Nothing in my way of thinking

 

Nothing in my way of thinking is  better proof of a well-ordered mind than a man's ability to stop just where he is and passed some time in his own company Seneca

 



 

This story of Sleepy Hollow starts during the battle of White Plains on November 1st, 1776. Major General William Heath recorded in his diary that a canon took off the head of a Hessian artilleryman. When Washington Irving came to live in the area as a boy, he heard the story and arriving just in time for a yellow fever epidemic, he wrote to his friends that the villagers “speak in hushed whispers the strange cries heard in the woods”

 Irving first heard the legend of a Headless Horseman from a laborer and also from a Dutch housewife his sister boarded with. So he wrote it all down and created a book full of fictionalized existing folklore but purposely crammed it full of actual stories of real people and places that he blurred the lines between fact and fiction. As an example, Ichabod Crane was a real person who fought in the War of 1812.




 

 

 


If anyone here has ever had a moment of darkness and you've got past it, congratulations.

 

If anyone here has ever had a moment of darkness and you've got past it, congratulations. I pray you never do, but if you do, it's gonna get better, I can guarantee you people that you're rubbing shoulders with right now, or walking past on the streets, have felt exactly the same way,

Don't keep it in,  write it down, talk about it and I can guarantee you in a day or a week or a month, you're reading  what you wrote and go “Wow I never want to feel like that again.” You accept it, you deal with it, and you move on, and in your mind start to tell yourself “I'm OK I can do this” and trust me your life is going to change. Letita Hughes

 


 

 

A well written story can make a big difference

 

For early Americans Christmas Day was no big deal, it was just another workday. In some cities and towns, it was even outlawed as a Romanist blasphemy. And then, in 1870, Charles Dickens wrote the novella A Christmas Carol. Soon afterward December 25 was soon recognized as a US holiday.




Is an important thing to fail.

 

Is an important thing to fail. I think failure teaches you things that you don't learn from success, I think failure gives you an opportunity for self-examination it also gives you a feeling that is very uncomfortable and that very uncomfortable feeling helps you grow that when you feel like you screwed something up, like when I've had bad podcasts. My podcasts always got better When I've had bad stand-up sets, I've always gotten better after that because those bad sets motivate you they get they give you a perspective like “hey here's some clear examples of where you fucked up.” I don't look at these failures as proof that I suck, I look at them as opportunities for growth, I look at them as opportunities to be motivated to do better.  Joe Rogan

 


People will tell you life is short,

 

People will tell you life is short, but actually, life is long. I mean when I was 34 years old, I was still 21 years away from having a book published even though I've been busting my ass for all that long, so I  would say to a younger person take some pressure off yourself you know if it's all this bullshit in the social media that you can do it tomorrow.  You know what? Enjoy the trip, pay attention, keep your eyes open on the journey. it'll hit went it happens, it'll happen.  Steven Pressfield




I want to thank me for doing all this hard work

 

 

I want to thank me for doing all this hard work. I want to thank me for having no days off. I wanna thank me for never quitting.  I want to thank me for always being a giver and trying to give more than I received.  I wanna thank me for trying to do more right than wrong I the world.  wanna thank me for just being me at all times.Snoop Dogg

 


You can't wait

 

You can't wait to be happy until life isn't hard anymore.




I told everybody at 10 years old I was gonna be on TV.

 

I told everybody at 10 years old I was gonna be on TV. One problem was that I had a severe stuttering problem. One day we were given an assignment to write on a piece of paper what we wanted to be when we grew up. I wrote I want to be on TV. The teacher called me to the front of the class, she called me up there to humiliate me and she said “Why would you write something like this on your paper? Who in the school has ever been on TV? Who in your family, in this neighborhood, has ever been on TV? Look at you, standing there, you can't even talk, how they gonna put somebody like you on TV?

So every Christmas I sent her a flat-screen TV.   Steve Harvey




A lot of people that I know try to make other people happy

 

A lot of people that I know try to make other people happy, and I'm just like, why are you doing that?

Before you can make anyone else happy you have to make sure you're happy yourself.

If you've got a list of people that are extremely important to you and you're not at the top of that list …….man, something is wrong.

Now people will dictate to you and tell you how should live your life, but ultimately you are the main person to decide how you should live your life.  You decide to be happy, do what you enjoy, do what makes you happy, think about yourself for once before you make other people happy, and make sure you're happy yourself.




The actual endings of Disney movies

 

 

The actual endings of Disney movies from your childhood are surprising. As an example,  in the original story of Sleeping Beauty,(A German tale)  the Prince impregnated the girl, Sleeping beauty, while she was sleeping. She conceived two children from the rape.

 In The Little Mermaid, (Another German tale) the Little Mermaid undergoes excruciating pain so she can grow legs. She grows the legs but fails in her mission to marry a Prince and kills herself.  

 The actual Cinderella (Perhaps a Greek tale)  story has Cinderella murder her first stepmother so her father could marry the housekeeper. Cinderella murdered the woman by slamming a chest lid on her throat and breaking her neck.




A museum says they gave an artist $84,000 in cash to use in artwork. He delivered blank canvases and titled them "Take the Money and Run."

 A museum says they gave an artist $84,000 in cash to use in artwork. He delivered blank canvases and titled them "Take the Money and Run."

BY CAITLIN O'KANE

A Danish artist was given $84,000 by a museum to use in a work of art. When he delivered the piece he was supposed to make, it was not as promised. Instead, the artist, Jens Haaning, gave the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art in Aalborg, Denmark two blank canvases and said they were titled "Take the Money and Run."

Haaning was asked to recreate two of his previous works: 2010's "An Average Danish Annual Income" and "An Average Austrian Annual Income," first exhibited in 2007. Both used actual cash to show the average incomes of the two countries, according to a news release from the artist.

In addition to compensation for the work, Haaning was also give bank notes to use in the work, museum director Lasse Andersson told CBS News via email. Their contract even stated the museum would give Haaning an additional 6,000 euros to update the work, if needed, Andersson said. At the time the works were initially exhibited, the Danish piece highlighted the average income of 328,000 kroner, approximately $37,800, while the average Austrian salary illustrated was around €25,000, or $29,000.

For the "Work it Out" exhibit at the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, Haaning was meant to fill frames with money. But they were empty.

"We also have a contract that the money $84,000 US dollars to be displayed in the work is not Jens' and that it must be paid back when the exhibition closes on 16 January 2022," Andersson said.

"The exhibition is called 'Work it Out' and features works of art by many different contemporary artists," he said, adding that the exhibition It runs from September 24 to January 16, 2022.

 

Andersson said when they spoke to the artist about making the piece earlier this year, he agreed to the contract and "he indicated a fairly easy job."

But when it came time for Haaning to actually deliver, he did the unexpected.

"The curator received an email in which Jens Haaning wrote that he had made a new piece of art work and changed the work title into 'Take the Money and Run,'" Andersson said. "Subsequently, we could ascertain that the money had not been put into the work."

Indeed, the frames meant to be filled with cash were empty.

"The staff was very surprised when they opened the crates. I was abroad when the crates were opened, but suddenly received a lot of mails," Andersson said.

When he finally saw "Take the Money and Run," Andersson said he actually laughed. "Jens is known for his conceptual and activistic art with a humoristic touch. And he gave us that – but also a bit of a wake up call as everyone know wonders were did the money go," he said.

According to Haaning's press release, "the idea behind was to show how salaries can be used to measure the value of work and to show national differences within the European Union. But by changing the title of the work to "Take the Money and Run" Haaning "questions artists' rights and their working conditions in order to establish more equitable norms within the art industry."

"Everyone would like to have more money and, in our society, work industries are valued differently," Haaning said in a statement. "The artwork is essentially about the working conditions of artists. It is a statement saying that we also have the responsibility of questioning the structures that we are part of. And if these structures are completely unreasonable, we must break with them. It can be your marriage, your work - it can be any type of societal structure".

Andersson said while it wasn't what they had agreed on in the contract, the museum got new and interesting art. "When it comes to the amount of $84,000, he hasn't broke any contract yet as the initial contract says we will have the money back on January 16th 2022."

 

The museum director said they'll wait and see what Haaning does, but if the money is not returned on January 16, "we will of course take the necessary steps to ensure that Jens Haaning complies with his contract."

He said they are in contact with Haaning, who he called a "well-respected and well-known artist in Denmark." But they have yet to reach an agreement.

Yeah


 

misbegotten.

 

In the beginning, there was begietan, and begietan begot beyeten; then in the days of Middle English beyeten begot begeten. All of the Old English and Middle English ancestors above basically meant the same thing as the modern beget—that is, "to father" or "to produce as an effect or outgrowth." That linguistic line with the prefix mis- (meaning "wrongly" or "badly") brought forth misbegotten.




my heart........

   My heart is a thousand years old. I am not like other people.  Charles Bukowski.




To Hob Nob

 

In William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, Sir Toby Belch warned Viola (who was disguised as a man) that Sir Andrew wanted to duel. "Hob, nob is his word," said Sir Toby, using "hob, nob" to mean something like "hit or miss." Sir Toby's term is probably an alteration of "hab nab," a phrase that meant "to have or not have, however it may turn out." After Shakespeare's day, hob and nob was used in the phrases "to drink hob or nob" and "to drink hobnob," which meant "to drink alternately to each other." Since "drinking hobnob" was generally done among friends, hobnob came to refer to congenial social interaction.



Greetings NYCPlaywrights

 Greetings NYCPlaywrights


*** FREE THEATER IN NYC ***

Off-Broadway in the Boros Fest
The Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment (MOME) announces the Off-Broadway in the Boros Fest, a series of Off- and Off-Off-Broadway theatrical performances running from September 29 through October 3 at various locations throughout the five boroughs. Coming on the heels of Broadway’s official reopening weekend, the five-day festival aims to shine a light on local performing artists while offering free entertainment to New Yorkers in neighborhoods hardest hit by the pandemic.

Each two-hour performance will take place at a designated Department of Transportation Plaza, Open Street or Open Culture location, which leverages an existing NYC program that allows communities to embrace new public spaces and support small businesses. The performances will feature a combination of theatrical elements, including concert versions of current or new Off- and Off-Off-Broadway musicals, musicians playing Jazz and Dominican Rock Fusion, tap dancers, singers, circus performers, Brazilian drummers and LatinX dance troupes.

The full festival lineup is as follows:

Wednesday, September 29, 12-2pm 
Location: Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn - Marcy Avenue Plaza between Fulton and McDonough Streets
Performances: STOMP
Hell’s Kitchen Happiness Krewe 
The Bushwick Starr presents ‘Music from Jillian Walker’s SNiNFoLK: An American Show’
Fogo Azul NYC

Thursday, September 30, 3-5pm 
Location: Jackson Heights, Queens - 34th Avenue between 77th and 78th Streets
Performances: Gazillion Bubble Show
Hell’s Kitchen Happiness Krewe 
Pregones/PRTT’s “TORCHED!”
Bindlestiff Family Cirkus

Friday, October 1, 3-5pm 
Location: Washington Heights, Manhattan - Dyckman Street, Between Payson and Seaman Avenues 
Performances: STOMP 
Yasser Tejeda & Palotre
Hell’s Kitchen Happiness Krewe 
Luis Salgado and Company 
Special Guests: 
Candace Bushnell, author of Sex and the City and the upcoming, one-woman show Is There Still Sex in the City?

Saturday, October 2, 4-6pm 
Location: Bronx - 1 Fordham Plaza 
This performance is in partnership with the Bronx Night Market taking place every Saturday from 4-10pm. 
Performances: Winnie the Pooh: The New Musical Adaptation 
Pregones/PRTT’s “TORCHED!”
Hell’s Kitchen Happiness Krewe 
Luis Salgado and Company 

Sunday October 3, 12-2pm 
Location: Staten Island - Snug Harbor Cultural Center, 1000 Richmond Terrace, Northeast Meadow
Performances: Gazillion Bubble Show
Hell’s Kitchen Happiness Krewe 
Bindlestiff Family Cirkus
Fogo Azul NYC



*** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***

Staged in local coffee shops throughout the five boroughs, New Play Cafe creates a cozy, come-as-you-are platform for playwrights in NYC and beyond. This round, we're looking for unproduced plays written in the past few years. So if you're an inexperienced writer with a big idea or a seasoned writer who just wants to try something new, we'd love to hear from you!

***
The Snowdance® 10 Minute Comedy Festival is a festival of original comedies that run 10 minutes or less. Submitted scripts will be judged by the Snowdance Selection Committee. A selection of scripts will be chosen for production during the Snowdance Festival in the winter of 2022. 

***
Are you a writer whose life has been touched by adoption? We want your story for a new theater event that will highlight personal stories about adoption from diverse perspectives, with all viewpoints welcomed and encouraged. 

*** FOR MORE INFORMATION about these and other opportunities see the web site at https://www.nycplaywrights.org ***


*** THEATER COSTUME DESIGNERS ***

William Ivey Long’s Stunning Costume Designs from Nine, Hairspray, and More
The six-time Tony Award winner has worked on everything from the musical Chicago to next month’s TV remake of The Rocky Horror Picture Show.


***
In Susan Hilferty’s bustling studio workshop on West 24th Street in New York, you will find shelves overflowing with books and drafting tables covered in papers. This is Hilferty’s invaluable “image library”, where the designer finds pictures that spark her imagination. Anything will serve: newspaper clippings, magazine photos, or illustrations in books. For the intensive research and visualisation needed to create the astonishing costumes of Wicked, Hilferty searched far and wide, from the contemporary fashion design of John Galliano to the Edwardian couture that she “twisted” to create many of Wicked’s unique Tony Award-winning costumes.

“In many ways, I consider myself a historian, a sociologist, and an art historian – in addition to all the other things that I do with clothes. To me, what was so exciting about Wicked was trying to understand a world that had a connection to the turn of the century as we know it. But I also had to incorporate the idea that animals talk, that there is magic, and that there are Munchkins in this place called Oz. So the design process meant researching history and creating a parallel universe.

More...

***
We sat down with Emilio during a fitting, to talk about his inspiration for the costume and what he loves most about the Christmas Spectacular.

Where are you from?
I’m originally from the Dominican Republic and I grew up in the South Bronx in New York City.

What inspires you about Christmas?
What inspires me most about Christmas is that it’s the one time that we all come together and celebrate as one. We put our differences aside and come together as people – as family, friends, co-workers –the Christmas season is about coming together and seeing how we as people can become our greater selves and not be so wrapped up in our own issues. Christmas allows us to become more human.

What is your favorite number in the show?
There’s something about the “Living Nativity.” We all know the story, but seeing it in front of you to that magnitude of spectacle with the actors, the animals, the costumes, the lights, the music – it really just makes it so special and puts me in the Christmas spirit. When I was growing up, we always had a little nativity scene so seeing it live brings me back to being a kid.

More...

***
In 1971, Willa Kim designed costumes for Weewis by Margo Sappington for the City Center Joffrey Ballet. The ballet marked her introduction to a then brand-new fabric called spandex, which had only been invented recently. At that time, there was stretch-able fabric, but it didn’t bounce right back—it didn’t have “memory.”

“Willa realized that it would be a great dance fabric,” recalled Richard Schurkamp, a friend and executor to Kim’s estate, who knew her for almost 40 years, until her death in 2016. “As we all know now! Everybody in the world, the dancers and people who do yoga or go to the gym or anything wear this fabric.”

Kim also quickly discovered that spandex could be painted, and a whole world of painted stretched costumes opened up for her. Schurkamp worked with her on the 1995 Broadway musical Victor/Victoria. He remembers the dance number “Le Jazz Hot!,” which began with three men, purportedly in a jazz club, playing piano and trumpet and trombone. They danced with their instruments in three-piece suits that weren’t suits at all but single units crafted of spandex; the actors simply stepped into them and were zipped up the back. They were silver gray with stripes of red up the side, and when they moved, the jacket didn’t pull away from the vest, and the vest didn’t separate up from the pants. It was a complicated construction, and it was all Kim.

“It seems a very quintessential Willa costume to me—the zipper was hidden, and you couldn’t ever see that it wasn’t a three-piece suit,” said Schurkamp.

What set Kim apart from a lot of other designers, Schurkamp feels, was her wit. There was always humor in her costumes, he said. Not that they were goofy or overtly funny, but there were slight touches of humor. One always knew when they were seeing something by Kim, he said, because there were often clever little jokes in the design.

More...

***
Sweeney Todd has been one of the most iconic and long-lasting characters of the Victorian Period. Making its first appearance as a villain of the Victorian penny dreadful serial The String of Pearls, in 1847, his tale became an urban legend in London. In 1979 the acclaimed Tony-Award winning Broadway Musical “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” by Stephen Sondheim, gave the character a much deeper personality and depicted him even more as the demon he always intended to be.

The most recent version of this story is Tim Burton’s 2007 musical film “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street“, which is an adaptation of the Broadway musical. In this film, just like in other occasions, we witness how Tim Burton and the legendary costume designer Colleen Atwood, unite forces and talent to create an amazing Gothic-Victorian world, of course with the outstanding performance of Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter as the main characters.

“I’ve worked with Colleen Atwood many, many times, and she’s as important as anybody on a movie. Costumes are another character in the movie. Most of the great actors I’ve worked with, when they put on the costume they become the character. It helps them find who the character is” -Tim Burton
 
Sweeney Todd, former Benjamin Barker, is a barber who is unjustly convicted by Judge Turpin, a man who wanted to take his family from him. Todd is exiled to Australia and after many years, he is able to return to London, seeking revenge against Turpin. He starts working as a barber again, but hate has invaded his entire soul and killing becomes an obsession. He murders his customers with a razor while his partner in crime, Mrs. Lovett, bakes their flesh into meat pies. 
]
The story takes place in London sometime between 1830 – 1865, and it combines elements of different parts of the city. It portrays a suffering and poor English society with classic and gothic elements as well. Atwood shared in an interview for USA Today that her main inspiration for creating the costumes for this musical was the music itself. She said, “It’s the starting point of all of it. It’s a moody piece, so I wanted a lot of texture in the costumes. I wanted you to be able to feel them on screen.” One of the main plots in the story is the class struggle that both Sweeney and Mrs. Lovett face in their lives due to power abuse. Costumes are an excellent means of exposing the difference in social classes, where people had to either wear worn out and recycled clothes or have a shiny cravat and top hat if they were wealthy. The main silhouette of the period is absolutely accurate, we see bustles, chemise, and corsets in the ladies clothing, and frock coats, vests, trousers, top hats, and cravats for men. Every single detail in the costumes works within the period and status of each character, creating another magnificent work of art by the outstanding Colleen Atwood.

More...

***
Tony Award-winning costume designer Clint Ramos says he felt his “very selfhood slip away” when the industry he loves shut down in March 2020, and with two Tony nominations pending – he’s up for Best Costume Design/Play for The Rose Tattoo, and Best Scenic Design/Play for Slave Play – the designer, born and raised in Cebu, the Philippines, should be unreservedly delighted with the recent rush of planned Broadway openings. So why has he “been unable to muster a wholehearted sense of hope?” In a guest column for Deadline, Ramos, a lifelong advocate for an equitable landscape in theater and film, poses a series of questions to the industry, raising concerns that he says weigh heavily on the hearts of colleagues of color. “I am delighted at the notion of a return to the American theater,” Ramos writes. “But not as we left it. I want to return to a truly equitable American theater.”

Many theater practitioners feel a profound closeness to their work. It is their life’s purpose. It is their essence. That is how I feel about the theater. So, when Covid drew stage curtains across prosceniums throughout the American stage, I felt my very selfhood slip away.

The joy and hope that many feel amidst the rush of announcements of shows returning to Broadway and the ultimate reopening of the American theater is wonderfully valid and re-affirming. But lingering questions burn a hole in my stomach with each announced reopening. Questions that countless others have asked for years. Questions that remain unanswered.

Why have I been unable to muster a wholehearted sense of hope?

Of course, the idea of returning and restoring that sense of self is a reason for joy and excitement. I am delighted at the notion of a return to the American theater. But not as we left it. I want to return to a truly equitable American theater.

As a theater worker of color, my sense of self, as for so many other theater workers of color, has always been fractured. Pieces of us are allowed to cross the threshold of the stage door. Other pieces are not. As Playbills start going to press again, I and so many of my colleagues of color find ourselves returning to a state of being in which it is necessary to perennially negotiate our fractured selves within an industry that does not seem to acknowledge what we have been saying about racial equity – not only this last year but for a very long time.

I cite racial equity specifically because Americans clearly see now more than ever, from stolen land to stolen people, the centrality of institutionalized racial supremacy to the country’s formation and development. The American theater and its de facto national theatrical institution, Broadway, just need to catch up.

More...

***
Seattle Opera sat down with Costume Director Susan Davis to learn more about the costumes for Carmen, which were envisioned by Gary McCann, Production Designer. Every Seattle Opera production takes approximately six weeks to costume from start to finish. This includes making garments from scratch, modifying or refurbishing existing costumes, and making any modifications that come up before opening night. This is the 10th time Seattle Opera has presented Carmen, and each time it looks a little different, Davis says. Bizet set his opera in the 1840s, and the fashions of this time period have an almost comical flair to modern sensibilities, Davis says. "But when you see an opera in a time period you recognize, it can offer audiences a closer connection to the story."

What’s your favorite thing about the costumes for this show?
It’s interesting to be doing this Carmen—it’s definitely new and different from what you saw on our stage last time, in 2011. Stage Director Paul Curran and his collaborator Gary McCann have set the work in the late 1950s. So onstage, you’ll see real clothes; vintage pieces (things you may recognize from your own closet if you were alive in the 1950s), and costumes used in Opera Philadelphia's production. As director of this work, Paul is thinking a lot about the haves, and the have-nots—from the factory workers struggling to make ends meet, to the upper-class in this story without a care in the world.

More...

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "NYCPlaywrights" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to nycplaywrights_group+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/nycplaywrights_group/b97b0436-6045-4ad1-b273-664b8bd6b299n%40googlegroups.com.