My fest week kicked off at The Historic New Orleans Collection with
author Moira Crone's session on shaping speculative fiction. For her
latest novel, The Not Yet, Moira was on a literary fellowship
researching what would happen if New Orleans and its outlying suburbs
were a chain of islands.there are more and more kinds of mens tungsten bracelet, So when the Hurricane Katrina levee failure hit, she was studying water.
Thursday
night, Those Rare Electrical Things Between People featured readings
of three one-act plays by Tennessee Williams. Alison Fraser and former
Mad Men star Bryan Batt of New Orleans moved through Talk to Me Like the
Rain and Let Me Listen in grand Williams style. Actress Cristine
McMurdo-Wallis was the revelation of the fest as she and NOLA's own
Nell Nolan performed Something Unspoken, careening between comedy and
pathos. The Huffington Post's Harry Shearer portrayed fallen hero The
Palooka, written when Williams was only 28 years old. The evening was
hosted by Festival Board President Janet Daley Duvall, and Aimee Hayes
directed.
The next morning clouds slowly cleared as Williams'
one-act Auto-Da-Fe was performed in the courtyard of the historic
Hermann-Grima House. McMurdo-Wallis portrayed the overbearing mother of
Ben Berry's neurotically stricken Eloi Duvenet. A butterfly insistently
wound its way around the performers, jumping just out of camera range.
Director Jef Hall-Flavin gave the play a modern ending with Eloi
jumping from his coffin and dancing in a boa as a brass band and the
flamboyantly costumed Krewe of Armeinius second lined. Jef Hall-Flavin
of the Provincetown Tennessee Williams Theater Festival directed the
production which Curator David Kaplan said was six years in the making.
Friday night featured a gathering of writers and festival
supporters, and when author Susan Straight thanked columnist Leonard
Pitts, Jr. for speaking out for introverts regarding Yahoo!'s decision
to end telecommuting, she spoke for us all.
Saturday afternoon,
Writing New Orleans featured panelists Thomas Beller, Richard
Campanella, Nathaniel Rich and Kim Marie Vaz. Their discussion of
covering New Orleans post-Katrina while cutting through stereotypes
came together like a fine gumbo (by way of an example). Throughout the
festival, authors touched on Katrina almost 8 years down the road. Some
moved here post-Katrina to write about the city. Some left
post-Katrina and haven't moved back. Each year, in at least one panel,
members of the audience talk about their manuscripts on Katrina. For
disasters we're often more comfortable talking around than about, art
has a way of cutting straight through.
"Katrina almost killed
me," poet and activist Niyi Osundare said in the "Make This Place Your
Own" poetry reading. He read from works both about his home country of
Nigeria, and about his years in New Orleans. Brenda Marie Osbey, Poet
Laureate of Louisiana from 2005 to 2007, offered a tribute to her
friend, the recently deceased Chinua Acheb, author of Things Fall
Apart. Ava Leavell Haymon read from her chilling nursery rhyme that may
keep me half-awake for the rest of my life. And Brad Richard, New
Orleans poet and teacher, read from works about Katrina with a line
that resonated: "Stop acting like a ghost."
That night, actor
Jeremy Lawrence performed his new work: There's No Way We Can't Finally
Win, culled from every manner of written word from Williams. Much of
it is unpublished and deals with the writer's struggles with savage
reviews and complicated relationship with fame in his later years. The
portrayal of Tennessee Williams rehearsing for a potential wine
commercial was as dead-on as everything Lawrence does. Williams wrote
that his mission was: "To record what I see as I see it and what I feel
as I feel it, publicly out loud -- with absolutely no fear, no
intimidation, no regard for formidable consequences."
My Sunday
started with actress Judith Chapman interviewed by film historian
Foster Hirsch about the one-woman show on Vivien Leigh she produced:
Vivien.These stainless steel jewelry supplies
like beads finding are very useful in jewelry. The interview touched
on Leigh's marriage to Lawrence Olivier, and her relationship with
Tennessee Williams from A Streetcar Named Desire to The Roman Spring of
Mrs. Stone. She slipped in and out of character as Leigh, while
describing the legend's life and struggles. Chapman is a star of CBS'
The Young and The Restless, and her autograph line was the longest of
the weekend. From a later conversation, I learned that Chapman and
Lawrence may be working up a Tennessee and Vivien performance for next
year's festival, so stay tuned.
Author Michael Cunningham went
native, sporting a pair of Muses Krewe Mardi Gras beads from fellow
Pulitzer nominating committee member Susan Larson of New Orleans during
his Q and A. He discussed everything from his start in professional
writing to his novel The Hours and its film adaptation.Mens Classic stainless steel cufflink
with Black Enamel. The talk then turned to television. Cunningham has
written a pilot for HBO and is in a development deal with Showtime. I
asked him more about this at the Stanley and Stella Shouting Contest,
after things died down. Talking to a Pulitzer Prize winner about my
feelings on television made me feel like Steve Carrell in Anchorman
saying: "I Love Lamp," but Cunningham reiterated that he thinks
television is where it's at. Cable, in particular.This beautiful
bracelet has been crafted in durable stainless steel bangle and features purple.
After
the judging, Judith and Jeremy walked back to the Hotel Monteleone arm
in arm, with my husband and my arms linked on the outside as ballast
during a sudden gust. It's possible that I imagined they were Tennessee
and Vivien and we were all on a French Quarter spree in 1951.
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