LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Theatre Co. is hosting open auditions for its next play, “Alice in Pantoland.”
Auditions will be held Wednesday, Nov. 13, at 6 p.m., and Saturday, Nov. 16, at 2 p.m. at the Kelseyville United Methodist Church, 3810 Main St.
Everyone age 10 to adult is encouraged to audition.
Performances of “Alice in Pantoland” will take place at the Upper Lake Middle School Theatre Feb. 28 to March 8.
Panto is a form of interactive theater, certain to give the whole family a rollicking good time.
“Panto takes a new look at old favorites with interaction between the performers and audience. Boo for the villians and cheer for the heroes of our story. This is a family friendly performance and fun for all ages,” said Director Dennis Fay.
Join Alice and her friends in a quest to find out what is happening in Pantoland.
The jam for the Queen’s tea-time tarts has gone missing. Who has stolen the jam? Will they find the culprit? Will the queen have jam for her tarts at tea-time?
All of your favorite characters are here in this wonderfully colorful and imaginative panto.
The Lake County Theatre Co. seeks actors, singers and dancers ages 10 and up for this original twist on “Alice in Wonderland that is sure to delight kids and adults alike.”
For more information, please call Director Dennis Fay at 707-278-9628.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lake County Symphony opens its 42nd season with its Fall Concert at the Soper Reese Theatre at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 17.
The concert includes pieces by multiple composers and a solo performance by a local violinist.
It starts off with a performance by the LCSA Youth Orchestra, led by Conductor Sue Condit, performing “The Birthday Cantata No. 208” by J. S. Bach (Best of Bach), arranged by Jerry Brubaker. Their second selection is “The Moldau” by Bedrich Smetana, with arrangement by Richard Meyer.
The symphony begins its performance with “Radetzky March,” a well-known piece by Johann Strauss Sr (1804-1849). It was written by Strauss to commemorate the victory by Field Marshall Joseph Radetzky von Radetz at the Battle of Custoza.
When it was first played before Austrian officers, they spontaneously clapped and stamped their feet to the chorus. It soon became another unofficial Austrian national anthem – the second one composed by a member of the Strauss family. (The other unofficial anthem was the Blue Danube Waltz written by Johann Strauss Jr.) Its use in numerous promotional jingles and at major sports events makes it a recognizable piece for US audiences as well.
Franz von Suppe (1819-1895), an Austrian composer of light operas and other theater music, wrote the next selection, “The Jolly Robbers Overture,” a lively piece which should keep the audience moving.
Von Suppe studied flute and composed music as a teenager but was discouraged from a musical career by his father. He studied law to please his father, but privately pursued his musical interests, with encouragement from a distant relative, the great Italian opera composer Donizetti. After the death of his father in 1835, von Suppe moved to Vienna, and was able to carve out a successful niche as a composer for the stage by the 1840s.
Nathan Crozier then takes the stage as the violin soloist for Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Concerto for Violin in E Major.” Bach (1685-1750) is considered the most important composer of the Baroque period and the complexities of his compositional style continue to amaze musicians today.
This piece, which was written by Bach while he was in the service of the Prince of Anhalt-Cothen, has been described as being “full of an unconquerable joy of life.”
Following intermission, the final selection of the concert features Franz Joseph Haydn’s “Drum Roll” Symphony No 105 which takes about 30 minutes to perform. Haydn (1732-1809) is considered a leading composer of the Classical Period and has been called the “father of the symphony” and string quartet.
He composed the first well-known works in those genres and composed more than 100 symphonies over the course of his long career.
Born in Vienna, he began his career as a composer at age 16, taking pupils during the day and composing music at night. It was a poverty-stricken existence for awhile, but as his works began to attract attention, he was hired as a composer and conductor with Count Marzin.
Over time, he became more successful and his music established him as a celebrity in all of Europe. The “Drum Roll” Symphony is the next to the last of his “London Symphonies” written during the period when he lived in London.
The Soper Reese Theatre is located at 275 S. Main Street in Lakeport.
General admission is $25 and premium seating is $30. Symphony Association members receive a $5 discount. Tickets may be purchased at the door the day of the concert. For live concerts, the box office opens two hours before show time.
Ted Kooser. Photo credit: UNL Publications and Photography. We've published several poems by Washington, D.C., poet Judith Harris, who writes beautifully about her Jewish heritage. Bruno Bettelheim, writing about fairy tales, remarked on the closeness of the relationships between young children and elderly people, and this poem touches upon that. Harris's most recent book is Night Garden, from Tiger Bark Press.
Grandmother Portrait
Here's a small gray woman in an enormous beaver coat
standing at the end of the curb of a street in Brooklyn, her strapped heel
about to be lowered to asphalt.
I'm strolling beside her carrying a sack,
the sidewalk shaded by cranked out awnings: butchers, bakeries, shoe repair shops
the smell of rotting eggs,
as we climb up to her sixth floor apartment with its plastic slip-covered chairs,
the long chain for a toilet flusher, pocks in the plaster ceiling.
She is my Romanian grandmother who speaks little English,
but taught me to crochet,
now lost among the broken headstones of the old gated Jewish cemetery
we passed by that day after buying our milk and our bread.
In 1991, Jodie Foster’s young FBI trainee Clarice Starling sought the advice of Anthony Hopkins’ imprisoned Hannibal Lecter, a brilliant psychiatrist and serial killer, to apprehend another serial killer in the psychological thriller “Silence of the Lambs.”
FOX network’s new series “Prodigal Son” is arguably inspired by the film that launched the fictional Hannibal Lecter as a pop culture legend probably as well or even better known than authentic mass murderers like Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy and Jeffrey Dahmer.
Unlike Dahmer’s crude method of eating the body parts of many victims, Hannibal Lecter demonstrated his sophisticated approach to cannibalism by noting that he would have a nice Chianti with fava beans and the victim’s liver.
Well, what does this all have to do with “Prodigal Son,” a crime drama about a gifted criminal profiler tormented by his own demons? A lot in terms of connecting the titular character to a fraught relationship with his serial killer father.
Barely minutes into the first episode, Tom Payne’s Malcolm Bright gets fired from his job as an FBI agent. His unorthodox methods, including an assault upon a sadistic police officer, don’t sit well with his superiors.
Malcolm’s unconventional approach to law enforcement is explained by his bosses informing him that he ignored protocol, intimidated those with whom he disagreed and annoyed “every cop from here to Tennessee.”
More hurtful was the assessment that Malcolm demonstrated psychotic inclinations not unlike those of his father, who committed twenty-three murders and is known by the moniker of “The Surgeon” and deemed to be a predatory sociopath.
Understandably, Malcolm changed his last name so as to try not to be known as the son of Martin Whitly (Michael Sheen), a seriously deranged killer that caused Malcolm at the age of ten to cooperate with the local police.
The horror of discovering a trunk in the basement with the partially nude body of a dead young girl has left Malcolm with nightmares that persist to this day, though shifting insights into the ordeal leave room for doubts about what actually happened.
But what is very real and not the subject matter of bad dreams is the relationship that Malcolm forged as a child with NYPD lieutenant Gil Arroyo (Lou Diamond Phillips), who just might be the father figure that Malcolm needs.
Even after being given the boot by the FBI, Malcolm has so much to offer in solving mass murders that he ends up being a consultant to the NYPD, thanks to Lt. Arroyo but very much to the consternation of other police officers.
Afflicted with PTSD and tethered to a daily routine of consuming an assortment of medications, Malcolm cannot escape his routine nightmares focused on the tragic events of his childhood.
More telling of the trauma that troubles Malcolm is the flashback to when his father said, before being taken away by the authorities, “I will always love you because we’re the same.”
While Martin has been locked away in an asylum, Malcolm has not visited his father for ten years, and if his mother Jessica (Bellamy Young) has her way, he never would.
Meanwhile, a string of murders of women in New York City demonstrates a pattern considered the work of a Dr. Whitly copycat and Lt. Arroyo believes that Malcolm could enlist the help of his father to solve the case.
While Gil Arroyo remains grateful that Malcolm once saved his life, two police officers also working the murder case think, and not unreasonably, that the forensic profiler is either a psycho or too much of an oddball for police work.
Detective JT Tarmel (Frank Harts), resentful of the profiler’s presence, is easily annoyed when Malcolm calls him every name that starts with the letter J, but Detective Dani Powell (Aurora Perrineau) shows more sympathy to Malcolm’s personal issues.
Socially awkward and practically devoid of any meaningful personal interactions with others, Malcolm’s best and seemingly only friend is his younger sister Ainsley (Halston Sage), an ambitious TV news reporter pursuing every murder story.
On the other hand, Malcolm’s mother, a successful businessman who suffers from the coping mechanism of having too many alcoholic beverages, is domineering and meddlesome, trying very hard to convince her son that working on murder cases is not good for his mental health.
What’s more, she’s adamant that Malcolm stay away from his father, forthrightly warning “He is a cancer. He will destroy you.” These may be words to the wise, but Malcolm does not heed them.
The crime scenes being investigated by Lt. Arroyo with the help of Malcolm are grisly and disturbing, which may not be as unnerving as when Martin tells his son that “there’s so much more I can teach you about murder.”
The gruesome crime scenes, the oddity of the father-son relationship and Malcolm’s eccentric behavior makes “Prodigal Son” the kind of drama that could be too unconventional for network television to hold up over the long run. Only time will tell if this show works.
Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.
Jean-Louis Trintignant and Anouk Aimee star in the 1966 romance, “A Man and a Woman.” Courtesy photo. LAKEPORT, Calif. – The 1966 romance, “A Man and A Woman,” starring Jean-Louis Trintignant and Anouk Aimee, screens at the Soper Reese Theatre on Tuesday, Nov. 12, at 1 and 6 p.m.
Entry to the film is by donation.
Winner of two Oscars, for Best Foreign Film and for Best Original Screenplay, director Claude Lelouch’s ode to the aching beauty of falling in love is tender, charming, simple and so very French.
It features a musical score by Francis Lai you’ll never forget.
The movie is sponsored by Michael Adams. Not rated, but does have adult themes and some nudity. Run time is 1 hour and 42 minutes.
The film will be shown in French with English subtitles.
The Soper Reese Theatre is located at 275 S. Main St., Lakeport, 707-263-0577, www.soperreesetheatre.com.
Ted Kooser. Photo credit: UNL Publications and Photography. How about a light-footed Irish reel before winter sets in, before the rest of our lives sets in? Here's a poem by Barbara Crooker, who lives in Pennsylvania. Her most recent collection of poems is The Book of Kells from Cascade Books, the winner of the Best Poetry Book of 2018 as judged by Poetry by the Sea.
Reel
Maybe night is about to come calling, but right now the sun is still high in the sky. It's half-past October, the woods are on fire, blue skies stretch all the way to heaven. Of course, we know that winter is coming, its thin winding sheets and its hard narrow bed. But right now, the season's fermented to fullness, so slip into something light, like your skeleton; while these old bones are still working, my darling, let's dance.