Thursday, 01 May 2025

Arts & Life

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Music legend Country Joe McDonald will perform in Lakeport on Saturday, Oct. 17, 2009. Photo by Jim Block.




 


LAKEPORT – Country Joe McDonald, 60s icon and legendary Woodstock performer will hold a special benefit concert for Lake County Radio station KPFZ on the evening of Saturday, Oct. 17, at the Soper-Reese Community Theatre in Lakeport.


McDonald's band, Country Joe and the Fish, recorded more than a dozen hit albums and performed with everyone from the original Grateful Dead to Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix.


In the film “Woodstock,” McDonald is seen shouting “Gimme an F” as tens of thousands echo in response.


In the 40 years since his signature Woodstock performance, McDonald has continued to give concerts and record music as well as to remain involved in peace and social activism.


His recent shows include a tribute to folk singer Woody Guthrie and this year he has toured internationally with the Heroes of Woodstock show along with Jefferson Starship, John Sebastian and others of Woodstock fame.


Tickets for the show are only $25 and are available at Watershed Books in Lakeport, Wild About Books in Clearlake, Java Express in Clearlake, Live Oak Grill in Kelseyville and directly from the show’s producer, Herb Gura at 707-350-1150.


Tickets also may be available at the Soper-Reese box office on the night of the show.


All proceeds from ticket sales go to benefit KPFZ. Lake County’s all volunteer community radio station.


The Soper-Reese Community Theater is located at 275 S. Main St., Lakeport.

LAKEPORT – The Lake County Arts Council's Main Street Gallery is adding a new series of classes titled “Monday Morning Academy.”


The first in this series will be taught by watercolorist Diana Liebe, who has frequently shown her work at the gallery and is currently showing at the cottages in Lucerne.


Beginning as well as intermediate painters are welcome to attend and explore a varied range of watercolor techniques.


Liebe will demonstrate various techniques and provide individual guidance each week and fun and success are guaranteed.


The first class will start on Monday, Oct. 5, will run from at 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and will be ongoing each Monday thereafter.


A list of supplies and recommended places to purchase are available at the Main Street Gallery.


Classes will be $10 per student per session.


Come once, come often, enjoy the camaraderie and experience the fluid movement and expression of this expressive and versatile medium.


For more information and to register for the class, please call the Main Street Gallery at 707-263-1871.


The gallery is located at 325 N. Main St. in Lakeport.

NICE – The Lake County Arts Council invites all members, potential members and guests to attend its annual meeting this month.


The event will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 28, at Tulip Hill Winery, located on Highway 20 and Bartlett Springs Road between Nice and Lucerne.


This is a good opportunity to mingle with other members, get caught up on the past year's events and give input on the group's direction for 2010.


Poet Laureate Mary McMillan will open the meeting and Arty Awards will be presented. A potluck dinner with wine from Tulip Hill and music will follow.


This will be an evening to celebrate the Lake County Arts Council's 28th year of advancing and supporting the arts in Lake County.


Please RSVP to the Main Street Gallery at 707-263-6658.

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THE INVENTION OF LYING (Rated PG-13)


The concept of fabricating alternate realities may have conceivably originated with politicians and lawyers, both usually interchangeable. I say this only because these two professions appear to predate advertising and public relations.


And getting back to the original notion, it seems such a reasonably easy case to make these days about shady political leaders, if you are paying the slightest bit of attention. Thus, it is a revelation to find that dishonesty has, in fact, been created by some loser working in a dead-end job as a documentary filmmaker.


Well, that’s the premise behind “The Invention of Lying,” where British comedian Ricky Gervais, the original egotistical office manager in the BBC series “The Office,” is going through the motions of being the same likable oaf he played most recently in “Ghost Town.”


Here, Gervais’ Mark Bellison labors at Lecture Films as a screenwriter for historical documentaries. His chosen field is the 14th century, and he’s incapable of making the Black Plague anything but depressing. Mark inhabits a world where the concept of lying is unknown (obviously a make-believe place). No one is capable of telling a lie, even a small white one that could avert hurt feelings. In fact, people blurt out all sorts of insulting opinions.


Mark is about to be fired from his job, except that his boss (Jeffrey Tambor) has to screw up the courage to tell him. Meanwhile, his mean-spirited, acerbic secretary (Tina Fey) has no hesitation in expressing her extreme distaste for Mark, as she gleefully anticipates his departure.


Making matters worse is that Mark’s rival, personally and professionally, the obnoxious Brad Kessler (Rob Lowe), is the perfect physical specimen who will interfere with any chance for Mark to find romance with Anna (Jennifer Garner).


In an unlikely blind date, Mark finds himself arriving to pick up the pretty Anna, only to find out that she expresses great doubt how the evening will turn out. At dinner, she frankly tells Mark that he is out of her league, and even the waiter chimes in to agree with her. Anna believes her future is with the tall, handsome type who will be the perfect genetic match to fulfill her child-bearing desires. Apparently, truth in this alternate world leads to a lot of superficial thinking.


Losing his job and facing eviction from his apartment, Mark hits upon the idea of lying in order to solve his problems. At the bank, he insists that he has more money in his account than the computer shows. Armed with a fistful of money because the teller believes him, Mark starts to turn his life around by fibbing his way to fame and fortune. He gains acclaim as a screenwriter by concocting a fanciful documentary about aliens invading the earth during the 14th century. He convinces his depressed neighbor (Jonah Hill) that everything will be OK and to forget suicide.


“The Invention of Lying” works best at originating its comedy when spoofing a world without guile or deception. Even advertising works with certain catchphrases, such as the ad for Pepsi that reads “When They Don’t Have Coke.” A motel bills itself as “a cheap place to have sex with strangers.”


Hitting closer to home for Mark is that his dying mother (Fionnula Flanagan) is at a retirement home which is called “A Sad Place for Homeless Old People.” The story takes a big turn when Mark tells his mother in her waning moments that she is going to a better place where she will live in a mansion.


To soothe his mother’s fear, Mark tells her about the Man in the Sky and the afterlife. Word spreads quickly that Mark is a prophet, and soon he is forced to emerge from his apartment with a set of commandments written on pizza boxes.


All along, the storyline is attempting to work in a romantic angle between Mark and Anna, which is mostly sabotaged by Anna’s insistence on a mate who’s not pudgy and snub-nosed. On the other hand, it veers off into a spoof of organized religion, since Mark is pressed by anxious mobs to explain faith in a higher being.


If you take what you find on YouTube at face value, Ricky Gervais claims to be an atheist, and since he’s half of the writing and directing force behind “The Invention of Lying,” one could assume that his own beliefs (or lack thereof) factor into the movie’s underlying theme.


In any event, this is a comedy that starts strong, mainly because fertile laughs are mined from the inevitable fallout from strict adherence to the truth, regardless of feelings or good sense. But it runs out of gas and peters out to a weak finish. Maybe I should have checked out “Zombieland.”


DVD RELEASE UPDATE


Whenever you mention Murphy’s Law, it usually refers to something that goes wrong. But for the BBC TV series “Murphy’s Law,” now being released on DVD for its first season, everything goes right, particularly for delivering an undercover cop drama starring the award-winning actor James Nesbitt, who became a household name in Britain for his roles in “Waking Ned Devine” and “Cold Feet.”


Nesbitt brings his considerable Irish charm to the role of hardheaded, hard-drinking undercover cop Tommy Murphy.


The tough maverick Irish cop takes on the London crime world, accepting the most dangerous assignments that include drugs, blackmail and murder.


“Murphy’s Law” offers Nesbitt to be as interesting a character to watch as Helen Mirren in “Prime Suspect” or Robbie Coltrane in “Cracker.” Here’s hoping the Brits will keep turning out compelling crime dramas.


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

CLEARLAKE – Second Sunday Cinema's film for October will be “Killer At Large: Why Obesity is America’s Greatest Threat.”


The movie will be shown on Oct. 11.


This high-impact documentary could change your life – or the life of someone you love.


When former US Surgeon General Richard Carmono is asked in the film what the single most pressing issue facing America today is, he responds, “Obesity. Because obesity is a terror within. It is destroying our society from within and unless we do something about it, the magnitude of the dilemma will dwarf 9/11 or any other terrorist event you can point out.”


Here’s another shocker: In 2002 alone, obesity and its related illnesses cost US taxpayers $117 billion. Its cost has only gone up since then. Is that where you want your tax dollars to go? Can our nation afford this kind of monetary hemorrhage?


In one shocking scene, we see a 12-year-old girl get her very first liposuction. We thought that was appalling until we saw how US policy strongly aids and abets the fat crisis with subsidies that lower the price of unhealthy agribusiness corn and soy, while NOT subsidizing healthy vegetables and greens. If you eat that cheap junk food, you’re eating subsidized corn – and almost certainly gaining weight.


How can watching a movie help? Well, a very successful Lake County resident came to Second Sunday Cinema back in November 2008 to watch the film, “Eating,” which is also on the very strong link between diet and health. This person had some serious health issues, but changed their diet and now, 10 months later, is healthy and feels much better. Any film SSC screens provides information. It’s YOU who makes the difference, whether it’s about your health or the state of your nation.


Important extra live feature: Starting at 5:15 p.m., Clearlake resident and long-time vegan chef Lori Patotzka will give a cooking demo. She’ll show how to make two vegan dishes that are quick, easy, low in fat and calories and delicious – and there will be samples. Patotzka will also offer free literature packed with valuable nutritional info and recipes. She offers plant-based cooking classes in Clearlake.


As always, this film is free. As always, our venue is the Clearlake United Methodist Church at 14521 Pearl Ave. in Clearlake (near Mullen). Come this month at 5:15 p.m. for the cooking demo OR at our regular time of 5:30 p.m. for snacks and conversation. At 6 p.m. we'll welcome everyone and then start the film. We hope to see you there!


Call 707-279-2957 for more information.

 


 

LAKEPORT – Watershed Books will host author Richard Martin at a reading and book signing this Friday, Oct. 2, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.


Martin edited and wrote several pieces for “Hos, Hookers, Call Girls, and Rent Boys: Professionals writing on life, love, money, and sex.”


The book, by Martin and David Henry Sterry, recently was the cover story for the New York Times Book Review and has been favorably critiqued in several additional publications.


There will be a lively discussion and good refreshments.


Afterward, continue an artist's appreciation evening as Main Street celebrates new art at the Lake County Arts Council's First Friday Fling at the Main Street Gallery, just a few doors down from Watershed Books, from 5:30 p.m. until 7 p.m.


Watershed Books is located at 305 N. Main St. in Lakeport, telephone 707-263-5787.

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