Seventh Street Playhouse begins
rehearsals for Paul on Sundaywhich will
have 9 stagings through Jan 2016.Including the KennedyCenter.Paul:http://paul.aegallo.com
A black comedy with more than a
touch of slap-stick
As
performed at the KennedyCenter, National Press Club, and Dramatists Guild of America
Monday, November 24, 20147:00
PM
3800 LOTTSFORD VISTA ROAD, MITCHELLVILLE, MD,
by
Anthony E. Gallo
This
two-act “black comedy
with a little slapstick” is about doubt and faith during the latter days of
King Solomon, long-time ruler of militarily and economically powerful Israel.
The legendary monarch, who holds together a diverse Nation by shrewd domestic
and foreign marriages, has lost God’s favor. He is the laughing stock of the nation because he
supposedly can not even see the temple he built. Foreign countries wait to
attack the borders, and the twelve
tribes of Israel
are at odds. Division and conflict everywhere! What will become of this
world? Lust, greed, pomposity, seduction,
perversion, revenge, betrayal, insanity, deception, horses, lies, murder,
drink, theft, cannabis, idolatry, political instability, and excess wives play
a role.One character thinks all this
might be troublesome. Many suggest that The Last Days of King Solomon makes for
a good Midrash.
A black comedy with more than a
touch of slap-stick
As
performed at the KennedyCenter, National Press Club, and Dramatists Guild of America
Monday, November 24, 20147:00
PM
3800 LOTTSFORD VISTA ROAD, MITCHELLVILLE, MD,
by
Anthony E. Gallo
This
two-act “black comedy
with a little slapstick” is about doubt and faith during the latter days of
King Solomon, long-time ruler of militarily and economically powerful Israel.
The legendary monarch, who holds together a diverse Nation by shrewd domestic
and foreign marriages, has lost God’s favor. He is the laughing stock of the nation because he
supposedly can not even see the temple he built. Foreign countries wait to
attack the borders, and the twelve
tribes of Israel
are at odds. Division and conflict everywhere! What will become of this
world? Lust, greed, pomposity, seduction,
perversion, revenge, betrayal, insanity, deception, horses, lies, murder,
drink, theft, cannabis, idolatry, political instability, and excess wives play
a role.One character thinks all this
might be troublesome. Many suggest that The Last Days of King Solomon makes for
a good Midrash.
Ballerina Misty Copeland said at a Club Newsmaker Nov. 18 that she never saw herself playing the role of Odette in Swan Lake due to what she called a “stereotype" of what the character should looks like.
Copeland, an American Ballet Theatre soloist, will make her U.S. premiere in the April 2015 debut of Swan Lake, a collaborative effort between the Washington Ballet, American Ballet Theatre and the Evermay Chamber Orchestra.
Copeland denied being the first black ballerina to star in a major classical ballet production, saying “others had come before her,” even though there was little documentation in any archive depicting this bit of history. She said the difference in her case was that she had been given a platform to “speak up” on behalf of all of them.
“Odette is the most iconic role I have ever had to portray, and there are so many who I feel I have to look up to, which is something that I respect,” Copeland said.
This is “probably” the second time that a major company in America has presented Swan Lake with African-American leads, Washington Ballet Artistic Director Septime Webre said. Copeland and Brooklyn Mack, a black classical ballet dancer, will star in the upcoming production.
Webre said three factors contributed to the growth of Washington as an art and cultural hub,caused a “convergence” of this phenomenon. The rise in economic growth, which translates to “resources for artists”; the high proportion of educated people from around the world “for whom art is a part of life”; and the fact that Washington was an “establishment city” where the “larger cultural institutions have a very big impact
Outstanding Reading of Eugenio at Arlington Mill Center Stage last night. See video and photos; YOUTUBE: http://youtu.be/et8Y7dX0FEo
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
In the summer of 1944,
American forces liberated Rome
from Nazi occupation. Now
ARLINGTON MILL CENTER STAGE AND THE SEVENTH STREET
PLAYHOUSE
PRESENT
EUGENIO
A PLAY ABOUT FORGIVENESS
AS STAGED AT THE KENNEDYCENTER, THE NATIONAL PRESS CLUB, THE
DRAMATISTS GUILD OF AMERICA,
THE NEW YORK MIDTOWN FESTIVAL, AND THE
UNIVERSAL THEATRE AND THE GREENBELTARTSCENTER
By
ANTHONY ERNEST GALLO
Wednesday, November 19, 20147:30 PM
Seventy years ago, American forces liberated Rome from Nazi
occupation.
This fact-based, two-act drama deals with that tragic
period in Italy during the
Holocaust when fifteen hundred Jews were sent to their deaths at Auschwitz.The
drama touches on the role of the Church and the Holocaust, and examines
forgiveness amidst three conversions. Rome's
aloof and scholarly Chief Rabbi Israel Zolli loses faith following the apparent
slaughter of his Polish family. He receives asylum in the Vatican, where
he comes to appreciate Jesus as God suffering for humanity. The Rabbi
rediscovers faith and converts to Roman Catholicism. This is seen as a betrayal
of his spiritual duty and a defection to the age-old enemy. Was his conversion
one of conviction or merely gratitude? What does he demand at his baptism that
eventually removes a major symbol of discrimination?
CAST AND CREW
Steven Rosenthal, Ronnie
Hardcastle, Shirl Weaver, Ben Robles, David
Weaver, Bunty Ketcham, George Spencer, Beatrix Whitehall, Annette Landers.
In the summer of 1944,
American forces liberated Rome
from Nazi occupation. Now
ARLINGTON MILL CENTER STAGE AND THE SEVENTH STREET
PLAYHOUSE
PRESENT
EUGENIO
A PLAY ABOUT FORGIVENESS
AS STAGED AT THE KENNEDYCENTER, THE NATIONAL PRESS CLUB, THE
DRAMATISTS GUILD OF AMERICA,
THE NEW YORK MIDTOWN FESTIVAL, AND THE
UNIVERSAL THEATRE AND THE GREENBELTARTSCENTER
By
ANTHONY ERNEST GALLO
Wednesday, November 19, 20147:30 PM
Seventy years ago, American forces liberated Rome from Nazi
occupation.
This fact-based, two-act drama deals with that tragic
period in Italy during the
Holocaust when fifteen hundred Jews were sent to their deaths at Auschwitz.The
drama touches on the role of the Church and the Holocaust, and examines
forgiveness amidst three conversions. Rome's
aloof and scholarly Chief Rabbi Israel Zolli loses faith following the apparent
slaughter of his Polish family. He receives asylum in the Vatican, where
he comes to appreciate Jesus as God suffering for humanity. The Rabbi
rediscovers faith and converts to Roman Catholicism. This is seen as a betrayal
of his spiritual duty and a defection to the age-old enemy. Was his conversion
one of conviction or merely gratitude? What does he demand at his baptism that
eventually removes a major symbol of discrimination?
CAST AND CREW
Steven Rosenthal, Ronnie
Hardcastle, Shirl Weaver, Ben Robles, David
Weaver, Bunty Ketcham, George Spencer, Beatrix Whitehall, Muriel Turner,
Annette Landers.
In the summer of 1944,
American forces liberated Rome
from Nazi occupation. Now
ARLINGTON MILL CENTER STAGE AND THE SEVENTH STREET
PLAYHOUSE
PRESENT
EUGENIO
A PLAY ABOUT FORGIVENESS
AS STAGED AT THE KENNEDYCENTER, THE NATIONAL PRESS CLUB, THE
DRAMATISTS GUILD OF AMERICA,
THE NEW YORK MIDTOWN FESTIVAL, AND THE
UNIVERSAL THEATRE AND THE GREENBELTARTSCENTER
By
ANTHONY ERNEST GALLO
Wednesday, November 19, 20147:30 PM
Seventy years ago, American forces liberated Rome from Nazi
occupation.
This fact-based, two-act drama deals with that tragic
period in Italy during the
Holocaust when fifteen hundred Jews were sent to their deaths at Auschwitz.The
drama touches on the role of the Church and the Holocaust, and examines
forgiveness amidst three conversions. Rome's
aloof and scholarly Chief Rabbi Israel Zolli loses faith following the apparent
slaughter of his Polish family. He receives asylum in the Vatican, where
he comes to appreciate Jesus as God suffering for humanity. The Rabbi
rediscovers faith and converts to Roman Catholicism. This is seen as a betrayal
of his spiritual duty and a defection to the age-old enemy. Was his conversion
one of conviction or merely gratitude? What does he demand at his baptism that
eventually removes a major symbol of discrimination?
CAST AND CREW
Steven Rosenthal, Ronnie
Hardcastle, Shirl Weaver, Ben Robles, David
Weaver, Bunty Ketcham, George Spencer, Beatrix Whitehall, Muriel Turner,
Annette Landers.
Imagine if the great Lincoln Memorial had been designed today. No longer would we feature our 16th president enthroned in a Doric temple. No more would we contend with an off-putting set of stairs as we strain to look up at cold, noninteractive marble.
Instead, Lincoln could be brought down to our size. In an immersive multimedia environment, tapping the latest technologies to recall log-cabin life, here we might help Lincoln as a child contend with his humble beginnings. The native vegetation of Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois could be planted on site, part of a LEED-certified green drainage plan. Through the Lincoln E-Memorial app, visitors could test their strength against the famous rail splitter through a game that posts scores directly to Twitter (hashtag: #RailedIt). Just be sure to duck when visiting the “Ford’s Theatre Experience.”
Thankfully, there is little risk of seeing the Lincoln Memorial recast this way. For Marian Anderson, Martin Luther King Jr. and many others, it has served as one of the most famous backdrops of the past century despite its antiquated marble technology. Yet since 1999, Washington’s master planners have been at work on another presidential memorial on the National Mall—for Dwight D. Eisenhower—that will pursue the opposite of the tried and true: a plan that was touted in its 2008 prospectus as a “21st Century memorialization,” using “new avenues” and “the widest possible range of innovative concepts and ideas,” with a “very significant electronic component,” leading to a “new vision for memorialization.”
National memorials have a history of long gestation and partisan controversy. Even the Lincoln Memorial, designed by Henry Bacon with sculpture by Daniel Chester French, completed in 1922, saw its share of criticism. Yet in this classical city, in hindsight, Washington’s traditional monuments have stood the test of time. So why must new mean “new”?
The congressionally authorized Eisenhower Commission certainly believes it got “new” in Frank Gehry, its chosen architect. With a proposal that subverts many of the classically based traditions of memorial design, the core of Gehry’s plan is the periphery: a 447-foot-long metal screen, suspended between 80-foot-tall columns, interwoven with images of trees. “The setting for Eisenhower Square,” reads the Commission website, “will be framed by transparent stainless steel tapestries, which depict the plains of Kansas, representing Eisenhower’s humble beginnings.” This device would serve as the backdrop for the sculptural program playing out in front of it.
In the initial proposal, since amended to include a greater cast of characters, this program centered on a statue of Eisenhower as a barefoot boy. The memorial would also be designed around an app that “will enable visitors to view historical footage, speeches, and events within the context of the physical memorial through augmented reality.”
Should we be surprised that the plan has become more bogged down than the Battle of the Bulge? The design has received widespread criticism—from Justin Shubow of the National Civic Art Society to Sam Roche of the group Right by Ike, not to mention members of Eisenhower’s own family—that has resonated with lawmakers and the general public. The site would also imperil the historic L’Enfant Plan by overlaying Maryland Avenue, between the Air and Space Museum and the Department of Education. In the New Yorker last year, Jeffrey Frank said the design “has managed to achieve something rare in Washington: in true bipartisan spirit, almost everyone hates it.”
This past summer, congressional members of the Committee on Natural Resources issued a 60-page report damning the project as a “five-star folly.” It is easy to see why. Congress has already appropriated $65 million for a project that would cost $100 million or more. Yet without a stone—or screen—in place, $41 million of this funding has already been spent or obligated, including almost $16.4 million for the designer and $13.3 million for administrative support. A $1.4 million fundraising effort slated to generate $35 million in private support has taken in less than $500,000. Meanwhile, the Commission maintains nine full-time employees and six full-and part-time contractors.
Beset by criticism, Congress has rightly halted future funding, some commissioners have resigned and calls have been mounting to scrap the Gehry plan altogether. Bruce Cole, the former head of the National Endowment for the Humanities who was appointed to the Commission a year ago, remains a skeptic. “A great memorial is an exclamation point, not a question mark,” he recently testified.
Yet led by its chairman, Rocco Siciliano, the Commission has dug in. Recent approvals by the National Capital Planning Commission and the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts have been hailed by Gehry defenders as the green light, even if the project has only enough gas to idle at the curb. Of course the bureaucrats behind the wheel still get their salaries. That’s right: Commission staffers will continue to draw down millions of tax dollars regardless of whether anything gets built.
Yet a greater force than self-interest has propelled the memorial to this point: the sometimes blinding mythology of the “new,” where widespread criticism can be mistaken for vindication, and pushback ennobles a self-anointed vanguard. Mr. Siciliano and others may believe they are following the example of the Vietnam Memorial, an unconventional design that overcame initial controversy to win the public over. But criticism alone does not authenticate avant-garde success. An unconventional design may just be bad, and design à la mode risks falling from fashion.
Eisenhower deserves a great national memorial, and it would be wrong to see this battle reduced to a mandate for one style over another. But the critics are right to demand something genuinely revolutionary—a design that is not simply “new,” but new, and that successfully communicates the essence of the man it claims to honor.
After all, here is the Supreme Allied Commander who oversaw the most complex amphibious assault in history. He liberated Europe, went on to become the president of Columbia University and the commander of NATO. As the American president who ended the Korean War, he ushered in a period of peacetime prosperity, connected the country through the Interstate Highway System, created NASA and the agency that would invent the Internet, while pushing civil-rights legislation and sending federal troops to desegregate the schools. When he died in 1969, he was buried, by his request, in his green World War II jacket in an $80 government-issue casket. Does this say “8-story-high, $100 million metal screen” to you?
Mr. Panero is the executive editor of the New Criterion
This story in today's Washington
post is about the American Ballet and Misty Copeland which I am hosting next
Tuesday at the National Press Club
Representatives of the Washington Ballet, the Evermay Chamber Orchestra and American Ballet Theatre (ABT) Soloist Misty Copeland plan to discuss their joint venture for the April 2015 debut of "Swan Lake" at a National Press Club Newsmakers press conference on Tuesday, Nov. 18 at 10 a.m. in the NPC's Holeman Lounge.
Like all Newsmaker events, this press conference is open to credentialed press and NPC club members, free of charge. No advance registration is required.
The production will mark the U.S. premiere of star ballerina Misty Copeland in the leading roles of Odette/Odile. It will also launch performances by musical artists of S&R Foundation’s Evermay Chamber Orchestra in The Washington Ballet’s first-ever full-length production of this quintessential ballet. Copeland is scheduled to dance with the Washington Ballet's Brooklyn Mack, one of the most pre-eminent African-American male classical-ballet dancers.
Copeland and Mack plan to speak at the Newsmakers press conference, along with Septime Webre, artistic director of the Washington Ballet; Arthur Espinoza Jr., managing director of the Washington Ballet; and, Kate Goodall, chief operating officer of the S&R Foundation, Evermay Chamber Orchestra.
Copeland has been on a meteoric rise to stardom as one of the nation’s most celebrated African-American ballerinas, only the second African-American ballerina to be promoted to soloist at ABT. Copeland authored the New York Times best-selling memoir Life in Motion and is the worldwide face of Under Armour’s “I Will What I Want” campaign. Recently she appeared as a guest judge on the television show "So You Think You Can Dance" and was appointed by President Barack Obama to the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports, and Nutrition.
The Evermay Chamber Orchestra is an ensemble of highly refined artists from five continents, assembled by S&R Foundation Washington Award Grand Prize Winner Tamaki Kawakubo.
"Swan Lake" will be conducted by Kuwaiti-born Nabil Shehata, an award-winning double bassist.
Misty Copeland and Septime Weber to appear at National Press Club. http://cur.aegallo.com NPC Newsmaker Program MEDIA ADVISORY
TO: Daybooks/Calendar/Correspondents/Assignment Editors/Press Offices... FROM: Herb Perone, NPC Newsmakers Chairman, 301-512-7636, herb@peronecomm.com
Washington Arts Luminaries to Discuss Washington Ballet’s Historic Debut of Swan Lake with Renowned African-American Ballerina Misty Copeland And New Partnership with Evermay Chamber Orchestra
Washington, DC – Representatives of The Washington Ballet (TWB), the Evermay Chamber Orchestra and American Ballet Theatre (ABT) Soloist Misty Copeland will discuss their joint venture for the historic April 2015 debut of Swan Lake at a National Press Club Newsmakers news conference on Tuesday, November 18. The production will mark the U.S. premiere of star ballerina Misty Copeland in the leading roles of Odette/Odile. The production will also launch performances by musical artists of S&R Foundation’s Evermay Chamber Orchestra in The Washington Ballet’s first-ever full-length production of this quintessential ballet. Misty Copeland has been on a meteoric rise to stardom as one of the nation’s most celebrated African-American ballerinas, only the second African-American ballerina to be promoted to soloist at ABT. Copeland authored the New York Times best-selling memoir] Life in Motion and is the worldwide face of Under Armour’s “I Will What I Want” campaign. Recently she appeared as a guest judge on the television show So You Think You Can Dance and was appointed by President Obama to the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports, and Nutrition. Copeland is scheduled to dance with TWB’s Brooklyn Mack, one of the most pre-eminent African-American male classical ballet dancers. Copeland and Mack will speak at the Newsmakers news conference, along with Septime Webre, TWB Artistic Director; Arthur Espinoza Jr., TWB Managing Director; and, Kate Goodall, COO of the S&R Foundation, Evermay Chamber Orchestra. The Evermay Chamber Orchestra is an ensemble of highly refined artists from five continents, assembled by S&R Foundation Washington Award Grand Prize Winner Tamaki Kawakubo. Swan Lake will be conducted by Kuwaiti-born Nabil Shehata, an award-winning double bassist. He is a frequent guest soloist of prestigious orchestras. This NPC Newsmakers news conference is scheduled for Tuesday, November 18 at 10 a.m. in the club’s Holeman Lounge, on the 13th Floor of the National Press Building at 529 14th St. NW, Washington DC 20045. Like all Newsmaker events, this news conference is open to credentialed press and NPC club members, free of charge. No advance registration is required. Contact:
Feel honored to host ballerina Misty Copeland at the National Press Club on Tuesday, November 18 at 10 AM. She will be the first African- American do the lead role in Swan Lake at the American Ballet Theater http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misty_Copeland
Am having Reverend Alveda King speak at the National
Press Club on January 7, 2015 speaking about her uncle, The Reverend Martin
Luther King. http://www.alvedakingministries.com/
Ruth Guerra, director of Hispanic outreach for the National Republican Party speaks at an Oct. 31 National Press Club Newsmaker event as (from left) Mark Lopez, director of research for the PEW Hispanic Research Center, Tony Gallo of the Newsmakers Committee, Peggy Sands Orchowski, congressional correspondent for Hispanic Outlook magazine and Esther Aguilera, director of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute, look on.
The Hispanic electorate is diverse and expanding but turnout of Latino voters on Nov. 4 looks at this point to be smaller than in 2012 and may not be decisive for either party.
These were some of take-aways from a National Press Club Newsmakers panel Oct. 31.
There are currently about 25 million eligible Hispanic voters in the U.S. but only about 8 million have registered to vote to date. In 2012, only 48 percent, or about 11 million, eligible Hispanic voters cast ballots; in 2014 the turnout percentage is expected to be even lower.
“One reason for lower turnout of Latino voters in 2012 and probably in 2014 is because of the dominance of youths in the Hispanic electorate,” Mark Lopez, director of the PEW Hispanic Center.
Not only do Latinos between the ages of 18-34 make up almost one third of the Hispanic electorate, 70 percent of all Hispanic youths are now born in the United States. This means a surge in the number of young potential voters into the future but it is also a universal problem that youths don’t tend to vote because they are very mobile, aren't that engaged in politics, are first-time voters and most are very busy, Lopez said. “Their political engagement will change as they get older," he added.
The Latino vote is still "punching below its weight," Lopez said.
The significance of the Latino vote is reduced because Hispanic voters don’t live in swing states: more than half live and vote in California and Texas so they don’t get the attention or have the impact that they would in a smaller state.
In 2014, Colorado, where about 14 percent of the electorate is Hispanic, is the only key state where the Hispanic vote might have an impact, Lopez said. In states like Georgia and North Carolina, only about 3 percent of the electorate are Hispanic.
"This too will change as the number of Hispanic citizens grows in states across the country,” Lopez said. “But turning a (solid Republican) state like Texas blue (Democratic), won’t happen overnight. It will take a long time, Maybe not until after 2020."
As for issues important to Hispanic voters, the panelists agreed that immigration reform was one among several.
“It’s important to the community, but I hear as much about health care and economic issues,” said Ruth Guerra, director of Hispanic media for the Republican National Committee. "Immigration issues drive the Latino vote but education, health and economic issues are equally important."
The Hispanic electorate is young, mostly born in the U.S. and is concerned about jobs and health care in the future, said Ester Aguilera, director of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute.”
"Passing immigration reform will be important to both parties in 2016," said Peggy Orchowski, panel moderator and congressional reporter for the Hispanic Outlook .
"But if the Republicans dominate Congress, reform could happen in pieces not comprehensively," Orchowski said.
LIBRE Executive Director Daniel Garza and Ben Domenech, publisher of The Federalist, will discuss the Latino vote in the 2014 midterm elections and its effect on immigration, health care and the economy at a Newsmakers news conference on Thursday, Nov. 6 at 10 a.m. in the club’s Bloomberg Room.
Garza and Domenech will also describe the ramifications for the 2016 Presidential election and evaluate changes in the Latino community over the last few years.
LIBRE is a national organization dedicated to promoting private-sector based prosperity in the Latino community. The organization works with large Latino populations in promoting free enterprise, limiting taxes and regulation, and minimizing dependency on welfare.
Like all Newsmaker events, this news conference is open to credentialed press and NPC club members, free of charge. No advance registration is required.
For more information contact Tony Gallo, 202 -544-6973, agallo2368@verizon.ne