Monday, December 31, 2007

Happy New Year!




The Last Sunset of 2007, Fire Island, NY 12.31.07 - 4:38 pm - Donald L. Brooks

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Friday, December 28, 2007

The Power of Pain

Pain is a powerful force. It can make a grown man howl like an animal in the middle of the night, a child cry until she chokes to death on her own tears, the best of friends betray each other as their eyes are gouged from their sockets, a broken heart leaps to freedom, another slashes the object of rejection while still another eats his own dog to sate the gnaw of starvation.
Agony -- Egon Schiele, 1912

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Christmas


Monday, December 24, 2007

-------


Sunday, December 23, 2007

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Solstice


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Today brought the Winter Solstice to North America.

The actual moment of the Sun's lowest latitude in the sky is December 22 -- 6:08 am Universal Time (EST: Dec 22, 1:08 am; CST: Dec 22, 12:08 am; MST: Dec 21, 11:08 pm; and PST: Dec 21, 10:08 pm.

Welcome Yule!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Hold It!

Ozzie Guillen and Alex Rodriguez, from the YouTube video The Way I Are: An Alex Rodriguez Slideshow.

Monday, December 03, 2007

11.24.07


Full moon rising, photograph taken from my mother's window on her 88th birthday, November 24, 2007

Friday, November 16, 2007

11.16.07


In search of the youth with no face, a tear falls as I remember.

Sunset on Fire Island, November 16, 2007

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Monday, October 22, 2007

10.22.07

Halloween
Annual Theater for the New City Halloween Ball --
"Zombies on Parade" will be performed that evening, October 31, 2007
(a one-act musical satire of horror)

Monday, October 15, 2007

TNC Halloween


Annual Theater for the New City Halloween Ball --
"Zombies on Parade" sketch in Cabaret (Donald L. Brooks)


Monday, September 24, 2007

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Fire Island Sunset



Fire Island Sunset, August 12, 2007 -- Donald L. Brooks

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Caesar



July 13, 1992 -- July 10, 2007

Monday, July 09, 2007

07.09.07


The Off-Off Broadway Experience

as Our Lady of 42nd Street in Donald L. Brooks' "Xircus, the Private Life of Jesus Christ" at the Performing Garage, NYC -- 1971
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I am overwhelmed with memorabilia from the underground of the 60’s and 70’s theatre, and there is no way in hell I can catalogue and publish it all before I kick the bucket -- perhaps someone is interested in a project of that magnitude -- however, that is another tale.
The first play in which Harvey Fierstein was cast outside of Brooklyn was Xircus, the Private Life of Jesus Christ for the dual role of the Clown and Our Lady of 42nd Street. Harvey had arrived with resume and photo in hand to an open non-Equity call (the Equity cast was leaving because I would not sign a contract to turn the show over to an Off-Broadway production) for replacements of the original cast.
I had been totally unsatisfied with certain aspects of the play, and this development offered a chance to correct all of them -- one being the casting of Our Lady of 42nd Street, who at the end of the play gives a rambling monologue to the audience amidst the gaudiness of a pornographic Times Square blaring “God Bless America”.
The actress who had played the role had decided (most likely with the director’s blessing) that it was her moment -- long drawn out moment, introspective and feel-sorry-for-me moment, all-wrong moment! The end of the play and its monologue felt like a giant pause before the curtain call, instead of a steady mad swirl to the conclusion of the evening’s can-can dance to a film of the atomic bomb!
Harvey showed up at the audition with faux credits and a convincing monologue -- I spoke to him about playing the madwoman and the all-out-stops energy that builds to the conclusion -- he understood. He wanted the part. Well, he’s always blamed “Xircus” and me for his rasping voice because he insisted his lines be heard -- I could not impress upon him that they were not important -- that the mad raving should not be coherent. His screaming was excellent, but he did hurt his voice -- I will not take the blame, one should have vocal training in order to perform an aria -- however, it did make for a great finale!
Harvey and I went on to over a dozen collaborations -- Euripides The Trojan Women (Andromache), Aeschylus “Prometheus Bound”, Sheridan’s “The Rivals”, H. M. Koutoukas’ Christopher at Sheridan Squared”, two Megan Terry plays, and finally, upon my advice, became a playwright with In Search of the Cobra Jewels which I directed, continuing on with “Freaky Pussy” and “Flatbush Tosca”.
We went our ways, so to speak, upon the first installment of “Torch Song Trilogy”
I have enjoyed watching the monster I created balloon to stardom!
-----------------

Thursday, July 05, 2007

07.05.07

The Off-Off Broadway Experience

Second in a series of articles on theatre, especially the birth and growing pains of the Off-Off Broadway theatre movement with links, memorabilia and illustrations, on theatre productions and individuals with which I have been associated or met in theater. The views are strictly my personal experience and do not represent any other individual's life and experience outside of our mutual association.

Your comments in the Comments section provided will be more than welcome. If you find errors or omissions, please make note of same in the Comments section of the post in which they appear -- any corrections found necessary will be executed promptly upon verification, and all Comments will be acknowledged and left as Archive.

ODETTA

In today’s New York Times crossword puzzle, the 1-Down entry clue is “Gonna Let It Shine” singer -- the answer, of course, is ODETTA. Odetta's name is a frequent entry in crossword puzzles due to the crossword-friendly letters in her name. So today is as good a day as any for her appearance in "The Off-Off Broadway Experience".


In 1971, producer Richard Briggs (who was stage manager of "The David Frost Show" at that time) began a series called “Monday Nights at the Performing Garage”, enlisting performers he had met on the Frost Show, or knew from the past. Odetta would perform on September 13, 1971. The Performing Garage was the space on Wooster Street that had housed “Dionysus in 69” which was on tour, and Richard Scheckner, it’s director and producer had rented the space to the controversial production of
“Xircus, the Private Life of Jesus Christ” which was now in its fourth month of a then unheard of six-month Off-Off Broadway run. So Odetta was certainly going downtown that evening!

I set up the lighting that day, which was fairly simple, utilizing the existing instruments with minimal refocus -- Odetta, with her guitar, was the solo performer.When the performance began, one could hear some sort of large vehicles arriving outside of the theatre (sound came through easily as the Performing Garage was just that, a garage with a metal roll-down door). It could not have been ten minutes when the unbelievable sound of a jackhammer began in front of the garage in the street. Consolidated Edison, at 9:00 o’clock in the evening had decided to dig up the street.

Odetta is a very subtle performer -- folk songs rarely get raucous! When the jackhammer started, she simply kept performing for the remainder of the song she had begun. At the end of the song, Richard Briggs made an announcement to the effect that we would pause to find out what was happening -- the jackhammer resumed.There was a conversation outside the theater and Richard Briggs returned, and so did the jackhammer! Richard Briggs went back outside again and when he returned, all was silent, the performance resumed and continued to a successful conclusion minus the accompaniment of a jackhammer.

It was some time later that I found out that Richard had taken the entire box office and dropped it in the hole that Consolidated Edison was in the process of excavating -- telling the workers something to the effect “If you can get that for me in the next hour, let me know by starting that jackhammer again -- I’ll come back out -- otherwise, take a break fellas, we won’t be long.”

Upon the conclusion of the performance, the audience left to the sound of a jackhammer!



Tuesday, July 03, 2007

07.03.07

The Off-Off Broadway Experience



H. M. Koutoukas' "Christopher at Sheridan Squared", Directed and Designed by Donald L. Brooks at the Performing Garage on Wooster Street, NYC -- 1971


CHRISTOPHER AT SHERIDAN SQUARED

Monday, July 02, 2007

07.02.07


The Off-Off Broadway Experience

First in a series of articles on theatre, especially the birth and growing pains of the Off-Off Broadway theatre movement with links, memorabilia and illustrations, on theatre productions and individuals with which I have been associated or met in theater. The views are strictly my personal experience and do not represent any other individual's life and experience outside of our mutual association.

Your comments in the Comments section provided will be more than welcome. If you find errors or omissions, please make note of same in the Comments section of the post in which they appear -- any corrections found necessary will be executed promptly upon verification, and all Comments will be acknowledged and left as Archive.


CHRISTOPHER REEVE

In the month of May, 1976,
Theater for the New City (at that time located in the Jane-West Hotel in the West Village presented a production of a Jacques Levy play entitled “Berchtesgaden” directed by Barbara Loden, with Lane Smith as Hitler -- the play took place at Berchtesgaden at the height of Hitler’s power.

The general plot of the play was punctuated by monologues by individuals affected by Hitler, one of which was a zealous young Nazi officer, played by Christopher Reeve.I was the set and lighting designer, and as such I attended run-throughs and, of course, the first week run-through, dress rehearsal, etc. for purposes of lighting the play. Barbara Loden had elicited an absolutely fantastic performance from Christopher Reeve in his 10-minute monologue, the character did not appear before or after the monologue.

Two, actually three, recollections -- first, the author Jacques Levy appeared for the first at the first dress rehearsal -- he issued copious notes and wanted to change the entire set, upon which I advised him of the cost and time involved, adding that with the amount of time and my unpaid status, that he best find someone to replace me in that function -- needless to say, the set remained.

However, the meddling with direction and performance was interminable -- to the point that at the final dress rehearsal I saw Christopher Reeve sitting dejectedly in the dressing room area -- I asked why so down and he explained he didn’t know what happened to his performance. He was right, the audience prior to Jacques Levy’s redirection was extremely enthusiastic of his ten-minute monologue, applauding forcefully and long at its end -- in short, Christopher Reeve stopped the show!

I always made it a practice not to speak to actors about their performances when I was not the director of a production -- but here was this absolutely fantastic performer giving a brilliant performance, who had been dulled down by a writer who knew nothing of living theater. I told Christopher that I usually don’t make comment and then proceeded to say that whatever he was doing before Jacques Levy appeared on the scene, go back to it -- do it, forget the changes requested -- you were brilliant and the show was better for it -- what can they do, replace you? You’d be better off -- just go for it and to hell with everyone.

Well, he did -- and he brought down the house with thunder every night.

The second recollection I’d like to relate is that there were two German Shepherds in the play, props for Hitler in a particular scene -- Christopher wound up, due to the fact that he had but 10 minutes in the play, caring for the dogs during the remainder of the play -- he also had quite a fine respect and love for the two young and ferocious-looking canines.

To stave their restlessness, Christopher would take them jogging along the West Side Highway for a mile or so down and back.Well, you must know that at that time, the old piers and the elevated highway were still there -- the area was infested with homosexuals covertly and overtly intermingling with the garbage and vandalized pier buildings. When Christopher went jogging in full Nazi uniform, the hat, the gun belt, the medals, the boots, the whole detailed uniform, with two German Shepherds, leashes held left and right, under the elevated West Side Highway -- all heads turned, the swoons were audible, fairies were fainting left and right!

Needless to say, some may have never recovered if they knew that he would soon be cast as “Superman”.


The third recollection is one from the late Arthur Williams who shared the dressing room with Christopher -- when I mentioned to him that Christopher cut quite a figure, Arthur, who reminded one of Emil Jannings in “The Blue Angel” replied, “My dear, you haven’t seen anything until you’ve seen him in the nude!” -- and then he sighed!

Christopher was one of the finest young actors I have ever known -- and the success of his career was wonderful -- his unfortunate accident and subsequent struggle was a tragedy, but he accepted his fate, committed to a cause as a spokesman, and once again played his role to perfection!








Sunday, July 01, 2007

42nd St.



42nd Street, NYC -- 3:00 AM 6.29.07

Thursday, June 28, 2007

1933


Greta Garbo, "Queen Christina", 1933

2007


Saturday evening, June 23, 2007 -- the "Zipper" ride sign at the weekend fair, Shirley, NY

Friday, June 22, 2007

1963


August, 1963 -- In the Black Hills of South Dakota, near Rockerville

1961


January, 1961 -- Riverside Park, New York City

1957


Federal Correctional Institution, Ashland, Kentucky
The Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Ashland is a low security institution housing male inmates with a satellite camp that houses minimum security inmates.

The facility is located in the highlands of northeastern Kentucky, 125 miles east of Lexington and 5 miles southwest of Ashland.


Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Finis



The last frame and blackout of "The Sopranos" is a direct reference to "The 400 Blows" (1959) and its memorable final shot... The haunted eyes of Antoine Doinel, Truffaut's autobiographical hero, in the freeze frame that ends "The 400 Blows."





Agnes' Dog












Friday, June 01, 2007

Wisteria



Seven years after planting, finally a bloom!

Thursday, May 31, 2007

"Pink Narcissus" - Street Scene



Street Scene from "Pink Narcissus" by James Bidgood, from left to right, Andrew Starr, Donald L. Brooks, Charles Ludlam, Larry Rey

Angel, by James Bidgood



Donald L. Brooks as Angel, 1969 photo collage by James Bidgood.


Pink Narcissus




The original James Bidgood photo with reference to May 29th Robert Patrick Pentatych.

.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Pentatych by Robert Patrick

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Gimme a Head with Hair PLUS Fashions to Match!!!



DORIC WILSON, 1969, MICHAEL WARREN POWELL, 1968, DONALD L. BROOKS (with Andrew Starr in "Pink Narcissus," photo James Bidgood) 1969, Edward Crosby Welles, 1964, WALTER MICHAEL HARRIS, 1968.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Mother's Day -- 2007
Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth
John Singer Sargent -- American painter
1889
Tate Gallery, London
Oil on canvas
221 x 114.3 cm
Presented by Sir Joseph Duveen 1906
Jpg:
Tate Gallery, London

(Click on image to
step back)


Probably the closest Sargent ever got to the Pre-Raphael Brotherhood was with his paintings of the famous actress, Dame Ellen Terry (1847–1928) as Lady Macbeth after the first performance in the role; and yet this is not at all an allegorical painting, just a straight portrait of the actress in costume playing Lady Macbeth. Still, the tone, the costume, the medieval implications are very much in theme with Edward Burne-Jones and the Aesthetic Pre-Raphaelitism.


Is there any reason for a man to starve to death, be it for love or any thing?