Sunday, December 9, 2007

TEEN FILMMAKERS WANTED!
2008 NEWPORT BEACH FILM FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES CALL FOR TEEN FILM ENTRIES
Volcom Embraces Creativity of Young Filmmakers with Sponsorship of Youth Film Event


The Newport Beach Film Festival is proud to announce Call for Entries for its 2008 Youth Film Showcase presented by Volcom. The Festival is currently accepting film submissions from student filmmakers for its annual spring youth cinema event. The free event will spotlight films produced by filmmakers 18 years-old and younger. Through the exhibition of youth created media, the event will provide young people a forum for creativity and freedom of expression.

For the fourth year in a row the event will be sponsored by Volcom, one of Orange County’s hottest action sports brands and maker of cutting edge snow, surf, and skateboard wear and videos. As presenters of the showcase, Volcom will present filmmaker cash awards recognizing artistic excellence in filmmaking. "The Youth Film Showcase is an exciting and important part of the Festival and we are proud to be involved in it,” stated Volcom’s President and CEO Richard Woolcott.

The competition is open to U.S. and international filmmakers 18 years and younger. Filmmakers can submit live action or animated short films of all genres, including drama, romance, comedy, documentary, action sports, experimental, musical and science fiction. Individual filmmakers, film groups or school classes may enter their films. Filmmakers can submit through www.withoutabox.com or by downloading an entry form on the Festival’s web site. Deadline for entries is January 25, 2008. Visit http://www.newportbeachfilmfest.com/youth_division/ for information about the Youth Film Showcase presented by Volcom.

Films will screen at the Regency Lido Theater and at Edwards Island Cinema in Fashion Island in Newport Beach. The event will feature a Volcom Awards ceremony, a question and answer session with student filmmakers and a Volcom post-screening celebration. The ninth annual Newport Beach Film Festival will run April 24th through May 1st, 2008 and will spotlight over 350 films from over 35 countries. Visit www.newportbeachfilmfest.com.

Saturday, December 8, 2007


Winter Stone Carving Workshop Begins January 12th

Learn the techniques of this time-honored art form using a variety of tools and stone. The stone carving classes are taught by master stone carvers, Marvin Johnson and Joseph Sovella, and held at Laguna College of Art & Design, 2222 Laguna Canyon Road in Laguna Beach. This 10-week workshop takes place on Saturdays, beginning January 12 through March 15 from 9 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Work outside amidst the magnificent scenery of Laguna Canyon. Ample free parking is available.

No prior experience is necessary. This class is open to all skill levels ranging from beginners to advanced. Enjoy working outdoors sculpting stone into forms of almost any size or shape. Superior technical skills are taught as part of the art process as both Joe and Marv pass on years of knowledge to their students. Sovella has taught at Laguna College since 1986 and Johnson since 1992.

Joseph Sovella and Marvin Johnson have been Laguna residents for more than 20 years. “Laguna is where my artistic energy is constantly stimulated,” says Sovella who has had an interest in stone since childhood. This interest has taken him to the far corners of the world, including Pietra Santa, Italy, where he has worked with some of the great sculptors of the world. He has also exhibited in Europe since 1990 and has just completed an exhibit in Nice, France and Kealakekua, Hawaii. Joseph has combined his education and experience in geology, engineering and stone sculpting to develop a unique blend of artistry that relies on both technical and creative ability to compose various styles of sculpture in alabaster, soapstone and marble.

Marv Johnson holds an MFA in sculpture and studied at the Boston Museum School as well as receiving his B.A. in philosophy from Whittier College. Marv was a foundry pattern maker in the mid-60’s and designed parts for Barbie Dolls; sculpted civil war soldiers for diorama in Gettysburg; was a Clay modeler at General Motors; and developed a line of Jewelry made of tropical hardwood. Marv’s work has been widely exhibited including New England Sculptor’s Association, Boston; National Orange Show; Bahrum B. Gallery in Laguna Beach as well as in private collections throughout California.

Cost for the 10-week workshop is $300 and includes all tools and a sample stone. An additional selection of specialty stone is available for purchase onsite. To register or receive additional information: jdaniels@lagunacollege.edu

Images: Stone sculpture students at work.


Friday, December 7, 2007


FESTIVAL OF ARTS "POSTER" EXHIBIT AT WELLS FARGO

A retrospective of Festival of Arts annual posters from the past 20 years is being presented at the downtown Laguna Beach Wells Fargo through January 31, 2007. Over the years many images for posters have been produced for the purpose of highlighting the Festival and Pageant of the Masters.

The poster exhibit reflects not only the history of the Festival, but also that of Laguna Beach. Included are Armen Gasparian's 1982 depiction of Crystal Cove and a more recent painting of the same subject matter by Michael Obermeyer.

Other posters include reproductions of paintings by Brenda Bredvik, Sandra Jones Campbell, Dagmar Chaplin, Clarence Hinkle, Michael Jacques, Kathy Jones, Mark Kerckhoff, Roger Kuntz, Tom Swimm and others. Also on display are some items sold in the gift shop during Festival season and on the website year-round. Marketing director Sharbie Higuchi said, "Visit the Festival’s online gift shop and take advantage of the 45% off merchandise discount offer. You’ll find affordable, collectible and artful gifts for your friends and family members that are uniquely Laguna, or perhaps even something for yourself.”

The exhibit is on the third floor of the Wells Fargo building at 260 Ocean Avenue, Laguna Beach. The building is open to the public Monday through Friday 9:00 a.m. –
6 p.m. and Saturday 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. Admission is free. Anyone wishing to purchase a Festival of Arts poster may visit the website at www.LagunaFestivalofArts.org. An online winter sale with all merchandise at 45% off runs through January 31st.

This exhibit is part of an ongoing series of shows that the Festival of Arts is having at Wells Fargo this year. The Sawdust Festival has an exhibit on the main floor of the building, while Community Art Project (CAP) has an exhibit on the second level.


The Festival of Arts is a non-profit organization whose proceeds support the arts in and about Laguna Beach. For more information call 949-464-4282.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

LAGUNA PLAYHOUSE

CALENDAR LISTINGS
December 2007 – April 2008

Through December 16

Moulton Theatre Main Stage
Off-Broadway Hit Musical
Hank Williams: Lost Highway
Written by Randal Myler and Mark Harelik

Performances:
Tuesday – Saturday evenings at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening December 9: 7:00 p.m.

Country and Western music icon Hank Williams touched the hearts of millions of people during his short career. Now, his unique magic as a performer and the simple spell of his yearning songs return to life in this unforgettable musical tribute. Packed with familiar melodies – including “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” and “Your Cheatin’ Heart” – the show recounts Williams’ often lonely journey from obscurity to super-stardom at the Grand Ole Opry. Though his life ended tragically, Williams’ legend lives on through songs that celebrate the tenderness of the heart and the hopefulness of the human spirit.


December 17– 23
Moulton Theatre Special Engagement
Back by Popular Demand
Sister’s Christmas Catechism
Written by Maripat Donovan with Marc Silvia and Jane Morris
Directed by Marc Silvia
December 17-23
Monday – Sunday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
hursday, Saturday & Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.

Think CSI: BETHLEHEM as Sister tackles the question that has been puzzling historians throughout the ages: What ever happened to the Magi's gold? Sister engages her audience to help solve the mystery through a forensic examination of the nativity scene. Sister hunts under the manger and over camel humps in her quest for clues.

January 1 – February 3
Moulton Theatre Main Stage
World Premiere

TRANCED
Written by Bob Clyman
Previews:
January 1 - 4
Regular Run:
January 6 – February 3, 2008
Tuesday – Saturday evenings at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Thursday matinees January 3 & 17: 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening, January 27: 7:00 p.m.

In this fast-paced, suspense-filled thriller by the author of The Laguna Playhouse hit drama, The Secret Order, an African graduate student comes to Dr. Philip Malaad, a respected psychiatrist and renowned specialist in clinical hypnosis, seeking relief from her panic attacks which began shortly after she observed a violent incident in her native country. After ‘trancing’ her, Dr. Malaad begins to suspect whatever she believes she witnessed may actually be concealing a repressed memory, one with profound consequences for many thousands of people unless someone quickly intervenes. Caught between his professional ethics and this large moral obligation, Malaad is soon pulled into a vortex of high-level political intrigue, forced to examine as never before the slippery nature of truth.

February 12 – March 16
Moulton Theatre Main Stage
Southern California Premiere
Red Herring
Written by Michael Hollinger

Previews:
February 12 - 15

Regular Run:
February 17 – March 16, 2008
Tuesday – Saturday evenings at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Thursday matinees February 14 & 28: 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening, March 9: 7:00 p.m.

Take three pairs of lovers, add an unsolved murder, several pinches of espionage, and pickle everything in a brine of early Cold War paranoia, and you have the ingredients for a side-splitting black comedy enmeshed in tangled romance. Why is Senator Joseph McCarthy’s daughter dating a would-be traitor? And what’s that supposedly dead Russian fisherman doing pretending to be feisty landlady Mrs. Kravitz’ deaf husband? Did we mention the pair of dogged gumshoes? And how does I Love Lucy and the H-Bomb fit into the plot? This spoof Red Scare drama will keep you reeling with laughter.

March 25 – April 27
Moulton Theatre Main Stage
World Premiere

BROWNSTONE
Written by Catherine Butterfield

Previews:
March 25 – 28

Regular Run:
March 30 – April 27, 2008
Tuesday – Saturday evenings at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Thursday matinees March 27 & April 10: 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening, April 20: 7:00 p.m.

As the saying goes, “if only these walls could talk,” and in Catherine Butterfield’s imaginative new play they do! Set in a Manhattan brownstone, this play spans three contrasting eras and plays host to three very different sets of occupants. There’s the pampered rich young couple of the 1930s, eager for adventure in Paris. There are the starry-eyed aspiring actresses of the 1970s and the chillingly self-absorbed “power couple” of the new millennium. They all have dreams, but as events unfold they must learn to ride the shifting waves of fortune. These walls have stories – funny, tragic and mysteriously linked. From the author of The Playhouse’s hit comedy The Sleeper

ABOUT LAGUNA PLAYHOUSE

TICKET INFORMATION
949-497-2787 ext. 1 (group tickets ext. 229)
www.lagunaplayhouse.com

606 Laguna Canyon Rd., Laguna Beach, 92651


Wednesday, December 5, 2007

THE LAGUNA PLAYHOUSE

PRESENTS
TRANCED
BY BOB CLYMAN
January 1 – February 3, 2008

WORLD PREMIERE PRODUCTION IS DIRECTED BY JESSICA KUBZANSKY

The Laguna Playhouse is pleased to present the World Premiere of Tranced by Bob Clyman, running January 1 through February 3, 2008 in The Playhouse’s Moulton Theatre in Laguna Beach. The production is directed by Jessica Kubzansky.

In this fast-paced, suspense-filled thriller by the author of The Laguna Playhouse hit drama, The Secret Order, an African graduate student (Azmera) comes to Dr. Philip Malaad, a respected psychiatrist and renowned specialist in clinical hypnosis, seeking relief from her panic attacks which began shortly after she observed a violent incident in her native country. After ‘trancing’ her, Dr. Malaad begins to suspect whatever she believes she witnessed may actually be concealing a repressed memory, one with profound consequences for many thousands of people unless someone quickly intervenes. Caught between his professional ethics and this large moral obligation, Malaad is soon pulled into a vortex of high-level political intrigue and forced to examine as never before the slippery nature of truth.

“It’s easier for me to write about mental health because I am a psychologist as well as a playwright. It gives me a leg up as far as authenticity,” notes Clyman. “I know about hypnotherapy, and I talked to a hypnotherapist who works in this manner. It’s not abracadabra. They sit across from you and create paradoxes which will alter your relationship with reality, and without knowing it you’ll be much more open to suggestion. And despite the serious subject there’s also a lot of humor in the play, although it’s all character based comedy. I don’t write laugh lines. You need good comic actors for this role, actors who understand rhythm and language, someone with an ear. You need the right person that understands how to capture the mood and maximize the comic pop. I do not write actor proof plays. I leave a tremendous amount of responsibility to directors and actors.”

Tranced features four Los Angeles-based actors: Eriza Tazel (Azmera), Thomas Fiscella (Dr. Philip Malaad), Ashley West Leonard (Beth, a journalist) and Andrew Norba (Logan, Director of African Affairs).

Bob Clyman’s plays have been performed Off-Broadway and at regional theaters, including The Laguna Playhouse, Denver Center Theatre, George Street Playhouse, Williamstown Theater Company, Colony Studio Theatre, Missouri Repertory Theater, Playwrights Theater of New Jersey, and Philadelphia Festival Theater. Subsequent to its performance at Laguna Playhouse, his play Secret Order was recently produced at Merrimack Repertory Theatre and opened Off-Broadway at 59E59 Theatre in November of 2007. He has also been awarded a number of national prizes, including a Eugene O’Neill Summer Conference Fellowship, New Jersey State Arts Council Award, Geraldine Dodge Fellowship, Berilla-Kerr Foundation Award, Edward Albee Foundation Fellowship, Djerassi Foundation Fellowship, Shenandoah Valley Playwrights Fellowship, Playwrights First Award and Theater in the Works Fellowship. He was a member of the Circle Rep Lab in New York, where four of his plays were produced.

Jessica Kubzansky is an award-winning director who was awarded the 2004 LA Drama Critics Circle Margaret Hanford Award for Sustained Excellence in Theatre. New works are a passion for Kubzansky, whose recent forays include: the world premiere and Ovation Award-winning production of Bryan Davidson's War Music for the Playwrights' Arena/Echo Theatre at LATC which went on to play at The Geffen Playhouse; the world premiere of Cold/Tender for The Theater @ Boston Court; the critically-acclaimed West Coast premiere of Sheila Callaghan's Kate Crackernuts at the 24th Street Theatre; the multiple award-winning Toys in the Attic at The Colony; and the award-winning new musical Moscow, by Nick Salamone. Kubzansky's work out of town includes Julia Cho's BFE for Portland Center Stage's JAW West Festival, David Gow's Bea's Niece for MetroStage in Washington, D.C., Pirates of Penzance for The Publick Theatre (Boston), Tony Kushner's The Illusion for the American Stage Co. (Florida), Twelfth Night for the Grand Canyon Shakespeare Festival (Arizona), and Macbeth at Greyfriars Kirkyard (Edinburgh). Kubzansky is blessed to indulge her wildly eclectic theatrical tastes in Southern California, with productions as diverse as Measure for Measure for A Noise Within, Amy's View (with Carol Lawrence and Susan Egan) as well as A Servant to Two Masters for International City Theatre, world premieres for the Mark Taper Forum New Works (plays by Diana Son, Paula Weston Solano, et al), Moon for the Misbegotten at the Laguna Playhouse, Wedekind/Peter Barnes' Lulu for Pacific Resident Theatre, Dancing at Lughansa for McCoy-Rigby/La Mirada, Vaclav Havel's The Memorandum for the Odyssey Theatre, The House of Blue Leaves for West Coast Ensemble, Heartbreak House for the Colony Theatre, Arthur Schnitzler's Anatol for the Buffalo Nights, the world premiere of Carol Wolf's The Thousandth Night (Monsieur Shaherazad) with Ron Campbell, which has played London's Old Red Lion and toured the world; and many more. Kubzansky and her productions have received numerous theatre honors, including the Scotsman's Fringe First, London Fringe, Los Angeles Drama Critics' Circle, LA Weekly, Drama-Logue, Backstage West Garland, OC Weekly, and Robby Awards. Kubzansky has an M.F.A. from California Institute of the Arts, a creative writing degree from Johns Hopkins University, was a V.U.S. at Harvard University, and teaches at UCLA.

TRANCED - Performance & Ticket Information:

Ticket Prices: $25 to $65

Previews:
Tuesday – Friday, January 1 – 4: 8:00 p.m.
Thursday, January 3: 2:00 p.m. & 8:00 p.m.

Regular Performances
January 6 – February 3, 2008
Tuesday – Saturday evenings: 8:00 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday matinees: 2:00 p.m.
Sunday, January 27: 2:00 p.m. & 7:00 p.m.

FOR INFORMATION & TO PURCHASE TICKETS:
CALL: 949.497.ARTS (2787) - GROUP SALES: 949.497.2787 ext. 229
www.LagunaPlayhouse.com

MOULTON THEATRE: 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, California

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

2008 World Festival of Sacred Music – Los Angeles

September 20 to October 4 -- 2008

1,000 artists perform in Los Angeles’ largest and most diverse citywide festival with forty sacred events of music and movement – crossing neighborhoods, cultural, religious and ideological boundaries in the spirit of world peace

With the success of the 1999, 2002 and 2005 World Festivals of Sacred Music – Los Angeles, a powerful coalition of arts, faith, cultural, community, and environmental groups are announcing that the fourth citywide event will take place in September 20 to October 4, 2008.

The fifteen-day, 40 event multidisciplinary Festival will share music and movement in places large and small, sacred and secular, public and private -- crossing neighborhoods, cultural, religious, and ideological boundaries. Through music each person in the audience can expand their definition of who they are as members of this city, go beyond the familiar, and explore the potential of intercultural and interfaith collaboration.

Artists, organizers, and the audience realize the community-building intention of the Festival through their participation.

The World Festival of Sacred Music—Los Angeles is made possible through the shared commitment of its Festival partners, which produces this event by contributing in-kind assistance and volunteer time. In 1999, 2002 and 2005 this non-commercial, community oriented, citywide Festival had a combined estimated attendance of 120,000 people, and is the area’s largest and most diverse festival. With the fourth 2008 WFSM-LA the Festival establishes itself as an on-going part of the cultural life of this community.

The Festival is currently reaching out to the community, as it has for the previous Festivals, for participants – performers, venues, presenters, and volunteers. Applications are due January 4, 2008.

On December 3, 5, and 6 there will be three community meetings where all interested in the Festival can learn about the application process; this is also a gathering of fellow artists, presenters, and staff to kick off the Festival.

www.festivalofsacredmusic.org or call 310-825-0507.

The World Festival of Sacred Music-Los Angeles is a project of Foundation for World Arts, EarthWays Foundation and UCLA Center for Intercultural Performance. The 2008 WFSM-LA is funded in part by The James Irvine Foundation, The Annenberg Foundation, The National Endowment for the Arts, Ford Foundation, Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles and the Los Angeles County Arts Commission.


About the 2008 World Festival of Sacred Music – Los Angeles

Working under a broad definition of “sacred,” the Festival is founded on the belief that sacred music has the ability to bring forth our shared human values of peace, understanding, and respect for all living things. Offering an alternative, community-oriented model to the corporate values that dominate the entertainment culture of Los Angeles, the Festival provides opportunities for people to come together and investigate issues of tolerance and diversity within our complex, urban environment.

As Festival director Judy Mitoma said, “Through music, each person in the audience can expand their definition of who they are as members of this city, go beyond the familiar, and explore the potential of intercultural and interfaith collaboration.”

The first Festival was initiated by His Holiness the Dalai Lama in 1999 to mark the millennium with a message of peace, cultural understanding, and spirituality: the goal was to present the Festival on four continents.

“As in 2005,” Mitoma said, “we are continually trying to build performances that encourage collaboration between artists who normally work independently. We seek to highlight artists from around the world, as well as provide meaningful contexts for local artists who work tirelessly in our own city. We are building the forty events in the Festival – and our goal is for many to be an invitation for seemingly unconventional partnerships between religious and arts organizations, professional artists and community performers, and traditionalists and experimental artists to encourage community building that transcends borders.”

Monday, December 3, 2007


ALMOST, MAINE

Written by John Cariani and Directed by Steph N. Davis

THE ORANGE CURTAIN presents:
ALMOST, MAINE
Written by John Cariani and directed by Steph N. Davis.

Almost is a small town in far Northern Maine. On a cold December Friday night, under a big sky, the residents of Almost are falling in and out of love at an alarming rate. Hearts are broken, and mended, during this evening of romantic revelations. These vignettes are full of magical and wonderful surprises, and nothing is at all what it seems. This play is all about one moment in time and what can happen in a heartbeat.

Starring: Albert Bohorquez from San Juan Capistrano; Sean J. Marchant from Dana Point; Bettina Marlaine Saam from Tustin; and Sherryl Wynne from Vista.

Friday and Saturday – December 7, 8, 14 and 15 at 8:00 p.m.
Sunday – December 2,9,and 16 at 3:00 p.m.

The Orange Curtain Theatre
31776 El Camino Real
San Juan Capistrano,
ADMISSION: $18.00

info@theorangecurtaintheatre.org