Home Blog Page 185

Comedy Mayhem On Stage At Old Globe With “God Of Carnage”

0
Jack Lyons Theatre & Film Critic

If Neil Simon was the King of Comedy from the 1960’s, through the 1990’s, then French-born playwright Yasmina Reza is on track to become the Queen of intelligent and sophisticated comedy for the 21st Century. Comparisons are odious at best, and in the case of Neil Simon, he is in a class by himself.

However, with a continuing output of her brand of sophisticated comedies over the next few years, and with a little bit of luck, Reza could find herself the dominant female playwright of the early 21st century. Her material, like Simon, transcends gender, nationality, and culture. Her plays, written in French and translated by English playwright Christopher Hampton, resonate with audiences of all stripes and strata. Whether her audiences are rich or poor, her characters quickly and easily become identifiable.

One of her earlier efforts was the 1998 Tony winning comedy “Art”, which signaled that a new major playwright was among us and was revealing all of our foibles and shortcomings for the world to see. It was a delicious and auspicious beginning. Then in 2007, her latest comedy bombshell hit the stages of the world. “God of Carnage” became an overnight comedy blockbuster play. It’s been translated into more than 30 languages, and still growing.

Which brings us to The Old Globe production of “God of Carnage” now onstage at the Sheryl and Harvey White arena stage. I’ve seen three previous productions (all proscenium staged) and, as I mentioned above comparisons are odious indeed, however, the current Globe production that stars: Caitlin Muelder as Annette, Erika Rolfsrud as Veronica, and Lukas Caleb Rooney as Michael (all three talented actors are graduates of Old Globe/University of San Diego Graduate Theatre Program), and T.Ryder Smith as Alan, can slug it out with the best of them when it comes to engaging in theatrical onstage mayhem. This quartette of performers doesn’t have to take a back seat to any ensemble that has previously performed the play.

The story by now should be familiar to theatre going audiences everywhere. In short, it’s a hilarious, ninety-minute comedy of “bad manners” on the part of two sets of upscale New York parents, who come together to discuss a schoolyard confrontation by their two eleven year-old sons. Initially, they gather in an upscale Brooklyn home to sort out what took place. At first civility is upheld, but as the libation-fueled conversations continue, the tone changes, ultimately going off track sending a warning that a street brawl is about to take place. When discussions ultimately spiral out of control, and decorum flies out the window, the audience gears up for a session of name-calling and tantrums from adults who should know better.

But their loss of control is our gain, as Reza’s razor-sharp wit illuminates the situation many people often find themselves in. Her acute ear for spot-on dialogue reminds me of the late, great, playwright Paddy Chayefsky. Very few writers had his gift and ear for the dialogue of the people he wrote about. Tennessee Williams also had the gift and we are the richer for it. Reza is about to join some pretty heady company.

T. Ryder Smith’s Alan (complete with his cel phone as his best friend) is a Freudian delight, and fascinating to watch. Erika Rolfrud’s Veronica, is so hypocritically spot-on that I thought I heard one or two squirming seats after her outbursts. When it comes to throwing away all pretense of decorum on the part of Michael, Lukas Caleb Rooney’s inner Neanderthal comes roaring out as if in relief from the game he has been forced to play. When Caitlin Muelder’s Annette, the tightly wound investment banker character finally snaps, the audience react as if they’ve heard an explosion. It’s a sublime theatrical comedy moment.

I’ve deliberately saved the best for last. Richard Seer, the director of this wonderfully funny and entertaining production is entitled to all the bows and kudos that come his way.

His inspired direction of this ensemble cast, in the round, gives proof that not all technically difficult plays should be staged in a proscenium theatre. One forgets that all of the wonderful magic taking place on the stage is a collaborative effort seen through the lens of the director’s personal vision. Come and share the experience. You won’t be disappointed.

“God of Carnage” runs through September 2, 2012. Tickets can be purchased by going online to www.theoldglobe.org or by phone at 619-234-5623.

[easyembed field=”code1″]

 

First-Day of School, in the Summer?

0
Mike Grein, the Principle, with Adam and the kids

Times have changed since I went to school. My elementary school in Germany did not look like anything the new Cabot Yerxa Elementary School does. Desert landscaping, winding esplanades, appearing more like a junior-college, with a killer vista of the San Jacinto Mountains. A healthy, joyful and save an surroundings for the young  “Cabot Yerxa Explorers” to be taught.

Cabot Yerxa Elementary School, located in Desert Hot Springs, California, serves grades K-5 in the Palm Springs Unified School District and serves about 600-hundred students.

I followed our city councilman Adam Sanchez that sunny Monday morning at 7:30 am. He was taken his grand-children to their first day of school in the middle of the summer. The reason is, Cabot’s is a year-round school and takes a different tack on learning by using multi-track or single-track calendar. Summer’s vacations are eliminated, and students have shorter, more frequent breaks.

Mike Grein, is the Principle and is very respected and loved by his students. He administers the school with a staff of 23 teachers. He was in full swing that morning, managing traffic with a smile and a kind word to the youngsters and their parents.

Adam’s grand-children got breakfast at their very clean school-cafeteria, only fresh fruits, and natural health food on the menu; all food purchases are tracked by staff, for each child. No junk food in this place, the children looked fit and obesity was not visible anywhere.

More about the advantages and disadvantages of year-around schooling; just click link!

Cabots Yerxa Schools Mission Statements is:
The faculty and staff of Cabot Yerxa School believe that each child is a unique, valuable individual who is capable of learning and succeeding. We further believe that participation, communication, and cooperation with the home and the community at large are critical for student success in school. Recognizing the special needs of our multicultural, language diverse population, we will practice a variety of instructional strategies. These strategies, while promoting district and state goals for educational development, will facilitate the growth of productive members of a democratic society.


Test of shame! Lebanese protest against anal probe for suspected gays

0
Lebanese demonstrators hold signs against anal “tests” on men suspected of homosexuality during a protest in Beirut on August 11, 2012.(AFP Photo / Anwar Amro)

Lebanese are protesting in Beirut against the use of anal examinations on men suspected of homosexuality and “virginity tests” for women. Same sex relations in the Arab country are considered a crime and punishable by up to one year in jail.

Lebanese demonstrators gathered outside the law courts in the capital holding banners that read “United to abolish the tests of shame”.

Lebanon-based HELEM, considered the Arab world’s first and leading lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights group, called for the rally under the slogan: “Stand up against the tests of shame, vaginal or anal.”

One sign read: “The cost of forensic rape: 125,000 Lebanese lira” (about $85), pointing out that the men subjected to the anal probes were being charged for the procedure, AFP reports.

Read the whole story…

News Corporation loses $1,6bln in second quarter

0
AFP Photo / Timothy A. Clary

News Corporation, owned by Rupert Murdoch, reported a net loss of $1.6 billion as the company faces ongoing legal charges over the phone-hacking scandal.

Publishing profits of the media giant fell to $139 million dollars from $270 million dollars.Last year the company earned a net income of $683 million in the same period.

News Corporation said it lost $224 million due to the “costs of the ongoing investigations initiated upon the closure of The News of the World”.

The company has decided to separate its entertainment business from publishing assets, a move that has cost it $2.9 billion.

UK’s newspapers The Sun and The Times and in America the Wall Street Journal, and New York Post will be separated from Murdoch’s entertainment business that includes “20th Century Fox” and Fox TV.

This means that the group’s 39% stake in broadcasting giant BSkyB will be separated from the embattled newspaper division, which has been the focus of the phone-hacking scandal.

The electronic-eavesdropping scandal which started at Rupert Murdoch’s Sunday tabloid News of the World has already cost the company $258 million in legal fees and settlements. It forced Murdoch to close the 168-year-old tabloid within weeks, and drop his New York-based company’s bid for the rest of British Sky Broadcasting Group Plc (BSY).

Despite the losses, however, Rupert Murdoch said the company was in a “strong” position.

Its full year net profit amounted to $1.2 billion compared to the $2.7 billion last year.

We are proud of the full year financial growth achieved over the last 12 months, led by our Cable Network Programming and Filmed Entertainment segments”, said Rupert Murdoch.

“Our company has continued to innovate, grow and consistently adapt to the rapidly changing media industry landscape. We find ourselves in the middle of great change, driven by shifts in technology, consumer behaviour, advertiser demands and economic uncertainty and change brings about great opportunity” Murdoch added.

Where’s the gold? NY Fed undergoes first-ever audit

0
AFP Photo / Michal Cizek

A massive trove of gold kept under lock and key five stories below Manhattan at the New York Federal Reserve has been undergoing its first audit in history. It could put conspiracy theories – for example, that the gold is a sham – to sleep for good.

According to the official record, the US government keeps billions of dollars in gold stored beneath the New York Fed’s Italian Renaissance fortress around the block from Wall Street.

But conspiracy theorists claim that the gold stock may have been stolen years back in a dramatic caper, that it’s been used for backdoor deals with foreign governments, or even that it’s been removed and replaced with gold-painted metal bars.

And as many know, the stash has caught the attention of some politicians, most notably Texas Representative Ron Paul.

For years, Paul has called for an independent audit of not only the New York Fed, but of the Federal Reserve Bank as a whole.

But the government hasn’t been eager to grant his wish.

In 1981, when Paul served on the Gold Commission – a panel formed by Congress to look into expanding gold’s role in the US financial system – he argued for full gold audits to be carried out on an annual basis.

He has proposed legislation for an exhaustive review of all the gold kept on US soil, which includes bullion owned by various foreign governments in addition to America’s.

If the gold is there and everything is in order, they should welcome an audit,” Paul said, as quoted by The Los Angeles Times.

Now, things seem to be moving in Paul’s direction, at least at the New York Fed – which is by leaps and bounds the largest by assets, and most influential of America’s 12 reserve banks.

The US government has been quietly carrying out an audit of all the American-owned gold at the New York Fed. The process involves drilling small holes in about ten per cent, or roughly 350, of the bars to make sure they’re pure.

About a half dozen Mint, Treasury Inspector General’s Office and New York Fed employees took part in the audit. It’s being monitored by the Government Accountability Office, the branch of Congress that wields investigative powers.

Other than that, Treasury officials have thus far refused to provide any details about the operation or its findings. They only say that the results will be announced towards the end of the year.

The New York Fed has also refused to comment.

But one anonymous Fed official, apparently speaking in the direction of conspiracy theorists, quipped recently that the audit will show that “Goldfinger didn’t sneak in at night” and take off with the gold.

Though the gold kept at Fort Knox, West Point and the US Mint in Denver, Colorado, have all been audited and tested in the past, the remaining 5 per cent – or about $21 billion – of America’s gold, held at the New York Fed, has never been exhaustively checked out.

Taking into consideration the gold owned by other nations, the New York Fed’s vaults hold about 23% of the world’s official gold reserves.

And even if the audit shows that the gold’s all there, it’s not likely to satisfy many, including Paul.

He claims he’s not concerned with whether the gold is real or fake, but with the paperwork that would outline what it’s been used for. Many suspect deals that were never made public, like loans to foreign governments.

The US stopped backing dollars with gold in 1971, bringing an end to the Gold Standard. Today, the gold in vaults across the country carries little weight, so to speak.

To that, Paul suggests that Washington simply get rid of it.

I would just as soon they sell the gold,” he’s said. “And then we would find out if they really had it.

Westboro Baptist Church praises Sikh temple shooting

0
Oak Creek : Law enforcement personnel walk outside the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin where at least one gunman fired upon people at a service. (AFP Photo / Tasos Katopodis)

Almost immediately after the shooting at the Sikh Temple in Wisconsin, leaders of the Westboro Baptist Church took to Twitter, calling the shooting a beautiful punishment from an angry God.

Westboro Church leader Margie Phelps sent out a tweet that read, “God sent another shooter?

The shooting claimed the lives of seven victims, and left many injured. The alleged attacker  Wade Michael Page was found dead at the scene and the FBI  is investigating if this is a case of domestic terrorism.

Fred Phelps, the leader of Westboro, wrote on Twitter that the shooting was a “beautiful work of an angry God who told Wisconsin to keep their filthy hands off his people (WBC!) #godsenttheshooter.”