Arts & Life

jimmalcolmriver

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Scottish Singer Jim Malcolm is returning to Lake County to perform a fund raising benefit concert for KPFZ 88.1 FM, Lake County Community Radio.

The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 30, at the Lake County Arts Council's Main Street Gallery at 325 N. Main St. in Lakeport.

Malcolm is an accomplished singer, song writer and plays both guitar and harmonica.

Malcolm will be bringing with him his latest CD, “Corncrake,” which is filled with traditional Scottish songs.

He will be performing songs from this CD as well as some old favorites.

Tickets are $22 or $20 for KPFZ Members.

You can buy tickets from Watershed Books at 350 N. Main St. in Lakeport, at the Arts Council Gallery or call 707-262-0525.

dec2014fiddlersnew

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – The Ely Stage Stop and Country Museum welcomes back the Old Time Fiddlers Association for the monthly First Sunday Fiddlers’ Jam on Sunday, Feb. 1.

Fiddlers, as well as other musicians, will meet in the Ely barn to perform their wonderful Americana music.

Donations benefit both the Ely Stage Stop, helping to fund a blacksmith shop on which volunteers are about to start work, and the Old Time Fiddlers Association, who uses it to partially fund their scholarship programs.

The fun begins at the museum at 11 a.m. Come and enjoy the main house displays, learn the history of the building and its relocation to the present site, and get the latest information on up-coming events as spring is just around the corner.

Musicians will play from noon through 2 p.m. (allowing plenty of time to get home and set for the Super Bowl).

There will be the regular monthly raffle near the end of the day and more chances to purchase raffle tickets for the "Barns, Birds and Quilts" raffle that will celebrate a winner later in the year. Those items will be on display in case you aren’t yet familiar with this particular raffle.

This is a free, family friendly event for all to enjoy, so bring young and old alike. Enjoy the music with hot beverages and tasty treats. Bring your own wine and sip it in Ely Stage Stop wine glasses that will be available for purchase.

Bet you can’t help but clap your hands, tap your toes and maybe get up and dance.

Home to the Lake County Historical Society, the stage stop is located at 9921 State Highway 281 (Soda Bay Road) in Kelseyville, near Clearlake Riviera, just north of Highway 29-Kit's Corner.

Current hours of operation are 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. each Saturday and Sunday. Fiddlers’ Jams occur the first Sunday of every month.

Visit www.elystagestop.com or www.lakecountyhistory.org , check out the stage stop on Facebook at www.facebook.com/elystagestop or call the museum at 707-533-9990.

10minuteplays

NORTH COAST, Calif. – Local writers take note: there’s never been a better opportunity to try your hand at play writing.

Mendocino College is currently seeking short plays by local authors to be produced on campus this spring.

The new semester is under way at the college, and one of the most exciting events of the college’s spring theater season is the annual Festival of New Plays.

Once again, theater professor Reid Edelman will use short plays written by local authors to teach directing and acting students about the joys and challenges of working with new scripts.

These plays will be produced in the college’s annual festival at the end of the semester.

This production of student-written scripts is now in its 12th year, and the event has become a highlight of the college’s annual theater season.

For the past eleven years, Edelman has worked with English instructor and playwright Jody Gehrman to find and develop student-written plays.

Anybody residing in Lake, Sonoma or Mendocino counties is eligible to submit an original play.

“We clearly have an abundance of talented writers in this area,” said Gehrman, “but only a small percentage of them even think about writing a play. Playwrights aren’t born, they’re coerced by people like us to try it once. After seeing their work produced, most become addicted; it’s a tremendous high to sit in a theater and watch your ideas come to life.”

The deadline for submissions is Valentine’s Day, Saturday, Feb. 14.

There are no limitations in terms of theme or content, but small casts (two to five characters) and minimal technical requirements are recommended for optimal chances at production.

Scripts should have a running time of no longer than 10 minutes. Electronic submissions should be saved as PDF files.

For more information or to submit your play, contact Jody Gehrman, 707-468-3150 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

You also can mail your play to 1000 Hensley Creek Road, Ukiah, CA 95482.

hotfrittatas

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Soper Reese Theatre is presenting a special concert celebrating 1920s and 1930s Italian café music and the beautiful sound of the mandolin.

The show starts at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 31, at the theater, 275 S. Main St. in Lakeport. 

Headliners, the Hot Frittatas, deliver a concoction of classical and contemporary roots music from Spain, Italy, France, South America and Mexico, with waltzes, tangos, polkas, musettes, tarantellas and marches all performed with style and vivacity.

This Northern California group, including Lake County local Don Coffin, has played on National Public Radio and written music for “The Bachelor” TV series.

Opening for the Hot Frittatas is the Gravenstein Mandoln Ensemble hailing from the Santa Rosa area.

The group plays a wide variety of mandolin music from the classical repertoire, Brazilian Choro music, Italian Ballo Liscio, Klezmer music and contemporary music.

Tickets are $20 for single seats at a table; $18 center Loge and $15 side Loge.

Tickets are now on sale at www.soperreesetheatre.com ; at the theater box office, 275 S. Main St., Lakeport from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Fridays or up to two hours before the show; and at The Travel Center, 1265 S. Main St., Lakeport, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.

For more information call 707-263-0577.

gravensteinensemble

tedkooserbarn

Kwame Dawes is the editor of Prairie Schooner and one of my colleagues at the University of Nebraska. Had I never had the privilege of getting to know him I still would have loved the following poem, for its clear and matter-of-fact account of a sudden loss.

Coffee Break

It was Christmastime,
the balloons needed blowing,
and so in the evening
we sat together to blow
balloons and tell jokes,
and the cool air off the hills
made me think of coffee,
so I said, “Coffee would be nice,”
and he said, “Yes, coffee
would be nice,” and smiled
as his thin fingers pulled
the balloons from the plastic bags;
so I went for coffee,
and it takes a few minutes
to make the coffee
and I did not know
if he wanted cow’s milk
or condensed milk,
and when I came out
to ask him, he was gone,
just like that, in the time
it took me to think,
cow’s milk or condensed;
the balloons sat lightly
on his still lap.

American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation ( www.poetryfoundation.org ), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright 2013 by Kwame Dawes, “Coffee Break,” from Duppy Conqueror: New and Selected Poems, (Copper Canyon Press, 2013). Poem reprinted by permission of Kwame Dawes and the publisher. Introduction copyright 2015 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. They do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.

AMERICAN SNIPER (Rated R)

As a director, Clint Eastwood’s best work is arguably realized in bringing the story of a true American hero, a former Navy SEAL who devoted his military career to saving the lives of fellow soldiers on the battlefield, to the big screen in “American Sniper.”

The Oscar-nominated film’s screenplay is based upon the runaway bestselling autobiography of Chris Kyle, the U.S. military’s all-time sharpshooter, a man who racked up more than 160 confirmed sniper kills in four tours of duty in the Iraq war following the terror attacks of 9/11.

Portrayed by actor Bradley Cooper, Chris Kyle is first seen positioned with rifle in hand on a rooftop in a small Iraqi town, watching a deserted street as U.S. armed forces approach on foot and in tanks.

Suddenly a woman and young boy appear, looking suspiciously like insurgents ready to detonate an improvised explosive device.

Tension mounts as Chris sizes up the situation, being mindful that the misstep of killing civilians could land him in a federal penitentiary, as his commanding officer cautions him. Still, he can’t risk the lives of his fellow soldiers depending on him to provide safe passage.

This powerful scene sets the tone for a suspenseful film.

Waiting in the hot desert sun allows plenty of time for flashbacks.

After the tense opening, we get a quality glimpse into the formative years of this heroic American soldier, going back to his youth when he learned to shoot with precision and discovered his role in life would be that of the protector, an instinct that carried through his military career.

The fact that Chris volunteered for subsequent tours in war-torn Iraq did not go unnoticed. Chris’ reputation caught the attention of film producers Peter Morgan and Andrew Lazar.

Morgan noted, “We heard about all his accolades as a Navy SEAL and obviously knew what a great patriot he was.”

And yet, the producers learned that there was more to Chris Kyle, raised in rural Texas, than his faithful adherence to the code of “God, Country and Family.”

Sure, Morgan knew of his heroism, but said that “the more we delved, what kept coming across was what a genuinely good person he was … how loved and admired he was by his family, friends and those who served alongside him.”

Normally, I wouldn’t quote film producers extensively, or even at all, but the flavor of what they could see in the titular character is that the faith, belief system and patriotism of Chris Kyle was genuine and grounded in his humble upbringing. All that, and the love of a good woman, was a compelling reason for Chris’ sense of purpose.

During his training, Chris meets his future wife Taya (Sienna Miller). It’s an uneasy courtship at first.

Not surprisingly, Taya is wary of an emotional commitment with a soldier ready to be shipped out for another tour of duty.

But love prevails, and while Chris and Taya start a family, their relationship gets tested by his willingness to keep returning to the battlefield.

Events on the front lines are marked by a number of rough circumstances, including enhanced interrogation techniques that deliver vital intelligence. War is a tough business.

As good as he is, the good soldier Chris is unable to prevent every ambush. There is plenty of pain in the loss of fellow soldiers in the heat of battle.

While Chris and the rest of the military are presented in a favorable light, there is no sense here that “American Sniper” is turning the Iraq War into a celebration of gung-ho American valor that marked most films set in World War II.

On the other hand, it clearly demonstrates that the Americans were up against savage and brutal enemy forces, not unlike what we face now with the vicious, cutthroat ISIS, or if you will ISIL, terrorists.

As Chris moves into his third and fourth tours of duty, the fighting has only gotten more difficult.

Al-Qaeda has placed a bounty on Chris’ head. An elusive enemy by the name of Mustafa (Sammy Sheik) is an Olympic medal-winning sharpshooter whose skill has raised the stakes in a terrifying manhunt.

Things also get messy when a fellow soldier is killed in a raid, and Chris returns home to attend the funeral.

Chris’ loyalty to his buddies and his commitment to service leads to more conflict on the home front. After his final tour, Chris faces a troubling period of adjustment.

In the making of “American Sniper,” Clint Eastwood relies on plenty of intense action to move the story.

One very powerful scene is when Chris and his comrades, during the midst of a sandstorm, appear trapped in an ambush before managing an escape.

But the auteur director puts a lot of stock in the development of personal relationships, whether it involves Chris with his wife or his brothers in arms.

Moreover, he doesn’t shy away from the psychological toll that multiple tours and absence from family have on Chris.

Sadly, “American Sniper’ comes to a tragic ending, and though little is revealed about the valiant soldier’s demise after his retirement, the film’s most moving footage involves the tribute that ordinary Americans paid to a true hero during the funeral procession.

Rolling out wide this month, “American Sniper” is one of the best films of 2014.
  
Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

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