Sunday, June 19, 2011

Our Boy Won!!!!

The Drag Races went on as scheduled, the usual crowd (though I didn't stick around to watch).  People arriving early to get seats, and strollers starting to appear when I went off, some people think it's wholesome family goodness.

The big news is the former venue manager did break the gender barrier, running the race as a man, and shock of shocks, she won.  Our team wins, though now I'm confused, was it a win for men or women?

As a prize, I gave her the copy of that Berenstein Bears "No Girls Allowed" taht I bought some years back and featured in the Diary a few years back.  She liked that, she said she liked the Berenstein Bears.  She would have gotten it anway, for merely running the race.

In retrospect, I now see one reason why the boys/girls didn't want the girls/boys to participate.  Running in flat shoes is so much easier than running in high heels, our boy likely won on that basis alone.  So maybe the next time a Drag King participates, there will have to be some handicapping.

Who is Aristippus?

I saw this on the Final Saturday, and it was alost sold out, and had the most audience in a show I've seen this Fringe.  Though, it seemed to be family and friends night.

The Steampunk angle, I guess one could define Steampunk as imagining the past to have more  advanced technology than it did, is what drew me in.  They do play that out in the costumes, and the quest of the main character.

But the blurb also says this is Commedia Dell'arte which I still don't completely know the meaning of, but now have a better idea of.  The San Francisco Mime Troupe is said to have originally been based on Commedia Dell'arte, and I've seen them twice. Once in a park in San Francisco in 1980, then here in Montreal when they performed in November of 1982 (and I finally after some years of wondering where it is, found my San Francisco Mime Troupe tshirt, though it's too small now).  I can see the similarity in form between those shows and "Who is..."A level of comedy, and the actors at times address the audience. 

Anyway, it's  fairly old form of theatre, so this show is somewhat different (not unique, the form has appeared at the Fringe at least once, likely more times), but souped up with the notion of Steampunk.  There was some talk of rivalry between this and another show earlier in the week, but really, there's no comparison.  "How We Went to mars" isn't exotic theatre, but the science fiction angle is important.  Here, the Steampunk is just a way to dress up the actors, the type of story is quite old, as is the form of performance.  This one does come across as theatre types wanting to try out a different form, rather than science fiction types wanting to put on a show.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Buzz

The days of the paper buzz seem in the past.  Very few has been put up, and there doesn't seem to be much lost somewhere, unlike some years.  The paper program doesn't even address buzz, though it has space for all the branded spaces on the internet.  The process has faded as new peole come in and don't remember the origins.  I've seen acts hand out the paper forms, only for it to be useless when turned in, since people are rating the show "three stars" rather than commenting, or they don't bother to put the title on the paper.

In its place, the Fringe is printing electronic buzz and putting that up.  Some of it, maybe from teh Fringe website, is badly done.  Why do I care about "This show is Awesome!!!", rather than the title so I can look for comments about a show I'm curious about?  Yet the  form gives larger fonts to that initial comment rather than the title, of the show, which is pretty tiny.   I also don't think it wo5rks as well when spread across a page, the paper buzz was small but it didn't require reading across a full page length. Print the buzz in small columns.

Sponsors and Fundraisers are people too

The teenagers from LOVE (Leave Out Violence Everyone) were at the Beer Tent on Friday soliciting donations.  Some of last year's group returned, like a little reunion.  I'd wanted to show them a book, but guessed wrong about what day they'd appear, and of course, they miss the Drag Race, that they seemed to enjoy last year, when I said unlike the other groups, they seemed to get something from their visit to the Fringe.

Actually, the groups have seemed more into it this year.  There was one woman from the Native women's shelter who was surprised and pleased by t e offer of the cookies, and then I had a plastic bag for the woman who seemed to be the organizer when she was packing up.  I said "We want your visit to the Fringe to be good".  One of the women from Ami-Quebec gave a big smile when she rode off on her bicycle.  I realized we should have given each four Fringe Bucks so they could get into a show (or just some outright single show pass).  They sit at the table, surrounded by the Fringe, and we should give them a chance to see what it's really like. I'd give them my own Fringe Bucks, but I haven't gotten any in five years, so I no longer have a stash to hand out.

But this is one thing wrong with the Fringe.  They have sponsors, but don't really tell us about them.  We hear about the groups coming to collect donations, but there is no intimicy shown.  It's hard to tell if the Fringe really likes these groups, or if it's mercenary, figuring people may be more likely to donate for these other causes than the Fringe (and sometimes it's hard to tell whether the Fringe needs money or not, it's not like they ever tell us anything).

I wrote about the teens from LOVE last year, because they were animated, becoming part of the Fringe.  I pointed to a piece about Peter McAuslan last year, because I think he deserves more notice.  I gave cookies to Debora who sat at the Beer Tent one year for Maisoneuve Magazine, and over a decade ago to the woman working at the little Nantha's tent, just because they were there and they should be considered part of it all. Last week when the Beer Rep appeared carrying one of the coolers for the beer, I rushed over to help her.  Not because we should be good to the Beer Company, but because it seemed a polite thing to do.  I helped blow up those  purple feet from the wine company when the woman seemed to be struggling (the pump was overkill for the task, and required a lot of push for a small amount of air, Santropol Roulant had a much easier to use pump when they were tuning up bikes on Wednesday).

But the Fringe just points to them, "these are the sponsors".  If I was running things, I'd be writing something about them, defining the relationship, because it's the thing to do.  Otherwise, they are just blank objects, they are merely sponsors that some others can dismiss as controlling the festival.  The Fringe has always been an intimate place, all those acts trying to get you to their show by interacting with you, seeing the staff and volunteers around so you feel like volunteering, and at least can respect the producer because they aren't just bossing people around.  We are a different festival, not by defining but by action, and one way is to offer up more detail.  Gossip is a connecting thing, and I'm not talking about malicious gossip.  It brings people in.

For a couple of years, Ile sans Fils was listed as a sponsor (as I said at the time, kind of illusionary since the group is more an organizer, talking commercial entities like Mainline into sharing their wideband connection).  Yet the most important thing to reveal was that there'd be wifi access at the Beer Tent, information rather than promotion.  Yes, they helped, but that's far less important than how they helped.   Indeed, the group is nothing if people aren't actually using the unified log-in that they are offering. The Fringe seemed to assume everyone would know why they were a sponsor, or maybe didn't care, they just felt an obligation to list them as a sponsor.

Even circa 1997, when maybe I said something somewhere that got CAM to be a sponsor (they even had a venue named after them at least one year), we could have leveraged that and had a terminal on site.  But since the only information the Fringe wanted us to know was that they were a sponsor, the information didn't arrive until it was too late to organize something.

Indyish came for a few years, the Fringe didn't tell us really about them, though Indyish blew its horn.  Some of that could have been far better handled by the Fringe telling us about them, rather than something new to live with.

There's a whole trail of things that have been part of the Fringe, yet they just often seem inflicted on us, the Fringe doesn't tell us "we like what they are doing, we asked them to come, and here are the reasons". We are not merely consumers of the art that appears at the Fringe, we are a key component of the Fringe.

One year, 1998, the Fringe did send out a sort of "newspaper" letting us knmow of the plans for that year, but it was more humorous than detail. But for a decade they'd send out email, likely still do, but they never really told us anything.  Theatre St. Catherine suddenly opens up, the Fringe says out announcements of what was happenning there, but no mention of who was running it (I had to read that somewhere else).  Initially, I thought the Fringe was running it.  Then the Fringe did get its own venue, and some made up story about a poker game rather than truth, and they'd lready done the rennovations by the time we heard.

No, the Fringe can't put detail in the paper program, not without making it a whole lot larger.  But that's what the internet is for, easy distribution, cheap printing cost.  Indeed, it is the very existence of the webpage that begs the Fringe to say more.  In the early days, there would be an ntroduction in the program that tried to drag us in, that's faded, as if we are just consumers of culture, to see the shows, to buy the beer, to be passive. The Fringe needs to change this, because either sponsors are obnoxious or they actually mean something to us.

I can remember saying to Patrick "you should work the crowd", but that meant being more visible during the year, being out there when it came time to bring in volunteers or have troupes apply for a slot in the Festival.  The sad thing is, once they started doing that, they were acting, often putting on a role to work the crowd, rather than being honest.

Justice for Some

Political art should not hit you on the head, Carmen Ruiz said that in Hour last year before her show at the MAI.  Oops, I said that in 2007, about one dance show that tried hard to be political. (The concept is actually a variation on politics in general, you want to change people to your point, not hit them until they convert).

So do I give inFluxdance a pass here?  I loved their first two shows years back, the complicated patterns, the fun, the vegetables and the keys. There's no humor here, but I did have mild tears in my eyes towards the end.  I can't figure out if they've just things that would trigger that in me, or if the show does work properly, affect people without hitting them over the head.   Yet I know I would react badly if they were hitting us on the head with it, that's my makeup, so I think I'm not overlooking it because they are inFluxdance.  They are actually dancing to say something, unlike that show four years ago where the dance seemed so separate from the political quotes being played through the sound system.  Once again, they have a  fair number of dancers for a Fringe show, I think I counted six, which of course gives the show a different tone from one that is a solo or duet.  I think they captured a crowd well at one point.

Sometimes the Fringe has shoehorned dance into too small a venue especially when lots of dancers appear), though I once saw Jane Gabriels recite poetry in the late Bistro 4 while dancers squeezed beteen tables. But, while Tangente has the space I find it less appealing.  The MAI seems better for dance, even La Chapelle, they have big enough stages, but not that depth that sometimes the dancers seem lost in.  I like the years when it's grouped together, since some shows seem to get lost when off somewhere else, but this show fit okay in Club Espanol.

Siblings

This is only a 15minute/$4 show (well $6 with the service charge, why are the shows with a lower price penalized by the Fringe more than the full limit ticket price shows?).  I'd like to hear the story of why it's an excerpt, it can't be a test run since Lynsey Billing is not new to the Fringe.

I saw it at 23:45 on Friday night, one show I was willing to go to that late (even though I spent about 90 minutes waiting for it to happen).  It seemed to bring out her friends, not a particularly large audience, but at least we all sat in the same section so it was concentrated.

Maybe it was the smaller venue, somehow more inviting than the depth of Tangente, but it felt like they are doing something different with dance. Like when she did "Barbie World" in 2008, the ballet influence is noticed. It thus becomes interesting because the vocabulary of the dance is somewhat different from the rest of the shows, that are generally using the vocabulary of modern dance (except for the breakdancing shows)

Lynsey Billing teaches dance, but it seems away from the usual places. Three years ago, I expected the Barbie piece to be more commercial or more entertainment dance,  but it wasn't, and it was only one of a few pieces in the show.  And maybe the distance from the status quo enables her to do something different, which may somehow be folded into the local status quo.

On the other hand, one of the musicians listed in the program is Becky Fooms (I think I spelled that wrong) who I've seen accompany someone at Studio 303, maybe Allison.

Raven Causes Mischief

I mentioned native storytelling last year because I was trying to suggest things that don't appear at the Fringe which would broaden it.  There is a lot out there where the people doing it might not define themselves as artists, so they may overlook the Fringe, yet still be good at doing what they do.

And then wham, here's a native storyteller, even from the Pacific Northwest. And we get to contrast her style with the storytelling that usually happens at the Fringe.  This is creation storytelling, not "Joe went out on the ocean and a funny thing happened to him..." And there's a style to it different from what we normally see, though there is movement that makes for good spoken word.  She even used a microphone, which maybe should be announced, I don't like the acoustics in that venue and haven't been in there for years, though suddenly I've been in twice, two shows I couldn't ignore.  The microphone helped.

This is different performance art, which helps to make the Fringe diverse. But, of course it also brings a different voice to the Fringe (I like the two years when the Kanawake Theatre Company did shows at the Fringe, but at least one of those shows was fairly mainstream, about safe sex).

Coincidentally, the 40th anniversary issue of "This Magazine" (it started out life as "This Magazine is About Schools", complete with at least one piece by Bill Ayers) has a bit about  "Native Earth Performing Arts" in Toronto.  "so few places exist where any of us can hear Aboriginal voices live and unmediated", which is true.

During "The Oka Crisis", CJAD had regular  reports from the Kanawake radio station, about the Crisis, yet once it was  all over, that disappeared. Most of the time, the only stories we hear  from there are about cigarettes or other squabbles, not about the library,  or that they want to build a new sports complex.

Most don't get to stay  the night at Kanawake and hear the clump, clump, clump of someone in boots walking around all night, he staying up to keep the woodstove going so we'd be warm, or know the woman who loved cashews, or the guy from AIM who said, after two concentric rainbows appeared on the plains of South Dakota, "that's nothing, I once saw three rainbows at a time".  Or meet Floyd Westerman  before he became a movie star, or have that guy carrying the medecine bundle come over and say something when he knew I was feeling a bit off. I was once in a crowd of 500,000 people in New York City and suddenly  there was someone from Kanawake who remembered me.  Most people don't get that, just regular people.

I'd like to think I did cause this show to appear, someone reading what I posted last year and thinking "I can do that".  But I fear it was more sculpting by the Fringe, someone perhaps whispering in the right place so they'd know about our Fringe.  Fine if it's Joe Nobody doing the whispering, kind of tampering if it's the Fringe.

Gender Barrier to be Broken at Drag Races!

Word from a reliable source is that at the Drag Races on Saturday, there will be at least one Drag King participating.

This has been an ongoing story since one venue manager told me some years back that she wanted to be in the Drag Races, but they told her "only if you come as a woman".  But she is already, what's the point of that?  There was hurt in her heart.

But dreams do come true.  Apparently she will be allowed to participate this year, indeed she has been allowed for the past two years, but was unable to do so for other reasons.  Nobody told me, though it would seem that I was the one making the issue louder.  I wouldn't have repeated myself if somebody had told me the change had happened.

The "reliable source" is the woman who wanted to participate, so I have no reason to believe she is making this up.


I wonder if the "10 year old boy" from "Beethoven Lives Upstairs" will participate too?

Friday, June 17, 2011

Arthur C. Clarke's How We Went to mars

I took all this time to write about the show, even though I saw it the first night, because I wanted to write something deep about it.

There has been science fiction at the Fringe before.  In 1998, Anthony DP Mann did a show based on Dr. Who, but it was low budget and campy.  It was fun, but it was not that different from most Fringe shows. (DP Mann was interesting, he sounded and looked old, but was only 21 that year.  About a month after the Fringe, I saw some dinner theatre put on by him at a church hall, spaghetti while an original story based on Sherlock Holmes was performed.)  In 2004, ASM did "The Martian Chronicles" and it was slick, but didn't really feel like anything.

Last year Black Box theatre did "Shades of Grey".  About three old time type science fiction short stories  presented in the form that was seen on "The Twilight Zone".  You could feel those old stories, you could feel the connection to science fiction before it came to mean movies.  But they were limited by the form.

This year they are back with "Arthur C. Clarke's How We Went to Mars" and I think they've done an even better job.  They aren't stuck with a predefined form.  It is a lecture (and no, I  didn't talk to Liz last year about how lectures could be a form for Fringe shows) and while going to Mars is the theme, the lecturer has a distinct style that is entertaining. You need a dynamic artist to show off the static slides.

Science fiction is "fringe".  It's over there somewhere.  People do things because it interests them, the true definition of "amateur".  Yet bring it to the Fringe, and suddenly that gets to show off.  Someone who would spend so much time building a model, because he likes to build models, now gets to show it off, as part of the background to the lecture.  The care put into the detail may be much finer than many Fringe shows, because putting on a show isn't the key component.  The Fringe becomes a vehicle to put on the show, and like all kinds of art that is out there but which might not consider performing at the Fringe,
it may be better than some of the self defined artists who then lack experience or life to say something important.

Sorry Liz. in trying to do so much thise week, I don't convey this properly.

Lectures as Performance

One show I never got around to writing about last year was "A Trip to Coney Island with Uncle Zeroboy", seeing it late afternoon on the final Sunday. It intrigued me since it was listed as "multimedia" and I expected it to be a movie, but it was really a sort of tour of the place by acting out some of the people you'd meet at the park.

It reminded me of when lectures were big entertainment.  Before tv, before radio, the lecture circuit was big, and people went not just to keep track of what was going on, but it was seen as entertainment.  You wanted to catch Stanley after he'd found Livingston in Africa, not only for the story told, but because he'd been in the news.  And without tv, movies or radio, the only live way to see such speakers was for him to tour about and come to your town.

When Ernest Shackleton got stuck in the Antarctic ice back in 1914, when they  abandoned ship and then struggled across the ice and across dangerous open  water, they  get photographic plates because without them, the lecture would not be so  interesting, and without the lecture tour, they'd never  make the money  needed to pay back the investors for the trip to the  Antarctic.

Lectures make an interesting variation for a Fringe show.  We've seen them, "The Bisexual Alphabet" that Shakti brought one year was really a lot less about entertainment than lecture.  I guess all the "Teaching...." shows by Keir Cutler have lecture as a theme.  Even MacHomer has an element of lecture, since it would be nothing without the drawings of the Simpsons characters.

But it becomes a dynamic way to show off something that would otherwise be static.  If you have some drawing skill, you could get a Fringe slot and use it to display that art, but I can't see it working too well, the Fringe really is a performing arts festival and the art would be too static.  But, turn it into a lecture, "I just got back from Alpha Centauri and here are some of the creatures I came upon...", it can become a vehicle to show off the art.  Make the lecture entertaining, but the slides or whatever would be the key part.  You can do things with a lecture that would be fairly impossible doing as performance.  Too costly
to create costumes or sets, but if they exist only on a projection screen, they become doable.  Yet the storytelling benefits from the visual element.

EcoCarnival at the Fringe

I was going to post that picture on Wednesday of me with a Zodiac in a Greenpeace Toronto action, since it was "Eco Day" at the Fringe, but I suddenly can't find it.  (We got stopped by the OPP as we were going into the construction site of the Darlington nuclear power plant back in 1980, but unlike the other Zodiac, we did not get a ticket.  Though when we were stopped, water starts coming in, someone didn't put the plug in the bottom of the Zodiac when we put it together, and the cop says "Oh, you're taking
on water".  Well only when we were stopped.)

There was the advertised bike tuneup clinic, some seemed familiar faces so i think Santropol Roulant sent some of their people over (it was the group's day to fundraise too, they brought cupcakes).  A couple of tables of what seemed like used clothing.  Someone was planting something, I didn't stay that long.

But, this seemed another case of creating an event rather than showing reality.  The Fringe hasn't been so great about recycling, it's often been a last minute thing, and the result of some volunteer taking it into their hands.  It's never worked out so well, the bins were never clearly for recycling so the garbage goes in (and recyclables go into the garbage). The best recycling has always seemed to be by the scavengers coming by to dig the cans out of the garbage.  Yet, just because of the makeup of the Fringe, it likely is more careful about such things, and we should be pointing that out, rather than adding a manufactured event.

There was a blog posting from someone a bit before the Fringe where someone related helping deliver Fringe programs.  She pointed out that nobody at the Fringe had a driver's license or a car (and she revealed, she had to rent one for the task).  That seems the norm.  Maybe nobody has the money for gas or a car, maybe they aren't sprawled out in the surburbs which tends to require a car, maybe they make a deliberate decision.  But the reasoning is less important than that it is the reality.  It looks odd when an audience member pulls up at the Beer Tent in a taxi, something that is foreign to me (and that time, it turns out she needed to go further, to the actual venue).

Likewise, we've covered the hole in the park numerous times with scrap we've pulled from garbage.  That we now have a sort of permanent cover does not negate the fact that someone pulled it from a pile of discards. When I was returning the Fringe for All flyers to Fringe HQ the week before the Fringe, I spotted some scrap wood and dragged it along, in case the commercial cable bridge didn't appear as promised, I was going to make one this year finally.  For a decade I've saved the flyers after the Fringe for All, no big deal, I just can't bear to see it go to garbage.  Not only a waste, but the artists have paid good money to have them printed.  The Fringe even had garage sale one early year.

Since Fringe is "doing on the cheap", likely many of the troupes are using used, borrowed or recycled material for their shows.  It's no big deal, it's just something that happens.

It's not uncommon in conversation with volunteers to find people who will pull things from the garbage.  I picked up a halogen lamp when I was on the On the Spot historical walking tour, the lamp was just lying on the sidewalk (and it worked, bulb and all).  One year, a woman was a venue manager after just moving to Montreal ("it seemed like a good way to meet people") and I mentioned something about July 1st being a good day for interesting things being tossed out, and she admitted she might be out looking for furniture for her new place.  I didn't think she was cheap, I didn't think she was poor, I didn't even think she did it for ecological reasons, it was just something people do.  I was so pleased to see her last week.

And maybe that's the best thing. The worst driver I've known couldn't get my point about her driving, yet she'd say "I should give it up for the pollution it causes".  Decisons shouldn't be made because of some Grand Cause.  I'll pull something from the garbage because I see it, and maybe it does mean I have money for something else that I know I can't find. But I'll buy at garage sales, and I did buy that LCD tv set a month ago (but I bought it on sale).  Big Causes tell you to live completely free, when really it's likely a novelty for the promoter.  Or tell you to Buy Nothing on the day after US Thanksgiving, yet it ignores the fact that the frugal will always try to buy things when on sale, freeing money for something else.

 
Or take bikes.  It was a few months after Earth Day in 1970 when bike paths hit the island of Montreal.  Yet it wasn't for some grand ecological reason, it was to assert the cyclist's right to space on the road. I suspect most people who bicycle are doing it for a variety of reasons, people who change "because it's the right thing" often don't change that much, and resent the change.  Hence it's silly to promote the right of the cyclist to the road along ecological reasons, the right is there and has always been there.  Demand that right, don't water it down by propping it up for some good cause.  Ride your bike because you like to do it, because it's cheaper than buying a car or gas, because it's convenient, and revel in the fact that incidentally you are helping the world.

Lydia Lockett ...Jazz Poetry of the New Beat Generation

I like the form of poetry to jazz music, and I like the fact that Lydia Lockett has tried something somewhat different at the Fringe, taking a risk.  But while I can't quite quantify it, I kept thinking "this form could be better".

One immediate thought is that the music was too lout.  It sounded to me like it was at the same level as her voice, when I'd say the form has the music more like background (though that may not work so well if you've got a live jazz band performing).  The music was also generic (and in some cases, not all that jazzy), which suggests it was chosen to show off the form, rather than have the poetry a reaction to the jazz.

But maybe I've mythologized the form too much.  The music becomes a catalyst for the poetry, maybe even the poetry is improvization as a reaction to the  music. Here, the music seemed like a novelty, to play the Beat Poet so the music is neither Hot (or Cool), it's just there.  I think in listening to John Coltrane in recent years, I can hear the rhythm of On The Road or The Dharma Bums, the go, go, go.  I didn't hear that here, though she does fold the poetry into the music.  (And how is poetry recited to music different from singing along?  Well, with poetry, it really is just spoken word, you are pacing the poetry to match the music, but you aren't changing the tone of the voice.)

I thought I was the only one going in, and I offered her the chance to cancel the show if I was the only one.  She said, "wait a few minutes, in case some more people come in" and there were six of us in the audience.

She did get her obligatory Westmount Examiner plug this week, I knew there was another act hailing from Westmount.


One reviewer wondered what the New Beat Generation was.  About  20 years ago, there was a pseudo-beat revival, "The Washington Squares" being a visible component.  They were neo-folk, but they dressed like the stereotypical beatniks, and they had the right sound.  I have the fist album, I actually like it.  Jake brought one of the members to one of the Yawps! in the mid-nineties.

Frankie Nominations announced?

Up at the Beer Tent last night, the Frankie Nominations were up. So is the press release up at the Fringe website?  If not, then fifteen years of internet strategy hasn't gone anywhere.  Internet doctrine since 1996 is that press releases should be released to all, it's an easy way of providing informationg (since it's already done) and you don't know what someone might do with it.

The list is odd, since it was up at the Beer Tent while the first Piss in the Pool show was going on, yet the show was on the list, twice.   How can you nominate something before you've seen it?  Also, the 303 prize has tended to be about a specific piece rather than show, so listing Wants & Needs is premature.

Tantalizing too is that suddenly out of town shows are on the 303 prize list.  The specifics have always been vague, but in the past it's been about local shows, so if that's changed, we should see details (or someone like me questioning the change).  It was also oddly about "up and coming" (I forget the exact wording); "oddly" because so many of the dance shows have either been at Studio 303 or come through there in some way, so the prize is a return rather than a step up.  How can an out of town act justify coming back to do a show at Studio 303, where fewer people will see it than at the Fringe?  Tangente isn't that much bigger. 

One year, when Studio 303 was having some problems, Tangente stepped in, and that too was a vague prize. It seemed to be about all the dance acts, or maybe even just the out of town acts, and then when the winner was announced, the prize had morphed and the winners (there was a runner up) were local acts.  That likely had to do with logistics/cost, getting someone here, the cost of travel and even getting together the participants, is likely too high for many.

Another thing to consider.  Once upon a time, the Fringe did issue a list of the Top Ten shows that were selling well.  I even copied the list once or twice and posted it to the internet.  The Fringe was all set to put the list on their webpage about 2000, but never did.  CAM was acting up that week, so I think the list got lost to flakey access.  And then the Top Ten list disappeared.

Do we want a return to those days?  Showing the nominees, especially this early, is tantamount to saying "go see these shows, the others aren't worth it".  "Festival of Discovery", like "community", is not a cute marketing phrase, it's  an action.  What's to discover when the various juries for the prizes have now  announced what they consider the important shows?

At least the Top Ten list had the value of showing what shows might be sold out, so if you wanted to see them, you'd need to get to the venue early.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Tidbits for a hot summer Bloomsday

Yes, it isn't yet summer, but it is hot.  Maybe even ice cream hot.  But it is Bloomsday, June 16th the day on which all of James Joyce's "Ulysees" takes place, and some literary types celebrate it.  I try to remember it, since it always falls during the Fringe, though at one point there were some local events to mark the day.

Someone tried to seduce me into "Shlong Form Improv", whispering in my ear the magic word.  I assume they didn't have that much audience in the early evening of Wednesday.  That can be hard, artists need an audience to perform at peak, things like comedy and improv count on audience.  Though, I suspect just trying to lure in passersby on Prince Arthur isn't the way to go, either target the pool of fringe goers, or be more obvious away from the Fringe.  It's not clear if anyone has had much success luring in people at random to a show.

There was a bigger audience for the On the Spot historical walking tour on Wednesday.  I'm sure that works better for them, and of course a nice day is likely to draw an audience more than that after the rain day I went.

I wonder if John Sebastian will make a surprise visit to the Beer Tent later?  He's here for the folk festival.  The other main player of The Lovin' Spoonful was Zal Yanovsky.  I remember Bill Brownstein doing a  column about Nikki Yanofsky some time back, and I at first wondered if she was Zal's daughter, but then the difference in spelling of their last names became obvious.  Zal was married to Jackie Burroughs for a bit, yes, "Aunt Hetty" from "Road to Avonlea".  Of course, he had that problem with the law over drugs, which was more of a problem for him since he was Canadian in the US, and he ended up "squealing" and that caused a boycott of the band, though the story goes his naming names didn't cause any real problem to others.  And that's when the US Beatles broke up, well Zall left and it was only a matter of time.  Zal released an album or two, then moved to Kingston where he opened a restaurant, Chez Piggy, in the late seventies that he ran until he died a few years ago.

Speaking of Woodstock (well, John Sebastian was at Woodstock, painting rainbows all over your blues), according to one of the books published on the fortieth anniversary, P.J. Soles was there, going with then boyfriend Joshua White (of light show fame).  P.J. Soles was one of the MPs in "Stripes" that interact with Bill Murray and Harold Ramis, though I'm not sure I've ever figured out which one is which.  Anyway, she was backstage making and/or passing out cookies and sandwiches to the performers.

Passing out the large number of chocolate chip cookies she'd made, Jack Casady of the Jefferson Airplane took one and asks "Is there anything in them"?  And PJ Soles says, "No.  They're made with love.  They're pure". (Reminds me of when someone asked a few years ago "are these brownies 'special'?" and I said "All brownies are special, but not the way you mean".) Anyway, Jack Casady ate a few, apparently she used organic ingredients.  Then years later she met him again, asked him if he remembered her, and he said "Yes, those were the best chocolate chip cookies I've had in my life!"

I almost saw Jack Casady perform once.  When Peter Gzowski briefly had a late nate tv show on the CBC in the late seventies, I ended up with a ticket to a local taping.  And then it turned out that Hot Tuna (with Jack Casady and Jorma Kaukonen, who had also been part of Jefferson Airplane) were scheduled.  I have no idea why they were in Montreal, or why they were booked for the show.  This wasn't that long before they broke up for a while, selling the Tunamobile.  But somehow I got lost finding my way to Cite Du Havre where the CBC had a studio for a while, and I turned around and came home, since I'd not get there in time.  Then I dutifully watch the show that night, and no Hot Tuna.  They'd run out of time and the band had been bumped.

Artists must never forget the importance of personally meeting the potential audience.  Someone doing Reciprok was working at the info booth the other day, and she mentions her show, which caused me to look at the blurb and see that it was a show put on by recent ConU dance students there's a long tradition of people graduating from the program and putting on a Fringe show.)  I'm not sure I'd have caught that without the interaction, their flyer is actually the flip side of Body Slam.  For that matter, if I'd not met the woman doing The Naled Project postering at the Beer Tent last Wednesday, it's less clear if I'd have bothered to take in her show.  Yes it's work, but it does provide results, maybe especially for those sort of borderline, aware of the show but not completely certain.

My rhythm is off this year, and some of it is trying out blogger.  I've wasted so much time fighting it to put in links, it trying to be helpful and fixing what I'm trying to do.  Though perhaps there is logic to it for someone coming from a different direction. Yes, when I did it by hand I'd forget the end tag to turn off italics or bold or something, but having to do all the work gave me better control.

It would seem the Gazette is doing a lot less reviewing this year.  It does seem down, though it's hard to completely tell.  No reviews of dance, I don't think that's going to happen.  Oddly, there didn't even seem to be the annual "The Fringe is Coming" piece, that has often been a trigger for me to write the paper about the coverage (which have never been published, but seem to have influence).  For a while they did review dance,sporadically, and even have a preview piece.  The contempt the dance writer has for the Fringe seems pretty strong, at least some times in recent years the paper has had the former dance writer (now covering "festival and kid's beat") doing some preview and/or review of dance at the Fringe, but nothing this year.

I'm tired of the fight, especially when some of the fight was always with the Fringe.

Pat Donnelly isn't even blogging as much as last year  I'm not sure I liked it that she was putting more content on the blog  than the paper last year since the blog is a different medium and just  because people read the paper doesn't  mean they'll jump to the blog, but better blogging than nothing. Maybe she's twittering this year? (What's the point of doing that from the Fringe for All other than scooping the others?  The notion of dynamic content at the Fringe website is to draw in people using the spontaneity of the Fringe, though that happens less these days.  But while it's important to record the Fringe for All, I've even posted the list of who performed some years, how many are going to rush down to see it because Pat Donnelly is twitting about it right now?)

I checked ConU again, and still no "summer" issues of the student papers, so I guess that isn't happening this year.  It always seemed a surprise to stumble on them, and then find Fringe articles in it, but I guess it's harder to justify a paper printing these days.  They do have some Fringe content u on their websites, I can't remember if it was The Link or the Concordian, or both.

On the other hand, if you have a show in the Fringe and you are from Westmount, it's practically guaranteed that you'll get a mention in the Westmount Examiner, even as the paper slowly fades away.  Last week Keir Cutler had his obligatory article.  But the upstart (and now better paper), The Westmount Independent, briefly mentions Keir and Jessica Salomon (who apparently grew up in Westmount).


Repercussion is doing MacBeth this year (they should have brought back Rick Miller for a double bill, after all, he dreamed up MacHomer waiting backstage at Repercussion).  But, apparently Lady MacBeth is played by Anana Rydvald, who performed way back in 1999 at the Fringe with "Mask On".  The troupe was "Random Acts", but the next year they'd changed their company name to "Mask On!" and did "Tripping Through Oz".  It's hard to believe it's been over a decade, I remember them so well.

The Fringe mugs are back, apparently packing more punch this year (something about saving some money on later purchases of beer).  They didnt' seem too popular last year so I thought they were gone.  This means I can buy another one, so I have one to use and one as a souvenir.

Just for Laughs  made their annual visit to the Beer Tent on Wednesday, with flyers for their festival.  The Zoofest is still not a Festival of Discoveries, even though they continue to call it that.  Weren't The Pyjama Men at the Fringe a while back?  Kahlil Ashanti certainly was twice at the Fringe, coming from LA, and he's doing Basic Training at the comedy festival. I seem to recall he won the comedy fest prize at teh Fringe one year.

Mike Paterson dropped by the Beer Tent, outgoing as ever.  So did Robby Dillon, somehow thinking I'm some Fringe legend for sticking around all these years.

Speaking of which, there have been some odd occurrences of people I truly don't recognize saying things to me.  Almost as if someone put a picture of me up somewhere again.


It's a shame I can't control the Fringe's website. They clearly haven't checked over the links to blogs.  "Heart Strings" was a great show last year, but since they aren't in Montreal this year, they are hardly going to blog about the Fringe.  Davyn at Dee Arr hasn't posted for a year, there's no sense in having the link up this year.  Meanwhile, some are out there posting, though it seemed slow.  Since I'm not showing up in a blog search (even using specific text from here as the searchwords), I can't help but think there may be some default setting that needs fixing, even though the setting seems to default to making the blogs searchable.

The Naledi Project

I was intrigued by this one, since it breaks another Fringe wall, someone getting a Fringe slot and simply performing music.  We have seen it before,  the two years someone did Flamenco guitar and then  three years ago there was the mysterious "Mayan Time Reversal" that turned out to be improvisational music.  But this show is less out of the ordinary.

There is a difference between someone getting slot in the Fringe and music at the Beer Tent.  The former has spent the money to subcontract the space and services from the Fringe, and is on a level playing field with the other acts like that, completely dependent on promotion in order to get a paying audience to recoup the expenses of putting on the show.

But I fear this one may fail.  10pm on Wednesday, it didn't look like there'd be an audience.  I had gone over there instead of seeing more dance, but I didn't want to inflict myself on the performer if I was the only audience.  Then suddenly 2 people showed up just before 10pm, so in I went.  But three people isn't a good audience, and while I've not checked, I suspect it's not drawing an audience.  The two other  eople seemed to know the performer.

I can't judge it.  It was less exotic than the flyer might suggest, yet it was music that seemed fine to me.  A woman with an acoustic guitar,with a regular drumset and electric base to back her up. Lots of people like that, but she dared to show it off by getting space in the Fringe.  For a while I went to the Yellow Door on a regular basis, just taking in whatever came along, music doesn't have  to be famous in order to be good.

The last song, she really seemed to  put more into it, I wonder if she felt the lack of the audience.

I thought it was different, like the Mayan Time Reversal it was nice to just sit for a while listening to music, which maybe takes less of the audience than a play or dance.  I fear it's not different enough during such a busy week to draw an audience, which is a shame since it seems like she's more capable than some of the shows that draw tiny audiences.

An empty theatre can be so daunting to a performer, is it them or is it promotion?  You can't know unless there is an audience, and then when they all hate it, at least you know where the problem is. Little or no audience is too ambiguous.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

June 15 halfway through the Fringe Tidbits

Actually it's more than half way through.  I realized yesterday that I'd been at the Fringe every day for a week, and decided the smartest thing was to stay home and rest up.  You just can't catch up if you try to squeeze out sleep.  I was tempted to go see Siblings since it's only a 15 minute show, but it would take me an hour, at least, to walk over there and then another hour to walk back.

We forgot Cindy/Lucinda Davis's birthday on Tuesday.  It's been thirteen years since she was a in "Sexual Gore" in 1998, and also working as a venue manager.  Weeks ago, I was watching the evening news and they had an entertainment segment, and there I thought I saw Cindy.  But wait, it can't be.  It's a ten year old boy in "Beethoven Lives Upstairs".  No, it was Cindy.  There was  atime when she had a role in a movie and was excited since it wasn't another teenage role.  If memory serves, they ended up not using her after all.  Playing a ten year old boy in a children's play is not the same as getting typecast as a teenager.

A cat seems to have adopted the Fringe. One strolled through the Beer Tent on the weekend, but then on Monday it was there again, getting fed by one of the venue managers.  The photo didn't turnout.

There's a punching bag in the workroom at Mainline.  It wasn't there last year, so maybe Amy had it installed, to take out her frustrations.

I got to meet Amy's mother, though she seemed familiar so I guess she's volunteered in the past.  It took some years before I realized that someone who always came to deliver soda before the Fringe opened was Jeremy's father.

It's the dormant year for the Canada Dance Festival in Ottawa, but I've yet to see Deena Davida around, or anyone on the 303 Jury.  For that matter, the Gazette hasn't run any article related to dance at the Fringe, though it does seem like they are reviewing less Fringe-wise this year.  SOme years, maybe due to my prompting, they've had a preview of dance at the Fringe, but not for a while.  Last year, they had one set of reviews of dance, on the Tuesday or Wednesday.

We lost the two Just for Laugh venues (I remember when the museum opened, I'm sure there was some derision about having a museum for comedy.  As it was, it seemed like the two venues were always more important than the museum,  originally I kept wondering how they could have events mingled in with an exhibit, it took some time before it was clear therer were specific venues in the building.  memory says they opened on April 1st, and stayed open all night.  I remember being tempted to go, yet I didn't so I'm thinking there may have been a snowstorm that night.  Something made me decide not to go.

Anyway, it looks like we'll lose another venue.  When the Tangente program came out back in the fall, it included a note saying this would be the last year at the current location.  It was unclear then what would happen next, and I havent' seen anything since.  Unless the Fringe works a deal with the university that owns the building, that venue is history after this Fringe.  I recall the first year for Tangentye was 1999, complete with a cigarette sponsor, and David Bonk the venue manager outside making things out of popsicle sticks.  But then it wnet away, only to return.  (The MAI is like that, though when it was first a venue, it was under the guise of the Strathearn Centre.)

I still think we should organize a group tour of the Beer Factory.  Find people who want to go, and then go together.  It's something like $15 per person, but maybe a group deal can be worked out, or a discount for Fringe volu8nteers and acts.

Or we can organize a trip to the porn theatre on St. Lawrence, Monday and Tuesday couples get in for free.  So everyone can get an assigned date, and not only would it be free, but it would be safe.

One volunteer was afraid of the cookies, she's allergic to nuts.  I said "no nuts at the Fringe" and finally someone got the joke.  But yes, I made a deliberate decision to not put nuts in things that go to the Fringe, even before someone said they were allergic.  Maybe it was in anticipation, maybe I was just too cheap, I can't remember.  Then another volunteer thought I was going to charge for the cookies, she made a gesture that turned out to be about empty pockets, I thought she was gesturing that she didn't want unsightly bulges to develop from eating cookies.  You don't get a cookie shaped lump on your thigh each time you eat one.

 There isn't a lot of blogging activity this year, so I assume, I hope wrongly, that everyone has gone behind the facebook wall.  I don't like the rise of pseudo-professional blogs, things were better in the amateur days and the coming of a distinctive class disables the rest, making the internet a passive experience like old media.  or maybe everyone is titting, I can't imagine having anything useful to say in 132 characters.

TJ Dawe has a wikipedia page, here. I have not spent time checking endless names to see if they are there, though perhaps that's something to do on the off season.  Amy Hill was at our Fringe in 94 or 95 and somehow made an impact on me, even though  I did not see her show.  She already had success in mainstream, and is routinely on tv an din the movies when an asian character is needed.

Since I'm not keeping track of the news stories this year, I'd better point to
Amy Blackmore is mesmerized by tricks of the trade where Amy is interviewed by Bill Brownstein of The Gazette.  I actually get a mention, though I did not say what was attributed to me.  That is one thing that's missing, the volunteers never get interviewed (other than that time a decade or so ago when someone interviewed Summer, but the consensus was that he was trying to pick her up).  Yet the volunteers are the ones the public are most likely to see, and in some cases, we have lasted longer than the staff.  Even poor Patrick artist/volunteer/general manager/sabbatical/volunteer coordinator/general manager doesn't really get interviewed.  As I mentioned two years ago in email to Bill Brownstein, when it was announced that Amy was taking over.

Zoofest ios not Festival of Discovery, copy versus derived

This is one of the Zoofest flyers from last year. The Zoofest is not a Festival of Discoveries.  They want it to sound like  the Fringe, so they take the line from the Fringe.  Not unlike the first  year when they made such a fuss about it being separate from the comedy  festival, yet the domain for the Zoofest webpage was registered by the  comedy festival. Not unlike the first year when there were complaints  about the website, they having made it glossy instead of informative.


I mentioned it to Vinnie, and he repeated back the line that everything is derived from other things. Yes, maybe, but this isn't so much derived as simply taken.  I called the Fringe a Festival of Discovery back in 2003 because I wanted it viewed a different way.  I didn't like the snear that some reviewers gave the Fringe, I didn't like the notion that we should all wait for some reviewer to tell us which shows to go to.  The Fringe used it, but since they don't talk to me, I have no idea if they really understand what I was saying, or if they thought it was a good slogan. The Zoofest is removed a second time, I'm certain they simply thought it was a good marketing phrase.

Yes, everything is created out of what came before.  But there is a difference between merely repeating something,  and taking it in, processing it and and then spitting it out in a modified form.

The difference might be portrayed by the first Indiana Jones film. Steven Spielberg was influenced by others, he never denied that it was a look back at the serials of the old days. But, it was distanced by time, and at the very least he put something out there that hadn't been done for a while.  But once Raiders of the Lost Ark was out, various movies and tv shows came along to go after that market.  They didn't do the work to lookback to the old serials, figure out what was good about them, and then create a new character, they had to wait till Raiders of the Lost Ark came out.

I knew what I'd do with the internet long before I had access, before I knew about Arpanet.  It was very much based on science fiction fanzines, and that famous Gestetner machine in San Francisco in 1967. But it was  20 years of waiting, and all kinds of other things mixed in with it.  It's not the same thing as  aiting fifteen years with internet access and then saying "Oh  look, facebook is popular, let's use that".  I sure didn't think in 1996  "Hey, the internet is the latest thing, we must jump on it", I was trying  to deal with traditional problems of getting the word out.

Every bit of creativity is based on something, it needs stimulous to happen.  But that can come from taking in a lot and processing it, or it can come from observation.  You can look at a circuit and say "wait a minute, change this and you can do this...", but it requires an understanding of the circuit before you can make that leap.  I once saw a whole different path for something simply because I read a newspaper article about the trespassing law in Ontario changing; others were unable to make that leap.  But creativity doesn't come from "others" it comes from everyone. I can think of Great Thoughts I had when I was sixteen and they are not unique, in fact they were verified by the fact that I'd later read similar  yhings  elsewhere, but they were based on my own observation.  I'd forgotten some  of  those early  observations, yet the reality is they are what colors my  view of the world.

I invented bike paths when I was ten, in 1970.  "Invented" because at the time I was unaware that such things existed elsewhere.  I can run down exactly what caused that reaction.  But I can also tell about being 25 and realizing the error, that segregation doesn't fix things. Bike paths were a way for people to get tangible recognition, they are a way for municipalities to say "see, we do see bicyclists", yet they don't change things.  I can point to where bike paths were first debated on the island of Montreal, all the points taken up back then.  Yet for anyone who came later, Le Monde a Bicyclette came five years after, it is a different thing.  They aren't reacting to something and coming up with a solution, good or bad, they are reacting by pulling an existing solution off the shelf. They don't know a world without bike paths, so they continue to demand them, even taking painted stripes on roads for the acknowledgement. The only public argument today about bike paths is cyclists versus car drivers, one wanting them, the other hating them.  Very little is argued about whether they are the proper solution to the problem, that is lost in history.




Is creativity easy or hard?  I have no idea.  I am inclined to believe it's less about some ability than it is about external force that enables or disables creativity. But I suspect many people don't realize their dependence on creativity,  the masses thinking copyright is outdated, not thinking about  where they'd be if others weren't creating.

I want people to speak their own words, because that's the only way I can tell if they understand something or not.  If you just repeat back what was said in that magazine article, you aren't telling me anything new.  I am reminded of grade 7 or 8 science, where the teacher who otherwise taught English read through a book about how to fly a plane.  Not only was it more about the mechanics of flying than how a plane flies, but did she understand any of it when she was reading straight out of the book?

Art at the very least is about speaking your own words.  Yes, there can be horrible copies of things, but even then artists are forced to create using their own words, and hopefully they get better at it.  If you don't start, you can never move from mere copying to deriving.
Jim Peck did two years in WWII for opposing war.  I saw his photograph on TV three times in May, yet he was invisible.  This is one of his books, it seems to have a dedication scrawled inside from him, I bought it used but somehow it came to me.

As soon as he landed in prison during WWII, he started a strike to desegregate the prison dining hall. He opposed war because war is wrong, not because he thought Hitler was swell.

The reality is, the civil rights movement was built on those WWII riff-raff jailbird pacifists.

After the war, Bayard Rustin (he did 28 months for opposing war in WWII) organized the Journey of Reconciliation in 1947, the first of the freedom rides, to desegregate interstate busing.  The list of riders includes a good number of WWII pacifists. Not much happened, a few got arrested.

Jim Peck was a crewmember of The Golden Rule in 1958 (yes 13 years before Greenpeace, and it was the inspiration for Greenpeace) that tried to sail into a nuclear test site (when they were still testing above ground).  The ship was captained by Albert Bigelow, who had served in WWII but then turned against war.In early May of 1961, The Freedom Rides happened.  James l. Farmer organized it that time, another CO from WWII. There was nothing illegal that time, they were testing rulings that had disallowed desegregation on interstate busing.  Albert Bigelow and John Lewis ere attacked, Jim Peck was nearly beaten to death, one bus was burned. The civil rights hierarchy didn't like the Freedom Ride, the people in the south didn't like them, the US presidency didn't like them.  But just like Rosa Parks showing others to act by her deed, Diane Nash (who had been part of the lunch counter sit ins the year before) knew it was important and made sure the Freedom Rides continued. And with hundreds of jailbirds that summer, desegregated busing in the US stopped.

They had power that most of us can't grasp.  To stand up to bullies, and segregation and all that kept it in place was at its core bullies, to stand up to their violence.

Both sets of freedom rides counted on those WWII pacifists as participants or organizers (and sometimes both, since pacifist George Houser, I think he did time in WWII despite being a theology student (and thus exempt) rode in 1947, then helped to organize in 1961).

Bayard Rustin was a major reason for the non-violence of the civil rights movement.  It wasn't some tactic, it was a deep seated realization that violence is wrong. Non-violence came roaring out of the CO camps and the prisons of WWII to change the world.

In 1982 I was I was in the War Resisters Office buying some books, and someone served me who seemed familiar and was older.  I assumed he was one of those WWII pacifists, though I'm no longer sure which one. They have aged too, most have passed away already, without a lot of fuss from mainstream press.  Though, there was George Houser at about 91 on Oprah on May 4th/  Sadly nobody really said anything about him, or to him,  and not a word was said about the WWII pacifists that were key players in the beginning.

Someon'e slooking for a Fringe date, or is it just advertising?

According to this post, Let's Just Fringe Together. All Night - m4w someone is looking for a date for the Fringe.  Or maybe not, there are enough telltales in there to suggest it is advertising, 

Once again, in 1998 the Montreal Fringe was on the Mirror's Best of Montreal in the category of Best Pickup Spot.  I have no knowledge of some organized attempt to get it there, I know I voted it deliberately.

In that context, you're better off going to the Fringe and enjoying it, and hope to meet someone.

As I've stated before, if you spend enough time at the Fringe, it is an out of the ordinary experience.  I thought I said it was like summer camp back during the McGill years, but I just found something from about a decade ago  where I quote volunteer Sara, who went on to form   Pony Up! as saying it's like summer camp   The boundaries are different, so it is okay to go up and start talking to someone when in "ordinary" circumstances you wouldn't.  That doesn't make it a good pickup spot, it does make it a great flirting spot and without flirting, nothing else can happen.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Children's Shows, but there aren't any

I'm really glad that Venezuela is being promoted as a children's show by having a $2.00 ticket price for those under ten.  There are a few other shows that aren't children's shows but are suitable, which is nice too. But the days of having outright children's shows seem long in the past. The days when nobody knew what the Fringe was so people were willing to try variety have been pushed out. Though maybe that will change as the youngest Fringe Oldtimers start  having children.

In 1994 or 95, one family from the West Island did a Dr. Seuss show, I really wanted to see it, but they finished early and it slipped by.  I remember 1996 and realizing the Fringe was right in that period at the end of the school year when nothing much is happening but you still have to attend.  I thought how  MacHomer could be a great field trip in those last days of school before summer.  It helped that the Fringe ran from noon to midnight back then, so shows were happening during school hours.

Then in 1997, Rick Miller and Stephanie Baptist (did I get that right? They later formed a legal partnership and produced a child or maybe more) did Babaloo & Ganoosh which was intended for children.  Stephanie showed up at the Fringe For All in costume, wearing shoes shaped like hot dogs in buns.  "Are those dogs tired?",  I asked. I saw it, memory reminds me that someone small did watch it, interested in the toys on stage before the show started.  And Rick tossed a beret into the crowd, coming close to Bill Brownstein is what I remember.  (They did get a decent review, though.) But I don't think it did that well, certainly not drawing children.

Then in 1999, Marc Boiteux and Lazareth did Once Upon A..., Lazareth being a dummy.  They had been doing comedy clubs around then, but this was intended for children.  I don't think many attended.  When I saw it, I remember one maybe ten year old girl attending, and she had a good time. Then she dutifully went right over to the Beer Tent to fill out buzz. Marc said he  didn't get the audience he'd hoped, the typecasting of the Fringe already  being strong.  But he was back the next year, with "Balloon Factory"., helped along by the Great Zamboni, who was a man, not machine. That time he made the effort to promote away from the Fringe, pulling kids in from elsewhere and I thought he did well.   I think that was the year I saw him handing out flyers at the Fraser Hickson Library street festival,  one couple glad to  know that the Fringe was coming since they were  uncertain of the dates.  He came back again with the same show in French the next year, and then I guess that was it.  He had a sandwich board chained to the  short black fence at the Beer Tent, two months after the Fringe one year I was passing by and noticed the sign was still there.

The addendum to this is that about a week before the Fringe, I was watching the news and they had a story about Sun Youth's annual bike giveaway.  A familiar face appears, and then yes, it is Marc Boiteux, of course looking older.  Apparently he'd had some diabetic issue, and his son had done the right thing, which is why his son got the bike.

I can't remember any children's shows since then.  Though of course plenty that might have some appeal to them.  And we must never forget that dance has potential to lure a young audience, so much of the movement is similar to what small children are doing anyway.  And better to drag them to a cheap and short show at the Fringe, complete with the informality, than spending big money to take them to Place des Arts.

Oddly in 1999, there was "Kid's Day at the Fringe", right there at the Beer Tent in the parking lot of the restaurant.  But I must have gotten there after it was over, since I have no memory of it.  It was sort of incongruous, and seemed more a nod to someone who was on staff that year than part of some Big Plan for expansion.

Children's shows are often fringe, somewhere over there.  If anyone set out to do a specifically children's show now, they'd have to work hard away from the Fringe to bring in an audience.  I don't think we even do enough to promote that the Fringe can be a family event, Cabaret L'Amour Fou from the west coast 2 years ago certainly should have brought children in.  Instead of a fringe, we've set up a monolith of "young hipster" that can be as alienating as any clique.

Machomer is Going to Stratford!

According to this  Stratford Blog entry,  Machomer will be at Stratford this summer.  Aunt Julia will be so pleased.


I'ts been so long since the show appeared at the fringe, 1995 and 1996 (and then it was a fundraiser just before a Fringe, I guess 1997) that a whole generation has grown up not knowing it locally. Rick Miller has been in Toronto for at least a decade, though for a couple of years, he would come back for our little Fringe.  There was one year when he offered up something like $200 as a Multimedia Prize, memory says that didn't work out so well either because it wasn't well defined or there weren't many shows that fit the category.   Things have definitely improved in that area, the days of gratuitous multimedia are in the past.


For some reason, I checked, and there is even a Wikipedia entry for MacHomer

Monday, June 13, 2011

Folk Music

I have no idea if the folk music at the Fringe occurred yesterday as planned, or if it was rained out. I heard the later activities went inside, the Dramaturkey being interrupted by rain), but nothing about the folk music.

This is one reason I don't like the blender of the peripheral things at the Fringe.  There is a whole lot more reason for me to take in the Folk Festival at the canal than many other of the festivals, but since it happens during the Fringe, I won't go.  So why are we seeing a segment of Folk at the Fringe?

To make matters worse, John Sebastian is performing on Thursday June 16th as part of the Folk Festival.  I never really gave much thought to whether I'm willing to spend $50 ($60 after May 31st)  to see him because it happens right in the Fringe.  I miss so much while the Fringe happens , in those prime early hot days of summer, it's not fair to tempt me. Details are here.

Coincidentally, Thursday night on Channel 57, the Plattsburgh PBS station, they are running "John Sebastian presents Folk Rewind" from 9pm to 11pm.

This reminds me of the time I replied to someone in rec.folk.music:
    > Harvey Reid says the autoharp will never come into vogue until
        teenaged boys ask  for one for Christmas to impress teenaged girls.
 
    But didn't that happen at one point in time?  I barely remember seeing
    the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show, but I've seen footage of the Lovin
    Spoonful, and  John Sebastians playing an autoharp.  I can imagine that
    that sort of thing did lead teenage boys to ask for autoharps to
    impress teenage girls.  Indeed, was John Sebastian's use of an autoharp
    traditional, or a prop to impress teenage girls?

    That is an exaggeration of the situation, but there was a time, and
    John Sebastian came out of it, where "traditional folk players" would be
    using the autoharp in non-traditional settings (ie, folk became hip), and
    then the newer generation like John Sebastian took it up and rose to greater
    visibility.  Once it was out there, surely there were people who took
    up the autoharp because John Sebastian played it.

    I must have somehow been impressed by the autoharp, because there was a
    time when I'd thought of getting one, to take up actually playing an
    instrument.  I guess I gave up on that idea when I mentioned it to
    someone, and he said the autoharp was very easy to start to play, but
    beyond that it was much more difficult.

That's when Happy Traum jumped in to point out that John Sebastian had made an introductory video on the autoharp for Homespun Tapes, which was Happy and Arti Traum's educational business.

In other folk music news, Roger McGuinn apparently has a new CD out, full of sea songs.  I've seen him perform twice, once with Gene Clarke at one of those old clubs near Place des Arts, about 1978 and then less than a decade ago when he played the Concordia Concert Hall with Ritchie Havens (and I'm too tired to look for the date).   he's a real gadget freak, there was a time when he'd post to rec.music.folk and the newsgroup about  The Byrds, until someone stalked him away.  if he came to town, I'd give him an early Sony transistor radio for his collection.

Tomorrow, Tuesday June 14th, "Phil Ochs: There But for a Fortune" is playing in Ottawa, presented by the Ottawa Folk Festival.  The details I saw are here.  Too far and the wrong week. But it doesn't matter, it will be out on DVD on July 19th (and yes, I'll buy it).

Montreal Improv

When they opened the actual Venue/school late last summer, I meant to go by, but either it was the wrong time or I didn't have the address. So I finally got into the venue this week, and it's nice.  It's not glossy, but it's the kind of venue we need, like the Yellow Door for folk music, or what Studio 303 used to be.  An intermediate place where people can start out, but still comfortable enough  for the audience. I would argue that some fancy venues are not so comfortable, unless you are used to that life.

I was surprised they had so much space for the stage, but then, no.  When they are teaching classes, they need a space to perform, and a place for teh rest to sit and watch.  It's not like dance at Studio 303 where we'd ahve to put the chairs and equipment away after the show even if it was being staged the next day, since it would get in the way of classes in the studio.

Bryan (on the right) has been venue managing a lot this week.  He and the rest have been around the Fringe for some years now, they are close to qualifying as Fringe Oldtimers, but I don't remember them volunteering.  of course, they had to supply their own venue managers, but it's a different role to see him and his lovely assitant.  They even have their own set of walkie talkies in addition to those from the Frio they can talk up to their venue.

I put this picture in because whatever night it was, I passed by and thought the guy on the left was some comedian. When I went back, I realized he resembled Lewis Black, and ona subconcious level I thought they were loading up with comedy superstars.  But he isn't, he's just "some guy"

Jessica Salomon, Doing Good

She's had good press, I even saw her on Global TV at midnight the Sunday before the Fringe, when they run the local newsmagazine show.  But I never know how that translates, does someone have a good hook, are they good at publicity, or does it reflect their actual show?

Jessica Salomon is the one who had people dressed as waiters with trays of shot glasses, printed with "Doing Good" at the Fringe For All.  One of the better gimmicks, that night or maybe any Fringe, but while that makes her stand out, it still says nothing about her show.

I was indifferent, but when I went to see "Venezuela" (luckily they had one night of shows on Thursday, before the Fringe began) she was one of the Friends.  Yes she was funny, so I went to see her show.  Another heroin reference, give away the sample to lure them in.  Sadly, I saw much of standup when she opened for "Venezuela" so for some of the really good jokes, I saw them coming and didn't laugh as much as the first time.  The key part of the show was more like storytelling of her time in law.  She name drops Kofi Annan, who was then Secretary General of the UN.  (I can name drop, on June 7th, 1982 when we arrived at the UN, the assistant Secretary General came out to welcome us. I can't remember his name, or anything he said.  I do remember Corretta Scott King greeting us after we crossed the street).  But in telling the stories, she's making them funny, it's no dry history.

I remember over a decade ago, Martha Chavez was part of a benefit for the Fringe, and  I did see something different in her  jokes, which got me to the Comedy Nest a few times. She organized a few nights of women comedy there (the Comedy Fest later took over the concept, with a different host).
The big thing I remember is that it was safe to sit in the front row, you might get pulled into the show, but you wouldn't get attacked. I found I did react differently to the women comics, I'm not sure if it's because the jokes are different, or if it's a sexual thing, they being women I am less inhibited in my laughing (or is it that laughing is a vulnerability so I feel I can be more vulnerable and thus laugh harder, when it's a woman telling the jokes)?  Seeing women tell jokes is a treat, it shouldn't always be men doing the work of making people laugh.

I remembered all that as I sat in the front row seeing "Doing Good".  I did react well on hearing some of her best jokes the first time.  I loved the one about the sleepover, it's right up there as  a sex scene with the one in the movie "Big" where Tom Hanks claims the top bunk.  I didn't think the show was particularly "dirty", I thought they jokes were  funny, and sex should be fun.  I an see women dragging their boyfriends to this show, as foreplay, just like women would drag men to see Shakti dance when she came to the Fringe (it was never clear if they were excited because it was dance their boyfriends would see with them, or if they saw it as foreplay for later in the evening).

Venezuela, Venezuela, and Friends

I thought they used a picture of My Cousin Vinnie twice, but there really are two people who look quite the same.  I wanted to see this one since they charge $2 for children under ten, I wondered if that was merely a gimmick for us to take notice of the show, or it was fit for kids.

It's suitable.  It starts off like a silent movie and that would have worked in itself, but then slowly they add gibberish.  The movement is the key, the gibberish allows for emphasis and exclamation.  Think "Beaker" on The Muppet Show.  I thought one piece went on a bit long, but I have no idea if it's a fixed show each time or if they have multiple routines to pick and choose from.

It works for children, but in a good way.  It's neither a children's show nor an adult show, it's just funny and like old silent films, children can see the humor.

The "Friends" open the show, it's an hour show with the Venezuela bit about half an hour.  So they've brought in some of the other acts to open. I don't think Jessica Salomon was really appropriate if there had been children, but I also assume any children in the audience would have been accommodated.

The Fringe needs shows that children can see, so I'm glad they've done this.  The only bad part is that while a child can see the show for one week's allowance (I don't know what kids get for allowance these days, I remember when I'd get fifty cents and rush off to buy a "How & Why Wonder Book" with it), they then have to spend another week's allowance paying the service charge.

Hidden Returning Acts, June 13

There are the obvious Big names returning this year, but some returning acts are sort of hidden.  I'm not sure I've found all of them, but here goes.

Last year, a woman came from New York City and did "Recess".  She's back, doing "JapJap".  I never saw last year's show, she finished her run on the Wednesday, but it was something I was curious about, and it seemed to get good reviews.  This year's show seems drastically different, and I didn't realize it was her until I looked at the program blurb a few times.


Maybe more important, Lynsey Billing is doing "Siblings".  It's dance, but somehow lost over at Mainline.  She did a dance show in 2008 "Barbie World". They wandered around the Beer Tent in electric pink dresses, I thought they should have been in the Drag Races since they were already in drag.

I wrote back then:

     I saw Barbie World. It's only 30 minutes long, which helped a lot for a
     performance that started at midnight. I heard the interview on the
    radio, but I had expected something to play up the pop culture aspect
    of Barbie, especially given the cast has been running around the Fringe
    in electric pink dresses and wigs. I had expected more of entertainment
    type dance, so I postponed my viewing of it. But, other than the
    opening piece, where the cast are Barbies, this is contemporary dance,
    maybe with a fair influence from ballet. It was pretty good. A bonus is
    that there are lots of dancers, a lot of dance at the Fringe is solo or
    duets, surely the result of the small stage and finding performers who
    can be at performances at varying times. I remember now that I had
    almost gone to see it months back when it was performed at Studio 303,
    and something came up. It was right around Barbie's birthday, which is
    supposed to be March 9th; she was born in 1959 so she turns the Big 5-0
    next year.

So based on that previous show, I'll take in this one.  I notice it's also a 15 minute and $5 show, which gives it even ore reason to be seen.

One thing we have to remember is that  modern dance is not very lucrative, other than the most popular have to have a second job, if they are lucky they can teach dance or yoga.  For others, how we view them is perspective.  If I only know someone because she performs at Studio 303, I'll see her as a dancer or choreographer, but someone in another aspect of their life might see them as a librarian that sometimes performs


Fringe Very Oldtimer Ed Fuller is doing "Between Gossip & Dreams".  It sure has an intriguing premise. I remember seeing Ed Fuller for the first time in 1996 performing at the Beer Tent, but his history goes back further.  Sometimes he's missing, other times he's performing and other times he's volunteering.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

On the Spot's Walking Tour

I was intrigued (and don't make me type in the full title, it's listed in the program under "On the Spot") but OFF shows too often collide with the regular shows, with fixed times that can ruin a whole evening.  But, I was soaking wet, just from walking from Mainline to the Beer Tent, and hovering around the InfoBooth for shelter, it slowly revealed that some of the crowd wasn't just there for shelter, but for the tour.  I wasn't in the mood to go to a show while soaking wet, but as the sun returned, some walking might dry me out.  And the tour was about to start, and it would finish before the show I really wanted to see, which happened to be close.

It shows that I don't pay that much attention to the blurbs, since I really expected a walking tour, albeit a humorous one. I guess being Fringe Historian, I'd want to arrange a walking tour to show off the old Venues.


Instead, this is improv, with the really neat factor of moving around. I liked that when they did Shakespeare on Mount Royal a decade ago, I liked it when some troupe did a free OFF show during the Fringe a few years ago.  It can get tiresome to always be sitting in seats to see a show, to have to sit in the same spot through the show.

And then one can be amused by cyclists that just ride through the scene (on the other hand, some others made a point of avoiding it).


Still expecting history, when Terrence Bowman, I think it's him as the tour guide, asked for something from the "tourists', it came across like a teacher reaching for an answer rather than reveal it.  It took me a while to grasp that one had control, sort of, over the situation by yelling out whatever.  I liked it, and it wsa over before I started wondering about the time.  Don't take the history as exact. I think it would work better with a larger crowd, there were about four of us as audience, and as many On the Spotters.  There was also a horribly obnoxious woman  in our tour Sunday night, I tried to be polite but then moved away from her.

Indiana Jones Day at the Fringe, June 12

Nobody even noticed, but Sunday June 12th was Indiana Jones Day at the Montreal Fringe.  A chance to wear a beat up fedora and leather jacket, and show of your skill at using a whip.  June 12, 1981 was the day "Raiders of the Lost Ark" came out.

I saw it early, at the Imperial, but I'm sort of blank about it.  The concept was novel enough, so just like when Star Wars came out (I saw it twice the afternoon it first played Montreal), we weren't sure what to expect. Oh, preview shows pointed otu it was an homage to the serials of the old days, but in 1981, it wsa a fork in the road.  I thought I saw it at midnight, and came back from somewhere to do so, but not on June 12th, so I must be mixing that memory with one of the Star Wars films, or even when the 2nd Indiana Jones film came out.  It's lost some of its impact over thirty years, and the fact that I do have it on VHS so I can watch it when i wnat, but it was a potent film when it first came out.    Back then, watching it whenever you wanted  was only beginning with the slow rise of VCRs, you saw it when it first came out, maybe if it hit the rep houses, and then you were dependent on if it appeared on TV.

We should have made a big deal of this at the Fringe.

June 12th is always and forever also Anne Frank's birthday.  This year I will get Miep Gies book about Anne, Miep Gies being one of the people who helped to hid the Franks, and then of course, kept the diary safe until Otto Frank came home safely.

Another event that I had to look up actually happened on June 12th, too.  Back in 1971, the Whole Earth Catalog had their "Demise Party", having decided to shut down operation (of course, that didn't last long, they produced more Catalogs for decades, and of course in 1974 started printing the CoEvolution Quarterly that I read for most of its life.  Significant about the Demise Party is that some guy named Fred Moore ended up with the money that the Catalog had offered up for some project (and the attendees could not reach a decision about where the money should go).  When I read the Rolling Stone article about the Demise Party "The Last Twelve Hours of the Whole Earth" (Rolling Stone, July 8, 1971) around 1976, Fred Moore was just a name in the article.  But some years later, he reached a certain level of fame by helping to start the Homebrew Computer Club, that was very important in the early days of home computers.  And Fred Moore apparently walked through Montreal in June or July of 1964 as part of the Quebec-Washington-Guantanamo Peace Walk, an event made famous because when they hit the Deep South they ran into segregation, and the Peace Walk was not segregated. 

That July 8th issue of Rolling Stone is also important, since on page 8 it carries a short article announcing that The Fillmore is closing at the end of June, rather than later in the year.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

The Beer Arrives, The Posters Go Up

Another day at the Beer Tent, though I got there a tad later.  Beer was supposed to arrive anywhere from 11 to noon, it came about 3:30pm if I remember right.  And there was no sense in my going for the beer, they brought three people and three handcarts.  I suspect that happened last year too, when it came earlier than I'd been told and missed it.  For a long time, it was only the driver, and so we volunteers worked hard at moving the kegs. That's the Donkey Kong reference, we were rolling the kegs into the park.  But with three handcarts, rolling just got in the way, so I think my days of moving beer is in the past.

But there were some last minute things to take care of, so i didn't completely sit around.  I think the full cast of "Think Outside" came to help, they were actually fun to have around.  They even have tshirts, though I initially thought only those with tshirts were part of the troupe.  It is a good way to work your way into the Fringe culturally, yes you can promote your show but the real impact is not that the olunteers may come to your show, but that they will think kindly towards your show.  I do mention the show here, right?  I've often thought for out of towners, it's also something to do. If you are in a strange place, helping out at the Beer Tent is a means of staying with the somewhat familiar, and then for the rest of the Fringe, there are some people around that you know.

Again, the postering was happening today rather than opening night.  The first in line arrived about 3:30pm, "C'est un Riopel".  Liz doing "Arthur C. Clarke's How We Went to Mars", was next in line, I guess reasonably soon after.  A few trickled in, but then the real crowd did not arrive until much closer to the 6pm start time.

One or two acts were smiling at me, and oddly I didn't react.  I suddenlywasn't sure if they perceived me as authority, or if they remembered me from other years.  And sometimes it is actually someone I may know.  Even some of the people bringing the tents or fences remember me from year to year.

So long as Patrick and a few other people aren't around, I've been around  longer than anyone, now that Jeremy has "retired".  Well, Nancy K. Brown is senior volunteer, I can't think of any volunteers who are still around who predate me.  Tristan was a volunteer from Fringe 1, but he's been staff and board of directors since. Kristi in the counting house is another volunteer from before I arrived, but she's been staff, and has also missed some years.

There were some new rules about the postering, some good, some seem arbitrary.  No postering on the benches, which is great.  We've always cleaned them up, but two years ago we were told to scrub harder.  It wasn't clear whether it was change of management of complaints, but this time Many said there had been complaints.  That's one rule I'm glad of, those benches were really hard to get back in "normal" state.  The glue of the tape actually starts affecting the wood.  No postering on the tables where the beer is served.  I think I can rememember when someone first took the initative to poster there, I guess it's deemed too messythough it always seemed like a good place.  I'd still like to try putting posters under the plastic, without tape.  If it works the posters stay clean and the top of the plastic is clean, but of course if it doesn't work, the beer gets under the plastic and the flyers soak it up. Some areas of the fence were reserved, obviously in some cases though I don't know why the fence on St. Dominique has to remain poster free.

I announced one minute to go at 5:59, nobody took the bait, so I blew the whistle at 6pm, and crowd rolled in.  The usual stampede, some had been waiting for some time, though some had spent the time postering the outside of the fence and arranging their posters in preformed sets. Without that crowd of artists, there would be no Fringe.  They are the paying customers at the moment, they subcontract the venue, technical help and ticket sales (plus some other bits and pieces) from the Fringe and they won't make money until they can sell their show to an audience.

Nodoby was at the gate holding the crowd back, nobody was there to greet them except for me. I can remember when volunteers ruled the Fringe, I can remember when that first night postering wasn't seen as tradition, but as one important thing to do to lure an audience to your show.  I have absolutely no status, yet I have the deep history and uphold the culture of the Fringe.

With the posters up, it was the usual mingling. But then the sky darkened. We were actually lucky, it didn't rain either day of the setup, though it had been forecast.  It's not fun being cold and wet all day.  And then the wind came, gritty dry wind and then the rain came.  Not too heavy, but not too pleasant. Amy passes by and whispers "it's not my fault". And I sure woudln't pin rain on her.  It happens.

I left about 8:30pm.  Again I was too worn down to do anything useful, so I was going to watch "Saving Private Ryan" as a late D-Day memorial, but the VHS copy I bought the week before for 25cents has mangled sound.  I wonder if it was like that when I bought it, or if I mangled it by putting that radio on top of the tapes?  So instead, I watched "The Ghost and the Darkness", that Val Kilmar/Michael Douglas film about a man eating lion attacking railroad workers in Africa. I never saw it before.  It was okay, but I should have been doing something practical.

I think that gets the accumulated junk out of my system, so now I can get
with the Fringe.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

The Fringe Doesn't Start Until I Put Up the Beer Tent

Even though I've already seen one show (my superpass came early, and without fuss), the Fringe doesn't start till the Beer Tent is up, and for something like the tenth time I was there early today to put it up.

I barely take the bus or metro, walking everywhere, but having wasted time trying to find something for my cordless screwdriver, I had no choice but to take the bus.  And the 24 is still taking a detour at Guy, that's happened before but I'm not sure the construction has been going on continuously since last Fringe.

 I can remember when few showed up, though usually some trickled in later, but then we often had other things to do too, in those days before more staff came along. It's better organized, there really is a sequence to it all, and some years there was too much overlap.  So some years I really worked hard staying till 8pm or so (Jeremy would finally send me home).  I should probably stop, with more volunteers I do less, yet staying all day in the sun puts a lot of wear on me right before the Fringe.  But not only do I have the tools, I bring food, and I don't know what happens if I don't show up.  Some disaster might happen, and then I'd get blamed.

We had a fair number of volunteers, all so eager.  Even some returning from last year.  Joseph St. Marie came back, for at least a second year (I can't remember about two years ago). When he was leaving, he remembered and handed out his flyers, he's doing "Elevated; Pushing Buttons". Sometimes it's confusing, I just see them as volunteers, and then when they later come back with a show, it almost looks like one of us "made good", but the reality may be different, it may be that they are volunteering because they are already interested in putting on a show. Someone else returned, I think, but my memory is mangled, is the face matching the memory I remember?

The fence is the key thing, and it was late.  I only jokingly blamed Amy, it can't be her fault but with a change one has to connect it to other changes.  If the fence isn't up before the other things roll in, something stalls.  So we spent a while moving things up from the office (which has to be done eventually), and the regulars to the park were able to remain longer than usual.  (Usually, there is a steady stream of people wanting to get through the park, because that's what they normally do.  Then as we take things down, the fence is barely down, and we aren't finished, when people and animals return to the park.  Nature is strong.)  The tents. chairs and tables came before the fence arrived, not so good but better than if they arrive together.  So when the fence did arrive, we had to rush to get the sections in place behind where the tents go.

Other than the delay, it was a quiet day.  Really hot, I don't know if the rash on my arms came from something in the astroturf, or if it was a heat rash

Oddly, I saw nobody coming by wanting to buy tickets (usually someone does, not realizing the box office doesn't open yet, they have to go to Mainline), or people asking what was going on (it always makes sense to have a bundle of programs at the site from early on).  One woman walking her dog near the back of the park was glad to see the Fringe returning, I couldn't help but wonder if she lived across the street.

I stayed till about 7pm, though I was hardly working hard all that time. Someone has to keep the volunteers happy.

But then I realized how much it takes out of me, that full day in the sun. So instead of getting something done, vegetating by watching "Singles" rather than sleeping or doing something.