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Arts & Life

Playwrighting competition in full swing

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Written by: Suna Flores
Published: 07 January 2009
LAKE COUNTY – Well, here we are at the first of the year and you still haven't submitted your original, prize-winning play to the LCTC Playwright contest. Oh, my gosh. You mean you forgot? Well let us remind you again.


Lake County Theatre Co. (LCTC) is sponsoring its biannual playwright festival again this year.


The contest is called “Dreamcatcher” and is currently under way.


All residents of Northern California are encouraged to dust off old manuscripts and create new ones and send them in by snail-mail (c/o Suna Flores, 3012 willow Rd, Kelseyville, 95451) or email visit the LCTC Web site at http://lctc.home.mchsi.com. You will find an application form and the contest rules at the same Web site.


What happens if you win the contest, you may ask. The first thing will be $350 in cash, but, better yet, your play will be performed and you will be invited to be the guest of honor.


LCTC (formerly known as Lake County Repertory Theatre) has sponsored this playwright competition for many years with amazing results and very high quality productions. We are looking forward to this year's offerings with high anticipation.


The final date to submit your play is March 15.


If you have questions, call 279-2595). Hurry! Get started. Don't put it off ... Not again!


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Second Sunday Cinema features 'King Corn' on Jan. 11

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Written by: Suna Flores
Published: 06 January 2009

CLEARLAKE – “King Corn,” Second Sunday Cinema's free documentary film for Jan. 11, is a delightful yet serious examination of how corn, America's native crop, is now threatening America's health and community-based happiness.


Two friends, just graduated from college, set out to understand the relatively new paradigm of American farming: agribusiness. Because corn forms the basis of most everything we eat in this country (as has been discovered through cellular analysis) they focused on this once proud and healthy crop.


Both their great-grandfathers had grown corn in Iowa, so they returned there and convinced a friendly farmer to rent them one acre of his farmland so they could plow, plant, grow out, harvest, sell and then follow the corn they produced through the markets. They discovered that their corn sure ain't their granddaddies' corn.


Today's corn is all but 100-percent genetically modified (GMO) and requires herbicides, pesticides, chemical fertilizers – and robust government subsidies. Since a cousin of theirs makes movies, they brought him along, and the result is this entertaining, informative and inspiring documentary. Inspiring? Yes – inspiring us all to change our diets and improve our health!


Have you noticed the "obesity epidemic" in this country? Many experts blame high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which sweetens virtually all cans of non-diet soda in this country (and infiltrates most processed foods as well).


HFCS is far worse in its effects on the human body than even that old villain, white table sugar. Because HFCS is structurally different from sucrose, it is metabolized differently – resulting in extremely easy weight gain and a higher threat of diabetes, another current epidemic.


At this screening, two local speakers will briefly present info on xylitol and stevia – alternatives to HFCS.


Our young heroes were students of well-known author and Slow-Food advocate Michael Pollan who states: "Food is a powerful metaphor for a great many of the values to which people feel globalization poses a threat, including the distinctiveness of local cultures and identities, the survival of local landscapes and biodiversity."


Imagine for a moment all the benefits of feeding your family organic food produced by local, sustainable farmers proud of the tasty, healthy, corn, carrots, squash and other veggies they grow!


This film earned widespread and enthusiastic praise. The Boston Globe extols "King Corn" as "an enormously entertaining moral socio-economic odyssey through the American Food Industry." The Washington Post found it to be "funny, wise and sad".


As always this Second Sunday Cinema film is free, and as always it will be screened at the Clearlake United Methodist Church at 14521 Pearl Ave. near Mullen in Clearlake.


Doors open at 5:30 p.m. for chatting with neighbors and grabbing seats and snacks. The film will start at 6 p.m.


More information is available at 279-2957.


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Malcolm performs at Soper-Reese Jan. 31

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Written by: Editor
Published: 05 January 2009
LAKEPORT – Scottish singer and songwriter Jim Malcolm will perform on Saturday, Jan. 31, at the Soper-Reese Community Theatre, 275 S. Main St.


The concert starts at 8 p.m.


This concert is a benefit for KPFZ 88.1 Lake County Community Radio.


Tickets, $20 in advance and $25 at the door, are available at Watershed Books, 350 N. Main St. in Lakeport, and Wild About Books, 14290 Olympic Drive in Clearlake, or call 262-0525.


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The joy of 'Despereaux,' a tale brightly told in animation

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Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 03 January 2009

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Despereaux is the movie's hero, a mouse who doesn't follow the rules. Courtesy of Universal Pictures.

 

 

THE TALE OF DESPEREAUX (Rated G)


Not all cute mice belong to the Walt Disney animated universe. Our newest champion is a tiny, brave mouse named Despereaux Tilling, graced with such oversized ears that he should probably be called the Dumbo of Mouseworld.


“The Tale of Despereaux,” based on the best-selling children’s book by Kate DiCamillo, celebrates the virtues of this unique mighty mouse, the most unlikely of valiant heroes who lives in a storybook medieval world that lends itself beautifully to colorful animation.


The story is set in the magical Kingdom of Dor, an inviting place that draws people from around the world. Dor is as renowned for its great soups as France is for its cheese.


This is what appeals to the rat Roscuro (voiced by Dustin Hoffman), who arrives at the kingdom just in time for the annual Royal Soup Day on which Chef Andre (voiced by Kevin Kline) reveals his latest culinary masterpiece.


Alas, by virtue of a series of mishaps, Roscuro lands in a bowl of soup, causing a terrible accident resulting in the death of the Queen. Banished to the filthy sewers of Ratworld, Roscuro longs to return to the place inhabited by humankind.


Meanwhile, over in the thriving society of Mouseworld, a tidy, cozy and friendly place, the brave and virtuous mouse Despereaux (voiced by Matthew Broderick) lacks the required timidity and adherence to conformity that is expected of all mice.


Failing to cower or display fear, Despereaux flouts the traditional ways of Mouseworld, much to the consternation of his parents and teachers. When he spends time in the Royal Library, it is not to eat the books but rather to read the great stories that inspire his imagination. For his enthusiasm to experience life at its fullest, Despereaux is soon banished to the castle dungeon and the world of the rats.


Another story unfolds in the Royal Castle, which since the death of the Queen has turned into a dark and gloomy place. The King, consumed by grief and oblivious to the needs of his kingdom, sits alone in his music room and plays somber tunes on his lute. Princess Pea (Emma Watson) feels loneliness and isolation in the castle, and longs to escape her doldrums.


While the Princess bemoans the burden of her royal birthright, homely servant girl Miggery Sow (Tracey Ullman) dreams of becoming a princess, even though she fails to understand that one must be born into royalty.


“The Tale of Despereaux” devolves into a more complex plot than one would imagine feasible for a family animated entertainment. The story requires the various realms of Mouseworld, the Royal Castle and Ratworld to collide in a giant scheme of treachery and deception.


For one thing, Miggery plots against the princess for personal gain and strikes an alliance with the denizens of the dark underground in the castle dungeon. And so, Princess Pea is kidnapped and delivered to Ratworld, where the fate that awaits her should prove disturbing, if not downright frightening, to small children.

 

 

 

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Despereaux and Princess Pea form an unlikely friendship. Courtesy of Universal Pictures.
 

 

 


Oddly enough, this family entertainment has its share of menace and gloom that could prove unsettling. However, the air of uncertainty and dread sets the stage for Despereaux’s inevitable bravery and heroic rescue efforts on behalf of the Princess.


In the end, the principal characters find redemption and forgiveness. Roscuro reclaims his dream of chivalry and derring-do. Despereaux becomes all that he can be, mustering his courage to become the knight in shining armor that saves the imperiled Princess.


For all its visual beauty and inspired animation, “The Tale of Despereaux” is most beautiful for its earnest exaltation of the timeless virtues of bravery, forgiveness and redemption. It’s a winning message that trumps the cynicism so easily found in popular culture.


DVD RELEASE UPDATE


History is a lot more fun when it is serialized in a Showtime cable series. That’s the case with “The Tudors,” a no-holds-barred look at Henry VIII (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), the promiscuous British monarch whose move to divorce Queen Katherine and marry Anne Boleyn prompted an excommunication by Pope Paul III.


“The Tudors: The Complete Second Season” revisits the turbulent world of the King’s expansive appetite.


Anne’s failure to provide Henry with a male heir sets the wheels in motion for her eventual beheading and sends the King into the arms of Jane Seymour (Anita Briem).


The third season of “The Tudors” returns to Showtime in the spring of 2009, with Joss Stone joining the cast as Henry’s fourth wife, Anne of Cleves.


Meanwhile, I also want to make you aware that one of the all-time best TV detective series is getting its second season released on DVD. “Mannix: The Second Season,” which stars Mike Connors, features all 25 episodes.


In this second season, the tough-talking Joe Mannix has set up his own agency, aided by his loyal secretary Peggy Fair (Gail Fisher), a young widow and mother, whose policeman husband died in the line of duty.


Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.


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  1. A definite maybe for Jim Carrey's 'Yes Man' comedy
  2. Auditions for 17th annual Winter Music Fest coming up
  3. CLPA's Symphony Christmas Concert is Dec. 21

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