BAY STATE BANNER: Boston Entrepreneurs Discuss Challenges, Opportunities

While not applicable to the arts community or Boston’s theatre scene, this article written by Yawu Miller outlines the challenges that seven Boston-area entrepreneurs of color face in opening and running their businesses.

An interesting read, courtesy of the Bay State Banner.  Read the article HERE.

ArtsFwd: Accountability Through Experimentation

What if funders viewed experimentation as mandatory, and organizations were held accountable for being actively engaged in exploratory practices?

The sub-heading of this post by Alison Konecki poses an interesting question, one that she attempts to unpack over the course of the article.  She outlines the inherent challenge arts organizations have in embracing “innovation” in an economic landscape where donors want to see measurable outcomes for their limited resources.

Read the entire article HERE.

KEVIN DEANE PARKER: Minimize Cost, Maximize Art

Company 1’s associate production manager Kevin Parker has himself a blog.

But beyond that, he wrote a highly entertaining and whip-smart post where he talks about theatre production “in terms of industrial engineering.”  Within the article, Parker discusses the fine line he walks as a production manager between helping to achieve art on stage and the costs required to do so.

Very enjoyable, and highly recommendable read can be found at the link HERE.

BOSTON GLOBE: Thanksgiving: Above all, try to be present

C1 playwright Kirsten Greenidge just penned a wonderful opinion piece over at the Boston Globe.  The link to the article can be found HERE, or you can read the piece in its entirety below:

THANKSGIVING IS a peculiar holiday with a somewhat amorphous focal point. How many of us, in front of our friends and family, truly stop and say aloud what we are thankful for? Posting it on Facebook for a month beforehand does not count.

In any case, Thanksgiving, for those who celebrate it, can still be as joyful as a high school band marching past Macy’s — or as anxiety-inducing as driving to Logan to pick up your great-aunt Cora, who could never really tell you apart from your sisters. Uncle Phil always drinks too much, and cousin Pam should drink more, and it’s not going to be the same without Nana this year, so why bother? Where to go, who to invite, what to make? Not long ago at my children’s playground, I talked to a dad whose responsibility it is to bake the pies and cakes. Each year, he says, it scares the hell out of him.

I am the author of a play called “Splendor,” which was produced recently in Boston. It takes place over a few decades of Thanksgivings in a Massachusetts town like the one where I grew up. What draws me to the holiday is how it makes us see the intricacies and intimacies that make up a family. To me, Thanksgiving will always stir memories of ironing napkins for my mother the Wednesday before, and of seeing our counters covered with bags of flour and sugar, cans of cranberry sauce, piles of potatoes and celery stalks — ingredients so plentiful (even when we couldn’t really afford them) that we couldn’t fit them in the cupboard. My favorite part of the meal was dessert, because that’s when the women — my mother, my grandmother, my aunts — would finally relax. That is when I learned to listen, which was an invaluable part of my childhood.

Even if you are somewhat stripped bare emotionally, the holiday is, or can be, a day of repose. This is a luxury absent from our everyday lives. Rarely do we turn off our phones and turn to our friends, our neighbors, our children and say: I see you, I hear you. In this age of constant e-mail and tweeting, our workdays and our free time are not easily distinguishable. Despite the human cost, we are always open for business. Increasingly, that mindset is creeping into Thanksgiving, but not every family suffers equally.

In “Splendor,” the colorful character Gloria’s teenage daughter questions her whereabouts on Thanksgiving Eve. Gloria, a cashier at a grocery store, retorts, “I got the afternoon off, like the rest of regular people the day before Thanksgiving in these United States of America.” To Gloria, who’s used to working, being able to stay home on the eve of a holiday is a luxury afforded to others — presumably those whom our culture deems more deserving.

My husband works in the restaurant business, where holiday shifts are routine; someone has to work them, and it’s usually not the owner. For us, it is dismaying to read about the current trend in retail of opening for business on Thanksgiving, or at midnight the following day. An additional day of sales is paid for in the time lost with family or friends. That additional day is not made possible by a CEO graciously forgoing her turkey dinner so that we may all buy a new flat-screen TV. It is not made possible by a salaried manager choosing to work a little longer, and deciding to make up lost family time in other ways, while we elbow our way through the mall. Instead, these days are made possible by wage earners for whom a holiday shift is, in practice, hardly optional.

In the course of writing “Splendor,” I talked to a lot of people who shared moving and humorous stories about Thanksgiving in their families — recalling the magic the day held for them as children, or looking forward to handing the recipes and family gravy boats to the next generation.

To many of us consumers, that Thanksgiving night shopping trip might feel like the perfect antidote to unbearable family time. But there is something to be said for resisting the urge to shop and choosing to be present with our friends and family, if just for a short while.

Kirsten Greenidge is a Boston-area playwright.

WBUR: Who Should Be The Mayor’s Arts Czar?

During his campaign, mayor-elect of Boston Marty Walsh promised a “cabinet level position in the arts.”  In this enlightening and interesting article appearing on WBUR’s ARTery blog, Ed Siegel and Greg Cook outline some of the figures in Boston’s artistic community who might make a viable candidate for Marty Walsh’s “arts czar.”  The list is populated with artistic and executive directors, artists, activists, and a host of others.  It also outlines each candidates credentials and how they might impact that Boston community.

Read all about their “nominees” over at the ARTERY blog and keep a keen eye on the news to see whether or not Walsh makes good on his campaign promise to appoint such a figure, and whether one of these candidates ends up snagging the job.

Future Boston: Boston’s Neighborhoods

The folks at FutureBoston.com are engaging in a spotlight of some of the city’s neighborhoods.  This series has been great in outlining the history, features, and landmarks that make each of Boston’s neighborhoods unique.

Not all of the neighborhoods have been profiled yet, but those that are…

Beacon Hill

Mission Hill

Jamaica Plain

Roxbury

As more neighborhoods are profiled, I will add them to the list.

NEA Arts Magazine: Finding Common Ground

 

“The theater can raise questions that no other medium can raise in quite the communal way a play does. There are issues about science that very often don’t get expressed and don’t get discussed…. [having] to do with the moral dimensions of our research.  We’re trying to find out what the human conditions behind science are, and that’s, I think, one of the greatest values that we have in the theater.”  -Playwright Alan Brody

This fascinating collaboration is happening right in our back yard, over at MIT.

Two faculty members at MIT have partnered up a pair of local theatre companies to bring scientists and theatre artists into regular conversation with one another.  The Underground Railway Theater and the Nora Theater Company, have partnered up with MIT to form the Catalyst Collaborative at MIT (CC@MIT) in order to create and present plays that deepen public understanding of science and technology.

Paulette Beete at the NEA website has written an article discussing how MIT and some other theatre artists have put these two seemingly disparate disciplines (science and theatre) into conversation with one another.  The entire article can be read HERE.

HOWLROUND: Assessing Theater Education or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Grading

“How do you compare a naturally gifted actor with no work ethic against a hard working but not-so-engaging student on stage?” -Wyckham Avery

In this interesting article over at Howlround.com, a theatre educator discusses some of the challenges that come along with offering assessments in a high school theatre class.  What criteria are used, how heavily is attendance and participation weighted, and other concerns are outlined and discussed.

The full article can be found HERE.

The Guardian: Swedish cinemas take aim at gender bias with Bechdel test rating

Cinema houses in Sweden are taking a stab at gender biases in the films they show by subjecting them to the Bechdel Test.

A small portion of the article…

To get an A rating, a movie must pass the so-called Bechdel test, which means it must have at least two named female characters who talk to each other about something other than a man.

“The entire Lord of the Rings trilogy, all Star Wars movies, The Social Network, Pulp Fiction and all but one of the Harry Potter movies fail this test,” said Ellen Tejle, the director of Bio Rio, an art-house cinema in Stockholm’s trendy Södermalm district.

As C1 kicks off the XX Playlab event this weekend, seeing other creative ways to tackle gender parity is refreshing.

Read the entire Guardian article at the link provided.