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Showing posts with label Judith Malina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Judith Malina. Show all posts

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Top Ten BAM Blog Posts of 2013

By Robert Wood

Carl Einhorn and Karen Weiss in Paradise Now, Living Theatre, 1968.
Photo: Kenneth L. McLaren

For most respectable publications, the window for posting 2013-related top 10 lists closed a few weeks ago. But any blog representing the "home of adventurous artists, audiences, and ideas" is obligated to flout journalistic convention. Besides, the year would feel incomplete without at least a cursory look back at our year in self-publishing, so here, without further ado, are our top 10 most popular posts from 2013.

10. King of New York: Remembering Lou Reed at BAM

As we implied above, BAM has always committed to being a home for adventurous artists, and never has that mission excluded the chain-smoking, poker-faced, proto-punk-innovator set. Lou Reed, who died in October of last year and who performed at BAM frequently throughout the 90s, was an important part of that pantheon. Susan Yung remembered Reed in this lovely piece.

9. John Cassavetes: Criminal Minded

What’s cooler than being a pioneering director of American independent film? Being a pioneering director of American independent film who also steals people’s sweaters. Critic Pauline Kael had it coming, according to John Cassavetes, who was the subject of a retrospective at BAMcinĂ©matek in July. BAM’s own Nate Gelgud recreated the director’s sleight-of-hand vengeance in this comic.

8. BAM Illustrated: John Turturro Mid '80s Hat Trick

It’s John Turturro’s own fault that he’ll always be known as “The Jesus.” That’s what happens when you lick a bowling ball while wearing a purple onesie and it’s all caught on film. If Turturro’s other roles with the Coen Brothers—and to a large extent, Spike Lee as well—were no less iconic, they also overshadowed lesser known but equally fantastic turns in '80s films from Woody Allen, Susan Seidelman, and William Friedkin. BAM illustrator Nate Gelgud paid homage to these underrated roles in conjunction with Turturro’s stint in Ibsen’s The Master Builder.

Monday, March 11, 2013

The Living Theatre at BAM: the revolution never was televised, but it was staged

by Louie Fleck

In 1963, New York had the Bread and Puppet Theater.
In 1963, Detroit had the Detroit Repertory Theatre.
In 1967, San Francisco had the Diggers and the San Francisco Mime Troupe.

But before Oh! Calcutta! (1969) and Hair (1967) came along to commercialize the tribal hippie movement, there was The Living Theatre. The Living Theatre was an integral part of their artistic generation and had a profound influence on further generations of artists, actors, poets and musicians, including Allen Ginsberg, Al Pacino, Martin Sheen, Merce Cunningham, John Cage, Keith Richards, Jim Morrison and practically countless others.

Photo: Don Snyder, 1969.



Maybe you didn’t notice a recent short article about the closing of The Living Theatre’s Lower East Side space.