March, 2009

James Agee on Film, pt. 1

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

James Agee

I was rummaging through the Reg the other day, hunting down a film review in a 1948 issue of The Nation by totally-cool-dude James Agee that I had heard rumor of, but couldn't confirm if it existed. Not only does it exist, but it's only one of many great reviews by Agee. I'm a big fan of the zinger!-school of film criticism. These are a few highlights picked out from just the first few issues of 1948. I plan on returning soon to search through the rest.

"Tycoon." Several tons of dynamite are set off in this movie; none of it under the right people.

"Bill and Coo." Over 200 trained birds, complete with neckties, hats, etc., waddle around an anthropornithomorphic community called Chirpendale. By conservative estimate, the God-damnedest thing ever seen.

"The Miracle of the Bells." As pernicious a gobbet of pseudo-religious asafetida as I have been forced to sniff at, man and Sunday-school-boy. I hereby declare myself the founding father of a Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to God.

"You Were Meant For Me." That's what you think.

God Loves Frats

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

Videogum is showing Alpha Delt some love today.

This video of a Chicago fraternity "welcoming" the evil Westboro Baptist "god hates fags" protesters to their college earlier this week with a song, dance, and "no tolerance for intolerance" banner is basically the most heartwarming fucking thing I've ever seen in my entire life:

Of course, I don't think the Videogum folks quite realize that U of C frats are not exactly representative of Greek life across the country, but it is pretty cool.

Hyde Park Urbanist and the Maroon also cover the very University of Chicago counter-protest.
[photo by avi schwab]

[photo by avi schwab]

Holding Court

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

The Court Theatre has announced its 2009/2010 season...and I'm apprehensive.

Court Theatre proudly announces the company's fifty-fifth annual season, which opens with August Wilson's Chicago jazz-era classic Ma Rainey's Black Bottom directed by Resident Artist Ron OJ Parson. The Season continues with Charles Ludlam's camp classic The Mystery of Irma Vep directed by Sean Graney; and the Chicago Premieres of Joan Didion's The Year of Magical Thinking and Tony Kushner's adaptation of The Illusion, both directed by Artistic Director Charles Newell. The Season will close with Athol Fugard's Sizwe Banzi is Dead directed by Resident Artist Ron OJ Parson. The 2009/10 season will be performed at Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis Avenue in Hyde Park.

I would be very excited to see the Didion play...except that it stars Mary Beth Fisher. In fact, it's a one-woman-show. Fisher is one of the most frequently-cast veteran actresses in Chicago - and, in my opinion, inexplicably so. I just don't get the appeal. I've found that she plays every role exactly the same; even at the level of line delivery, she speaks every sentence with the exact same inflection. I've also seen her cast several times as English characters, yet she seems oddly unable to sustain the accent.

I was pleasantly surprised by her understated performance in the first act of Court's recent production of Ibsen's The Wild Duck - yet she closed out the play with a return to that same reliable inflection, which rendered all of Gina's lines as sardonic jokes at her husband's expense. It seemed like they were playing it for laughs, and the audience the night I saw it responded accordingly. I recognize the inherent challenge in presenting that play, as the characters each cling so feverishly to their ideologies that they do appear ridiculous and comical, even though the consequences are tragic. It's similar to the audience laughter I've always witnessed at screenings of Hitchcock's Vertigo - at the tensest moment of Jimmy Stewart's attempted transformation of Kim Novak into his lost love, the crowd uncomfortably laughs at how extreme his obsession is. Even so, I think there are more strategic ways to deal with the absurdity than jokey line deliveries...not to mention the choice of [spoiler alert] dropping a dead body from the ceiling.

I did enjoy The Wild Duck, all the same, and thought many of the performances were quite strong. The biggest problem in the cast was not, in fact, Mary Beth Fisher, but the young woman playing Hedvig. Charles Newell directed her exactly the same as he directed her as the daughter in Court's production of Carousel - a cloying, squealing, scampering moppet of a 4-year-old. Unfortunately, Hedvig is not 4, but 14 - and a precocious 14-year-old at that. Perhaps things are different in Norway, but I don't recall high school freshmen scurrying hyperactively everywhere they go - bent at the waist, literally running between the couch and the bookshelf of the living room. Hedvig's demise was more relief than tragedy in this particular production.

But back to the upcoming season. We've got some August Wilson - and, I mean, he's great, but I feel a little August Wilson fatigue (and find that most of his later plays really needed the help of a red pen). The Kushner and Fugard plays I'm excited to see.

But then...there's the one directed by Sean Graney of the Hypocrites.

Graney is treated like this brilliant wunderkind of Chicago theatre and I have no idea why. He doesn't seem, in my estimation, to know how to read. He either selects plays of pretty dubious quality, or selects plays that I adore...and then proceeds to butcher them. He rides completely roughshod over the texts, thinking he can do a whole lot better by inserting stupid sight gags and silly audio cues. He completely ignores the verbal wit of the playwrights he claims to adore, like Ionesco, and covers up their lines with gimmicks. The Court press release describes the play he is directing as a "high-camp quick-change romp." This is how he approaches every single play he directs.

I do like the Court a lot. For a long time, I thought it was the most consistent theatre in the city. I just hope they can keep it up.

[court theatre]

8.7

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

How long do you think it'd take me to get a Best New Music from Pitchfork if I started a band called The Black Crystal Wolves?

Sigh.

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

23%

IMDb does not mince words.

Well, what can ya do.

Playing smart

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Many of my friends regard improv with a great deal of skepticism - and understandably so. When the only available points of reference are Whose Line Is It Anyway? and some similarly game-based high school and collegiate comedy groups, there's no reason to assume that improv is anything beyond formulaic, lazy approximations of sub-SNL humor.

This means that most of my friends, despite living in Chicago for at least four years, have entirely avoided seeing long-form improv, one of the city's greatest cultural offerings, and arguably one of the greatest innovations of American theatre. They all love Chicago improvisers when they hit the "big time," appearing on 30 Rock or writing for The Colbert Report, yet rarely express any desire to see them in the environment where they get their start - and where, usually, they're at their best.

Last night, I saw a special performance of the Armando Diaz Experience at i.O. (formerly Improv Olympic) celebrating what would have been the 75th birthday of Del Close, the i.O.-cofounder and probably the most influential figure in American comedy of the past 50 years. The usual monologist was replaced by all of the performers periodically offering stories about Del, which continued on in a post-show discussion. The portrait painted of Del was of a mad journeyman and genius - a hyper-literate, larger-than-life drug-abuser who intimidated and inspired awe from everyone he encountered. One of the members of Baron's Barracudas, the first Harold-team he ever directed, returned to i.O. and offered a story about being a wide-eyed youth meeting Monty Python's Graham Chapman when he was in Chicago, who asked to be taken to meet Del. When they arrived at Del's roach-infested apartment, he found Del already sitting there with Bill Murray. Seeing the rapt attention that Chapman and Murray gave to everything that Del said, the young improviser realized that Del Close was more than just a local teacher, but instead a kind of guru to the entire comedy world.

Del Close

A point they emphasized was the importance Del put in "playing smart." Though notoriously brash and outspoken with his students, being stupid was really the only thing he would not tolerate. It doesn't have to be funny, as long as you are playing to the top of your intelligence. This elicited a quickly glossed-over moment of contention as Joe Bill interjected that, if the product you are selling is billed as "comedy," then it ought to be funny.

And there, I think, is the great tension that causes a lot of problems, and ultimately prevents many smart, funny people from exploring the world of improv. Really, it's a matter of marketing that trickles down to the content itself. There's a tension between Improv Olympic presenting itself as part of a larger narrative of innovative, experimental theatre and presenting itself as COMEDY! - a fun thing-to-do in the evenings for tourists and Wrigleyville barhoppers. i.O. attempts to do both, I think, perhaps necessarily so for survival, but I wish it could veer more toward the former. Hearing the veteran improvisers speak last night, I think they do too.

The global perspective on improv is, I think, that it's full of yukks and that's about it - a fairly brainless and harmless form of light entertainment. The story of improvised theatre in Chicago, though, is a story of intellectuals. It was born on the campus of the University of Chicago in the 1950s, with brilliant minds like Paul Sills, Mike Nichols, and Elaine May coming together at places like Jimmy's Woodlawn Tap to create a new approach to theatre as the Compass Players, which would eventually morph into Second City. Del Close was a book fiend and a member of Ken Kesey's Merry Pranksters. His ideas, as last night's performers implied, were inspired as much by quantum physics and Chaucer as Laurel and Hardy.

The Compass Players in Chicago, 1956

The Compass Players in Chicago, 1956

It's this approach that I like most in the improv I see. I'm not trying to be elitist and claim that all improvisers must hold advanced degrees and make exclusively referential humor. But I appreciate it when I see it. Maybe the most revered improv act in town, TJ Jagodowski and Dave Pasquesi, manage to perfectly blend universality and literacy - they even feature as a frequent guest Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tracy Letts. They play characters that everyone knows and has encountered in life, yet also infuse their dialog with pieces of literature and science that imply that they actually read - a lot. You sense the same thing seeing Noah Gregoropoulos perform, and The Reckoning, and others. These are people who experiment with form, who will often not be "funny" for 20 minutes, yet suddenly deliver an amazing payoff.

What's particularly astounding with Del Close's brand of long-form improv is that it is group theatre. If you pay attention to a good show by any Harold team, you can see stunning improvisational pyrotechnics at work - an element introduced at the beginning will return, inverted and reimagined to amazing effect, and all done with the performers arriving magically at the same destination. With only minimal elements of form pre-planned, the shows end up with better structure than, well...this rambling blog entry, for example.

So, I think the key for long-form improv to be taken seriously as an art form is for the community to take itself seriously. I wish it could rid itself of the word "comedy" sometimes, as the label is both helpful and toxic. As proud as I am of its Chicago roots, I wish it were not such a local phenomenon, but could be reproduced globally at the same caliber. Frankly, it's a subject that ought to be studied academically. It's not that the story hasn't been told - Jeff Griggs and Kim "Howard" Johnson, for example, have both published books in recent years about Del Close's life and death. It's just that the stories haven't been heard outside a very specialized audience.

I don't know what it would take - a biopic? A This American Life episode? But I think that the same people who revere Ian Curtis and Charlie Parker in music, or Virginia Woolf and Franz Kafka in literature, or Orson Welles in film, would hold Del Close in the same regard as a tragic icon of improvisational theatre, if only they knew the story.

Encyclopedia Brown v. Board of Education

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Shannon & Robb

Since it began in December, I've provided music for The Encyclopedia Show, a monthly showcase of spoken word/music/visual art/etc. created and hosted by my buds Robbie Q Telfer and Shanny Jean Maney-Magnuson. Each show is loosely based around a theme (bears, the moon, colors, explosives, the future) and different contributors are invited to write short pieces based on topics related to the theme.

Gapers Block just posted an interview with Robb about the show (in which I get a sweet name check - thanks, RQT!)

We had a moon pinata (made by my friend Meghan Keys) for the show we did for THE MOON. It was full of string cheese. My buddy Eric was holding the pole for it, which was kind of short, and we gave a cane to our friend Al to try and whack the pinata open. Al is a delightful puppet-making lady, whose control over blindfolded cane-swinging was immediately questionable when she started flailing. Luckily, she didn't kill Eric, the pinata burst open with cheese for the children, and the audience started chanting "GOOD IDEA, GOOD IDEA." That was a highlight.

[gapers block]

200 hypothetical channels and still potentially nothing to watch

Monday, March 9th, 2009

The idea of a Comedy Central show called Just Humor Me is really bothering me. This program does not exist except for in my head. Yet, like those hypothetical arguments one dreams up while taking a shower, this somehow is still irrationally getting me all riled up.

Just Humor Me.

Not only is the title terrible, but I can imagine just how awful the corresponding content would be. I'm bothered even thinking about seeing "as seen on Comedy Central's Just Humor Me" on the ads for suburban comedy clubs featuring the up-and-comers from the show, who all would be wearing bowling shirts in their accompanying headshots.

What a terrible show.

Wayne & Jeffrey

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

Wayne and Jeffrey, 1970
Wayne and Jeffrey, 1970

Wayne and Jeffrey, 1971
Wayne and Jeffrey, 1971

[via sexypeople]

Margo Margo Margo!

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

Over at blowupdoll this week, they're doing a special feature of covers of Margo Guryan songs. Margo is one of my favorite songwriters ever. She had a music degree from Boston University and wrote really delicate jazz-inspired baroque-pop songs, complete with whispery double-tracked vocals and French horns, which are pretty much the keys to my heart. Unfortunately, she only put out a single album, 1968's Take a Picture, though an excellent CD of demo recordings was released in 2001. The Heavy Boxes covered her incredible song "Think of Rain" at our very first public performance ever.

Here is Mama Cass Elliot's recording of "I Think A Lot About You":

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Margo Guryan

Other Margo covers at blowupdoll:
Astrud Gilberto - Think of Rain
Spanky and Our Gang - Sunday Morning
Julie London - Come to Me Slowly
Marie LaforĂȘt - Es Si J'Taime
Claudine Longet - I Don't Intend to Spend Christmas Without You
Samantha Jones - Come to Me Slowly

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