Monday, July 31, 2006

DIY Inspiration

A friend listened to my Hip Tranquil Chick interview and was inspired to create a DIY version of a creativity tool I'd mentioned:
i enjoyed your podcast interview. it was very interesting. one of the things you talked about inspired me to be creative ;) there was a store you spoke of that had a deck of writing prompts. my friend, beth, is a writer. although, i am not sure how much writing she has actually done lately. so i decided to create a personalized deck for her. i came up with a bunch of prompts and i want to make them all cute on little cards when i get home. i thought it would be a fun way to get her writing again. so thanks!
I thought this was a great example of how we can inspire ourselves. (But if you aren't the DIY type, you can purchase a pre-made deck online, or, for DC residents, at Proper Topper in Dupont Circle - if they're still carrying them...)

Thursday, July 27, 2006

One Woman on One Man Star Wars

Actor Charles Ross from One Man Star Wars - Photo credit: Jason Woodruff, copyright 2005
I saw One Man Star Wars Wednesday night, part of the Capital Fringe Festival, and it was fun the way eating icing with a spoon is fun; the way being in your pajamas on a snowy Saturday afternoon and finding a movie you love on cable is fun; the way going to someone's apartment and realizing from the knick knacks on their shelves and posters on their walls that they like the same bands/movies/TV shows you do, is fun. Innocent, light, hey-we-have-something-in-common fun.

The star of the show, Charles Ross, literally reenacts the key plot points and moments of the original Star Wars trilogy in about 60 minutes. He includes all the famous lines (Luke: "I'm not afraid"; Yoda: "You will be. You will be."), which of course elicit roars of recogntion for the audience, as do his characterizations: Luke as a whiny whiner ("But I was going into Tashee station today to pick up some power convertors!"), Han Solo as a crotch-grabbing man's man, the Emperor as a lecherous old man.

One man, on a stage, bringing a much-loved story to life, the crowd in the palm of his hand. After a standing ovation, he took a few minutes to chat with the audience, and these were his parting words (approximately): "When you're pursuing a dream, don't let anything life throws you get in the way." In other words: may the force be with you.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Introducing creativedc.org

Creative DC now has its very own domain: www.creativedc.org.

If you visit the site at its old URL, you should be automatically redirected here.

Please update your bookmarks. And hey, if you like what you read here: tell a friend!

If you don't like what read, or would like to see something a little different: please let me know. I'm about to leave my full-time job to pursue a freelancing career, and hope to carve out much more time to devote to this blog; I want to make sure it's as interesting and useful for you as possible.

Happy Tuesday!
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Update 7.27.07: If you subscribe to the Creative DC RSS feed, please make sure to update the URL so you'll continue to get updates.

(If you have no idea what an RSS feed is: that's ok, neither do most people in the world. But if you're curious, it stands for 'really simple syndication.' Check out bloglines.com and see how you can subscribe to get updates from your favorite sites; I love it because instead of visiting a bunch of different sites each day, I can just check bloglines and get updates all in one place.)

Sunday, July 23, 2006

See me...HEAR me...

Creative DC host Amanda with sidekick CosmoCheck out an interview with yours truly in the latest Hip Tranquil Chick podcast. Kimberly Wilson, host of Hip Tranquil Chick, interviews me about Creative DC and about living life creatively and "off script." Since my photo's posted with the interview, I figured I might as well post it on my own site, too... that's me and the famous Cosmo at left.

Listen to the interview (note: clicking this link will cause a .mp3 audio file to start downloading to your computer).

Read the show notes on Hip Tranquil Chick (from this page, you can click the pink "podcast" icon to listen to the interview).

I ramble in places, but hopefully there are a few useful nuggets in there for people.

Funny aside: when Kimberly and I were chatting before the show, we discovered that we'd both been voted "most likely to host a talk show" back in school. Maybe a CreativeDC podcast is next...(cue dramatic "to be continued" music).

Monday, July 17, 2006

Creative DC Profile: Gina and Jack

An essential ingredient of a creative community is people who enjoy and appreciate other people's creative work. That's why, for my third Creative DC profile, I've decided to feature the most avid theater goers I've ever met: my in-laws.

Gina and Jack, avid DC theater goers, holding programs from their collectionGina and Jack, who've lived in the area for over 25 years, attend an average of about 3 plays each month. They have subscriptions to the Woolly Mammoth, The Shakespeare Theatre Company, Round House Theatre and the Everyman Theatre in Baltimore. In addition, each year they attend the Contemporary American Theater Festival in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, and sample plays from Theater J, Cherry Red Productions and other local outlets.

Gina and Jack recently sat down with me to talk about their theater habit, and to reflect on how DC theater has changed over the years.

How long has theater been such a big part of your life?

Gina: We started going to the theater in New York.

Jack: We went to 3 plays on our honeymoon.

Gina: One of them was The Wall, one of them was –

Jack: Hello, Dolly!.

Gina: Yes, and Oh! What a Lovely War. Growing up in New York, you could see a play for $3 or $5 with student ID. As kids we got to go to plays - schools encouraged it, our parents encouraged it.

"About where the Home Depot is...there was a theater."

Jack: When we moved here for the first time, in 1965, there was virtually no local theater. It was national road companies. We saw a couple things at the National Theater. On Shady Grove Road, about where Home Depot is now, there was a theater…it was a theater in the round. They specialized in musicals, carried a lot of national touring companies of big shows --

Gina: We saw...the one with Felix Unger...

Jack: The Odd Couple. Now we avoid national touring companies.

Gina: We went [to the theater] occasionally [when we lived] in San Francisco. We saw a local production of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. There was the one with the live sex acts… in the North Beach area. So, theater’s always been somewhat important, but it got a lot more important about 25 years ago. The kids were old enough for a babysitter. But we didn’t do the volume that we do now.

You've talked about how there didn't used to be as many local productions. How else has the DC theater scene changed over the years?

Gina: We used to go to the Source a lot, but now that’s gone. In fact, the Source was one of our favorites -- it was sad to see that go.

I think we’ll always remember the all-male version of The Importance of Being Earnest... And then there was Vampire Lesbians of Sodom -- we took [our youngest son] when he was in high school and he thought we were so cool. We were one of the very few mixed [gender] couples in the audience, and one of the only ones with a child.

Jack: We were the only ones with a child.

Gina: A lot of these theaters used to be ratty old places, but now they’re very nice… the Studio has a great new space. We really liked Frozen.

Jack: Woolly Mammoth started in the Lansburgh building, when it was still an abandoned department store. They were urban pioneers – they led the march to upper 14th Street.

Gina: And the Source.

Jack: I’m pretty sure [Woolly] came first. Then the Studio, then the Source...another change is that so many professional theaters have opened in Virginia that we don’t even know about, other than seeing the reviews in the Post.

"When we first lived [in DC], everything closed by 10 on Saturday."

Gina: DC, in the years that we’ve lived here, has changed a lot. It’s a lot more sophisticated in things like theater and art...When we first lived here, everything closed by 10 on Saturday, you couldn’t even find a donut shop. [Now], more has opened up around the theaters – before and after, nightlife. You can have dinner before the theater, coffee or a drink after.

Jack: [Theater is also] more expensive. As the productions get more professional, they have to charge more.

Are there particular actors or directors you follow?

Gina: If I hear Nancy Robinette (who’s a secretary and does this part time – she’s fantastic) and Sarah Marshall are going to be in something, I try to get tickets. It used to be the same way with Marty Lodge, but I don’t see him around much anymore; he must have left the area. Bruce Nelson. Kyle Prue. Floyd King. Emery Battis. And the actress we saw [at a restaurant] - Jennifer Mendenhall.

Jack: Gina loves to accost actors.

Gina: I do. And they love it!

Jack: None of them, for me, have that effect- I’m much more interested in what the play is and whether it appears to be a good production. I think the companies we go to regularly do a very good job on the basics – casting, choosing a director, lighting, scenery, sound, costumes – they’re all at a very good, professional level for those things. Sometimes the choice of plays is a problem. Woolly has a habit of choosing plays that are built around themes for shock value, which tend to play well in first act, but then in the second act no one knows what to do.

Gina: I wouldn’t say they have a habit of that – they do it sometimes.

Do you talk about the plays you see afterwards?

Gina: We always talk about them.

Him: "That's the appeal of theater generally...that it makes you think."

Her: "We like movies, too, but plays are more interesting."

Jack: I think that’s the appeal of theater generally – the idea that it makes you think. Which may be why we’ve gotten away from the big spectacle shows, and more towards shows built around an idea.

Gina: We really want to see things that are new, or unusual – even if we don’t like them. We always find something fascinating in it to talk about. Like the one we saw recently about the men in the Beirut jail (editor's note: the name of the play is Someone to Watch Over Me).

We like movies too – but plays are more interesting. They’re smaller – they’re not on a big screen, there aren’t as many props - you’re looking more at the performances; in movies, with all the cinematogrpahy and all that, sometimes the acting is secondary.

Do you have any pre- or post-theater rituals? –a particular place you go to get a cup of coffee, or…?

Gina: Only with Shakespeare and Woolly, and it’s because they’re right near each other. We always go to Olsson’s. Jack browses books and records, I read The City Paper and sit in the coffee shop and have a latte. It’s where a lot of the [family's] Hannukah gifts come from!

Jack: It’s also good to go to the bathroom there first if the play doesn’t have an intermission.

Gina: And we used to walk to Café Luna, when we went to the Source and the Studio with [our friends] Phyllis and Jim.

Do you see a lot of plays with DC themes?

Gina: We’ve seen a lot of gay-themed plays.

Jack: One thing that you’ll see – not necessarily the play itself, but the production, they’ll throw a bit of business in that isn’t in the script, that clearly has a political implication. It just sort of whizzes past – it’s just them making a little statement.

Gina: I think it’s to get a little recognition or applause from the audience. We see a lot about lost people, depression – I’m thinking of The Faculty Room – people who are not who you’d consider your next door neighbor type people…family dysfunction.

In all of our play-going, I’ve noticed you really don’t see the [full] DC population represented [in the audience], unless it’s a black-themed play.

What’s the weirdest play you’ve ever seen?

Jack: Probably something by Charles Busch or Charles Ludlum.

Gina: I loved Psycho Beach Party, but I don’t know if that was the weirdest. Vampire Lesbians of Sodom was pretty weird.

Jack: Goodnight Desdemona, Good Morning Juliette – it was about a time traveler, a woman who was a researcher for a professor, who finds herself living with the characters of Othello, and then the characters of Romeo and Juliette, and most of the characters in Romeo and Juliette are gay…there’s a scene when they’re piling on each other, and a female character steps back and says, “does no one sail straight in Verona?”

"[There was] that one where they threw blood at us..."

Gina: And that one where they threw blood at us – that was Cherry Red Productions. They don’t technically throw blood at the audience, they throw it at themselves, and the first two rows get it.

The worst?

Gina: That one act Korean woman thing that we came out in a snowstorm for. That was so bad, I felt so cheated.

Jack: She’s a Los Angeles-based performance artist who was sort of developing a new show and using us as guinea pigs, but it was sold as a real show.

Gina: The first play Woolly Mammoth did in their new space – there weren't a lot of people in the audience, because people had heard [it was bad], and after intermission there were even less people. Something about dead puppies. Big something. Big Death and Little Death.

We can tell you the plays we’ve walked out on. Jack’s walked out on more of them. We walked out on The Cherry Orchard – a terrible production of a not very interesting play.

Jack: I walked out on Homebody Kabul –I thought it was just dreadful. It starts out with this really annoying woman – she’s supposed to be annoying, but I quickly found myself hating her, and not caring what happened after that. I understand what Kushner was trying to do, which was to turn it into a kind of history lesson about Afghanistan, but I don’t think it was an effective piece of theater. And it's one of the few times that I really disliked the production itself – the accents were beyond the actors’ skills.

The best?

Gina: Ooh, there are so many. I love Les Miz Les Miz to me is a perfect play. Jack hates it. I’ve seen it 4 times – he saw it once and was miserable. But you know, it’s hard to say [which play is best] – every season there are things that stick out.

Jack: To me there is no best or worst. We’ve seen a lot of good stuff, and we've seen a lot of crap.

Do you save all your programs?

Jack: Yes, but we make it a point to not organize them. It’s not like we could retrieve something quickly when memories fade. The programs are more like our memories - you never know what you might come up with.

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Do you go to a lot of plays in DC? Why or why not? What are the best, worst and weirdest plays you've seen? What do you love about local theater, and what do you wish was different?

Or, is there another creative community in DC that you help keep alive through your appreciation and support?
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Past Creative DC Profiles:

Sunday, July 16, 2006

More on the Capital Fringe Festival

The other day I complained about the festival's Web site, so I wanted to make sure to point out that Washingtonpost.com's City Guide has put together a much more user-friendly site offering full coverage of the festival.

My husband and I have tickets to One Man Star Wars, and I want to check out some additional shows this weekend - I'll let you know how it goes...

Makin' a Buck

Those of you with keen observation skills will notice that I added Google ads to this blog a couple of days ago. I didn't start Creative DC with the intention of making any money from it, but I am about to leave my full-time job to begin life as a freelancer, and one of the things I hope to do is find a way to grow Creative DC. I love writing this blog and want to find a way to spend more time with it, and grow its coverage, while still being able to pay the old mortgage. If the Google ads completely turn you off, though, I want to know - so please use the comments feature to share any feedback or concerns. Thanks!

Friday, July 14, 2006

L'Enfant (Bastille Day, baby!)

It is rare to find a place that exudes joie de vivre - but L'Enfant, a cafe and bar near the intersection of 18th St. and Florida Ave. NW, is just such a place.

I discovered L'Enfant thanks to their Tuesday night Belgian beer happy hours (mmm, Belgian beer). To spend time there is not just to eat or drink, but to feel like you're at a party hosted by a fabulous friend. This is especially true when they actually throw a party, as they did a few months ago, for their third anniversary. The theme? Free leather shoe-shines (third anniversaries are leather...get it!?), and discount glasses of champagne. The owner greeted people as though they were his personal guests, and chatted with us all night.

All of which is a long way of saying - tonight, L'Enfant is hosting a Bastille Day party, and as the invitation (below) reveals, they'll be infusing the event with their characteristic verve and vigor:

Bastille Day party at L'Enfant



FRIDAY, JULY 14th! 5pm-2am.

Liberté, égalité and fraternité!

Celebrate France’s Independence Day with us as we serve up a “revolutionary” night of fun and festivities.

Arrive by 8pm and watch or participate in our “FRENCH MAID RELAY RACE,” an over-the-top fun, relay race featuring fifteen French maids competing for a $500 Magnum of champagne as the top prize.

OPEN 5PM-2AM

DJ SPINNING EUROPEAN & FRENCH FAVORITES



The French Maid Relay Race starts at 8pm. There are drink specials (French beer, champagne), and the invitation includes a mysterious mention of "French Royalty." I have plans with family, so I can't make it, but I highly encourage you to check it out - and if you do, please report back with stories (and pictures!).

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Capital Fringe Festival


It is with mixed emotions that I send you to the Web site for the Capital Fringe Festival. On the one hand - how cool that DC has a fringe festival (July 20-30). On the other hand - using that Web site is enough to drive a person mad (you essentially have to click once to choose the topic you want to read about, and then again to get at any information about that topic).

I'd tell you more about the festival, but I'm afraid you'll have to brave the site yourself. You may have a better experience with this forum about the festival, set up in partnership with artdc.org.

And hey, if you unearth any good info about cool shows that are playing, how the festival will compare to fringe fests in other cities, etc - send it my way.

Sorry to be so persnickety. Bad user experience just sets me off. (For info on good user experiences - check out the aptly titled Good Experience Web site.)

Off to grumble grumble grumble into my day.

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UPDATE 7.16.06: The Washingtonpost.com's City Guide has full coverage of the festival.

UPDATE 7.15.06: The Warehouse Theater Web site has a list of venues and shows.

Monday, July 10, 2006

Monday!

Painting by Ben Claasen at www.bendependent.com


















Painting by Ben Claasen, www.bendependent.com

Mixed Results

Following up on my last post...
  • Number of times I intended to walk somewhere, but was been running late and ended up driving instead: 3

  • Number of times I took the metro instead of driving: 1
So, I have a ways to go when it comes to reducing my reliance on my car. But, there are a few eco-friendly things my husband and I already do that are worth noting, if for no other reason than to make me feel better:
  • We have digital thermostats that regulate the A/C temp throughout the day, and when we're on one floor of the house, we turn the temp on the other floor way up

  • We use Energy-star appliances, and are good about replacing A/C filters

  • Thanks to him, we're dogged about turning off lights in rooms we're not in

  • We recycle, and thanks again to him, we wash and re-use ziploc bags

  • He bikes to work
So, I don't completely suck, but I'm committed to doing more. Things I plan to do:
  • Begin unplugging appliances I'm not using (except for those with clocks)

  • Replace all or some of our light bulbs with compact flourescent bulbs

  • Stop driving so much!
Don't worry, I don't plan to turn CreativeDC into an all-environment-all-the-time blog, but if you do have tips to share, please let me know, and I'll post a list. Are there local businesses we should support for their eco-friendly practices? Little things you do around the house to save energy? Web sites or other resources that you find useful or inspiring? Let me know.

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Getting Creative About the Environment

I saw An Inconvenient Truth the other day, aka The Al Gore Movie. The easy thing for me to do would be to say, "it was really good, you should see it." (There, I did my part.) Or maybe I could point you to the movie's Web site.

Allow me to go on a brief tangent. The thing I didn't know going into this movie is that it's not just about global warming. It's also about Al Gore's driving need to make other people understand global warming, feel its urgency, take action. Care. The movie sticks with me more than anything as a testament to how hard it can be to get people to care about what you care about. The challenge of the artist, and of anyone trying to live a meaningful life. The silent prayer of please care. Please please please care.

We should all care, in this case. And so, I challenge each of you to commit to one way you can help the environment. If you're an artist, think about how you can use your art to make a difference. And hey - if you're like me and you believe our life is our art...how can your life make a difference?

Think of one thing, and then do it.

My first step is this blog post. Step two is that starting tomorrow, every day for a week I will do at least one thing differently to reduce my impact on the environment. And at the end of the week, I'll commit to ways I can live differently moving forward.

Stay tuned...
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Related resources: