Wednesday, 27 November 2024

Arts & Life

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Auditions for the rock opera “Jesus Christ Superstar” are scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 4, and Friday, Nov. 7, from 7 to 9 p.m.

Singers are needed in all voice categories. All roles are open including the chorus, and all roles are open to men and women.

The musical will be staged at the Soper Reese Theatre in Lakeport.

Performance dates are March 20 to 22, March 27 to 29 and April 2 to 4.

Rehearsals will occur on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday with some weekend dates. The full cast is not needed at all rehearsals.

Those wishing to audition should prepare a two minute musical selection from one of the following:

– One of these five songs from Jesus Christ Superstar: “Pilate’s Dream,” “Heaven on Their Minds,” “Gethsemane,” “I Don’t Know How to Love Him” or “Herod’s Song.” Piano accompaniment will be provided.

– A song of choice with auditioner’s own CD or other accompaniment.

For more information on the auditions, contact Linda Guebert, artistic director, 707-279-4272 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

Those wishing to audition are strongly encouraged to attend the “How to Audition” workshop at the Soper Reese Theatre on Saturday, Oct. 25, at 2 p.m.

For more information on the workshop, contact Nick Reid, 707-349-2045, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

The theater is located at 275 S. Main St. in downtown Lakeport.

 

THE NOVEMBER MAN (Rated R)

The fact that Pierce Brosnan portrayed James Bond in several installments of the famous spy thriller franchise in the 1990s makes him a good choice to play a secret agent in the present day who reluctantly comes out of retirement for one final mission.

“The November Man,” in which Brosnan’s Peter Devereaux is a retired CIA agent living peacefully in Lausanne, Switzerland, is based on Bill Granger’s novel “There Are No Spies,” and since the author has penned other novels in the series, maybe this is the start of another spy franchise.

The temptation is clearly evident to say that Brosnan’s CIA agent is a reformulation of James Bond or Jason Bourne.

Yet, it’s a younger man’s game for those well-recognized spies. Here, Brosnan is more like the tough guy Liam Neeson has become since his role in the thrilling “Taken” franchise.

If Pierce Brosnan returns in sequels to “The November Man,” the motto of “Old Guys Rule” may become something more than an expression of wishful thinking on ball caps and T-shirts. By all accounts, much like Liam Neeson, Brosnan has the chops to be ruthless and hard-hitting.

The spy thriller opens in Montenegro in 2008 with Devereaux and his young CIA protégé, agent David Mason (Luke Bracey), involved in protecting the American ambassador from an assassination attempt, which results in the unfortunate death of a young girl as collateral damage.

The action shifts to five years later at a lakefront café in Lausanne, where Devereaux’s carefree existence is interrupted by the arrival of old colleague, John Hanley (Bill Smitrovich), who insists that the retired agent must help extract a woman under deep cover in the Kremlin.

Devereaux’s reasons for rejoining the agency for a dangerous mission is, like many things, not immediately known. But valuable information about a former Russian general now a rising politician who could become the next president presents an imperative.

The Russian in question, Arkady Federov (Lazar Ristovski), is corrupt and dangerous. As an Army general in the Chechnyan conflict, Federov was engaged in serious war crimes and had abducted young girls for human trafficking in sex slavery. The missing Mira Filipova holds very incriminating evidence against Federov.

The mission in Moscow to extract American deep asset Natalia (Mediha Musliovic) goes horribly wrong, and Devereaux ends up in a shootout with a team of CIA agents chasing after him and the Russian secret police trying to stop Natalia.

Devereaux discovers that his former protégé David Mason has unfortunately been ordered to take him out. The man who was once the hunter has now becomes the hunted. Mason is deadly and determined, having learned well from his former mentor.

The resulting cat-and-mouse game between the old and new guard in the spy ranks sets up a good contest. As Devereaux closely trained Mason and shaped into what he is today, both men are evenly matched as they each other’s strengths and weaknesses.

The escalating battle is orchestrated by others in the shadowy ranks of the CIA, including efforts by master manipulator Hanley using highly questionable methods that are overseen by Perry Weinstein (Bill Patton), who has no qualms about using harsh powers of persuasion to spur Mason on in a quest to eliminate Devereaux.

The chase ends up in the Serbian capital of Belgrade, where Devereaux comes into contact with social worker Alice Fournier (Olga Kurylenko, a former Bond girl in “Quantum of Solace”), who not only helps young girls fleeing sexual slavery and human trafficking but may be the key to finding the missing Mira Filipova.

When it becomes apparent that Alice knows too much, her life is in danger, and only Devereaux can protect her.

A ruthless Russian female agent starts to kill anyone looking into Federov’s activities, including a journalist who senses that he’s on track for a big story.

The grizzled veteran spy has to dodge bullets and double-crosses, while the bodies start piling up in this hard-edged, violent thriller at an alarming pace that is only rivaled by serial killing favored by the cheesiest of horror flicks.

Though “The November Man” is somewhat predictable and sometimes lacks coherence, there are key elements of surprise that bring delight.

This is an end-of-summer popcorn action film that, even though it wishes to explore moral quandaries, makes no pretense in the end of its objective of being an entertaining thriller.

Nearing an age to qualify for Social Security, Pierce Brosnan, like many other colleagues of his generation, is still very credible for being the action hero.

Watching him engaged as the conflicted good guy capable of delivering the goods makes “The November Man” a decent pleasure for those who enjoy the spy genre.

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

tedkooserbarn

We’re at the end of the gardening season here on the Great Plains, and the garden described in this poem by Karina Borowicz, who lives in Massachusetts, is familiar to tomato fanciers all across the country.

September Tomatoes

The whiskey stink of rot has settled
in the garden, and a burst of fruit flies rises
when I touch the dying tomato plants.

Still, the claws of tiny yellow blossoms
flail in the air as I pull the vines up by the roots
and toss them in the compost.

It feels cruel. Something in me isn’t ready
to let go of summer so easily. To destroy
what I’ve carefully cultivated all these months.
Those pale flowers might still have time to fruit.

My great-grandmother sang with the girls of her village
as they pulled the flax. Songs so old
and so tied to the season that the very sound
seemed to turn the weather.

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 Karina Borowicz, whose most recent book of poems is Proof (Codhill Press, 2014). Poem first appeared in the journal ECOTONE and is reprinted by permission of Karina Borowicz and the publisher Introduction copyright 2014 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.

tedkooserchair

One of Grant Wood’s earliest paintings is of a pair of old shoes, and it hangs in the art museum in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where Wood grew up.

Here’s a different kind of still life, in words, from Jim Daniels, who lives in Pittsburgh.

The shoes we put on our feet gradually become like the person wearing them.

Work Boots: Still Life

Next to the screen door
work boots dry in the sun.
Salt lines map the leather
and laces droop
like the arms of a new-hire
waiting to punch out.
The shoe hangs open like the sigh
of someone too tired to speak
a mouth that can almost breathe.
A tear in the leather reveals
a shiny steel toe
a glimpse of the promise of safety
the promise of steel and the years to come.

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 reprinted from Show and Tell, Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 2003, courtesy of the University of Wisconsin Press. Copyright 2003 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System. Jim Daniels’ most recent book of poems is Birth Marks, BOA Editions, Ltd., 2013. Introduction copyright 2014 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.

COBB, Calif. – Hoberg’s Spa and Resort returned to life in August with a concert celebrating the 45th anniversary of Woodstock. 

“It was a terrific start to something that’s going to continue for a very long time,” said producer Dan Nelson, “It was exciting to see the crowd having a great time – we got a glimpse of the future this weekend.”

The show, which featured the Heroes of Woodstock – Jefferson Starship, Canned Heat, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Imperial Messenger Service, Country Joe McDonald, and the Grateful Dead’s Tom Constanten – was followed on the next day by a Summer of Love show featuring Elvin Bishop, Lydia Pense and Cold Blood, and It’s a Beautiful Day.

The resort is now gearing up for Cobb Mountain Daze, on Sunday, Sept. 21, when the masters of rock and roll theater, The Tubes, will headline a show that will also include Lee Gallagher and the Hallelujah, Cheating Daylight and Mystic Man Reggae.

No band has ever combined music, parody, satire and excess better than the Tubes, from “White Punks on Dope” to “Don’t Touch Me There.” A Tubes show is entertainment of the highest order, featuring vocalist Fee Waybill, guitarist Roger Steen, and drummer Prairie Prince.

San Francisco-based Lee Gallagher is a powerful vocalist and strong songwriter fronting a storming organ and guitar-driven rock band in the Hallelujah. 

Lake County’s own Cheating Daylight is full of handsome, young and talented players, strong enough to have been nominated for last year’s “Rock Artists of the Year” award at the Los Angeles Music Awards gathering. 

Mystic Man Reggae fuses Calypso, Reggae, Latin, African Highlife and other strands of world music in a way that has made Mystic Man the best-known artist of Haitian descent on the West Coast.

Cobb Mountain Daze will kick off on Saturday with a Tribute Band Day, a tribute bands concert that will delight with a combination of excellent musicianship and nostalgia for the original sounds. 

Escape (Journey Tribute), Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers (ZZ Top Tribute), Fleetwood Masked (Fleetwood Mac Tribute), and Jett Black (Joan Jett Tribute) will make for an extraordinarily entertaining day.

Joining the music on the day’s agenda will be a rock band contest, a wine tasting, a chili cook-off, a new menu of food choices, many vendors, and Hoberg’s historical tent, which will explore the rich history of Hoberg’s and Cobb Mountain.

Doors open at noon.

Tickets for Saturday $20 in advance, $25 at the door. For Sunday, advance tickets cost $29 per person or $35 at the door. Two day passes cost $39 each in advance or $45 at the door.

Tickets can be purchased at www.Ticketfly.com .

For more information visit www.hobergsresort.com or call the Cobb Mountain Concert Series hotline at 866-622-7709.

During the summer television press tour, the CBS network took a hit from several critics for its lack of diversity in new series.

For its fall season, ABC is the flipside of a network’s commitment to casting minorities in prominent roles.

Paul Lee, the head of ABC Entertainment, during a panel discussion in front of the nation’s critics, was naturally asked how the ABC network became a case study in diversity and if this approach reflected a mission statement.

Without missing a beat, Lee informed the group that the network has “a mission statement to reflect America,” which in a way is “not so much diversity as authenticity if you’re reflecting America.”

For added punch of legitimacy, Lee observed that “we went out of way to approach some of the best storytellers.”

Great storytelling is the fail-safe method to launching a successful new series. One has to wonder if that was the network thinking in coming up with “Selfie,” a practice so annoying and narcissistic that a series by the same name is hardly “relatable” or remotely appealing.

Oddly enough, “Selfie,” a putative comedy, relies so much on the premise of “My Fair Lady” that the lead character Eliza Dooley is another version of Eliza Doolittle, while her mentor Henry Higenbottam is a modern day Henry Higgins.

The hook for “Selfie” is as aggravating as the social media phenomenon of the delusional idea that one’s picture must be posted with a frequency greater than that of an old man with an enlarged prostate having to visit the bathroom at recurrent intervals during the night.

In this case, Karen Gillan’s Eliza Dooley, though a successful sales agent in a pharmaceutical company, lacks social graces because her interaction with the world appears to be limited to being “friended” by strangers on Facebook because of her posting of repeated self-portraits.

An unfortunate and highly embarrassing accident that goes viral causes Eliza to seek the help of reluctant co-worker Henry Higenbottam (John Cho), a marketing guru. Eliza solicits Henry to rebrand her image, which needs a lot of work and tries his patience.

One thing to say about “Selfie” is that you can chalk up the starring role of an Asian-American as another major advancement for the cause of diversity.

On the other hand, Las Vegas odds-makers might not rate this show’s chances highly, and John Cho could be off the air before too long.

On the diversity front, the new comedy “black-ish,” a title that could be too clever, shows promise for an affluent African-American family (think modern day “The Cosbys”) which lives in a predominantly white upscale neighborhood. The patriarch, Andre Johnson (Anthony Anderson), insists on holding true to black culture.

The problem in the Johnson family is that one of Andre’s sons, reaching the age of 13, wants to have a bar mitzvah, just like his school buddies.

Andre’s father (Laurence Fishburne) is an amused bystander, while Andre’s wife Rainbow (Tracee Ellis Ross) may not be black enough.

More ethnic variety is found in the new comedy “Cristela,” named after the show’s creator and star Cristela Alonzo, who plays the titular character, now in her sixth year of law school and still far removed from leaving the nest of her traditional Mexican-American family.

On the brink of landing her first big gig as an unpaid intern at a prestigious law firm, Cristela’s pursuit of success is more ambitious than her family thinks is appropriate.

Humor in the workplace seems to turn on her being mistaken as a janitor, while the laughs at home come at the expense of the clash of old culture and a working-class family unaccustomed to modern ideas.

A new drama that looks promising, maybe because of its creator’s pedigree with “Scandal,” is the serial legal drama “How to Get Away With Murder,” starring Viola Davis as Professor Annalise Keating, who gets entangled with four law students in a murder plot.

Brilliant, charismatic and seductive, Professor Keating has no qualms about advising her students to bend the rule of law in her criminal law class. Little do they know that they will have to apply what they learned to real life, living up to the show’s suspenseful name.

Another new dramatic series with great potential is the ambitious “Forever,” the story of New York’s masterful medical examiner Dr. Henry Morgan, a man with a secret who fears exposure.

Ioan Gruffudd is the star, and though he has been around, I have yet to know how to pronounce his name, both given and surname.

Pronunciation matters little, because Gruffudd’s Dr. Morgan is an intriguing man of mystery, whose immortality has lasted for centuries.

Every time he dies, he returns to life from a nearby body of water, completely naked. This is a slight problem considering the proximity of the Hudson River.

Dr. Morgan has only one friend, his confidant Abe (Judd Hirsch), who knows his secret. However, the good doctor’s work has brought him notice from detective Jo Martinez (Alana De La Garza), and as they work together on homicide cases, she becomes curious about who he is.

Each week, a new case and the budding friendship between the medic and the cop will reveal layers of Henry's long and colorful past.

“Forever” may last long enough to unravel plenty of mysteries. Meanwhile, chalk it up to ABC for getting another minority actor in a major role.

I thought “Selfie” was irritating to an extent, and I am finding “Manhattan Love Story” somewhat grating because the idea of a romantic comedy exposing the differences between men and women through unfiltered thoughts is most aggravating in its execution.

Analeigh Taylor’s Dana and Jake McDorman’s Peter meet cute and start dating. The gimmick for “Manhattan Love Story” is that we get to hear the characters’ thoughts as they stare dreamily at each other while sipping a latte or some adult beverage. Apparently, this will be constant.

If you’re thinking this series evokes Woody Allen, you’re not alone.

During the press tour, one critic got a negative response when asking about a reference to Allen’s romantic comedy “Manhattan.”

They may say “no” but I am thinking maybe “yes,” and what’s would be wrong with that, unless, of course, the show is quickly canceled?

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

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