iBroadway

Random Stuff

High School Tony Awards Honors Schools' Biggest Nerds, Losers


High School Tony Awards Honor Schools’ Biggest Nerds, Losers

The new frontier of Trademark's on the Internet.

I came across this article on NYtimes.com entitled Google and Louis Vuitton Face Off in Trademark Spat. The article discusses a lawsuit filed by Louis Vuitton claiming that Google infringes on their copy right because Google allows people to purchase Google Adwords with names like “Louis Vuitton fakes” or “Louis Vuitton replicas.” The lawsuit, which was filed in France was found in favor of Louis Vuitton and is being appealed by Google.

I don’t know much about trademark or copy right law but I find this extremely interesting. I mean I guess technically there is an infringement on the copyright but at the same time I think that people are purchasing the Google Adwords which are being placed almost automatically on the Google search engine. Would you sue the owner of a bill board because someone placed an ad on that space? This law suit is a perfect example of how technology has changed the way people have to look at the law and that its never clear cut or black and white.

Where the WWWomen Are

A few weeks ago, my friend Yvonne, who is in her early 30’s, invited both friends and family to a party. Her mother-in-law was particularly excited to attend because Yvonne’s college friend, Dave Gilbert, was a fellow party-er.  Gilbert, Yvonne’s mother-in-law had recently discovered, had designed her favorite computer game.  (Gilbert is owner of Wadget Eye Games .)

This cute coincidence is illustrative of a larger trend.

The game Yvonne’s mother-in-law loved is a “casual game,” which are those computer games that are not shoot ‘em ups or epic games, but simple games with simple rules — think Tetris and Bejeweled.

According to a report by the Casual Games Association, 200 million people play casual games online. Women account for 51% of this large pie (according to one report , this number is 76%.) Women also make up 74% of people who pay for games. And people over the age of 35 account for 62% of all gamers.

Casual games: designed by young men, played by their moms.

How to Make Your Sister Love New York

My sister and her husband made their first visit to New York last week. (They live in Los Angeles, where I’m from.) Naturally, we wanted to show them a kling-klang-king of a good time. We also had theatre-type commitments almost every night of her visit. (Yeah, I know, sucks to be us.)

Luckily they love theatre and were very good sports about devoting most of their evenings to our professional preoccupation. Also, luckily, all the things we saw were truly wonderful. (Phew! It would’ve been awful to make out-of-towners sit through a bunch of stinkeroos.)

First, we took them to Almost an Evening, for what happened to be F. Murray Abraham’s final performance. The cast and crew were also kind enough to include them in the champagne toast that followed. Let me tell you, there’s something supremely satisfying about introducing your family to an Academy Award winner, who also happens to be extremely charming and funny. That’s just cool!

On Tuesday, we were over at the Cherry Lane Theatre (which we love) to see a workshop performance of one of the company’s Mentor Project plays. Do you know about Mentor Project? It’s Artistic Director Angelina Fiordellisi’s ten-year-old program that matches emerging playwrights with masters of the craft. Over the course of a single season, three established artists are each paired with a mentee to work on one play. Each work is given a staged reading and a workshop presentation in CLT’s Studio space. Past mentors have included Tony Kushner, Alfred Uhry, Jules Feiffer, Wendy Wasserstein, Theresa Rebeck and Lynn Nottage.

We saw a performance of Jailbait by Deidre O’Connor, directed by Suzanne Agins and mentored by Michael Weller. I had seen the reading and liked it very much, and I’m thrilled to tell you we were all truly impressed by what we saw on the stage last week. O’Connor’s dialogue is pitch perfect and her characters are deftly and lovingly drawn. It’s the kind of smart, honest theatre that you know is being made in New York, in little theatres, in basements, in rehearsal studios and studio apartments, but that rarely gets noticed amidst the hullaballoo.

Our next outing rocketed us from the humble to defiantly lavaloovanal: We took in a performance of Boeing Boeing. I ponied up the bucks for 7th row seats on the aisle–hey, you only take your sister to a boffo B’way show once in a while, right? Anyway, the show is, on its merits, pretty pukey. It’s a Sizzlin’ Sixties Sexcapade that definitely shows its years, BUT the production values are so high, the cast is so polished, and–most importantly–is so obviously having the time of their lives that it just doesn’t matter. I mean it, the joy radiating from the stage is palpable. The post-curtain/pre-bow samba–which has exactly nothing to do with the plot–is clearly there just to let this group of goof balls burn off a little excess joy before punching out for the night. It’s fun, it’s cwaaazy, it’s as one review has it: a nutball comedy. Go for the laffs.

Finally, we walked over to the Atlantic Theater Company for a preview of Conor McPerson’s Port Authority, which opened last night. Expertly acted by Brian D’Arcy James, John Gallagher and the incomparable Jim Norton under the direction of Henry Wishcamper, Port Authority grabbed me in the first thirty seconds and never let go. Read Brantley’s review here. It’s a series of monologues by three Irishmen, one young, one middle aged, one old. Each tells the story of a love that never was, a victim of passivity, fear or simple bad timing. It’s haunting and wrenching, mesmerizing and strips the theatrical experience to its bones. It’s essential, and I mean that literally, for certainly the first drama resided in the stories we told around the fire, our faces gilded by its glow and the night wrapped tight around us. That’s how Port Authority feels: intimate and painful and achingly human.

Anywhoo, my sister and her husband were thoroughly charmed by all of last week’s theatrical hocus pocus. Their enthusiasm reminded us just how fortunate we are to see so much shockingly great theater every single blessed day of the week! (In case we were starting to take it for granted.)

Time Out Magazine: The Joke's on Us

time-out-cover.jpg

A friend of mine really, really likes Sex and the City and is devouring all reading material about the upcoming movie. She was uber-excited to see those fabulous 4 on the cover of this week’s Time Out …

Even though there was duct tape over the actresses’ mouths, and a pink banner draped across the magazine’s front cover that screamed,

“NO SEX! Enough already. We love ‘em, but it’s just too much.”

Nope, my friend was undeterred. I observed her as she opened up the magazine and skimmed the table of contents for the Sex and the City article, but did not see the article listed.

Then she skimmed the entire magazine.

Then she looked carefully at each and every page of the entire magazine.

Finally, she found one lonely little poll, which asked readers if they were truly tired of Sex and the City.

Time Out had performed a marketing coup: The absence of an article made a potential reader look closely at each and every page of the magazine.

Too bad it wasn’t the April 1st issue …

Avenue Q Four Years Later

I saw Avenue Q back in 2004 for the first time with the original cast and then again in 2005 with all original members with the exception of Barrett Foa as Princeton. Both times I saw it I was amazed. I really love this show. What I feel Avenue Q has that other shows do not is heart. It really has heart. Although it is pretty vulgar at times and politically incorrect (which I love) it has an excellent message and you feel good after seeing it. Other shows may be stronger and everyone show leaves you with certain feelings, I feel that Avenue Q is different.

I saw Avenue Q for the third time on Friday. Although there is one member of the original cast (Jennifer Barnhart) all of the others are now replacements. I have observed that shows lose a lot of spark when the original cast departs. I have seen this in shows such as Wicked and The Producers. I took my sister, who has not seen a Broadway show since Cats in the 1980’s. I felt that the show is easy to digest, funny and light. I personally was worried that I would not feel as strongly for the show because I would not be seeing the original cast.

I was WRONG! I felt like I was watching the show for the first time. The entire cast was excellent. Howie Michael Smith played Princeton and Rod in his Broadway debut and Sarah Stiles (who will be Joanne in the upcoming Broadway Musical Vanities) played Kate Monster and Lucy the Slut. I am still so happy to have seen the show again. I will say that it is probably one of my favorites. I did notice that they changed some of the staging and lyrics (specifically in “There is Life Outside Your Apartment”). The show is still so much fun, it’s not only topical, its real, people can relate to the characters and the theme of trying to find what they are supposed to do in life. If you have failed to see Avenue Q in the past I would recommend seeing it because you can not walk away from it smiling and the show is as strong as ever.

THE PROGRAM: A Flashlight on Avant-Garde Darkness

As much as I love theater of all types, plenty of times I leave the show wondering what it all meant, if I got all I could out of it.  The more experimental the show, the more I am left wondering what, exactly, I was supposed to understand.  I often read the reviews after I see a play to see if my interpretation matches those of the critics.

… And now, there’s THE PROGRAM, which allows people like me to hear from a panel of critics, and even the playwrights, as an introduction to the show.

THE PROGRAM is Helen Shaw, David Cote, and Jeffrey Jones, “two reviewers and a playwright-cultural critic — who want the widest possible audience to feel welcome at the widest range of dramatically ambitious work,” according to the pamphlet I received at the panel discussion before God’s Ear last night.  The three travel to different theaters to introduce various shows and speak about what makes them special.

Jenny Schwartz, the playwright of God’s Ear, joined the panel discussion at the Vineyard Theatre, so the talk not only shed light on the important aspects of the play, but also provided insight into the creative process of playwrights.

The Program was a great intro to a great play, and I would definitely seek it out for plays I see in the future.

I Smell a TONY…Please Hold

Cubby Bernstein…Theatre Mogul

Hair and Hamlet together at last!

This is the best key art I’ve seen in years.

Hair and Hamlet

Dancing to the Rhythm of a Sermon

On Friday, I saw a dance performance at the Danspace Project at St. Mark’s Church. My knowledge and experience with dance can fit on the head of a pin, but I really enjoyed it.

In one of the many short pieces, a striking, strong woman came out on stage. She stood in the center of a spotlight. A sermon started from the speakers.

And she began to dance to it.

When the preacher spoke of the virtues of a good attitude, she held herself a little taller. When he was particularly preachy, she walked around the perimeter of the spotlight circle and wagged her finger at the audience.

But the dance was not limited to interpreting the content of the speech. When the words tumbled out of the speaker’s mouth in a rush, the dancer was a flash of arms, legs, and hair. And when he slowed down to emphasize a point, her flash of movement slowed down to match it.

The piece was short, but quite powerful in demonstrating the beauty in everyday language.