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About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 2024)
Ghosts and ghouls of Eugene-Springfield, the day has come. Don your Halloween costume, it’s time for Samhain. Kick the day off by heading to the all-day Howl-O-Ween Spooktacular at beergarden (777 West 6th Avenue) for specialty cocktails, trick or treating and a special ShelterCare fundraiser dance by Thrill the World Eugene at 6:30 pm. At 7:30 pm, local blues-rock band Goatmouth takes the beergarden stage for the first time. Free afternoon? Skulk over to Oracle Tattoo & Spa (740 Main Street, Springfield) for a guide on Samhain cleansing bath rituals for just $20. You’ll be walked through the history and significance of the Celtic festival and taught how to embrace the day’s themes of renewal and reflection. While you’re in town, take a jaunt over to Springfield City Hall (225 5th Street) for the annual City Hall-o-Ween from 3:30 pm to 5 pm, where you’ll be greeted with trick or treating, free grilled cheese sandwiches from Franz Grilled Cheese Truck and a magic show at 4 pm. Book it back to the old Y (2055 Patterson Street) at 6pm for the Trunk or Treat Block Party , a family event that lets you get to know your neighbor. No registration or fee is required, but you are encouraged to costume yourself and the trunk of your car! Keep the fun going with Shakespeare in the Dark at 6:30 pm at Wayne Morse Family Farm (595 Crest Drive) for a free, spooky performance of Macbeth. The play is rated PG for “pretty grue- some,” and you’re advised to bring flashlights, comfortable shoes and costumes. Be prepared for fake blood, screaming, howling and clashing swords! There are two more parties to attend before the night is through: one at The Hult Center (1 Eugene Center) and one at WOW Hall (291 West 8th Avenue). The Haunted Hult Halloween Party , presented by Eugene Ballet and The Hult Center, runs from 7 pm to 10:30 pm, filling the time with scarily good ’80s retro music performed by Shelley James and Agents of Unity . You won’t be the only one dancing, though, as you’ll be given a sneak peek of Eugene Ballet’s upcoming show, Mowgli: The Jungle Book Ballet, from 7:30 pm to 8 pm. You must be 18+ to attend this haunted house show! Last but certainly not least, WOW Hall’s Halloween Freak Fest features four musical performances from 8 pm to 11 pm. That’s right, you can be back in bed before the witching hour! Three local bands and one special Seattle guest rock WOW Hall while you enjoy the venue’s dance floor, photobooth and costume contest. Who can pick a favorite when groovy Eve ’n the Bad Apples , rage-filled Baby Smooth , indie-rock Mothra and punk-reimagined Beautiful Freaks are all performing on the same night? — Emma J Nelson OCT 31 The Howl-o-Ween Spooktacular is FREE. Oracle Tattoo & Spa’s Samhain Cleansing lesson is $20. City Hall-o- Ween is FREE. YMCA’s Trunk or Treat Block Party is FREE. Shakespeare in the Dark is FREE. The Haunted Hult Halloween Party is $25. WOW Hall’s Halloween Freak Fest is $10. Photo by Sergio Zhukov COMEDY American Graffiti New York comic Caitlin Cook brings her one-woman bathroom stall graffiti- inspired musical to Eugene BY WILL KENNEDY C aitlin Cook studied art history in college, and now, as a touring standup comedian and musician, she spends a lot of time in public restrooms. Through that lens on her surroundings, Cook noticed and took pictures of bathroom stall graffiti some years ago. She then used the jokes, bits of advice and profane illustrations she collected as songwriting prompts. Those songs now form The Writing on the Stall: A One- Woman Bathroom Graffiti Musical. After a successful off- Broadway run, Cook brings The Writing on the Stall to Eugene Wednesday, Oct. 30, at Olsen Run Comedy Club & Lounge. The show also enjoyed sold-out dates in London and the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland. Cook tells Eugene Weekly in a phone call that photo- graphing bathroom stall vandalism “beautifully broke my brain at a time when I was grappling with my relationship with art history. And I started photographing bathroom graffiti everywhere.” A woman’s restroom, she adds, “is a place where we bond and gossip and share secrets, and graffiti is where people get confessional.” support.eugeneweekly.com In the show, Cook plays guitar, narrates and sings about the bathroom stall graffiti (also known as latrina- lia), accompanying herself on acoustic guitar and some- times keyboards on a public restroom set, complete with a toilet on which Cook sometimes sits. Threaded throughout are details from Cook’s life, mixed with observational humor about what the dirty jokes, sketches and doodles in public restrooms, which get projected on a screen, teach us about what makes us similar and how we’re different. On the soundtrack, available to stream online, a song is about women’s restroom graffiti and how it’s often a positive affirmation, while men’s rooms get tagged with phallus drawings. One of which, included in Cook’s show, wears a cowboy hat and spurs. From an art historian’s perspective, “Writing on toilet walls is neither for critical acclaim nor financial reward; it is the purest form of art,” Cook says. Cook says the show has a narrative arc that touches on her coming-of-age story, stressing this is a one-person show and a musical rather than a stand-up comedy perfor- mance. The story also covers the social anxieties and intricacies that we go to the bathroom to hide from and how we’re all connected in these small ways if we allow ourselves to be vulnerable enough, she says. These days, Cook still writes bathroom stall graffiti- inspired songs and jokes based on pictures her fans and followers submit on social media. While doing so, she says she’s learned that “every- one is an artist even if they don’t think they’re making art. Even if they’ve just pulled a pen out of their purse or carved something into a toilet seat with their keys — Photo by Mindy Tucker they’re putting their mark on something. Sometimes, it’s an intricately illustrated phallus in the men’s room. Sometimes, it’s a word of encouragement in the women’s.” She adds, “Overall, something is interesting about why humans feel like they can be vulnerable when they’re anonymous or in a private space like a bathroom.” Caitlin Cook The Writing on the Stall: A One-Woman Bathroom Graffiti Musical is 7 pm Wednesday, Oct. 30, at Olsen Run Comedy Club & Lounge in Eugene, 44 East 7th Avenue; $30, 21-plus. October 24, 2024 21