Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Monday, April 18, 2016
Saturday, April 16, 2016
The Crucible - Broadway (Saoirse Ronan plays Abigail Williams)
http://www.broadwayworld.com/article/VIDEO-Saoirse-Ronan-on-Playing-Abigail-Williams-in-THE-CRUCIBLE-Shes-the-Worst-20160415
This link takes you to an article + video of Saorise Ronan talking about Abigail Williams, whom she is playing in the Broadway version of the Crucible. Ronan is well known for her role in "The Lovely Bones."
This link takes you to an article + video of Saorise Ronan talking about Abigail Williams, whom she is playing in the Broadway version of the Crucible. Ronan is well known for her role in "The Lovely Bones."
Friday, April 15, 2016
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Friday, April 8, 2016
Thursday, April 7, 2016
100th POST
Guys I just wanted to post to be the 100th post.
HAPPY 100!
HAPPY 100!
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Selected Shorts: City People
"Malta Sheffer" by Nelson Eubanks (read by Brandon J. Dirden) and "A Sunday Kind of Love" by Tom Wolfe (read by Tracee Chimo)
Excerpts from Humans of New York (read by Vanessa Aspillaga, Jason Biggs, Tracee Chimo, Lynn Cohen, Brandon J. Dierdan and Peter Francis James)
Excerpts from Humans of New York (read by Vanessa Aspillaga, Jason Biggs, Tracee Chimo, Lynn Cohen, Brandon J. Dierdan and Peter Francis James)
Selected Shorts: Growing Up
"Resistance" by Stephan Enter (read by Michael Cerveris) and "Gorilla, My Love" by Toni Cade Bambara (read by Hattie Winston)
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
Selected Shorts: Young Love (2/8)
"How I Met My Husband" by Alice Munro, read by Amy Ryan/"The Meeting" by Aimee Bender, read by Paul Hecht
Does the story/selection appeal to you? Why or why not?
What does the reader to do bring the story to life, create a vivid voice? How would you rate the telling of the story? What in particular did you like or dislike?
Does the story/selection appeal to you? Why or why not?
What does the reader to do bring the story to life, create a vivid voice? How would you rate the telling of the story? What in particular did you like or dislike?
Selected Shorts: Hard Times (2/17)
"Republica Y Grau" by Daniel Alarcon, read by David Strathairn/"The Letter Writer" by M.T. Sharif, read by Joe Morton
Does the story/selection appeal to you? Why or why not?
What does the reader to do bring the story to life, create a vivid voice? How would you rate the telling of the story? What in particular did you like or dislike?
Does the story/selection appeal to you? Why or why not?
What does the reader to do bring the story to life, create a vivid voice? How would you rate the telling of the story? What in particular did you like or dislike?
Selected Shorts: An Alien and a Gentleman (2/24)
"Good Intentions" by Etgar Keret, read by Leonard Nimoy/"The Man Who Liked Dickens" by Evelyn Waugh, read by Leonard Nimoy
Does the story/selection appeal to you? Why or why not?
What does the reader to do bring the story to life, create a vivid voice? How would you rate the telling of the story? What in particular did you like or dislike?
Does the story/selection appeal to you? Why or why not?
What does the reader to do bring the story to life, create a vivid voice? How would you rate the telling of the story? What in particular did you like or dislike?
Selected Shorts: Strange Places (3/1)
"Portal" by J. Robert Lennon, read by Robert Sean Leonard/"A Curtain of Green" by Eudora Welty, read by Frances Sternhagen
Things to Comment on:
Does the story/selection appeal to you? Why or why not?
What does the reader to do bring the story to life, create a vivid voice? How would you rate the telling of the story? What in particular did you like or dislike?
Things to Comment on:
Does the story/selection appeal to you? Why or why not?
What does the reader to do bring the story to life, create a vivid voice? How would you rate the telling of the story? What in particular did you like or dislike?
Saturday, February 20, 2016
Thursday, February 11, 2016
Macbeth's Death Scenes
Polanski's Macbeth
Goold's Macbeth (Yes, it really does end like that. In the next scene, we see Macduff carrying around Macbeth's severed head).
Monday, February 8, 2016
Thursday, January 28, 2016
Sleep No More
Hilton Als' New Yorker review of the show:

After checking in at the box office, where audience members are given a playing card, and leaving coats, sweaters, and bags in a coatroom that lines the dimly lit entrance hall, you climb a flight of stairs that leads to a black, curtained space. There’s an opening in the curtain; you enter and, within moments, you’re shuffling through a maze. (The only light is projected onto the floor. But it’s not a path that inspires confidence, since you have already entered an environment that you don’t feel you can trust.) Will the curtains suffocate and swallow us up? Is there someone in the velvet darkness who will “get” us? Is there a trapdoor in the floor? We can’t hold on to the music as any kind of comfort. The score is loud, constant, a timpani-heavy beat combined with other abrasive sounds. (The dreadful, perfect soundtrack here and throughout the show is by Stephen Dobbie, whose work often sounds the way the protagonist’s agony reads in Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart.”) There is no one to help us. But then comes a measure of relief—if you can call it that. After we finally reach the other side of the maze, we find ourselves in a lounge, which consists of a small bandstand, a bar, tables, sofas, chairs. But the atmosphere is from another era, with a host from another era, dressed in a tuxedo, with black, slicked-back hair, and an unctuous, controlling manner (Conor Doyle in this performance; the cast varies). He welcomes us to Manderley.
Like our host, the smoky, damask-heavy atmosphere comes straight out of the nineteen-thirties. (The brilliant set is by Barrett, Livi Vaughan, and Beatrice Minns. The equally noticeable costumes are by David Israel Reynoso.) Or are we in the nineteen-thirties? Was our journey through the black velvet actually some kind of time travel? Doyle speaks in a plummy old-English-movie accent; he could well be the star of the sort of movie where bodies are found in the library and love and betrayal are expressed over a perfectly appointed dinner table. He directs us to the bar to purchase a drink, also telling us that, in short order, the cards we’ve been carrying will be called. You might be dreaming as you order a drink. You might be a dream yourself. Before you can settle in with your cocktail, though, your card is announced, and you move on to the next sequence of events, which forms the core of the performance. Standing in a dark vestibule in front of a lift, you’re given a mask to wear, which brings to mind both the murderer in the “Scream” series and the party guests in Stanley Kubrick’s “Eyes Wide Shut.” A beautiful black woman (Teena Blain) with long black hair, dressed in an evening gown and speaking with an exaggerated accent—every other word she utters, it seems, is “darling”; sometimes it sounds like a threat—tells us not to say a word; language would upset the other guests, or inmates. She implores us to hurry back if we must; she’ll be lonely without us. She’s lonely for the young man (John Sorensen-Jolink) who crowds us into a freight elevator, too. The chiaroscuro lighting in the lift only adds to the sense of dread and foreboding as he cautions us never to remove our masks, and assures us that if we get confused while on any of the hotel’s five floors that are open to us there are sentries in black who can help us. The elevator stops. We’re discharged. There’s the creak and whir of the lift descending. Then silence.
Doors. Rooms filled with desks, old papers, stuffed animals, all dimly lit. We’re on the verge of horror. But where is it? In our very imaginations? One of the rooms contains a number of beds with iron frames; clipboards with the inmates’ psychological histories are attached. But where are the nurses, the doctors, who are meant to see these absent patients through their disease of the mind? Is the sight of a room filled with bathtubs, of a man washing garments in one and then placing them on another tub to dry, any more real than the vision we will soon have of characters based on Macbeth and Lady Macbeth (Eric Jackson Bradley and Tori Sparks) engaged in a silent physical exchange—a battle that looks sexual because it is—before he helps her dress and apply her lipstick for their shared battle of deceit and tragedy? Sparks has close-cropped hair and a square torso, while Jackson Bradley is long and lean, almost slight; he is at a mental disadvantage because she has the physical power. To see the various characters without masks—or wearing their characters’ face—makes our masked faces look and feel more theatrical and fake than the performers’. Walking from level to level, the audience catches sight of other performers. A pregnant woman reaches for and then shuns the milk she’s being offered. She’s Lady Macduff. Turning a corner, we see Banquo. Again, the performers’ movements—at times delicate and slow, like the tenderest of mimes; at other times fast and agitated—help bring out the tension that exists here between theatrical plasticity (the play’s various actions) and pictorial stasis (its remarkable set). Indeed, the music further confuses us as it insinuates itself throughout this self-consciously “beautiful” work, which teeters on the edge of making us sick—by inducing a kind of emotional vertigo—before hiding behind its captivating, hard finish. The music belongs less to the dancers than to their backdrop. It wafts over, and settles into, the action, which feels as sour and inexplicable as those bouts of insomnia when the world is stale and we can hear the blood coursing through our bad thoughts.
Of course, sleep and blood are the central metaphors of disturbance in Shakespeare’s “Macbeth,” but I didn’t feel that the Bard was the central dramaturgical impulse here. I felt, as I walked to various levels in the cavernous space, and travelled through a moth-eaten Highlands hotel and alongside the stunted ramparts of a castle and among clumps of Christmas trees, or followed a distraught young woman whose costuming and attitude reminded me of the gesture-filled, lyrical, and cinematic self-exposure featured in the late Francesca Woodman’s photographs, that Barrett and Doyle’s primary impulse was to make theatre matter, to have an over-all emotional effect, in which décor and dance are equal to the dramaturgy, as in eighteenth-century operas.
Because language is abandoned outside the lounge, we’re forced to imagine it, or to make narrative cohesion of events that are unfolding right before our eyes—or on the floor below, without us. We cannot connect with the characters through the thing that we share: language. We can only watch as the performers reduce theatre to its rudiments: bodies moving in space. As such, large chunks of the work belong to the world of dance, and ideas about repetition: the performers “act” their parts over and over in a three-hour time frame. Stripped of what we usually expect of a theatrical performance, we’re drawn more and more to the panic that the piece incites, and the anxiety that keeps us moving from floor to floor and from room to room, like shuddering inmates. This spell is, unfortunately, broken if you return to the lounge to quiet down and gain perspective. The images that one has instilled with fright start to recede as the jazz combo and the singer take the stage, and the beautiful black woman walks and slowly dances among the assembled guests, who are perhaps contemplating the next round of cloak-and-dagger with their own souls. Does this mean that, if one forgets moments of the piece in this doomed party atmosphere, it’s superficial? Yes. Does this mean that the profound role the piece plays in altering one’s consciousness makes it a deep work, too? Yes. ♦
Monday, January 25, 2016
Shakespeare May Have Smoked Pot
Link to USA Today article here
Wednesday, January 20, 2016
Different Versions of Macbeth's Dagger Soliloquy
Version 1: Roman Polanksi's Macbeth starring Jon Finch as Macbeth
Fun Trivia:
This was the first movie Roman Polanski directed after the murder of his wife, actress Sharon Tate, by Charles Manson's "family" (a cult of strung out girls he controlled).
When crew members suggested to Roman Polanski that perhaps the film was too unrealistically gory for its own good, Polanski reportedly replied, "I know violence. You should've seen my house last summer."
Major Hollywood studios refused to finance the project, but Polanski found a financial savior in his friend Victor Lownes, a senior VP of Playboy Enterprises in the U.K.who persuaded Hugh Hefner to finance the film. Some have construed Playboy's involvement as the reason for Lady Macbeth's nude sleepwalking scene; however, Polanski and Tynan have said they had written the scene before their association with Hefner.
Version 2: Rupert Goold's Macbeth starring Patrick Stewart
This version evokes atmosphere of the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin, with subtle parallels between Stalin and Macbeth in their equally brutal quests for power. The three witches are also updated in keeping with the 20th century aesthetics, appearing as hospital nurses.
Fun Trivia:
This was the first movie Roman Polanski directed after the murder of his wife, actress Sharon Tate, by Charles Manson's "family" (a cult of strung out girls he controlled).
When crew members suggested to Roman Polanski that perhaps the film was too unrealistically gory for its own good, Polanski reportedly replied, "I know violence. You should've seen my house last summer."
Major Hollywood studios refused to finance the project, but Polanski found a financial savior in his friend Victor Lownes, a senior VP of Playboy Enterprises in the U.K.who persuaded Hugh Hefner to finance the film. Some have construed Playboy's involvement as the reason for Lady Macbeth's nude sleepwalking scene; however, Polanski and Tynan have said they had written the scene before their association with Hefner.
Version 2: Rupert Goold's Macbeth starring Patrick Stewart
This version evokes atmosphere of the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin, with subtle parallels between Stalin and Macbeth in their equally brutal quests for power. The three witches are also updated in keeping with the 20th century aesthetics, appearing as hospital nurses.
Monday, January 11, 2016
Words that don't translate into English directly
http://roamandreason.com/2014/04/11/25-words-of-different-languages-youll-wish-we-had-in-english/
Words that don't translate into English.
Words that don't translate into English.
Backpfeifengesicht- A German word referring to a face that needs a slap.
Sisu- A Finnish term that basically means the quality of being a badass. The word is usually equated with the Finnish national character.
L’appel du vide-
French – “The call of the void” is this French expression’s literal translation, but more significantly it’s used to describe the instinctive urge to jump from high places. (Seth jumping off the roof?)
Also there's a website devoted to words that don't translate to English called http://betterthanenglish.com/
Also there's a website devoted to words that don't translate to English called http://betterthanenglish.com/
Saturday, January 9, 2016
Questions for 1/11: Kayla, Natalie, Neil, Rob, Ryan, Skylar, Zack
Comment on this post with one central discussion questions about the reading assignment. You can focus on character, setting, conflict, theme, a motif, symbolism, or anything else that comes up. Make sure you read your classmates' questions first before commenting so you don't repeat questions.
Passages for 1/11: Apara, Caroline, Chiara, Colin, Emma O, Emma S, Gabby
Pick out one important passage from the reading (at least 5 lines but no longer than a page). Comment on this post, and share your passage. You don't need to type out the whole passage. Just write down the page number as well as the starting and ending words of the passage so we can find it in our books. Then, write a follow up question about the passage. Make sure you read over any passages your classmates have already shared so you don't repeat passages.
Thursday, January 7, 2016
Discussion Questions for 1/8 (pg. 173-206): Apara, Caroline, Chiara, Colin, Emma O, Emma S, Gabby
Comment on this post with one central discussion questions about the reading assignment. You can focus on character, setting, conflict, theme, a motif, symbolism, or anything else that comes up. Make sure you read your classmates' questions first before commenting so you don't repeat questions.
Central passages for 1/8 (Kayla, Natalie, Neil, Rob, Ryan, Skylar, Zack)
Pick out one important passage from the reading (at least 5 lines but no longer than a page). Comment on this post, and share your passage. You don't need to type out the whole passage. Just write down the page number as well as the starting and ending words of the passage so we can find it in our books. Then, write a follow up question about the passage. Make sure you read over any passages your classmates have already shared so you don't repeat passages.
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