•• r .s .. y » "**¿T T v '. '- £ • T w W s fe » a « •U3^ & & 3 & > <■■■ - . < i»w» ¿WMA I m B orii and O bserver »J uly 31, 1996 P age BS e W (Elje |Lîortlanh (lObscruer ENTERTAINMENT World premiere of “ The Darker Face of the Earth 55 t&e 2 (td Hawaiian Melodies The Oregon Historical Society presents I tawaiian music and dance hv the Kanakahi Brothers begin­ ning at noon, 1200 S W Park Ave., 306-5200. Farewell Party To say farewell and help raise funds for the Miracle Theatre’s touring troupe, Teatro M i lagro and their tour through Mexico and the western United States, Miracle hosts a party with salsa lessons, a silent auction, music and dancing, 8 pm, 525 SE Stark St., 236-7253. Kyogen Tonight The 1996 Portland Internation­ al Performance Festival hosts an Kyogen Tonight, an informal per­ form ance by Kyogen com edy workshop students with guest art­ ist Yasushi Maruishi at 8 pm, PSU Lincoln Hall Studio Theater, 1620 SW Park Ave., 725-4862. “The Darker Face o f the Earth’’ is the first full-length play by former U S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove, who developed the piece during a three- week 1994 workshop. This epic dra­ ma, running through Oct. 27, is the final play to join the Shakespeare Festival’s 11 -play season. D ove’s play, set in antebellum South Carolina, tells a story o f love and revenge in the shadow o f sla­ very. In the play, A m alia- a planta­ tion ow ner's daughter who becomes the mistress o f the place - sets out to break the newly purchased Augustus, but finds herself irresistibly drawn to him. The brutal system o f slavery traps them both as they play out their fateful love against the backdrop o f a slave rebellion. “The Darker Face o f the Earth” combines the cal l-and-response form o f the slave narrative with African- based drumming, music and stylized movement. OSF presents “The Darker Face Some people dream in color: oth­ ers in black and white. Lenny Kravitz dreams in music. “ I was irt Amster­ dam,” he recalls. “And it was three in the morning. I heard it all - the mel­ ody, words, everything. I woke up, ran into the bathroom and started singing into this little tape recorder. I hen, I cut it the next day in the next day in the studio." H e’s talking about “ Bullet,” one o f the more incendiary tracks o ff Circus. And while others among his eleven new songs were generated simply through hard work, intuitive experiment or a flash of inspiration - Lenny’s fourth album Open House Sattcictaq t6e 3 t d \ India Festival Political Drama A lejandro Saderm an's film, Knocks at My Door, is a tense political dram a illustrating the struggle between the church, the state and military in contemporary Latin America, 7 & 9 pm, through Aug. 4, Northwest Film Center, 1219 SW Park Ave.. 221-1156. AIDS Project Festivities The Cascade AIDS Project pre­ sents “Salsa-a-Go-Go”, with af­ ternoon festivities includingacon- test for most outrageous costumes, door prizes and contemporary and Latin dancing. Sean Sasser from M TV ’s The Real tForW appears as a special guest, 4 pm, Howell Ter­ ritorial Park on Sauvie Island, 223- 5907, ext.200. Concert Series Cathedral Park’s Blue Heron C oncert Series continues with Johnny Limbo & the Lugnuts, in a pop/rock concert, 6 pm, comer ofN. Edison and Pittsburgh Streets, next to St. John's Bridge, 289-5187. TheatreSports PDX TheatreSports, combining the quick wit o f improvisational comedy with the excitement o f a sporting event, continues its sum­ mer season Sunday nights through Aug. 25, 8 pm. 2522 SE Clinton St., 452-6544. and Tyrone Wilson. The production also features two on-stage drummers, Russ A p p le y a rd and C raig Goodmond. O SF’s involvement with the piece began in 1993, when Story Line Press, the play’s publisher, sent a copy o f the script to White, who directs the indeed qualities as his most explo­ sive. It’s a true music lover’s dream: a dazzling carnival o f rock and funk, ballads and barbed guitar. The sonic charge o f “Rock n’ Roll is Dead” detonates the record. Refin­ ing, Kravitz says, “a riff I came up with in a soundcheck in Japan,” the song attacks, “the giant corporate white- bread bubblegum machine that we're all a part o f ’ and “the clichéd rock n ’ roll lifestyle." Countering the poseurs, Kravitz offers real emotion, genuine passion. The song delivers its message loud and clear; "Be whoever you are: be the person who's inside you." Festival's Play Development Pro­ gram. "OSF is, o f course, first and fore­ most a producer o f classics, with a growing interest in new work," White says. "Darker Face’ has its roots in (ireek drama, but Rata sets the story in the 1840’s, in the antebellum South. Rata evokes big issues with her rich poetry, while telling an involving story. “A development partnership be­ tween this major American poet and ATA seemed natural in order to move her play from the page to the stage,” White continues. "And so began two years o f workshops, readings, and re-writes. Working with Rata has been a phenomenal experience.” In 1994, the Festival received a $ 100,000 grant award for New Amer­ ican Plays from the W. Alton Jones Foundation for the development and proposed production o f “‘The Darker Faceofthe Earth." For its production o f the play. Crossroads Theatre has been awarded a major grant from the Fund for New American Plays, a project ofthe John F. Kennedy Cen­ ter for the Performing Arts, with sup­ port from American Express Com­ pany and in cooperation with the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities. Natalie Cole plans acting role In romance Singer Natalie Cole has taken the first step towards an acting ca­ reer by optioning the rights to the debut novel by a former journalist for People and Essence magazines. "Good Hair,” by Benilde Little, tells the story- o f a young black reporter from modest means who falls in love with an upper-crust Boston surgeon. The romance is strained by the lovers' disparate backgrounds. While exploring the little seen world o f upper class black society, “Good Hair" aims to tap into the publishing and film success ofTer- ry M cM illan's“Waitingto Exhale.” Simon & Schuster has scheduled the book for October release. Cole optioned the book for a mid-six figures, most ofw hich will be paid on the first day o f filming. Sources said she plans to pro­ duce and star in the project even though she does not have a produc­ tion deal at any studio. Theatre season a bagful of fun Portland C enter S tage’s 1996- 1997 season during the fall and win­ ter months marks their ninth year as Portland leading theatre company. Theatre-goers have some great productions to look forward to as this season blends an interesting mix o f classic and contem porary plays, with several special features: The production o f Mtss Julie fea­ tures a new adaptation by Producing Artistic Director Elizabeth Huddle, moving the play to the 1880’s Amer­ ican South. PCS has com m issioned Peter Schickele (PDQ Bach) to create a Dole’s Hollywood Sequel Bob Dole is again preaching fam­ ily values to Hollywood — though not in the same harsh terms he used last year. In a speech at Twentieth Century Fox in Hollywood, Dole said there is a big demand for positive, life-affirming movies. D ole’s tone differed from his April 1995 speech when he condemned the entertain­ ment industry for producing “night­ mares o f depravity drenched in vio­ lence and sex” and accused movie makers o f "marketing images o f evil to American children in a thirst for profit.” This time he praised movies like“Forrest Gump,” ’’Independence Day" and “Apollo 13” and singled out only ’’Striptease” as an example o f bad taste. Blazers Auditions Are you the next Whitney Hous­ ton? Well, even if you aren’t but can sing the national anthem, the Blazers want you for their home games dur­ ing the 1996-97 season. The Blazers will host National anthem. Halftime Talent and Public Address Announcer auditions along Drayton Hall, a plantation house, was built around 1740 on the Ashley River near Charleston, South Carolina. A southern plantation such as this the setting for Rita Dove's revealing play. Lenny Kravitz dreaming up music Portland’s environmental cre­ ative arts group is throwing its annual summer shingdig and open house in celebration o f the publi­ cation o f The Bear Essentiall #7, 5:12 to 11:02 pm, 2516 NW 29th Ave., 242-2330. The India Cultural Association presents India Festival 1996 fea­ turing live music, dance, enter­ tainment and foods from India, starting at 11 am, in PioneerCourt- house Square. o f the Earth" in association with Crossroads Theatre Company (New Brunswick, N.J.), which will amount the play in 1977. Ricardo Khan, the artistic director ofC rossroads Theatre, will direct the Festival’s production. O SF’s produc­ tion also features scenic design by Richard L. Hay, costume design by Karen Lint, lighting design by James Sale, music composed by Olu Dara and c h o re o g ra p h y by D ianne McIntyre. OSF Associate Director/ Play Development Cynthia White serves as dramaturg and assistant to the director. In the play, Ezra Knight plays Augustus, with Elizabeth Norment as Amalia and Thomas Byrd as Hec­ tor. O th e rs in the cast include Michelle Blackmon, Gina Daniels, August Gabriel, BW Gonzalez, Tamu Gray, N adine Griffith, Johanna Jack- son, Kevin Kenerly, Mark Murphey, Paul Vincent O ’Connor, J.P. Phill­ ips, Dennis Robertson, Davon Russell with a Fan Fair at the Rose Quarter Commons on Saturday, August 17 and Sunday, August 18 from 8:30 a m . to 5:00 p.m. Interested applicants can sched­ ule an Anthem/Talent audition time by contacting (503 ) 234-9291. Spaces available for auditions will be limited. new score and songs for The Rivais (co-commission with Chamber Mu­ sic Northwest and the Lincoln Cen- ter Chamber Orchestra Society. Eliz­ abeth Huddle makes lier Portland stage debut as Mrs. Malaprop. A Tuna Christmas is generating a lot o f excitem ent among fans o f Greater Tuna, who can’t wait to re­ visit this small Texas town. A “tuna” food drive and casserole bake-off will add to the holiday w ackiness asso c ia te d w ith this show. Art students exhibit work Pacific Northwest College o f Arts is taking art to the streets. Six display windows on the cor­ ner o f the McCoy Building, South­ west Fifth and Stark, are now the McCoy Gallery featuringjuried art exhibitions from the College. McCoy Gallery is accessible to all passersby and is lighted 24 hours a day. The current exhibition, which will run through the end o f Septem­ ber, will showcase four local art­ ists. Maurice Fykes 111 o f Vancou ver, Wash., is displaying silkscreen prints. Adriana Martinez, a Mult nomah resident, is showing wood cut prints. While Tom Lechner o f South east Portland, is presenting a wood sculpture installation, and Yolanda Baca-Johnson, a Portland resident, is exhibiting sculptures o f stones, sticks and paper mache. All art ists are students in the Bach­ elor o f Fine Arts program at Pacific Northwest College o f Art. Marquis • Boss Mecca • Pelle Pclle • Nappy cz: CZ2 Tl O CQ CZ3 INNERCITY OUTFITTERS Gfr-ia/t Gw-vTratfGe-ar- > C o U X) 3 u _o o a- 3 Q- 4—» o SUMMER SALE SPECTACULAR SUm)RT_MIN()RiTJ _BUSINESS $5.00 O F F all a p p a re l C n» 2006 NE BROADWAY (503) 460-2640 (503)460-2641 * N o C re d it C h e c k * N o H id d e n C o s t Activates Any Pager! 3 2 1 3 N . E. M a rtin L u th e r K in g B lv d . P o rtlan d , O R 9 7 2 1 2 # (5 0 3 )2 8 8 -9 1 8 0 Interstate Firehouse 11223050 G.R.E.A.T. Gang Resistance Education and Training Program "O presents the Neighborhood Vouth Theatre Project o t J C 3“ o o □ < CD -1 on G> / /t r i 3 *N o G im m ic k s in partn ership w ith z-> Pagers Apparel C ell Phones Tennis Shoes Music Galore and Galore Paging Activate any pager for 25 cents! (Previously know as Theatre in Da Hood) Workshop Locations Interstate Firehouse Cultural Center • 5340 N Interstate • 823-2000 Villa De Clara Vista • NE 72nd & Killingsworth • 284-7075/ 249-2061 Rice School/Asian Family Center • 6433 NE Tillamook • 235-9396 Workshops July 8-26 9 :0 0 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Potluck and Performances July 24-26 6 -9 p.m. CO o CZ5 CZ5 Nappy • Pelle Pelle • Boss • Mecca • Marquis B reak fast and Luneli provided Optional afternoon activities available r