Last week was an exciting time at the Settlement Quarry. On June 3rd, artist in resident Tawanda Chabikwa worked with Stonington-Deer Isle students on dance and story-telling though movement at the Settlement Quarry. While at the Quarry, Tawanda and artist Mia Kanazawa, who had designed sea-gull heads and wings for the children to use, helped the students work in groups to create choreographed dance sequences.
The work was in conjunction with the in-development production--Q2:Habitat. Q2 is based on the original 2007 Quarryography. A sneak peak of Alison Chase, Mia Kanazawa, and Nigel Chase collaboration at the Quarry will take place this August 7th and 8th. Full production scheduled for August 2010. Rain date: August 9th
Monday, June 8, 2009
Sunday, June 7, 2009
First read-through brunch in the sweet soft air of Queens
Rebecca and Stephanie, Hermia and Helena, were wicked fierce today; no mild little ingenues these two spitters as they confronted each other over supposed betrayals in the fairy forest. It was an overall fierceness in the cast that most struck me in this first read-through. Puck fierce and chilly and absolutely clear in his detached manipulations; Theseus, with Hippolyta by the hair, so to speak, declaring Hermia's fate if she opposed her father's choice of husband; Titania almost guttural in her passion for Bottom; Bottom so fully full of himself. Lysander just clear (lovely rendering of the language) until his head is muddied by Puck's flower--and then venomous in his rejection of Hermia. I have been reading the play and watching film versions for weeks--never have I heard it so clearly. Already.
Monday, June 1, 2009
Welcome to Shakespeare in Stonington
Saturday, May 23, 2009
Fragiles
A great picture surprised me when I walked into the DI-S K-8 school at 8 a.m. Friday morning to finish preparing for our show, "Sea of Birds," at the Reach Performing Arts Center: a first grade class circled around our teaching artist's lobby installation, finishing their learning from the artist's residency under the initiative and guidance of their teachers. They had collected "fragiles"--objects which they understood to be fragile, like the stories we tell each other about our lives. They were placing these fragile objects--slender forsythia branches, delicate paper objects, etc.--onto the fragile stick-and-tape structure they had created as a place from which to tell their own storytelling emerged (in the form of drawings on fragile paper, strung along the ceiling above the stick dome).
In creating these structures and teaching about and with fragile objects and spaces, Sebastienne Mundheim, our visiting artist, was giving the students a tactile, visual sense for something abstract: the fragility of our stories and memories. How are our stories fragile? In the way that "truth" is fragile: it is created amongst us, never by ourselves alone. There is our experience of something--and our memory of it, which is always slightly different from the actual experience. Then there is our telling of the memory, which shifts the experience again; and the hearing of this telling by the person or persons to whom we are telling it. Then the person to whom we told our story tells our story to others. And on the story goes into the world, each detail important to us, to our understanding of our shared world, and delicate as it is passed from mouth to ear and heart to heart.
And thus the students, placing their "fragiles" upon the delicate structure in the lobby, from which their drawings of the stories their mothers had told them emerged.
Check out the photos at our Facebook site: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=5780599838#/photo.php?pid=1905369&id=18518578665&ref=mf
In creating these structures and teaching about and with fragile objects and spaces, Sebastienne Mundheim, our visiting artist, was giving the students a tactile, visual sense for something abstract: the fragility of our stories and memories. How are our stories fragile? In the way that "truth" is fragile: it is created amongst us, never by ourselves alone. There is our experience of something--and our memory of it, which is always slightly different from the actual experience. Then there is our telling of the memory, which shifts the experience again; and the hearing of this telling by the person or persons to whom we are telling it. Then the person to whom we told our story tells our story to others. And on the story goes into the world, each detail important to us, to our understanding of our shared world, and delicate as it is passed from mouth to ear and heart to heart.
And thus the students, placing their "fragiles" upon the delicate structure in the lobby, from which their drawings of the stories their mothers had told them emerged.
Check out the photos at our Facebook site: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=5780599838#/photo.php?pid=1905369&id=18518578665&ref=mf
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Magic
I'm pretty sure nothing makes me happier than spending a day in the fall and one or more in the spring working alongside OHA's great volunteers to clean and spiff up the theater for the coming season. Last Saturday we had so much fun: the doors flung open and passers-by sticking their heads in; Cathy Marshall (Seamark's director) showing up to paint in her wonderfully paint-spattered painting pants, and doing a beautiful job of giving our expanded concessions counter coats of OHA Red and OHA Yellow; Michele Leveque of El El Frijoles making our stage the cleanest in the COUNTRY; Ted Crouch quietly fixing the broken window and back door of the office; Tinker and Sharon scrubbing the green room; and me crawling all over, organizing the shop (!), hoisting things up to the catwalk and out to the deck . . . the place took on this magical smell of what can only be called, well, love: and by the time I shut all the doors and turned out the lights I was sad to go home. You can catch the magic, too, Saturday May 23 when we hold another volunteer cleaning day. I'm not making this up: the magic is there.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Spring in Stonington
It feels as if spring has finally arrived in Stonington, and OHA couldn't be more excited! The summer 2009 schedule is finalized, and it is filled with many excited events. A highlight is the annual Shakespeare in Stonington production, “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” directed by Julia Whitworth.
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One thing that makes this year so exiting is this is the 10th Anniversary of Opera House Arts. The 1912 Stonington Opera House, on the National Register of Historic Places, was renovated and repaired by Opera House Arts, which was incorporate as a 201 C 3 nonprofit organization in 1999. Opera House Arts helped restore and reopen the historic theatre. Many wonderful performances and community events have taken places at the opera house over the past ten years, and on August 15th and 16th, OHA will hold a 10th Anniversary Revue-Looking Forward, Looking Back. The event will includes some of the most popular OHA performances: Broadway singers, TV Stars, Randy Judkins, and Mike Miclon in John Cariani's "Falling in Love," the Moose Boy; the Lobster Girl; opera; The Vigina Monologues; pianist Paul Sullivan; and much more...
Download a copy of the 2009 schedule here: http://www.operahousearts.org/documents/summer_2009.pdf
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One thing that makes this year so exiting is this is the 10th Anniversary of Opera House Arts. The 1912 Stonington Opera House, on the National Register of Historic Places, was renovated and repaired by Opera House Arts, which was incorporate as a 201 C 3 nonprofit organization in 1999. Opera House Arts helped restore and reopen the historic theatre. Many wonderful performances and community events have taken places at the opera house over the past ten years, and on August 15th and 16th, OHA will hold a 10th Anniversary Revue-Looking Forward, Looking Back. The event will includes some of the most popular OHA performances: Broadway singers, TV Stars, Randy Judkins, and Mike Miclon in John Cariani's "Falling in Love," the Moose Boy; the Lobster Girl; opera; The Vigina Monologues; pianist Paul Sullivan; and much more...
Download a copy of the 2009 schedule here: http://www.operahousearts.org/documents/summer_2009.pdf
Friday, March 6, 2009
Bus to Bamako

On February 18th, Pierre-Marc Diennet premiered his in-development play “Bus to Bamako,” at Opera House Arts. The play, starring Pierre-March Diennet and Sean-Michael Bowles, was the story of one man’s experience working as a photojournalist in developing countries.
The play begins in a hotel bar in Bamako, the capital city of Mali, where Peter (Pierre-Marc Diennet), a young American, is talking about his experiences. He is a photojournalist on assignment in Mali and is clearly troubled by the things he has seen and in fact some of the things he himself has done during his travels. Peter tells different stories to Baba (Sean-Michael Bowles) a young university student, and culminates with one story in particular, during a bus ride to Bamako, where his own actions have left him disillusioned and cynical.
“Bus to Bamako” was a powerful play reading which was beautifully acted and looked at very important and challenging issue. It will be extremely interesting to see future productions of the play and see the direction and movement of the story. At Opera House Arts, the production was concluded with an audience reaction discussion. Director and actor Pierre-Marc Diennet was very interested in what the audience had to say and plans on incorporating many of the suggestions into future productions.
For more on play readings and other live performances at the opera house check our web-site at http://www.operahousearts.org/livetheater.php
-Emma
The play begins in a hotel bar in Bamako, the capital city of Mali, where Peter (Pierre-Marc Diennet), a young American, is talking about his experiences. He is a photojournalist on assignment in Mali and is clearly troubled by the things he has seen and in fact some of the things he himself has done during his travels. Peter tells different stories to Baba (Sean-Michael Bowles) a young university student, and culminates with one story in particular, during a bus ride to Bamako, where his own actions have left him disillusioned and cynical.
“Bus to Bamako” was a powerful play reading which was beautifully acted and looked at very important and challenging issue. It will be extremely interesting to see future productions of the play and see the direction and movement of the story. At Opera House Arts, the production was concluded with an audience reaction discussion. Director and actor Pierre-Marc Diennet was very interested in what the audience had to say and plans on incorporating many of the suggestions into future productions.
For more on play readings and other live performances at the opera house check our web-site at http://www.operahousearts.org/livetheater.php
-Emma
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