Sunday, November 16, 2008

What's up Theater TRaC?!

Alrighty, to sum up this week... lets just say us theater trac-ers had a great one :) On tuesday, the 11th we were able to see In Conflict at the Barrow Street Theater. We can all agree that it was a great show. Our wednesday, class was led by Eric! (though we definitely missed Karen) We wrote about the moment the made the most impact on us from the show and then had one big discussion about In Conflict.

During these wonderful discussions, all of us had the opportunity to see Mike Daisey from If You See Something Say Something, in his robe, getting ready for his show. We managed to sneak in a little conversation in too! Good stuff :)

Remember the ledes we did in class for
In Conflict and don't forget to either email them to me, or post them on the blog :) Our next class is on the 19th, followed by Taking Over at the Public Theater at 8:00. Bring money for food! Looking forward to seeing everyone on Wednesday :)

Saturday, November 15, 2008

In Conflict Ledes!


An Iraqi mother sheathed in black clutches a white blanket with what seems to be a baby crying from within. She lets the sheet drop and blood red rose petals slowly drift down to the floor of the Barrow Street Theater stage.
Ben and Monica

"In Conflict" is the show that brings the war home. It takes the stories from veterans of the Iraqi war and exposes the hard, raw and cold truth to its audiences.
Phoenix and Amy

Friday, November 7, 2008

Hey Guys :)

Hey everyone of Theater TRac! :)
So basically this is just an update for the upcoming week of 11/10
On tuesday, November 11th, we have an outing; we are seeing In Conflict :
Make sure you're there a little bit before 7:40 @ The Barrow Street Theater. 
And on Wednesday, we have a special class lead by Eric. Should be fun. 

As far as homework, make sure all your letters, from the Dia de los Muetros show, are sent to Karen.
For this week, work on developing your 'Statement for the Arts'.

Looking forward to seeing everyone on tuesday! :)

Statement on the Arts by Michael Chabon

Every grand American accomplishment, every innovation that has benefited and enriched our lives, every lasting social transformation, every moment of profound insight any American visionary ever had into a way out of despair, loneliness, fear and violence—everything that has from the start made America the world capital of hope, has been the fruit of the creative imagination, of the ability to reach beyond received ideas and ready-made answers to some new place, some new way of seeing or hearing or moving through the world. Breathtaking solutions, revolutionary inventions, the road through to freedom, reform and change: never in the history of this country have these emerged as pat answers given to us by our institutions, by our government, by our leaders. We have been obliged — to employ Dr. King’s powerful verb — to dream them up for ourselves.

America’s artists are the guardians of the spirit of questioning, of innovation, of reaching across the barriers that fence us off from our neighbors, from our allies and adversaries, from the six billion other people with whom we share this dark and dazzling world. Art increases the sense of our common humanity. The imagination of the artist is, therefore, a profoundly moral imagination: the easier it is for you to imagine walking in someone else’s shoes, the more diffcult it then becomes to do that person harm. If you want to make a torturer, first kill his imagination. If you want to create a nation that will stand by and allow torture to be practiced in its name, then go ahead and kill its imagination, too. You could start by cutting school funding for art, music, creative writing and the performing arts.

Our children need training and encouragement and support—they need rehearsal space and tempera paint and bass violins, teachers and tap-shoes; they need constant, passionate exposure to the great artistic heritage of their people, so that even if they don’t grow up to be artists themselves, they will still have been blessed, as Americans have always been blessed, with the artist’s gift for seeing the possible in the impossible, the fellow soul on the other side of the fence. Our artists need freedom to pursue the solitary investigations into which their art inevitably leads them. America needs that untrammeled flow of creativity, of the willingness and ability to innovate, to skylark, to tinker, to daydream out loud: over the course of two and a half centuries now, our creative flow has filled the world’s libraries, museums, theaters and recital halls, its academies, movie houses and marketplaces, with works of genius to break the heart and boggle the mind. And the people of the world–our world–need an America that remains in full, confident possession of its mighty gift of imagination, not merely to meet the global demand for our entertainment and art and literature, but so that they–and we–need never fear the brutality, the arrogance and the inhumanity to which a nation in want of imagination must, inevitably, descend.

***

Michael Chabon is the Pulitzer-Prize winning author of THE YIDDISH POLICEMEN’S UNION and THE AMAZING ADVENTURES OF KAVALIER AND CLAY. His other books include THE MYSTERIES OF PITTSBURGH and WONDER BOYS. His work has appeared in the New Yorker, Harper’s, and in a number of anthologies, among them Best American Short Stories 2001 and Prize Stories 1999: The O. Henry Awards. He lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife, Ayelet Waldman, also a novelist, and their four children.