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Lake Forest home of real-life Daisy Buchanan sells for $7.5M

 

August 03, 2022 11:00 AM

A Lake Forest mansion with ties to F. Scott Fitzgerald sold for $7.5 million, the highest price for a home in the town in four years.

The six-bedroom, 11,600-square-foot home, known as “La Vieille Maison” hit the market in March 2021 with an asking price of $10.5 million. It went into contract this week.

The 5.2-acre estate was the 40th Chicago-area home to sell for $5 million or more this year, compared with 48 in 2021. The last time a home in Lake Forest, among Chicago’s affluent suburbs, sold for more was in 2018, when Nancy Hughes, the widow of 1980s filmmaker John Hughes, paid $12 million for a 3.4-acre property on nearby Mayflower Road.

Originally built in 1888 for a Chicago map publisher, the Rosemary Road mansion was remodeled in 1910 for well-to-do newlyweds William and Ginevra King Mitchell. She inspired the character Daisy Buchanan in Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby.”

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Fitzgerald met King Mitchell, one of Chicago’s “Big Four” debutantes during World War I, when they were teenagers in his hometown of St. Paul, Minn. After he visited her at her parent’s home in Lake Forest, King Mitchell shifted her attention to the much wealthier Mitchell, the son of a local bank president.

Fitzgerald went on to create characters in Gatsby and short stories that were based on King Mitchell. Another Gatsby character, Jordan Baker, was based on one of Chicago’s other “Big Four” debutantes, amateur golfer Edith Cummings.

The Mitchell family owned the home until 1988. In 1995, a couple bought the home and used it on weekends. Before listing the home in 2007 and selling it in 2011, the pipes burst. A rehab firm bought the property for $2.25 million and sold it to the most recent owners for $5 million in 2013.

 


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JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE FINDS CANDIDATES FOR EARLIEST GALAXIES

 

While the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) has previously looked at the Cartwheel, dust obscured its view.

This image from Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) shows a group of galaxies, including a large distorted ring-shaped galaxy known as the Cartwheel.

This image from Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) shows a group of galaxies, including a large distorted ring-shaped galaxy known as the Cartwheel. (Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Webb ERO Production Team)

"NIRCam also reveals the difference between the smooth distribution or shape of the older star populations and dense dust in the core compared to the clumpy shapes associated with the younger star populations outside of it," the agency said in a release with the image.

The Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) reveals regions in the Cartwheel Galaxy that form the spiraling spokes much more prominently.

What looks much like craggy mountains on a moonlit evening is actually the edge of a nearby, young, star-forming region NGC 3324 in the Carina Nebula.

What looks much like craggy mountains on a moonlit evening is actually the edge of a nearby, young, star-forming region NGC 3324 in the Carina Nebula. (IMAGE: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI)


"Webb’s observations underscore that the Cartwheel is in a very transitory stage. The galaxy, which was presumably a normal spiral galaxy like the Milky Way before its collision, will continue to transform," NASA said. "While Webb gives us a snapshot of the current state of the Cartwheel, it also provides insight into what happened to this galaxy in the past and how it will evolve in the future."

The first images from the international observatory, including the wondrous cosmic cliffs of the Carina Nebula, were released last month.

 


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*** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***

 


Over Our Head Players is accepting submissions for the "2023 Snowdance® 10 Minute Comedy Festival." "Snowdance®" entry is open to original 10 minute or shorter comedies for the stage. 2023. Concluding each performance, audience members can vote for their favorite individual comedy; the audience favorites will earn cash prizes for the playwright.

***

Theatre Now New York is accepting submissions from across the country for its Musical Writers Lab, a community of musical writing teams that meet biweekly for feedback and developmental opportunities for both traditional and genre-bending new work. There are two chapters; the local New York Group meets in person in midtown Manhattan, and the National Group meets on zoom.

***

Echoes Writers Group at Primary Stages is a year-long, educational program focused on finding, nurturing, and amplifying the voices of women, non-binary, and gender non-conforming artists. It is a place for writers to develop their practice in a supportive and creative community that grows together. Led by the artistic team at Primary Stages, the group is comprised of writers who are just starting to discover their voice and build their craft, particularly those who are interested in learning about the art of playwriting.

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


*** PETER BROOK ***

Mr. Brook was called many other things: a maverick, a romantic, a classicist. But he was never easily pigeonholed. British by nationality but based in Paris since 1970, he spent years in commercial theater, winning Tony Awards in 1966 and 1971 for the Broadway transfers of highly original productions of Peter Weiss’s “Marat/Sade” and Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” He staged crowd-pleasers like the musical “Irma la Douce” and Arthur Miller’s “A View From the Bridge.”

More...
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/03/obituaries/peter-brook-dead.html


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Peter Brook, the legendary film, theater, and opera director whose extensive career spans 70 years, recently joined The Brooklyn Rail for a conversation via Zoom hosted by President emerita of Brooklyn Academy of Music, Karen Brooks Hopkins, and director of Theater of War and writer, Bryan Doerries.
https://www.tfana.org/education/digital-programming/peter-brook

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"I can take any empty space and call it a bare stage. A man walks across this empty space whilst someone else is watching him, and this is all that is needed for an act of theatre to be engaged."

"A critic is always serving the theatre when he is hounding out incompetence. If he spends most of his time grumbling, he is almost always right. The appalling difficulty of making theatre must be accepted: it is, or would be, if truly practised, perhaps the hardest medium of all: it is merciless, there is no room for error, or for waste."

"In a sense the director is always an imposter, a guide at night who does not know the territory, and yet has no choice – he must guide, learning the route as he goes."

https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2022/jul/03/the-best-peter-brook-quotes


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The monumental “Mahabharata,” adapted from the Sanskrit epic poem, had a cast of 21 performers from 16 countries and toured for four years. (It was seen at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in 1987.)

A sworn, lifelong foe of colonialism, Mr. Brook found himself accused of cultural appropriation.

“When we did it, Indians said, ‘Here you are, colonialists, stealing our heritage.’ I said, ‘No, it belongs to the world.’ And I know that you have little companies all over India who do Shakespeare. Has anyone ever said, ‘This belongs to England’?”

An early pioneer in color- and gender-blind casting, Mr. Brook defines the actor as a storyteller who transcends his visible physicality. He cites the theater theorist Antonin Artaud’s phrase, “the actor and his double,” and says, “This is the secret, an open secret: No actor and no audience believe for one moment that this is the real person.”

“It’s like there’s the person, the role and in between is the space where the two meet,” he continues. “That’s what the performance is, where it’s the invisible becoming visible, it’s the space where the two meet.”

Theater reaches its apotheosis, he says, when such a space, outside of time, is occupied by the audience as well as the performers. It can’t happen, he adds, “if the actors are too tense or too ambitious, if the audience is too stupid or laughs too easily. But if these two concentrations, two essences, really come together, for a moment, it’s plain sailing.”

More...
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/18/theater/peter-brook-interview.html


***

Peter Brook describes Threads of Time as ‘a relatively full answer’ to the question ‘Why Paris?’ It is the first of his books not to have started out in another form. The Empty Space (1968) was based on lectures; The Shifting Point (1988) consists of articles, interviews, speeches, programme notes and other occasional writings drawn from his whole career; There Are No Secrets (1993) began life as three talks on acting delivered in Paris and Kyoto.

The new book is a memoir and started out as it is. Brook’s autobiographical writing is recognisably clean, clear and colloquial, only occasionally falling into what David Hare calls ‘the Esperanto patter of the higher mysticism’. From the start, Brook avoids ‘personal relationships, indiscretions, indulgences, excesses, names of close friends, private angers, family adventures or debts of gratitude’, though there is a wistful moment later on when he speaks of the ‘book that is not to be written’, a family history of memories that belong only to those who share them. Equally, he claims to have spurned ‘the well-known splendours and miseries of first nights’.

Unencumbered by private or professional anecdotage, Brook is able to chart two voyages of discovery. The first is his conversion from the magical illusion of the toy theatre (what he calls the conventional ‘two room’ theatre of darkened auditorium and blazingly illuminated stage) to the sterner, less flashy but infinitely more powerful theatrical space that is the shared possession of actors and audiences. Parallel to this journey is his trajectory from ambitious theatrical prodigy to Zen pupil, from busy careerist to seeker after spiritual truth. Like the rivers which provide so much of Brook’s theatrical and literary imagery, these two courses eventually meet, as Brook starts to work developmentally with small groups in the Royal Shakespeare Company. ‘For years,’ he writes, ‘I had rigorously kept my inner explorations and theatre experiments apart.’ However, ‘nothing can stay for long in watertight compartments’ and in the early Sixties Brook realised that, far from being the truth-seeker’s day job, ‘the theatre was becoming a practical field in which the possibility existed of observing laws and structures parallel to those found in traditional teaching.’

More...
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v20/n22/david-edgar/showman-v.-shaman


***

ENCORE! - Legendary director Peter Brook delves into the human mind


Many consider him one of the most visionary and influential directors of the past half century. In a career spanning over 70 years and several disciplines from theatre, film and opera, he's continually pushed the limits.

British by birth and Parisian by adoption, director Peter Brook joins Jade Barker on set to talk about his incredible career. Brook explains why he decided to explore the workings of the human mind in his latest production "The Valley of Astonishment", how Shakespeare will always be relevant and why he decided to call France home for over four decades.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQSlQZxYvog

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A Midsummer Night's Dream - Peter Brook - Documentary with original footage excerpts - 1970

Peter Brook's landmark production featured a white box and trapeze set designed by Sally Jacobs.

Brook approached the play with deliberate radicalism, taking up the baton from Granville-Barker almost 60 years earlier who innovatively presented the play in London on an apron stage with minimal set.

The 1970 Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) production of A Midsummer Night's Dream was directed by Peter Brook, and is often known simply as Peter Brook's Dream. It opened in the Royal Shakespeare Theatre at Stratford-upon-Avon and then moved to the Aldwych Theatre in London's West End in 1971. It was taken on a world tour in 1972–1973. Brook's production of A Midsummer Night's Dream for the RSC is often described as one of the 20th century's most influential productions of Shakespeare, as it rejected many traditional ideas about the staging of classic drama.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hdtlsWpeLDM

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