Alicia Keys Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/alicia-keys/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Mon, 04 Jan 2021 22:22:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 Forward. Together. – The Public Theater https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/20/forward-together-the-public-theater/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/20/forward-together-the-public-theater/#respond Tue, 20 Oct 2020 17:15:20 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=11257 The Public Theater Website/YouTubeChannel/Facebook Page

October 20th - October 24th

STRONGLY RECOMMEND

The post Forward. Together. – The Public Theater appeared first on Cultural Attaché.

]]>
When New York’s Public Theater plans a virtual fundraising event, they have a deep rolodex of talent they can contact to participate. For tonight’s Forward. Together. A Virtual Event to Support The Public Theater the talent line-up is fierce.

Where else would you find these people all in the same show?

Jelani Alladin, Jacqueline Antaramian, Antonio Banderas, Laura Benanti, Kim Blanck, Ally Bonino, Danielle Brooks, Jenn Colella, Elvis Costello, Daniel Craig, Alysha Deslorieux, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Holly Gould, Danai Gurira, Stephanie Hsu, David Henry Hwang, Oscar Isaac, Nikki M. James, Alicia Keys, John Leguizamo, John Lithgow, Audra McDonald, Grace McLean, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Mia Pak, Kelli O’Hara, Suzan-Lori Parks, David Hyde Pierce, Phylicia Rashad, Liev Schreiber, Martin Sheen, Phillipa Soo, Meryl Streep, Will Swenson, Shaina Taub, Kuhoo Verma, Ada Westfall and Kate Wetherhead.

Tony Award-winning director Kenny Leon (A Raising in the Sun) is putting this all together. The music director is another Tony Award winner, Ted Sperling (The Light in the Piazza).

Why did all these people come together for Forward. Together.? Simply put, The Public Theater has supported playwrights and artists for decades. Amongst the show that began their life at The Public are A Chorus Line, Girl from the North Country, Take Me Out, Elaine Stritch: At Liberty, Caroline, Or Change and Hamilton.

There is also an online auction where there are 20 items you can bid on ranging from posters from Shakespeare in the Park seasons, to a ten-year premium seat pass for those annual summer gatherings at Delacorte Theater in Central Park to virtual drinks and meals and more. To view the items and bid, you can go here.

The fundraiser premieres at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT and will remain available for viewing until October 24th at 11:59 PM EDT/8:59 PM PDT. The show can be watched on The Public Theater’s website, their YouTube channel and Facebook page.

Having watched the show I can tell you there are some very real highlights. Amongst them, Antonio Banderas and Laura Benanti singing “What I Did For Love” from A Chorus Line; Danielle Brooks singing a Burt Bacharach song as a lullaby to her young child and to us all; a song from Shaina Taub’s musical, Suffragette and Oscar Isaac singing a song from Two Gentlemen of Verona.

Photo: The Public Theatre (Photo by Joseph Augstein/Courtesy The Public Theater)

The post Forward. Together. – The Public Theater appeared first on Cultural Attaché.

]]>
https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/20/forward-together-the-public-theater/feed/ 0
We Are One Public – POSTPONED https://culturalattache.co/2020/05/30/we-are-one-public/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/05/30/we-are-one-public/#respond Sat, 30 May 2020 06:01:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=9236 The Public Theater's Website

POSTPONED

8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

The post We Are One Public – POSTPONED appeared first on Cultural Attaché.

]]>
UPDATE: Due to the unrest around the country, The Public Theater has postponed this event. We will update you when a new date is announced.

New York’s Public Theater has given birth to some of theater’s finest accomplishments. From the Pulitzer Prize-winning That Championship Season to Caryl Churchill’s Top Girls to Caroline, Or Change and a couple musicals you might have heard of: A Chorus Line and Hamilton. They will be celebrating their history and looking passionately towards the future on Monday, June 1st with their online gala event We Are One Public.

No pun intended, but the public is invited to join The Public for this event. We Are One Public begins at 8 PM EDT/5 PM PDT on their website. Hosting is Jesse Tyler Ferguson. Tony Award-winning director Kenny Leon directs and the music director is another Tony Award-winner, Ted Sperling.

If you want to see a list that defines an embarrassment of riches, the participants for Monday’s fundraiser will serve as just that:

Todd Almond, Antonio Banderas, Laura Benanti, Kim Blanck, Ally Bonino, Danielle Brooks, Troy Anthony Burton, Michael Cerveris,  Glenn Close, Jenn Colella, Elvis Costello, Daniel Craig, Claire Danes, Carla Duren, Danaya Esperanza, Jane Fonda, Nanya-Akuki Goodrich, Holly Gould, Danai Gurira, Anne Hathaway, Stephanie Hsu, David Henry Hwang, Oscar Isaac, Brian d’Arcy James, Nikki M. James, Alicia Keys, John Leguizamo, John Lithgow, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Audra McDonald, Grace McLean, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Margaret Odette, Kelli O’Hara, Sandra Oh, Mia Pak, Suzan-Lori Parks, David Hyde Pierce, Phylicia Rashad, Jay O. Sanders, Liev Schreiber, Deandre Sevon, Martin Sheen, Phillipa Soo, Meryl Streep, Trudie Styler & Sting, Will Swenson, Shaina Taub, Kuhoo Verma, Ada Westfall, Kate Wetherhead and more.

During We Are One Public, there will be two special honors awarded. The first is to benefactors Audrey & Zygi Wilf whose philanthropy has greatly benefited The Public Theatre. The second is to actor Sam Waterston.

Billy Rose Theatre Division, The New York Public Library. “Sam Waterston, Jane White, and Tom Aldredge in the Shakespeare in the Park stage production Cymbeline” The New York Public Library Digital Collections. 1971.

The actor, who will be the artistic honoree, has appeared in over a dozen productions at The Public Theater. His work there began in 1963 and usually finds him performing the works of William Shakespeare – most often during The Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park season. His most recent appearance was as Prospero in the 2015 production of The Tempest.

Obviously donations are encouraged before, during and after this event. There is also an on-line auction that is already open for bidding. Amongst the items available are a virtual conversation with Queen Latifah and director Lee Daniels; a decade of premium Shakespeare in the Park seats; a signed sketch of the set of Hamilton by David Korins and a Zoom chat with ballet dancers Ethan Stiefel and Gillian Murphy. There are many more items available.

We Are One Public is scheduled to run 90 minutes. There is a virtual dance party immediately following the event.

Photo from Cymbeline courtesy of the New York Public Library.

Photo of The Public Theatre Courtesy of The Public Theater

Update: This post has been updated to include the postponement of the event.

The post We Are One Public – POSTPONED appeared first on Cultural Attaché.

]]>
https://culturalattache.co/2020/05/30/we-are-one-public/feed/ 0
Aaron Diehl Plays Rhapsodies in Deux https://culturalattache.co/2019/02/15/aaron-diehl-plays-rhapsodies-in-deux/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/02/15/aaron-diehl-plays-rhapsodies-in-deux/#respond Fri, 15 Feb 2019 20:44:53 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=4452 "A lot of time I'm thinking on a macro scale - how will this all fit together. It's not random."

The post Aaron Diehl Plays Rhapsodies in Deux appeared first on Cultural Attaché.

]]>
Music scholars have long argued whether or not George Gershwin was a classical composer or a jazz composer. Or both. It is a conundrum that pianist Aaron Diehl can relate to.

“They are both very much a part of my musical DNA and influences,” he says. “I have to reconcile the fact that I need to find the way to combine the best of both worlds in my music. Both genres speak and resonate heavily with me.”

Aaron Diehl plays both jazz and classical music
Pianist Aaron Diehl (Photo by Jaime Kahn)

Diehl, who has a new trio album due out this fall and often plays with recent Grammy Award-winner Cécile McLorin Salvant, finds himself fronting the LA Philharmonic this weekend for performances of Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue on Saturday and the composer’s Second Rhapsody on Sunday. This is part of the celebration of the music of William Grant Still and the Harlem Renaissance. Thomas Wilkins conducts both concerts.

When we discussed the upcoming concerts yesterday, it was just after a rehearsal with the LA Philharmonic. And it was clear the jazz/classical line was going to be straddled for these concerts.

“With the Rhapsody in Blue, I’m doing some improvisations in the cadenzas and that’s difficult,” he reveals. “It’s got to feel like it is a seamless part of the piece, but on the other hand it should have some feeling of improvisation and freedom in the phrasing and the content and the ideas. It’s really making sure there’s a nice balance between the improvised and the written material.”

From Diehl’s perspective at the piano, the greater challenge can be found in the Second Rhapsody.

Composer George Gershwin (Photo by Alfredo Valente/Courtesy of the NYPL)

“It was written for a film called Delicious in 1931 and it’s less of a piano concerto. Even though the piano is clearly out front, it’s really embedded in the ensemble. The challenge in playing that piece is really figuring out how to weave the material together as a soloist because there is a lot of back and forth between the ensemble and piano. The mystery lies in how to connect the dots of the piece and not just let it be a series of motifs.”

Walking the line between jazz and classical, music as written and improvised music, is something Diehl has given a lot of thought. He also thinks that maybe we’ve gotten a little too precious with classical music performances.

“Even though there is a lot of scholarship and practice, it’s my firm belief we don’t really know how Chopin or Liszt sounded. We don’t have recordings of classical music like we do jazz musicians like John Coltrane or Louis Armstrong. I’d be really interested to get a time machine to see how these guys and women performed their music. There’s a part of me that thinks it could be radically different than the way we interpret or perform today. I bet it was more raggedy, a lot more rawness. If Beethoven was improvising a cadenza it was, at times, a bit raw and edgy – certainly for the time.”

Pianist Aaron Diehl (Photo by Jaime Kahn)

Since the concerts in which Diehl is appearing also include William Grant Still’s music, it was important for the pianist to discuss how amazing Still’s accomplishments were.

“You have to talk about race,” he says. “The fact that this is a man who was an African-American who made a career in classical music as a composer and conductor. That was quite a feat for the early 20th century. It’s quite a feat even now in classical music. He had a vision of wanting to incorporate the African-American folk tradition, meaning the blues specifically, and the syncopations of African-American folk music. This music was seen as either primitive or simply a novelty to be exploited. Just to see a man like him have even a modicum of success in getting major orchestras to play his pieces, that’s incredibly encouraging and inspiring.”

Diehl believes it is vitally important that we continue to acknowledge and support artists like Still and pianist Hazel Scott who received a shout-out from Alicia Keys during last weekend’s Grammy Awards.

“Wow, she could play. Play their music! The music just has to be heard. I’m a big advocate of John Lewis who was the music director of the Modern Jazz Quartet. Whenever I get the opportunity in concerts, I play his music. For artists with a platform it’s important to be rooting for those artists and composers who could be forgotten if people don’t play their music. Sometimes it takes larger institutions to really keep these people in the consciousness of the greater public.”

Or it might take an artist like Cécile McLoran Salvant who brilliantly bridges the past while moving jazz vocals forward. Diehl is regularly found on the piano for both her recordings and concerts.

“She’s a special artist because what she does that most people can’t do is make connections. And not just between Duke Ellington and say Herbie Hancock, but connections between art and human relations to that art and culture. She points things out – anything you can think about – she can make all kinds of associations. That’s so rare. That’s another level of artistry.”

Diehl straddles the line between jazz and classical music
Pianist Aaron Diehl (Photo by Jaime Kahn)

Which takes us back to Gershwin. When asked if he agrees with the composer’s statement that “Life is a lot like jazz…it’s best when you improvise,” Diehl pauses for a moment before responding.

“Ah…maybe I should slightly alter that. Gershwin was a very YOLO type of guy. [You only live once] For me it’s life is a lot like jazz if you improvise and you also have a plan. If you have a generic structure of what you’re doing and then you can work within that framework. Even when I’m soloing, I’m not ‘off the cuff – I have no idea the next note that follows.’ A lot of time I’m thinking on a macro scale – how will this all fit together. It’s not random.”

No more than his playing classical and jazz music is.

Photos of Aaron Diehl by Jaime Kahn/Courtesy of the LA Philharmonic

Photo of George Gershwin by Alfredo Valente/Courtesy of the NY Public Library

The post Aaron Diehl Plays Rhapsodies in Deux appeared first on Cultural Attaché.

]]>
https://culturalattache.co/2019/02/15/aaron-diehl-plays-rhapsodies-in-deux/feed/ 0