranging from tender and sensual to bawdy and naughty.

FRIDAY, FEB 10
Valentine’s Ball with Soundstage Rhythm Orchestra Let Walters Cultural Arts Center in Hillsboro lure you to the ’burbs and pull you onto the dance floor with a whopping 25-piece dance orchestra playing swing and Latin classics all night.

SATURDAY, FEB 11
Miz Kitty’s Parlour This monthly vaudeville spectacle pulls out all the stops for V-Day weekend: Jazz jams! Uke beauties! And contortionist Brittany Walsh, who can famously shoot a bow and arrow with her legs whilst poised in a back-bent handstand!

Ethos benefit Cover Your Hearts 5 Ethos Music, a nonprofit that brings a hands-on music-making experience to kids free of charge, calls in a favor from the Wonder Ballroom and some grown-up bands. Charmparticles, Derby, Chris Robley and more will cover 80’s power ballads, hoping you’ll help cover the cost of youth music-making.

SUNDAY, FEB 12
Mousai Remix at Ivories Jazz Lounge A newly-formed chamber group featuring Oregon Symphony musicians Emily Cole, Shin-young Kwon, Jennifer Arnold, and Marilyn de Oliveira will play Beethoven’s F Major Quartet, Op. 59, No.1 and Brahms C minor Quartet Op. 51, No. 1.

TUESDAY, FEB 14
Portland Story Theater’s Kiss & Tell PBS writer Slash Coleman, comedian auGi, and Vagabond Opera’s mustachioed accordion icon Eric Stern will preside over some sexily confessional hijinks at Alberta Rose, including pro puppetry and an amateur “orgasm choir.”

Smalldoggies Reading Series at The Blue Monk PCC prof Emily Kendal Frey, Seattle prizewinner Jenny Forrester, PDX slam poetry champ Mike McGee, and Vegas novelist Kris Saknussemm will speak. (Full disclosure: A Culturephile blogger will play some music—but urges you not to hold that against this otherwise reputable event.)

Dia de los Enamorados w/ Pete Krebs Andina will prepare a feast “from Lima with love,” while Portland’s top Django-style swing group Pete Krebs Trio regales diners with classic croon-tunes.

Rontoms Rock Prom As gussied-up as the hipster set gets, this night tends to culminate in a wall-to-wall tangle of vintage crinolines, thin ties, and hastily shouted hellos. Amid the fray, Monarques, Radiation City, Youth and DJ Cooky Parker will play.

Mortified at the Mission Theater Grown adults willingly subject themselves to the inevitable embarrassment of reading their adolescent diary entries aloud while the audience snickers (but secretly sympathizes).

SATURDAY, FEB 18
BodyVox Presents Flirt w Luciana Proaño A nuanced South American seduction from the unfettered mind of the Peruvian dancer, drummer and folklorist.

Love of Portland Art Show More than 150 visual artists pitch woo to Portland via undoubtedly bike, brew, and bird-heavy PDX-themed pop art. What’s not to heart?

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

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Tags: valentine's day

ticket giveaway

Q Center Winter Gala at YU on Saturday, Feb 18

Enter below for a chance at two free tickets to the charity event of the season

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Photo credit: Wayne Bund

We’re trying something new here at Culturephile and with the On the Town newsletter: giving you free tickets to some of our favorite events. And what better way to kick it off than two tickets to one of the most glamorous, not to mention fun, events on the Portland gala calendar.

Having outgrown its digs at the Nines Hotel (500 people packed the ballroom last year), the Q Center Winter Gala is jumping the Willamette for the gorgeous industrial chic of YU. The lofty warehouse space with its grand views of downtown seems in perfect step with the gala’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s, 60’s-era theme, “Never Out of Style.” And the night’s lineup promises to maximize the building’s unequaled party potential, particularly with Bob Mould behind the turntables. While he’s famous for his ’80s indie-pioneering band Hüsker Dü and ’90s pop-driven phenom Sugar, he’s also taken on electronic music in his solo work and now co-DJ’s a nationally touring alterna-gay dance party called Blowoff. Which is to say, he’s a master of never going out of style and seems just the ticket to make this night the stuff of legend.

This contest has ended.

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Tags: ticket giveaway

Absurd Garfunkel & Oates Quotes

Two lucky commenters will win tix to see this mouthy musical duo!

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Riki Lindhome (Garfunkel) and Kate Micucci (Oates) were young actors before finding their true calling in 2009: writing snarky songs and performing them in viral home videos. Quickly racking up click-rates in the millions, the pair has gone on to comedy fests, celebrity cameos, and even a gig on Late Night with Jay Leno. Set to release a new album, Slippery When Moist, on February 21, the pair hits Helium Comedy Club this weekend.

But wait! Before you go trotting off to YouTube for a laugh, read a few of their choice quips below (warning: they’re irreverent) and LEAVE A COMMENT of your own. Two lucky readers who do so will WIN TICKETS TO SEE THEM AT HELIUM!

“Pregnant women are smug. Everyone knows it, but nobody says it, because they are pregnant. You’re just giving birth now. You’re not Mother Earth now.”

“I don’t know who you are; I don’t have a freaking clue. So get a catchphrase, get an accent, hook your face up with a tattoo. You don’t even look a little familiar to me, and I blame you.”

“Okay, okay, I said my boyfriend’s gay, but what does it matter anyway? He hasn’t come out of the closet yet; ‘til then, I’ll take all I can get.”

“I wanna be a nun, so I can marry a priest and we’ll have a baby and call it Jesus.”

“Pat Robertson once said it’s a long downward slide that will lead to legalizing sex with ducks. God, I hope he’s right!”

“Where do I look when someone’s serenading me? I look him in the eyes and it feels really awkward. He plays guitar as well as me—and that’s not saying much.”

“I used to dream that I would marry a guy that looked like Charlie Sheen, and he would have a name like Gary.”

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executive playlist

Obama Loves AgesAndAges!

After his latest performance of “Let’s Stay Together,” the president launches into “No Nostalgia” (sensing a theme?)

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Okay, we can’t actually confirm the headline. But we do know that someone on the Obama campaign is a fan, because AgesAndAges’s “No Nostalgia” just made the cut of the 29 songs his re-election campaign will play at rallies, speeches, and other events. They’re alongside legends like Bruce Springsteen, Aretha Franklin, and, of course, Al Green, along with arena acts like U2 and No Doubt. They’ll be lifting the moods and serving the hope to millions of American’s of all types and stripes, which is crazy big news for Portland’s charming champions of folk harmonies and hand claps.

“No Nostalgia,” eh, Mr. President? Not even just a little for your 2008 campaign? Guess we just have to Stand Up, Raise Up, and Keep on Pushing, because it’s gonna get Even Better Than The Real Thing (you can see a complete list and listen to all the songs at The Wall Street Journal).

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green zone

Peter Halley’s Neon Installation Will Tickle Your Brain

At Disjecta through Feb. 25

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Photo credit: Jake Richardson

The geometric cells and conduits of Peter Halley’s installation, “Prison,” at Disjecta buzz with a seeming kinetic energy. Covering the walls of the 3000 square foot gallery and glowing green from neon paint and stage lighting, the layered boxes with their tight parallel lines play with the eye, shimmering and shifting, coming in and out of focus. Though it’s only a laser print on wallpaper, there is an incredible sense of depth that’s constantly oscillating and that, combined with the rushing sound of the forced air system, creates a perpetual sense of motion no matter where you stand.

Given the way the installation toys with perception, I had to ask Halley if our deepening understanding of how the brain processes images plays any role in his work. “I have always been interested in the psychology of perception and new developments in the understanding of the neurobiology of the brain,” said the New York-based painter, printmaker, and writer. “At Disjecta, the perceptual ideas are pretty straightforward. The prison images slowly get larger as they go from the side walls to the middle wall—creating a perspective effect and making the room seem even bigger than it is.”

With solo shows at the likes of MOMA and work in the collections of museums such as the Tate, Whitney, and Guggenheim, Halley is an impressive close to Disjecta’s already impressive 2011-2012 Curator-in-Residence season. “Prison” is a continuation of his exploration of visual and architectural systems—this time wedding “geometry of the social” with “the mall-level transcendence of saturated fluorescent color.” It’s his first solo installation in the Northwest and one of his grandest anywhere. Make sure to catch it before it closes on Feb. 25.

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Tags: Art, Review, Disjecta

kimo-know

Slideshow + Review:
Madame Butterfly

Portland Opera premieres Puccini’s melodramatic, lovelorn gut-wrencher.

summary by Anne Adams, review by Aaron Scott

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©Portland Opera/Cory Weaver

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©Portland Opera/Cory Weaver

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©Portland Opera/Cory Weaver

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©Portland Opera/Cory Weaver

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©Portland Opera/Cory Weaver

View Slideshow » Illustration:

©Portland Opera/Cory Weaver

Summary

Poor Cio-Cio-San. First she falls for the fickle charms of US Naval Officer Pinkerton, even forsaking her family’s religion, Buddhism, to make herself a more suitable bride to the Westerner. When her handsome blonde boyfriend departs for America, she faithfully roosts in their lovenest awaiting his return, never suspecting that he intends to leave her in the lurch. Against the sunset-hued backdrop of pre-World War Nagasaki, Butterfly gradually realizes she’s been had and succumbs to her shame, eventually committing hara-kiri, a ritualistic Japanese suicide. The nickname Pinkerton has given her, “Butterfly,” becomes an overt metaphor for their relationship: He, the butterfly collector, is compelled to capture a thing of beauty and pin it to a board—nevermind that in the process, he’s stabbing the fragile creature in the heart.

Madame Butterfly opened last weekend at the Keller.
Click through the attached slide show to see Kelly Kaduce’s kimono-clad performance, or read on for Aaron Scott’s review.
—AA
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Review

Those who imagine opera as stationary fat ladies singing will be delightfully surprised by the level of acting in Portland Opera’s production of_ Madame Butterfly. _Kelly Kaduce’s performance as Butterfly is wonderful, as she shifts from the delight of a newly wed, to the self-delusional defiance of a righteous teenager when others say Pinkerton won’t return (one must remember she’s only 15 at the start), to her attempt at steadfast strength leading up to her honor suicide. And her soprano is clear and gorgeous, her song imagining Pinkerton’s return earning a roiling applause and an irrepressible shout of ‘Bravo!’ from the balcony.

Other highlights include John Hancock as Sharpless, the kind American consul left to clean up Pinkerton’s mess, and Kathryn Day as Suzuki, the protective, plodding maid, who expertly expresses the pathos of her character’s own tragedy: spending three years watching Butterfly cling to her dream, the whole while knowing the truth that Pinkerton will not return. And of course, an almost audible ‘awww’ seeps from the audience every time 3-year-old Finnegan Grab with his mop of brown hair runs onstage as Butterfly’s son (it’s a rare thing indeed to have a child actor the age of the actual character, and it lends a certain magic).

Clocking in at nearly three and a half hours, Madame Butterfly’s length creates almost a shared experiential empathy on the part of the audience: we sit an hour for every year she waits for Pinkerton. There’s a patience presumed that most contemporary plays and movies wouldn’t dare, particularly in the final movement of the second act, when Butterfly, her son, and Suzuki wait silently for Pinkerton, backs to the audience, the only action on stage for a number of minutes being the slowly changing quality of light as night falls (and the splendor of the lighting design on the artfully made set is action enough). But if you can channel Butterfly’s patience, the heart-wrenching beauty of her final song is certainly worth the wait. *
—AS*

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Tags: Review, Slideshow, Opera, preview

irish ditty

The Decemberists Collaborate with the Chieftains

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The Decemberists kick up their heels for a frolicking collaboration with Irish folk legends the Chieftains on Bob Dylan’s “When The Ship Comes In.” The cover appears on Voice of Ages, an album celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Chieftains, alongside team-ups with artists like Bon Iver, Civil Wars, Pistol Annies, Punch Brothers, Carolina Chocolate Drops, and Low Anthem.

“It’s not often you are called to collaborate with one of the world’s foremost innovators and influencers in folk music, or any music for that matter,” Colin Meloy told Rolling Stone. “I mean, the Chieftains have almost single-handedly defined Irish traditional music for the last 50 years.”

Visit Rolling Stone to hear the song, or watch Chieftains bandleader Paddy Moloney give the Decemberists and Portland some love (along with some of the other bands) in the video below:



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gallery grazing

First Thursday Sampler

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Sculpture + watercolor

Mel Katz’s Anodized Aluminum and Henk Pander’s Worlds Apart at Laura Russo Gallery

Katz, one of Portland’s best-known sculptors for over 40 years, imparts his latest exhibition of large aluminum pieces with his trademark use of vivid colors and odd, organic shapes. In Worlds Apart, Pander, another veteran local artist, unveils his uncanny plein-air watercolors depicting somber expressionist landscapes.



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Prints

David Hockney at Augen Gallery

British Printmaker Hockney has been compared to artists like Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol. This collection features etchings, screenprints, and lithographs from a career that spanned 1965 to 1998, when Hockney left conventional media printmaking to focus on digital and traditional painting.




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Sculpture

Joe Thurston’s Nothing Leading Anywhere Anymore Except to Nothing at Elizabeth Leach

Having established himself as as one of the Northwest’s most versatile painters, from portraiture to gestural abstraction, Thurston is leaving the two dimensional behind, and his shift to sculpture promises to be monumental. His rugged, monolithic containers will take over the gallery and possibly invade the viewer’s space as well—mentally, if not physically.



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Big art explosion

The 100 Show at Wieden+Kennedy

Never short on good ideas, the folks at W+K asked hundreds of artists to submit a 10”x 10” piece of art with no restrictions on medium, with the plan of displaying them in the building’s gallery and pricing each at $100, of which half will be donated to MercyCorps and half will go to the artist. Apparently even less short on friends, they’ve received over 900 pieces from local and international artists, photographers, illustrators, painters, and more. Seems the only thing they are going to be short on is wall space. (Or you can shop online.)



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Smaller art explosion

Deadstock at Compound Gallery

If 900 pieces of affordable art strike you as a little overwhelming, but you still want to support a good cause, head to Compound for Deadstock. Referencing the retail term for merchandise that does not leave the shelves or the warehouse, the show invites artists to dust off some of their disregarded products and works—their surpluses of creativity, if you will—with part of the proceeds going to the Right Brain Initiative program of the Regional Art and Culture Council.



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Math paint + found objects

Xylor Jane and B. Wurtz at PNCA’s Feldman Gallery & Project Space

This two-artist show emphasizes the simplicity and sublimity of their artistic process. Jane utilizes mathematical algorithms as a basis for her intricate paintings on wood panels, while Wurtz adopts mundane found objects like string, socks, buttons, household implements, and plastic bags in his sculptural assemblages.



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Meditations on mail

Clouds Inclose Comets: The Envelope at PDX Contemporary Art

Naysayers warn about the death of posted mail (and granted, post offices are closing), but the envelope still pervades our lives and will continue for a long time to come. In this group show, a variety of skilled artists riff on the unlimited potential forms and functions of the envelope.



The First Thursday art walk is a monthly event held by an assortment of galleries in Portland’s Pearl District. For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

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Tags: Art, First Thursday

bedroom sleuthing

Sex Talks + 5 Questions for Arianne Cohen

Hate Valentine’s? Go to these three talks to learn to love love again (or at least sex). Plus, the author of The Sex Diaries Project talks with us about how Portlanders differ in their erotic and romantic proclivities.

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Monday, Feb 6 offers a choice between the science of love and gushy radio stories about love that will 100-percent-for-certain make you blubber like a well-cherished babe:

As part of OMSI’s beloved Science Pub lecture series, past pub favorite and OHSU biologist Larry Sherman delves into the chemicals in your brain that drive the compulsion we call love in his talk, “Lust, Chocolate and Prairie Voles: The Neuroscience of Pleasure and Love,” at the Bagdad Theater at 7.
– or –
At Powell’s, Dave Isay, the founder and guiding voice of NPR’s crazy popular Friday morning tearjerker StoryCorps, shares stories of the heart from his new book, All There Is: Love Stories from StoryCorps. He normally plays his favorite excerpts from the thousands of oral histories they’ve recorded, making his talks some of the most emotionally gripping around. I promise you will cry. I’ve seen it before; it’s like he’s a King Midas for happy tears.

If you’re interested in the steamier side of things, then head to Powell’s on Wednesday, Feb. 8 at 7:30 for NYC transplant Arianne Cohen’s talk about her new book, The Sex Diaries Project: What We’re Saying about What We’re Doing. She’s spent several years compiling diaries about sex from a wide range of people—young and old, gay and straight, married and celibate, prudish and slutty, and everything in between. Along the way, she’s teased out some bigger themes and surprises. While we like to consider ourselves objective, dispassionate journalists, we couldn’t help but be a little intrigued:

How did you get started on the Sex Diaries Project?
It was a bit of a fluke. I wrote a cover story for New York Magazine in 2007 on New York City sex diaries, and the response was so good that it became a weekly online column of diaries. I soon realized that what I was reading was not what I had expected. What many people are actually doing in their private lives is wildly different from our culture’s rom-com sense of monogamous coupledom. So I began expanding outside of NYC, and commissioning wide and far.

What was it like to become a real life Carrie Bradshaw?
I won’t lie: it rocked. I found myself on every sexy invite list one would hope to be on. It was a great way to get an education. I did the column until 2010, when I moved to Portland.

What sort of patterns have emerged as you’ve compiled these diaries?
Lots. I think the thing that surprised me most was the realization that couples are like little two-person companies. Some make widgets; others provide customer service. And it goes much better for all involved if everyone understands what kind of company they’re in. The book outlines the three main types of couples I found, and the pros and cons of each.

What do you think your readers will find most surprising as they peek into others’ private lives?
I think there’s this idea that everyone is either in a long-term relationship, or looking to be in a long-term relationship. And when you read the diaries, that’s not what you find. At any one time, people are doing lots of different things—there’s a whole world of ways you can live out your private life. There are no rules.

You’ve been in Portland for two years now. How do sex and relationships differ in Portland from other places?
There’s more kombucha, and less f-word dropping. Here diarists talk about “their process” and “the connection” and "growth.” When I first started reading them, I’d read entire entries and have no idea what the diarist was talking about.

And breakup behavior here is very different. In New York City, diarists would leave relationships on horrible terms, doing things like screaming “fuck you” and then never really see each other again. Here, diarists know they’re going to bump into each other for the rest of time, and thus really go out of their way to avoid drama. Sometimes that means avoiding the discussion altogether, and just smoothing it over. It’s not altruism—it’s self-protection from future nausea.

We love to think of ourselves as unique, progressive, and sustainable. Does that extend into the bedroom?
Emphasis on sustainable. There’s a large population of people here who change partners every year or two for decades on end. Whether that’s progressive or not depends on your point of view.

What’s next for the SDP?
I’m doing a college tour this fall, Sex Diaries Project on Campus, having students keep anonymous diaries beforehand, and parsing out precisely what’s going on in their bubble. I can’t wait. And I’m developing a TV show based on the concept, which is very fun. Please feel free to come keep your own diary, or read other peoples’ diaries, at sexdiariesproject.com!

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Tags: Books, 5 questions

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