Showing posts with label solo performance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label solo performance. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
The Next Gig: Queen Esther sings at Bushwick Burlesque -- TONIGHT, 9/17!
Darlinda Just Darlinda & Scary Ben Present:
BUSHWICK BURLESQUE: 2 YEAR ANNIVERSARY PARTY!!
SEPTEMBER 17, 2013 (Every third Tuesday)
12 Jefferson Street, Brooklyn, NY 11206
Doors at 8pm / Show at 9pm (NOTE NEW START TIME!)
Tickets Free (Suggested Donation $7)
You read it correctly! We at Bushwick Burlesque are celebrating our 2 year anniversary! In September 2011 we had our very first Bushwick Burlesque show and we haven't stopped! We've laughed, we've cringed, we've felt funny "down there", and mostly we've been ENTERTAINED!! That's right TWO YEARS of unabashed uncensored ULTIMATE Performance Art and Debauchery!!
You won't want to miss this month's celebratory line-up! September brings you many award winning international performers on our bill, just to show you that Bushwick is an international destination and guess what . . .it has been for TWO YEARS!!
Starring:
Alotta Boutté, Adrienne Truscott (of The WauWau Sisters), Jo "Boobs" Weldon, Perle Noire, James Habacker as Go-Goat Boy, Dixie Ramone, Albadoro Gala, Kitty Bang Bang, Queen Esther, Rush the Sadomasochistic Elastic Indestructible Clown, and Gemma Stone!
Our resident DJ, DJ Johnny Horrible, and of course performing and hosting the show are “The Perverse George and Gracie”; Scary Ben and Darlinda Just Darlinda!!!
As always we offer superbly curated line-ups designed to highlight the fine line of where absurdist art meets entertainment, meant to confound, titillate, excite and bewilder, with hopes of blowing you (our loving audience) away.
Come celebrate the ridiculous, risque, rowdy and raunchy night of BOOBS!! BOOZE!! BALLS!!
(of course we welcome your suggested donation of $7 or more to help us support live art, artists and theater, right here in our neighborhoods!!)
Thursday, March 07, 2013
What I Do For A Living, Part 3: "You didn't write that...did you?"
i have always loved to read and write.
i can't remember when expressing myself on paper with words was anything other than effortless. i'm sure this has something to do with my stay-at-home mother who taught me how to read at such an early age. when i was three, there were letters and then there were small words and then there were dr. seuss books. by the time i hit kindergarten, i could read with the comprehension of a kid twice my age.
i zipped through one advanced placement english class after another with relative ease, churning out essays and whatnot at will. when i was 12, an english teacher insisted that i turn in a journal as a weekly assignment and i've kept one ever since. when i was in college at ut austin as a freelance writer for a student newspaper, i thought it was kind of kitschy to get paid to write, but that was it. it wasn't until i came to new york city that writing mattered professionally.
what happened?
strange but true: when i came to new york city, i thought talent actually mattered. that's right: i honestly believed that if i did a great audition for a show, i'd get it because i was the best one for the part. i didn't realize that there were all these other factors at work. like my height. or someone else's height in relation to mine. or if my size 4 body fit into the size 16 costume, or headpiece, or whatever costume i had to wear. or whether or not someone behind a desk thought that i was pretty enough. or my blackness. yeah -- i know, right? believe it or not, i honestly thought: "this is theater. everyone has the willing suspension of disbelief so it doesn't matter that i'm black. i'll audition for every female role in my age range and my talent will get me the work." it never dawned on me that i could be the best one for the part and not get it because i couldn't fit into the costume or somebody thought that i was ugly or i was the wrong kind of black girl for that part, because the negro doing the casting was colorstruck. none of that ever entered my mind.
when it finally did, i was profoundly depressed. i didn't believe that i was pretty enough to do film and tv -- and even if i were, i wouldn't really get to act. theater and musical theater was my home base. with this realization, it was gone.
and then for some reason, i went to see john leguizamo in mambo mouth at the american place theater, and that's when all the lights came on. i had never seen a solo show. i didn't know that such a thing existed. as i watched him work, all i could think was, i can do that. i went home that night and wrote a monologue, almost as a reflex. it just fell right out of me. the next thing i knew, i was performing it at ps 122. two one person shows and a ton of showcases, workshops and festivals later, i've got a sold out run at joe's pub for my newest idea, queen esther: unemployed superstar.
all of a sudden, a whole world of options opened up to me. i was no longer at the mercy of a casting agent. i didn't have to wait for the phone to ring. if it did ring, that was terrific but if it didn't, i could employ myself. i came up with ideas, i developed them, i performed them. boom-POW, just like that. ideas oozed out of me all the time. keeping that journal since childhood shook a lot of them loose without my fully understanding what was happening. eventually, i shifted gears, started writing lyrics and songs -- and that meant more work.
last april, several performers and i -- francesca harper, charles wallace and keith thomas, respectively -- performed the billie holiday project, a show that i'm still developing, at the apollo theater's music cafe. how strange was it to chat with people in the audience afterwards, so genuinely surprised that i wrote it. for those who don't know me at all, getting accepted to nyu's tisch school of the arts mfa program was an astonishing feat. the real coup will be finding a way to pay for it.
what happened? all at once, i realized that i'm an originator, not a replicator. there have been rough moments, sure -- but i haven't looked back. i can't change who i am.
(to paraphrase paul harvey: "...and now you know the rest of the story.")
i can't remember when expressing myself on paper with words was anything other than effortless. i'm sure this has something to do with my stay-at-home mother who taught me how to read at such an early age. when i was three, there were letters and then there were small words and then there were dr. seuss books. by the time i hit kindergarten, i could read with the comprehension of a kid twice my age.
i zipped through one advanced placement english class after another with relative ease, churning out essays and whatnot at will. when i was 12, an english teacher insisted that i turn in a journal as a weekly assignment and i've kept one ever since. when i was in college at ut austin as a freelance writer for a student newspaper, i thought it was kind of kitschy to get paid to write, but that was it. it wasn't until i came to new york city that writing mattered professionally.
what happened?
strange but true: when i came to new york city, i thought talent actually mattered. that's right: i honestly believed that if i did a great audition for a show, i'd get it because i was the best one for the part. i didn't realize that there were all these other factors at work. like my height. or someone else's height in relation to mine. or if my size 4 body fit into the size 16 costume, or headpiece, or whatever costume i had to wear. or whether or not someone behind a desk thought that i was pretty enough. or my blackness. yeah -- i know, right? believe it or not, i honestly thought: "this is theater. everyone has the willing suspension of disbelief so it doesn't matter that i'm black. i'll audition for every female role in my age range and my talent will get me the work." it never dawned on me that i could be the best one for the part and not get it because i couldn't fit into the costume or somebody thought that i was ugly or i was the wrong kind of black girl for that part, because the negro doing the casting was colorstruck. none of that ever entered my mind.
when it finally did, i was profoundly depressed. i didn't believe that i was pretty enough to do film and tv -- and even if i were, i wouldn't really get to act. theater and musical theater was my home base. with this realization, it was gone.
and then for some reason, i went to see john leguizamo in mambo mouth at the american place theater, and that's when all the lights came on. i had never seen a solo show. i didn't know that such a thing existed. as i watched him work, all i could think was, i can do that. i went home that night and wrote a monologue, almost as a reflex. it just fell right out of me. the next thing i knew, i was performing it at ps 122. two one person shows and a ton of showcases, workshops and festivals later, i've got a sold out run at joe's pub for my newest idea, queen esther: unemployed superstar.
all of a sudden, a whole world of options opened up to me. i was no longer at the mercy of a casting agent. i didn't have to wait for the phone to ring. if it did ring, that was terrific but if it didn't, i could employ myself. i came up with ideas, i developed them, i performed them. boom-POW, just like that. ideas oozed out of me all the time. keeping that journal since childhood shook a lot of them loose without my fully understanding what was happening. eventually, i shifted gears, started writing lyrics and songs -- and that meant more work.
last april, several performers and i -- francesca harper, charles wallace and keith thomas, respectively -- performed the billie holiday project, a show that i'm still developing, at the apollo theater's music cafe. how strange was it to chat with people in the audience afterwards, so genuinely surprised that i wrote it. for those who don't know me at all, getting accepted to nyu's tisch school of the arts mfa program was an astonishing feat. the real coup will be finding a way to pay for it.
what happened? all at once, i realized that i'm an originator, not a replicator. there have been rough moments, sure -- but i haven't looked back. i can't change who i am.
(to paraphrase paul harvey: "...and now you know the rest of the story.")
Sunday, February 06, 2011
writing and writing and writing
i was working with ken on some rewrites at the workspace in chelsea tonight and he starts improvising around this one idea, just verbalizing intent and ideas and bits of things that we'd been discussing about entitlement and white people. i don't know why but something took off in me, running. hard and fast. i almost literally exploded in another direction. i stood there in the middle of the rehearsal space scribbling, while he went off. i couldn't write fast enough. it was astonishing, how effortless all of it was, how the words swung out of the pit of me, how what ken said had me bouncing in a thousand different directions, all of it oozing out of the tip of my pen.
it was almost as though i were in some sort of trance. not thinking, not feeling. instinctively shifting something inside me again and again and letting more and more out.
there was a time when i couldn't remember when i had moments like those as a playwright. now they're coming hard and fast, all the time. for this, i am truly grateful.
now back to my rewrites.
it was almost as though i were in some sort of trance. not thinking, not feeling. instinctively shifting something inside me again and again and letting more and more out.
there was a time when i couldn't remember when i had moments like those as a playwright. now they're coming hard and fast, all the time. for this, i am truly grateful.
now back to my rewrites.
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