Arts & Life
MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – Middletown Art Center’s Restore project features a writers’ workshop with Clive Matson this Sunday, April 21, from 1 to 5 p.m.
Adults and children age 12 and up of all levels of experience are invited to come to one or monthly writers workshops that will be offered until May 2019.
A long-time Bay Area author and poet, Matson uses his own methodology based on his book “Let the Crazy Child Write!” to allow writers to delve into their unconscious and express that itch or urge that the creative unconscious wants to release.
Matson’s workshops focus on writing and sharing with positive feedback, providing a safe and encouraging environment for writers of all levels of experience.
As Matson expresses it, “We recognize three voices in the writer’s psyche: ‘Editor,’ ‘Writer’ and ‘Crazy Child’ – or creative unconscious. The Editor is the ‘should ‘ voice, as in: you should write everything perfectly the first time, you should make money with your writing, and, you should make no spelling errors. The Writer organizes your writing life, finds blank paper and pens that work, makes time to sit at the computer or go to a coffeehouse with a notebook. The Crazy Child is the urge to write, that itch in your psyche or body that wants to get out into the world. We’ll tell the Editor and Writer to take a walk and let your Crazy Child write whatever it wants.”
To learn more about Clive Matson, check out his Web site at http://matsonpoet.com/.
Please register in advance for this and all Restore classes at www.middletownartcenter.org/restore , email
Class this Sunday is one of two final Restore writing workshops. The last one will be on May 11 with Georgina Marie and Casey Carney. Participants are encouraged to submit work to contribute to MAC’s second chapbook of writings and images at class this Sunday, April 21.
Writers may also read at an Open Mic Spoken Word event on April 19, from 6 to 8 p.m. at Woodland Community College Culinary room, and at a curated reading on June 1 at the re-opening of EcoArts Sculpture Walk 2019 between 5:30 to 8 p.m.
MAC’s first chapbook, “Resilience – a community reframes disaster through art,” is available for purchase at MAC or on the MAC Web site.
The Restore project provides Lake County residents with low-cost art classes and the opportunity to learn or refine skills in a variety of materials and techniques. The project comes to a close in May. Remaining classes in printmaking, and in creation and installation of a collaborative sculpture for Rabbit Hill are coming up. Visit www.middletownartcenter.org/events to learn more.
The Restore project was made possible with support from the California Arts Council, a state agency, with additional support from local organizations, businesses, and individuals.
Visit www.ca.arts.gov to learn more about the California Arts Council’s important work in communities and schools throughout California.
Middletown Art Center is located at 21456 State Highway 175 at the junction of Highway 29. Be a part of the growing arts scene in South Lake County by becoming a MAC member, by participating in Restore, or by attending one of the many arts and cultural events or classes at MAC.
Visit www.middletownartcenter.org or “Like” Middletown Art Center on Facebook to stay up-to-date with what’s happening at MAC.
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- Written by: Middletown Art Center
Ezra Pound commanded America's poets to "Make it new."
And here's a good example. Has there ever been another poem written, and written beautifully, about children playing among laundry drying on a line?
Thomas Reiter, who lives in New Jersey, is a poet whose work I've followed for many years. His most recent book is “Catchment.” This poem appeared in the Tampa Review.
Pinned in Place
A bed sheet hung out to dry
became a screen for shadow animals.
But of all laundry days in the neighborhood
the windy ones were best,
the clothespins like little men riding
lines that tried to buck them off.
One at a time we ran down the aisles
between snapping sheets
that wanted to put us in our place.
Timing them, you faked and cut
like famous halfbacks. But if a sheet
tagged you it put you down, pinned
by the whiteness floating
against a sky washed by the bluing
our mothers added to the wash water.
Could anyone make it through those days
untouched? You waited for
your chance, then jumped up and finished
the course, rising if you fell again.
Later, let the sky darken suddenly
and we'd be sent out to empty the lines.
All up and down the block, kids
running with bed sheets in their arms,
running like firemen rescuing children.
All night those sheets lay draped
over furniture, as though we were leaving
and would not return for a long time.
American Life in Poetry does not accept unsolicited manuscripts. It is made possible by The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2018 by Thomas Reiter, "Pinned in Place," from Tampa Review, (No. 55/56, 2018). Poem reprinted by permission of Thomas Reiter and the publisher. Introduction copyright ©2019 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.
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- Written by: Ted Kooser
SHAZAM (Rated PG-13)
The question that some people may be asking is what does a 14-year-old kid do when he comes into possession of superpowers that could be used for the public good in amateur crime-fighting?
Does he become Batman without a really cool costume? That’s the awkward thing in “Shazam!” when the streetwise young Billy Batson (Asher Angel) utters the magic word and ends up wearing a cape and an outfit of red spandex with a bright yellow lightning bolt on the chest.
But first, how did a foster child looking for the mother that abandoned him years ago and evading the Philadelphia police for pulling pranks come to be an unlikely hero?
Placed in yet another foster home with a caring, loving yet oddball family, Billy’s roommate is the nerdy, sarcastic Freddy (Jack Dylan Glazer), a collector of superhero mementos, who gets bullied at school.
Escaping from bullies that hassled Freddy, Billy rides on a subway that transports him to another realm called the Rock of Eternity where the aging Wizard (Djimon Hounsou) has to find someone pure of heart to take on the mantle of his superpowers.
Aside from Billy’s origin story at the film’s start, we also learn more about another young kid going back to 1974 who was verbally abused by his uncaring father and grew up to have serious daddy issues.
That kid became Dr. Thaddeus Sivana (Mark Strong), a disturbed adult miffed that the Wizard did not choose him to take the powers conferred to Billy aka Shazam. For spite, Sivana decides to release the Seven Deadly Sins on the world.
It will be up to Billy as his alter ego Shazam (Zachary Levi) to do battle with Sivana. First, however, Billy has to adapt to his new-found identity not to mention the discomfort of being an adolescent in an adult’s body.
To his credit and with plenty of good humor, Zachary Levi has to carry off the giddy immaturity of a 14-year-old who delights in making YouTube videos of his exploits to become a media sensation.
Shazam gets a kick out of using the lightning in his fingers to pop soda cans out of a vending machine and randomly charging the cell phones of passersby, or showing up at school to give Freddy some street cred for hanging with a superhero.
Before getting down to the serious business of protecting his community, Shazam messes around with his powers as you might expect from a kid not even close enough in age to buy beer unless he’s wearing his spandex costume.
Not only filled with humor, “Shazam” also has plenty of heart as Billy finds comfort and love in his new extended family that he wants to protect from the evil unleashed by Sivana.
Of course, being in an action film, Shazam is relentlessly stalked by the vengeful Sivana, until the climactic showdown at a Christmas carnival has them fighting an epic battle on the ground and in the skies above Philadelphia.
Lighthearted fun with plenty of good wit, “Shazam!” is a family-friendly fantasy film with ample charm, good action scenes and a positive message about family values. All is well in this DC Universe.
‘ABBY’S’ ON NBC NETWORK
Does a sitcom about a neighborhood bar with regular customers that are apparently unemployed or have no other place to go sound recognizable? “Abby’s” has an air of familiarity that is unmistakable.
During the winter press tour, executive producer Michael Schur said that his team was “acutely aware of the fact that no matter what we did, the show would be compared to ‘Cheers’.” That’s not a bad thing for a series seeking out feel-good camaraderie for its barflies.
The twist for “Abby’s” is that former Marine veteran Abby (Natalie Morales) is operating an unlicensed backyard watering hole at a house she is renting from a lady who has just passed away.
The denizens of her neighborhood sanctuary selling beer and spirits at affordable rates are a motley crew that includes Beth (Jessica Chaffin), a mother escaping from her unruly kids, and James (Leonard Ouzts), the putative bouncer disinclined to any physical activity.
Bar stool regular Fred (Neil Flynn) proudly announces that he hasn’t missed one day at the bar in three years, which prompts Abby to proclaim that he’s the “Cal Ripken of low-grade alcoholism.”
The neighborhood fun almost comes to a screeching halt when straight-laced Bill (Nelson Franklin), a nerdy engineer attuned to legalities, arrives to notify Abby that he inherited the house from his deceased aunt.
Stating the obvious, Bill is shocked that an unpermitted commercial enterprise is operating out of the backyard without any insurance or other safeguards. Bill didn’t even mention the likely zoning violation.
“Abby’s” is rife with standard sitcom humor that often seems predictable but still elicits plenty of chuckles. The cast is delightfully likeable and the interaction of the goofball characters may well merit watching a few episodes to see if the series hits the right groove.
Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.
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- Written by: Tim Riley

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The 1958 comedy, “Auntie Mame,” starring Rosalind Russell, screens at the Soper Reese Theatre on Tuesday, April 23, at 1 and 6 p.m.
Entry to the film is by donation.
In this hilarious comedy Rosalind Russell recreates her standout stage role as the flamboyant, devil-may-care diva who strives to release her young nephew from the stuffy confines of an aristocratic upbringing. Campy, colorful, fabulously funny and nominated for six Oscars.
The movie is sponsored by Kathy Jansen. Not rated. Run time is 2 hours and 23 minutes.
The Soper Reese Theatre is located at 275 S. Main St., Lakeport, 707-263-0577, www.soperreesetheatre.com.
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- Written by: Elizabeth Larson
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