2007 Fringe Festival: Day 11
Aug. 13th, 2007 07:37 amA successful last day. Somewhat to my surprise, I managed to make all my scheduled shows for a total of 38 Fringes. The secret, at least for me, was pacing. I never saw more than four in a day, and never fewer than three. I didn't force myself to go to one more if tired, and choreographed traveling between venues.
KIPO! **** 1/2
Kipo Means Happy
Exuberant Tibetan clog dancing with banjo and yak. The dancers and singers recreate dance in Tibet before the Chinese invasion, and end with a sad prayer. The politics are kept to a minimum as the joys of a simple life are celebrated.
The Opportunity: It's not a pyramid scheme *** 1/2
Real Sales Rallies Are Like This, Unfortunately
Good send-up of faith-based multi-level marketing sales force rallies. Some good lines and nice audience interaction. In many ways, they squeeze too gently for how ubiquitously companies sell their false hope.
Wallace and the Dragon ****
The Story Of A Spiritual Naturalist
Alfred Russel Wallace deserves to have his story told, the true story of his vision and his blind spots. He was a great scientist and observer with a moral stance above that of the British. Anti-religious but spiritual, he never convinced people that science and the supernatural were woven of the same cloth. Rounded up because of the great live music and the dancing komodo dragon.
I have a podcast to do (and might get some more interviews for it), and some pictures to look at and post. I might pause for a day to get my bearings. We'll see.
KIPO! **** 1/2
Kipo Means Happy
Exuberant Tibetan clog dancing with banjo and yak. The dancers and singers recreate dance in Tibet before the Chinese invasion, and end with a sad prayer. The politics are kept to a minimum as the joys of a simple life are celebrated.
The Opportunity: It's not a pyramid scheme *** 1/2
Real Sales Rallies Are Like This, Unfortunately
Good send-up of faith-based multi-level marketing sales force rallies. Some good lines and nice audience interaction. In many ways, they squeeze too gently for how ubiquitously companies sell their false hope.
Wallace and the Dragon ****
The Story Of A Spiritual Naturalist
Alfred Russel Wallace deserves to have his story told, the true story of his vision and his blind spots. He was a great scientist and observer with a moral stance above that of the British. Anti-religious but spiritual, he never convinced people that science and the supernatural were woven of the same cloth. Rounded up because of the great live music and the dancing komodo dragon.
I have a podcast to do (and might get some more interviews for it), and some pictures to look at and post. I might pause for a day to get my bearings. We'll see.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-08-13 02:39 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-08-13 04:06 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-08-13 04:41 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-08-13 06:41 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-08-13 07:40 pm (UTC)It kind of had to be, since the dragons made him promise that he wouldn't talk about it.
Frankly, I think that part was stupid, and undercuts the credibility of the whole story, which was plenty interesting without it. They could have had the dragon dance without making it the explanation for Wallace's descent into historical obscurity.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-08-13 08:45 pm (UTC)If he promised not to talk about it, we wouldn't have a written record. I suspect you're right that it didn't happen in quite that way, but given Wallace's spirituality and subsequent actions giving all the credit to Darwin, the fictionalization works for the character. You're fond of Trickster characters. Why not a trickster dragon?
Besides, most of the show is Wallace sitting there talking. The show needed some theatrical oomph, and the dragon worked to enliven what was basically a one-man show.
Anyway, thanks for the recommendation. I liked it better than you did; you liked Bards better than I.