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Review: On The Eve of Friday Morning

Fruit, nuts, and Persian food-for-thought from Oregon Children’s Theater.

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Bahadnassrin

Bust out the basmati and pop open a pomegranate; Sunday is Nowruz, Persian New Year. Probably not coincidentally, it’s also closing night for Oregon Children’s Theater’s latest play, set in Iran. On The Eve Of Friday Morning, penned by Washington DC high school teacher Norman Allen and sponsored in part by Portland’s Ziba Design, is an offering that clearly seeks to enlighten as well as entertain. The Winningstad lobby is adorned with festive décor, and show-goers are even given a traditional Persian parting snack of dried fruit and nuts. Here are some other memorable takeaways:

THE MESSAGE
The minute Nassrin bursts onstage, over a blast of Iranian hiphop, she blurts out what must be the key point: “I do not live in ‘the axis of evil!’”
Having gotten that off her chest, she begins to reintroduce the audience to her homeland Iran, explaining that it was formerly known as Persia, a land of poetry, music, and art. But the contemporary Iranian government—far less prone to poetry—has imprisoned her father for the possession of banned books. “Depending who you ask, I’m the daughter of a hero, or the daughter of a criminal,” she observes.

So which is it? Is Iran a bastion of rich culture, or a seat of cultural oppression? Yes. This play wastes no time unveiling a tough truth, seeming to say, Honey, it’s a big world, with good and bad and in-between guys. It’s complicated.

But in Persia, we’re told, paradoxes are nothing new. In place of “Once upon a time,” Nassrin’s mother explains, Persian storytellers customarily start with, “There was one and there was none. Except for god, there was no one.” (To my ear, this rings similar to the Biblical passage, “In the beginning was the word, and the word was with god, and the word was god.”) As she speaks the traditional phrase, an ancient folktale begins to unfold on the other side of the stage. Guided by an orphan boy and a travelling storyteller, we’re transported to ancient times. Dried fruit, nuts, and jewels are the currency, and turbaned day-laborers genuflect to royalty. Peasants and a princess are assigned their fates by mysterious gods. Eventually, a message materializes: Be satisfied with what you have. Share what you have. And also share your stories—in Persian tradition, they’re considered part of your wealth.

THE TALENT
Refreshingly (and in contrast to the last OCT piece Culturephile covered), this play puts child actors front and center—and we’re pleased to report that they earn it! Maya Caulfield as Nassrin, and Jordan Karlous as Bahad, both bring maturity, subtlety, and poise to their respective roles. When they interact, they also manage to nail the preteen girl-boy love-hate dynamic. Nassrin is the more confident character, bounding around the stage, holding up an index finger to drive home her bold declarations. Bahad, meanwhile, is more “ah-shucks,” with a bit of a slouch and a layer of sarcasm not quite masking a simmer of sensitivity. Even the offstage god-voice of Mushkil Gushad is left to a child actor (one of the understudies?) who dispatches it with excellent inflection. These child performances offer enough pep to engage younger kiddies, and enough edge to keep adults intrigued.

Meanwhile, competent grown-up actors hold supporting roles. Matt Dieckman (whom we last saw in Imago’s brilliant wordless thriller Stage Left Lost) plays Baba Kharkan, a day-laborer who catches a stroke of luck and becomes a nobleman. As Naqqal the storyteller, Andrew Garrettson interjects with warm, wise tones and narrates the story without overbearing. Curious Comedy regular Laura James plays a mirror-gazing, silly Persian Princess that reflects a better-known archetype: Alice In Wonderland’s Queen of Hearts. Meanwhile, Dré Slaman bears up under the heaviest dramatic load as Nassrin’s modern-day Mother, smuggling banned books under her chador (more on that later) while running interference between the oppressive government, her radical husband, and her impatient daughter. These adults keep the plot progressing and set the overall tone, but allow the kids’ stars to shine.

THE SETTING
The set starts out as a span of sand-colored, ancient-looking architecture, but as the story unfolds, bolts of silk unfurl, enveloping the setting and the characters in sparkling, soft billows. It’s simultaneously a celebration of the native textiles, and a demonstration of the way stories enrich the bland day-to-day landscape.

THE GARB
Lest it seem odd that an article of clothing should get its own callout, consider this: Adults will likely see Nassrin’s mother’s chador, which obscures everything but her face and hands, for what it is, a customary costume that an Iranian woman wears outside the home. But for westernized children, it’s bound to generate discussion. As in, “Mommy, why is Nassrin’s mommy wearing a black blanket!” Donning and doffing the costume each time she comes and goes from home, Nassrin’s mom enacts a routine almost as accessible as Mister Rogers changing from his sport-coat into his cardigan. Kids will quickly come to realize that there is a “regular lady” under the black blanket—a worthwhile acclimation.

Happy Persian New Year, Portland. And here’s hoping in between eager chomps of nan, you leave room for this entrancing fable, as well as the broader cultural conversation it’s likely to kickstart with your kids.

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: Theater, children, international

film

PIFF Pick: The Last Circus

This International Film Fest flick delivers politically portent clown-on-clown violence.

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Clown

For the last leg of its impressive two-and-a-half-week run, the Portland International Film Festival has partnered with area colleges and CineLit, to curate a showcase of films en español. Among the titles, Black Bread humanizes the struggles of post-war rural Spain, Revolución and Chicogrande tackle the Mexican Revolution, and Hermano is the Venezuelan submission for “Best Foreign Language Film” Oscar. Culturephile can’t catch them all—though we suggest you do. Jonathan Banasky was able to take in The Last Circus, and file this review:

Balada Triste de Trompeta (The Last Circus) has everything you would expect from a foreign film: sex, romance, betrayal, action, and of course, what would a good piece of art cinema be without machine gun-toting clowns? Of all the imaginative films coming to town in this year’s PIFF, I defy you to find one as bizarre, grotesque, disturbing, and entertaining as Alex de la Iglesia’s historical black comedy.

The movie follows Javier, a sad circus clown who falls in love with his boss’ girlfriend. The three end up in a love triangle that spirals out of control, resulting in one clown’s machine gun rampage, among other equally as ridiculous clown-on-clown violence. The film intertwines historical facts of Franco’s fascist regime with absurd fiction, creating an allegory representing the clownish nature of fascism and its effect on Spain.

Political symbolism aside, this movie is absolutely insane, yet you cannot take your eyes off it. Every shot is artfully crafted with a pulpy, comic book feel and every scene sways between hilarious, horrifying, and downright strange. The Last Circus may not be for everyone (especially those of us with lingering childhood clown issues), but de la Iglesia’s film is truly original and unlike anything you will find in American cinema.

The Portland International Film Festival runs through the 26th. For more upcoming 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: Review, Film, festival, Latin, circus, Spanish, international

film sports

Bicycle Film Festival

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This Friday and Saturday, the Bicycle Film Festival , endearingly dubbed the “BFF,” will breeze through Portland with a curated selection of shorts, and a local opener: beach-punk band Guantanamo Baywatch. Not to be confused with Portland’s own Filmed By Bike , which screens in April, this annual showcase of bike-themed short films is headquartered in New York, and set to tour internationally in 2011. BFF was friendly enough to send along the following trailers:

RIDING THE LONG WHITE CLOUD
Seven professional skateboarders attempt to cycle New Zealand’s North Island in this beautiful documentary. They experience the Heaven and Hell of cycling New Zealand while traversing the island in search of skate spots.

LINE OF SIGHT: LUCAS BRUNELLE (Dir. Benny Zenga)
His helmet-cam footage of unsanctioned street races around the globe gives us a unique perspective on the best urban riders in the world.

EMPIRE (Dir. Christian Thormann & Luke Stiles)
The long-awaited urban cycling feature following some of the best riders in New York City.

BIRTH OF BIG AIR (Dir by Jeff Tremaine, produced by Spike Jonze, Johnny Knoxville and Mark Lewman)
A documentary about BMX legend Mat Hoffman.

The Bicycle Film Festival will show at the Clinton Street Theater this Friday and Saturday. For more upcoming 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: festival, bicycle, portland bike, punk, international

music

Album Review: Ashia Grzesik

Bison Rouge honors its title with earthy, crimson old-world tones.

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L-ashia-grzesik

Cellist Ashia Grzesik may sing music from the old country, wear ruffled skirts and cook borscht, but she’s no neo-bohemian gypsy-punk poser. Though she currently hangs her plumed hats in Portland, this sultry songstress hails from the old country—Wroclaw, Poland, to be exact.

Grzesik, a classically trained musician, has been very active in the local music and theater communities, playing in both the Portland Cello Project and Vagabond Opera, and winning a Drammy Award in 2010 for her cello score to Third Rail Rep’s The Gray Sisters. This coming Friday the 25th, Grzesik is set to release a 5-song EP entitled Bison Rouge, a follow-up to her 2007 debut album Pay To Be Loved.

Listening to Bison Rouge, one can’t help but hear a collage of influences. Grzesik can certainly give Joanna Newsome a run for her whimsy, she possesses the old-world charm and quirky dramatics of Regina Spector and the cello-punk instincts of Bonfire Madigan, and her voice vacillates between the throaty alto of Amanda Palmer and the ethereal soprano of Maria Callas. Simply put, she’s got a little bit of everything.

The album starts off with a playful number, “Country Will Do Her Well,” in which Grzesik’s operatic voice shares the stage with her penchant for theatrical storytelling. “Rip Up your Stitch” is the one of the more accessible songs on the EP, with Grzesik going easy on her vocals to let the lyrics sleepily tumble out. The song “Broken Crowns” starts with a beautiful string arrangement, very much in the classical realm until her cello kicks into high gear. She sings the chorus, “Its a long way down, it’s a long way down” climaxing in a cacophony of descending strings and a deep primal wail, (which is quite cathartic and pleasing to the ears, though I’m not sure that it’s supposed to be).

On “Prosto Do Nieda”, Grzesik sings in her native tongue, and the song seems to ooze with seduction. She could be singing about Pierogis for all I know—but something about foreign languages and cellos just sounds sexy. As the song moves toward its final conclusion, Grzesik spits out the lyrics dramatically, and though liner notes reveal that the piece is about her grandmother, I prefer to imagine her admonishing a lover (or perhaps a Pierogi).

Grzesik’s last song, “Ode to Bison,” swaggers and teases relentlessly. Her voice is cool and confident, as she casually states, “I’ll get a blade to skin your heart, don’t you worry about the pain.” This track sounds like it belongs in a Broadway musical; in fact, I can clearly picture Roxie Hart slinking around her cellblock to this number, proclaiming, “You’ve got nowhere to go, you’ve got nowhere to run” in a mockingly saccharine tone. As for the other songs, It’s easy to visualize any one of them being performed in some smoky nightclub in Eastern Europe, or the south side of Chicago (or perhaps a turn-of-the-century Victorian-era ballroom in Northeast Portland).

Though it’s hard to resist comparing her to other artists or sticking her in a box neatly labeled with an obscure hip-sounding genre name (Steampunk freak-folk? Cabaret-core?), that wouldn’t be fair. Good music sounds like other good music, and hence can seem so familiar that you can’t imagine not having heard it before—but in truth, you haven’t. Thus every fleeting moment of recognition that “Bison Rouge” reveals, further solidifies Grzesiks’ mastery of craft.

Ashia Grzesik will play an all-ages EP release party on February 25 at The Secret Society with guest performers, including bellydancer Nagasita and members of Vagabond Opera and the Portland Cello Project. Take advantage of the online ticket presale that includes a copy of “Bison Rouge.” For more upcoming 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: Review, music, chamber, album, portland cello project, circus, international

phile under: world wise

New Year Holidays
From Here To China

January 1 marks the Western New Year, but not the only one.
Why not enjoy Portland’s later-breaking international festivities?

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Lansun

Chinese New Year at Lan Su Garden will feature a luminous floating lantern display.

2010 Memories
My, what a year in Portland culture. On this blog alone, we’ve seen tasteful nudes, talkative clowns, and even a handful of overgrown Annies. We’ve watched Japanese performance art in the pouring rain, done our best to decipher ten tiny dances, and demanded answers from a folk-singing cabbie, a novel-writing stripper, and a girl in a box, just to name a few. There’s been music, laughter, chaos and charity, and 2011 will surely bring more of the same.


NYE Plans
This New Year’s Eve, practically every bar in Portland will host some sort of bash. But in case you’re lost, Culturephile’s blog brother The Bar Pilot has already compiled a short list of recommended reveling spots.

However, if you miss these festivities, don’t despair; January 1 is only the first of several viable New Year dates. If you switch from the Gregorian to the Julian calendar, for instance, or if you take your cues from the moon, you’ll discover there’s still time to celebrate the turnover. Does this sound like an excuse to prolong partying? Well—maybe it is. Anyway, might as well mark your international calendar for:

RUSSIAN NEW YEAR
Rumor has it, The Secret Society Lounge will host a big, authentic Russian New Year bash on January 15 (although it doesn’t seem to be listed on the Lounge’s calendar. Shh; it’s a secret.) Local Eastern-bloc rockers Chervona will headline, supported by Russian folk singer Natasha Hauge and Russian DJ Zhenya. Celebrants will be taught the proper traditions of vodka drinking—namely, washing down plenty of zakuson, Russian drinking snacks. Russian Santa, Ded Moroz, and his partner, Snegurochka (the Snow Maiden daughter of Spring and Frost, who yearns for the companionship of mortal humans) will both appear, partaking in a traditional Russian tree-lighting ceremony.

JAPANESE NEW YEAR, aka MOCHITSUKI
On January 30, this traditional celebration of Japanese rice-pounding should be bumpin’, with not-one-but-two breakdancing troupes, Portland Taiko drum performances, and many other Japanese attractions, both traditional and modern. It’s at the Scottish Rite Center, but don’t let that confuse you.

CHINESE NEW YEAR
This coming week (Jan 2-9), Lan Su Chinese Garden will be open free of charge—but again, don’t be confused; that’s not Chinese New Year—that’s just Lan Su being nice. New Year celebrations begin on February 3, and culminate on February 17, with an evening ceremony lit by several hundred glowing paper lanterns. During regular business hours throughout the celebration, the Garden will entertain visitors with lion dances, martial arts demos, traditional music, and hands-on art activities. Each guest will receive a red envelope, signifying a wish for prosperity in the coming year. What’s in it, you ask? Your hopes and dreams.

Whenever you choose to start 2011—and however long you make it last—Culturephile and Portland Monthly wish you a happy new year.

For a more comprehensive list of events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar!

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Tags: international

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