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Theater Review

Oklahoma! in Color

An interracial cast gives new meaning to the musical at 5th Avenue Theatre.

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Curly (Eric Ankrim) goes for broke to court Laurey (Alexandra Zorn) in Oklahoma! at 5th Avenue.

I grew up singing the songs of Oklahoma!. My dad, an old soldier, used to croon the opening lines to “People Will Say We’re in Love” not as “Don’t throw bouquets at me,” but as “Don’t throw grenades at me.” But never having seen it performed, I didn’t know the plot. I relied on 5th Avenue Theatre’s production for that.

To wit: A goofball white cowpoke, Curly, competes with the surly black farmhand, Jud, for the affections of the beautiful farmgirl, Laurey. She gives enough thumbs-up signals to Jud and enough hard-to-get nonsense to Curly to encourage them both in their romantic pursuit of her—but as the musical unfolds we learn that Curly is earnest and cheerful and hard working, and Jud is angry and increasingly menacing, with a chip on his shoulder and a disturbing interest in pictures of naked women.

Laurey is attracted to both; a dilemma her psyche attempts to work out in the famous dream ballet scene at the end of the first act. Laurey’s danced courtship with Curly is all pirouettes and rainbows. Her dream dalliance with Jud, however, is a darker thing entirely: a rape, or something close to it, thanks to the brilliantly, violently physical choreography of Spectrum Dance Theater’s Donald Byrd.

The 5th Avenue’s most significant update to the beloved 1940s musical was to make it a reflection of the racial dynamics of the Oklahoma Territory at the turn of the century. As a result, this production of Oklahoma! could make a person think it was a play about the tragedy of the black experience in America—which renders the whole giddy last scene of the show offensive and off-putting; almost part of another play.

Because—spoiler alert!—when Jud-as-black-man brings all his years of frustrated serfdom and unrequited lust to a last violent encounter with Laurey, he’s no longer just some isolated loner/loser; now he carries the African-American experience of forced servitude and presumptively threatening sexuality onto the stage. Considering Jud’s destiny in the next scene, and the trumped-up trial that follows—the plot, if Jud is black, has entered the realm of tragedy.

All of which message would be fine— great even—if it weren’t trapped in a musical where everyone gathers for a few laughs from the show’s clowns and a big showy reprise of the victory song, “Oklahoma!” at the end.

Oklahoma!
Thru Mar 4, 5th Avenue Theatre, $29–$139

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Tags: Theater, 5th Avenue Theatre

Film

Is Pina One of the Greatest Dance Movies Ever Made?

The director dissects his Oscar-nominated documentary at Cinerama.

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Pina isn’t just a dance movie, in the same way The Red Shoes wasn’t about footwear. In this Oscar-nominated documentary, director Wim Wenders (Buena Vista Social Club) composes a visually stunning eulogy of German dance pioneer Pina Bausch, who died of cancer shortly after she and Wenders started preproduction on the film in 2009. Wenders, in turn, pays tribute by documenting four of Bausch’s most elaborate pieces, performed by Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch company members. In The Rite of Spring dancers crisscross a stage covered in dirt; for Vollmond they splash through a sheet of water. They also take Bausch’s choreography outdoors, spinning through meadows and in front of factories.

Now imagine all that…but in 3D. Impossibly long limbs look even longer—it’s a much better use of the technology than, say, Piranha 3D. “This is a stunning work of art, and we are proud to introduce it to our community," said Seattle Cinerama operator Greg Wood in a statement. Cinerama screens Pina (3D) for a limited run starting today; after that, it moves to SIFF Cinema at the Uptown. And the best part: On February 17 at 8pm, Wenders will attend a Cinerama screening, followed by a Q&A with Spectrum Dance’s Donald Byrd. It’s the director’s first appearance in Seattle in 15 years, and sure to be mobbed with dance and film fans alike. Tickets ($30) are on sale now.

Pina (3D)
Feb 10–16, Seattle Cinerama
Feb 17, 8pm, screening and Q&A

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Tags: Dance, Film, Seattle Cinerama, Oscars 2012

The Weekend Starts...Now.

Met Picks: Gauguin at SAM, An Evening with Anthony Bourdain and Eric Ripert

The top 10 things to see or do this weekend.

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The art of video games See Ken Taya’s Elly Robo at the Wing.

SPECIAL EVENT

Feb 11
An Evening with Anthony Bourdain and Eric Ripert
These celebrity chefs and unlikely friends will dish about the restaurant industry in their one-night stand at the Paramount. It’s being billed as “good versus evil,” but how do they really stack up? Read our Chef Showdown to find out. Paramount Theatre, $55–$200.

THEATER

Thru Mar 4
I Am My Own Wife
Playwright Doug Wright (Quills, Grey Gardens) tells the true story of Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, a transvestite in East Germany who proudly cross-dresses during Nazi and Communist occupation. Who better to play Charlotte—plus 30 other characters—than Seattle’s own Hedwig, Nick Garrison. Seattle Rep, $12–$59.

Oklahoma!
Those familiar Rodgers and Hammerstein tunes are still intact (“O-k-l-a-h-o-m-a!”), but in this updated production of the 1940s musical, Jud Fry will be played by a black actor (Kyle Scatliffe), and Spectrum Dance’s Donald Byrd has infused the dance numbers with a bit of grit. 5th Avenue Theatre, $29–$139.

CLASSICAL & MORE

Feb 10 & 12
Unstrung Hero
Clarinettist Sean Osborn, who debuted at 17 at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, joins the ensemble for Brahms’s brooding Clarinet Quintet and his own Beatles-inspired composition for clarinet and strings. Fri at Q Cafe, Sun at Mt Baker Community Center, free–$30.

DANCE

Feb 11 & 12
Chop Shop: Bodies of Work
Eleven of the Northwest’s modern dance masters—including Spectrum’s Donald Byrd and founding Mark Morris Dance Group member Penny Hutchinson—head to the Eastside for this fifth-annual festival of dance performances, master classes, and lectures. Meydenbauer Center in Bellevue, $20–$25.

FAMILY

Feb 10–June 17
Asian American Arcade
Hit the pause button and examine the creativity of video games; this new exhibit showcases paintings and 2D imagery by seven local artists, and an installation inside a play station, naturally. Wing Luke Museum, $9–$13, opening reception Feb 9 is free.

FILM

Opens Feb 10
Oscar-Nominated Short Films
Starting this Friday, Varsity Theatre screens this year’s Oscar-nominated short films for a limited time. Get a leg up on your office Oscar pool with our handy guide. Live-action and animated shorts are separated into two feature-length events. $7–$10.

Bonus! Oscar-nominated dance documentary Pina opens at Seattle Cinerama on February 10.

PARTY

Feb 11
Girl Walk // All Day Premiere and Dance Party
Mashup king Greg Gillis, aka Girl Talk, now has a feature-length music video set to his album All Day. It makes its local debut at Neumos this weekend—dance party included. $12 advance, $15 at the door.

BENEFIT

Feb 12
Beer and Chocolate for Charity
What better than chocolate and beer to sooth a lonely heart on Valentine’s weekend? Georgetown Brewing Company promises live bluegrass music, Macrina baked goods, Theo Chocolate, and the debut of Lisa’s “The Sun Is Trying to Kill Me” Chocolate Stout, brewed with 15 pounds of cocoa. Makes a mean beer float. Proceeds support Autism Speaks. $50.

VISUAL ART

Feb 9–Apr 29
Gauguin and Polynesia: An Elusive Paradise
Despite the lushness of his Tahitian paintings, Paul Gauguin never found that idyllic paradise he sought in 19th-century Polynesia. Examine nearly 60 of the master’s works—and 60 by Polynesian artists—at Seattle Art Museum. (It’s the traveling exhibit’s only U.S. stop.) $18–$23.

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Tags: Met Picks, Weekend

Ticket Giveaway

Win a Four Pack of Tickets to Oklahoma!

5th Avenue Theatre updates the 1940s musical with an interracial cast and gritty choreography.

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Eric Ankrim stars as cowpoke Curly in Oklahoma! at 5th Avenue Theatre.

Oklahoma! officially opens tonight at 5th Avenue Theatre, and we have a four pack of tickets to give away to an upcoming performance on Thursday, February 23, at 8pm.

Dare we say it, these seats are good: row P, dead center, orchestra level (a value of about $400). It’s a close encounter with the updated Broadway musical, whose familiar Rodgers and Hammerstein tunes are still intact (“Surrey With the Fringe On Top,” anyone?), but now features Jud Fry played by a black actor (Kyle Scatliffe), and gritty, emotionally charged choreography by Spectrum Dance’s Donald Byrd.

To enter to win, email SeattleMetTix@gmail.com with “Oklahoma” as the subject, and a reason why you want to see the show, by Thursday, February 16, at 5pm. The winner will be notified by email shortly after the deadline.

Oklahoma!
Thru Mar 4, 5th Avenue Theatre, $29–$139

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Tags: Theater, 5th Avenue Theatre, Ticket Giveaways

Met Pick

Girl Talk Movie and Dance Party at Neumos

New York gets its groove back in this feature-length music video from Jacob Krupnick.

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It’s hard not to be charmed by Girl Walk // All Day, the feature-length music video that follows Anne Marsen (“the Girl”), Dai Omiya (“the Gentleman”), and John Doyle (“the Creep”) as they dance their way through New York City with Girl Talk album All Day as a soundtrack. Hints of formal dance training shine through, but the really good moments are very informal—Omiya and Marsen get jiggy on Dance Dance Revolution, three women dressed as flowers break it down with Doyle in a cemetery, Omiya chases a thief in a high-speed parkour pursuit, and a man in his briefs pole-dances on the subway. It takes Christopher Walken’s Fat Boy Slim video and blows it out of the water.

The film is about dance as a “personal expression of ecstasy,” says director Jacob Krupnick, but also about people living in their own little worlds. “When you see the film you realize it’s unbelievable how little people care that we’re doing this in public,” he told The New York Times. It’s true. In one ironic scene, the music demands “everybody pay attention” as Omiya dances in front of a cafe, but only two people watch before returning to their menus.

Kicking off a West Coast tour, Girl Walk // All Day premieres in Seattle this Saturday at Neumos, in a film screening and dance-along with Marsen, Krupnick, and producer Youngna Park in attendance. Greg Gillis’s (Girl Talk) eclectic-but-always-kickin’ mashups ensure it’ll jump off right. After the film, the party continues with DJs Tigerbeat and Radjaw.

Girl Walk // All Day
Feb 11, 8pm, Neumos, $12 advance, $15 at the door. 21+

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Tags: Neumos, Dancy Party, Seattle Premiere

Film Review

A Quick Guide to the Oscar-Nominated Animated Shorts

Catch them all at once at the Varsity, along with the five live-action nominees.

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“The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore”

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“The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore”

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“The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore”

Starting this Friday, Varsity Theatre screens the (often elusive) Oscar-nominated animated shorts in a special engagement prior to the awards ceremony on February 26. In preparation, we watched them all and picked our winners.

“The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore”
William Joyce, Brandon Oldenburg
USA, 15 minutes

A fierce windstorm—the kind begging someone to cry out “Auntie Em!”—lands Morris Lessmore and his beloved collection of books in an Oz of flying, piano-playing novels. Animated by William Joyce, formerly of Pixar and Dreamworks, this whimsical short has trademark Pixar heart and wit: “Why does the weasle [sic] go ‘pop’?” Lessmore writes in his journal. “Does it matter?”
Where else? An iPad app turns the film into an active storybook (don’t test its flight capabilities, though).

“Wild Life”
Amanda Forbis, Wendy Tilby
Canada, 13 minutes

This beautifully handpainted short tells the story of a remittance man—a wealthy young Englishman sent to rustic Alberta in 1909 to be a rancher—with documentary-style comments from the folks who know him. Each still deserves its own frame and a wall to hang it on.
Where else? Download it—for a small fee—from the National Film Board of Canada (Canadians can watch for free).

Runners-up:

“A Morning Stroll”
Grant Orchard, Sue Goffe
UK, 7 minutes

Like one long gag, an extended “Why did the chicken cross the road?” joke, a chicken moseys down a New York sidewalk and turns heads in 1959—but can’t compete with a smartphone in 2009. It’s sharp and funny, but lacks the narrative depth of the other films.
Where else? It’s making appearances at film festivals around the world, but we don’t know when Seattle will have another chance to see it.

“Dimanche/Sunday”
Patrick Doyon
Canada, 10 minutes

First-time filmmaker Doyon tells the story of a young boy trying to entertain himself on a dreary Sunday as he is dragged to church and his grandparents’ house. Unfortunately, the film conveys his boredom a little too well with its sluggish pace. The few moments of action are, strangely, the deaths of animals—a rabbit is run over by a car, and a fish loses its head in the kitchen.
Where else? Like “Wild Life,” this one is available from the National Film Board of Canada.

“La Luna”
Enrico Casarosa
USA, 7 minutes

In Pixar’s submission, written and directed by Casarosa, a boy is taken out in a boat in the middle of the night by his father and grandfather and initiated into the family business—custodians of the moon. The underlying coming-of-age plot feels stale, which, despite a few truly clever moments, knocked it down our list; however, the film might snag a solid grip on the Academy’s heartstrings.
Where else? Attached to Pixar’s Brave, out June 22.

Oscar-Nominated Short Films 2012
Out Feb 10, Varsity Theatre

The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore from Moonbot Studios on Vimeo.

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Tags: Film, Varsity Theatre, Oscars 2012

News Brief

City Promises $1.6 Million to Seattle Arts

Mayor McGinn announces grants for 137 local arts organizations.

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5th Avenue Theatre, now part of a historic theater district in downtown Seattle, will receive a boost in city funding this year.

Seems yesterday was a big money day for Seattle arts. First Intiman Theatre announced that it had secured enough funding to reopen this summer. Then the Seattle Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs announced a $1.6 million commitment to Seattle-based arts, heritage, and cultural organizations in the coming year. Through the Civic Partners program, the city will provide grants for 137 different arts organizations—up from 130 last year—that are both established and emerging, as long as they’ve been in Seattle for at least three years.

The top grant recipients are:

Seattle Symphony / $166,950
Seattle Opera / $161,705
Pacific Northwest Ballet / $147,870
Seattle Art Museum / $135,945
Seattle Repertory Theatre / $95,400

While these top sums are down slightly from last year, smaller organizations received a boost, and in some cases, funding doubled, notably for 5th Avenue Theatre, Northwest Folklife, One Reel (which puts on Bumbershoot), Pratt Fine Arts Center, Seattle Theatre Group (which organizes events at the Paramount, Moore, and Neptune theaters), and SIFF.

“In the last five years, more arts organization have qualified for funding, but the dollar amount to invest has remained relatively flat,” said Lori Patrick, public relations manager of the Seattle Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs. “This shift it to move to more balance and equity across the portfolio.” To make the cut, organizations are rated on several criteria—public impact, artistic excellence, and organizational strength among them—by a peer review panel. The city has the final say.

Here’s the complete list of funded organizations.

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Tags: Theater, Seattle Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs

Visual Art Preview

Slideshow: Gauguin and Polynesia at Seattle Art Museum

The exhibit opens February 9—here’s a sneak peek.

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All images courtesy Seattle Art Museum.

Paul Gauguin, Vahine no te Tiare (Tahitian Woman with a Flower), 1891, oil on canvas, 27 3/4 × 18 5/16 in.

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All images courtesy Seattle Art Museum.

Paul Gauguin, Vahine no te Tiare (Tahitian Woman with a Flower), 1891, oil on canvas, 27 3/4 × 18 5/16 in.

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Paul Gauguin, Faaturuma (Melancholic), 1891, oil on canvas, 37 × 26 7.8 in. Courtesy Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri.

Though Gauguin is famously known for his seductive portraits of Tahitian women, his early paintings featured them in conservative western dress, looking forlorn. People “can remain hours and days sitting immobile and gazing sadly at the sky,” Gauguin wrote to his wife.

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Gauguin, Te raau rahi (The Large Tree), 1891, oil on fabric, 29 1/8 × 36 9/16 in. Courtesy the Cleveland Museum of Art.

Gauguin left Tahiti’s capital and ventured 45km away to the village of Mataiea, where he sought out authentic daily life.

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Paul Gauguin, Parahi te Marae (The Sacred Mountain), 1892, oil on canvas, 26 × 35 in. Courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art.

When Gauguin didn’t find the paradise he was looking, he made it up, said Pam McClusky, curator of Art of Africa and Oceania at SAM. The yellow hillside could invoke yellow feathers, which are a sacred element in Polynesian culture.

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Moal Kavakava (Cadaverous Male Figure), Easter Island, early- to mid-19th century; wood, bone, obsidian.

This handsome fellow with obsidian eyes is similar to the artwork Gauguin saw at the World’s Fair in Paris in 1889—a collection of pieces that inspired his desire to see both the savagery and beauty of “the Promised Land.”

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Paul Gauguin, Arearea no Varua ino (Words of the Devil, or Reclining Tahitian Women) , 1894, oil on canvas, 23 5/8 × 38 9/16 in. Courtesy Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen.

Constantly plagued by wanderlust, Gauguin continued to paint Tahiti even when he was back in Paris from 1893–1895. It doesn’t help that he contracted syphilis and only sold nine of 47 works while he was home.

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Paul Gauguin, Three Tahitians, 1899, oil on canvas, 28 3/4 × 37 in. Courtesy National Gallery of Scotland.

Gauguin returned to Tahiti from 1895 to 1901, where he was both prolific—abandoning ethnographic portraits for lush, seductive paintings—and frustrated by syphilis, a lack of cash, and run-ins with local authorities.

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Photo: Laura Dannen. Pota (Tiki Figure), late 18th to mid-19th century, stone, Marquesas Islands.

This tiki comes from the island of Hiva Oa, where Gauguin lived at the end of his life in the early 1900s. “It was the Tahiti of former times that I loved,” he once said.

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Photo: Laura Dannen.

En route to Tahiti for the second time, Gauguin passed through New Zealand, where he became engrossed with a collection of Maori carvings at the Auckland Museum. This piece (pictured) covered in fine spirals is one of the oldest on display (ca. 1865), but was sadly turned into a collection basket (note the key hole).

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Photo: Laura Dannen.

Don’t forget to say hello to Pou (ca. 1840). This figure typically welcomes visitors to a Maori meeting house, and you’re expected to greet it when you pass by.

Originally published December 2011. Compared to the Impressionists, Paul Gauguin was something of a wild card. His painting career was preceded by stints in the merchant marines and the financial sector. Then, rather than paint flowers in rural France, he trotted off to the South Pacific.

Gauguin and Polynesia: An Elusive Paradise, on display from February 9 through April 29 at Seattle Art Museum downtown, traces the rich relationship between the 19th-century artist and his adopted country. The exhibit’s a near-even split: almost 60 pieces by Gauguin, 60 by Polynesians. Gauguin’s own fascination with ethnographic art started early, so some works in the show make references to Breton folk culture and date back to before his first South Pacific trip in 1891. “He was always looking for something raw and authentic…primordial and basic and real,” says SAM curator Chiyo Ishikawa.

Before he went tropical, the artist toyed with forming a kind of hippie art commune with his painting buddy, Vincent Van Gogh. But, says Ishikawa, Van Gogh’s “ethic of self denial” didn’t mesh with Gauguin, who “wanted to eat everything and take advantage of everything and impregnate everybody.” So the hedonist was off to Tahiti.

The French territory wasn’t exactly the virgin paradise he sought. Gauguin was bummed to see the “bourgeois trappings” of Western dress, says Ishikawa. “His idea of paradise as a free place of flowers, where you can pluck the fruit from the trees? That went out the window quickly.” In his portraits, young women have melancholic expressions, a stark contrast to the bright colors of the lush island.

A century later, his works may have steamrolled local style; Google “Tahitian art” and it’s mostly Gauguins and bare-breasted knockoffs. But in SAM’s show, dozens of elaborate carvings and ornamental jewelry show off the Tahitian, Marquesan, and Maori styles that inspired the troubled artist. In the tour’s only U.S. stop, the museum shows off not merely the dissatisfied Frenchman who craved authenticity, but the paradise lost that was so hard for him to find.

View the slideshow for a preview of the exhibit. Photo captions by Laura Dannen.

Gauguin and Polynesia: A Elusive Paradise
Feb 9–Apr 29, Seattle Art Museum
When the museum opens at 10am on Feb 9, the first 100 people wearing sunshine yellow get in free.

In the Studio with Hotel 1000: A Curator-Led Talk on Gauguin and Polynesia
Feb 15, 5–6:30pm, Hotel 1000

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Tags: Visual Art, Seattle Art Museum, Slideshow, Preview

Ticket Alert

Madonna to Play KeyArena in October

And tickets are already going on sale.

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Madonna previewed new single “Give Me All Your Luvin’”—featuring M.I.A. and Nicki Minaj (pictured)—during the Super Bowl.

Turns out Madonna’s Super Bowl halftime show was just a warmup for a year of stadium concerts. Madge and Live Nation announced today that she’s hitting the road on Memorial Day, touring behind her new album MDNA (due out March 26)—and she’ll be in Seattle on October 2. Her KeyArena show is bound to be a high point of Seattle Center’s 50th anniversary celebration of the World’s Fair, which runs April through October and already includes appearances by Radiohead, Coldplay, and the Black Keys.

But if we had to hold out for one show, it’d be the Material Girl’s. Who else will bring along an army of backup dancers dressed as gladiators? She’s still got it at 53—and she can draw a larger audience than the biggest game in American sports. According to the Nielsen ratings, more than 114 million tuned into her halftime show on Sunday night, while Manning v. Brady drew 113.3 million viewers. Madonna, 1. Football, 0.

Madonna World Tour 2012
October 2, KeyArena; tickets go on sale February 13, 10am, at ticketmaster.com

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Tags: Concert, Ticket Alerts, Seattle Center, KeyArena

Theater News

Intiman Raises $1 Million—The Show Will Go On

The regional theater will reopen this summer with a four-play festival.

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Intiman

Photo courtesy Ali Mohamed el-Gasseir.

Back in business (From left) Directors Allison Narver, Andrew Russell, and Valerie Curtis-Newton take the reins of Intiman’s 2012 summer festival.

With the help of 1,000 investors, Tony-winning regional theater Intiman met its $1 million goal —enough to go forward with a 2012 summer festival. Intiman’s board of trustees voted unanimously last night to reopen the theater after a budget crisis crippled its 2011 season nine months ago.

“We’ve taken the last nine months to regroup, reorganize and strategize on how best to seize this opportunity, and we’re so thrilled this community has rallied to help us blaze towards the finish line,” artistic director Andrew Russell said in a statement. “We’re here because of them, no question."

With the funds in place, Intiman will relaunch under Russell with a four-play summer festival slated for July and August. The 2012 season is the group effort of the company’s new multidisciplinary collective and 12-actor repertory, featuring an adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, staged within the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, starring Marya Sea Kaminski with choreography by former PNB principal Olivier Wevers; a contemporary two-act play by director Valerie Curtis-Newton set inside the theater and in the courtyard; and an original show by Dan Savage.

The theater still has sizable debt, which it will pay off over time, but the $1 million pledges will go toward the festival. Subscription tickets from 2011 will be honored this year.

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Tags: Intiman Theatre, Seattle Center

V-Day Outings

Five Ways to Keep Busy on Valentine’s Day

There’s the obvious way, but we’re talking about going out on the town.

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And ZinZanni said, “Let it be pink! And sparkle!”

Valentine’s Day is on a Tuesday this year, and last time we checked, there’s nothing sexy about a Tuesday. But we did a little sleuthing and found five viable options for a lively celebration.

Beer and Chocolate for Charity
Feb 12, 4pm, Georgetown Brewing Co
Okay, technically this is on Sunday night, but what better than chocolate and beer to sooth a potentially disheartened soul? Georgetown Brewing Company promises live bluegrass music, Macrina baked goods, Theo Chocolate, and the debut of Lisa’s “The Sun Is Trying to Kill Me” Chocolate Stout, brewed with 15 pounds of cocoa. Makes a mean beer float. $50; proceeds support Autism Speaks.

Caliente
Feb 14, 6:30pm, Teatro ZinZanni
The go-big-or-go-home option includes a five-course meal, champagne, chocolate-covered strawberries, and a zany cirque act with acrobats, comedians, singing wait staff, and a hula-hooping salsa duo. It’s hard not to be entertained under the spiegeltent. $126–$176.

Love Songs: A Valentine’s Day Evening at Columbia City Theater
Feb 14, 7:30pm, Columbia City Theater
Three of the city’s top vocalists—Hey Marseilles’ Matt Bishop, Tim Wilson of Ivan and Alyosha, and soul-stirring pianist Kaylee Cole—set the mood by crooning a selection of their favorite love songs. $10 advance, $15 day of.

Round 81: Valentine’s Special
Feb 14, 8pm, Fremont Abbey Arts Center
Fremont Abbey is bringing in some top-notch talent for the 81st edition of the Round, an evening of music, slam poetry, and live painting. Sean Nelson of Harvey Danger, indie-pop guitarist Alexandra Niedzialkowski of Cumulus, and painter Skye Graves will perform, and the hosts will provide tables for two (or four), chocolate, wine, Seattle beers—the works. $8; $50 reserved table for four.

Wine and Chocolate Tasting
Feb 14, 5pm, Volunteer Park Conservatory
Things will get steamy during this Valentine’s Day happy hour—literally. It’s a balmy 75 degrees inside the Volunteer Park Conservatory. Sample four vinos from Wilridge Winery and Vineyard paired with Theo Chocolates, and support the stately glasshouse during a critical fundraising period. $10.

Prefer a quiet dinner for two? Nosh Pit is keeping tabs on V-Day specials at local restaurants.

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Tags: Valentine's Day 2012

Summer Music Fest

Sasquatch! 2012 Festival Lineup Announced

Beck, Bon Iver, Girl Talk, and Jack White headline the four-day festival.

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Tickets go on sale next Saturday for the 2012 Sasquatch! Music Festival, returning to the Gorge May 25 to 28. Following up on last year’s record-shattering 10th anniversary festival (the first to add a fourth day) the lineup—just released yesterday—has plenty of names to draw your attention.

Beck, Bon Iver, Girl Talk, Jack White, the Roots, and Feist lead a list packed, as always, with indie rock, folk, pop, and electronic acts. Fans of local hip hop have a lot to look forward to this year, with Dyme Def, the Physics, Grynch, THEESatisfaction and Fatal Lucciauno all on board.

Comedians will be having the best week ever (eyeroll), led by Nick Kroll and John Mulaney, plus a bit of crossover music/comedy action from Tenacious D, Childish Gambino (Troy from Community ), and Portlandia (Wild Flag will be there, too).

Four-day, all-inclusive festival passes ($315) go on sale February 11 at 10am PST.

In the meantime, here’s the full lineup:

Music Jack White, Beck, Bon Iver, Pretty Lights, Tenacious D, The Shins, Beirut, Girl Talk, The Roots, The Head & The Heart, Portlandia, Feist, Silversun Pickups, Metric, Explosions In The Sky, The Joy Formidable, Mogwai, Nero (DJ), M. Ward, John Reilly & Friends, Childish Gambino, St. Vincent, The Civil Wars, Jamey Johnson, Little Dragon, Tune-Yards, Wild Flag, Blind Pilot, Wolfgang Gartner, Beats Antique, Apparat, The Walkmen, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, Mark Lanegan Band, Spiritualized, Blitzen Trapper, The Cave Singers, Shabazz Palaces, Fun., Grouplove, Tycho, Sbtrkt, Strfkr, Ted Leo and the Pharmacists, Deer Tick, Imelda May, Alabama Shakes, Dum Dum Girls, The Helio Sequence, Kurt Vile, Cloud Cult, We Are Augustines, Ben Howard, Here We Go Magic, Zola Jesus, The War On Drugs, Shearwater, Cass McCombs, Active Child, Trampled By Turtles, Charles Bradley & His Extraordinaires, Araabmuzik, Star Slinger, L.A. Riots, Com Truise, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, I Break Horses, Walk The Moon, Dry The River, Allen Stone, Pickwick, Hey Marseilles, Gary Clark Jr., Purity Ring, Electric Guest, Yellow Ostrich, Nobody Beats The Drum, Coeur De Pirate, Lord Huron, Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside, Beat Connection, The Sheepdogs, Hey Rosetta!, Said The Whale, Howlin Rain, Gardens & Villa, Felix Cartal, Craft Spells, Vintage Trouble, Poor Moon, Black Whales, Gold Leaves, Greylag, Awesome Tapes From Africa, THEESatisfaction, Dyme Def, Fresh Espresso, The Physics, Sol, Metal Chocolates, Grynch, Spac3man, Don’t Talk To The Cops, Scribes, Fatal Lucciauno, Fly Moon Royalty, Katie Kate Comedy Nick Kroll, John Mulaney, Todd Barry, Beardyman, Rob Delaney, Pete Holmes, Howard Kremer.

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Tags: Festivals, Music Festival, Gorge Amphitheatre, Sasquatch! 2012

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