Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Anthony Joseph (Tony) Weisman

Tony Weisman
May 31, 1944-September 29, 2009



Tony Weisman fixing a neighbor's roof last November, right, and Tony dressed in his nicest jacket, above.


We lost an angel of a friend when Anthony Joseph Weisman died on September 29, 2009. You can see many photos of him at www.MeM.com, where you search with Weisman, Anthony, or just use the link at the right.

He was a gift to everyone who knew him, but he was especially a gift to me, Sylvia; to Leecia (her daughter, Stella, calls him Opa Tony); and to my brother, Thomas Sherwood Manning, 1955-2005, mentally and physically handicapped, for whom Tony made a home the last nine years of his life.



Tony and Sylvia in 2008 in New York for the NY International Fringe Festival, with Stella.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Encore une fois, Bread & Puppet




We, Sylvia and poet friend Monique LaForce, of Québec, attended the B&P Circus this last Sunday. It was in the New Theatre instead of in the field, because of weather. They performed to two packed houses, one after the other, but with no Pageant in the woods. It was even better than before. It was great. Monique, who had never seen a Bread and Puppet performance before, said it was like entering another world.

And Peter Schumann was Uncle Sam again on his sky-high stilts. Go to this URL to see him on them: http://breadandpuppet.org/ (or click at the Bread & Puppet link on the right)




Monique LaForce, poet, after picking wild raspberries at Mullein Hill, Glover, Vermont.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

more Bread and Puppet pictures from July 4, 2009

Some in rags, some in jags ...

I love these new puppets with (I think) plastic buckets for mouths. I love their bright colors and how, moving down Glover Road in Barton, Vermont, their ribbons of rags lift in the cool July breeze.

and some in velvet gowns.




And who wouldn`t love Dirt Cheap Money, title and theme of this year's circus?

Thursday, July 16, 2009

From the north country

One of the joys of being in northern Vermont -- in the Northeast Kingdom, as it's called -- is the opportunity to see the great Bread and Puppet Circus.The sunshine came out just for them, when the band started playing in the Barton parade, and it stayed all afternoon so that people could enjoy the first circus of the season. (Otherwise, not a lot of sunshine that week in the Kingdom.)

Friday, June 12, 2009

Elizabetta, from John Reed's Insurgent Mexico


Back in the Texas heat for a month as of today, and in a small town where local theatre is not very local and not, in the opinions of some, theatre, after giving two book talks on Right Relationship: Building a Moral Economy, I found myself putting into Celtx a (new and improved, that is to say, revised) version of a play I wrote some time back. Well, I wrote it on the last typewriter we purchased, a manual Smith Corona which now lives, with its extra keys for Spanish, at the cabin in upstate Vermont. Think of it? I wrote this play before we ever owned a computer.

But it's computerized now!

So the play is Elizabetta. "Elizabetta" is also the title of Chapter 13 of John Reed's book, Insurgent Mexico. But the play gives more than just that chapter. I worked to present some of the depth of Reed's experience there, from the whole book; and beyond that, it begins and ends in a prison cell in Russia.

As the movie Reds has it, he didn't actually die in prison, but shortly after being released; but drama is fiction, or so I learned as a cataloger. One can take liberty.

If you'd like to see the play, follow the link to my plays on Celtx, on the right. For a little while, Elizabetta will be on the opening Projects page. Afterwards, you will need to put either SilviCol or Elizabetta in the Search Box.

Celtx is no longer free to those of us who use it for writing or production purposes, but it's still free to the browsing public.

I thought this play might be good for radio and looked up that format. The new Celtx, though, makes an instantaneous adaptation to Audio Format or Screenplay. That's good enough for me for now.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Joe's Mrs. Warren's Profession!

"The acting is great," reads one review. Another has this:

"Joseph Franchini’s performance as Praed is also a gem, from the time he nervously approaches to meet Vivie and becomes inexorably drawn into the family’s drama...
That each character wholeheartedly believes in his own standpoint and worldview, whether with a sense of naïveté or entitlement, makes their interactions captivating and provocative to watch throughout the performance...." (Off Off Online)

Below Joe's picture, on the right, is a link to a review; or just search Google with Mrs. Warren's Profession, Joe Franchini.

Congratulations, Joe.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Anouihl's Antigone

Last night I saw a wonderful production of Jean Anouilh's Antigone at Théâtre de Poche (Pocket Theatre) here in Quebec City, at the University Laval. Antigone had lip piercings and unkempt hair, dressed in grunge black. The jacket she left behind on her last entry into her tomb the young Hémon will hold it as if it were the bundled child they might have had. The audience walked through the cast, assembled beforehand on-stage as Anouihl requested for curtain rise -- and here there was no curtain. The tone was set from the moment your ticket was taken by one of the guards.

It's a splendid script, of course, and these young French Canadians actors were in their element with the French.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Sylvia SilviCol news





Sylvia Ann Manning (SilviCol) is happy to note that her play about Walt Whitman's housekeeper was one of two plays chosen for a Herstory event by Co-op Theatre East. The full name of the event is COTE Tales: "In Her Own Words: Retelling Herstory".

The title of the SilviCol play is Elizabeth's Book about Mary.


The staged reading will be Sunday, March 29, 2009, at 6 pm at Kaffe 1668, 275 Greenwich St. in Tribeca, NYC.

A link for Co-op Theatre East is at the right. If you go to the link, go on to the blog.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Joe's in Mrs. Warren's Profession!



Joe Franchini has taken a role in George Bernard Shaw's play, Mrs. Warren's Profession.


(That's Joe's picture at the left from back in 2005 when he directed Pierrot le Quin at the Connelly Theatre. A more recent picture is on the right, above the link to the Boo Arts website -- with more information about the production he's in.)

"I am so happy to be working on a Shaw play," he says. "I love his work. The language is a joy to work on (and difficult to learn!).


Sunday, January 25, 2009

Thanks again to Annalisa Derr, our Lucila

Annalisa in group is second from left; Annalisa below is second to none.





Here's what Annalisa tells us about playing the role of Lucila:

As a non-native Spanish speaker, this is the second time I've played a Spanish speaking character. However, playing Lucila brought a handful of challenges aside from language. One of which was bringing to life the non-fictional character of a young Gabriel Mistral. I had to discover the truth, complexity, and freedom of this young woman without playing at being a 'little girl.'

One of the many fun things about being an actor is the process of discovery and growth that happens with each new play and character we inhabit. I had the fortune to learn about a talented and mysterious poet while recreating her through my own eyes.
There are universal human truths that we can all draw on to, "step into the shoes" of the character, or empathize with them. These truths I drew from while molding the character of Lucila. And sometimes, as actors, we ask for guidance and permission from that of the deceased soul of the character we are portraying in order to create a well-rounded portrayal."

[That's Gabriela Mistral on the left —Lucila grown up. She's smiling because someone worked hard to tell the story of what happened to her in Vicuña, Chile, when she was a child. Lucila's story.]
We're glad to know that Annalisa has been up to a lot of things since the 2008 New York International Fringe Theatre Festival.

I just wrapped a web series entitled "Empire," in which I played Katherine. Nearly completed filming the feature-length film, "Mara."
I am always creating; whether I am acting, writing, singing, dancing, painting, taking photographs with my Polaroid, I am "doing." I just returned from a three-week trip to Poland in which, among many things, I was able to perform my rendition of "My Funny Valentine."

Thanks!

Annalisa Derr

But we're back to the top where we who thank her for doing such a great job. Wish we could see her Funny Valentine.