Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Lola!

Hello! Today I decided I would like to give you a little insight into what went into one of the bigger projects that we've made for our productions... the Dragon from Shrek! Or what we affectionately like to call her, Lola.

From the beginning we knew we wanted to make a huge dragon. Not just the head. Not just a head piece that the actor would wear. Not just a cut-out. The whole Dragon.  The first step was to figure out a design. We went through a million different options but we knew it had to be huge, it had to move around the stage, and it had to look awesome! We were also toying with the idea of putting the actor inside. There were so many different variables that went into it that we didn't wind up agreeing on one design, so Jewel made it his project to figure out. He figured out what materials we needed (PVC pipe, chicken wire, a heat gun, zip-ties, eva foam, purple fabric, and lots and lots of hot glue) and we all started working. It wasn't our original plan to build Lola in our living room but because the venue for Shrek was a school there were too many rules to build her there.

So the boys started with shaping the PVC pipe. They had to heat it with the heat gun to get it hot enough to bend but not break, it was pretty delicate work. It was being shaped into the skeleton of Lola's body.
From there we had to shape the chicken wire around the PVC to fill her out. chicken wire is pretty difficult to work with because it scratches and since it is metal it hurts, badly. All of our hands and forearms were pretty cut up by the end.
We attached to wire to the PVC with the zip-ties and hot glue.
Meanwhile Teara and I were starting on the head. For the head we used a piece of eva foam. Teara shaved it and cut it and decorated it, it was hard but she did a great job. I had to shape the wire to put underneath the foam into the general shape of a dragon head, the hardest part of that was making the mouth able to open and shut.
When the general frame was done we put the fabric on. It had to be attached in such a way that covered the top and the underneath with spaces for people to stand inside.
When that was done it was time to move her to the venue. We had to take out our sliding back door to get her out of the house. The doors to the school were bigger, thank heavens...haha.
We actually got a welder to donate their time to make the wings for us! They turned out awesome! I covered them with fabric and a bit of spray paint and they were done.
We put all of the finishing touches on Lola to really make her look like the dragon in the movie and I think we did a pretty good job, if I do say so myself haha:)
Here are some pics of the process!














Friday, February 20, 2015

Friday

Today is the first Friday in Lent so I thought it would appropriate to post some verses to reflect on. As I was looking for verses I came across a website that had these ones that  I ended up posting below. And as I read them I just felt they were perfect because they not only apply to lent, but they are also really in line with everything that's going on in the world, with the horrible persecution of Christians in Syria and Iraq. They desperately need our prayers and sacrifices this lent, as do the persecutors.

Romans 8:15-18: For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the spirit of sonship. When we cry, "Abba! Father!" it is the Spirit himself bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with him in order that we may also be glorified with him. I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us.

1 Peter 4:13: But rejoice in so far as you share Christ's sufferings, that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed.

1 Peter 5:8-9: Be sober, be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking some one to devour. Resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same experience of suffering is required of your brotherhood throughout the world.

Luke 5:35: The days will come, when the bridegroom is taken away from them, and then they will fast in those days."

Mark 9:27-28: And when he was come into the house, his disciples secretly asked him: Why could not we cast him out?  And he said to them: This kind can go out by nothing, but by prayer and fasting.

Matthew 6:16-18:   And when you fast, be not as the hypocrites, sad. For they disfigure their faces, that they may appear unto men to fast. Amen I say to you, they have received their reward.  But thou, when thou fastest anoint thy head, and wash thy face;  That thou appear not to men to fast, but to thy Father who is in secret: and thy Father who seeth in secret, will repay thee .

My apologies

I know I know I've missed a few blogs:'(  I'm sooowwwyyy. But I'm making up for it because I did have them planned out. Stop looking at me like that, I did.

So last Friday I wanted to tell you all about something that I love... Laughing:D Just as in life, in the theatre there is a season for everything. And just like summer, comedy is my favorite "season." Now I love slapstick, I really love "comedy of errors" style, but perhaps my favorite is improvisational comedy, or at least partial improv. We have some great improv comedy groups around here that we love to go see, I feel so special to have that right at my fingertips because it's just that enjoyable. So if you live here and have yet to go check out Mandudebro in particular, you'd better get on that.

There is this fabulous show that has come to Bethlehem a few times in the past several years that is a perfect display of this partial improv that I speak of. It's called Tony and Tina's Wedding and you may have heard of it, it's quite popular. It is hilarious and highly entertaining, and we have taken part in it in the past, but not this year when it came. Which brings me to... Tonight! Well, OK last Friday night. We went to go see it and were so excited to see many great actors and great friends and experience the whole thing from a patron's point of view. Of course I missed being in the cast, especially working with "Tony" and "Tina," and also working with easily the best director I've ever had the pleasure of working with. But nevertheless it was an extremely fun night and if it comes back next year or the year after or the year after that, go! I promise you it's not just any old show, it will be a whole experience you'll remember for a long time:)

In the meantime, until an awesome comedy show arrives in your area, you can just YouTube old episodes of Whose Line is it Anyway. That should hold you over.

Bye bye

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Lent, A time of Sacrifice and Thanksgiving

    And thus we have entered into the Lenten season. Ash Wednesday was yesterday, we all got our ashes at Mass and it was the start of the most solemn time of the year. These next 40 days or so are the days we must reflect on the sacrifice he made for each and every one of us on Good Friday so many years ago. This is time of sacrifice, service, meditation and thanksgiving. A time when we must prepare our souls for the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. 
    There are many traditions or disciplines that come along with the Lenten season especially in the Catholic faith. One tradition that is universal among most Christians is abstinence from meat on Ash Wednesday and every Friday during Lent. Have you ever wondered why we abstain from meat on Fridays? Well, I know there are different explanations as to why the tradition actually started but I always learned that we give meat up on Fridays as a form of sacrifice and remembrance that Christ offered His flesh for us on the cross. It is a form of prayer and discipline in which we can focus on Christ and our souls and offer Him our 'flesh' as a sacrifice instead of focusing on ourselves and our own bodies. 
    Another tradition is to fast during Lent. There are different ways of fasting. We are all called to fast on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday but some people choose to fast the entire Lenten season. Fasting usually means eating one full meal and one or two smaller meals that don't add up to a second full meal each day and no meat on Fridays. There are a lot of people in the religious life who fast during all of Lent and that's just the least of what many of them do for Lent. 
    Sacrifice is huge part of Lent and a huge part of what allows us to focus on Christ and be more one with Him. That is why along with abstaining on Fridays and Fasting on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday we, as Catholics give up something else for the whole 40+ days. Whether it be chocolate, junk food, coffee or some type of action such as going to church every day, saying the rosary every day at noon, meditating for a couple hours a day on the crucifixion, giving up swearing, etc. The idea is to choose something that is a challenge, something that will be hard for you to do every day for Lent. And every time you face that challenge and overcome it you offer it up to Jesus Christ and become closer and closer to him. 
    Among these traditions there are the Stations of the Cross that are usually said once a week during Lent and there are many meditations and prayers and services that you can do to enrich your Lenten experience. Lent is different for everyone, embrace it and use this time to really strengthen your relationship with God. Jesus died for us, let us show Him how much we love Him and thank Him for the sacrifice He made by making our small daily sacrifices for these 40 short days. 





Wednesday, February 18, 2015

40 Days For Life

Hi Everyone! I hope you had an awesome Fat Tuesday yesterday with many many treats! haha!
Now today is not only Ash Wednesday, the first day of lent, but it is also the kick off of the first 40 Days for Life campaign of 2015. 40 Days for Life is the largest internationally coordinated pro-life mobilization in history, helping people in local communities end the injustice of abortion through prayer and fasting, peaceful vigil, and community outreach. 40 Days first started in 2007 and has since grown quite considerably... there are 650,000 volunteers; 559 cities; 27 nations; 3,336 local campaigns that take part in 40 Days for Life worldwide.
We have been participating in 40Days for a long time, I don't know if we started all the way back in 2007 but probably pretty close to it.  We try our best to pray outside of one of the abortion clinics in our area as often as possible within the 40 days. It is going to be extra hard this year because the weather is unbearable but we just have to bundle up tight, offer our numb fingers and toes up to God, and remember what we are doing it for. It's a wonderful feeling to know that you are helping to save the lives of people that can't fight for themselves; babies who many people don't think even exist. 3,699 unborn children have been saved in some way by this Campaign, and those are only the ones that are proven. I believe that there are probably many other women who have been on their way to get an abortion and drove past the clinic or gave their decision a second thought because someone was outside praying and nobody would've known. And not only are babies being rescued but clinic workers and doctors are starting to see the horrible wrongs that they have been taking part in. I think 40 Days for Life is an amazing campaign and it is really easy to find campaigns close to you and there are many different ways to help, I hope you go check it out:)

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Function Of Art?


   This was another college paper for Music History II. It was really difficult for me and although there isn't a real resolution it is very interesting in the questions it raises.
     Before I start can I ask us all to join in a moment of prayer for mankind. 45 human beings, likely Christian were burned alive by ISIS 5 miles away from where 250 American troops are stationed. The troopes are now surrounded and our gov. has not provided air support. The flip side of this coin of evil is our culture has permitted the disgusting filth of '50 Shades of Grey' to enter our movie theatres and lead the box office. This is a perverted movie which misrepresents love, the problem with the world-rejection of Love(I could go on but I will not in this blog post).  When we permit evil it is our shoulders the blame sits on. The world is burning.......it is up to you to put out the fire.   !!!!                                                         



                                                              Timeliness and Lateness
Everything having no function in the work of art - and therefore everything transcending the law of mere existence - is withdrawn. The function of the work of art lies precisely in its transcendence beyond mere existence….Since the work of art, after all, cannot be reality, the elimination of all illusory features accentuates all the more glaringly the illusory character of it existence. This process is inescapable. (PNM 70)”
At one point in this excerpt, Said writes that Adorno is not easily read in any language. I would definitely have to agree, and add that this whole piece was quite a laborious task to digest. The principles and concepts discussed are deep and uncontained in a way that allows us much freedom to explore their meanings and our own interpretations of them. Although, this is a double-edged sword, for that means that to fully grasp and form an opinion on the concepts we must invest ourselves into the reading, a time-consuming task that is not for the backseat regurgitating student. That being said, these words I have chosen to explore are full of ripe implications.
I will examine them in steps and then as a whole. The first implication we see is the thought of art as more than a representation of true reality, even more so how it cannot be, for the more it tries to represent real life the more it becomes an illusion. Art then, cannot ever be ‘real.’ In this vain of thinking possibly art is never real, for art is always a creation of the subjective or interpretation of creation. This process is dependent on the creator and is therefore subjective and in a way illusory. To take this to the next logical step in my mind is that even historical records….are an art! Beethoven’s work in this light creates the interesting parallel. Some of his works have been held almost as historical biographical documents, ones that serve as records of the composer himself. Adorno sees this as "relegating them (the late works) to the far reaching vicinities of art." We see death and a man who is alienated in Beethoven's late works, yet here Adorno has established that what we feel are only allegories for death and broken representations, not just Beethoven's autobiography but something different and valuable.
Art goes beyond the laws of reality for it has no function besides transcending function. This can be seen as a slight paradox. To accept art as having no function at all is to accept it as meaningless and misunderstood. Interestingly, Adorno views art as something not meant to hide its frills and thrills within the meaning. Tied into the first implication we see this view of art being refined. Now we see art as having a meaning and purpose to rise above reality as its very function, but within this function in reality art cannot and should not try to wipe away its fantastic qualities. Beethoven’s late period work represents this as it represents the idea of Lateness. His work was not a meshing synthesis but an unleashing of energy. This energy is not bound by reality yet is speaking to us almost objectively. This defines art as a function by having no definable one.
The word function seems to complicate this concept. It is different than purpose for its purpose I would contest, is to elevate the moral and social state of man. Its practicality I would say is the outlet of one's emotions and the awakening in another's. Instead he has chosen which ever word translates into the English one of function. This is a more encompassing word speaking to its right to exist. He finds the right for art to exist not in its practicality but in its impracticality. Altogether he did not mean it in this way but Beethoven's Late works put this idea of more impractical art into practice through its stubborn rashness which drove the direction of the future.
A last step I reach before digesting the whole is a conceptual parallel between art and man. If art truly holds this place for mankind, a place of communication without boundaries, it is our highest duty before invoking religions. (Although earlier I had asserted even historical recounts are art.) We find that the closer to man and his core we come and the closer we strain toward the heavens, the more natural, holistic, and sometimes ornamentally ridiculous it becomes. As it reaches deeper illusion it approaches what is most real.
Beethovens work was an incredible representation of this thought. His late style was most likely shocking in his time as it affronts our ears even today. It does not follow paths marked out for it. It is beautiful in a foregone way, a lost way, an eccentric way. We see the value of work that swam in contest with the contemporary. It was not a representation of our idea of what is natural or real for a man of his time and age but rather a glimpse into a consciousness living outside of itself. Now this art has meant everything to us, and without it we would lose the foundation of modern music. Beethoven represents this communication, a higher calling, for his creations were beyond yet for himself and they touched a time he did not. This is the greatest illusion or art of all.
Said creates in this excerpt an art of art. He writes linking the natural to the artistic, finding meaning in our body’s condition through the eyes of the art it creates. Together we discover a great rift between timeliness and lateness. He then centers this deciphering around Adorno who writes on the lateness of Beethoven drawing over reaching beliefs through the study of Beethoven.
If we do not really accept art as having the truths stated in the passage I chose, then we lose much of the importance of Beethovens Lateness. If art is to have a function, one that is real, one that is beyond just aesthetic pleasure and it achieves this without ornamentation, then his work is nothing but cacophony of a deaf man. To those accepting this it is a monument left for us of art.We do not expect to hear what we do in the Late works as they are not the soundtrack of a peaceful successful man. There is nothing timely about Beethoven's Late music, but when we listen or realize what they have done, there could not be anything more timely about them.















Friday, February 13, 2015

50 Shades

The real reason 50 Shades is so wildly popular (HINT: It’s not the sex)

Kirsten AndersenKirsten Andersen Follow Kirsten
Over the past several weeks, countless pixels have been expended on this website and others about just how horrible the cultural juggernaut known as Fifty Shades of Grey is.  Literary and film critics hate it because it’s terribly written.  Feminists hate it because the main female character is spineless and void of personality.  Domestic abuse awareness activists hate it because it portrays stalking, threats, and controlling behavior as signs of true love.  BDSM aficionados hate it because they feel it unfairly portrays their lifestyle.  Cultural conservatives hate it because it’s taken the kind of violent, kinky porn people used to be ashamed about consuming and placed it squarely into the mainstream.
Even the stars of the soon-to-be released film adaptation of the popular books sort of hate Fifty Shades.  Jamie Dornan, who portrays the series’ titular character Christian Grey, told Glamour magazine that he’s “played a couple of sick, sick dudes, serial killers…and characters who don’t treat women the way society deems appropriate.”  Still, he said, “Christian was a massive challenge.”
To prepare for filming, Dornan visited a sex dungeon like the one Christian Grey built in his apartment to satisfy his taste for violence and control.  After watching the things he’d be expected to do to his costar, he returned to his wife and newborn baby feeling dirty.  “I had a long shower before touching either of them,” he told Elle UK.  He even went as far as telling the UK’s Guardian newspaper that although he desperately misses his late mother, who died of cancer when he was 16, “it’s probably just as well she didn’t have to see Fifty Shades.”
Meanwhile, Dakota Johnson, who plays Ana Steele, told Glamour that even though she comes from a long line of Hollywood actors – her parents are Melanie Griffith and Don Johnson, and her grandmother is Tippi Hedren – she’s uncomfortable with the idea of them seeing her breakout role.
“I don't want my family to see [Fifty Shades], because it's inappropriate,” Johnson said. “Or my brothers' friends, who I grew up with. I think they'd be like, 'Blegh.'  Also there's part of me that's like, I don't want anyone to see this movie.”
So with all this hate for the series of books and the upcoming films, what is the secret to its massive success?
Jamie Dornan is curious about that himself.
“I wonder what it is about this set of books that has, excuse my pun, penetrated the global market," he told Elle UK. “Mass appreciation doesn't always equate to something good. Think of Hitler! But I think, in this case, it must. It simply must. There's got to be merit in it if so many people agree.”
You’re not wrong, Jamie, but here’s a hint: It’s not about the sex.
To truly understand the success of Fifty Shades, one first has to revisit the book’s roots.  Despite a determined campaign of internet scrubbing by author E.L. James and her publishers, it’s still relatively common knowledge that Fifty Shadesbegan its life as an online Twilight fan fiction serial called Master of the Universe. 
Then going by the pen name “Snowqueen’s Icedragon,” or “Icy” for short, James (real name: Erika Leonard) published the story online as an X-rated reimagining of the blockbuster series about a teenage vampire and his obsession with an ordinary human girl. Master of the Universe transformed sparkly vampire Edward Cullen into a young billionaire entrepreneur (think Mark Zuckerberg with sex appeal and a sadistic streak), and mousy high school student Bella Swan into a mousy college co-ed who stumbles – literally – into Edward’s world and immediately captures his attention. At the time, Twilight fan fiction had become so popular that entire small publishing houses were set up to “file the serial numbers off” the most read stories and republish them as original works. (Publishing fan fiction for profit is widely considered a violation of copyright law, so removing all reference to characters owned by other authors is a necessity if one wishes to sell a derivative work.) One of these small publishers approached “Icy,” and she agreed to switch up the character names in order to publish her story as a series of e-books under a new pen name, E.L. James.  As they became increasingly popular, the rights were sold to Vintage, which republished them as what the world now knows as Fifty Shades of Grey.
So what is the secret to Fifty Shades’success?  Easy.  It never strayed far from its source material.  Fifty Shades is popular for exactly the same reasons as Twilight,because it’s exactly the same story, just written for an older audience – an audience with deeper pockets and no meddling parents to say “no” when they ask to buy the book at the store, check it out at the library, or see the movie when it comes out in theaters.
Twilight was told from the perspective of Bella Swan, a shy and awkward teenage girl who, without even trying, attracts the attention and eventual obsession of Edward Cullen, an inhumanly attractive classmate with superpowers and a dark secret: he’s a vampire, and even though he is desperately in love with Bella, he struggles with his innate desire to hurt her.
In Fifty Shades, we have Ana Steele, a shy and awkward college girl who, without even trying, attracts the attention and eventual obsession of Christian Grey, an inhumanly attractive (he’s repeatedly described as an “Adonis”) man with incredible power and a dark secret: he’s addicted to violent sex, and even though he is desperately in love with Ana, he struggles with his innate desire to hurt her. 
Does any of this sound familiar?
The commonalities between these two stories go much deeper than the ripped-off plotline.  The characters of Bella and Ana are both written as almost blank slates, onto which readers can project their own personalities.  (For the salty-language tolerant, The Oatmeal explains the mechanics of this process here, better and more concisely than I ever could.)
All we know about each girl is that she’s ordinary – like, so ordinary that if you looked up the word “ordinary” in the dictionary, you would find their pictures – only you wouldn’t; you’d find a little mirror reflecting your own face back at you, because that’s the entire point.  You’re meant to insert yourself into the story, and suddenly it’s you, in all your banal lack of glory, who has proven irresistible to these powerful, godlike, beautiful, deeply damaged men, and only you can help them find their humanity again.  The best part?  You didn’t have to do anything to capture their undying devotion but be yourself.
It’s a heady fantasy, no?
For the women who love Fifty Shades, the sex is largely beside the point.  (Let’s be honest; there’s better-written and much more explicit erotica out there for those who are into that sort of thing.)  The descriptions of sex in Fifty Shades range from the dryly clinical to the absurdly childish, with the main character constantly referring to her sexual organs as “down there.”  Penthouse Letters, this is not.
No, the appeal of Fifty Shades and Twilightalike is the fantasy that somewhere out there, there’s an extraordinary man (or, erm, vampire) who will adore you just the way you are, no matter how plain, how unaccomplished, how downright unremarkable.  If this has you thinking that maybe these women have a God-shaped hole in their hearts, you’re probably right.  Even The Oatmealcartoonist Matthew Inman, an atheist, picked up on this in his above-mentioned critique of Twilight, labeling his cartoon rendering of the lead male character: “Edward Cullen – Also known as He-Man/Jesus Christ.”
“Imagine everything women want in a man, then exaggerate it by ten thousand - and you've got Edward Cullen,” Inman wrote.  “As far as the reader is concerned, Edward cares about nothing in the world more than [Bella]. What the author has done is created a perfect male figure - a pale Greek statue which the reader can worship and in turn be worshipped by.”
Substitute “Christian” and “Ana” for “Edward” and “Bella” in Inman’s commentary, and you’ll begin to understand what’s going on here.
The success of both Twilight and Fifty Shades stems from the battle that rages in all of us from the day we emerge screaming, naked, and helpless into this world.  On the one hand, we all want to be deeply loved for who we are.  On the other, we see ourselves as pathetically unworthy. 
That feeling of unworthiness may come from a lot of different places – the media, society, maybe even our friends and families.  In fact, as I was writing this essay, a friend and fellow writer noted that the women who make up Fifty Shades’ core audience were born and raised in the late 1960s, and 1970s, when divorce was at its peak.  As a result, many of them – perhaps even the majority – were raised without a full-time father in the home. 
Maybe they missed out on the experience of being the apple of their father’s eye, as Mom nursed whatever wounds drove the split in the first place, while Dad set up a new house and a new life with some other lady and different kids.  Perhaps in idolizing these damaged men who find healing and wholeness only by learning to unconditionally love these seemingly unworthy girls, they are unconsciously being swept up by a fairy tale that speaks not to their romantic desires, but some deep, unexamined childhood wound.  Since no one’s done a study on this, it’s only speculation, but I suspect the results of such a study would be telling. 
That’s just one possible source of the emptiness books like Fifty Shadestemporarily fill.  But the truth is, anyone who has ever felt unremarkable or invisible for any reason can put themselves in Ana’s shoes and understand her thrill at being chosen – her, of all people! – by a man with so much power he might as well be God.  And anyone who has ever tried to love someone out of a dangerous lifestyle – be it addiction, violence, self-harm, risky sexual behaviors, or heck, vampirism (you never know) – can relate to Ana’s joy as her steadfast love transforms Christian from a damaged, petulant dictator into a loving husband.
Ultimately, the secret to the success of Fifty Shades is that it puts the reader in the role of both the saved and the savior.  But that’s also precisely what’s so dangerous about this story – because Christian Grey is not God, neither is Ana, and neither are any of us.  In reality, Christian’s all-consuming “love” would warrant a restraining order, and Ana’s refusal to leave him would eventually land her at a battered women’s shelter or dead.  The same is true for the rest of us – bad things happen when we try to play God, or when we let someone else fill the role of God for us.  The only salvific love we’ll ever find in this world is divine in origin – not romantic.
Christian conservatives in particular have been working hard to combat the damage this series is primed to do, sounding the alarm about its glorification of pornography, domestic abuse and degradation.  But there’s another front Christians need to be fighting on, and for once, it’s not one where we’re on the defensive.  Forget the porn for a minute; forget the abuse.  In Fifty Shades, we have a story that has touched the hearts of millions of women, and underneath its filthy exterior, at its core, it’s about unconditional love and redemption. 
This is our home turf, people … this is our story. If a hundred million people will shell out for a counterfeit paperback version of a love we live every day, we should see that not just as an attack, but an opportunity. 
Love is our story.  Let’s tell it better.

I had no idea this story was based on Twilight! I think this article really sheds some light on why so many people love this book. I don't think all of the similarities she points out between Twilight and 50 Shades are completely on point but overall it makes so much sense!