• Oops, one more theatre show

    I already saw it, but you should go if you’re interested in music or theatre, or music theatre:

    The Sandman, a new opera from Target Margin

    ·

    Categories:
  • Art things to see

    … as opposed to my theatre post earlier today:

    ·

    Categories:
  • Things to go see

    I’m going to see all of these, so email me if you want to know when I’m attending.

    At St. Ann’s Warehouse in DUMBO:

    • Jennie Richee — because of Mac Wellman and almost everyone else involved
    • Brace Up! — because of Wooster Group and Paul Schmidt
    • Barber of Seville — because of the music and David Neumann

    At P.S. 122:

    • Paul Zaloom — gay puppetry
    • Art, Life and Show Biz — Ain Gordon
    • Sentence — David Neumann
    • Bitter Bierce – Mac Wellman and Ambrose Bierce

    Plus Panic! at Ontological, since one needs a dose of Richard Foreman occasionally, and I know one of the cast members, Tea Alagic.

    ·

    Categories:
  • The shape of things to come

    OK, I finally added the Daily Kos to my blogs on the right after reading 2003 in review, a “future history.”

    ·

    Categories:
  • Republican Morality Scale

    They thought Clinton lying about sex was the worst behavior in the history of American politics. South Knox Bubba has a response.

    [via Ruminate This]

    ·

    Categories:
  • A sweet holiday movie

    A mother to her daughter, on her friend whose parents don’t seem to love her:

    I know darling… One thing about unwanted children: they soon learn how to take care of themselves.

    — from The World of Henry Orient starring Peter Sellars, Paula Prentiss, and Angela Lansbury. We got it from NetFlix and watched it last night.

    I had heard of the movie, and was reminded of it recently when the Times had an obituary of the director, George Roy Hill.

    It’s a weird early 60s movie with worldly parents drinking scotch, and two 14-year-old girls who decide to stalk a concert pianist named Henry Orient. The way the two girls joke about Chinese stereotypes and speak in funny accents probably helps explain why the film is so obscure today.

    One of the two girls went on join the Dark Side as a communications expert, working for the likes of William Webster and Ronald Reagan.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Money money money

    The Bush administration kills tracking of mass layoffs, because it makes them look bad.

    Meanwhile, our President stands to make a lot of money from worldwide war the old-fashioned way, by inheriting it.

    One more: our tax dollars have started going to religious groups to promote marriage. I love my gay dollars going to help spread the word that I’m evil.

    Good essay on why cutting taxes on dividends is a bad idea.

    ·

    Categories:
  • My new daily reading

    Phil Gyford has turned the diaries of Samuel Pepys into a daily weblog.

    An article by him about the project is on the BBC web site.

    ·

    Categories:
  • My quote for 2003

    Tyranny is the absence of complexity.
    — André Gide

    ·

    Categories:
  • Tom Moody

    Yay! Charles Goldman — we’re almost done with his web site, then I’ll tell you about it — has pointed me to a cool weblog by an artist, Tom Moody. He also has a second blog about electronic music here.

    I like his post about the lethargy of the art world and Chelsea as an artist-free Brasilia for collectors.

    I need to organize my links area. It’s time to separate political vs. general vs. cultural ones somehow.

    ·

    Categories: