Supergood Reality

On November 19, 2010, Reality happens at Ars Nova. As part of their annual ANT FEST for developing works, they have invited me to take the stage and do my thing, which generally includes music, video, monologue and mayhem. Over the past eight years, I have performed many incarnations of this show in different venues, most of which no longer exist (Arthur's Dress Shop, Trilogy Theater, Monkeytown), but Ars Nova is by far the nicest theater I have ever been a part of. I am thrilled to have this opportunity and I hope that YOU can join us. Tickets are…

Now Circa Then

I saw a great show at Ars Nova last night. Now Circa Then is a play that takes place at the Tenement Museum on the Lower East Side and concerns the two actors (or the people inhabiting the roles of two 19th century Prussian immigrants in a reenactment) who engage in a relationship both outside and in their stage lives. The play is simple in it's structure and conceit, yet manages to cleverly illuminate the joys and perils of our existence. It is funny, sad, tender and sweet; a play within a play that leaves us searching for our own…

Awesome Entertainment!

The past week has been full of good fun. Friday night was Ween at Central Park: these guys pack a party and serenade the masses with every genre of music imaginable. Saturday evening was my first encounter with Brooklyn Bowl and I love it. Great food from Blue Ribbon and a rawkus stage and pit (with a fun boom box show by Javelin) with a backdrop of balls and lanes make this LEED-certified building a very happening spot. On Sunday I was treated to a dress rehearsal of BLOODY BLOODY ANDREW JACKSON on Broadway and was so unbelievably excited to…

The Capeman

Theater is typically immune to foul weather, but when the venue is Delacorte Theatre in Central Park, The Doppler Radar is the main tool for determining a show's viability. At 8pm, when Paul Simon's Capeman was scheduled to start, standing umbrellaless was a mistake so Alaina and I huddled under the one we had and waited the next hour until it was closer to mist than storm and we filled our seats in the quarter-bowl. Before the head of The Public Theatre, Oskar Eustis, gave his introductory thanks and acknowledgments (calling the Delacorte "the greatest theater in the greatest city…

Phish 3D and The Bloody Bloody Band

3D technology is everywhere and I think we can safely say it has proven itself beyond a gimmick. It truly enhances the visual experience even without the original cliched application of sharks and other objects popping into your face. Phish 3D is the best look I've ever had at my favorite band, bringing the audience onstage with incredible depth and perspective, allowing visual details that would be invisible to anyone at the show and some that would be unseen even in a 2D format; I saw what their "farewell" show in 2004 simulcast in a theater, and this blew it…

Thank you Phil for reminding me!

They play at least 162 games in a season, which makes the value of each one so small, but last night was the very first and after months surviving on other sports I allowed myself to watch it as if it were game 7 of the World Series. Plus it was against the Yankees. Beginning of Baseball season also means beginning of patio season, which is where I write this now and where we grilled last night, opening BBQ season with spicy kebabs v. spicy chicken (Daliente!); a great night of hanging out with friends watching The Sox deliver a…

Voodoo and Zombies

Last night we went to see a great production of Eugene O'Neill's The Emperor Jones at The Irish Rep. It is primarily one man's descent from "Emperor" into a voodoo-induced nightmare and John Douglas Thompson is awesome and terrifying in his psychosis. The scenery dances and puppets play ghosts as the audience journeys inside a head of madness. We then came home and watched Shaun of The Dead. I have never seen a movie that combines comedy, tragedy, love and horror in the same way. How scary would life be if the undead wandered the streets consuming human flesh? How…

Tranny Fun

I was de-virginized last night at my first Rocky Horror Picture Show experience and it was, as I had been warned, highly participatory. If you yourself are still a virgin, I will enlighten you: the ridiculous 1975 rock musical B-movie is augmented by a group of live actors who dress (scantily) as the actors and lip-synch the lines while yelling commentary at the screen. Audiences are encouraged to throw stuff, dance and yell at appropriate or inappropriate moments. Before the midnight show at Clearview Cinemas in Chelsea, all the virgins--as in audience members who had never seen the show before--were…

Circle Mirror Transformation

I had the pleasure of attending a dress rehearsal of Alaina's new show at Playwrights Horizon last night and it is excellent. Sure, I give all her shows great reviews (she is the Production Stage Manager) but it's only because she works on great projects! This show takes place over six weeks in an acting class in rural Vermont and features five extremely talented actors playing five unsuccessful actors searching for their role in life. Yeah, it's meta... The characters all face serious emotional baggage and end up tearing each other down. It is heartbreaking on some levels, inspiring on…

Superhuman

I am a fan of basically any type of entertainment spectacle, from sports contests to film and TV to concerts. I like when people demonstrate extraordinary humanity and push the limits of our own experience. But if I had to show an alien just one event in hopes of proving our survival worthiness, I might take it to Cirque de Soleil. It has everything: music, dance, comedy and unbelievable stunts. Performing feats of strength and concentration with potentially lethal risks, these performers bring you onto the precipice with them, jarring your nerves and repacing your heart. At times, it is…