Film: Celebration of a maverick

by Mal Karman    

If you like your films as rare as your steak, the Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center this month is serving up a healthy dose of out-of-the-mainstream Orson Welles, who, despite his wars with the major studios, was twice voted the greatest director of all time by his peers.

“After Welles left Hollywood in the late ’40s, most of his films got very little exposure here,” says Richard Peterson, director of programming at the Rafael. “These are rare items, most of them made in Europe.” Among the unheralded gems are F for Fake, which Peterson calls “a very special documentary.”

“It’s an essay film, a portrait of a [Hungarian] art forger [and an American literary fraud],” he says. “Welles was able to utilize his personality in creating the film by talking directly to the camera. And he manages to bring the quality of a puzzle to it.”

Perhaps the most unique program in the retrospective is a presentation of Welles’ more obscure works by Joseph McBride, a professor at San Francisco State University and author of What Ever Happened to Orson Welles? A Portrait of an Independent Career.

No doubt paying a price for being a perfectionist, Welles was painted by critics as a lazy, overweight has-been who had pissed away the remarkable talent he demonstrated in Citizen Kane and the Mercury Theatre production of War of the Worlds.

McBride takes issue with the filmmaker’s detractors. “His life was a saga of untiring work, dedication … replete with evidence of his dogged tenacity,” he writes in his book, adding, “ … overwhelming obstacles (were) placed before him by a society that tragically undervalues its great artists.”

Also in the retrospective are Confidential Report, presumably the director’s intended version of Mr. Arkadin, about a man trying to track down his own past; The Immortal Story, Welles’ first film in color from an Isak Dinesen novel about a scheming wealthy 19th century merchant and Touch of Evil, which was re-edited not long ago according to Welles’ intentions by a team including Academy Award-winning Walter Murch of Bolinas.

‘Welles 100: The Maverick’ plays on Sundays and Thursdays through November 22; Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center; 1118 Fourth St., San Rafael; rafaelfilm.cafilm.org.

Music: Masterful messenger

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by Charlie Swanson

Bay Area native and indie folk singer/songwriter Vienna Teng has spent the last decade living in New York City, Detroit and most recently, Boulder, Colorado. And, that’s in between spending two-thirds of her life on the road pursuing her music, touring nationwide and amassing a fan base that adores her piano-led chamber pop.

One such fan was Bay Area author and playwright Tanya Shaffer, who reached out to Teng with an offer to collaborate on a new work. “We had a friend in common,” Teng says by phone, on the road as usual. “She mentioned that she and her husband had actually gotten married to one of my songs, which was touching.”

Shaffer also mentioned that she was working on a new play—a musical—and wanted Teng to compose the score.

“It was a pretty irresistible challenge,” Teng says with a laugh. “One, because I’d never written for anything other than my own albums. And she also had this really compelling story she wanted to tell.”

That story was “The Fourth Messenger,” a tale about the Buddha imagined as a woman in contemporary society. Possessing a fairy tale quality, Shaffer’s vision was both sweeping and epic while maintaining intimacy and emotion. “It really touched a chord for me,” Teng says.

The challenge for Teng was to get out of her songwriting comfort zone. As emotionally stirring as her songs are, pop music and theatrical tunes don’t always go hand in hand.

“We got incredible support by various theater groups in the Bay Area,” Teng says. “I felt like I was surrounded by mentors who were able to point me to soundtracks and other reference points.”

After a crash course in musical theater, Teng composed a slew of emotionally touching and ambitiously melodic songs that helped make “The Fourth Messenger” a success when it originally premiered in Berkeley two years ago.

Now, “The Fourth Messenger” is an album, featuring Teng herself singing in some of the lead roles alongside an ensemble cast of recording artists. Many of those vocalists will be assembled on stage when Teng and Shaffer bring a selection of songs from the album to life with a record release concert this weekend in Mill Valley. The concert includes a meet-and-greet with the cast, and Teng is also performing an all-request after-party set, where fans can hear her personal piano-driven pop repertoire.

Vienna Teng sings “Songs from the Fourth Messenger” on Sunday, Nov. 8 at Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley; 8pm; $38-$50; 415/383-9600.

Theater: Changing faces

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by David Templeton

From new faces on the management team to a new face on the company logo, a number of North Bay theaters have been introducing their “new kid in town”—and they aren’t just humming an old Eagles tune. As the seasons make their summer-to-fall change all around us, it seems like an appropriate time to introduce a few of those new faces to the theatergoing public.

At Cinnabar Theater in Petaluma, Diane Dragone, formerly of San Leandro Performing Arts Center, has just been selected to replace Executive Director Terence Keane, who departed last June. Since then, Stephen Hamilton has filled in admirably, and was the one to officially introduce Dragone to Cinnabar sponsors and press at a pre-performance event in October. Originally from New York, Dragone has also worked with Teatro ZinZanni and San Francisco Classical Voice.

“Cinnabar,” Dragone says, “has an incredible diversity of artistic performances, and it will be my job to make the community more aware of that. Petaluma is experiencing a lot of growth, with new people coming in all the time, so there are new people to tell about Cinnabar. For years, it’s been the ‘best kept secret’ in the North Bay. I’m looking forward to being a part of making it a lot less of a secret.”

Meanwhile, at 6th Street Playhouse in Santa Rosa, Jared Sakren has been hired as the new executive director, a position that will work side-by-side with Artistic Director Craig Miller. Sakren—who’s been the artistic director of Arizona’s Southwest Shakespeare Company for more than a decade—comes to California with a stellar reputation as a theater professional and fundraiser.

“Jared is awesome,” Miller says, “and with him taking on a lot of the development and financial matters, I’m going to be able to focus on building the artistic and aesthetic strengths of the organization.”

In addition, 6th Street has recently hired Steven Piechocki as the company’s new technical director, a position that has gone empty for nearly a year. An alumnus of Texas Repertory Theatre, Piechocki served most recently as technical director of the Old Lyric Repertory Company in Logan, Utah.

“Till now, without a technical director, we’ve been piecemealing our sets together using local contractors, often not achieving the full potential of the set designs we’ve envisioned,” Miller says. “With Steven, we’ve got a fully vested team player, and he’s already proven to be a huge asset.”

And finally, Marin County’s own Ross Valley Players has made a major change as well, introducing a fresh new barn-themed logo after more than three decades of being identified with the previous one. Both depict the legendary red barn at the Marin Art & Garden Center, where the company has had its home since 1939. The most recent logo, with a prominent “RVP” floating above a distinctly “wild west” drawing of the barn, has been retired in favor of something that reflects Ross Valley Players’ more modern approach to doing theater.

The beloved company, founded in 1930, has been doing a lot of exciting artistic experimentation of late, and the new logo—bold, simple and fun—effectively reflects the changing face of one of California’s oldest continuously operating theater companies.

Home & Garden: Environmental Heroes

by Annie Spiegelman, the Dirt Diva

Poor Mother Earth. She must be so done with us humans. We use more than a billion pounds of pesticides in American agriculture annually; home gardeners, even here in Marin County, are ignorantly drenching their yards with chemical fertilizers, which travel into local waterways and create “dead zones.” And even with the latest drought, Californians are still growing LAWNS. Arrrgh! Just when I was about to lose hope, I received an invitation from the filmmakers at the Mill Valley Film Group to attend a screening of the latest episode of their Emmy-Award-winning series entitled The New Environmentalists. The episode was so inspiring that the next morning I crawled out from under the covers, dashed outside to give my rusty ol’ compost spinner a few wild spins, and promised Mother Earth that I still had her back.

There are now a total of 13 episodes of The New Environmentalists, and starting this month you’ll be able to see them all on television. You won’t want to miss these. Each episode features six ordinary community members who blossom into dedicated activists and environmental heroes. Oftentimes these courageous champions place themselves squarely in harm’s way to battle intimidating and powerful adversaries who are unjustly threatening to pollute local land or endangered ecosystems. And to top it off, the series is narrated by Robert Redford. (Hear that sound? That’s the pitter-patter of the microbes in my compost spinner fighting for a selfie with their eco-heartthrob. Settle down now. )

In 2003, Mill Valley filmmaker Tom Dusenbery was asked to chronicle the work of recipients of the Goldman Environmental Prize, the world’s largest award honoring grassroots environmental activists. Dusenbery reached out to his colleagues, John Antonelli and Will Parrinello at the Mill Valley Film Group, who he had worked with in the past on various film projects. Since then, the team has been traveling globally to feature new eco-heroes annually.

“We delve into the personal side of the story and try to find the motivation for why an individual like Richard Blum would be driven to support healthcare and educational projects in the Himalayas or Richard Goldman would want to spend his resources to help honor and empower grassroots environmental activists around the world,” Antonelli says. “When we find the core value beneath that inspiration, we are able to tell stories that matter to those founding fathers and the remarkable family of leaders that they have gathered around them and to the audiences that we are able to reach through our work.”

Since 2004, Robert Redford has narrated each episode of The New Environmentalists. The filmmakers have a one-day session with him yearly and often must travel out of state or even do “phone patch” sessions with him to record, when he is on location. This year it was New Zealand. They sometimes are able to “hang out” with him for a while after a session and listen to his travel stories. “A few years ago John, Tom and I were recording Redford’s narration at Disher Sound in San Francisco,” Parrinello says. “We sat around after the session, talking about the Beat Generation. [Redford] told us about coming up to S.F. from L.A. as a teenager and landing at City Lights where Ginsberg, McClure, Rexroth and Snyder were reading while Kerouac passed the hat. When we told him we made a film about Kerouac, which premiered at the first Sundance Film Festival in 1985, he smiled saying, “We really struggled back then.”

The latest episode of the series is titled From Myanmar to Scotland and features local resident Jean Weiner restoring coral reefs and coastal degradation in Haiti; Myint Zaw, an accomplished photojournalist in Myanmar who launched a series of art exhibits to halt construction of a dam on the treasured Irrawaddy River; Berta Caceres in Honduras, who rallied the indigenous Lenca people to wage a grassroots protest against the Agua Zarca Dam; Phyllis Omido in Kenya, who stood up to her employer when she learned that factory lead emissions were lethally poisoning her community, former Canadian tribal chief Marilyn Baptiste, who led her native community in defeating proposed gold and copper mines that would have destroyed Fish Lake; and Howard Wood, an amateur diver in Scotland who put an end to destructive scallop dredging in order to restore the marine ecosystem.

Two things will happen when you watch this series. First, you will cheer the courageous eco-leaders on. Second, you will feel like a total eco-slacker. That’s OK. There’s still time for you to clean up your act. It can be small-scale. Simply getting off the gardening chemicals in your own backyard is a statement. (Compost, compost, compost is all you need.) Your stories won’t be as adrenaline-charged as those by these gutsy leaders and filmmakers, but you will automatically become my star students!

“Yes, we have scary stories,” Dusenbery says. “Having our gear impounded by Russian Customs on an island off the coast of Siberia due to a paperwork misunderstanding (and probably corruption). But the adventures have been amazing with opportunities to see places and things I would never have been able to, in parts of the world I hardly knew existed—and meet these heroic and remarkable people.”

And they’ll always have Honduras. “Shortly before we departed for Honduras our protagonist, Berta Caceres, told us she was receiving death threats and that we would have to hire Honduran “security consultants” (bodyguards) to work with us,” says Parrinello. “For the first five days of the shoot there were no threats, besides those that come with climate change and the intense unseasonal rains that turned a two-hour drive on a dirt road to the town of San Francisco de Opalaca into a 10-hour ordeal, with our four-wheel drive vehicles getting stuck in the mud so many times that we lost count after 12 times. The sixth day there were actual death threats to Berta and a roadblock. Suffice it to say, we all got out of it unscathed through a combination of help from the U.S. State Department, Honduran National Police and our own security team’s cunning ways, which use their brains more than their brute force or weapons.”

National broadcasts of The New Environmentalists series, beginning with The New Environmentalists—from Myanmar to Scotland, roll out the week of Nov. 8. Check local listings in Bay Area counties for cable channels, and learn more at mvfg.com.

Food & Drink: Keeping it fresh

by Tanya Henry

At first glance, the Victorian-themed Local Spicery on Tiburon’s tree-lined Ark Row appears to be much like the rest of the quaint neighboring boutique retailers who appeal to traveling tourists and well-heeled locals. However, dig a little deeper, and you will find that the 3-year-old spicery is much more than a well-appointed boutique in a toney neighborhood.

Husband-and-wife team Nicholas Davoren and Evelyn Wood began sourcing and selling their specialty spices at northern California farmers’ markets, including the one at San Rafael’s Marin Civic Center, in 2012. Over the last three years, the business has expanded to include a spice mill in Bel Marin Keys, an online mail-order business and a shiny new storefront in Tiburon.

“Stinson Rub is our biggest seller and most popular,” says Wood of their ancho, cumin, coriander and thyme mixture that they recommend as a perfect complement on a top cut of beef. With more than 70 different blends that include chile combinations, spicy jerk rubs and traditional herb mixtures, along with a “brown bag” of necessities for brining birds, the company packs a lot of flavor into a small space.

Chefs from Farmshop and San Francisco’s Namu Gaji have sought out Local Spicery for hand-selected spices that have not been irradiated or treated with ethylene oxide. By milling in small batches, the couple is able to maintain a high level of quality. They are also keen on educating folks on how to care for their spices to maintain freshness. “We recommend that customers not buy more than what they would use in a year,” Davoren says.

“It’s really important to have airtight lids on our tins to ensure optimum freshness,” explains Wood, who goes on to cite that along with oxygen, heat and light are major factors that contribute to spices losing their freshness and flavor.

It’s a good bet that Local Spicery’s offerings—blends like apple pie, poultry seasoning and mulling spices, along with more than 200 individual herbs and single spices—will make it onto many a table this holiday season.

Local Spicery, 80 Main St., Ark Row, Tiburon; 415/382-6455; localspicery.com.

Upfront: Global leadership

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By Joseph Mayton

Editor’s note: This story is under review following reports of challenges to the veracity of Joseph Mayton’s reporting for other publications.

Time to Lead on Climate, an upcoming climate forum in San Rafael, aims to bring together dozens of organizations, NGOs and others to create a unified front in what organizers and partners describe as a monumental effort for the Bay Area—and Marin county, in particular—to lead on climate issues.

“We have been very active on climate change action in Marin,” says Belle Cole of Organizing For Action (OFA) Marin, one of the lead sponsors for the November 9 event at Dominican University.

Bill Carney, president of Sustainable San Rafael, says that the event shows that the county and the state of California are “leading the way to real­ world climate solutions.” The event in Marin is part of the lead­up to the United Nations Climate Summit in Paris (Nov. 30-Dec. 11) and the American election campaign season. “It’s time for everyone to support global solutions and to make sure that climate is a deciding issue in all our political discussions,” Carney says.

Cole says that 40 Marin County organizations—among them, the Marin Conservation League, Sustainable Marin, MCE Clean Energy and the Marin County Bicycle Coalition—have signed up to join the Time to Lead on Climate forum and that diversity is a reflection of the growing desire to make serious changes to the status quo in order to advance climate efforts on the grassroots level. She added that the large amount of support helps the “effectiveness in working as a team in making this event happen.”

“We thought, let us take advantage of the convergence of the UN Summit on climate in Paris, elections on the horizon, Governor Brown’s climate leadership, the Pope’s moral imperative as well as Marin’s climate know­how and receptiveness to climate and environmental reform to confer with climate leaders on how best to solve climate change,” continues Cole.

While climate change issues have sparked much media attention over the past few years, a renewed effort from grassroots organizations and concerned citizens has been growing, from massive rallies to smaller conferences aimed at educating communities on the need to be aware of how humans are helping to change the Earth’s atmosphere and causing global warming.

Cole and others in Marin believe that the time for action is now. NASA reports that “97 percent of climate scientists agree that climate­ warming trends over the past century are very likely due to human activities, and most of the leading scientific organizations worldwide have issued public statements endorsing this position.” The Time to Lead forum is a local effort to unite organizations for a common cause.

Jody Timms, the chair of the Divest­-Invest campaign at 350Marin, says that the event reflects the care for the planet that citizens of Marin have. “Climate change affects every single one of us the world over and we are doing our part to urge local, national and global leaders to step up and follow the will of the people.”

For 350Marin, keeping fossil fuels in the ground is key to the success of stemming and reversing carbon emission trends. “We need a renewable revolution,” adds Timms.

Carney agrees, saying that Marin has shown itself to be a leader in giving its residents the opportunity to live with clean energy. “The governor just signed a bill calling for half our energy to come from renewable sources in 15 years,” Carney says. “And Marin residents can already choose 100 percent clean energy. We’re building a whole new green economy based on that foundation of clean energy. We’re showing the way to a sane climate future.”

Marin School of Environmental Leadership teacher Jesse Madsen believes that the present moment is arguably the most important in the global struggle for efforts to combat climate change. Madsen argues that with the Time to Lead on Climate forum, local communities can have a large part in the greater context of the global discussion on climate issues.

The conference, Madsen says, “allows Marin leaders to unify in message and direction, setting the stage for Marin to be a climate leader on a global scale.”

Being a part of the conference, which has presented an opportunity to learn from and collaborate with local environmental leaders, has been inspiring and rejuvenating for Madsen. “My hope is that the event is not the end of this collaboration, but the beginning of a wider movement that is inclusive of all people, as all of us will feel the impacts of climate change and all of us have a responsibility to act.”

SolEd Benefit Corp CEO David Kunhardt of the Citizens Climate Lobby understands the need for action. “2015 is on track to being the hottest year in recorded history, the oceans are absorbing even more heat and acidity,” Kunhardt says. “California has experienced the worst drought in 1,000 years, forest fires and now is expecting a record El Niño winter, all consequences of climate disruption by greenhouse gases.”

For him, the Time to Lead on Climate forum is an important moment for Marin and local communities across the country aiming to band together in an effort to spur change.

“It is the perfect time for citizen activists to step up and say, ‘It is time to lead on climate,’” Kunhardt says.

The world is waiting to see what transpires in Paris, and the international community is again hopeful that a new climate agreement could help create even more efforts to understand the root causes of changing climates and carbon emissions in order to establish agreed-upon reductions by all countries across the planet. But in Marin, that effort is already underway, and sponsors, organizers and supporters alike believe that this county can be a leader on the local, state and national level in creating the belief that change can happen.

Time to Lead on Climate; Monday, November 9, 7pm to 9pm; Angelico Hall, 20 Olive Ave., Dominican University, San Rafael; leadonclimate.org.

Feature: Festival fever

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by David Templeton

“Festival Mind.”

It’s a phrase I first heard from actress-comedian Brooke Tansley, who describes it as the unique attitude people have at film festivals and theater festivals.

“Festival Mind is an attitude, I guess, of grateful expectation, of excitement and anticipation—where everyone knows that the more movies you see, or the more plays you see, or the more comedy acts you see, the better your chances are of seeing something that’s really, really great,” explains Tansley, who’s performed on Broadway as Belle in Beauty and the Beast and on the Los Angeles comedy stage as a member of Amy Poehler’s Upright Citizen’s Brigade improvisation troupe.

I was thinking about Tansley’s Festival Mind idea last month, over the course of the Mill Valley Film Festival (MVFF). Having just completed its 38th year, the MVFF has pretty much fine-tuned the art of creating Festival Mind, effectively building—and keeping—an audience of filmgoers who are willing to set aside the usual movie-going or theater-going mindset of cautious skepticism and prove-it-to-me reluctance, entering instead into a kind of gleefully gluttonous, bring-it-on, all-you-can-eat, happy-to-be-here, more-is-more optimism in which a disappointing show or two actually enhances the fun instead of killing it dead in its tracks.

Which is what every live theater company I know of is deathly afraid of: Screwing up, killing theiraudience’s interest, accidentally staging a show that, for one reason or another, underperforms, and as a result loses that company whatever momentum they might have started with their previous show, which was very possibly a hit.

And you know what?

Theaters should be afraid of that.

Because—with one or two exceptions—most live theaters in the Bay Area (and other places, too), have been inadvertently cultivating an audience imbued with the exact opposite of Festival Mind. Call it Creeping Pyrophobia Mind (CPM)—a crippling fear of getting burned.

It’s CPM that makes theatergoers tread cautiously when choosing: A. Which season announcement brochures to get excited about; B. Which theater companies to become subscribers to; and C. Which never-heard-of-it-before shows to take a chance on. Creeping Pyrophobia Mind is arguably the cause of: 1. Slowly audiences; 2. A reduction in advance revenue that companies once depended on from subscriptions; 3. The erosion of private and foundational wallets that were once wide open to nonprofit arts organizations; 4. A palpable job security threat for various theatrical executive directors and artistic directors; and 5. A motivation for companies to raise their ticket prices, forcing them to take fewer chances, while lowering the overall quality of theater in the region, resulting in more A through C and 1 through 5.

So what can theater companies do to reverse the trajectory of CPM, and replace it with a great big dose of Festival Mind?

One way to start is to take a look at what lessons and tricks can be learned from the Mill Valley Film Festival, along with organizations such as the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, the San Francisco FringeFestival and the like.

And no—sorry, you boards of directors, you actors, you directors, you hardcore fans of local theater—it’s not the audience’s responsibility to catch the Festival Mind fever. And it’s not the responsibility of the press to pump up expectations, especially if the quality isn’t there to match it.

Nothing contributes to CPM more than overpraising a show (“It’s as good as anything you’ll see on Broadway!”), filling your seats with expectant people, happy to have paid premium dollar for something they have been told is awesome, only to realize that they were duped. Creating a culture of Festival Mind is the theater community’s job—and there’s no way around it.

“In a region where demographics are changing,” says director Mary Ann Rodgers, vice president of the Ross Valley Players (RVP) Board of Directors, “at a time when the traditional theater audience is being replaced by younger folks who haven’t grown up going to the theater, what we have to do is to just find ways to make going to the theater a whole lot of fun.”

Among the state of California’s oldest continuously running community theaters, Ross Valley Players has not always been seen as a source of fresh ideas and radical theatrical invention. But in recent months, there has been a notable shift in the energy around RVP’s beloved Old Barn Theatre at the Marin Art & Garden Center.

“We haven’t thought of it as ‘Festival Mind,’ exactly,” Rodgers says, “But we have been thinking of it more along the lines of ‘creating the sense of an event.’ With our recent production of Pirates of Penzance, we worked hard to turn it into more than just a play. We added a ‘Dress Like a Pirate’ day. There was a photo booth there where people could put on a pirate hat and have their picture taken. There were a lot of engaging add-ons to the show, creating a more immersive experience for the audience.”

Rodgers says that more and more directors are pitching shows, not based on the script or vision of the production alone, but in terms of how it might be turned into something more, something unexpected, something worth spending their time and money on. Even for something as simple as a stage reading of a new show, a little extra thought can make the experience extra special—and make attendees feel more likely to attend another event in the future.

Last weekend’s two-night-only staged reading of Gary Wright’s Nevermore—about the life of Edgar Allan Poe—included a snack bar selling Dark ‘n’ Stormy cocktails (rum and ginger beer) and cookies in the shape of Edgar Allan Poe’s head. Visitors to the company’s Facebook page could find all kinds of entertaining Poe-related material in the days leading up to the reading.

This month’s production of Ladies of the Camellias—about warring divas from the Golden Age of theater—will feature more audience costume nights with historical drinks and snacks.

The goal isn’t to make money from selling cookies and beverages … but to have a bit of additional fun. Because in this climate, fun equals money.

“For years,” Rodgers says, “the theater has been thought of as a place where you go to be exposed to something cultural and important and special, and it is, but now we want people to also think of the theater as a place where you get to go and play.”

And in redefining what “theater” is, any successful theater today must look at how they define themselves in terms of their audience.

“We’re a community theater,” Rodgers says. “We know that. And one thing we have started to reclaim is that we need to be more community minded, meaning we’re thinking of everyone who might benefit from seeing a show, and thinking of ways to reach out to them.”

Later in the season, when Rodgers directs Anna in the Tropics, about cigar factory workers from Cuba during the 1920s, the company will be pulling out the stops to make the show available to the local Latino community, using a show that will appeal to Spanish-speaking audiences as an opportunity to demonstrate how much fun the theater can be.

So, what else can theater companies do to create an attitude of Festival Mind?

Lots of things. Price is a major factor. Sorry about that. It is.

Would you go to Denny’s for a plate of macaroni and cheese and think it’s fair if they charged you what the Buckeye Roadhouse charges for their gourmet macaroni and cheese?

Sorry Denny’s. Buckeye’s is better. Deal with it. Either make yours taste just as delicious or charge less for it.

Same thing goes for theaters.

By staging a play you know to be a solid community theater show, and charging the same thing that the superb, fully professional Marin Theater Company charges, you are inviting people to feel burned. And you will lose them as audience members.

It’s not the average theatergoer’s cross to bear that you have a high mortgage. That’s what your donors and corporate sponsors are for. The average theatergoer doesn’t see going to a show as an act of charity. They see it as buying a product, and it’s not enough to tell them that you are a nonprofit.Tell that to someone with millions of dollars looking for a project to fund. Most regular people only see one or two entertainment events a month.

If you make them pay premium prices, they will expect premium quality. The same way you would.

Because of this, most festivals have creative pricing, where you get discounts for buying more tickets, and the more tickets you buy the more perks you get: VIP seating or early entrance so you get the best pick of seats; discounts on merchandise and invitations to special events; handwritten thank-you notes and early notification of upcoming seasons and events; automatic entry into raffles and giveaways; free peanuts. Whatever.

Giving your audience a sense of value-for-their-dollar is huge, and that can be done by making the prices appropriate to what they are getting, or by adding extra stuff. One of the things that makes the San Francisco Fringe Festival work (from an audience point of view) is that the prices are low enough that people can afford to see two or three shows, and if some shows aren’t up to snuff, it’s no big deal. Their “Frequent Fringer” card is a great innovation. Buyers can purchase a card that gets them into any three shows, for a discount, or any six shows, for a larger discount. It’s not that different from a season subscription, but it sounds more fun.

“There’s some basic human psychology at play here,” says Barry Martin, co-founder of Napa’s Lucky Penny Community Arts Center. “When I’ve gone to places like Ashland or Louisville or New York, I’m there for just a short time and want to see as much as I can, sort of like trying to ride all the rides at Disneyland. I’m usually on a special trip for this purpose, and certainly of the ‘Festival Mind,’ and I am omnivorous and will see things I might usually pass up.

“But when I am in my ‘normal mind’—meaning my normal home-and-work routine—I think about seeing shows very differently,” Martin continues. “I consider the rest of my schedule, how many weeks the show is running, how bad the traffic will be trying to get there, how late it will get out. Is it really a show I want to see?”

Which brings us back to the central question.

How do you create an environment in which more people want to see whatever it is that your theater is staging? At Lucky Penny—which recently transformed a small tile shop into a thriving little theatrical hotspot that is the talk of Napa—Martin and his rule-breaking associates have done many of the same things that Ross Valley Players is trying, from thinking up themed snacks and drinks, working clever contests and raffles into every performance, selling merchandise like T-shirts and posters and finding ways to break the fourth wall by turning the stage into a bar with the actors selling drinks for an hour or so before the show begins.

“I agree,” Martin says, “that theaters need to think about every production and imagine how they can make it an ‘event,’ and not just another in a series of shows. I think we all need to give added value when we can. If a party atmosphere’s not right, maybe then it’s a talkback that adds the needed sense of something special happening, or maybe dinner-and-a-show combinations, or cross-promotional projects with other theaters, maybe setting aside one or two low-cost or free shows in each run. What about free beer?”

In other words, break the rules, and see what works.

What else might the local theater community consider trying?

Why not attempt to turn the whole North Bay theater scene into a year-long “festival vibe” event? How about working with the other theaters in your county, your town or your particular stretch of 101? You just found out that your production of Dracula is running at the same time that another company in the area is staging The Creature, and other companies are doing Rocky Horror Picture Show, The War of the Worlds, Blithe Spirit and Into the Woods. Why not work together?

How about a single postcard going out to the entire combined mailing list of all theaters, with a title along the lines of “Monsters! Aliens! Witches! Ghosts!” and some sort of “frequent fright” discount for seeing at least three of the shows?

This may mean working together with companies that you are “competing” with. Is it way outside of your comfort zone? Is it a whole lot of trouble?

Sure it is.

“And everything we try might not work,” says Rodgers, of Ross Valley Players. “But some of it will work, and the important thing is that we start trying new things, because that’s what we do. We’re creative people. We’re theater people. We create something out of nothing. It’s time to remind ourselves of that.”

And if done right, with an attitude of fun and excitement, it will, in time, create a sense of Festival Mind throughout the North Bay, a sense that something kind of special is going on—and everyone wants to be a part of something special. It’ll take some work. It might take some guts.

It will take some time.

And who has time these days?

Of course, we’ll all have plenty of time when theater Creeping Pyrophobia Mind finally takes its toll and we’ll have to shut some of our theaters down.

But hey, even then, it won’t be all bad, right?

We’ll finally be able to go see shows at those theaters that were actually willing to make a change.

Hero & Zero: Raising awareness & shame on management

By Nikki Silverstein

Hero: Many talented people in the entertainment industry call Marin home. We’re especially proud of Mill Valley resident Jeffrey Brown, an Academy, Emmy and Peabody Award winner, who has dedicated the last eight years to making the film SOLD, which tells the true story of a young girl trafficked from her village in Nepal to a brothel in India. Brown directed SOLD; Emma Thompson served as executive producer, and Gillian Anderson and David Arquette starred in the film. They joined forces to spread awareness about human trafficking and to protect vulnerable children. Support this mission by donating to widen the film’s release. Perks range from a sincere thanks to a breakfast with Anderson or an evening of karaoke with Arquette. Learn more at indiegogo.com.

Zero: Whole Foods is in the Zero aisle again, thanks to another overzealous security guard. Marika, of San Rafael, was a regular at the Third Street store. Until last week. “A Whole Foods security person accused me of stealing food and called the police on me,” Marika said. The beef began when she took a container of food, with a preset price, into the dining area outside. (On many occasions, she has eaten food outside, brought the container back in, shopped, and then paid for all of her groceries.) The guard didn’t let her explain her intention and the situation escalated to absurdity. Marika, the executive directive of a local nonprofit, wasn’t arrested; however, she is banned for life from Whole Foods. Management should be ashamed.

Got a Hero or a Zero? Please send submissions to ni***************@***oo.com.

Free Will Astrology

By Rob Brezsny

ARIES (March 21-April 19): On a January morning in 1943, the town of Spearfish, South Dakota experienced very weird weather. At 7:30am the temperature was minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit. In the next two minutes, due to an unusual type of wind sweeping down over nearby Lookout Mountain, thermometers shot up 49 degrees. Over the next hour and a half, the air grew even warmer. But by 9:30am, the temperature had plummeted back to minus 4 degrees. I’m wondering if your moods might swing with this much bounce in the coming weeks. As long as you keep in mind that no single feeling is likely to last very long, it doesn’t have to be a problem. You may even find a way to enjoy the breathtaking ebbs and flows. Halloween costume suggestion: Roller coaster rider, Jekyll and Hyde, warm clothes on one side of your body and shorts or bathing suit on the other.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): How dare you be so magnetic and tempting? What were you thinking when you turned up the intensity of your charm to such a high level? I suggest you consider exercising more caution about expressing your radiance. People may have other things to do besides daydreaming about you. But if you really can’t bring yourself to be a little less attractive—if you absolutely refuse to tone yourself down—please at least try to be extra kind and generous. Share your emotional wealth. Overflow with more than your usual allotments of blessings. Halloween costume suggestion: A shamanic Santa Claus; a witchy Easter Bunny.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In the last 10 days of November and the month of December, I suspect that there will be wild-card interludes when you can enjoy smart gambles, daring stunts, cute tricks and mythic escapades. But the next three weeks will not be like that. On the contrary. For the immediate future, I think you should be an upstanding citizen, a well-behaved helper and a dutiful truth-teller. Can you handle that? If so, I bet you will get sneak peaks of the fun and productive mischief that could be yours in the last six weeks of 2015. Halloween costume suggestion: The most normal person in the world.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Members of the gazelle species known as the springbok periodically engage in a behavior known as pronking. They leap into the air and propel themselves a great distance with all four feet off the ground, bounding around with abandon. What evolutionary purpose does this serve? Some scientists are puzzled, but not naturalist David Attenborough. In the documentary film Africa, he follows a springbok herd as it wanders through the desert for months, hoping to find a rare rainstorm. Finally it happens. As if in celebration, the springboks erupt with an outbreak of pronking. “They are dancing for joy,” Attenborough declares. Given the lucky breaks and creative breakthroughs coming your way, Cancerian, I foresee you doing something similar. Halloween costume suggestion: A pronking gazelle, a hippety-hopping bunny, a boisterous baby goat.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “A very little key will open a very heavy door,” wrote Charles Dickens in his short story Hunted Down. Make that one of your guiding meditations in the coming days, Leo. In the back of your mind, keep visualizing the image of a little key opening a heavy door. Doing so will help ensure that you’ll be alert when clues about the real key’s location become available. You will have a keen intuitive sense of how you’ll need to respond if you want to procure it. Halloween costume suggestion: Proud and protective possessor of a magic key.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The ancient Hindu text known as the Kama Sutra gives extensive advice about many subjects, including love and sex. “Though a man loves a woman ever so much,” reads a passage in chapter four, “he never succeeds in winning her without a great deal of talking.” Take that as your cue, Virgo. In the coming weeks, stir up the intimacy you want with a great deal of incisive talking that beguiles and entertains. Furthermore, use the same approach to round up any other experience you yearn for. The way you play with language will be crucial in your efforts to fulfill your wishes. Luckily, I expect your persuasive powers to be even greater than they usually are. Halloween costume suggestion: The ultimate salesperson.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I encourage you to be super rhythmical and melodious in the coming days. Don’t just sing in the shower and in the car. Hum and warble and whistle while shopping for vegetables and washing the dishes and walking the dog. Allot yourself more than enough time to shimmy and cavort, not just on the dance floor but anywhere else you can get away with it. For extra credit, experiment with lyrical flourishes whenever you’re in bed doing the jizzle-skazzle. Halloween costume suggestion: Wandering troubadour, street musician, free-styling rapper, operatic diva, medicine woman who heals with sound.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I expect you to be in a state of continual birth for the next four weeks. Awakening and activation will come naturally. Your drive to blossom and create may be irresistible, bordering on unruly. Does that sound overwhelming? I don’t think it will be a problem as long as you cultivate a mood of amazed amusement about how strong it feels. To help maintain your poise, keep in mind that your growth spurt is a natural response to the dissolution that preceded it. Halloween costume suggestion: A fountain, an erupting volcano, the growing beanstalk from the Jack and the Beanstalk fairy tale.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Just as a snake sheds its skin, we must shed our past over and over again.” So says Buddhist teacher Jack Kornfield. Can you guess why I’m bringing it to your attention, Sagittarius? It’s one of those times when you can do yourself a big favor by sloughing off the stale, worn-out, decaying parts of your past. Luckily for you, you now have an extraordinary talent for doing just that. I suspect that you will also receive unexpected help and surprising grace as you proceed. Halloween costume suggestion: A snake molting its skin.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Speaking on behalf of your wild mind, I’m letting you know that you’re due for an immersion in revelry and festivity. Plugging away at business as usual could become counterproductive unless you take at least brief excursions to the frontiers of pleasure. High integrity may become sterile unless you expose it to an unpredictable adventure or two. Halloween costume suggestion: Party animal, hell-raiser, social butterfly, god or goddess of delight. Every one of us harbors a touch of crazy genius that periodically needs to be unleashed, and now is that time for you.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I hope you will choose a Halloween costume that emboldens you to feel powerful. For the next three weeks, it’s in your long-term interest to invoke a visceral sense of potency, dominion and sovereignty. What clothes and trappings might stimulate these qualities in you? Those of a king or queen? A rock star or CEO? A fairy godmother, superhero or dragon-tamer? Only you know which archetypal persona will help stir up your untapped reserves of confidence and command.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): It’s time to stretch the boundaries, Pisces. You have license to expand the containers and outgrow the expectations and wage rebellion for the sheer fun of it. The frontiers are calling you. Your enmeshment in small talk and your attachment to trivial wishes are hereby suspended. Your mind yearns to be blown and blown and blown again! I dare you to wander outside your overly safe haven and go in quest of provocative curiosities. Halloween costume suggestions: Mad scientist, wild-eyed revolutionary, Dr. Who.

Homework: What is your greatest fear? Make fun of it this Halloween. Tell me about it at FreeWillAstrology.com.

Advice Goddess

By Amy Alkon

Q: Sometimes, when my boyfriend is upset, he wants comforting, just like I would. He’ll vent or lay his head in my lap, and I stroke his hair. But sometimes, he just sits on the couch and says nothing. How do I know what he needs, and how do I feel better about it when it isn’t me?—Man Cave Confusion

A: Just like women, men often verbalize complex emotions—for example, “I want sausage and pepperoni on that.”

The truth is, men have feelings; they just don’t hang them out to dry on the balcony railing like big cotton granny panties. Developmental psychologist Joyce Benenson, who studies sex differences, notes in Warriors and Worriers that men, who evolved to be the warriors of the species, typically express emotions less often and with less intensity than women. Men are especially likely to put a lid on fear and sadness, emotions that reflect vulnerability—though it’s also the rare man you’ll hear chirp to his buddy, “OMG, those are, like, the cutest wingtips!”

Men’s emotional coolness is an evolved survival tactic, Benenson explains. “Emotions communicate feelings to others. They also affect our own behavior.” In battle, “a person who loses control of his emotions cannot think clearly about what is happening around him. Revealing to the enemy that one feels scared or sad would be even worse.”

Women, on the other hand, bond through sharing “personal vulnerabilities,” Benenson notes. Men and women do have numerous similarities—like having the adrenaline-infused fight-or-flight reaction as our primary physiological response to stress. However, psychologist Shelley Taylor finds that women also have an alternate stress response, which she named “tend-and-befriend.” “Tending” involves self-soothing through caring for others, and “befriending” describes “the creation of and maintenance of social networks” to turn to for comforting. (And no, she isn’t talking about Facebook or Instagram.)

So, as a woman, you may long to snuggle up to somebody for a restorative boohoo, but for a man, opening up about his feelings can make him feel worse—and even threatened. The problem is we have a tendency to assume that other people are emotionally wired just like us. Being mindful of that and of the evolutionary reasons a guy might need to go off in a corner to lick his wounds might help you avoid taking it personally: “I’m upset about how you’re upset!” (Great! And now his problem has a problem.)

It would be helpful if an upset man would hang a “Do not disturb” sign on his face when he just wants to drink a beer (or four) and watch South Park. You could try to read his body language—like crossed arms and stiff posture saying “go away.” But if his body isn’t speaking up all that clearly, you could say, “I’m here if you wanna talk—or if you don’t.” If it’s the latter, stock the fridge; make him a sandwich; make him some sex. In other words, comfort him in the way a clammed-up guy needs to be comforted. It beats being the girlfriend version of the enthusiastic Good Samaritan who, on a slow day, forces little old ladies across the street at gunpoint.

 

Q: My girlfriend loves to “spoon” when we sleep. She says it makes her feel safe and loved. I have recently developed spinal problems and have to sleep on my back like a corpse with this weird neck pillow. I’ll put my hand on her thigh to make her feel connected, but it’s not really cutting it. I suspect this reminds her of her marriage falling apart and her now ex-husband sleeping on the other side of the bed with a bunch of pillows between them.—Ouch

A: Sometimes a person’s need to feel safe and loved has to be forgone for the other person’s need to not be an Oxy-addicted hunchback at 45.

You can surely understand where she’s coming from. Nothing like going from sleeping lovingly intertwined with somebody to feeling as if you’re sleeping next to an open casket. This may feel even worse for your girlfriend if she does associate physical distance with emotional distance, having had an ex who built a Berlin Wall of pillows between them and would only have been farther away in bed if he’d slept on the floor.

What you can do is promise to make it up to her with extra affection when you’re out of bed—and do that: Go to cuddlesville when you’re watching TV together; shower with her; put your arms around her and kiss her head while she’s washing a mug. (P.S. This is also a smart practice for men who don’t sleep on a foam log.) Love does involve making sacrifices, but one of them probably shouldn’t be no longer being able to feel your toes.

Film: Celebration of a maverick

by Mal Karman     If you like your films as rare as your steak, the Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center this month is serving up a healthy dose of out-of-the-mainstream Orson Welles, who, despite his wars with the major studios, was twice voted the greatest director of all time by his peers. “After Welles left Hollywood in the late ’40s,...

Music: Masterful messenger

by Charlie Swanson Bay Area native and indie folk singer/songwriter Vienna Teng has spent the last decade living in New York City, Detroit and most recently, Boulder, Colorado. And, that’s in between spending two-thirds of her life on the road pursuing her music, touring nationwide and amassing a fan base that adores her piano-led chamber pop. One such fan was Bay...

Theater: Changing faces

by David Templeton From new faces on the management team to a new face on the company logo, a number of North Bay theaters have been introducing their “new kid in town”—and they aren’t just humming an old Eagles tune. As the seasons make their summer-to-fall change all around us, it seems like an appropriate time to introduce a few...

Home & Garden: Environmental Heroes

by Annie Spiegelman, the Dirt Diva Poor Mother Earth. She must be so done with us humans. We use more than a billion pounds of pesticides in American agriculture annually; home gardeners, even here in Marin County, are ignorantly drenching their yards with chemical fertilizers, which travel into local waterways and create “dead zones.” And even with the latest drought,...

Food & Drink: Keeping it fresh

by Tanya Henry At first glance, the Victorian-themed Local Spicery on Tiburon’s tree-lined Ark Row appears to be much like the rest of the quaint neighboring boutique retailers who appeal to traveling tourists and well-heeled locals. However, dig a little deeper, and you will find that the 3-year-old spicery is much more than a well-appointed boutique in a toney neighborhood. Husband-and-wife...

Upfront: Global leadership

By Joseph Mayton Editor's note: This story is under review following reports of challenges to the veracity of Joseph Mayton's reporting for other publications. Time to Lead on Climate, an upcoming climate forum in San Rafael, aims to bring together dozens of organizations, NGOs and others to create a unified front in what organizers and partners describe as a monumental effort...

Feature: Festival fever

by David Templeton “Festival Mind.” It’s a phrase I first heard from actress-comedian Brooke Tansley, who describes it as the unique attitude people have at film festivals and theater festivals. “Festival Mind is an attitude, I guess, of grateful expectation, of excitement and anticipation—where everyone knows that the more movies you see, or the more plays you see, or the more comedy...

Hero & Zero: Raising awareness & shame on management

hero and zero
By Nikki Silverstein Hero: Many talented people in the entertainment industry call Marin home. We’re especially proud of Mill Valley resident Jeffrey Brown, an Academy, Emmy and Peabody Award winner, who has dedicated the last eight years to making the film SOLD, which tells the true story of a young girl trafficked from her village in Nepal to a brothel...

Free Will Astrology

By Rob Brezsny ARIES (March 21-April 19): On a January morning in 1943, the town of Spearfish, South Dakota experienced very weird weather. At 7:30am the temperature was minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit. In the next two minutes, due to an unusual type of wind sweeping down over nearby Lookout Mountain, thermometers shot up 49 degrees. Over the next hour and...

Advice Goddess

advice goddess
By Amy Alkon Q: Sometimes, when my boyfriend is upset, he wants comforting, just like I would. He’ll vent or lay his head in my lap, and I stroke his hair. But sometimes, he just sits on the couch and says nothing. How do I know what he needs, and how do I feel better about it when it isn’t...
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