Edward Moore Kennedy

By |2009-08-26T07:50:00-07:00August 26, 2009|Uncategorized|

I slid the flag half-way down its pole before I put it on display this morning.  A small gesture, but I needed to do it. Ted's clarion calls for compassionate public policy have stirred me most of my life.  His clear rhetoric slashed through the technical/political mumbling on vitally important issues from the Vietnam War to health care. He said what I felt, and said it unambiguously and unapologetically. His life reflects the standards that were instilled in me growing up in Massachusetts in the late 1950's and early 1960's.  Ted was a man who inherited his family's imperative to serve [...]

The Music Man

By |2009-08-18T15:57:00-07:00August 18, 2009|osf, plays, Uncategorized|

Ashland, Oregon at the Oregon Shakespeare FestivalMusic Man Book, music, and lyrics by Meredith Wilson Story by Meredith Wilson and Frank Lacey I keep saying that I don’t like musicals. When I walked out of The Music Man grinning, humming, and full of “do you remember when Harold Hill…” comments, I thought I was on an unnatural high.  I was sure that after a day or so, the holes in the melodic fabric would appear, and I would become a happy, jaded nay-sayer again:  “Well, there really is only one song in the whole show, you know.” I assumed that a [...]

Paradise Lost

By |2009-08-16T12:40:00-07:00August 16, 2009|osf, plays, Uncategorized|

Ashland, Oregon at the Oregon Shakespeare FestivalParadise Lost by Clifford Odets Oh, damn! Another performance ranking Production: Good, Play: Awful. I was happily anticipating this Depression Era play directed by the same Libby Appel who resurrected  A View from the Bridge and provided an important and satisfying show last year. That Arthur Miller “period piece” was heartbreakingly current.  Unhappily, this year’s model resonates with 2009 with shared bad economic times, but it clunks down the street alone with Odets’ polemics and immutable characters. The winning philosophical views of life in Paradise are those of an embittered communist-sounding furnace repairman, Mr. Pike played by Mark Murphey, [...]

Don Quixote

By |2009-08-15T11:22:00-07:00August 15, 2009|osf, plays, Uncategorized|

Ashland, Oregon at the Oregon Shakespeare FestivalDon Quixote by Miguel Cervantes Saavedra Word Premiere adaption by Octavio Solis The quest of our aging, would-be knight hero failed to pass a friend’s “So what?” test, but even she enjoyed reasonably much the journey to nowhere.  Her reaction sums up the night. This bright, broad evening was simply fun.  Colorful, meandering, adventure-filled.  Good-spirited, obvious, raucous. Fun. The social context of knights, by-gone chivalry, and 1600’s Spain are not part of my background.  This Don Quixote didn’t bring Cervantes’ story into the 21st Century.  The evening didn’t make universal any of the incidents [...]

Henry VIII

By |2009-08-14T14:25:00-07:00August 14, 2009|osf, plays, Uncategorized|

Ashland, Oregon at the Oregon Shakespeare FestivalHenry VIII by William Shakespeare A better title of this production of the seldom-produced Henry VIII would be The Vilma and Tony Show.  The performances of Vilma Silva (Queen Katherine) and Anthony Heald (Cardinal Wolsey) alone are enough to make this an extremely satisfying evening of theater. This play is looked down on as odd — if not downright “bad”.  The Oregon Shakespeare Festival avoids it, having last put in on 25 years ago in 1984. The audience was littered with people who are seeing Henry VIII to complete their viewing of the Shakespeare [...]

Religious Principles and Health Care

By |2009-08-13T11:29:00-07:00August 13, 2009|Uncategorized|

The national voice of my church is weighing in on on the heated health care hatred being spewed against any attempt to reform the current failed delivery system. I agree: "The first religious principle at stake is compassion. We must be a strong, persistent voice that reminds our nation and our leaders that compassion is central to all major faith traditions," says the President of the Unitarian Universalist Association, Rev. Peter Morales (pictured at right). ..."We are witnessing cynical demagoguery that plays on fear in order to defend privilege." Full Unitarian Universalist statement on health care.

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