James Baldwin Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/james-baldwin/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Fri, 05 Feb 2021 16:56:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Best Bets: January 29th – January 31st https://culturalattache.co/2021/01/29/best-bets-january-29th-january-31st/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/01/29/best-bets-january-29th-january-31st/#respond Fri, 29 Jan 2021 08:01:33 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=12932 Fourteen streaming events for the last weekend in January

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With next weekend being the Super Bowl, streaming culture is chock full of options this weekend. Even the performing arts avoid, for the most part, doing battle with the mother of all sporting events. Which means my Best Bets: January 29th – January 31st are extensive and have a little bit of something for everyone – of all ages.

My top pick this weekend is Boston Lyric Opera’s new film, directed by James Darrah, of The Fall of the House of Usher. This is a mixed-media film set to the Philip Glass/Arthur Yorinks opera. By the way, you’ll see Darrah’s name several times in these listings.

We have jazz, dance, classical music, new classical music, family-friendly theatre, very mature subject matter and some show tunes.

So let’s get to it. Here are the Best Bets: January 29th – January 31st:

Pianist Hélène Grimaud (Courtesy Unison Media)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Hélène Grimaud with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra – Debuts January 29th – 3:00 PM EST/12:00 PM PST – Available through May 31st

Pianist Hélène Grimaud joins conductor Nicholas McGegan and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra for a performance of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor, K. 466. The concert also includes a performance of Mozart’s Symphony No. 40 in G minor, K. 550.

Grimaud released her album The Messenger last year which features her performing this concerto with Camerata Salzburg. As she’s one of our finest pianists performing and recording today, this is a concert certain to please all fans of Mozart and classical piano.

The cost to stream this concert is $10, but does allow for streaming through May 31, 2021.

The character of Luna in “The Fall of the House of Usher” (Courtesy Boston Lyric Opera)

TOP PICK: OPERA: The Fall of the House of Usher – Boston Lyric Opera – Debuts January 29th

When I recently spoke with director/designer James Darrah he made it clear how he wanted to bring new ideas to opera and classical music. This film he directed of Philip Glass’ The Fall of the House of Usher is definitely an example of him doing just that.

Darrah combines hand-drawn animation, stop-motion film, and archival footage to tell this Edgar Allan Poe story.

Collaborating with Glass, as his librettist, was Arthur Yorinks.

This 93-minute film opens with the line, “Not what you expected?” If a traditional performance film is what you expected, perhaps this isn’t for you. Screenwriter Raúl Santos sets a young immigrant girl detained at the United States border within the opera. There is also a warning at the start of the film that certain images and scenes might be too intense for younger viewers.

The Fall of the House of Usher features Chelsea Basler, Jorgeandrés Camargo, Christon Carney, Jesse Darden, Daniel Belcher with David Angus conducting the score.

The design team includes Production Designer Yuki Izumihara; Director of Photography Pablo Santiago; Costume and Doll Designer Camille Assaf; Art Director/Lead Designer Yee Eun Nam; Lead Animator Will Kim; Associate Animator Jian Lee and Lead Illustrator Rodrigo Muñoz.

The rental cost to stream the film is $10 and allows for streaming for a period of seven days. I had a chance to see The Fall of the House of Usher and can tell you it is well worth the money. And for those who don’t think they like opera, give this a chance. This film with surprise you. That’s why it is our Top Pick this week.

Demi and Richard Weitz (Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

MUSICALS: RW Quarantunes – Center Theatre Group – January 29th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

You never know who will show up in this celebration of Broadway. Father and daughter Richard and Demi Weitz have been doing Zoom parties for their celebrity friends (he’s a partner at WME). Amongst those who have participated in previous RWQuarantunes have been Boy George, Josh Groban, Nathan Lane, John Legend, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Randy Newman, Bernadette Peters, Rod Stewart and Rufus Wainwright.

Whoever the guests are for this Center Theatre Group Fundraiser, they are going to be performing songs from The Book of Mormon, Jersey Boys, Les Misérables, Phantom of the Opera and more. Given CTG’s history and reputation, I’d expect some pretty high-caliber participants.

There is no charge to view the show, but you must register for it. As this is a fundraiser, donations are strongly encouraged.

James Baldwin (Courtesy Broadway on Demand)

PLAY: The James Baldwin Project – Broadway on Demand – Now – January 31st

Hub Theatre Group from Lubbock, Texas created a project celebrating writer James Baldwin called The James Baldwin Project. Their show, The Dream Unrealized, part of that project, is streaming through the end of this weekend as part of Broadway on Demand’s Martin Luther King, Jr. programming.

This film features actors Alex Hairston (Beautiful: The Carole King Musical), Tayler Harris, Jenny Laroche and Judine Somerville (Hairspray) reciting Baldwin’s words and adding their own stories to them. This combination yields a powerful message about how little change there has been since Baldwin was alive.

There is a $5 fee to stream The James Baldwin Project.

(Courtesy Broadway on Demand)

FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT: Grimmz Fairy Tales – Broadway on Demand – Now – March 30th

Hip-hop meets Snow White, Rapunzel, Hansel & Gretel and Cinderella is this show from the Children’s Theatre of Charlotte. Creators Ron Lee McGill and Rahsheem Shabazz take on the persona of Jay and Will Grimmz in this family-friendly 71-minute show currently available through Broadway on Demand.

McGill, in an interview last year with the The Charlotte Post, said of the songs they created for Grimmz Fairy Tales, “We want to make this for everyone, not just for kids, but something that everybody—the family—can collectively come together and enjoy this.”

Streaming the show costs $23.54 and allows for 72 hours of viewing.

Jonas Kaufmann and Eva-Maria Westbroek in “Andrea Chénier” (Photo by Billy Cooper/Courtesy Royal Opera House)

OPERA: Umberto Giordano’s Andrea Chénier – Royal Opera House – Now – February 6th

Conducted by Antonio Pappano; starring Jonas Kaufmann, Eva-Maria Westbroek, Željko Lučić and Denyce Graves. This David McVicar production is from the 2014-2015 season.

Giordano’s opera had its world premiere in Milan in 1896. It features a libretto by Luigi Illica and is inspired by the life of the poet André Chénier who was executed during the French Revolution.

A love triangle is ultimately at the center of this opera. Chénier says one too many things in the presence of Maddalena, Countess di Coigny’s daughter, about the imbalance between the French government and the poverty that has trapped so many of his countrymen. This is just prior to the French Revolution.

Half a decade later, Carlo Gérard, who was a footman to the now executed King Louis XVI and was influenced by Chénier’s talk, is now a leading political figure. The poet, however, is not in their good graces. This interrupts his plans to meet a young woman with whom he has been corresponding. That turns out to be Maddalena. Though she and Chénier are in love, Gérard also has his eyes on her. Politics and passion collide leading to the poet’s execution.

Tim Ashley, in his review for The Guardian, raved about Kaufmann. “Kaufmann is performing the title role for the first time, and it’s hard to imagine him bettered. His striking looks make him very much the Romantic and romanticised outsider of Giordano’s vision. His voice, with its dark, liquid tone, soars through the music with refined ease and intensity: all those grand declarations of passion, whether political or erotic, hit home with terrific immediacy. His acting is superb, too…”

Tickets to stream the opera are £3 or approximately $4.15 (at press time)

Gonzalo Rubalcaba (Photo ©Pavel Korbut/Courtesy Rubalcaba’s Facebook Page)

JAZZ: Gonzalo Rubalcaba & Pedrito Martinez – SFJAZZ – January 29th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

If you like your jazz on the Cuban side, you won’t want to miss seeing pianist/composer Gonzalo Rubalcaba and conguero Pedrito Martinez in this SFJAZZ concert from 2017.

This concert, part of the weekly Fridays at Five series, will definitely not leave you sitting still. This is a great way to start the weekend.

You’ll need either a monthly membership ($5) or an annual membership ($60) to view this concert. But given how much great music you’ll get for your investment, it’s well worth the money.

A scene from “Lumee’s Dream” (Courtesy LA Opera)

OPERA: Lumee’s Dream – LA Opera – January 29th – February 11th

p r i s m, the Pulitzer Prize-winning opera by composer Ellen Reid and librettist Roxie Perkins, is the inspiration for this new film by the opera’s direct James Darrah. (He’s obviously been busy.) Here he takes a small moment from the opera and turns it into a long-form sensory experience.

There is no charge to watch Lumee’s Dream. You will need to register at LA Opera.

While you’re there, you can still catch Darrah’s film of p r i s m. That’s also free and will remain available through February 8th.

Steven McRae and Ntalia Osipova in “La Fille Mal Gardee” (Photo by Tristram Kenton/Courtesy The Royal Opera House)

BALLET: La Fille mal gardée – The Royal Ballet – January 29th – February 27th

A love story between Lise and a young farmer, Colas, is the centerpiece of this ballet choreographed by Frederick Ashton. This ballet had its world premiere in 1960.

The translation of the title is The Wayward Daughter. Clearly her parents aren’t too keen on her taste in men. Or in this case, her widowed mother.

Ashton based this work on a 1789 ballet by Jean Dauberval. The music was adapted by John Lanchberry from an 1828 score by Ferdinand Hérold.

This production is from 2015 with Barry Wordsworth conducting members of the Royal Opera Orchestra. Natalia Osipova dances the role of Lise. Steven McRae dances the role of Colas. The role of Lise’s mother is danced by Philip Mosley.

Tickets to stream the opera are £3 or approximately $4.15 (at press time)

Derrick Spiva Jr. (Photo courtesy Derrick Spiva Jr.)

NEW CLASSICAL MUSIC: Mother of Bravery – Close Quarters #7 – Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra – January 29th – Debuts at 9:30 PM EST/6:30 PM PST

Composer Derrick Spiva Jr. is both the curator of this edition of LACO’s Close Quarters episode and also the composer of both works being given their world premiere performances.

Mother of Bravery was commissioned by LACO. The other work is Mind the Rhythm (For Amplified Violin and Electronics). Each work is 10-11 minutes.

As with other Close Quarters films, this will not be a traditional performance video. James Darrah (I told you he was busy) is the director/designer of the accompanying film.

Spiva is a fascinating composer and this series has proven essential. I wouldn’t miss this (and you don’t have to watch it just at the premiere time – it will remain available.) There’s no charge to watch the film.

San Francisco Opera’s “La Traviata” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy SF Opera)

OPERA: La Traviata – San Francisco Opera – January 30th – January 31st

Conducted by Nicola Luisotti; starring Nicole Cabell and Stephen Costello. This John Copley production is from the 2013-2014 season.

Alexandre Dumas fils (the son of the author of The Three Musketeers) wrote the play, La Dame aux camélias on which Verdi’s opera is based. Francesco Maria Piave wrote the libretto for La Traviata which had its world premiere in Venice in 1853.

In the opera, Violetta, who is in declining health, throws an opulent party. At this party she is introduced to Alfredo by her lover, Baron Douphol. When signs of failing health get noticed by Alfredo, he encourages her to give up her lavish lifestyle. He also admits his great love for Violetta. A love triangle is now in play. From there the opera tells the story of a woman who sacrifices everything to live life on the edge.

Search(light) (Photo courtesy Kinesis Project dance theatre)

DANCE: Search(light) – Kinesis Project dance theatre – January 30th – 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST and 8:30 PM EST/5:30 PM PST

Two sets of dancers will be performing this work…twice. One set will be at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York and the other set will be at the Kay White Hall at Vashon Center for the Arts on Vashon Island, Washington. This will be a pair of live performances with the dancers being accompanied by music by Sandbox Percussion and violinist Kristin Lee.

Kinesis Project’s main focus has been on site-specific productions. Search(light), utilizing two different sites, was inspired by Melissa Riker’s experience watching fisherman in Seattle. Riker is the artistic director of Kinesis Project dance theatre.

The New York cast includes Claudia-Lynn Rightmire, Therese Ronco, Jeimin Yang, Sumaya Mulla-Carrillo, and Nicole Truzzi. The Seattle cast includes Lorraine Lau, Kimberly Holloway, Hendri Walujo, Robert Moore, Margaret Behm, Madeline Morser. 

Rather than responding through a website, interested viewers should e-mail: Kinesis_RSVP@icloud.com.

The event is free, but donations are encouraged with a suggested donation of $15.

Conductor Michael Christie (Courtesy New West Symphony)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Holocaust Remembrance – New West Symphony – January 31st – 6:00 PM EST/3:00 PM PST

This concert, part of a worldwide series of events for Holocaust Remembrance Week honoring the six million Jews killed during the Holocaust, features music that will be very familiar and some selections less so.

Michael Christie leads the Jerusalem String Quartet and pianist Daniel Vnukowski as guest artists.

New West Symphony members violinist/Concertmaster Alyssa Park; violist Phillip Triggs and clarinetist Joshua Ranz also perform.

The program features John Williams’ Theme from Schindler’s List; Mendelssohn’s Song Without Words, Op. 67, No. 2; Brahms’ String Quartet No. 3 in B-flat Major, Op. 67; Schulhoff’s Five pieces for String Quartet; Kovács’ Sholem-alekhim, rov Feldman!; Szpilman’s Mazurka; Weinberg’s Sonata No. 1 fur Viola Solo, Adagio; Ryterband’s Suite Polonaise – Oberek and concludes with Williams’ Remembrance from Schindler’s List.

Tickets to stream the concert are $25.

Ryan J. Haddad in “Hi, Are You Single?” (Photo by Lawrence E. Moten III/Courtesy IAMA Theatre Company)

PLAY: Hi, Are You Single? – Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in association with IAMA Theatre Company – January 31st – February 28th

Even with technology making everything seemingly readily available, finding someone to hook up with isn’t always as easy as you might think. Consider having an above-average sex drive, being gay and having cerebral palsy. That just increased the degree of difficultly exponentially.

Ryan J. Haddad stars in this one-man show that he also wrote. It allows him to explore the challenges faced not just in getting laid, but in perhaps finding the right person with whom to fall in love. This isn’t a work of fiction, it is an autobiographical show.

As you might imagine, I wouldn’t recommend this as family fare. This is adult material. But it should be enlightening, entertaining and perhaps uplifting.

Tickets are $15 to stream the show, but only if purchased by January 31st prior to the first show at 9:01 PM PST. After that tickets will be $20. Tickets will allow for 48 hours of streaming the show.

That concludes the official list of Best Bets: January 29th – January 31st. But, I do have a few reminders:

In Concert at the Hollywood Bowl on PBS has two episodes on Friday, January 29th: Jazz at the Hollywood Bowl and Musicals and the Movies. Check your local listings for exact start times.

If you live in the Los Angeles area, the 20th annual Dance Camera West festival is taking place in Santa Monica. You can get the details in our preview here.

Metropolitan Opera closes out their Antiheroes Week with performances of Wagner’s Der Fliegende Holländer on Friday; Verdi’s Rigoletto on Saturday and Verdi’s Macbeth on Sunday.

This concludes my Best Bets: January 29th – January 31st. That’s a busy and exciting way to close out the first month of 2021. Enjoy your weekend.

Main Photo: An image from The Fall of the House of Usher (Courtesy Boston Lyric Opera)

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The Soul of Billy Porter Meets The Soul of Richard Rodgers https://culturalattache.co/2018/05/31/soul-billy-porter-meets-soul-richard-rodgers/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/05/31/soul-billy-porter-meets-soul-richard-rodgers/#respond Thu, 31 May 2018 08:24:25 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=3022 "When I was in college and my voice was unique and different, I had to think outside the box. I was forced not to be traditional.”

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Composer Richard Rodgers once said, “If a composer is to reach his audience emotionally – and surely that’s what theatre music is all about – he must reach the people through the sounds they can relate to.” Though he hadn’t ever heard that quote, Billy Porter, who won the Tony Award for his performance as Lola in Kinky Boots, was happy to hear it. After all, his most recent album is The Soul of Richard Rodgers and that’s what he’ll showcase this weekend in his appearance at The Soraya (Valley Performing Arts Center) on Saturday.

Billy Porter, Annaleigh Ashford and Stark Sands, right, perform in Kinky Boots. (Photo/Sean Williams)

On the album, Porter does not offer traditional show tune performances of Rodgers’ songs from musicals like Oklahoma, The King and ISouth Pacific and Pal Joey. Instead he has done the kind of album you can imagine Stevie Wonder would have done had he chosen to do one. And Porter has brought along some friends like Tony Award winners Leslie Odom Jr. (Hamilton), Patina Miller (Pippin) and Cynthia Erivo (The Color Purple). And he has some other friends like India.Arie, Ledisi and Pentatonix along for the ride, too.

When I brought up the Rodgers quote to Porter during our phone conversation he was thrilled to hear it. “That’s a person who really understands the power of transcending their time,” he enthuses. “It’s like it really matters that we can recontextualize these great pieces of work and make them relevant. I think it’s a great thing he said that and I wish more people knew he said that. We get squashed a lot by the purist intention to sort of preserve. I get it, but I like to be expansive.”

Not that he was looking to satisfy Broadway purists nor convert non-fans of that music. “I set out to make a Broadway album that is authentic to myself,” he revealed. “I came into theatre via the Pentecostal church and gospel music. I don’t know if you’ve ever heard my version of ‘Sunday.’ The first time I heard Sunday in the Park with George, I heard in my ear what you heard on my album. I didn’t hear it the original way. It was going inside of me and resonating in me with a completely different sound in my brain. When I was in college and my voice was unique and different, I had to think outside the box. I was forced not to be traditional.”

Audiences, Porter says, have taken some time at his concerts to realize what he’s doing. “Most of my audience is going to know me from the theatre. We think the sound and the arrangements are challenging for some people from the Broadway audiences. Last summer I was able to go into many different venues and watch the transformation when they finally realized what I was singing. To see the light bulb go off. There was one person who was a little mad at me because my show is a little loud. That’s the authenticity of R&B and Soul. But the person was mad because I didn’t do any Broadway music. It’s a compliment and you’re an idiot. Literally 80% of my show is Broadway.”

I relayed to Porter a conversation that recently took place on RuPaul’s Drag Race where one of the African-American queens talked about how hard it was to be black, gay and a drag queen. No doubt Porter could relate given that his role in Kinky Boots was all those things.  It did and it also lead to his new television series, Pose.

Billy Porter stars in the new series "Pose" on FX
Billy Porter as “Lola” in “Kinky Boots” (Photo by Matthew Murphy)

“Yes, I’m gay, black and grew up in the church and ended up being a drag queen and it changed my life for a period of time. Now I’m on Pose and there are five transgender actors of color! In series regular roles in network television! The education I’m receiving you add to what you heard [on Drag Race] and add transgender woman of color to that. These people think they can just kill them because nobody will care or look for her. That’s what they live with. I had no idea. Imagine living with that reality every single day. Those of us who have the position must continue to fight for those who don’t.”

Like many who know Rodgers & Hammerstein’s song “Carefully Taught” from South Pacific, Porter does not believe the song will ever not be topical. “There’s always going to be stupid people in the world and art will have to check them.” Which lead me to ask him if he’s optimistic that politicians, usually the last people to catch on, will finally find closer parity with the culture of the country they govern.

“That’s what brings me so much joy as an artist. I get to be part of that catalyst that brings that type of change. That’s why we get attacked first. People who think slavery should have stayed and that kind of thing. As James Baldwin said, it’s an artist’s responsibility. I take that task very seriously.”

“The artist is distinguished from all other responsible actors in society — the politicians, legislators, educators, and scientists — by the fact that he is his own test tube, his own laboratory, working according to very rigorous rules, however unstated these may be, and cannot allow any consideration to supersede his responsibility to reveal all that he can possibly discover concerning the mystery of the human being.” – James Baldwin

Main Photo courtesy of Ron Cadiz for Sony Music Entertainment

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