
I'll admit it. When I first saw the film adaptation of The Boys in the Band, I loved it. I knew I wasn't supposed to, of course. I was in college at the time. My first boyfriend had instructed me that the politics of Mart Crowley's play (and subsequent screenplay) were all wrong. "Self-loathing" and "Internalized Homophobia" were the buzzwords at get-togethers of the Lesbian, Gay and Transgendered Student Association on campus.
So I did what any self-respecting newly-liberated young homo would do. I kept my feelings to myself.
Continue reading "Gay Man Comes Out: Why I Love THE BOYS IN THE BAND" »

I was at a concert the other night where music was performed by an orchestra and choir and most of it was stuff recently written by the conductor himself. It all sounded pretty bland, like watered-down Richard Strauss. For those of you unfamiliar with Strauss operas, just think of the harmonic progressions of John Williams' Star Wars score on overdrive. Lots of rambling chord progressions with no clear sense of a tonic, or home. When you listen to Mozart or Bach or 99% of music written before WWII, there's a clear sense of where harmonic home base lies. The audience can feel when the piece has come to its final chord. Not so with Richard Strauss.
Anyway, the guy conducting who had programmed a lot (and I mean, A LOT) of his own rambling noodling muzak throughout the evening made one fatal mistake.
Continue reading "The Beethoven Pitfall" »
With Conan's last Tonight Show now a memory, I thought I'd do a quick run down of the winners and losers in the latest edition of the late night wars.
Continue reading ""Late Night" Thermometer" »
Full disclosure: a friend of mine was in this series and another friend of a friend wrote it. So, naturally, I was curious to take a 2nd look at a show that I'd seen only a few episodes of when it first aired on HBO. When my b.f. gave me the DVD as a gift, we seized the opportunity to watch the entire series -- the lone single season -- start to finish.
Frequent readers of this blog may recall my waxing hyperbolic about the unparalleled level of subtlety in the writing for Matthew Weiner's Mad Men on AMC. So, it came as a wonderful surprise to encounter equally subtle directing and acting on the short-lived Lisa Kudrow vehicle, The Comeback.
Continue reading "2nd Look: The Comeback. Valerie Cherish is Gorgeous" »
Hi all! Please check out these two exciting
events. (And tickets WILL sell
out, especially for Puppet Playlist. So please get your tickets early!)
If you're around, please join me in person:
I'll be in Boston to see "The Crocodile Boy Project" on Saturday and Sunday, Jan 30-31...
Then I'll be performing in NYC's Puppet Playlist alongside some of the finest puppeteers I know: Feb 5 and Feb 7. Details follow!
Continue reading "Two Cool Events! " »

Prospect Theatre has a teaser video on their website for their new musical, The Hidden Sky. In it, we see only screen pans across drawings but we hear some of Peter Foley's arresting score underneath a narration which, given the sci-fi content of the piece, provides us with the background. It's an innovative approach worth examining.
Continue reading "A cool way to promote a brand new musical online" »
Check out the bios for our singer/songwriters and writer/readers. It's a great lineup. To join us, Feb. 4th at El Cid (4212 West Sunset in Silverlake), email your NAME and the NUMBER in your party. There's no cover charge but reservations are strongly recommended as space is limited. Showtime: 7:30PM. Email us at: ticket@pinkplot.com
Continue reading "Dazzling lineup for 1st Ever Brevity Fest - Feb. 4" »

I’ve had a few days to digest the Golden Globes and these
are the things that have stayed with me (even though I tried intense therapy to
remove them from my consciousness)
Continue reading "Twelve things I'm left with, three days after the Golden Globes" »
My philosophy professor once told me about an essay he had
to write in grad school. He was asked to ponder the question, “If you are
continually darning a sock, at what point does it become a new sock?”
The question is about essence. What makes each individual
thing unique? Is the sock new after a single patch? After 51% of it is patched?
Or is it still the same sock as long as a single thread remains from the
original?
The same question can be asked of people. What gives each
person their own identity? Is it their body? Their memories? If a person has
their memory wiped clean, as happens more and more now as we live longer, are
they still the same person?
Put another way, what constitutes a human soul?
Continue reading "Invasion " »
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