Entries from Seattlest tagged with 'actii'
September 14, 2007
The post we wrote yesterday about Rick Steves ("Rick Steves. The man lives in a pleasant world.") seems reasonable if you only know the man through his travel shows on PBS. He was on the Town Hall stage for all of about four seconds last night before destroying that illusion. Actually, he lives in a few different worlds; one here, in Edmonds, Washington, U.S.A., and another in Europe where he spends a third of every......
Continue Reading "Rick Steves Blows Up Town Hall"March 26, 2007
First of all, despite what you read in the Times and the P-I about Donald Byrd's Never-Mind (which came and went over the weekend), it's not all that, as Brendan Kiley says over on the Slog. We've become fans of Byrd's "neo-expressionist" style, but Never-Mind (at this point) is short on style and substance. It came off like "Frank Miller's Never-Mind": an ugly cartoon of drug abuse, of dysfunction, of iconic fame. Not that......
Continue Reading "In Extremis: Spectrum Dance Theater @ The Moore"March 24, 2007
Spectrum Dance Theater at the Moore Theatre 8pm tonight, tickets $15-$45 (plus fees) Spectrum Dance Theater's Never-Mind had its world premiere last night and ends tonight. It's a disturbing work, set to Kurt Cobain's perturbing music. If repeated shotgun blasts bother you, this is not your kind of show. If you're intrigued by the idea of Cobain getting a fix from Love, or seeing fans swept up into his tragic dance, then make plans.......
Continue Reading "Get Out: Spectrum Dance's Never-Mind"July 14, 2006
Forget Pirates of the Carribean: Dead Man's Chest. The true blockbuster of the summer is Seattle Gilbert & Sullivan Society's Pirates of Penzance, playing at the Bagley Wright Theatre at Seattle Center. As with any Gilbert and Sullivan play, Pirates' plot does not stand up to rigorous analysis, and the G&S Society seems to know this. They treat the ridiculous twists and turns with wit and whimsy, creating a world in which everything seems possible.......
Continue Reading "A Rollicking Band of Pirates, They"