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Archives for January 2011

Generation Dayton Offers 2011 Speaker Series

January 24, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Generation Dayton is offering a Speaker Series for 2011 that will be a great opportunity for young professionals to “network-up.”  These events will bring young professionals and local business leaders together, offering frequent high-level professional development and mentoring opportunities.

“The 2011 Speaker Series will provide a unique opportunity for young professionals to meet, network with, and learn from top-level businesses and community leaders who have a desire and passion to share their expertise with tomorrow’s leaders,” says Generation Dayton Chair, Jennifer Rettig.

The list of speakers includes Phil Parker, President and CEO of the Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce, Debbie Lieberman, Montgomery County Commissioner, Neil Arthur, Publisher of the Dayton Business Journal, Peggy Lehner, Ohio Senator for the 6th District, and many more.  Sample topics include the Economic State of the Dayton Region and Climbing the News Ladder in the Digital Age.

The first lunch will be held on January 28th at the Crowne Plaza.  Former Governor Taft will be speaking on the topic of Education and Innovation.

Visit www.generationdayton.org for details about the event and organization, or visit Generation Dayton on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GenDayton.  For a list of upcoming speakers and topics lined up, please see below:

Event Date Location Speaker Topic
Fourth Friday Lunch January 28, 2011 Stars Lounge, Crowne Plaza Former Governor Taft Education and Innovation
Business & Breakfast February 15, 2011 Racquet Club Phil Parker, President and CEO of Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce Generation Dayton’s Role in the Overall Mission of the Dayton Chamber of Commerce
Fourth Friday Lunch February 25, 2011 Dayton Art Institute Ginny Strausburg, Director, DP&L Foundation Choosing Board Positions Wisely: Questions Young Professionals Should Ask
Business & Breakfast March 15, 2011 Cracker Barrel, Miller Lane Debbie Lieberman, Montgomery County Commissioner Montgomery County Economic Update
Fourth Friday Lunch March 25, 2011 Schuster Center Donor Lounge Ken Neufeld, President and CEO of the Victoria Theatre Association Get Excited About the Arts in Dayton
Business & Breakfast April 19, 2011 Mimi’s Neil Arthur, Publisher of the Dayton Business Journal Climbing the News Ladder in the Digital Age
Fourth Friday Lunch April 29, 2011 Norton’s Peggy Lehner, Ohio Senator for the 6th District Update on Ohio’s State Budget
Business & Breakfast May 17, 2011 First Watch, Kettering Dr. Steven Johnson, President of Sinclair Community College TBA
Fourth Friday Lunch May 27, 2011 Racquet Club Jim Leftwich, CEO and President of Dayton Development Coalition Economic State of the Dayton Region
Business & Breakfast June 21, 2011 Courtyard by Marriott, University of Dayton Allen Elijah, United Way of the Greater Dayton Area The Aladdin Factor- One of the Greatest Lessons You’ll Ever Learn
Fourth Friday Lunch June 24, 2011 Amber Rose Dr. Roy Chew, President of Kettering Medical Center Healthcare Reform and It’s Impact on You

RSVP’s are required for attendance. Please RSVP to [email protected]

Generation Dayton, established in 2006, is the place for the diverse pool of talented young professionals who live and work in the Dayton region to meet, network, learn, grow and establish themselves as integral components in the future success of the Dayton region.

Filed Under: Networking, Clubs & Associations, Young Professionals Tagged With: 2011 Speaker Series, generation dayton

Olive Puts the Call Out for Local Music

January 24, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

The interior of the former Wympee burger soon to be home to Olive and local music

It’s always nice to start off the week hearing about community members doing what they can to support each other.  For those who haven’t heard of Olive, an Urban Dive, is a new restaurant coming to the site of the old Wympee burger on the corner of Third St. and Wayne Ave.  It’s the brainchild of Kim Collett and Matthew DeAngulo, who are putting an emphasis on all things local throughout the development of their new business.  That local emphasis is now extending to the music they’ll play in Olive once it’s open.

This morning a call went out via Olive’s Facebook page for local music to include on their iPad jukebox including “everything from ‘get the mornin jammin’ to ‘easy lunch & dinner’ to ‘end of the night funk’.”  Local musicians can get more information by emailing: [email protected]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: bands, Dayton Music, olive an urban dive

Arts and Entertainment on a Budget

January 24, 2011 By Dayton937 3 Comments

Marsha Pippenger said it best in her article about supporting the Dayton arts scene: just go. Yet despite the plethora of arts and entertainment options in Dayton, we all have our excuses, and money is certainly a legitimate one. The arts aren’t cheap to produce, and while the high quality productions are usually worth every penny, many of us can’t afford to drop that kind of cash every weekend. That being said, my motto for 2011 is “No Excuses.” So fear not – there are plenty of discounts and freebies to go around. Here are just a few:
Twelfth Night
Oscar season is upon us, and “The King’s Speech” is certain to appear on the list of nominees. Check it out at The Neon this week; on Tuesdays, tickets are only $5! Even full-price tickets at The Neon ($8.50 for evening screenings) are a few dollars cheaper than the big-box movie theatres.

This Wednesday (1/26), preview the Human Race’s “Twelfth Night” for the price of a canned good. Ticket distribution begins at 5:30 pm (first-come, first-served); performance begins at 7 pm. If you can’t make it to Wednesday’s Pay What You Can performance, then join JumpstART on Feb. 10th for Jump Into Theatre.  This young-professional branch of Culture Works is offering half-price tickets to “Twelfth Night,” plus a backstage tour.

Are you a fan of bluegrass? JumpstART is also offering discounted tickets to the Ricky Skaggs concert on Jan. 29th, presented by Cityfolk.

If jazz is more your style, then don’t miss the Eddie Brookshire Quintet on Monday, Jan. 31st at the University of Dayton. This concert is free! Learn more about this high energy ensemble at http://www.eddiebrookshiremusic.com.

Forbidden Broadway: Dances with the Stars will hit the Victoria Theatre stage on February 19th; buy your ticket online before January 28th and get 35% off. Just visit http://www.ticketcenterstage.com and use the code “DWTS”.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment Tagged With: Dayton Music, discounts, free events, Human Race Theatre, On Screen Dayton, theatre, University of Dayton, Victoria Theatre

The Most Delicious Week of Winter Returns!

January 23, 2011 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

Choose from over 50 restaurants and enjoy a prix-fixe  meal for $25.11.  Winter Restaurant Week is the perfect time to get out to that restaurant (or restaurants) you’ve been dying to try at a discounted price!  Experience cuisine that delights your palate and defines the art of dining in the Miami Valley.  For a list of participating restaurants and sample menu’s click here.  Notice that there are quite a few less expensive eateries that are offering 2 meals for $25.11 and The Melting Pot is opening for lunch to celebrate Restaurant Week.  You’ll also notice that there are several places that are offering a bonus 4th course.  There’s no doubt that the restaurants really use this week to show off and lure customers, so enjoy it!

Originally started in 2005, Restaurant Week has become a twice a year phenomenon that will have the Miami Valley eating out all week long.  And for each meal served $1 will be shared with local nonprofits.  This winter the chosen charity’s are the Foodbank, For the Love of Children and The Dayton Alzheimer’s Association.

Tips For A Successful Restaurant Week Experience

Reserve Ahead– many restaurants are already booked

Be Adventurous– Try new things- many Chefs love to show off new items during this week, trust them

Expect Changes– Menu’s are published a few weeks ahead, often availability changes, roll with it

Try Add Ons– Many restaurateurs will have wine suggestions to go with each course, experience the pairings

Splurge– You’re getting a deal on the meal, go ahead and order an appetizer or dessert to share

Plan Ahead– Franco’s & L’Auberge are running this promotion for 2 weeks, so plan on dining there the 2nd week and you’ll have 2 more nights open during Restaurant Week to explore

Tip Well– As a former server, I can’t say this enough!  20% is the standard, up or down based on experience

We’d love to know which restaurants your planning to experience.  Just leave a comment below and tell us about your Restaurant Week Experience.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles

Dayton’s Best Kept Secret…Sounds FISHy to Me! 2011 Fish Fry Events

January 20, 2011 By Dayton937 7 Comments

Click here for the 2013 List

Dayton has a lot of great things, of which you are probably already aware.  However, I’d like to fill you in on a little known secret about a special season that goes on each year here.  Yes, you’re aware of our holiday seasons, as well as the four seasons of the year.  To most of you, the season I am talking about might sound a little fishy.  It actually started last Friday at Holy Angels Church.  Have you guessed it?  If you haven’t, I’m just going to flat out tell you – Dayton has the best “Fish Fry Season” around!When you hear “fish fry”, the words “boring” or “dull” may come to mind.  Well let me tell you something…Dayton fish fries are nothing of the sort!  Traditionally, fish fries were held on Fridays during the season of Lent as we Catholics don’t eat meat on those days.  However, with the many Catholic parishes/schools and other organizations out there, and the amazing popularity of fish fries, they have expanded to Fridays outside of Lent as well.  At a typical fish fry, you will be able to experience an amazing evening full of fish, chips (fries really), beer, silent auctions, black jack, poker, and much more!  Plus, the cost you pay is significantly less than the amount you would spend on a night out on the town…and it supports a good cause!  So, regardless of whether you are Catholic or not, definitely make a point to “catch” at least one or more of these great fish fries this season.

 

January 21 – St. Albert

January 22 (Saturday) – St. Christopher

January 29 (Saturday) – Knights of Columbus 4022

January 29 (Saturday) – St. Helen

February 4 – Ascension

February 4 – St. Mary

February 11 – St. Henry/Bishop Leibold

February 12 (Saturday) – St. Peter

February 25 – Alter High School

March 11 – Carroll High School

March 11 – Incarnation

March 18 – St. Anthony

March 19 (Saturday) – Chaminade Julienne High School

March 25 – St. Charles

My Friend Amy and I at a Past St. Albert Fish Fry

The details for some of these fish fries are not yet available.  However, I will post them on the DMM event calendar as I get more information, so please be sure to check there if you are interested!  Also, if you know of another fish fry going on, please be sure to share it in the comments section below!

Oh…and how could I leave without sharing a dumb joke?

What did the fish say when it swam into the wall?  Dam!

Happy Fish Fryin’!

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Alter, Bishop Leibold, Carroll, Chaminade Julienne, Fish Fry, Holy Angels, Incarnation, Knights of Columbus, St. Albert the Great, St. Anthony, St. Charles, St. Henry, St. Mary

Just Go

January 20, 2011 By Marsha Pippenger 3 Comments

Marking the Past/Shaping the Present: The Art of Willis "Bing" Davis (at DAI)

I want to thank Mary McCarty for her DDN column of Sunday, January 16. She made note of something we all do in regards to the arts. We talk and talk and talk about how we need to go more, see more, do more, and do it all more often, and then one day, when we do go, it’s gone, and just like the song, we realize we don’t know what we’ve got till it’s gone.

That’s what could happen to our arts – all of them – if we don’t change our attitudes.

Back in the early 80s, my husband and I lived in the Washington DC area, a region rich with art – the many museums of the Smithsonian, the Phillips Collection, the galleries, free stuff on the Mall, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Walters Art Gallery – and to this day I regret not going more often to these wonderful places while I lived so close and it was so easy. Some of them I never got to (shame on you Marsha!). I had the same problem we all have in our lives; I had a finite number of hours in a day, a week, a month, and I still had to do laundry, run errands, clean the house, go to work, so how could I possibly set aside those “have tos” for an “I‘d really like to”?

Because, as Mary so rightly points out, those “like tos” have to become “must dos” or those things in life that enrich us will disappear. Some already have, sadly. It’s tough to change our actions; it’s a decision to be intentional; to set time aside to nurture ourselves. And, as we all know, the laundry still has to get done.

How do we do it? Am I making a case for a 12 step program in saving the arts? Do we need to form a support group of arts lovers who drag us to the museum, to the theatre, to those wonderful galleries full of interesting, thought-provoking local art?

I don’t think so. But I do think it’s time to make a promise: to honor that part of us that gains health and nourishment from creation, visual thought, and imagination. Otherwise we will surely starve.
When you go to the Dayton Art Institute: Enjoy the permanent collection, then visit these:

100 Years of African-American Art: The Arthur Primas Collection
On view through January 30

Marking the Past/Shaping the Present: The Art of Willis “Bing” Davis
On view through January 30


Folk Art from the Collection of Porter Wright Morris & Arthur LLP
January 21 – March 27 in the Lower Level Galleries

Investigation Destination: Science and Math in Art
On view through April 3 in the Experiencenter

Filed Under: Visual Arts

THE NEON – MADE IN DAGENHAM Set For One Week Only!

January 20, 2011 By Jonathan McNeal Leave a Comment

Hello Everyone.

It’s time for us to move along. Today (1/20/2011) will be our last day for BLACK SWAN, and MADE IN DAGENHAM – starring the enchanting Sally Hawkins – will start tomorrow (1/21/2011). That said, you’ll have to move fast if you want to see DAGENHAM…we only plan to have the film for one week…that’s because BLUE VALENTINE is set to open on January 28.

Synopsis for MADE IN DAGENHAM: “Based on a true story, MADE IN DAGENHAM portrays a decisive moment in that decade of upheaval, when the fight for equal rights and pay was led – unexpectedly – by ordinary working-class women with one foot in the kitchen , one foot on the factory floor, and ears glued to the pop coming over the radio and telly from far-off London (19 kilometers and a world away). It’s a vintage “girl-power” tale.” (Sony Pictures Classics) Una LaMarche of The New York Observer writes, “Made in Dagenham is a retro romp with heart, smarts, soul and wit that will restore your faith in the power of the picket line. Peter Travers of Rolling Stone writes, “Sally Hawkins is just plain irresistible in this funny, touching and vital salute to women in the work force.”
Check out this incredible supporting cast…Bob Hoskins, Miranda Richardson and Rosamund Pike!  Visit the official site by clicking this LINK.

In the next couple weeks, we have a few special events (I’m waiting on a description of a ski movie set for early February). In each case, THE NEON has been rented by a person or an organization. Ticket prices are then set by that lessee in accordance with their mission. Here are details that are ready for the press:

“RIDE THE DIVIDE, which was named best adventure film at the 2010 Vail Film Festival, is an inspiring journey about the world’s toughest mountain bike race, which traverses over 2,700 miles along the Continental Divide in the Rocky Mountains. The film weaves the story of the three characters’ experiences with immense mountain beauty and small-town culture as they attempt to ride from Banff, Canada, to a small, dusty crossing on the Mexican border. The tests of endurance and the accomplished moments throughout Ride the Divide prompt us to reflect on our inner desires to live life to the fullest.” The film will play One Night Only – Wednesday, January 26 at 7:30.
Advanced tickets – ($10 each + $1 processing) are only available by visiting this LINK.
Tickets the day of the show will be available at the door for $15 each.
The official site of the film can be found atwww.ridethedivide.com.

On Thursday, February 3 at 7:15, come to THE NEON for PK Night Dayton, Volume 6. PechaKucha Night was devised in Tokyo in 2003 as an event where people meet, network, and share their creative endeavors with a lively audience. PK Nights are now held in hundreds of cities, inspiring creative people worldwide. The name comes from the Japanese term for the sound of “chit chat”, and rests on a presentation format that is based on a simple idea: 20 images x 20 seconds. It’s a format that makes presentations concise, and keeps things moving at a rapid pace. PechaKucha Night Dayton is on its sixth volume, with presentations from Samantha Enslen, Reade Faulkner, Theresa Gasper, Sherif Hedayat, Sharon Howard, Brandy King, Jay King, and Chris Wire. Following the presenations, stick around for a screening of the thought-provoking and motivating documentary DIVE! Grocery stores around the country are filling their dumpsters with food. Not rotten, spoiled food, but billions of pounds of good, edible food. Follow filmmaker Jeremy Seifert and his circle of friends as they dumpster dive in the back alleys and gated garbage receptacles of L.A.’s supermarkets. In the process, they uncover thousands of dollars worth of good food and an ugly truth about waste in America: grocery stores know they are wasting and most refuse to do anything about it. The cost for this entire event is $5. Presentations start at 7:15 and DIVE! starts at 9:00.

Details about our annual FREE Oscar Party will be available soon! Hold the date for Sunday, February 27!

We’re quite excited to start BLUE VALENTINE next Friday. Given a 100% review from numerous critics (and a handful of my friends in other cities), I’m really looking forward to finally seeing it. If you haven’t seen the preview, you can visit the official site by clicking this LINK.

See you soon,
Jonathan

SHOWTIMES for January 21 – January 27:

MADE IN DAGENHAM (R) 1 Hr 53 Min
Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 12:15, 2:30, 4:50, 7:20, 9:40
Monday – Thursday: 2:30, 4:50, 7:20

THE KING’S SPEECH (R) 1 Hr 51 Min
Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 12:10, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 9:50
Monday & Tuesday: 2:30, 5:00, 7:30
Wednesday: 2:30, 5:00
Thursday: 2:30, 5:00, 7:30

RIDE THE DIVIDE (NR)
Wednesday: 7:30

COMING SOON:
As always, all dates are tentative. Some of these dates will change.
In some cases, titles may disappear.

Jan. 28 BLUE VALENTINE
Jan. 28 I LOVE YOU PHILIP MORRIS
Feb. 4 THE ILLUSIONIST & ANOTHER YEAR
TBD: RABBIT HOLE, BIUTIFUL, SOMEWHERE
TINY FURNITURE & BARNEY’S VERSION

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton Tagged With: Dayton Ohio, made in dagenham, Oscars, PK Night, Ride the Divide, the king's speech, The Neon

Seth Rudetsky Brings ‘Big Fat Broadway’ To Springfield

January 20, 2011 By Russell Florence, Jr. Leave a Comment

If you adore Broadway and love to laugh, be sure to catch comedian Seth Rudetsky deliver his “Big Fat Broadway Show” Saturday, January 22 at the Turner Studio Theatre of the Clark State Performing Arts Center in Springfield.

The hilarious, one-of-a-kind Rudetsky, a Sirius/XM Radio host who has music directed numerous Broadway shows such as “42nd Street,” “Les Miserables,” “Mamma Mia!” and “The Phantom of the Opera,” will deconstruct a slew of personal musical theater-related recordings/videos (such as Cher singing all the roles in “West Side Story”!) in a style all his own. In fact, his energetic, funny and knowledgeable musings on Broadway past and present have become a staple in Manhattan in recent years thanks to Seth’s Broadway Chatterbox, his weekly talk show at New York’s Don’t Tell Mama.

In addition, the Emmy and Grammy nominee, born in Jamaica, Queens and raised on Long Island, appeared in the Broadway revival of “The Ritz,” was a member of “The Rosie O’Donnell Show” writing team, and wrote “The Q Guide to Broadway.” He also majored in classical piano performance at Oberlin College and will accompany Tony winner Betty Buckley (“Cats”) at the Performing Arts Center the evening prior.

OnStageDayton recently caught up with Rudetsky in advance of his Springfield appearance.

onStageDayton: Have you been amazed by any particular Broadway show recently?

Seth Rudetsky: I am/was obsessed with “In the Heights.” I (saw) it 11 times. Lin-Manuel Miranda brought ‘hip-hop’ to Broadway, which I am certainly not a fan of, but the show – it’s amazing! It’s literally like one of the old fashioned Golden Age musicals, but with a more modern score. It’s so tuneful and full of joy! Can’t wait to see the film version!

OSD: Is there a particular musical you would like to see revived on Broadway?

SR: I think ‘Shenandoah’ would be a great vehicle for Hugh Jackman. Probably my favorite musical of all that has nothad a good revival is ‘The Most Happy Fella,’ which is a brilliant show by Frank Loesser.

OSD: If you could go back in time as musical director of one show what would it be?

SR: Probably ‘Funny Girl’ just to have chance to work with Barbra Streisand and see how she worked. She changed the melody a lot. On the ‘Funny Girl’ cast recording, the melodies are not sung as written. It would be fascinating to know why she decided to change the melody. I once spoke with Marvin Hamlisch, the original rehearsal accompanist for ‘Funny Girl,’ who said (composer) Jule Styne just let Barbra do what she wanted to because she made it better.

OSD: Is there anyone in the New York theater community you particularly feel might be the most underrated?

SR: Kristine Zbnorik, who is playing Roz in the national tour of ‘9 to 5.’ She’s one of the funniest people I’ve ever worked with. And obviously Betty Buckley, who won a Tony Award, but hasn’t been on Broadway since ‘Triumph of Love’ in 1997. Betty is not underrated, but I’d say she’s underused. Where is her Broadway musical? I love Betty and it’s frustrating to me that these big Broadway stars have to wait years and years between Broadway shows. Look at Patti LuPone – she waited 20 years between musicals (in terms of) ‘Anything Goes’ and ‘Sweeney Todd.’ What is going on?

OSD: You recently performed in a New Jersey production of ‘[title of show]’ with Muse Machine alum Tyler Maynard of New Carlisle. How was that experience?

SR: Tyler got me the job. He really pushed for me and that’s why I did it. It was an abstract-driven show, which really didn’t matter to me, but when I realized he was going to be playing opposite me I had to do it. It was a great experience. Tyler’s parents are coming to see my show in Springfield as well.

“What I love about the show is that no matter the audience there is always non-stop laughter.”

OSD: You have worked with some of the biggest names in the industry, have been nominated for some of the most coveted awards in showbiz, have your own radio show, written a book, and continue to perform in various venues across the country. Is there anything in particular you hope to accomplish in the future?

SR: I’d love to host the Tony Awards – that indeed would be thrilling. Plus, being nominated for one! I’d also like to star in a play I write myself – like Lin-Manuel Miranda! But I don’t write music so it would have to be an actual play or a musical with a score by someone else. I also have a young adult book coming out on the Random House label. I would like to turn it into a book series and perhaps write a film version!

OSD: What do you hope audiences take away from the experience of seeing “Seth’s Big Fat Broadway Show”?

SR: What I love about the show is that no matter the audience there is always non-stop laughter. I’ve literally done my deconstructions in Amish Country and Waco, Texas, so believe me I’ve had all kinds of audiences. Thankfully, it always works. But what I truly enjoy is the fact that people can laugh, but they walk away loving Broadway even more than they have before, even if they never have. And they usually come up to me and say ‘Now I have to go out and buy the CD of ‘Hair’ or ‘The Pajama Game’’ or whatever song I’ve played that they are now obsessed with.

Seth’s Big Fat Broadway Show will be held Saturday, January 22 at 8 p.m. in the Turner Studio Theatre of the Clark State Performing Arts Center, 300 S. Fountain Ave., Springfield. Tickets are $35. Seating is limited. For tickets or more information, call (937) 328-3874 or visit online at www.springfieldartscouncil.org. For additional information about Seth, visit online at www.sethrudetsky.com

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews, The Featured Articles

Conservatively Comedic

January 19, 2011 By J.T. Ryder Leave a Comment

Mark Klein Is Conservative On Everything But The Funny

Mark Klein - Conservative Comedian

While Mark Klein’s early career careened around the edges of the blue circuit, playing in seedy clubs and even strip joints. Over time, his act evolved and matured as he himself did. His performance reflects who he has become rather than a persona he cultivated over the years on stage. While being touted as a conservative comedian is a rarity, finding someone that is true to themselves on and off the stage is even more extraordinary.

Klein’s career has taken him from the comedy club circuits, to the cruise lines and into the corporate boardrooms, and his blend of political and observational humor has managed to win over audiences, fans and naysayers alike. I was able to speak with him as he was wending his way across the country and, as we spoke, a clearer picture of the man and his comedy shone through.

J.T.: Okay, so you are billed as the most conservative comedian…
Mark: Well, not the most conservative comedian, but I am the only Jewish, Republican, conservative comedian from Louisville, Kentucky in the world. There is only one and I am it. My political viewpoint on stage is definitely conservative and it has a definite point and edge to it. My career is comedy club work, cruise ship work and corporate speaking and I’ve kind of blended all of those into a show that says exactly what I want it to say and it’s become a real passion to get both the message out there and the comedy.

J.T.: Well, a lot of people are afraid to do that. A lot of people are afraid to use the platform that they have.
Mark: I can understand that. The minute you take a political viewpoint, you’re alienating half the people that are listening to you. My idea of a perfect show is when I see someone in the audience that doesn’t agree with me, and they’re laughing. To me, that’s just the greatest show you can have.

J.T.: Yeah, especially within the last decade or so, everyone has become so encamped and entrenched and polarized, people don’t feel they can laugh at truths about themselves even.
Mark: Right, and that is exactly what comedy is not about. Comedy, to me, is about getting people to look at the world and themselves and laugh at it as well as laugh with it. The whole goal of comedy is to find the points that we have in common and how we laugh at the same things together and then you get to use that to examine who you are and what you believe and examine the world around you. It’s a joyous way to make a living because you get to be the vehicle for the audience to be able to do that, so it’s just a great way to make a living.

Well, this doesn’t look conservative at all! No sir, it surely does not!

J.T.: Do you think that having yourself billed as the most conservative comedian kind of limits your audience? Would someone who sees themselves as a liberal enjoy your show just as much?
Mark: Of course, of course. There’s a good part of the show that has nothing to do with being liberal or conservative. A tremendous part of the show is just my world view described in a funny way, so it doesn’t matter who you vote for or what you believe or where you are from, you are going to find these things funny. Even when you disagree with the viewpoint, there are jokes there that are funny. A well written political joke for me is one that makes people on both sides of the aisle laugh and even people that disagree with it will find the humor in it and be able to laugh at it and, in that sense, I try not to use my humor to polarize people, but to unify them.

J.T.: Yeah, and a lot of people don’t do that. People take the opposite tack and ostracize a group.
Mark: There’s nothing insulting or bashing; there’s no ugliness to the show that I do.

J.T.: Well, why do you think that there are so few conservative comedians?
Mark: Well, entertainment, by it’s very nature seems to have more of a liberal following, in both the performers and those that patronize live entertainment and so most comedians are afraid of being ostracized from the comedic community for not being politically correct and, let’s face it, as an entertainer, you depend on the approval of your audience. As a professional entertainer, to get work, you depend on the approval of your peers and the people that book your work and so a lot of these guys are afraid of not having that approval. Well, I’m not afraid of that. I know who I am and what I believe and I know I can make it funny. You have to be true to yourself and my act is very true to who I am and what I believe and if it costs me work, so be it. To not be able to be that person on stage, that would absolutely suck the joy out of what I do for me. It’s important for em to stay true to myself politically onstage.

Mark Klein is set to take the stage at Wiley’s Comedy Niteclub (101 Pine St.) on Thursday, January 20th at 8:00 pm ($5 admission), Friday, January 21st at 9:00pm ($10 admission) and Saturday, January 22nd at 8:00 pm and 10:30 pm ($12 admission). Opening up for Mark Klein will be joined by the always likeable and incredibly funny Dave Zage. To make reservations, just call (937) 224-JOKE and for more information, go online to wileyscomedyclub.com. You can also find them on Facebook at Wiley’s Comedy Niteclub.

Filed Under: Comedy Tagged With: comedian, Comedy, comic, conservative, Mark Klein, Wiley's Comedy Niteclub

Betty Buckley Sings Broadway In Springfield

January 19, 2011 By Russell Florence, Jr. 2 Comments

Betty Buckle as Grizabella in "Cats"

Betty Buckle as Grizabella in "Cats"

Dynamic vocalist Betty Buckley, whose career in stage, film, music and television includes a Tony Award for her portrayal of the glamorously weathered Grizabella in “Cats,” will sing her signature tune “Memory” and a host of other Broadway favorites Friday, January 21 at the Clark State Performing Arts Center in Springfield.

Buckley, 63, has been an icon among musical theater devotees for decades. The Forth Worth, Texas native made her Broadway debut in 1969 as Martha Jefferson in “1776” (her powerful rendition of “He Plays The Violin” is a hallmark of the cast recording), appeared as Catherine in “Pippin” in the 1970s, and drew more acclaim in the 1980s with legendary turns in the aforementioned “Cats” as well as “Song and Dance,” “The Mystery of Edwin Drood” and “Carrie.” She also received a Tony nomination for “Triumph of Love,” appeared off-Broadway in “Elegies: A Song Cycle,” scored raves as Rose in “Gypsy” at New Jersey’s Papermill Playhouse, and garnered an Olivier nomination (London’s equivalent of the Tony) as Norma Desmond in “Sunset Boulevard” (which she marvelously reprised on Broadway to spine-tingling degrees).

“I really love Andrew Lloyd Webber,” admitted Buckley, speaking by phone last week from Dallas. “He’s a tremendous impresario and composer. He writes beautiful music, and working for him has been one of the greatest pleasures of my life. Grizabella, while it was a role centered around one song, was still a powerful role. ‘Memory’ is really universal. Learning to sing that song and deliver it the way it’s meant to be was a transforming experience for me. I kind of came into my full potential as a singer-storyteller with that material. ‘Sunset Boulevard’ was great too. Norma Desmond was the kind of role I had been training for a long time to do. I finally had the opportunity to use everything I knew how to do and it required even more of me.”

Betty BuckleyBuckley’s repertoire includes some of Lloyd Webber’s finest songs, but she also holds a deep appreciation for more complex composers such as Jason Robert Brown (“Songs for a New World,” “Parade,” “The Last 5 Years,” “13”) and Stephen Sondheim.

“‘Memory’ is the jewel of my collection and one of the most beautiful musical theater songs, but I’m a huge Sondheim fan,” she said. “He is a great genius. His character songs are so rich, multi-layered and complicated. I love Sondheim’s music and his capacity to really tell great stories. It’s very profound. But I’m also a fan of young composers like Jason Robert Brown and Ricky Ian Gordon. I also love Adam Guettel’s ‘The Light in the Piazza,” which is beautiful and one of the best new shows by a young composer I have ever seen. I was absolutely enchanted by it.”

Although Buckley regards her involvement in “Cats” and “Sunset Boulevard” as her most challenging and rewarding experiences, she says the one role that took her by surprise was portraying fanatical mom Margaret White in the 1988 flop “Carrie,” based on the 1976 film of the same name in which she appeared as the gym teacher. The show, which ran for only 16 previews and five performances, divided critics and audiences, but is considered a cult classic with an underrated score.

“When my friends Dean Pitchford, Michael Gore and Larry Cohen called to tell me they made a musical version of ‘Carrie,’ I just didn’t think it would lend itself to musicality,” she said. “When I did the role, it was a blast. It was a great show. I was very surprised how much fun it was to play a complete psycho, a singing psycho.”

In a welcomed and highly anticipated turn of events, off-Broadway’s MCC Theater will stage the first New York revival of “Carrie” next season. Buckley couldn’t be more thrilled for she feels the underappreciated musical is long overdue for a second look.

“‘Carrie’ did not get a fair shake at the very beginning,” she said. “It has very powerful, dramatic, operatic material. I think it was originally misconceived directorially and stylistically. It was inconsistent. But I think everybody involved with the revival knows that, and with the right director, the right cast, and the right approach it could be a huge hit.”

Theater aside, Buckley memorably starred as Abby Bradford in the ABC dramedy “Eight is Enough.” In addition to “Carrie,” her film credits include “Tender Mercies,” “The Happening” and “Wyatt Earp.” Among her solo recordings are “Bootlegs: Boardmixes from the Road,” “Children Will Listen,” “Stars and the Moon,” “The Doorway” and “Quintessence.” She received a Grammy nomination in 2002 for “Betty Buckley Live At The Donmar,” recorded at London’s famed Donmar Warehouse, and is currently finalizing her latest CD “Ghostlight,” an eclectic mix of standards, show tunes and contemporary songs (produced by her longtime friend T-Bone Burnett) which will be available in the fall. The Academy and Grammy Award-winning Burnett (“O Brother, Where Art Thou?,” “Crazy Heart”) also produced “Betty Buckley 1967,” which was released in 2007 and recorded when both were 19 years old.

“T-Bone is a great artiste,” she said. “He owned his own recording studio from the time he was 17 years old.”

Buckley’s schedule remains consumed with concert appearances, workshops and regional theater engagements. She will soon co-star opposite Tovah Feldshuh in “Arsenic and Old Lace” at the Dallas Theater Center, and is in negotiations to join the next stage of the new musical version of Armistad Maupin’s “Tales of the City,” which is co-written by Tony-winning librettist Jeff Whitty (“Avenue Q”) and will have its first full-scale production this spring at American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco. At present, she is excited to bring her “Broadway By Request” concert to Springfield alongside her frequently funny collaborator/accompanist Seth Rudetsky of Sirius/XM Radio.

“I will tell stories from some of the songs I’ve sung on Broadway and pianist/comedian Seth Rudetsky will offer some great deconstructions and comedy,” she said. “It’s a fun, light show and includes some of the great, beautiful songs I’ve been so privileged to sing like ‘Stars and the Moon’ and ‘Meadowlark.’ I like songs with a beginning, middle and end, songs that have a character coming to a new awareness and (ultimately) transformed in that awareness to a new place.”

Betty Buckley will perform Broadway By Request, accompanied by Seth Rudetsky, Friday, January 21 at 8 p.m. in the Kuss Auditorium of the Clark State Performing Arts Center, 300 S. Fountain Ave., Springfield. Tickets are $20-$50. For tickets or more information, call (937) 328-3874 or visit online at www.springfieldartscouncil.org

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews

Me & Moutains, The Seedy Seeds and No No Knots at Blind Bob’s

January 19, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

Me & Mountains unveiled their self-titled debut album about six months ago to much acclaim, and lucky for us, they’ve already started on the next one.  There’s no release date yet, but the band is aiming for a spring or summer.  There’s also already some national buzz for the new album as You Indie recently featured an interview with Me & Moutains’ vocalist and bassist, Burris Dixon.  Check out that article here.

You can catch Me & Mountains live at Blind Bob’s tomorrow night (Thursday, January 20).  They’ll be hosting two great Cincinnati bands: The Seedy Seeds and No No Knots.  The Seedy Seeds have played quite a few shows in Dayton over the past few years and are also prepping a new release due to come out in February.  Word has it, they’ll be unveiling some new material at Blind Bob’s.  No No Knots have just released an EP called Quiet to the Night.  You can download it for free here.

Full show details are available at the Dayton MostMetro events calendar.

Here’s one of my favorite tracks from Me & Mountains’ self titled debut album.


Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Blind Bob's Tavern, Dayton Music, Me & Moutains, Seedy Seeds, Things to Do

The Adventures Of Vaccinium Person From Finland

January 19, 2011 By J.T. Ryder 1 Comment

Might As Well Rewrite The Title As Well…

            To understand my position on this debate, I must first tell you a story. When my middle son was in 5th grade, he was harassed mercilessly by several black students in his class. Among those, there was one in particular that would constantly bother him, poking him with a pencil in the back, pulling his hair and calling him things like beaner, spic, camel jockey, sand nigger and towel-head. I had spoken with the teacher on many occasions and, while sympathetic, he was overrun by his classroom and, after taking up the matter with the school’s principal at the time, he found that he was alone in dealing with the problem.

One day, I received a call from the school saying that I was to pick up my son from school because he was being suspended for two weeks. Why? Because my son, in retaliation to the constant harassment, both verbal and physical, had finally had enough, turned around and hit the boy and called him a nigger. Oddly enough, the physicality of the altercation was swept aside as a negligible offense, but the racial slur was what was treated as the major transgression. I arrived at the school and met with the principal, who was a demurely petite black woman. She must have had a degree in psychology because the first thing she did was move a table that was in front of me out of the way so, “that there wouldn’t be anything standing between us.” Knowing that my wife was coming up, I thought that this was a foolish idea, as that table would at least buy the principal a few seconds for escape. As it turns out, I was right.

In speaking with the principal before my wife arrived, I brought up the fact that my son had been harassed by several children in the classroom and ran down the list of racial slurs that had been lobbed at him and that I had entreated the school to intercede to no avail. She stated that since he was not of that specific ethnicity, neither Arabic nor Mexican, then the racial slurs did not apply to him. She then made an allusion to the fact that he probably picked up his racism from me, since I was white, which is, in of itself, a prejudicial remark…and an incorrect assumption at that.

            Now, look up at my picture. Now back here. I am a white male. My wife, however, happens to be female (which is a good quality in a mother) and also happens to be black. In all honesty, she’s a Haitian/Cuban/Native American-American, but that just sounds confusing and stupid. So, that being the case, all of our children are multiracial, which makes this incident as interesting as it is convoluted. I brought up to the principal the fact that the school had a zero tolerance policy for racism, yet they had allowed my son to be called all sorts of names of a racist nature. She repeated her stance that since he was not of those ethnic origins, the racist epithets did not apply. So, by this logic, since the children were racist as well as ignorant of someone’s nationality, it made their slurs acceptable. I went on to say that I had heard children in the hallway call each other nigger on innumerable occasions, to which she explained that, in the African-American culture, that was a term of greeting and endearment. Well, what if, for the sake of argument, the black half of my son used the word, trying to be endearing, while the white half was appalled at the racist transaction? Would that make it acceptable? Shortly thereafter, my wife arrived and the whole conversation devolved rather quickly, especially when she called the principal a nigger and all the children involved “little nigglets.” As I predicted, the principal should have kept that table in front of her.

            I bring this up, not as a means to air my disgruntlement with the school system (although there is a cathartic quality to it), but as an example of how complicated the nuances of this argument are. On the one hand, we have black entertainers using the word ad nauseum, especially in rap lyrics, so much so that, if there weren’t so many words that rhymed with “nigger,” the rap genre would have died a quick death shortly after Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five’s first album. Walking along the street or standing in a store, I am constantly accosted by the dreaded “N” word, usually strung together with other expletives, with a complete disregard as to who is within earshot. It’s become a game, much like the one played by woman who wears exceptionally revealing clothes, just daring any male to look at them so they can unleash a hate filled tirade against the “sexist pigs.” It becomes a trap as to who can legitimately use The Word That Shall Remain Nameless, and woe to you if you use it and are not licensed to do so.

As with any other word, it is the intent behind the word and not the word itself that carries the weight. I can watch Richard Pryor’s Live On The Sunset Strip and never have a derogatory thought about the word nigger, even though it’s used roughly a thousand times during the show. If I watch Mississippi Burning and hear some white redneck use the word, you can feel the hatred drip off of each syllable. He could be calling the guy a “maraschino cherry”, and the sense of malice would be the same. By the same token, any word, regardless of how innocuous or funny that it may sound (such as peckerwood, which just cracks me up), should be treated equally as a pejorative term and not be relegated as having a lesser impact. I have seen innumerable black comedians, musicians, actors, etcetera, rail against the racism that blacks must endure, and then launch into bits denigrating other races without any thought of hypocrisy crossing their minds. You cannot claim a specific sensitivity to a word, then be insensitive about the language that flows from your own mouth.

            The argument against removing the word nigger from Mark Twain’s works is simple: don’t. It reflects the mores of that time period, regardless of whether it is right or wrong. It shows how people were viewed and treated, and not just black people, but Native Americans and different classes of people as well. If you green light sanitizing works of literature, how soon will it be before we rewrite The Dairy of Anne Frank to depict the young girl taunting the Nazi’s à la Macaulay Culkin in Home Alone? Using the same logic that NewSouth Publishing Company is using, the book should be changed so that it will make it easier for teachers to discuss the book without having to deal with the horrific nature of the holocaust. We need to change Steinbeck’s Of Mice And Men while we’re at it to depict handicapable people in a better light. Those poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar will have to be rewritten, because some of the dialect smacks of ignorance. After we’re done with that, we’ll be able to tackle that violently racist and sexist book, The Bible…

I am not downplaying the use of the word nigger. In it’s truest form, the word embodies the hatred and detestation of one race for another. It unfairly depicts a whole race of people under an inapplicable blanket definition and, to a large degree, holds them to it against their will. That’s one of the important reasons to keep the word alive in it’s original context in Huckleberry Finn, as a benchmark for what the word applied to a people of a certain era and what the word symbolizes now. A word, however, is a word and, even if you sanitize it and give it a more palatable appearance, unless you are willing to change the behavior that allows this hatred and the insufferable intent behind the word, this cleansing is all for naught. By way of example, George Carlin used to do a bit about the term “shell shocked”, which turned into “battle fatigue” and eventually ended up as “post traumatic stress disorder”. Through all its permutations, the actual devastating trauma and its cause remained the same, but the terms were more pleasant for people to deal with, allowing people to ignore the tragic nature of what the words entailed.

Even though Huckleberry Finn is a work of fiction, it is still a window into a historical era. To shut this window and draw the blinds is the surest way to cloud our vision and allow us to forget things that, while uncomfortable or upsetting, are important to remember so that we do not forget, as a people, where we have come from and the atrocities that we, as a people, have endured. It gives us a point with which we can juxtapose the past with the present so as to give us a clearer line of sight to where we need to be. To tamper with literary works in the name of appeasement or comfort is yet just another form of revisionist history, allowing for a Pollyanna perspective that will surely allow us to forget past transgressions…and eventually to repeat them.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iau-e6HfOg0′]

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: debate, J.T. Ryder, racism, racist, the "n" word

Jane’s Best Bets (1/19 – 1/23)

January 18, 2011 By Dayton937 Leave a Comment

Photo Credit: Alli Shillito

I have to be honest…writing this column each week has been a bit overwhelming, and this week is no exception!  As I have been researching events to share with you, I have realized that there are just TOO MANY great things going on in Dayton from which to choose!  In an effort to reduce the time it would take you to read about all the events going on this week, I have narrowed them down to a hopefully more manageable number!

On Wednesday, you can yell “checkmate” as part of the Chess Club at the East Branch of the Dayton Metro Library…or perhaps you better whisper it since you’ll be at the library.  Test your dance moves with Zumba at the East End Community Center.  Since you worked out, you can head over to Nick’s Restaurant for their Kahlua Tasting (you can’t go wrong with kahlua!), The Wine Gallery for their Weekly Wine Tasting, The Caroline for their Eel River Brewing Company Beer Tasting, or Savona Restaurant & Wine Bar for their Wine Down Weekdays! Or check out the movie Bill Monroe: Father of Bluegrass Music at The (Fabulous) Neon.

On Thursday, if you don’t know much about twitter, be sure to check out How To Use Twitter for Business.  When I gave up Facebook for Lent last year (except on Sundays, which was still incredibly difficult!), I created a Twitter account to “replace” it.  However, to this day, I still don’t know how to use it, so I could definitely benefit from this workshop!  If you think ice skating is a breeze, learn some additional skills at RiverScape as part of So You Think You Can Skate? I definitely wouldn’t be able to cut it for that one, but perhaps you are much more talented than I am!  Over at the Dayton Art Institute, check out the Dayton Philharmonic’s The King’s Theme: Bach’s A Musical Offering…who could turn down beautiful music in a beautiful environment?  While you’re there, be sure to take advantage of their Free Third Thursdays, as you will get free admission to two of their exhibits!  And finally, whether you’re good or bad, check out Jekyll & Hyde, which will be performed at Wright State.

On Friday, learn the basics of Bread Baking at the PNC 2nd Street Market.  Some music options are the Dayton Philharmonic’s ‘Bach: A Musical Offering’ at the Schuster Center, Betty Buckley – Broadway by Request at the Clark State Performing Arts Center, and Bruce Jordan with Sinclair Jazz Ensemble at Sinclair’s Blair Hall Theater.  I Hate Hamlet. Sorry to all the English teachers I have had in the past.  Actually, this is the name of a dramatic comedy you can see at The Playhouse South.  You can also catch Jekyll & Hyde at Wright State and Ravenscroft at the Dayton Theatre Guild.  And no matter your religious affiliation, if you missed the kick-off to fish fry season this past weekend at Holy Angels, be sure to head to St. Albert the Great for their Fish Fry!

On Saturday, get some tips on taking care of plants over the winter with the Plant Doctors at the PNC 2nd Street Market.  If you’ve never tried yoga and you’re wondering what all the hype is about, head to the Sri Yoga Open House at Sri Yoga Center, where you will be able to participate in FREE yoga classes!  Bring the whole family to Victoria Theatre for The Gizmo Guys – Comedic Juggling Duo.  If you have an ear for music, head to Aullwood Audubon Center & Farm for the Moon over Aullwood Musical Performance, Gilly’s for the Dayton Blues Society Winter Blues Showcase, or to Sinclair’s Blair Hall Theater for the Community Wind Symphony Concert.  Or if you’re like me and are a fan of music by THE Eagles (I can’t remember if any of them are bald), then head to the Schuster Center for ‘One of These Nights: Music of the Eagles’.  To catch some theater, purchase tickets to Ravenscroft at Dayton Theatre Guild, I Hate Hamlet at The Playhouse South, Seth Rudetsky’s Big Fat Broadway Show at Clark State Performing Arts Center, or Jekyll & Hyde at Wright State University.  For a thrill, check out AMA Arenacross- Professional Racing at the Nutter Center.  Plus, be sure to get the DaytonMostMetro.com discount for Saturday’s show ($4 off your ticket) by entering the promo code MMETRO!  And finally, although it was a tough loss to Xavier, hopefully the Flyers will get a victory when they take on Fordham at the UD Arena…and hopefully you’ll be there to cheer them on!

On Sunday, you will be able to attend one of the events you may have missed earlier in the weekend, such as the AMA Arenacross- Amateur Racing at the Nutter Center, The Gizmo Guys – Comedic Juggling Duo at Victoria Theatre, I Hate Hamlet at The Playhouse South, Jekyll & Hyde at Wright State, or Ravenscroft at Dayton Theatre Guild.  If you like art, you can catch the Wright State University 2011 Faculty Exhibition.  And for all you social justice activists out there, head to the Dayton International Peace Museum for their exhibit, Under Our Noses: Modern Day Slavery and What You Can Do About It.

And now it’s time for the Dumb Joke of the Week. Drum roll please…

How do you identify a bald eagle?

All his feathers are combed over to one side.

These are just a few best bets from the DMM Calendar.  There are plenty more events listed there, so if you haven’t, I encourage you to check it out today!  Also, if you have an event to share or promote, please submit it– it’s great marketing and better yet, it’s FREE!  And finally, if you have a dumb joke to share, I’m all ears!

Have a great week Dayton!

Filed Under: DMM's Best Bets, The Featured Articles Tagged With: AMA Arenacross Series, dayton metro library, Dayton Philharmonic, dayton theatre guild, Fish Fry, Jekyll & Hyde, One of These Nights: Music of the Eagles, PNC 2nd Street Market, Ravenscroft, riverscape, Schuster Performing Arts Center, Sinclair Jazz Ensemble, Sri Yoga, St. Albert the Great, The Neon, The Playhouse South, The Wine Gallery, UD Flyers, Victoria Theatre, Wright State

This Week on Kaleidoscope: Splattertude

January 18, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

Splattertude

Splattertude is a band, a comedy troupe and an internet radio show among other things.  Born from the Ghastleee Movie Show hosted by A. Ghastlee Ghoul on DATV, Splattertude will be performing on January 29th as part of the Dayton Does Dayton show at Canal Street Tavern.  You can check out event details on the Dayton MostMetro Events Calendar. I’ll be interviewing Splattertude tomorrow night on Kaleidoscope, 8-11pm on 91.3FM WYSO, and they’ll be playing some tunes live in the WYSO studios.

Our originally scheduled interview and live set will be accompanied by stories and memories of Barry Hobart aka Dr. Creep.  In addition to Splattertude, we’ll talk to local filmmakers Andy Copp and Matt Brassfield,  hear stories from filmmaker/musician Henrique Couto, an audio documentary about Dr. Creep from filmmaker Ann Rotolante and much more.

You can tune in online at www.wyso.org, and if you’re not close to a radio or a computer, the set will be available to stream on WYSO’s website beginning on Thursday afternoon.  We’ve also got links to stream-able episodes of Kaleidoscope right here in the sidebar of the DaytonMusic section of Dayton MostMetro.

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: A. Ghastlee Ghoul, Canal Street Tavern, Dayton Does Dayton, Kaleidoscope, Splattertue, WYSO

A Testimony To Our Time Remaining

January 18, 2011 By J.T. Ryder Leave a Comment

The Bengsons Perform The Proof

The Bengsons CD Release Party w/Walk The Moon
Thursday, January 20 · 8:00pm – 11:30pm
Location: Canal Street Tavern
308 East 1st Street
Dayton, OH

Abigail and Shaun Bengson

Shane Anderson, the technical director for the Encore Theater Company called me one late afternoon last October saying that I needed to come down to the Oregon District to check out the Bengsons. He said they were a husband and wife musical duo that were rehearsing their latest project, The Proof. I told him I’d be glad to and then asked him what kind of music they performed. That’s about the point when the conversation fell apart. Shane began by describing elements from the musical Hair, then switched up, describing what they did as “folk opera.” After more adjective searching, vaudeville, cabaret and folksy were tossed out before Shane conceded that it was difficult to describe their music and told me that I should just come down and see them for myself.

A cold Autumn drizzle covered the cobblestone streets in a slick sheen as I made my way over to the building that housed Encore. I entered and was met by Shane who led me upstairs to a rehearsal room where around fifteen or twenty people were scattered about. Abigail Bengson was flanked on her right by singers J.J. Parkey and Shawn Elizabeth Storms. On her left, her husband stood motionless, eagerly tuning his guitar. Behind the singers, musicians Bart Helms and Zach Wright were readying their own instruments. Abigail began the evening by welcoming everyone and thanking them for showing up before she launched into an abridged description of what their latest project entailed.

The premise caught me by surprise by its complexity. This was a story about two lovers who, upon finding out that the husband was suffering from a terminal disease, consciously decided to compress the sixty years or so that they once imagined that they together into a single year, which was what reality and circumstance had afforded to them. As they launched into an condensed version of the whole poetic précis, I felt the same loss of adjectives to describe what I was witnessing that Shane had had earlier.

The music ranged from boisterously defiant anthems to somber melodies, with each singer’s voices fading in and out, making room for a new voice, a new segment of the story. The melodies themselves conveyed a hue of their own, painting a picture of the passage of time as well as capturing moments lost to an impending sadness. Abigail’s resonating voice pitched and dove, holding a balance between incessant denial of the inevitable to the shrill sorrow of acceptance. Her eyes were brilliantly focused, her countenance held in a tightly coiled dramatic smile that communicated that which was left unsung. Her arms flailed, as if conducting an invisible orchestra, or as if she was holding a weaver’s needle, stitching the vignettes of the opera into a full tapestry of song. Shaun Bengson’s vocals were, at times, were a roughly hewn counterpoint, and at others, in a harmonious union with his wife’s voice. Shaun held together the elements of the opera through his musicianship and the acceptance of his character’s fate.

Afterwards, the group collected together, and asked the audience for their input, which most were eager to share. It wasn’t what most would expect, such as incremental advice or suggestions for improvement. The small audience had been personally touched by the message that the shortened opera had expressed and they responded with their own stories of loss or their fear of losing someone that they loved. After more than half an hour of discussion, everyone went their separate ways and I was able to talk to Abigail and Shaun over a beer.

J.T.: With you two being a couple, taking on a subject like this…you have to project and extrapolate that story onto the other person. Does that become bothersome at times?

Shaun: I think that that is where this piece actually came from. When we fell in love, we fell really quick. We were engaged after only like three weeks of dating, it was also at that moment that we also felt our mortality, you know what I mean? Falling in love with someone is also like falling in love with something that is flesh and blood and something that will eventually die. So, that’s where this piece came from It was Abigail’s original idea, like 2½ to 3 years ago and it has taken us this long to do it because it was just too painful to look at. I mean, it’s like a whole evening of looking at one of us dying.

Abigail: A lot of our work has been kind of political and things that we do and our passionate about, but they are pretty outside of ourselves, so this is the first piece where every song we were writing was about this. Everything that we were fucking doing was about this. We were trying to ignore it. We said the opera was about something else for a long time until, finally, we looked at each other and said, ‘You know what this is about, don’t you? Let’s just get to writing the opera that’s writing itself. The one that’s actually happening.’ Because it’s coming from a really pure place, it’s absolute gratitude and absolute terror, and that’s what it’s about.

J.T.: I can see one other correlation between the opera and where you would almost go through the stages of death with this because you went through the denial, you went through the anger and then you accepted your fate. There are also correlations with birth as well.

Abigail: (laughing) That’s exactly right! There is even the rebirth of becoming a married person.

Shaun: I was thinking that, even in mundane ways, there was a real ‘testing period’ once we were engaged because we got engaged so quickly that, whether our friends got it or not, or whether we would shut them out or let them in, our life looked incredibly different a year after we got engaged than it did a year before. Everything was different, from the people we were around to the things that we were doing…it really was a kind of death and rebirth.

Abigail: We changed everything.

J.T.: But then you start looking at the moments again, and those are the most painful. I mean, like you two together, doing this opera and revisiting your own mortality so often, how many walks do you have together? How many romantic baths do you have together? Would you take for granted the small things after facing the inevitable with this opera?

Abigail: For me, it was falling in love that…it’s so fucking cheesy, but it’s true…that made me, and not always in a comfortable way, but sometimes in a desperate way, want to have those moments and know I was having them. I didn’t just want to take a bath…I wanted to take the bath and it was happening in the moment.

J.T.: Putting too many expectations on something tends to overshadow the moment. Things like that have to be organic or else they become eclipsed by expectations.

Abigail: Right! But that is exactly what the opera is about! I guess it’s more about consciously enjoying each other as much as we can, not taking things for granted and living every moment that we’re living.

Shaun: We just read East Of Eden for the first time and we had never read Steinbeck before. There’s this character, Adam, and he has a whole decade of his life that is lost to the Army which was filled with lots and lots of boredom and, suddenly, ten years had passed. The quote in the book is something like, ‘Time passes without notice without any posts to hang the hat of memory upon.’ That has been another point that we keep coming back to, a point of real inspiration for this, finding these posts to hang the hat of memory upon, so instead of ten years going by in a flash, it’s like one year that feels like ten years.

J.T.: Well, of course, this project has had to draw you two together on some level…

Shaun: It’s so much ‘our life’ that it’s hard to pick apart the pieces…

Abigail: No kidding!

Shaun: I just think it’s amazing that I get to do this with the woman that I love. There is also the point that the simple act of creation can be really hard because we both really, really care about it, so sometimes we’ll be writing something and we’ll find ourselves avoiding each other or fighting and we wonder what the cause is, then we realize it is the writing, that it has become so emotional to create something that it bleeds into our lives.

Abigail: What we are creating with is the stuff of emotions.

Shaun: Sometimes we’ll get really emotional about something and misconstrue that, like, ‘Oh no! She’s upset with me!’ or ‘I’ve upset her,’ but it’s just dealing with the emotions of creation.

J.T.: That goes in line with another question that I have. Both of you are very emotive and very fervent about what you do. Do the lines ever blur between what the project is and what real life is, because you may become so wrapped within the role…

Abigail: Gosh, you know, right now…if we never sang another song, we would still be in love. I feel that it is my job to help Shaun to be himself in the world and visa versa. It’s something that we try to build together and a huge part of who we both are is this work, so building it together is an extension of who we are. It’s not that we’re literally going through what this character is going through, but, at the same time, I do feel really connected.

Shaun: We do believe that while theater isn’t therapy, but when we are doing the characters and the situations obviously came from things in our real lives and what we are going through, but when we’re doing it, we are trying to draw inspiration from the emotion that it arouses and use it to access it.

Abigail: That is probably why, this time, we are inviting other people into the process much earlier than we have before…

Shaun: Because it could get really inward looking and neurotic.

Abigail: We’re also super-perfectionists and we usually don’t show people anything until it’s done. Part of inviting people the process so early with this piece is, by its own nature, an insular work.

Shaun: I think the one thing that you point to that is a real danger is the danger of it becoming ‘precious,’ like our pretty little gem that we try to keep to ourselves.

Abigail: And that’s why we have to keep bringing it out so that we remember that it is something to give away.

J.T.: Well, theater isn’t therapy, but it is a realization. There are subconscious things that you are going to stumble across that may surprise you emotionally. What is something that you would want someone to take away from this?

Shaun: Wow, that’s a good question…the thing about our shows in general, and I know it sounds all hokey and hippie, but the most important thing to us is the creation of a loving space. The only thing that would make us feel badly about our shows is if we walked away feeling ‘slick,’ like we pulled something over the audiences eyes, so the core of what we do is to try and make everything an open, loving space and draw all that energy into it. In terms of this specific show…

Abigail: I think that that still stands. I mean, I have my big britches about what they’re going to take away (laughing)…

Shaun: (laughing) I guess I don’t know what I want them to take away from this…

J.T.: That’s the most honest answer I’ve ever gotten to that question! Well, what are other people’s impression of the show?

Shaun: A lot of the people that we have told the story of the show to, or have played some of the music for, have immediately had personal anecdotes that they have related to it. Whether it was having someone die or having a loved one go through some sort of illness. That part has been somewhat gratifying and serendipitous so far.

Abigail: Even tonight, during the feedback afterwards, I feel that people are reaching into their own lives and were are really lucky for the generosity of their stories. I think that is what this is all about really. It’s finding someone who is your anchor in this life that raises the stakes. You take care of yourself better for the other person because you have a responsibility to that other person to be here as long as you can.

Filed Under: Dayton Music, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Abigail Bengson, Bart Helms, Canal Street Tavern, Dayton Music, folk, J.J. Parkey, musicians, opera, Shaun Bengson, Shawn Elizabeth Storms, singers, The Proof, vaudeville, Zach Wright

The Bengsons Return to Dayton, Celebrate CD Release

January 17, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

The Bengsons (cr Domingos Goncalves)

You may recall last summer, our onStageDayton team forcibly encouraging you to check out out the Bengsons. In case you don’t, here’s the rundown:

The Bengsons are Shaun and Abigail Bengson.  They’re based out of New York, but Shaun’s originally from Bellbrook and performed with the high school’s band and theater as well as with community theater groups.  The duo has performed around the country and around the world in places like Cape Town, South Africa.  They’ll make a return visit to Dayton this week to celebrate the release of their latest album, The Proof.

The Proof is a fantastic mix of songs that tell stories and transport you to lands near and far all the while giving you that amazing feeling that comes from a really great stage show.  You can stream the album at the Bengsons’ website or pick up a copy on Thursday, January 20 at Canal Street Tavern when the Bengsons perform live.

You can also catch the Bengsons on WYSO earlier that day.  They’ll be on Excursions with Niki Dakota around noon.  Tune in at 91.3FM or listen online at www.wyso.org

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Bengsons, Canal Street Tavern, CD release, Dayton Music, Things to Do, WYSO

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