August, 2009

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Park Players: Taming of the Shrew

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Our local guerilla troupe is at it again.  I last saw the Birmingham Park Players do their rendition of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged).  This time around, they’re doing The Taming of the Shrew.  Ah yes, kiss me, Kate!

I love that Homewood Park contains a dedicated area for performances.  Stone steps and a grassy hillside built into the park in front of a stage.  Like it was meant to be.  But it must be criminally underused.  What else could we do with it?

Maybe the most fun of seeing shows here is watching the park users walk, bike, skate, skip, and play behind the stage, craning their necks, staring, and curiously peeking around at what’s going on.  I’m sure many of them come to the park every day or every other day and there sure-as-heck isn’t usually Shakespeare.  It feels like you’re in the “in crowd” – at least a little – when you show up for this kind of transformative happening.  And there was a big ol’ beautiful crescent moon behind the stage for the first half-hour of my performance.

The play is worth seeing.  Director Clay Boyce ensures that his version of the Bard stays entertaining for all ages.  As with his earlier work, highbrow goes out the window.  Slapstick, silliness, audience participation, crotch humor, mimickry, wordplay, romance, accents a-plenty, and mostly excellent pacing keep this play moving along for younger viewers (or adults with an internet-coddled attention span).  You’re guaranteed to laugh, whether you’re six or you’re a tax accountant.  It’s also fun to pay attention to the entrances and exits of the actors around the long, winding paths to each side of the stage – many laughs come just from anticipating what’s coming next.

Two standouts, for me, were Wesley Glass as Tranio and Kate Jenkins as Biondella.  Once you start to notice him, Glass is hard not to eyeball whenever he’s on stage.  And Jenkins does a fantastic job of frantically running back and forth from front to back and back again with big-eyed enthusiasm.  Both might could stand there stone straight and still probably make me laugh.

If I had any complaint, it’s just that the dynamics could get an adjustment.  No one in the cast was too loud, but several cast members were too quiet.  The whole thing could go up one notch and be just fine.  I recognize that performing outdoors is acoustically difficult.

Just like the park is probably underutilized for performances, I’d like to highlight that the play is FREE for anyone under sixteen.  One adult + one child = $15.  One grandmother + five grandkids = $15.  One teacher + ten students = $15.  Someone should advertise this at local schools and after-school type organizations.  It’s a fantastic way to reward kids participating in non-profits or for academic performance.  Also, a fine treat for those who might never have seen Shakespeare.

If you’re an adult, I wonder if you can remember the first few times you saw Shakespeare’s plays?  Even a little exposure might have saved you from a lifetime of only craving what’s on TV.  Plays are better ’cause they’re in person.  And you can look at whatever you want.  In my humble opinion, an “Under 16″ crowd could benefit from a little more exposure to this kind of live event.

I wish that other arts organizations in Birmingham would adopt this policy.  One thing I’ve noticed is that I’m always going to shows that are half (or more) empty.  Performances are simply better when it’s a fuller house.  It feels like something cool.  It’s fun to hear other people laughing and getting into it.  The actors, dancers, and performers have more fun.  Heck, it’s fun just to people-watch.

So, why would you Scrooge out about your tickets?  Give them away to kids.  This might have all kinds of good effects.  It might encourage (paying) parents or adults to come to more shows.  It may encourage those kids to become actors, singers, or whatever.  And most importantly, it might create demand in those kids for a whole lifetime.

Plus, it’s just funner to attend if the audience is more than just ten old “patrons” and me.  Y’all should think about it.  In fact, I wonder whether a policy of free or cheap “day of” tickets would encourage bigger audiences.  My guess is that you often know in advance whether there are going to be a mess of extra tickets to stuff.  Find a way to give ‘em away.  Don’t let your trees fall in the forest with no one there to hear.

Someone in charge should do some thinkin’ on this.

Poetry: Float Away

Friday, August 14th, 2009

We’ve hit the stretch of the Alabama summer and my creativity has been forced to take a back seat to real-world considerations.  Plus, I haven’t found a lot of art-stuff happening in Birmingham that I’m dying to go to.  Here’s something to hold me over ’til a meal with bigger portions:

Float Away

I once painted
My idea of space:
Pinpoint stars
On a black canvas.

If you believe in
An infinite universe
With endless lights,
It’s no big leap
That there has to be,
Somewhere,
A place
You might float to
And see the exact view
I created.

But if you can’t commit
To ‘verses with
No boundaries,
The screaming improbability of
Our own view,
Is equally boggling.

Some ordinary days
Make me want to
Float somewhere and scream.

36 Hours in Birmingham (NY Times)

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Someone recently drew my attention to this article on Birmingham, written by Jim Noles and printed in the New York Times.  The central premise was what a visitor could do in Birmingham from Friday afternoon through Sunday morning.  His suggested schedule includes:

  1. Vulcan
  2. Highlands Bar & Grill
  3. WorkPlay
  4. Continental Bakery
  5. Shopping at Mountain Brook Village / English Village
  6. Miss Myra’s Pit Bar-B-Q
  7. Sixteenth Street Baptist Church and the Civil Rights Institute
  8. Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum and Motorsports Park
  9. Hot and Hot Fish Club
  10. Little Savannah

All well and good maybe for a well-heeled New Yawker, but I got to thinking about alternatives to Mr. Noles’ schedule:

  1. McWane Center (who needs kids?)
  2. Miss Myra’s Pit Bar-B-Q (why change a good thing? Maybe Milo’s?)
  3. Bottletree (check their calendar)
  4. The Original Pancake House (if not unique, good people-watching)
  5. Shopping in downtown Homewood or Cahaba Heights
  6. Irondale Cafe (fried green tomatoes)
  7. Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame (music has always joined people together)
  8. Birmingham Botanical Gardens (still cool – still free)
  9. Niki’s West (put your phone away first)
  10. Klingler’s European Bakery & Cafe (different and good)

Why not this version?  What do we think?