Archive for the 'Previews' Category

Nov 05 2009

Bustin’ Loose – Preview

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The sounds of classic and southern rock fused with several country music styles will fill the Stand Theatre Saturday night when the Bustin’ Loose Band takes the stage at eight.

The locally spawned and trained six-man band has played together for roughly eight months, according to keyboardist Terry Ogden, and will perform two sets in Saturday night’s concert that will be recorded live by Smash Productions, for a demo tape.

“We enjoy putting on a good show and have fun doing so,” said rhythm guitarist Rick Rohlfing and drummer Bob Bolls on the band’s My Space page.

Bustin’ Loose is a locally based Shelbyville ensemble of musicians seasoned over the years in several other bands, Ogden said. The other three band mates in the current 6- member configuration are harmonica player Dave Boone, lead and rhythm guitarist Bob Dye and bass player Robin Roberts.

Each member in group shares the vocals and the songs span styles stretching from the honky-tonk crooning of Hank Williams Sr. to the soulful sounds of Eric Clapton, with a wide variety of other stylistic influences scattered in the musical mix.

Musically,  Bustin’ Loose performs covers of country music styles from the 1940’s to present,  such as the Bakersfield sounds of Merle Haggard and Dwight Yoakum, the Nashville sounds of Jim Reeves to classic country legends such as Johnny Cash and George Jones and more contemporary country tunes from Garth Brooks to Hank Williams Jr. and Brooks & Dunn.

According  to Ogden, the band is learning new material weekly to expand its range of style and musical genres. This  diversity of taste , however, also expands into the rock genre especially classic rock from Elvis to Bob Seger and Southern rock giants like Lynard Skynard and The Marshal Tucker Band, to name a few.

Saturday night’s show is an all ages venue and band members plan to ”interact with the audience to increase the fun” and hope that everyone from 1 to 99 years of age enjoy and  participate in live recording. Tickets will be available at the door of the Strand Theatre for $5.

This preview does not express the opinion of the Strand Theatre.

Submitted by:  Terrance Aldridge

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Nov 05 2009

Film Preview

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The mirth, madness and mayhem of live-action black and white cartoons will mix with slaps, nyuks, and belly laughs galore Friday night in a double-feature of film’s “fine messes,” extended jokes and bumbling buffoonery. On that night, at 7:30, the Strand Theatre will present films by two of Hollywood’s most prolific teams of crowned, clown princes of slapstick comedy, eccentric pantomime, and crazed visuals. This farce-filled evening of vaudeville on the silver screen features the gut-busting humor of the Three Stooges and the semi-surreal, nearly absurdist, extended puns of Laurel and Hardy. Prior to and during the cinematic shenanigans of these classic comedic troupes,patrons of the Strand Theatre may perchance chose to browse about the historic venue and enjoy, walk among and gawk at memorabilia commemorating these legendary, masters of miming movie magic. The funny festivities of Friday night’s guffaws opens with the Three Stooges short , “Malice in the Palace ,” a 1949 film created in the midst of a rather sad, ironic, real-life-family drama involving the three Howard (Horwitz) brothers: Curly, Moe, Shemp, and their cousin Larry Fine. Three years earlier, in 1946, during the filming of another short, “Half-Wits Holiday,” Curly (Jerome Howard) suffered a massive stroke and was replaced by on the team by his brother Shemp (Samuel) whom Curly had previously replaced as a stooge in 1932 when Shemp went solo to star in “Joe Palooka” films. Curly was originally scheduled for a cameo in Friday’s film “Malice in the Palace,” but was physically unable to perform. The first, 1932, reshuffling of “Ted Healy and the Stooges” would introduce the screwball genius of Curly, who shaved his head, stormed the stage and stole the auditions to become a stooge extraordinaire. It was his eclectic improvisations and situational antics that brought both glory and fame to the Howard brothers and their cousin, according to Moe (Moses), the business and creative master-mind of the manic, ever-changing trio of misfits. “If we were going through a scene and he’d forget his words for a moment, you know. Rather than stand, get pale and stop, you never knew what he was going to do. On one occasion he’d get down to the floor and spin around like a top until he remembered what he had to say,” brother Moe said describing Curly’s style: “Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk” and “woo, woo, woo,” at you and to you. This stooge style, however, would not blossom until 1937 when after 12-year career as a trio of second–fiddle mimes of violence, the classic Three Stooges were born and would bloom into household names in America and across the world. Eventually, these masters of mirth would make 190 shorts, several feature-length movies, a couple of cartoons, rebirth into the golden land of television and even record several albums of silly songs. All told there would be six stooges spanning a nearly 50-year career of living cartoons. In Friday’s film-short, “Malice in the Palace,” Moe, Larry and Shemp, parody “Casablanca” to some extent as they serve as chefs at the Café Casbah in a physical farce revolving around a caper about a diamond theft. Friday’s feature is also a film wrapped around and made by a classic comedy team seeking to branch out and flex their own creative independence. The “Flying Deuces,” (1939) was the first movie made by Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy after their break with Hal Roach Studios. Unlike the family-affair that was the Three Stooges, the initial (1919) pairing of Norvell (Babe) Hardy, a stage singer from Georgia, and Stan Laurel, a British pantomime comic, by Hal Roach produced an unlikely tandem. This under-achieving, un-dynamic duo would 12- years later evolve into the winners of the first Academy Award in movies in 1932 for the short “The Music Box.” In an equally strange artistic twist, this comic duos’ creation of ordinary, dim-witted guys caught in unfortunate situations often ending badly would eventually inspire the absurdist masterpiece “Waiting for Godot,” by Irish playwright, Samuel Beckett. After seeing the bowler-hatted, verbal and visual puns of Laurel and Hardy, Beckett said he conceived his notion of the “Theatre of the Absurd.” Of particular notice was the often laconic words and style of Laurel, especially his extended and repetitively circular jokes and puns. Ironically, Laurel, who was trained on the English stage as a 10-year-old understudy to Charlie Chaplin in Fred Karno’s vaudeville theater, would come to America and then inspire an Irishman across the sea to absurdly reinvent, provoke and challenge theater audiences around the globe. On a more obvious plane Beckett drew several theatrical tricks from Laurel’s unique vision of cinema translated from the stage. For example, Beckett was influenced by the, deadpan, down-and-out, yet eternally optimistic character of Laurel contrasted with the carefree pessimism of Hardy’s often serially repeated catchphrase: “Well this is another fine mess you’ve gotten us into.” This refrain echoes across and throughout the 106 films made by these serious clowns who frequently lace their slapstick with strange dark humor. Laurel, who was born, Arthur Stanley Jefferson, wrote and directed many of these short tales which tackle some rather somber themes. Typical of these themes is the repetitive references to reincarnation that run throughout Friday night’s movie “The Flying Deuces.” Another point to watch for during the movie is the surreal puns that Laurel developed and labeled “white magic.” These usually either involve a visual metamorphosis of incongruous images such as lighting his finger on fire then smoking it as a pipe or verbal triple entendres or conundrums delivered with the deadpan voice of a talking mime. In fact, Laurel and Hardy astonished many contemporaries in Hollywood because they could and did successfully translate the pantomime of silent film into such a verbally rich, yet under-spoken continuous and never-ending joke upon “high society,” during the trial and travails of the Great Depression and then WWII. In the clever, yet seriously strange mind of Stan Laurel, America and the globe got to view the tragic-comedic adventures of “two kids caught up in a world of grown-ups,” a rather uptight, somber existence filled with worries about money, society and war.

This preview does not express the opinion of the Strand Theatre.

Submitted by:  Terrance Aldridge

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Oct 27 2009

Poetry Preview

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Calling all poets

Show your personality

Creatively speak

Haiku journalism aside, Three Sisters Books and Gifts will present a night of poetry at The Strand Theatre Wednesday featuring readings by three published poets and invites, encourages, and alliteratively asks local bards to recite works during an open-mic session.

“We have been pleasantly surprised with the number of local poets who have participated in our poetry nights.  The poets are encouraged to step out of their comfort zone by sharing their work with a warm and welcoming audience,” said Barbara Rogers, co-owner of Three Sisters Books and Gifts.

This semi-choreographed poetic jam will begin at 7 p.m. and all wordsmiths are metaphorically and literally encouraged to share their verbal skills, written and spoken. The evening will also include readings by a triad of published troubadours: Mary Sexson of Indianapolis, Tom Alan Orr of Morristown and Gaye McKenney of Shelbyville. All three are involved with the Writer’s Center of Indiana and Sexson and Orr will have poetic tomes available for purchase at The Strand Theatre during this night of rhythmic readings and vocal musings.  A newer, award-winning, voice in Hoosier verbal verse, McKenney, recently garnered the laurel of an “Honorable Mention,” in the James Hearst Poetry Prize. More significantly, she also had a poem, “Demolition,” published this year in the nation’s oldest literary magazine; “The North American Review.”

Sexson, who is a mother of two and teaches reading and language arts at a Montessori school, penned poems of celebration, longing and sometimes lament in her book “103 in the Light,” published in 2004.  She is a graduate of Indiana University and is a native-born bard. In the “World on Fire,” she speaks regretfully about herself to her recently- buried mother.

“I never did set the world

on fire, like my mama

said I would.

Never did turn

a head for good reason,

or do a noted thing.”

In a later emotional exploration she recalls her memories about her children and the promise of each new day in the poem “A Fine Silver Box.”

“I have a fine silver box

Tucked in the folds of my thoughts

where I store the beauty of my children;”

A little less than a decade before Sexson’s poetry saw printer’s presses, Orr published a slender and thoughtful volume entitled “Hammers in the Fog,” in 1995. Born in Bangor, Maine, he arrived in the Hoosier state in 1972 and writes often eloquent songs about both the street life and fields of Indiana.

In “Gnat Dreams,” Orr reminisces about life, birth and existence around the Shelby County farm, he has lived on since 1986:

“Something ancient drives a man to gamble with a seed

In the pitch of the dirt or the dark of the womb,”

Elsewhere in this reflective volume he explores the problems and mentalities of a medley of strange, ironic and often destitute characters encountered in his 20-year career in human services. For example, in “The Turtle Lady,” he vividly depicts the turmoil and travail of a life lived on the fringes of society and how this affects those caught up in the webs of marginal existence.

“Some say she is crazy

When she crawls inside herself

And sees things in the dark,

But the Turtles know. They know.”

In a not so strange, twisted, triangular tale, each of this triad of troubadours have read works before in this town and will once again voice their touching words during this, the third, poetry reading (at the Strand Theatre) sponsored by Three Sisters Books and Gifts on the third day of this week.

“This community is blessed to have these three ladies doing so much work for the community of Shelbyville and to offer this venue,” said  McKenney. “It is a great showcase for both novice and published poets alike to read their works.”

This preview does not express the opinion of the Strand Theatre.

Submitted by:  Terrance Aldridge

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