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Horenstein to screen ‘Spoke’ at Austin Film Festival Oct. 25 and 30

27 Oct

HH_portrait_IMG_1091Since the 1970s, Boston-based professional photographer, filmmaker, teacher and author Henry Horenstein has expressed his love of cultural history with a focused lens on country music.

Recently, he created a short 21-minute documentary about the Broken Spoke entitled, Spoke, that will screen at several film festivals, including Austin Film Festival Oct. 23-30. The documentary screened at 2 .m. today, oct. 25, at the Rollins Theater inside the Long Center and will screen again at 7 p.m. Oct. 30 at the Alamo Drafthouse Village Theater.

Horenstein’s 21-minute documentary also screened at the Annenberg Space for Photography in Los Angeles this past September.

He said filming over the summer included spending time visiting the Broken Spoke co-founders James and Annetta White.

They first met while he worked on his 2003 book, Honky Tonk: Portraits of Country Music, that included Horenstein’s photographs of country artists taken beginning in 1968.

The documentary represents Horenstein’s third that he has directed and produced, through he has been a still photographer for more than 30 years. He hired a local crew to shoot the documentary, including Lee Daniel, an Austin cinematographer whose work includes the 1993 feature, Dazed and Confused, directed by Richard Linklater.

“I was there (at the Broken Spoke) a couple of times over six days of shooting,” Horenstein said. “We interviewed James, Dale Watson, Gary P. Nunn, Chris Wall, Ray Benson, Alvin Crow, and Kevin Geil of Two Tons of Steel and Jesse Dayton along with several of the regular dancers there.”

William “Bill” Anderson edited Horenstein’s film footage in Boston. One of Anderson’s best-known works includes the 1989 film, Dead Poets Society, staring Robin Williams and directed by Peter Weir.

The Annenberg Space for Photography commissioned Horenstein to create the documentary about the Broken Spoke. Guest curators of the Annenberg exhibit included Shannon Perich, who also curates photography for the Smithsonian Institution’s Natural Museum of American History in Washington, D.C., as well as Tim Davis and Michael McCall of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville.

He expects that he will participate in film festivals all over the world within the coming months.

Meanwhile, throughout the past three decades Horenstein has been a faithful patron of the Broken Spoke, despite the distance between Massachusetts and Texas.

“I’ve been going there for years. I don’t get there that often, but whenever I go, I go to the Broken Spoke,” he said.

“I really just met James when I photographed him a couple of years ago. I would go just as anyone would go – just as a customer.”

In those early days he and his girlfriend who lived in Houston, visited the Broken Spoke.

“We used to travel to Austin to hear music and stay for a few days,” he said. “Then Broken Spoke was definitely on our agenda, always. I was a little bit of a dancer back then; I’m not now. Now I just go to hear the music.”

The idea to make a documentary about the Broken Spoke began with a generic appreciation for Texas dance halls. Horenstein realized that throughout its 50-year history, the Broken Spoke has endured because of its authenticity.

“I had worked as a still photographer for so long that I just wanted to grow a little bit. When they had the photo exhibition here and asked me to be in it, I was talking to the director of the museum and I told her that I was interested in making this film about the Broken Spoke,” he said.

“I had intended to make a documentary about the dance halls generally in Texas — the history and the decline of the dance halls. The Spoke is a part of the continuing tradition, but I just didn’t feel that I could raise the money or had the time to do something big; I thought I might be able to do something on just one club.”

Horenstein said that he found the experience of making a documentary a familiar one.

“Besides the technology that presented a challenge, the idea of making a documentary from a lot of moving still pictures presents a lot of similarities, such as getting people together and deciding what’s important to show and who to photograph and so forth and so on – they’re somewhat similar,” he said.

“It’s a lot of what I do when shooting still photos, however, with still photographs I am much more in control. When making a film I depend a lot more on other people.”

He said he studied cultural history at the University of Chicago before becoming a professional photographer. Over the years he found that his subjects usually fall into the category of popular history.

“First of all I am interested in history, popular music,” he said. “Number two, I am a fan of the music. I just love the music.”

Surprisingly, a lot of the bands that perform at the Broken Spoke perform regularly in Boston as well, he said. Dale Watson performs there a couple of times per year, as does Bruce Robison.

“We’re very familiar with Texas music,” he said. “Other people we don’t see quite as often, like Gary P. Nunn. When he was with Jerry Jeff (Walker) we used to see him, but not as much now. So we (Bostonians) know the music — not as well as you guys do of course, but we know the touring bands because they all come through Boston. So I love that style of music.”

He likes to capture country music stars in candid moments when they appear their most vulnerable. One of the photos in his Honky Tonk book that Horenstein captured in 1968 includes a young Dolly Parton wearing a modest white dress.

“She was just coming up then. She had worked with Porter Wagoner; she was part of his band at that time and they were performing in Boston. That’s when I photographed her in Boston’s Symphony Hall, believe it or not,” he said.

“Boston and a lot of the northern cities have a long history with country music that comes from a variety of things, but one is that a lot of people migrated north after World War II and the Korean War because there were a lot of jobs. If they were from small towns elsewhere, they came home from the war and needed to work so they had to go somewhere to work. A lot of times it meant coming to places like Boston to work because it had big ship yards.”

Beginning in the 1960s, downtown Boston hosted several country music venues.

“There were some pretty rough honky tonks too – the Hillbilly Ranch was one, in downtown Boston or what used to be called ‘the combat zone,’” he said. “It was a rough neighborhood in downtown Boston in those days.”

He said Texas music attracts Bostonians more so than Nashville music.

“In Boston, education is the number one business. They have dozens and dozens of colleges in Boston. There are all these folk festivals; all these folk clubs existed in the 60s and 70s when folk music was very popular. People like Joan Baez and Bob Dylan, when they came up, came through Boston,” he said.

“Country music isn’t the same thing, but I think a lot of people relate to that kind of music through folk music. Joan Baez sang Johnny Cash songs on her first album. Big stars like Jerry Jeff Walker from New York State and other people like Slaid Cleaves more recently, from Maine, came to Austin to be closer to the music and their audiences.”

Before dying in 2003, Johnny Cash became known as an innovator who blended country, rock, blues and gospel genres of music, connecting people of all ages, backgrounds and ethnicities.

Guitarist Joan Baez became one of the most famous folk singers of the 1960s singing traditional American songs in interpretive ways. She and definitive songwriter and musician Bob Dylan, became a dynamic duo during the acoustic sound craze that began at the Newport Folk Festival in 1963.

Pop culture appeals to people who live in both Boston and Texas, but folk and country music connects the two groups, he said.

When he was eight years old growing up in New Bedford, MA, Horenstein received the vinyl album, Johnny Cash sings Hank Williams by Sun Record Company and that’s when his love of country music began.

“I still have that and I still play it. Johnny Horton was my favorite singer. I loved Marty Robbins and ‘El Paso’ and songs like that. In those days, it was the 50s and 60s and all that music was on the AM radio along with Frank Sinatra and Johnny Mathis. It was just popular music,” he said.

“It was the kind of music that I liked and then later on, I learned more about music through folk music. A lot of the bands that I liked then were really country bands like The New Lost City Ramblers and they played a lot of the creative music that we call country.”

He never really enjoyed listening to rock and roll music.

“I always listened to country music and there was always plenty of it around in Boston,” he said.

The 67-year-old fondly recalls the days in his 20s when he first saw touring country bands perform in clubs all over Boston. As an aficionado of country music, Horenstein’s life appears to have come full circle with the making of his documentary.

Horenstein hopes to show his Spoke documentary during the week of Nov. 4-8, in Austin when the Broken Spoke celebrates its 50th anniversary.

The Manninen Center for the Arts at Endicott College will continue to exhibit Horenstein’s Honky Tonk book through Nov. 17 in Beverly, MA. The Aug. 18 event included a book signing as well as the screening of the documentary, The Photographers Series: Henry Horenstein.

His work has also exhibited at the Smithsonian Institution’s Natural Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.; the International Museum of Photography, Eastman House in Rochester, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston; and Fabrik der Kunste, in Hamburg, Germany.

 

 

 

Two Beards Theatre Company presents ‘Mr. Marmalade’

15 Oct

http://youtu.be/SFDNR9Pz2bY

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While her babysitter has sex in another room with a boyfriend, a four-year old girl wearing a pink tutu plays “house” with a middle-aged man plagued by anger issues and addictions to pornography and cocaine.

A “pretend” world created by a child’s neglect and exposure, sets the plot for Mr. Marmalade, a play written by Noah Haidle in 2004. It has more edge to it than a straight razor, but it’s just the type of show that the co-founders of Austin’s newest theater company hope will launch their artistic success.

Andrew Robinson and Jacob Henry, met in middle school, remained high school buddies and then went to college together before they teamed up to create Two Beards Theatre  Company.  Their first show, Mr. Marmalade, opened Oct. 4-5 at the hip east side’s Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Road. The show continues with 8 p.m. performances Oct. 11 and 12. The theatre seats about 50 people and tickets sold for $10 each online in advance from the website twobeards.org.

The story combines humor with shock appeal – a 20-year-old actress plays the character of an articulate four-year-old who dreams up an imaginary friend, an abusive businessman portrayed to be decades older, but less wise.

“I’ve always wanted to do it (Mr. Marmalade) and I enjoy Noah Haidle’s work. I always enjoy his plays. He has a very interesting writing style that is very fun and light-hearted, but then it touches on some serious issues at the same time,” Robinson said.

Haidle’s work addresses social issues such as child neglect, substance abuse, and divorce. Not everybody “gets” Haidle, but Robinson does; he enjoys Haidle’s perspective and likes to provide key insight.

“He has a very different outlook for sure. I think he is very specific in his writing in the way he presents things. For instance, Mr. Marmalade is a story told through the eyes of a four-year girl. And it is very interesting to get into the mind of a four-year old. It can be very fun to see these crazy kooky characters and just come into Mr. Marmalade and just enjoy and laugh,” Robinson said.

“Or, after watching it, if audiences dig a little deeper they’ll see the other layers and say ‘Wow, that girl was creating all of this in her mind.’ It’s very interesting to think of why a four-year-old girl would have an imaginary friend who is abusive. It takes a certain child to imagine that and it takes a certain child who has had a certain experience to be able to have imagined that. I think if you go to that second layer, the writing is very very interesting.”

The four-year-old character, Lucy, creates an imaginary friend, Mr. Marmalade, who both abuses her and neglects her; she also has “an affair” with a love interest character closer to her in age.

“It’s interesting that she (Lucy) has control over all of her characters and their direction. For her to have created someone who is mean to her, or abusive — once you start to think about that — brings up a lot of different issues, social issues like child neglect, child abuse, substance abuse and divorce. Haidle writes on multiple levels,” Robinson said.

Haidle successfully delves into a little girl’s haunted and nightmare-like surreal existence inside her own mind.

Haidle’s tale, like favorite childhood stories and fairytales, makes the audience  squirm a little bit with his characters’ choices as well as their resolved and unresolved conflicts. Haidle’s story seemingly balances the funny, the beautiful and the magical touchstones of a young girl’s dream with the darkest and most sinister undertones. The audience knows the story is not real, but so much of it feels real.

“It’s definitely a story that can’t exist in our reality, but the issues are very much real in our present day. So he brings forth this very story using imaginary friends – with adult actors and actresses to play these beautiful characters. In our world, you don’t have four year olds played by 20-year olds, but you do have those horrors that are present – child abuse, substance abuse and neglect,” Robinson said.

The imaginative story told through the eyes of beautiful and memorable characters, reveals issues that remain ugly and reclusive in the real world.

Robinson said he and Henry wanted their first show produced by their new theater company to leave an impression, to make a statement, and to leave their “stamp of style” on the local community. They vowed to “wow” their audiences.

“I think Mr. Marmalade feeds Jacob’s and my creative vein in a show that we both enjoy and we enjoy the style of writing and characters. It did what we thought we could do visually. It’s a show that we thought would bring a lot of our talent out,” Robinson said.

The costumes designed by Greensboro, North Carolina costume designer Kathleen Ludwig remain true to those used in other productions of Mr. Marmalade play currently showing nationwide. However, Lucy’s cotton candy-colored tutu appears neon. In his set design, Henry narrowed his color choices to just two from the Crayola 100-crayon box selection; the result creates a deeper and richer “out-of-this-world” appearance. Lighting designer Dylan Rocamora adds more profound hues to the stage’s ethereal scenes.

“We wanted the show to almost represent what Lucy saw as her reality, so some of the things we heightened a little bit – of what she perceived her world to be. There is this very vibrant red couch on stage and a very large embellished purple chair. The outside of the house is this beautiful white house with a beautiful bright red door – one that could almost represent what her false reality is, her imaginative reality,” he said. “That is the style that Jacob (Henry) was trying to achieve with the set design and with Dylan’s lighting design as well.”

Together Robinson and Henry created a surreal and ethereal perspective that suspended Mr. Marmalade for the one-hour and a half of each audience viewing. They hoped audiences would forget their environments only to experience the world inside the mind of a four-year old child.

“We did scenes from Mr. Marmalade in college for a class that was student-directed. It was a shorter version and it was a fun show to do. So when Andrew and I sat down to talk about what shows we wanted to do, we picked one that we thought people in Austin would enjoy,” Henry said.

“Since both Andrew and I were raised here, we knew that we wanted a show that was kind of edgy and weird. It’s a great script and a great story that fits Austin.”

Robinson and Henry contacted the publishing house, Dramatists Play Service, that owns the rights to the script and once they worked out the logistics of renting the space at Salvage Vanguard, they filled their September days with auditioning a cast and crew.

Two Beards Theatre Company directors and co-producers, Robinson and Henry, have worked together since attending Westview Middle School and John B. Connally High School in Northwest Austin.

Henry, who is a year older than Robinson, was enrolled in seventh grade when Robinson started sixth grade at Westview.

They starred in a Saturday Night Live television spoof, a variety show called “Tuesday Night Live,” in middle school.

“I actually had the lead role in that. I played Dunstan Darkstorm, a super villain guy,” Henry said.

And Robinson played one of the love interests, a young hillbilly character whose girlfriend’s parents didn’t like him.

“I went after your girlfriend in the play and I tied her to the train tracks,” Henry said. “That was our big break – that’s when we KNEW.”

In high school, their theater director inspired them. Patricia MacMullen started teaching theater during Robinson’s freshman year, also Henry’s sophomore year.

Their first production together at Connally was a play by Michael Frayn, Noises Off. Robinson served as an understudy and Henry worked as a stage technician for that show.

“We had a massive two-story set that actually had to spin at one point in the show; my job was to move that big thing around,” Henry said.

Robinson attended rehearsals and absorbed the role as understudy for one of the characters in the play.

“Then we did Grease together as well. That was the next show and we were both in that production,” Robinson said. “We were both singing and dancing. I played an unnamed student and he was ‘T-bird number two.’”

In that production of Grease, the two acknowledged the excitement they felt about being part of a theatre troupe.

“We had a moment when ‘Danny’ sang his song about summer love; he and I walked up together on stage. There’s videotape of it somewhere – hopefully not on the Internet,” Robinson said.

MacMullen currently serves as the theatre director for the upper school at Hill Country Christian School, and instructor of high school advanced theatre, theatre productions, and Masterworks of Theatre.  She also teaches middle school theatre arts and introduction to theatre.

MacMullen taught Henry and Robinson and three other former students who also serve as cast members. They include Audra Uresti, who plays the character “tuxedo woman,” David Nguyen, who plays “Mr. Marmalade,” and Johnny Bender, who plays “Larry,” Lucy’s love interest.

“As a high school theatre director, if you are really blessed, you come upon a group of remarkable young people that happen to all gravitate to your program at the same time.  This group exemplifies that blessing. Working with them was a dream.  They were highly motivated, intelligent, talented, hard working, and focused,” MacMullen said.

She said that the first year Connally did not have a technical director in its theatre department, so Henry quickly filled those shoes.

“He was my rock.  He focused and programed lights, worked sound, built sets, etc. And then, I asked him to act — and he could!  What an amazing young man,” MacMullen said.

She said that Robinson possesses a profound work ethic.

“Andrew is one of the hardest working actors I know.  He ‘got it’ when I gave him direction the first time.  I knew he would one day be an amazing director because it was instinctive.  He had an innate sense of composition, motivation, and concept,” she said.

While in high school together, Henry, Robinson, Uresti, Nguyen, and Bender competed in the one act category at the University Interscholastic League (UIL) state championships three years in a row, winning third in the state in 2007.

That same year, the five also performed on the main stage at both the Texas Thespian Festival and the International Thespian Festival.

“They were just an amazing group of students and now, they’re an amazing group of young artists.  I absolutely adore them and wish them much success. I’m so proud of them,” MacMullen said.

When Henry graduated Connally in 2007, MacMullen advised him to look at Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi. The following year, when Robinson graduated, both Henry and MacMullen influenced his college decision as well.

Today Jacob teaches technical theater to three level one classes and one advanced class at Connally. He also manages the performing arts center and manages the maintenance and finances for the building.  After school he provides technical instruction to students and helps them to find jobs in private sector theater productions.

He feels that he is paying forward MacMullen’s influence.

“Everyone should pay if forward. I believe in something that I am passionate about. I never forget where I come from and that’s why I’m here at Connally. I wanted to give these kids a good education and something that I’m passionate about. I find that very thrilling,” he said.

Henry did not receive a teaching degree at A&M, but chose an alternative path to pursuing a career in education. He received a bachelor of art degree in theater in 2011 with a focus on tech and design and then quickly moved to Florida to work at Disney World. He obtained his teaching certification in 2012 through an alternative program offered through Texas Education Agency (TEA) after MacMullen called him home.

“I got a job at Disney out in Florida. I was doing tech work for them – lighting and pyrotechnics – that sort of stuff. Then I got a call from Ms. MacMullen and she said ‘hey, do you want to teach?’ I said ‘well, wait – where?’ Then she said ‘Connally,’ and I said ‘All right.’ I came back and I haven’t regretted it since.”

Meanwhile, Robinson finished up his senior year at A&M in Corpus Christi in 2012.

“Once I graduated, I moved back to Austin with strong intentions to move to Los Angeles or Chicago,” Robinson said.

Nguyen spiked Robinson’s interest in searching for theater work with him on the West Coast.

“Slowly, it just wasn’t working. Doors were kind of closing on us. So my mom could tell that I wasn’t very happy, because I wasn’t auditioning, I was just kind of working,  trying to raise enough money so I could move. Then, I went to a mass audition call and got some good feedback there and that led me to start auditioning in Austin,” Robinson said.

He signed with a local talent agency, then started auditioning for film work, but soon realized theater is his passion.

He worked with “The Story Wranglers” — Paramount Theater’s non-profit educational outreach program. He also worked with Punchkin Repertory Theater and did a show at Salvage Vanguard Theatre called Gods and Idols for Frontera Fest.

Meanwhile, Robinson and Henry never stopped talking about creating their own projects and starting their own troupe.

The two widened their circle of friends to include local theater actors and crew members, as well as directors who put them in touch with still more peers with similar interests.

“While talking about starting our own troupe, we kept saying how many talented people we know. It’s just amazing. We know so many great actors, great technicians – we worked with some of the best in high school and in college and after college,” Robinson said.

Some of their connections spanned several states, including Ludwig who shipped Two Beards all of the costumes that she designed for the show.

They cast the show, built the props, furnished the set, and came up with the equipment needed to technically manage it – all within a span of 30 days.

They said the key to their success has been an underlying passion they share for theater.

“And we were trained very well. It comes from our education and directors who taught us how theatre should run and so we hold it now within ourselves to manage our time very wisely and to make sure that we are using these people’s time wisely as well,” Robinson said.

“I know how it is to be an actor and have to work three different jobs, then come to rehearsals and stay until 10:30 p.m. You get tired, so I wanted to make sure that this process was convenient for them and fun and rewarding.”

The Salvage Vanguard has more than a little history behind it. Salvage has gone through several different management changes and provides a variety of different types of performances — everything from standup shows to performance art in addition to theater.

The hip neighborhood in East Austin attracts people off the streets as well. The two had hoped to attract a bit of the Austin City Limits crowd and out-of-towners during the first two weekends in October.

Robinson supplements his income by working two day jobs. He works for Kids Acting, an Austin program that has been around for 30 years. He participated in the same program when he was a child. Now he teaches 12 children in “a triple threat” class – with singing, dancing and acting – giving them a taste of the three core elements of a Broadway musical — in a production of Peter Pan.  His youngest student is five and the oldest is ten years old; the class meets Mondays from 4:15 until 5:45 p.m.

“I was in that same program when I was six. We have videotape of it. I was in a production of Snow White and the Seven Dogs and I was the Unicorn Prince,” Robinson said. “All I remember about it was — I knew all my lines and everyone else’s.”

He continues to work for Paramount Theater ‘s non-profit organization, “Story Wranglers.” He helps third graders to learn creative writing skills. He teaches one class on Wednesdays and two on Thursday mornings; each class lasts about an hour and a half with about 20 students respectively.

Highland Park Elementary partners with the Paramount Theater. Some of the financial support comes from the local community itself and other funds are provided through state and federal grants. Robinson along and the other teachers bring with them all of the writing materials and any brainstorming items needed.

The teachers offer students a typical story spine and vocabulary that begins with “once upon a time” and the children then add a character and a setting. The children fill in the blanks: “what a character wanted” and also add a conflict statement such as “something happened…” and a resolution statement that begins “ever since that day…” Sometimes, the results of the workshops take on all of the interesting improv elements of an AT&T television commercial.

“There are lots of very different, very creative ideas – that’s for sure. Very ‘out there’ thinking, which is fun. The kids get very creative,” he said.

Admittedly, it’s exactly that type of thinking that may have instilled in Robinson at an early age and later led to his choice of Mr. Marmalade as the first Austin production for Two Beards Theatre Company.

Cast of Mr. Marmalade

Lucy – Cassadie Petersen
Mr. Marmalade – David Nguyen Larry – Johnny Bender Bradley – Ronnie Williams Emily – Kristi Brawner Sookie/Sunflower – Adriane Shown George/Cactus/Man – Tim Stiefler Tuxedo Woman – Audra Uresti Tuxedo Man – Gino Sandoval

Production Staff

Stage Manager: Chanel Kemp Assistant Stage Manager: Dani Stetka Production Assistant: Sam Levine Lighting Design: Dylan Rocamora Costume Design: Kathleen Ludwig Makeup Design: Shea Lollar Makeup Assistant: Micaela Ramacciotti Props Design: Andrew Robinson Set and Sound Design: Jacob Henry Publicity Design: Drew Johnson

Technical Director: Jacob Henry Director: Andrew Robinson

Published 10-16-2013 online by Austin Fusion magazine http://austinfusionmagazine.com/2013/10/16/two-beards-theatre-young-friends-to-co-producers/

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