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Ivy
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« Reply #885 on: February 09, 2010, 08:46:38 AM » |
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This will be filmed in Sydney, but as a play, not a film. I mean...I hope you know what I mean.
It's supposed to be a film-version of the play. As a play, yeah, actors on stage etc. Right? And that's a great-great-great news! It won't be the same, by any means. I saw film-versions of theatre-plays and no, it's really not the same. But I don't care. I want it.
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"There was a buzz about Cate even when she was in drama school, there was always just something special about Cate, an excitement, an aura." - Geoffrey Rush "... And as soon as she showed up, birds starting chirping, bunnies started hopping and the sun instantly appeared." - Rick
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deusamait
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« Reply #886 on: February 09, 2010, 11:16:57 AM » |
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But I don't care. I want it.
Same here. 
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Blaze78
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« Reply #887 on: March 03, 2010, 08:10:07 PM » |
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Streetcar: Down and dirty from Down Under Cate Blanchett stars under Liv Ullman’s direction in “Street Car Named Desire”
By Victoria Hofmo Contributing Editor
Placing “Streetcar Named Desire” at BAM’s Harvey Theater left little need for a set designer. It was not so long ago an abandoned theater whose restoration turned it into a once again useable performance space. However, this was done somewhat radically as the proceeding layers were not painstakingly plastered and painted over, but rather incorporated into the restoration. Here history is literally peeled back, revealing what has come before. Its decayed beauty is very much like the French Quarter in New Orleans where this play takes place.
The seating is close, as if you live across the alley from the tenement, whose walls have been peeled away. You are in close proximity to the sounds, smells and intimacies of your neighbors. The tenants take this for granted and the stage direction further blurs the line between the private and public. For instance, I have never been to a play where a character, dressed in their underwear squats over with their butt to the audience. But, this crude gesture is really quite natural behavior for humans who are not on stage, when performing a common task such as picking something up. You do not reposition yourself. Allowing the audience to peer at the actors behaving naturally, as if they are at home, sets the audience up to be voyeurs.
The star of this sold-out engagement is Cate Blanchett (Blanche Dubois) who I had seen perform with this same group, the Sydney Theater Company in the same location, BAM a little over a year ago, when she starred as Hedda Gabler. A Norwegian connection has remained as, she is now being directed by Liv Ulmann in this iconic Tennessee Williams play.
How did this production come about? Ulmann and Blanchett had been working on a project to film “A Doll’s House,” and the necessary funding was never obtained. They decided to do a theater piece instead and pondered through the list of some Scandinavian greats; Strindberg and Ibsen. Then Andrew Upton, Blanchett’s husband and co-artistic directors of the STC, casually suggested “Streetcar Named Desire” and Ulmann was immediately intrigued. Blanche Dubois is a part that Ulmann had always dreamed of playing, so I guess for her to direct this play may be the next best thing.
Ulmann came to understand the play by exploring southern blues music. According to Blanchett in a New York article, “It is Ulmann’s foreignness with the material that makes her interpretation so liberating,” because, she was not wedded to the film version and other southern clichés. In the same interview Blanchette describes Ulmann as a reticent director. This Sydney star appreciates this type of direction because they can convey things by non-verbal means and even admits to “stealing a few things from her director… [such as] letting her hands float dreamily before her in Dubois-ian splendor are Liv’s.”
The direction is wonderful and surprising, as it finds layers in the play that I do not recall form either the movie or other theatrical productions. Blanche goes toe-to-toe with Stanley, and is an equal match or opponent rather than a victim. They are especially evenly matched in their worldliness and glibness, allowing for enjoyable sparring and indicating sexual tension rather than pure hatred. I am surprised by the humor this balance of power uncovers.
Because Blanche and Stanley unveil more depth and nuances, it is a much richer play. One wonders how Ulmann and riveting actor Joel Edgerton (Stanley Kowalsi) would handle the famous Brando scene when Stanley breaks down calling “Stella, Stella.” Here – Stanley cries when he realizes what he has done to his wife while drinking. He breaks down like a baby in a fetal position. It makes for a much more multidimensional and richer play. It also better illustrates why Stella would come back downstairs after the row, since he is now docile.
A stronger Blanche makes her more culpable in the game. Blanche is not flirtatious in the manner of a Southern Belle, as seen in the movie version. She is much more physical in her sexuality. It’s as if she is at war with the juxtaposition between her demure southern lady-like upbringing and her passionate sexuality. In the Kowlaski household her raw desire wins, unlike anything Vivien Leigh had ever done. She flirts physically, in close proximity, sneaks peeks at his physique and shows herself a little too underdressed (in a towel alone) while living with her sister’s husband. In one scene in which Stanley confronts her, she allows him to get so close that he puts his knee between her legs and she will not flinch as they are eye to eye. In another scenario this shot would have lead to passionate lovemaking.
What traumas are motivating Blanche who seems to have an incessant need for male approval? The constant death and dying that she lived with in her childhood home, which triggers an even more poignant moment in her life, the suicide of her young husband, a man she adored. One day she discovered him having a sexual relationship with another man in her own home. She did not immediately react. Shortly after, the three of them went to a dance where she reveals what she has seen and tells him how he disgusts her. After this announcement he runs out to the lake and shoots himself. She has never forgiven herself for this intentional cruelty and hates intentional cruelty in others and Stanley epitomizes what she loathes.
I wondered how this production would deal with the rape scene, since Blanche participates in this dangerous apache dance. It seems almost benign compared to the movie. In drunkenness Stanley and Blanche bicker, become a little physical, Stanley carries her to the bed and then Blanche passes out. Stanley sleeps with her while she is in this condition. That is the crime—she is passive because she is unconscious and unconsenting. After this she has a breakdown.
Dignity remains somewhere deep inside Blanche, even at the end, when she is broken with her hands pinned behind her back. She asks to be released from the matron? She is resigned to her fate, and walks out of the house bare foot, dressed only in a slip. But —there is a trace of Blanche’s dignity. If you have ever dealt with someone who suffers from mental illness they do not entirely disappear. There is still a piece of themselves that shines through and reveals itself.
Her sister, with newborn baby in tow obviously distraught, whispers to her friend, “I couldn’t believe her (Blanche’s story that Stanley raped her) and still go on living with Stanley.” Stella needs to have her own illusion about her husband if she can stand to live with him. All humans do. [We overlook those nagging habits and tensions that develop when we have close quarters and intimacies or we wouldn’t be able to tolerate each other.]
—And once again, Blanche is abandoned by those she loves. So she deliberately depends on the kindness of this new male stranger, her cyclical behavior and destiny complete.
This article was originally published in the Norwegian American Weekly on Jan. 8, 2010.
http://blog.norway.com/2010/03/03/streetcar-down-and-dirty-from-down-under/
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Blaze78
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« Reply #888 on: March 11, 2010, 09:02:45 PM » |
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An excerpt from the New York Times today: Marathons tend to be the toughest ticket to come by, yet they also yield the mathematical impossibility of squaring the number of people who claim to have witnessed great cultural events with the number of seats available.
Almost everyone who’s anyone in the New York theater world, it seemed, said this winter that they had seen Cate Blanchett’s critically acclaimed performance in “A Streetcar Named Desire,” with tickets costing as much as $1,000 in online scalping. But “Streetcar” had only 28 performances in an 874-seat theater, which helped make the production one of the most popular in the history of the Brooklyn Academy of Music. (Peter Brook’s nine-hour “Mahabharata” in 1987 is another candidate.)
Joseph V. Melillo, executive producer of the academy, said there was no way to accommodate everyone who wanted to see “Streetcar.” (Of course plenty got in. There were 24,688 tickets total, of which 19,145 were sold to the public; some of those tickets were for floor cushions.)
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/12/theater/12play.html
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Jude
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« Reply #889 on: March 11, 2010, 11:07:23 PM » |
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cool, nice to read it was a rousing success. So is this eligible for a Tony (sorry for my ignorance I don't know Broadway from Off-Broadway or the rules for eligibility)
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Blaze78
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« Reply #890 on: March 11, 2010, 11:35:59 PM » |
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No, it is not eligible for a Tony because the Brooklyn Academy of Music is not approved by the board as an Off-Broadway theatre.
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Blaze78
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« Reply #892 on: March 12, 2010, 09:51:17 AM » |
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I can't see it cuz I get an error message.  Oh well, I'm sure it was the Australian coverage of her accident? I think they still have it up on youtube.
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deusamait
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« Reply #893 on: March 12, 2010, 12:47:36 PM » |
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I can't see it cuz I get an error message.  Oh well, I'm sure it was the Australian coverage of her accident? I think they still have it up on youtube. Don't worry, honey, the link was wrong.  I've put the right one now. 
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Elizabeth Rex
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« Reply #894 on: March 12, 2010, 12:49:55 PM » |
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Great thanks Mait. 
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 Art work created by TNB
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Blaze78
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« Reply #895 on: March 16, 2010, 09:01:27 PM » |
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Well, this is more Liv related but Streetcar is mentioned: Liv Ullmann is set to direct "The Ghost Brothers of Darkland County," the forthcoming tuner by John Mellencamp and Stephen King, according to the actress-helmer. Ullmann announced her attachment to the project on a radio program in Sweden. There has been no official confirmation of the gig, and the timeline for the project remains up in the air. The musical was originally announced for the 2008-09 season at Alliance Theater in Atlanta but was later postponed indefinitely. Although King's website mentions a September bow for "Ghost Brothers" at the Alliance, a rep for the theater said no official plan to stage the musical has been confirmed. Ullman, who frequently appeared in front of the camera under the direction of Ingmar Bergman, recently helmed the Sydney Theater Company production of "A Streetcar Named Desire." Toplined by Cate Blanchett, that staging had a sellout run at the Brooklyn Academy of Music earlier this season. In January a starry recording of "Ghost Brothers" was announced for a forthcoming release. Produced by T Bone Burnett, the package -- including three CDs and a book -- will feature Kris Kristofferson, Elvis Costello, Roseanne Cash, Neko Case, Sheryl Crow and Mellencamp, among others. Plot of "Ghost Brothers" centers on the legend of a 1957 tragedy that has haunted a small Mississippi town. No release date for the recording has yet been announced. (Gunnar Rehlin in Stockholm contributed to this report.) http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118016529.html?categoryid=15&cs=1&ref=bd_legitI'm so happy to see a little resurgence in Liv's career. She did wonders for this play & I'm sure she'll do a great job with this musical.
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Blaze78
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« Reply #896 on: March 23, 2010, 06:18:16 PM » |
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Okay, I don't want to get my hopes up too high but this just came up: Albee, Jones, Ullman and Others to Take Part in "Masterclass" Series for HBO By Thomas Peter 23 Mar 2010 Tony and Pulitzer Prize winner Edward Albee, Tony winner Bill T. Jones and Tony and Oscar nominee Liv Ullmann will each be seen teaching the talents of tomorrow in "Masterclass," a nine-part documentary series that will air on HBO-TV weekly beginning April 18. Other teaching artists will include Michael Tilson Thomas, Placido Domingo, Jacques d'Amboise, Frank Gehry, Oliafur Eliasson and Julian Schnabel. They will be seen working with talented high-school students in the series, "sharing their arts and their life experience with young people representing the best of a new generation of talent in America," according to press notes. Ullmann's episode, which will air April 25, will show her coaching students through scenes from Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire. Ullmann will also be seen directing Cate Blanchett in the recent production of the play, which was seen at the Brooklyn Academy of Music after runs at the Sydney Theater Company in Australia and the Kennedy Center in Washington. Future episodes will show Jones instructing a choreographer, three dancers and two actors to create an original piece in three days, and Albee offering frank insights to playwrights, screenwriters and poets. The students featured in the series are members of YoungArts, the major program of the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts, which seeks to support and encourage young artists and to promote awareness of and support for the arts in America. The series will be produced and directed by Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon. For more information, visit http://www.simongoodmanpictures.com/Masterclass.html
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« Last Edit: March 23, 2010, 09:29:18 PM by Blaze78 »
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deusamait
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« Reply #897 on: March 23, 2010, 07:39:40 PM » |
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Oh, God, what a s*&¨%$ that I don't have HBO! 
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Natalie
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« Reply #898 on: March 23, 2010, 09:31:39 PM » |
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FUCK! I don't get HBO either 
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Blaze78
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« Reply #899 on: March 23, 2010, 09:40:11 PM » |
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Well, good thing is HBO releases their series on DVD eventually, so we'll inevitably have it in our grasp soon enough. Who knows? Perhaps HBO will have it up on their site to view? My parents have HBO, so I'll try to get them to record it. Rachelle, you don't have HBO, do you? Oh...and guys...this specific show will only have Liv directing students, not Cate, so there's no need to freak out too much.  They just eluded to the idea of Liv directing Cate for another project I believe.  BUT, this gives me hope that they are really considering filming Cate's Streetcar & it might just come true.
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