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Review: One Night With Janis Joplin

PCS’s tribute show will—intentionally—give you the blues.

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Janis

Janis Joplin may have died in 1970, but Portland Center Stage is striving to keep her spirit alive. In One Night with Janis Joplin, PCS has resurrected the legend of the self-described “white chick singing the blues,” offering her fans the impossible: a second chance to experience the power of her live performance.

Developed by Randy Johnson in collaboration with Janis’ siblings, Laura and Michael Joplin, One Night is a tribute concert hemmed in by a narrative flow (and a massive wreath of colored lights and tulle). With a band standing behind her and images of memorabilia projected on a screen as she speaks, Janis (Cat Stephani) shares her life story, feeding intimate biographical details to die-hard fans: She spent Saturday afternoons cleaning her house to a soundtrack of showtunes. She took odd jobs as a teen. She painted (and the images of the paintings are projected onscreen.) Interspersed with these detailed anecdotes, are philosophical musings about the blues. “People like their blues singers miserable, they like their blues singers to die afterwards,” says the implausibly prescient singer. (It’s almost like she knows!)

This role puts Stephani in a sensitive position: with every flip of her hair, every pause and phrase, every squawk and murmur and scream, she either reinforces or debunks audience preconceptions about a rock hero. She tries her best to match Janis’ gravelly voice and raspy cackle, but her classically-trained voice is too smooth and pretty to allow for direct imitation. Stephani most closely approximates Janis on the high notes, where her power shines through and her emotional delivery provides the rawness that will satisfy seekers of a Janis-like sound. Because she’s consistent within her own interpretation of the character, as the show wares on the audience gradually accepts the “new” Janis, and opens up to the character’s vulnerable, intimate side. “I know no guy has ever made me feel as good as an audience,” Stephani confesses with a low hum of sexuality that makes the crowd blush.

Sabrina Elayne Carten performs alongside Stephani as The Blues Singer, embodying the musical influences Janis adored (Etta James, Odetta, Nina Simone). Carten’s show-stealing voice and captivating physical presence feel steadier than Stephani’s attempts to channel Janis’ physicality. Carten also gets the best getups; the white fringe number that she wears while portraying Bessie Smith drawing gasps from the audience.

The final song, “I’m Gonna Rock My Way to Heaven,” was written by Jerry Ragovoy for Janis, and when the character mentions it she turns to her guitarist. “We’re gonna record that one real soon, yeah?” She never did.

In the singer’s own words, “It’s the want of something that gives you the blues. It’s that hole, it’s the vacuum.” Ultimately, amid the triumph of the tribute show, the tragedy of the loss looms even larger.

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, Review, PCS, Queer-Friendly

phile under: five questions

5 Questions with Good Night Billygoat

Stop-motion impresario David Klein of Billygoat
opens a window into the band’s world of miniature magic.

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Billygoats

We first published this piece in June 2010, but since then the music/film force known as Good Night Billygoat has made great strides, augmenting their live lineup with drummer Corey Nelson, finishing a new work called “Sophia,” recording a multimedia disc as merch, and embarking on a nationwide tour with Little Dragon . Last night, both Dragon and ’goat held the Doug Fir in awe, and as the crowd dispersed into the cold, a few were overheard murmuring theories and questions about the brilliant stop-motion animation. Here are at least a few answers.

David Klein and Nick Woolley, of Klein Wooley Productions, subsist on rustic soups; play ambient, epic multi-instrumental duets on harp, bass, and drum machine; and create intricate stop-motion films featuring birds, snails, and sylphs; all from the mossy confines of their workshop, a North Portland garage. (Magical realists, you were right all along—there are elves in our midst.) On the heels of the duo’s performance at No.Fest, Culturephile caught up with Klein, for the latest round of five questions .

You really can’t talk stop-mo without talking about frame rates, hours, number of pieces in a sequence. Run me through some of the numbers that pertain to your process.

Frame Rates run about 10-12 per second. [That’s 600-720 stills per minute.] As for hours—Geez. Nick and I will spend the day working on light-boxes and simultaneously prepping for shooting stills into the evening. We’ll spend about 4-5 hours taking photos. Getting 5-10 seconds per day is the goal. I’m usually editing from 1- 3am (while The Simpsons or NBC is massaging my shoulders) Not to sound like a total hippie, but the video is done for the evening when it latches on to a rhythm.

Your pieces seem to be very dreamlike, and they evoke a lot of familiar icons while still feeling unfamiliar. How do you decide what images and characters you want to create?

The imagery is always displayed in a somewhat simple form, letting an audience interpret what they will. Most of the images come from our environment, reoccurring dreams, and coincidences. And some images come from whatever is within reach depending on budget (which doesn’t actually exist). The people featured in the animations tend to come with the creative archetypes they are channeling, and we do our best to translate this into the video.

Let’s talk flow: do you decisionmake scene-by-scene, or do you mastermind the whole narrative arc of the imagery before you start?

I sometimes am amazed these things even have a flow. They’re constantly shifting/morphing. Now I just look at the set in the afternoon and will ask myself “What is the most practical way to approach this today without wanting to jump off St. John’s Bridge by nightfall?” So it’s really day-by-day at this point. Anything can happen, which is reassuring.

Does the music shape the animations, or vice versa?

The first two animations we did, really dictated the musical accompaniment, without a doubt. But sometimes the music and video will argue back and forth and we’ll have to lengthen/shorten one or the other. The current animation in progress, Sophia , is looking like the most open-ended of the three.

What experience or feeling are you trying to bring to your audience?

Before ever making any animation, I was reading a book on color and human responses and I got inspired by film-maker Cecil Stokes and his Auroratone Films, which were used to treat veterans post WWII. Not that we’re wanting to hypnotize the audience, but having a collective releasing session isn’t the worst thing that could happen. We’re here to make you feel good!

If you missed Billygoat last night, don’t fret—there are many more great events in the offing. For a list of upcoming events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar!

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Tags: music, Interview, Queer-Friendly, Animation, 5 questions, five questions, stop motion

PCS Artistic Director: “It Gets Better”

Chris Coleman voices his experience growing up gay,
supports teens in a national anti-suicide campaign.

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Last week, I was chased across the street by a young man in a purple pashmina. “Excuse me,” he panted, “I just wanted to thank you for wearing purple. You look great.” Well, gosh; I’ve made a few style statements in my time, but they rarely disrupt traffic. When I looked puzzled, the man explained: “We’re wearing purple this week to show solidarity with gay youth. There have been a lot of suicides….so we’re wearing purple to show support, and tell them they’re okay.” Upon further investigation, Mr. Pashmina (and I) may have been a little early to the purple party. Most websites set the “official” Wear Purple Day for this Wednesday, October 20. So good news; there’s still a little time to polish up your amethysts and launder your lavenders, and wear them tomorrow.

Meanwhile, a concurrent project with the same goal, the It Gets Better Project, features queer adults bringing words of encouragement to their younger bretheren. Chris Coleman, Artistic Director of Portland Center Stage (and recent featuree of our Fall Arts Issue), just added his voice to the cause via this video, filmed in the Gerding lobby:

To read more of Culturephile’s queer-friendly coverage, check out the queer-friendly tag! Or for a comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar anytime.

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Tags: PCS, Queer-Friendly

phile under: TBA 2010

TBA 2010: Digging Their Own Graves

Dutes Miller and Stan Shellabarger answer five questions about their groundbreaking performance art piece.

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Miller & Shellabarger resign themselves to each other’s mortality in Graves. Photo courtesy of PICA.

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Miller & Shellabarger resign themselves to each other’s mortality in Graves. Photo courtesy of PICA.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The (reluctantly political) pair made a cameo in Maine marriage-equality exhibit Mind Bending With The Mundane.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Miller & Shellabarger patiently crochet their pink tube.

Of course today would have to be sunny. After a week of overcast weather, the sun sprang out just in time to enliven your weekend—and make a grave digger’s job harder. Dutes Miller and Stan Shellabarger—whose performance-art piece requires them to dig their own graves and then lie in them—have broken a serious sweat as they wedge their way into the dirt on the perimeter of The Works. “We didn’t realize the soil would be this compacted,” comments Miller. “It’s all rock and clay.” But he and his partner are taking it in stride. They’re very patient men.

Both wear long beards, white tee-shirts, and blue jeans. Both wield standard shovels. At high noon, each has excavated about a foot’s depth, and stands chipping away at a rectangular hole. At first, I didn’t know a) if they were the artists, or if the artists had hired some help, and b) if they’d want to talk. But it’s seeming okay. And since “Shellanbarger” is a hell of a handle, Culturephile will henceforth refer to these guys by first name. Meet Dutes and Stan.

I know I can read my program…but I’d like to just ask, what’s this work about? Is it a meditation on mortality? Or does it have something to do with the figure of speech, “you’re digging your own grave?”

The two seem surprised. “We haven’t been asked that question before,” says Stan. “What do you mean?” asks Dutes, leading me to flounder for an explanation. “Well, digging your own grave, typically meaning error, right? Like doing the wrong thing, then doing more wrong things—expending more effort to worsen your results. Or futility.”

“Hm,” they both respond. “No, it’s not really about that,” says Stan. “I guess no one’s asked that because we’ve only done this piece in Switzerland, so maybe there was enough of a language barrier, that they weren’t thinking about the English figure of speech. Maybe more people will ask that here. But—no. It’s really about me and him and our partnership. I was really inspired by two books by Jacques Derrida: The Gift of Death, and The Work of Mourning. In them, he talks about the responsibility and the rules of friendship, how as soon as you meet a new friend, there’s an understanding between you that one of you is going to die first. And it’s at that point, that you begin the mourning.”

I understand you two are romantic partners as well as art partners. Has doing this piece, and contemplating your and your partner’s mortality, changed your relationship?

Both respond in the affirmative. One says “Definitely,” and one says “Certainly.”
“Well, when we get about five feet down, we’re going to dig a small tunnel just here, and then as we each lie in our graves we’ll reach through and hold hands,” says Dutes. “While it’s a very sweet idea that we could hold hands in the grave, underground, of course it’s an impossibility.”

“Yes, it’s changed our relationship and how we think about each other,” says Stan, “but we’ve also been working together for a long time. Many of our pieces are autobiographical; still, we hope there’s enough there that an audience can connect to their own experience. We were part of an exhibit in Maine called Mindbending With The Mundane , about marriage equality, where we had images of ourselves with our beards tied together. And there’s one piece we do called Pink Tube, in which we’ve crocheted a pink tube of yarn, and when we exhibit the piece, we crochet on opposite ends of the tube. We only work on it in public—we don’t sit around at home crocheting it—but it’s now about 60 feet long. Of course the longer it gets—the longer we work together on it—the further apart we can get from one another. Sometimes when we exhibit it, we’re placed in different rooms. There’s generally a bittersweet aspect to our work.”

So several of your pieces have a long duration then. How do you handle that—do you go into a sort of meditative state? Do you get impatient, or fatigued?

Both laugh a little. “All sorts of things happen,” says Stan. “Sometimes it can get meditative, but then when people engage and ask questions, then it’s not meditative at that point. And of course there is fatigue. With the Pink Tube piece, we pretty much made a pact that we’ll work on it until one of us physically can’t anymore, due to—well, arthritis, or—”

“loss of limb,” Dutes interjects, laughing. “You know, not nice things to think about, but possible.”

“Sure. And when one of us dies, the other one will unravel the tube,” Stan finishes.

Along with the repetitive nature of the work, there must be a lot of repeat questions. What do you guys get asked all the time?

“‘What are you doing?’ is the biggest one,” says Dutes. “And then sometimes they’ll think they’re being a smartass and say, ‘Digging a grave?’ and when we say ‘yes,’ they have nothing else to say. Some people will tell us their own stories, too. Like with Pink Tube, people will tell us about their grandmother who crochets, or with this, people will tell us their own stories about death and graves. We welcome engagement with the public. There’s not the idea that it’s theatrical. There is no ‘fourth wall.’ Our work is concept-driven. We’re not presenting a story, per se, so there’s no feeling that the audience is disrupting anything.”

You mentioned marriage equality. Could the struggle represented in your work, along with the intimacy—be read as a statement on the struggle for marriage equality?

“We always feel unfortunate that our work is political. It’s just because we’re two men, that it’s political,” says Stan.
I say, “Sorry, I won’t frame it that way.”
“No,” says Dutes, “It doesn’t matter; because people will frame it that way. As soon as people read that it’s two men doing this, it becomes symbolic of something political as well.”
“Maybe not so much here in Portland,” I offer.
“Maybe not,” says Dutes. “That’d be great. This town does seem to have a lot of unisex bathrooms; that’s always a good sign.”

I thank Stan and Dutes for their time, and tell them I might be back later to snap a picture. “That’s fine,” they say. “We’ll be here all day.”

For more information on TBA events, visit PICA. A more comprehensive list of upcoming events can be found at our Arts & Entertainment Calendar.

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Tags: Art, Interview, performance art, Queer-Friendly, 5 questions, five questions, TBA, TBA 2010, The Works

phile under: theater

BAR THEATER DOUBLE FEATURE:
Beach Battle & Vamp Romp

Someday Lounge raises the bar for campy summer pub plays.

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Vamp2

You know it’s hard out here for a vamp!
Alba dances around the fringes, hungry for blood and love.

Last night, Culturephile hopped into Someday Lounge for its $12 theater two-fer: Beach Blanket Beyond, and Alba The Vampire. Pleasantly shocked by the level of entertainment these two pieces provide, we suggest catching them next weekend before they close.

Beach Blanket Beyond is so beyond 60’s surfer campy, you expect someone to actually jump a shark. Ripped from the pages of Jason Squamata’s comic book; the “hunky” lead wears a soft-sculpture muscle-suit, the beachy beauties shimmy around in bright sarongs and drape themselves submissively on the males, and the players repeatedly “freeze-frame,” chime in some cheesy narration, and then resume their movements to illustrate the action. Undoubtedly an homage to the writer’s nerdiness, the cameo character is a teenaged H. P. Lovecraft, hefting a musty book of magic spells and hamming discomfort in his trunks. It’s all very self-aware and stylized and silly—and if it weren’t well executed, it would fall totally flat. Luckily, all cues, props, pauses, freezes, and fake muscles are tucked impeccably into place, for a piece that achieves every laugh it intends, and uses its minimal, low-budget setup for more than it’s worth.

Alba The Vampire, an original play by Jason Ferte, makes light of a modern Single White Vamp with a major cross to bear: the inability to interface her love life with her…erm…dietary needs. The leading lady is tasked with a stream of monologues, and she kills! She delivers a perfectly toned mix of bravado, comic timing, and nervous, urgent physicality that Culturephile hasn’t seen since Artist Rep’s Gracie & The Atom. Resultantly, this caustic comic vampire is highly humanized. You can’t help but care about her fate, and hope she’ll be able to stave her many appetites. Minor characters also hold their own, with spot-on comedy stylings, while a smattering of original music makes the play feel musical, but not quite like a musical, per se. That’s actually okay—while the singing is undistractingly competent, it’s the believable speaking and dynamic blocking that really sell this show.

Of the bar-hosted theater productions we’ve seen this summer, this double-header should take home a two-headed blue ribbon, for taking its silly material seriously, playing equally well to friends and strangers, donating a portion of proceeds to Outside In, and never missing a beat.


For a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar!

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Tags: Theater, comedy, performance, kitsch, Queer-Friendly, Gay-Friendly, vampire, comics,

phile under: comedy

Margaret Cho: Musician?

Famous comedian hits the Schnitz tonight,
promoting new comedy songs.

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Hilarious Margaret Cho wants you to take her musical side. Seriously.

“Margaret Cho” is a name you know. Inarguably the most famous queer Korean-American in comedy, she’s carved her own niche among gregarious greats, with riotous impressions of her mother, self-effacing declarations of sexuality (“I’m not straight or gay—I’m slutty!”), and off-kilter stoner observations (“I wonder what it would be like to braid Chewbacca….”) There is no question that Margaret Cho can talk your ear off, and you’ll laugh your a$$ off.

But how is she at singing?

Tonight at the Schnitz, Margaret Cho will appear, no doubt slinging a few jokes, but also strapping on a guitar to shill songs from her latest project—musical album Cho Dependent, featuring cameos from the following stars:

Tegan and Sara, Tommy Chong, Ben Lee, Brendan Benson, Fiona Apple, Andrew Bird, Jon Brion, Garrison Starr, Grant Lee Phillips, Ani DiFranco, Meghan Toohey, Rachael Yamagata.

Some of those names will undoubtedly get Portland’s attention, so Culturephile asked Ms. Cho a couple quick questions about how she plans to hold it.

You’ll be in Portland tonight—a town that’s almost as famously queer as your comedy. Have you partied much here? Any local scene stories to share?

You know, I haven’t!* I’ve been here a number of times, but it was always to work. I remember being in a bagel shop at 6am, and everyone singing along to Elliott Smith. That was the best.             

That sort of thing happens here. Portland’s brimming with the musically-inclined. Will knowing that your Portland audience has tons of musicians in it, change the way you perform your songs? 

Oh, I don’t know! I play in front of musicians all the time, but mostly I sing to tracks and play a little. It depends on my voice and what’s happening. 

Does it seem easier, or harder, to play music for other musicians?
 
Well, I do it a lot since my work is mostly collaborating with people, so I’m always playing with, or in front of, great musicians.                   

Hearing  a joke more than once, is usually less welcome than hearing a song more than once. Do you think that when you combine music and comedy, you shorten the shelf-life of the songs, or lengthen the shelf-life of the jokes?

I’m hoping to extend the life of both the joke and the song. Some joke songs just rock! Like [Weird Al Yankovic’s] Amish Paradise or [Flight Of The Conchords’] The Most Beautiful Girl In The Room – I can listen to them forever. So I’m hoping to have funny songs that also rock, and rocking songs that make you laugh!



Does Cho have the chops to stack up to her musicomical idols, and honor Cho Dependent’s A-list roster? You decide:

*Portland, you have your orders: Party tonight with Margaret Cho.

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Tags: comedy, music, Live, Interview, Queer-Friendly, Gay-Friendly, album

phile under: queer friendly

New all-ages brunchtime drag revue!

Coffee, Eggs, Wigs and Legs!

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Chaos In A Container wants to drag you out of bed for Sunday brunch.

You go into Sunday brunch with certain expectations. Coffee. Omelettes. Perhaps some toast. What you least expect is a fully frocked and coiffed cadre of drag queens, prepping to put on a show. Nevertheless, yesterday morning Crush, on SE 14th and Belmont, delivered all of the above. “Bear with us,” exhorted Jaiden Palace (pictured, right) as the troupe tested sound and lights. “We’re experiencing some testicular difficulties.”

The valiant a.m. antics, emceed by Ms. Phoenix Monte (pictured, left), marked the premiere in a series of morning drag performances by Chaos In A Container, a new group of femme-feigners. Juicy Monique Palace (pictured, foreground) confessed beginners’ jitters, but delivered a soulful performance of “I Am Changing.” And, egged on by her teenage daughter Coco*, Ms. Monte swished through several high-kicking numbers, and saucy shout-outs to the groggy morning crowd.

Set to become a Sunday staple, the event kicks up just where the more risqué Saturday night soirees at Embers and Darcelle’s leave off. And with coffee, cornbread, and all the other brunch amenities on-hand, it promises to awaken queer-arts appreciation in a whole new way.

*Crush admits all-ages patrons ’til 3pm.

For a more comprehensive list of events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar.

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Tags: Theater, Fashion, Drag, Queer-Friendly, Gay-Friendly

phile under: flash mob

Hootin’ Annies!

Heads up, SantaCon. A red-and-white summer spectacle is hot on your heels.

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Hootinannies

Luckily, the sun came out yesterday for AnnieCon.

This was a packed weekend. A hundred-odd Portlanders played music at PDX Pop Now. Ten thousand or so folks played fairies at Fairieworlds. But a few scamps looking for levity, played Annie, in a conspicuous downtown pub crawl yesterday afternoon.

The first annual AnnieCon, riffing off the international winter flash-mob phenom SantaCon, challenged its participants to caricature the lovable orphan, then hit the bars for Hannigan-style shenanigans. With a modest but respectable turnout yesterday, the event hopes to grow. Says founder Goldie Davich (pictured, third from right), “I’ve always loved Annie so much. As a curly-haired kid, I wanted to be Annie, and I’ve never stopped wanting it. This is the culmination of a lifelong dream.” Jeez. Cue the string section.

Silly as it may seem, post-Annie ennui is its own psychological meme. Below, consider the trailer from the documentary Life After Tomorrow, featuring actresses who struggled to gracefully outgrow the winsome role:

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Tags: comedy, monday fun, annual, Gay-Friendly, Queer-Friendly, Drag, drama, kitsch, fun, Guerilla Art, Downtown Bars, Downtown, Bar Culture, Events, Fashion, video

phile under: live review

RENT

Stumptown Stages gives Broadway classic a new lease.

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There are two types of people in the world: those who love RENT, and those who despise it. It’s melodramatic. It’s idealistic. It’s angsty. It’s maxed out with poetic double meanings that have since worked their way into the pantheon of cliche. If these are not deal-breakers, then we’re okay—and there’s a good chance that you’ll enjoy Stumptown Stages’ production, the musical’s post-broadway regional debut. Culturephile caught yesterday’s matinee. Here’s what stood out:

Best Assets: Ensemble chemistry and choral blend. The scenes where everyone is singing together onstage, are undeniably strong in this production, and the cast seems to genuinely like each other.

Most Riveting Solo Moment: Strong soloists, of course, are a given for RENT, so this almost doesn’t bear mentioning. But the tiara and sash would have to go to Maureen’s performance of “Over The Moon.” Though you’re supposed to laugh at this scene, Maureen (Alina Ziak) is so mesmerizing, she’ll make you believe. A master mind-trick, by an excellent performer.

Best Love Chemistry: Angel (Tyler Andrew Jones) and Tom (Jerrod Neal). Very warm, protective vibe. Not rip-roaringly sexual, but that makes sense for the dire straits the characters navigate.

Strongest Held Note: The second syllable of “Nightmare,” from “Will I?”, in act one, revealed the production’s Steve (Travis C. Patterson)—who doesn’t get tons of solo time—as a vocal standout.

Most Solid Harmonies: Mark (Clay Neal) and Roger (Stephen Miller).

Most Puzzling Problem: Roger’s inability to stay on key when singing solo, despite hitting pitch-perfect harmonies every time he sang with either Mark or Mimi (Heather Harlan). Hmm.

Best Physical Performances:

• Mimi’s hair-flipping gogo-dance routine. In electric blue sparkly spandex, she delivers the whole she-boom-boom.

• The ensemble’s rowdy cluster-hump in “La Vie Boheme,” shows off the cast’s group fluidity and chemistry.

• Angel’s last gasps, which conjure palpable pain.

Secret Weapons:

• Casting: The confines of a small stage demand extra subtlety. You can’t put anything over on an audience that’s that close. For the most part, actors honor their archetypes, with nary a soulless showboat in the mix.

• Lighting: This may seem silly to mention, but having recently attended a few shows that may as well have been held in gazebos, I really appreciated this lighting, designed by Director Kirk Mouser, which artfully supports season and mood, and beams intense, heavenly rays off Angel at the play’s dramatic climax.

• Band: Tucked away in the back hallway, piped through the PA, their live presence went unnoticed by the audience until the show was over. “Gosh, look, a band,” several people said, as they exited. (The fact that their performance was taken for granted, probably attests to their skill.)

A couple shortcomings:

• Aiming high: Three or four times (which isn’t bad, considering the material’s challenging vocal lines) a singer went for the super-high note, and choked. It would have been wiser for these mezzos (who probably know who they are) to aim for a tone closer to home, even if it meant deviating from the written melody.

• Not updating the wardrobe: Hm. Shared housing? Poverty? The pursuit of art? Are these topics the property of the New York 90’s? It seems like they’re just as pervasive in Portland, right now.The production no doubt chose to keep RENT in 90’s garb, for tradition’s sake. But it would have been more sporting, and equally on-message, to hop across the street to Belmont Stumptown and snatch modernized boho togs right off the patrons’ backs.

Theatre! Theater! ‘s total online obscurity: Although the production company for this particular play has a decent web presence, I defy you to casually google the Southeast Belmont venue, Theatre! Theater!. Resolving this may fill more seats. C’mon, guys, help us help you.

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Tags: Theater, Review, music, Queer-Friendly, Gay-Friendly, musical

phile under: sport-rock spectacle, pride pre-func

Pop Star Ping Pong War!

Local talent rallies to send one of their own to the Gay Games.

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Mercury or Willy Week?
Sleater-Kinney or Explode Into Colors?
Thermals or Starf*cker?
Which local rock luminaries will prevail in a ping pong showdown?

Tonight at Holocene, eight celebrity doubles teams take to the tables in support of Kaia Wilson’s (Butchies, Adickdid, Team Dresch, pictured) dream to compete in the Gay Games this summer in Cologne, Germany. Wilson has been rigorously training for the games under the moniker “Spin Slayer,” hoping to become “the best ponger in the northern hemisphere.” In preparation for her world conquest, she challenges tonight’s winning team to an epic paddling.

THE TEAMS:

Kathy Foster & Westin Glass (the Thermals)

Ryan Biornstad & Shawn Glassford (Starf*cker)

Lisa Schonberg & Heather Treadway (Explode into Colors/STLS)

Joe Preston (Thrones) & Donna Dresch (Team Dresch)

Alex Smith & Sean Sumler (AS/SS)

Rachel Blumberg (drummer extraordinaire) & Ezra Ace Caraeff (Portland Mercury)

Michael Mannheimer & Casey Jarman (WWeek)

Janet Weiss (S-K, Quasi) & Carrie Brownstein (S-K, Monitor Mix)

Tickets $5 (or more) at the door.
Click here to learn more about the Gay Games.

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Tags: Events, music, Sports, Queer-Friendly, Gay-Friendly, portland, pingpong

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