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“Art” streamed at SF Playhouse

By Test Review

“Art” at SF Playhouse

Carol Benet

The SF Playhouse is presenting Yasmina Reza’s ”Art” translated from the French by Christopher Hampton.  It is streamed on-demand through November 7.  This is an unusual project, a filmed version of a fully staged play that is then streamed to an audience.  This could be a game-changer in the world of theater arts, a method devised for the current COVID-19 pandemic when all the performing arts are shut down for safety’s sake.

The production of “Art” was created as any play with actors performing on a stage with a set, costumes,  lights and sound.  This is one of the first stage filming in the country and  the it is completely successful. and enjoyable.  This is one of the best uses of the internet for theatrical performances but then the play with its small cast is perfect and little action where the dialogues are the most important parts. 

“Art” was an immediate hit when it opened in Paris in 1994.  When translated it played in London and on Broadway.  Reza also wrote the hit play “The God of Carnage” and she is a  French novelist and  actress. 

“Art” has three actors, male friends who discuss Serge’s (Johnny Moreno) recent purchase of   a modern painting that is completely white with no figuration what so ever. Mark (Jomar Tagatac), an engineer with no artistic imagination or appreciation, is aghast because his friend paid $200, 000 for it.  Yes Serge is a dermatologist who can afford it but still.  A third friend Yvon (Bobak Bakhtiari) also weighs in on the conversation but he swings back and forth between accepting or denying the worthiness of the purchase.

The three men squabble about the object, the white painting that appears to Serge to have more than just the blank whiteness but in which he sees gradations of subtle colors (like the minimalist works of the time).  The others disagree. They see only a white rectangle. But the conversation goes deeper than the merits or not of the painting.  Mark asks Serge if the purchase made him happy and Mark retorts “Read Seneca”, an ancient author who wrote about happiness. Then their friendships come under inspection.

Yvon has had  many jobs and was once source of amusement for them, a joker.  But now all is changed now that he is soon to be married.  They loved him because he was their eccentric and absurd friend.  The other two could depend on this and this made him enduring to them. His change is hard to take. Yvon  comes late for meeting them to go out to dinner.  He is very agitated because all the step-mothers involved in his marriage (his, hers) want to be included on the invitation to the wedding. He also reveals that he has been talking about his friends with his psychiatrist whom he has been seeing for six years.  They are furious. 

They jab at each other over the merits of the painting and bring up the piece of “motel art” belonging to Yvon but this a sore spot because it was painted by Yvon’s father.  Serge also disparages the mundane landscape of Carcassonne in Mark’s living room.  In moments of verbal crisis Serge not only talks about Seneca but he brings up deconstruction, a literary criticism term bandied around the arts in the time. Mark takes this as an offense saying that Serge is off-standish and condescending with comments like this.  Serge accuses Mark for his smug and snickering insinuations.

They spar on hurts of the past, on personality quirks and they get to a point  of questioning why they are friends in the first place asking each other “what binds them”. They even have .a heated discussion about where they should have dinner, at what restaurant (“not the one with the greasy food”). Even Serge’s inability to stay married comes into the discussion. It becomes a free-for-all and one based on the purchase of a $200,000 minimalist painting that may or may not make Serge happy (read Seneca on this).  

“Art” is a wonderful play, suited to this on stage filming, with a very simple set and only three well-defined  and excellent actors.  Bill English does a brilliant job of direction.   It runs on demand through November 7 and tickets may be purchased at sfplayhouse.org 

Dracula

By Guest Review

I had the opportunity to see “Dracula” at the Sonoma Community Theater last weekend and it was spectacular! I thought I was at an ACT production! Len Handeland was amazing as Dracula and the cast certainly surpassed the expectations of a small community theater. I would highly recommend!

Joanne Maher

DRACULA is one of the BEST PLAYS to hit SONOMA in a LONG TIME!

By Guest Review

I’ve attended MANY plays in Sonoma at Andrews Hall on the Rotary stage, have seen countless plays on Broadway in New York and in San Francisco
at A.C.T. as well as at the Curran. Recently I had the pleasure of attending (several times now!) Silver Moon theatre’s production of DRACULA starring Len Handeland as Count Dracula and directed by Nellie Cravens. Everything from the set (which rumor has it, was built by someone who had built sets for A.C.T. and the San Francisco Opera company) a special effects person who had worked in L.A. with Francis Ford Coppola has elevated what a person would think of as “Community theatre” The acting is spot on, Len Handeland (as Count Dracula) captures the essence of “the King of all Vampires” Evil, diabolical, intense and downright TERRORIFIYING! He is mersmerizing to watch, captures the audience and virtually steals the show! His performance as the Count is hypnotic you might say! The supporting cast, Matt Witthaus as Professor Van Helsing (Count Dracula’s adversary and mortal enemy) plays his character intensely, with such conviction and concentration that it appears Count Dracula has a formidable opponenet in him! North Bay Actor veteran (Dan Monez) who has appeared in MANY North Bay productions (most recently “The Full Monty” & Cabaret and many others in Sonoma and Napa) is brilliant as Dr Seward (who runs the Sanitorium where Renfield, Dracula’s servant is kept) plays his character with elegance and grace. The youthful Michael Hunter (who plays Renfield) is equally as intense and a bit disturbing as the fly eating servant to Dracula. Michael Miller’s performance as the frustrated, concerned, fiance to Lucy Seward, is very convincing and is able to convey his emotions brilliantly! A mention goes out to Susan Lee (Alice the Maid) as well as George Bereschik as the Attendant (at the Seward Sanitorium) lend laughter and a bit of frivolity to an otherwise dark, eerie, terrorifying play! Courtney Bristow as Dracula’s victim and daughter of Dr Seward, plays the victim beautifully, her life force being drained out of her with every visit by her immortal suitor (Dracula) All in all I would give this (as the late Siskel & Ebert used to say) a four thumbs up! Everyone should run, not walk! To see this amazing (professionally) staged production of play writes Hamilton Deane and John Halderston. This is a production that would make Bram Stoker proud!

Byron W Hancock CFP Byron@hancock-partners.com Tel: (415) 987-6111

Dracula Play Creates a Delightful Chill at Sonoma Community Center thru Nov 2

By Guest Review

Nobody can explain why young Lucy Seward is so pale and why the mysterious neighbor, Count Dracula, is so eager to help her. This is the original Dracula play that spawned many other productions and it successfully resists becoming camp. It is compelling in its staging and acting thanks to director Nellie Cravens and is presented by Silver Moon Theatre and the Sonoma Theatre Alliance.
The play is staged in the round, making the audience an intimate witness to the chilling goings-on in the home of Dr. Seward. The talented Len Handeland takes the commanding title role and infuses it with cold passion that grows deeper and more evil throughout the play. Michael Hunter is Renfield, a deliciously creepy fly-eating madman patient of Dr. Seward with his own dark secret. Dan Monez as Dr. Seward and Matt Witthaus as Professor Van Helsing play off each other as sophisticated and intelligent men who discover the evil forces in their midst. Others in the cast have maximized their roles to create a believable (and therefore quite scary) tale just in time for Halloween season. Schubert’s music provides a perfect backdrop. Performances continue through November 2. Tickets: http://www.sonomatheatrealliance.org/shows-events/festival-theatre/dracula/

A “Silver Moon theatre production” in Association with the Sonoma Theatre Alliance, directed by Nellie Cravens, Stage Manager Laura Jovino and starring:

Len Handeland – Count Dracula

Matt Witthaus – Professor Van Helsing

Dan Monez – Dr Seward

Michael Hunter – Renfield (Dracula’s Servant)

Michael Miller – Jonathan Harker

George Bereschik – Attendant

Susan Lee – “Alice” The Maid

Courtney Bristow – Lucy Seward

Photo by Adrian Hyman

Left: Len Handeland as Dracula Right: Matt Witthaus as Professor Van Helsing

Dracula

By Guest Review

This was one of the best performances we have scene…the acting,set design,script,sound ,lighting,costumes & directing…could not have been better…I am not even a fan of this type of play,but boy was I surprised…it goes to show you when it is great…it entertains all!A must see!!!!

deborah@emerywones.com…707-3330083

Marin’s theater scene sets the stage for talent despite lack of funding

By Guest Review

As we enter the initial weeks of the 2014-15 theater season, the state of this beleaguered art form in Marin is good. Not great, but better than might be expected in a small county with a decentralized suburban population and two of the West Coast’s most important cultural hubs, San Francisco and Berkeley (with all that they offer) just a bridge crossing away. The picture might be even brighter if the severe water shortage we’re experiencing were not matched by another drought that’s been around for many years: money. More specifically, the widespread need for long-term, stable financial support for the arts.
It’s common knowledge that anyone brave or foolish enough to become seriously involved in a small nonprofit theater, whether at the professional or community level, is going to be overworked and underpaid. That people keep doing this year after year is one of the wonders of the world, and we who enjoy the results are blessed for it. A thriving arts scene enriches everyone, but when the money springs run dry, those who depend on them may be tempted to give up the daily struggle, and new ventures created by people endowed with creative vision and youthful energy are unable to take root.
With a few notable exceptions, that’s essentially a snapshot of Marin’s current theatrical landscape. In last year’s Fall Arts Preview, I noted that Porchlight Theatre was on the endangered list. Having cancelled its annual summer show in the rustic amphitheater behind Ross Valley Players’ Barn, the company was reportedly regrouping for a return in 2014. It didn’t happen. Lack of funding for required site changes and internal management squabbles sank a valuable cultural resource. It’s the latest in a series, with no replacements in sight.
That leaves us with the following lineup as we enter the 2014-15 season: Two professional companies operating under standard Equity contracts (Marin Shakespeare Company, with three summer productions at Forest Meadows Ampitheatre on the Dominican University campus, and Marin Theatre Company, with six productions during the regular season at their Mill Valley playhouse); two volunteer-run community groups (Ross Valley Players at the Marin Art & Garden Center in Ross, and the Novato Theater Company in its new digs adjacent to Hamilton); and, finally, a pair of professional/community hybrids (the Mountain Play, with one annual production, early summer on Mt. Tam, and Marin Alternative Theater (AlterTheater), presenting a couple of plays yearly in various empty San Rafael storefronts). A trio of non-mainstream participants—tiny Curtain Theater (one summer production in the amphitheatre behind the Mill Valley Library), the College of Marin Drama Department (various student shows on the Kentfield campus), and a festival of short plays called “Fringe of Marin” at Dominican—complete the list.
It might seem like a lot, but it really isn’t. During our “warm” summer months, except for Curtain’s free performances in Old Mill Park, Marin Shakespeare Company’s three productions are the only game in town. During the 10 months from September through June, the heart of the regular season, MTC’s six professionally produced shows are the focus of local attention. The lower-ranked companies have their loyal followings, but it’s hit or miss when it comes to play selection and performance quality. (I should add, however, that the Mountain Play, AlterTheater and RVP frequently offer entertaining fare and they have something going for them that the big boys don’t: bargain-priced tickets!)
Since Novato Theater company hasn’t been on my review schedule recently, I can’t make any judgments about quality, but play selection has been questionable in the past. Under Mark Clark’s leadership, that may be changing. See the “News” sidebar for NTC.
Marin Theatre Company is one of two major exceptions to the financial crunch most of its peers are facing. Its history is a classic example of how adequate funding can create a positive feedback loop. Back in 1984 a group of generous private donors raised several hundred thousand dollars and leveraged it to get grants and loan guarantees from the San Francisco Foundation, which was then administering the Buck Trust. The money raised was used to move the tiny but respected Mill Valley Center for the Performing Arts from the town’s old Golf Clubhouse to a vacant commercial building on Miller Avenue that was purchased and converted into the attractive theater complex that stands there today. Successive waves of other generous donors eventually replaced most of the founders, operations expanded and quality improved. In response, the subscriber list steadily lengthened—to the point that when the Marin Community Foundation (which took control of Buck grants after successful litigation) discontinued direct operational subsidies a few years ago, MTC could comfortably sail ahead under its own power.
While Marin Shakespeare Company has received substantially less contributed support from foundations and individuals than MTC, not having a building to maintain or a large permanent staff has allowed it to put most of its money into productions and outreach to local schools and prisons. That, in turn, has elevated its prominence in the community, attracting subscribers and helping to keep the company on a solid financial footing. Now, the recent receipt of a $1 million gift from an anonymous donor has the potential to transform what has essentially been a low-key mom-and-pop operation under Lesley and Robert Currier into one of Northern California’s top producers of the Shakespeare canon.
As we all know, success tends to build upon success. In the theater world, that means having the right combination of money and talent. One without the other won’t get the job done. Below the top echelon occupied by MTC and MSC, many leaders of second-tier companies that make substantial contributions to Marin’s cultural life, when interviewed for this report, wondered if they can avoid the financial crisis that closed Porchlight and others before it. They said the clear need is for a multitude of dependable revenue sources—from individuals, government, business and, most of all, from the Marin Community Foundation, which in recent years has been directing funding away from the arts to social justice and affordable housing projects.
Wishful thinking? Probably. But a cultural community is like a garden: plant the seeds with care, attract knowledgeable people to tend the plants, nourish them with adequate food and water, and they will reward you with a bountiful harvest. Neglect them and they will die. It’s as simple as that.
Marin Theatre Company 397 Miller Ave., Mill Valley. 415/388-5200, marintheatre.org
News: Now entering his eighth season as artistic director, Jasson Minadakis is watching MTC’s play development program pay off handsomely as two of six scheduled productions this season will be of scripts that were winners of the company’s Sky Cooper New American Play Prize. During the run of The Whale, its author, Sam Hunter, will be on hand for a public presentation of a project now in the workshop stage. Date and place to be announced. Public outreach is expanding with Q&A discussions after most performances and preview discussions of the season’s plays at libraries around the county.
Fall Productions: The Whale (Oct. 2-26), The Complete History of Comedy (abridged) (Nov. 28-Dec. 21)
Marin Shakespeare Company Forest Meadows Amphitheatre, Dominican University, 415/499-4488, marinshakespeare.org
News: Over and above the recent $1 million donation, contributions are at a higher level than previously, which is a welcome vote of confidence. With the support of a grant from the California Arts Council based on the impressive success of their Shakespeare at San Quentin Prison initiative (inmates guided by professionals perform plays for their fellow prisoners and members of the public), MSC is inaugurating a similar program at Solano State Prison in Vacaville. Managing Director Lesley Currier is in charge of a staff that will include interns with a drama therapy background. Discussions are underway with Dominican about facility improvements at Forest Meadows. One high priority item is to upgrade the stage lighting system, which is now over 40 years old.
Fall Productions: Romeo and Juliet and An Ideal Husband (running in repertory through Sept. 28)
Mountain Play Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre, Mt. Tamalpais, 415/383-1100, mountainplay.org
News: The Gala will feature stars from Mountain Play musicals that go back to 2006. The practice of bringing in new directors every year will continue and there may be other staff changes, with the goal being to make the organization “more dynamic,” according to Executive Director Sara Pearson. The $50,000 income shortfall for this year’s production of South Pacific has now been covered through fundraising.
Fall productions: Hooked on Broadway (Gala fundraiser) at the Hoyt Theater, OSHA Marin (Nov. 8) Next summer’s show is Peter Pan.
Antenna Theatre San Rafael, 415/578-2435, antenna-theater.org
News: After a 15-year occupancy, Antenna has had to move its headquarters from Marin Headlands to San Rafael’s Gerstle Park when its lease expired. The special effects-enhanced Magic Bus tours of San Francisco have been drawing more customers, especially among tourists, and a new tour bus experience is about halfway through the design process.
Fall productions: Summer of Love Magic Bus tours continue in San Francisco.
AlterTheater 1333 Fourth St., San Rafael 415/454-2787, altertheater.org
News: Unavailable
Fall productions: TBA
Ross Valley Players Marin Art & Garden Center, Ross, 415/456-9555, rossvalleyplayers.com
News: Last season ran a small deficit, but the good news is that the large rent increase the group originally faced has been reduced to a more manageable level. Chapter 2 and Old Money were the 2013-14 income laggards. Company goals include raising actors’ stipends (currently $100 for the production run) in order to make RVP more attractive to Bay Area talent who live outside Marin. There is also talk of starting an outreach program for school-age children, details of which have not yet been announced. This month RVP is also celebrating its 85th anniversary season, marking it as the oldest, continually operating community theater on the West Coast.
Fall productions: The Fox on the Fairway (Sept. 12-Oct. 12), Jane Austin’s Persuasion (Nov. 14-Dec. 12)
Novato Theater Company 5420 Nave Dr., Novato, 415/883-4498, novatotheatercompany.org
News: After several years of not having a permanent home, NTC is now happily settled into its space in the Hamilton area. Though the interior is still unfinished—audience risers are needed, among other things—there is a palpable sense of energy and vision coming from Mark Clark, its new artistic director/board chair. The recently concluded season saw an improved play schedule that featured Shakespeare’s As You Like It and the off-Broadway musical about a woman with bipolar disorder, Next to Normal. There will be staged readings of a new musical about life among the techies in Silicon Valley Nov. 14-16.
Fall productions: Leading Ladies (through Sept. 14), Avenue Q (Oct. 10-Nov. 9), Inspecting Carol (Nov. 29-Dec. 21)
College of Marin Drama Department Kentfield campus, Sir Francis Drake Blvd., 415/485-9558, marin.edu/departments
News: Drama Department Coordinator Lisa Morse says they are looking to expand their relationship with Kent Middle School, whose students can simply cross College Ave. to see a performance arranged specially for them. Consideration is being given to dropping the requirement that all actors must be enrolled students because it discourages experienced community actors (who often act as mentors for college beginners) from participating.
Fall productions: Little Women (Sept. 25-Oct. 5, Main Stage), The American Dream/The Zoo Story (Nov. 20-Dec. 7, Studio Theatre)
ONE FINAL NOTE: Although it lies a few miles north of the Marin County boundary, Spreckels Theatre Company, performing at the Spreckels Performing Arts Center in Rohnert Park (5409 Snyder Ln., 707/588-3434) is a convenient, low-cost way to view fully staged professional quality productions of Broadway musicals. Next up is Bell Book & Candle, Sept. 19-Oct. 9.
Charles can be reached at cbrousse@att.net.

The Ethereal, Exotic and Erotic in the Yogic Art of India

By Guest Review

The Ethereal, Exotic and Erotic in the Yogic Art of India

By Jenny Lenore Rosenbaum     jennyLenore8@gmail.com

Transcendence, awakening, enlightenment – grand, often intimidating terms that seek to express what is fundamentally ineffable: union with the Divine and the cosmos, which themselves are one. Among the most haunting works in the stunning exhibition, Yoga: The Art of Transformation, at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco (through May 25) is a painting of an indigo-hued Vishnu Vishvarupa (from around 1800). His body girded with a golden robe, his four arms hold the symbols of lotus, scepter, shell and cosmic circle.

The deity’s blazing face and erect body embody and encompasses all of existence. One eye embraces the sun, the other cradles the moon. Hellish snakes and fires are inscribed on his legs while images of heavenly bliss fill his chest. The deity contains within himself all that exists, and his being infuses all – epitomizing the mystical attainment of oneness.

In over 100 works that span more than two millennia – from the 2nd to the 20th centuries — the exhibit reveals how artists of India sought to embody this inexpressible state, the one attained by Gautama Buddha when, after reaching Enlightenment, he defeated the suffering embedded in human existence. At the core, it is extraordinary that artists would be so brazen – or impassioned – to attempt to express, through form itself, what is essentially formless and invisible. Equally amazing is that they accomplished this using such a cornucopia of styles and iconographic elements.

It is intriguing to contrast Islam’s shunning of any human representation of the Divine — forbidden because the Source, all-knowing Allah, transcends such visualization and, in fact, would be defiled by it — with the irrepressible urge, in the Buddhist, Hindu and Jain traditions, to visualize spiritual empowerment in human form.

And it was yoga, in collaboration with meditation, that became the interfused, empowering vehicles for reaching nirvana. They became the exit strategy through which seekers could plot their escape route from the cycles of bodily degradation, mental torment and emotional vulnerability to which humans are prey.

In an article entitled, Eons Before the Yoga Mat Became Trendy, art historian Holland Cotter describes yoga, in its most rarified form, as “a shattering personal revolution.” The exhibit uncovers the myriad ways – both lush and austere – that artists of India managed to embrace such a shattering: the cracking open of the heart to allow the Divine to flood in. It is, indeed, the process of making oneself irresistible to the Divine — the quest that consumed yogis (spiritual evolved beings) and yoginis (female yogis).

The exhibit’s sheer breadth, diversity and complexity are riveting. It traverses far-flung eras and dives into vast facets of Indian culture beyond the spiritual and mystical – including the political, aesthetic and sociological realms. All of this is interwoven with cross-pollinating traditions: Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sufism. Precisely targeting the birth of yoga is elusive even to scholars, but many believe its origins go back 4,000 years. But precision dating fades in importance when one beholds the exhibit’s lavishly illustrated catalogue, illuminating key aspects of yogic art and the tapestry of its cultural context.

The works were assembled from museums and private collections in India, the U.S. and Europe. Originally conceived at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery (of the Smithsonian Institution), curators there approached their counterparts at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, an institution that holds a magnificent treasury of Asian art, considered one of the world’s premier collections of the arts of India, Japan, China, Korea, Thailand, Burma, Cambodia, Indonesia and Java. The show, designed and materialized by Jeffrey Durham, Curator of Himalyan Art at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, and Qamar Adamjee, Associate Curator of Himalyan Art, will complete its run at the Cleveland Museum of Art (through September 7).

On a global level, no other exhibit has ever assembled an aesthetic record of yoga’s genesis, evolution and philosophical underpinnings. Tackling this subject represents nothing less than penetrating the heart of artistic expression in India, the most concentrated spiritual locus on earth. When this realization settles in, it becomes amazing that such an exhibit was not created earlier and that its itinerary includes only three venues.

So passionate has been the diamond-sharp focus of India’s spiritual seekers that their struggle for transformation became seized upon by artists, perhaps yogis themselves? One can only wonder. The spiritual quest, translated through the sensibilities of artists working in diverse media, is manifested in a torrent of masterpieces: sculptures (of both historic and divine yogis), paintings, a 15-foot scroll depicting the chakras (the network of spiritual energy centers within the body), opaque watercolors, ancient manuscripts and Islamic divination texts.

But let’s cut to the chase. Liberation from all that ravages the soul is far too much for most mortals. The knawing reality is that arriving at this state entails an unimaginable level of not simply effort but, more accurately, giftedness — or perhaps it’s “just” an irrepressible spiritual hunger. Those rare few who get there, arriving at the wondrous top of their game, have the ultimate payoff: the go-ahead to merge the drops of their singularity into a sea of sacredness that suffuses everything that is, was and will ever be. Or so the mystics whisper.

Greeting visitors upon entry is Three Aspects of the Absolute (opaque watercolors from an 1823 folio). It eloquently encapsulates what cannot actually be encapsulated: the stages of spiritual unfolding. The first panel, a shimmering field of undifferentiated gold, symbolizing the Absolute, gives way to the next — a Brahman yogi in a lotus position. In the final panel the yogi, in the same pose, has attained awakening amidst the cosmic sea.

As this exhibition abundantly reveals, getting to this apex can be expressed through sculptural figures that are chillingly serene, even austere – a deity standing in perfect equipoise, in imperturbable symmetry. Or, this fruition can be expressed through representations of yogis and yoginis encircled, in sometimes baroque renderings, by snakes, skulls, swords and shields. A demonic entourage seems to hover, suggesting the disquieting facets of the human condition, reminding us of the transient nature of life yet assuring us that death is but a portal to eternity.

Three larger than life size yoginis were reunited in this exhibition for the first time since they first adorned an open-air 10th-century temple. They exude a voluptuousness that, to a Western viewer, might be charged with eroticism. But to a Hindu of that era and later, the erotic dimension is eclipsed by their evocations of abundance, fertility, auspiciousness, and the sacred feminine, in all its aspects.

For the gurus, saints, sages, mystics, seers, deities, prophets and bodhissatvas (those who surrender their own eternal marination in non-duality to stay on earth, guiding suffering mankind), the process could mean diving, head first, immersing the chakras in self-mortifications and austerities – subjecting themselves to torturous heat and freezing, protracted fasting, striding upon nails, hanging from trees. The historic Buddha did it, then abandoned that path when an epiphany revealed the Middle Way – between the extreme of sensual indulgence and profound asceticism (part of the renunciation movement embraced by many yogis.)

Durham, a specialist in esoteric art history and visualization practice, speaks of being surprised to discover, in the course of co-curating the show, that the first visual depictions of asanas (Sanskrit for yogic postures) derived not from Buddhist or Sanskrit writings by Hindus, as scholars would expect, but rather from a text that emerged from the Sufi tradition (the most ancient and mystical strain of Islam). Called the Bahr al-Hayat (“Ocean of Life”), this 16th-century folio gave rise to a delicately rendered series of 10 paintings in the exhibition – adorned with calligraphic Persian script — showing the range of asana postures used by devotees.

Scholars have noticed that the depicted yogi bears a resemblance to Christ, perhaps resulting from the contemporaneous influence of Jesuit missionaries. One might speculate that the artist was drawing an analogy between Indian mystics and mystical elements of Christianity.

Also striking, Durham notes, is the fact that these asanas were not depicted in the folio until a full millennium and a half after the Indian sage, Patanjali, compiled the yoga sutras in the 2nd century A.D. A seminal figure in the yogic tradition, it was his text that systematically set forth the principles and precise means of self-liberation. The sage, considered more of a pragmatist than a mystic, makes clear that practitioners could attain not only clear minds – the fertile soil from which transcendence can blossom – but superhuman capacities such as immortality, the ability to journey to the past, and the capacity to fly.

In the exhibit is a striking Mughal era painting of a yogi soaring through the sky, with a flying princess in close pursuit. But she drops a ring into a pond below to entice the earthly king, cavorting in the water, with whom she is enamored. She straddles two worlds, as did many yogis who were courted by the political elite for their extraordinary powers.

Paradoxes abound in the quest to transcend body and mind: losing oneself in order to find oneself, becoming empty to be full, enduring mortification of the flesh as one avenue to ecstasy. The god Shiva is at once terrifying and soothing-ethereal. A curvaceous yogini offers a gentle smile but she has fangs and delicately holds a skull.

In the Mughal period of the 16th to 18th centuries, emperors, sultans and maharajas – who themselves had spiritual aspirations – held yogis in high esteem as gifted personages who could help them politically, militarily and engender prestige for their courts. This mutual respect and face-to-face contact between the politically powerful and the spiritually evolved was a rare instance of symbiosis between seemingly antithetical sectors. It evokes the role of the samurai in medieval Japan: their powerful ties to the imperial court, the influence of Buddhist philosophy and tea ceremony on samurai culture

During the British colonial period that followed the Mughal emperors, yogis were frequently perceived as barbaric creatures, freaks to be ridiculed. They also satisfied the British appetite for exoticism, an ardor for “the other” living on the far fringes of society. In the 19th-century, meticulously staged sepia studio photographs depicted them in self-mortifying poses, their visages forlorn. These images, suggesting, in more than subtle ways, intentions to humiliate, are a far cry from the august yogic presences that must have enraptured populations in eras past.

The final gallery brings yoga full circle, to its role in contemporary culture –.a potent tool, practiced by an estimated 16 million Americans and an untold number globally. Holistic spirit-mind-body benefits abound. Yoga came to have relevance and applications to everything under the sun — from heightened professional productivity to the unleashing of creative energies, enhanced interpersonal dynamics, sustained emotional balance, rejuvenated sexuality, and capacities to transcend grief, illness and death.

Indeed, in every facet of life, yoga has been promoted as a kind of antidote, par excellence, to the ravages of postmodern culture. Final images of the show are videos of some of yoga’s most revered contemporary practitioners, whose extreme asanas bear a resemblance to Cirque du Soleil contortionists, if somewhat less dionysian.

Having attained an undeniable charisma, yoga today rests solidly in the toolbox of self-help gurus. It has become a revered complement to traditional Western medicine as well as integrative (mind-body-spirit) medicine and modalities linked with the healing arts. Like practitioners from earlier centuries, teachers and students today still seek to unleash the powers of the subtle energetic body that underlies the anatomical body and engenders self-healing capacities. Durham elucidates a key relationship: “Yoga entered western medical discourse by mapping the subtle body onto the anatomical body.”

In the ways it has infiltrated popular culture, one can feel a degradation of yoga from eras past — when Shiva, Vishnu and the yoginis led practitioners on thrilling spiritual odysseys. But yoga remains a transformative art. It is at once diluted yet undiluted. While superficial — in its poignant reincarnations at elite spas and upscale health clubs — its sacred aura persists. If some strands of it are devolving, others are constantly enriched by the race memory of ancient lineages and the mastery of modern practitioners. Yoga’s nectar still seeps into the chakras, rejuvenating celebrants from Bali to Brazil.

Click here to download images from the Yoga exhibition. Also included is the Yoga image caption sheet.

END

The Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, in its inimitable way, offered an elaborate series of events to accompany the exhibition and strengthen its impact: lectures and demonstrations by master yoga teachers, panels by medical researchers and physicians influenced by yoga in their work on integrative medicine, performances by dancers and musicians whose creativity is infused with yogic practices and philosophy. At these events, abundant opportunities exist for the public and school children to interact with all the presenters.

On a daily basis, the Museum’s docents gave illuminating tours of the exhibition, based on three years studying Indian art, in its cultural and spiritual contexts. The rigors of their study included mentoring by Museum curators.

Few museums go to such lengths to transform historic art exhibits into extraordinary opportunities for personal transformation. The benefits are destined to reverberate through the intensely multi-cultural life of San Francisco, the Bay Area and beyond, richly marinating the chakras of bodily and geographic terrain for years to come.

Spreckel’s Theatre Company Produces Another Success!

By Guest Review

“Catch Me If You Can”, another success at Spreckel’s Theatre Company


by Richard Riccardi

“Catch Me If You Can” is the latest production in a current series of high-energy, large scale musicals presented by Spreckels Theatre Company in Rohnert Park. Overall I found it to be a very entertaining and expertly done evening of musical theatre. Zack Howard, as the young Frank Abagnale, delivered a tour de force portrayal of the young swindler and con artist, with timing and delivery far exceeding his young years and experience. David Yen, as the FBI agent Carl Hanratty, reminded me of Barry Morse’s portrayal of Lieutenant Philip Gerard in the old television series “The Fugitive,” ever-chasing, stubborn, and palpably frustrated. Garet Waterhouse and Betsy Glincher, as Frank Abagnale, Sr and Paula Abagnale, delivered memorable and poignant scenes depicting the portrait of the true unhappiness they experienced in their relationship. Kelly Brandeburg, known for her “why-the-heck-aren’t-you-in-New-York?” voice, plays Brenda Strong, the nurse who emerges as Frank Jr’s love interest, and possibly his downfall. Her performance was a lovely rendering of Brenda’s earnestness, naïvete, and sweetness. Brenda’s parents, Carol and Roger Strong played by Pam Koppel and Tim Setzer, hilariously completed the picture of the family duped by Frank Abagnale Jr. Supporting actors, singers and dancers completed the picture to make this show a very congealed and successful ensemble.

Choreography should be at the top of the list of credits for “Catch Me If You Can”. Michella Snider has consistently shown that she is clearly at the top of her game in musical theatre, and this production didn’t disappoint. Dance highlights by the ensemble were clearly the nurses and the PanAm stewardesses! Raucous, uplifting, and lots of gorgeous gams.

Aligning with many of the past productions of the Spreckels Theater Company, “Catch Me If You Can” utilizes a series of projections supporting the set design. These projections in a way reminded me of the early days of Cinerama, a brainchild of Fred Waller and originally produced by Mike Todd, using wide angles and three projectors. Although these are ‘still’ projections, not often moving, they do lend support to stage shows which can financially benefit from minimal scenery. It certainly is fair to say that the overall effect of the projections not only enhanced the show, but combined with it very satisfactorily. I did however find myself occasionally distracted by the projection as a show unto itself (was that a picture of the historic Penn Station in New York City?) and caused a bit of wandering in my concentration. The use of projections certainly isn’t new, and there have been some spectacular ones, to wit, the large projection of Air Force 1 in San Francisco Opera’s production of “Nixon in China” which seemed to envelop the entire stage. Spreckels is a large theater on a City of Rohnert Park budget, so Gene Abravaya has found a brilliant solution to filling the stage without astronomical set-costs.

The musical score for this production, adapted from the non-musical movie of the same name, was light, fun, at times sixties-groovy and supportive of the story line, but I frequently wished for more sound. I heartily applaud Janis Wilson and her band of five, who did an incredibly precise job of supporting the stage, but clearly the score is written for a big band of many more instruments, and certainly would have benefited, not only from the number of instruments it was written for, but for a placement in the pit, where orchestras are designed to play from, for many musical and acoustic reasons. From experience, I know that it takes at least four dozen extra, unpaid hours on the part of the musical director (and the band itself) to reduce a score for 14 instruments down to a group of 6. Janis Wilson deserves a medal!

Kudos to set designers Eddy Hansen and Elizabeth Bazzano for creating clever stage pieces which were artfully integrated with the projections. Pamela Enz’s costume design was period accurate, and at times extremely sexy (my favorites were the nurses outfits, my wife’s favorites were the bright-blue Pan Am stewardesses). The production was directed seamlessly by Gene Abravaya.

“Catch Me If You Can” plays until May 25, 2014. For show schedules and ticket information, please contact the Spreckels box office at (707) 588-3400 or online at www.spreckelsonline.com

Arms and the ManThe Play

By Guest Review

I attended the opening night of Arms and the Man on 3-14-14 at The Barn Theatre of Marin Art and Garden Center Ross Ca. directed by Ms. Chris Cassell. Cassell directed Ross Valley Players in “Night of the Iguana” and shows for S.F. Fringe Festival. The direction for “Arms and the Man” was done quite well and Cassell is a consummate professional.

The play depicted a zany comedy of love and war by playwright and author George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950). Born in Dublin Ireland and educated and worked in London. Shaw was a socialist and his views were unpopular in nationalistic and militaristic London at the time.
Arms and the Man portrays – as written by Shaw, presents a realistic view of war and not glorifying death and eradication of generations of men, families and cultures. There is an attempt at humor some may find amusing, such as hiding an enemy soldier on the heroine’s balcony and under her bed. The war was going on was between Serbia and long time rivals Austro Hungarian empire back at the turn of the eighteenth century. The good guys are supposed to be the Austro Hungarian homeland solders and the bad guys are the Serbian soldiers.

The heroine Ratina, is played by the absolutely beautiful and talented Kate Fox Marcom who hides the Serbian solder, Captain Bluntschli from the enemy or else he would be executed.. However the Serb’s enemy is her homeland’s military and king.. Now really – how many of us today can identify with one of the Austrian – Hungarian wars of the late 1880’s? I certainly can’t.
The cast consisted of seven actors and actresses whose acting skills were quite good. Even the tainted Russian and Serbian accents were almost believable. if not for being somewhat amusing.
Actress Stephanie Saunders Ahberg character (Catherine Petkoff), [The Winslow Boy, The Dresser credits] was notably believable as the protective mother of Ratina.

The other actors Ron Dailey (Major Paul Petkoff), Phillip Goldman as Cap’t Bluntschli had major parts in the play. Other notables did nice supporting roles and acceptable somewhat humorous acting skills.

On balance, if you want to see a somewhat slanted mildly humorous anti war play and you like George Bernard Shaw’s writing and plays – go see Arms and the Man otherwise you can watch Oprah on T.V.

My rating # 3.0 on five point scale.

Robert M. Chandler Events Critic For All Events
e-mail robertforallevents.com

MAME

By Guest Review

Hillbarns Theatre, in Foster City production of MAME, for the most part is very good. Annemarie Martin as MAME SHINES. Her supporting cast is highlighted by the young man playing, Young Patrick. All others in cast are meerly “OK”.