Hunger Strike

“Mr. Human Rights,” they once called him, and though his was never the most famous name on the bill–that was Bono or Bruce Springsteen, Sting or Peter Gabriel–as the organizer of the Conspiracy of Hope concerts in 1986 and the Human Rights Now! world tour two years later, Jack Healey…

These Magic Moments

Is the glass half empty or half full? Thoughtful theatergoers may rue what may be missing on the South Florida stage scene — classical productions, experimental theatricality, multimedia — but none can deny the area’s strengths, chief among them plenty of entertaining, vigorously produced musical offerings. Any number of musicals…

New Yakkers

This is the true story of seven people (Tommy! Annie! Ashley! Maria! Griffin! Carpo! And Benjamin!) picked to live in a city and have their lives changed. Find out what happens when people stop being polite, and start being real. The Real World: Sidewalks of New York. If you came…

Plotless Lines

Stop the presses! I must report that I have just seen a film that could top my personal list of the worst movies of all time. The new contender is La Cienaga (The Swamp), a recent release from Argentina that is so godawful it makes Ed Wood’s Plan 9 from…

Write On!

You had no problem pounding out that first novel. In fact writing on a legal pad during your daily train commute to work, you’ve produced many more since that fateful first attempt. But getting published? That’s a different story altogether. Twenty-one — yes, twenty-one! — publishers rejected your manuscript. For…

Strange Trip It’s Been

Some towns much older than ours proudly flaunt the fact that George Washington slept there. Among youthful Miami’s many dubious claims to fame: While onstage at Coconut Grove’s Dinner Key Auditorium in 1969, a very drunk Jim Morrison, lead singer for the Doors, allegedly exposed himself. He was arrested shortly…

Don’t Get Holidazed!

Oh, the weather outside is frightful. Well it isn’t really. It’s actually quite nice. Blinding sunny skies, a slight nip in the air. Nice, right? But don’t be fooled. Our balmy climate is one of the main obstacles to celebrating Christmas in South Florida. It just doesn’t feel very Christmasy…

Under the Rainbow

If high drama is your cup of tea, you should find what you’re looking for at theater companies all over South Florida. Just don’t look on the playbill. The offstage news from several local theaters is as full of dire foreboding, narrow escapes, and last-minute miracles as The Perils of…

A Range Just Right

For those who find it difficult what to make of some of the art being shown today, here’s a solution: Suspend judgment. Concepts need time to grow on you. That’s why a skeptic like Marcel Duchamp believed it was better not to know what to believe, rather than believe something…

War on War Books

Only a couple of months ago, it looked as though Donald Miller had a publishing home run on his hands–a thoughtful, exhilarating, inclusive book about World War II scheduled to hit stores just as Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks’ Band of Brothers was finishing its critically lauded run on HBO…

Dental Damned

It takes a nimble mind to mix light and dark, to wed humor with treachery, and in Novocaine newcomer David Atkins is not always up to the task. Neither is Steve Martin, who wants to be taken seriously while reserving the right to produce the occasional sick yuk. If you…

Have a Say

As those of us forced to fashion a clear, convincing, and even entertaining story out of a scant 400 or so words know well, it’s damn tough! Imagine then writing an entire play — comedy, drama, musical — that lasts less than twenty minutes. Can’t be done, you scoff? Tell…

People Over Palms!

A rocket blasts off, leaving a thick white cloud of smoke in its wake. A small private plane ascends from a faceless runway. “The Twentieth Century has produced a new man. A man on the move, curious, alert, with his eyes on the stars and his feet solidly on the…

Emma Goes to France

The heroine of Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s bold and bracing new comedy, Amelie, is Amélie Poulain, a doe-eyed crusader with the face of a porcelain doll and a sleek helmet of jet-black hair. From her high perch in Montmartre, where she works as a café waitress, Amélie secretly resolves to emancipate all…

Cain and Very Able

Joel and Ethan Coen’s periodic genuflections to classic Hollywood are inevitably accompanied by a knowing wink from one brother and a wry smile from the other. These devoted movie buffs’ versions of vintage gangster pictures (Miller’s Crossing) or the populist comedies of Frank Capra and Preston Sturges (The Hudsucker Proxy)…

Words Up

“I look at history as a current event, and everyone fulfills a historical role,” offers Heru, named for the terrible redeemer, the hawklike watcher of his ancient Egyptian ancestry. “What interests people is not necessarily what they’re hearing at the moment, it’s the possibility of what they might hear in…

Music for Our Times

Notorious for their stuffy reputations, most classical music conductors can’t claim to have their own Website, let alone even know what the Internet is. Marin Alsop is different. Her easy-to-read site (marinalsop.com) features her bio, lists her credits and recordings, plus offers pictures, reviews, schedules, and even contact information. “Pretty…

What’s So Funny?

Think of modern Broadway comedies and Neil Simon immediately springs to mind. The prolific and popular playwright spans four decades of American theater with no fewer than 28 plays and musicals produced on Broadway. And at age 74, he shows no signs of letting up; his Forty Five Seconds from…

A Blessing in Disrepair

In the theater world as in society, a happy few are much more fortunate than the rest. Consider the prosperous and respected Florida Stage. Now entering its fifteenth season, the Stage is blessed with a lovely facility (a 250-seat thrust theater with excellent sightlines), critical acclaim (22 Carbonell nominations for…

A New Tune

Natalie Merchant finished recording her third solo album, Motherland, on September 9, so by no means should anyone listen to the disc’s first song, “This House Is On Fire,” and think it has anything to do with hijacked airplanes, collapsed skyscrapers and the thousands buried beneath the rubble. The song…

Wide Awake in America

If you’re a college freshman, don’t read this. Just grab your newfound peers and go see Richard Linklater’s new movie, Waking Life, then head off to one of those ethereal late-night dining establishments for which you’ll desperately pine once the real world gets ahold of you. Discuss. For others this…

Chic Shocker, Español-Style

The stateside success of Penelope Cruz, Antonio Banderas, and Salma Hayek got the folks at Venevision International to thinking: Why let Hollywood make all the money off great Spanish-speaking actors? Instead of importing movie stars, why not import entire movies? Not those grim arthouse bores made for miniscule audiences but…