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Showing posts with label grows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grows. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

What grows in Brooklyn? A tree and a new theater

NEW YORK (AP) — In a season where little grows in the Northeast, something in Brooklyn is doing just that, foot by foot.

The metal guts of what will be a sleek three-tiered glass box surrounding the Theatre for a New Audience's 299-seat stage have gone up in a former parking lot as part of the city's ambitious plan to create a new $650 million cultural district.

"It's going to be a destination," said Jeffrey Horowitz, the founding artistic director of the company, during a recent tour of the work site in the Fort Greene section of the borough.

When opened in 2013, the $48-million theater will represent a milestone for Theatre for a New Audience and the city: It will be the first new stage designed expressly for Shakespeare and classic drama since 1965, and it will be the first permanent home for the itinerant company.

"We need a place to gather our activities, to set down roots in a community," said Horowitz, who founded the theater company in 1979. "Would you go to a doctor or a lawyer whose office kept changing?"

The construction site is one of several at city theaters this winter, including the building of Signature Theatre Company's new $66 million Frank Gehry-designed home on 42nd Street, a $57 million renovation of New York City Center and a $41 million theater being built on the roof of the Vivian Beaumont Theater at Lincoln Center Theater.

In addition to a 299-seat theater, the 27,500-square-foot Theatre for a New Audience's home will house a 50-seat rehearsal space and a lobby cafe. It will overlook a new public garden plaza and sit along a walking path between BAM's Opera House and Harvey Theater.

The theater will be energy efficient, acoustically isolated from street and subway noises, and offer any director maximum adaptability by allowing all parts of the inside to be modified, a nod to the theater's itinerant past. The new stage, for example, can be switched from thrust, to round, to proscenium.

"We wanted to build a theater that had flexibility. An artist can completely shape the configuration between the audience and the stage. This is actually several theaters in one," said Horowitz. "That idea — of not having a fixed way of doing a classic play or Shakespeare — that's part of the artistic DNA of the theater."

Designed by Hugh Hardy of H3 Hardy Collaboration Architecture, the new theater has a large glass facade, gunmetal gray panels, a 35-foot-tall main stage, a second-floor lobby and a central staircase — a simple form that Horowitz says is appropriate.

"We didn't want some fantastic shape on the outside and then you came in to a rectangle. What we said was, 'Let the outside reflect the inside,'" he says. "It is what it is. There's no hiding."

The Theatre for a New Audience hasn't been waiting around for its new home. It's been busy this winter, co-producing "Cymbeline" with Fiasco Theater at the Barrow Street Theatre, as well as putting on "Fragments" at the Baryshnikov Arts Center, and "Shlemiel the First" at New York University. In February, it unveils "The Broken Heart" — a 1629 tragic-comic gem written by John Ford — and in March "The Taming of the Shrew," both at The Duke on 42nd Street.

Last season, the theater company enjoyed one of its most successful, with four sold-out productions: "Notes From Underground," ''Cymbeline," ''Macbeth" and "The Merchant of Venice," which starred F. Murray Abraham as Shylock and was the theater's first production to have a national tour.

When it finally opens, Julie Taymor, of "The Lion King" and "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" fame, has accepted the theater's invitation to direct the official 2013 inaugural production, another nod to its past. Taymor directed four plays for the troupe, including Carlo Gozzi's "The Green Bird," which moved to Broadway in 2000, and Shakespeare's "The Tempest."

Theodore C. Rogers, chairman of the theater's board of directors, says the company has been thinking about having a bricks-and-mortar location for about 15 years. "We realized we needed a permanent home if we were ever going to be a theater of consequence and of meaning."

Rogers, who likes to visit the construction site virtually every week, said the company had been in enough theater spaces in the past to know what they didn't want. He recalled that one potential site had possibilities, but the search team was wrinkling their noses — a restaurant nearby was emitting a terrible stench. The team also wanted quiet: "We didn't want the subway running through Act 3," he said, laughing.

The shape and design of the building is something the theater has spent a lot of time on. "If we were going to build a theater, we were going to build a theater that built our art, not just enclosed it," said Rogers.

The new site is actually the third place the theater found and each site change cost the company a 14-month delay as plans were resubmitted and red tape handled. Along the way, famed architect Gehry dropped out.

Ground was finally broken on the new site — located on Ashland Place between Lafayette Avenue and Fulton Street — in June 2011. Asked how he will feel when he finally turns on the lights, Horowitz says it will be a mixture of "a tremendous sense of pride, accomplishment and pleasure."

"I do feel that this is going to be here for a long time — way, way after me," he says. "My journey will be finished when I turn the lights on, but the building's journey will go on. And that's an incredible feeling. It's something special."

A part of Horowitz will endure in the foundations of the new building — literally. He has gotten permission to write a line from Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" into the concrete.

The verse speaks of a theater that has, against all odds, finally come home, and of a company and its founder marveling at the strange twists of history: "If this were played upon a stage now," it reads, "I could condemn it as an improbable fiction."

___

Online:

http://www.tfana.org

___

Follow Mark Kennedy on Twitter at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits


View the original article here at Yahoo News!

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Support grows for planned Winehouse addiction foundation (AFP)

LONDON (AFP) – The father of Amy Winehouse on Wednesday won support from a lawmaker for his plan to set up a foundation in the late British soul singer's name for people struggling with drug and alcohol addiction.

Mitch Winehouse revealed plans to establish the foundation on Tuesday at the funeral of his 27-year-old daughter, whose hugely successful music career was often overshadowed by her fight against drink and drug problems.

The Grammy-award winning singer, who shot to stardom with her 2006 album "Back to Black", was found dead at her north London home on Saturday. A cause of death has yet to be established although it is not being viewed as suspicious.

Her family must wait two to four weeks for the results of toxicology tests.

Opposition Labour Party lawmaker Keith Vaz, who chairs a parliamentary committee that held a 2009 inquiry into drug addiction at which Mitch Winehouse testified, on Wednesday offered his support for the proposed foundation.

"Mitch Winehouse gave powerful evidence to the Home Affairs Select Committee during our inquiry into drugs in 2009," said Vaz.

"Drawing on his personal experience, he highlighted the long delay in accessing treatment for those with addiction.

"Two years on we need to revisit this issue to see if anything has improved. I am very happy to help Mitch in any way I can with his important campaign to help rehabilitate those most vulnerable in our society."

Friends and family attended Winehouse's Jewish funeral at Edgwarebury Cemetery in northwest London, where her father delivered a heartbreaking eulogy which ended with the words: "Goodnight, my angel."

He told mourners that his daughter had "conquered her drug dependency".

The singer made little secret of her struggle with drugs and alcohol, famously singing about her refusal to seek treatment in her biggest-selling single "Rehab".

But the problems increasingly took over, and she had to scrap a European comeback tour after stumbling through the opening performance in Belgrade on June 18.

With her beehive hairdo and sultry vocals, Winehouse became an international star with "Back to Black", her second and last album, which won her five Grammy awards.

Former Europe minister Vaz has been in the spotlight this month, with his committee role seeing him spearhead the grilling of key figures in Britain's newspaper phone hacking inquiry.


Yahoo! News

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Swedish king flatly denies improprieties, scandal grows (AFP)

STOCKHOLM (AFP) – Swedish King Carl XVI Gustaf gave a rare interview in an attempt to quash a swelling scandal, flatly rejecting media reports he had visited strip clubs and even had indirect contact with organised crime.

In a long interview with the TT news agency published late Monday, Sweden's head of state denied recent reported claims from a former mafia member, Mille Markovic, that he had pictures in his possession showing the king in a sex club in the same shot as two naked women.

"No, it is impossible that they exist," the king insisted, stressing that "it is also difficult to comment on something one has not seen and no one else has seen either."

The royal court has demanded that public broadcaster TV4, which in a report two weeks ago about the alleged pictures said a journalist had seen them, show the shots to prove there is any substance to the claims.

The TV4 report and a new book about another shady figure from Sweden's underworld alleged friends of the king had been willing to pay large sums of money to block the publication of pictures of the monarch in compromising situations.

One of the king's childhood friends, Ander Lettstroem, admitted in a statement last week he had contacted people involved with organised crime, but insisted it was purely his own initiative and had nothing to do with Carl XVI Gustaf.

In Monday's interview, the king reiterated a previous statement that he had no knowledge of Lettstroem's actions and had nothing to do with his confession.

"That he has been in contact with such people ... is not appropriate. That's something one could wish he had not done, I must say," he said, adding that "I have distanced myself completely from his actions and thereby also from our acquaintanceship."

He admitted the scandal had "of course hurt confidence in me, and even confidence in the monarchy and also Sweden."

"That is something I really regret, but it is something I will fix, and I will work double as hard in the future," he said.

The latest scandal comes just over six months after a tell-all biography of the king hit the bookstands, causing uproar with its descriptions of his participation in wild parties and affairs with young women.

The allegations also come shortly after the royal court announced the king's wife, German-born Queen Silvia, had launched a probe into her father's Nazi past.

When asked about claims in the book he had visited several specific strip clubs, the king on Monday was often on the defensive, responding repeatedly with "No," and "I have no idea."

Following the latest allegations, several polls have shown that a majority of Swedes would like the king to soon abdicate and hand over the throne to Crown Princess Victoria, who has long been far more popular than her father.

The king, who reached the official retirement age of 65 last month, reiterated Monday he has no plans to step aside in favour of his 33-year-old daughter.

"There is a tradition and custom and that is not what is going to happen," he said.


Yahoo! News


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Friday, May 6, 2011

Nigerian hip-hop, long a copy, grows into its own (AP)

LAGOS, Nigeria – Nigeria's most talked-about hip-hop video exhibits all the excesses of its American counterparts — beautiful, scantily clad models, a mansion and a bathtub full of hundred-dollar bills.

But the biggest surprise? America's own Snoop Dogg playing back up to Nigerian star D'banj, embracing him as his nephew and taking a Nigerian passport before leaving the rest of the remixed "Mr. Endowed" to the Yoruba-singing heartthrob.

Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation with 150 million people, long has been a leading cultural influence across the continent. Its low-budget "Nollywood" films can be found everywhere, while its music plays in taxicabs and minibuses far beyond its borders.

Now, however, Nigerian artists who once mainly imitated U.S. hip-hop proudly include African beats and their local languages on their own energetic songs. That combination appeals to both Nigerians, who are now proud of so-called "Naija" music, and to a growing foreign following as well.

"The beauty of music is that you don't need to understand it," female rapper Mo'Cheddah recently told The Associated Press. "Our music is traveling."

Like American hip-hop and pop music, Nigerian hip-hop uses samples, and also borrows from dancehall, house, and even zouk beats. The languages used are mainly Nigerian, with a predominance of Nigerian Pidgin English, as vocalists either sing, rap, or blend a combination of the two. It's is mostly upbeat, feel-good music, and the message usually optimistic. It's hugely popular, represents the youth culture and has become part of the mainstream Nigerian sound.

Satellite television networks like MTV Base, Channel O and Trace that transverse the continent cemented the reputation of Nigerian urban music in Africa. Songs by Nigerian artists like 2Face, P-Square and MI feature prominently at nightclubs in neighboring Ghana and as far away as Uganda and South Africa.

With a growing Nigerian population in the United States, Europe and Asia, the appetite for the tunes has only been growing.

"When I started out in the `90s, I struggled to play Nigerian music, but now I find it difficult to play anything else," Nigerian DJ Jimmy Jatt told the AP after recently returning from a trip to Malaysia.

"People are feeling our sound everywhere," he said. "I try not to be selfish but the moment I move away from our stuff, the party slows down. Music from other countries is also good, but it's just that ours is high energy."

While irresistibly danceable beats and the use of local languages and slang have become defining traits of Nigeria's urban sound, it also carries with it a nationalistic pride sometimes missing in the diverse nation. Home to more than 150 ethnic groups and even more local languages, Nigerians of different origins are still learning to live together 50 years after the West African country gained independence from Britain and some 40 years after the end of a bloody civil war.

Nigeria's best-known artists offer a united identity for a fractured nation. Rappers like Naeto C from the country's Christian southeast borrow words from the Hausa language of the Muslim north and the Yoruba language in the southwest.

"We're representing our country to the fullest," said Mo'Cheddah, the recent winner of the MTV Africa Music Awards' Best Brand New Act award. "We're putting our country on the map on a positive note. It's not just about the bad things, fraud."

It's also catching an international reputation as Nigerians put more of their music online. A French music executive late last year approached Audu Maikori, CEO of the Nigerian record label Chocolate City, to license a song.

"At first I thought, what would a French guy want this? But, that's what social media does," Maikori said. "People can now share. ... The traditional revenue streams have died but there's a whole new audience for your music."

Those new ways to earn money remain incredibly important in Nigeria, a nation awash in pirated movies and music. Pirated CDs remain much easier to come by than original ones hawked in Lagos traffic or hanging in market stalls. Now, artists no longer expect to make profit from albums. At an average price of $1, the records are only meant to promote their act.

Nigeria has had a long musical tradition with artists such as IK Dairo honored by the Queen of England as early as 1963. Afrobeat pioneer Fela Anikulapo-Kuti fought against the injustices of military rule in Nigeria and inspired a Tony Award-winning Broadway show long after his death.

But Nigerian hip-hop is more social than it is political, often addressing the challenges of everyday life while delivering a dose of optimism that Nigerians can overcome them. There's also a strong element of nationalism, as videos make generous use of the Nigerian flag and its green-and-white color scheme.

Now, the new generation too is paving the way with its own musical traditions.

"When you see this, Africa, you know, believe in yourself," D'banj said in a video clip showing him sitting next to Snoop Dogg. "Believe in the future."


Yahoo! News


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Nigerian hip-hop, long a copy, grows into its own (AP)

LAGOS, Nigeria – Nigeria's most talked-about hip-hop video exhibits all the excesses of its American counterparts — beautiful, scantily clad models, a mansion and a bathtub full of hundred-dollar bills.

But the biggest surprise? America's own Snoop Dogg playing back up to Nigerian star D'banj, embracing him as his nephew and taking a Nigerian passport before leaving the rest of the remixed "Mr. Endowed" to the Yoruba-singing heartthrob.

Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation with 150 million people, long has been a leading cultural influence across the continent. Its low-budget "Nollywood" films can be found everywhere, while its music plays in taxicabs and minibuses far beyond its borders.

Now, however, Nigerian artists who once mainly imitated U.S. hip-hop proudly include African beats and their local languages on their own energetic songs. That combination appeals to both Nigerians, who are now proud of so-called "Naija" music, and to a growing foreign following as well.

"The beauty of music is that you don't need to understand it," female rapper Mo'Cheddah recently told The Associated Press. "Our music is traveling."

Like American hip-hop and pop music, Nigerian hip-hop uses samples, and also borrows from dancehall, house, and even zouk beats. The languages used are mainly Nigerian, with a predominance of Nigerian Pidgin English, as vocalists either sing, rap, or blend a combination of the two. It's is mostly upbeat, feel-good music, and the message usually optimistic. It's hugely popular, represents the youth culture and has become part of the mainstream Nigerian sound.

Satellite television networks like MTV Base, Channel O and Trace that transverse the continent cemented the reputation of Nigerian urban music in Africa. Songs by Nigerian artists like 2Face, P-Square and MI feature prominently at nightclubs in neighboring Ghana and as far away as Uganda and South Africa.

With a growing Nigerian population in the United States, Europe and Asia, the appetite for the tunes has only been growing.

"When I started out in the `90s, I struggled to play Nigerian music, but now I find it difficult to play anything else," Nigerian DJ Jimmy Jatt told the AP after recently returning from a trip to Malaysia.

"People are feeling our sound everywhere," he said. "I try not to be selfish but the moment I move away from our stuff, the party slows down. Music from other countries is also good, but it's just that ours is high energy."

While irresistibly danceable beats and the use of local languages and slang have become defining traits of Nigeria's urban sound, it also carries with it a nationalistic pride sometimes missing in the diverse nation. Home to more than 150 ethnic groups and even more local languages, Nigerians of different origins are still learning to live together 50 years after the West African country gained independence from Britain and some 40 years after the end of a bloody civil war.

Nigeria's best-known artists offer a united identity for a fractured nation. Rappers like Naeto C from the country's Christian southeast borrow words from the Hausa language of the Muslim north and the Yoruba language in the southwest.

"We're representing our country to the fullest," said Mo'Cheddah, the recent winner of the MTV Africa Music Awards' Best Brand New Act award. "We're putting our country on the map on a positive note. It's not just about the bad things, fraud."

It's also catching an international reputation as Nigerians put more of their music online. A French music executive late last year approached Audu Maikori, CEO of the Nigerian record label Chocolate City, to license a song.

"At first I thought, what would a French guy want this? But, that's what social media does," Maikori said. "People can now share. ... The traditional revenue streams have died but there's a whole new audience for your music."

Those new ways to earn money remain incredibly important in Nigeria, a nation awash in pirated movies and music. Pirated CDs remain much easier to come by than original ones hawked in Lagos traffic or hanging in market stalls. Now, artists no longer expect to make profit from albums. At an average price of $1, the records are only meant to promote their act.

Nigeria has had a long musical tradition with artists such as IK Dairo honored by the Queen of England as early as 1963. Afrobeat pioneer Fela Anikulapo-Kuti fought against the injustices of military rule in Nigeria and inspired a Tony Award-winning Broadway show long after his death.

But Nigerian hip-hop is more social than it is political, often addressing the challenges of everyday life while delivering a dose of optimism that Nigerians can overcome them. There's also a strong element of nationalism, as videos make generous use of the Nigerian flag and its green-and-white color scheme.

Now, the new generation too is paving the way with its own musical traditions.

"When you see this, Africa, you know, believe in yourself," D'banj said in a video clip showing him sitting next to Snoop Dogg. "Believe in the future."


Yahoo! News


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.