Friday, November 8, 2019

'Theory' debuts at Mosaic


The Theory classroom ensemble at Mosaic Theater/Photo by Christopher Banks

A lady at the Smithsonian reception* the other night told me she liked provocative theatre, the kind which makes you think. She paused: "As long as it's got good acting.

"You're going to love Theory," I said, the newest show at Mosaic Theater which presents the American premiere of an award-winning Canadian production.

It will set your mind ablaze, I told her, while you ponder the meaning. For progressive theatre lovers, it's must see.  

Ari Roth, the much beloved founding artistic director at the much beloved Mosaic Theater on H Street, writes in program notes that he finds hope in this show.  I am happy he found it; I am still searching.

The protagonist (Musa Gurnis is Isabelle) challenges "the heteronormative, white-male-dominated film canon she is charged to teach," Ari writes. Pity white males.

Norman Yeung, a man of many artistic persuasions (playwright, filmmaker, artist, actor) won a 2015 Canadian national playwriting contest for Theory which is billed as a “techno-thriller,” but the action doesn’t really get going until the last scene.

Then (finally!) Isabelle suddenly develops strength of character and a new person emerges, stronger and better possessed of her faculties in contrast to the mousy do-gooder she acts in most of the drama, trying to be all things to all students, unleashing the class to become
whatever it wants to be.

In Yeung's play, the roles reverse: The students teach, and the dull teacher/student learns the hard way that students need structure, after all.

Suspense gradually builds but not enough to introduce the sudden departure from its gait to the pace presented at the end.

The weak link in this chain of events is the main character, Isabelle.

She is married to a lesbian, of course. (Andrea Harris Smith  is Lee, her wife.)  This is modern-day stuff.

Isabelle's syllabus says nothing is off-limits to post for the class, including murder, mayhem, and violent sex

That is, until certain words becomes too much for her wife to bear, and the original deal is scraped by Teacher Isabelle who changes the rules of this game.

Dynamic performances by all the students  (Josh Adams, Benairen Kane, Camilo Linares) lift the show, especially Tyasia Velines whose animation, arms, and exclamations earn her standout status.


Also in the cast is Tony K. Nam in a realistic and concerning portrayal as Isabelle's department head.


The stage and lighting are segregated by scene in a well-executed design by Daniel Ettinger with lighting by Brittany Shemuga. The classroom and desks sit in the upper left corner with stage center reserved for the living quarters of Isabelle and Lee. 

The far right transitions from a school to home office and back again, complete with a plant merry-go-round which, after the third movement or so, becomes a distraction and you are left wondering if it's the home or the school office that's up next. 

And "devices."  Sigh. They are omnipresent. What's a show without them?  Not a contemporary show.

Director Victoria Murray Baatin, the theater's associate artistic director, makes her Mosaic theater debut with Theory which she discovered on the last night of a travel grant to Canada. 

Dylan Uremovich does a nice job with simultaneous projections on different-sized screens.

Other members of the crew are Danielle Preston, costumes;
David Lamont Wilson, sound; Willow Watson, properties; April Sizemore-Barber, dramaturg; April E. Carter and Laurel VanLandingham, stage managers; Ashara Crutchfield, assistant director; and Paul Gallagher, fight choreographer.

What: Theory

When: Now through Nov. 17 at 8 p.m. from Wednesday through Saturday; 3 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday; and 7:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 10. 


Where: Mosaic Theater Company, Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H Street NE, Washington, D.C. 20002

Getting there: Riding public transportation from Union Station on the streetcar is easy and free, if you can find the streetcar behind Union Station where signage to the streetcar is poor. Valet and parking options are available. Move. (For late-night streetcar rides, the 
show may go on.)

Tickets start at $20.

Language: Adult

Duration: 85 minutes without intermission


Post-show discussions:  Saturday, Nov. 9, 3 p.m.;
Sunday, Nov. 10, 3 p.m.Thursday, Nov. 14, 11 a.m. (cast talkback); and Saturday, Nov. 16, 3 p.m.

Open-captioned performances: Friday, Nov. 15 at 8 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 16 at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. 

For more information: Please call the box office and leave a message: 202-399-7993, ext. 2.


*by Mary Louise Schumacher, art critic, at the American Art Museum

patricialesli@gmail.com




Sunday, November 3, 2019

Nancy Pelosi was at National Geographic


Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi at National Geographic, Oct. 23, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie

It was the day of her brother's funeral but still, the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, the third most powerful person in the United States, kept her date at National Geographic to help launch the institution's new exhibition, Women: A Century of Change.

In National Geographic's auditorium, Ms. Pelosi addressed hundreds who stood and applauded when she entered and who stood and applauded when she left. The speaker noted that her daughters, Alexandra and Nancy, were present.

In conversation with Susan Goldberg who is the editorial director of National Geographic's publications and the first female editor-in-chief of the magazine, Speaker Pelosi talked informally about her entry into public life and, based on her experiences, she had some recommendations for those who may consider it.

At first in the public arena, she was shy.  The "best advice" she has for those listening: "Be yourself" and ask: "What is your 'why'?"

Ms. Pelosi was first elected to Congress in 1987 when only 23 of 435 representatives were women.  Now, there are 102, and some are Republicans. "We need more women" in Congress, she said.  There is no glass ceiling.
 
When she was first elected speaker in 2007 (and again in 2009 and 2019), George Bush was president, and she said then:  "At last, we have a woman at the table.

"There need to be many women at the table," she said to applause.

When members of the audience weren't clapping, they sat spellbound.
Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi with National Geographic's Susan Goldberg, Oct. 23, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
 
Speaker Pelosi and Ms. Goldberg sat in front of a few enlarged photographs from Ms. Pelosi's life which included the "Mona Lisa" of political Washington, the photograph of Speaker Pelosi taking command at a White House meeting last month with President Trump and other men seated at a large table.
Speaker Pelosi chats with National Geographic's Susan Goldberg with a famous photograph as backdrop, Oct. 23, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie

George Washington appointed Commander in Chief at the Second Continental Congress, June 19, 1775, Philadelphia/Library of Congress, Wikimedia Commons

Ms. Pelosi laughed a lot and was obviously comfortable in the surroundings. She looks better in real life than she does in photographs or on television.
 
"You have to be ready to take a punch," she laughed and the audience laughed with her.  
In one form or another, she recommended that those listening "follow your passion."
Speaker Pelosi chats with National Geographic's Susan Goldberg Oct. 23, 2019 in front of a photograph of Speaker Pelosi with her mother/Photo by Patricia Leslie


If she ruled the world, "the one thing" she would do: "Educate women and girls." 



"Anything is possible. When women succeed, the world succeeds," and the audience loudly proclaimed its agreement as Speaker Pelosi exited the stage.
 
Women: A Century of Change opens at National Geographic/photo by Patricia Leslie
Women: A Century of Change opens at National Geographic/photo by Patricia Leslie


The National Exhibition exhibition features its photographs of women from the last century. A separate gallery is devoted to 24 women who herald the future and includes Speaker Pelosi and Christine LaGarde.

Every attendee at the launch event received a copy of the new National Geographic magazine which features the exhibition and begins a year of women's coverage to celebrate the 100th anniversary of women getting the right to vote in 1920.

What: "Women: A Century of Change illuminates, celebrates and reflects on where the world’s women have been, where they are now and where they are going."

When: 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. daily through Spring, 2020. The last ticket is sold at 5 p.m.

Where: National Geographic, 1145 17th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20036

Tickets: Adults: $15; seniors, military, students: $12; children ages 5-12, $10; children under age 5 are admitted free. No charge for contributing members.
 

Closest Metro stations: Farragut West (Orange Line) and Farragut North (Red Line)

For more information: 202-857-7700

patricialesli@gmail.com

Saturday, November 2, 2019

The Washington Nationals Championship Parade!


This flag marks the beginning of  the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade at the corner of Constitution and 15th, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
See the lady's shark hat For an explanation of the ties to the Washington Nationals, please go here.  She was at the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.

Look!  Racing President Thomas Jefferson (on far right) came, too.on a bicycle!  Someone in the crowd said it must have been tough wearing this big head and riding a bike, but like most presidents, T.J. got the job done at the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
I think this is Gerardo Parra at the front (who wears the tinted glasses) getting ready to throw...a t-shirt? He's the one who started the Nats' Baby Shark craze when he opted to use the song for his walk-up.  His children loved it, and so does he, and thousands more!

The buses moved up Constitution towards the Capitol, and the players and their families hung out on bus tops.  It was difficult to see all of them, and I missed Strasburg and Scherzer, and maybe, Rendon.  A loud speaker would have helped.  Fans who watched the parade at home told me you couldn't tell on TV either which players were on the buses at the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Parra (I think) is the "Daddy Shark" at the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
This is...who knows? The fellow in white, sunglasses, and hat holds two beers in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
This is the same group as above in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019, I took these pictures from a wall at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. Across the street is the U.S. Department of Commerce/photo by Patricia Leslie.

Troops in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Oh, oh, a Harper shirt.at the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019. See below for another version of it/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Matt Adams wears #15 and Patrick Corbin, #46, but I'm not sure if the men in these shirts are the players in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
This may be Rendon's bus in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie
This is ...? In the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Racing President Abraham Lincoln, looking stern as always, showed up riding a bicycle in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Racing President Teddy Roosevelt came, too, to meet up with Abe who turned his bicycle around to greet Teddy, also riding a bike. Everybody loves Teddy, because he's got that huge smile on his face. They were in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019. Never saw George the whole day/photo by Patricia Leslie.
I couldn't resist, but had to include another photo of the presidents passing each other
in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
There goes Teddy in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
This is Kendrick waving from the back of the bus. Thank you, Kendrick!  In the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
These were pom-pom people on a bus.  I especially like the woman on the ground in the light green jacket floating with the crowd at the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.

Children grow in trees where they can see the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade a lot better! Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
"Go Nats!" at the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Clydesdales, of course, in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Revelers in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Soto! (I think) In front of the bus in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie.
Who ... in the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019? I missed Sean Doolittle when he went by, but the crowd behind me screamed his name: "D -o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o."  Thank you, Sean Doolittle, for holding firm to your values and for refusing to participate in a ceremony at a place which has no values.  I hope more players join Doolittle. (Update: The following also did not attend:: Anthony Rendon, Javy Guerra, Joe Ross, Wander Suero, Wilmer Difo, Michael A. Taylor, Victor Robles, Roenis ElĆ­as, Raudy Read and Tres Barrera.  On behalf of civilization, thanks, guys!)./photo by Patricia Leslie.
The Budweiser beer tent in front of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. Beer and hot dogs were reasonably priced. ("Take me out to the ball game.")  That beer was sold on Constitution Avenue was a wonderful surprise.  Near the end of the parade, all that were left were Bud Lites, but that was A-OK, since some were left, thank Nationals!  Surely, the museum got a cut of the non-stop sales (I stood on the wall nearby to keep count) since its name was on the receipt. At the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie
The trophy!  The trophy!  Zimmerman holding it, maybe? In the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie
Another trophy shot, held by Martinez? Do the Nationals get to keep it  for a year, like the Capitals kept the Stanley Cup for a year, and take it on a worldwide tour, including swimming and filling it up with all kinds of goodies? At the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie
Joy to the RedConfetti spewed from blowers near the end of the parade which lasted about an hour or about double the length of the Capitals' parade.last year. At the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie
Whoosh! More confetti! At the end of the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie
At the end of the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019. No signs left lying on the ground per usual.  Everyone carried them home save those who didn't get one, like me.  Sniff/photo by Patricia Leslie
Walking along 17th Street at the Executive Office Building with the Renwick Museum in the distance, after the  Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019/photo by Patricia Leslie
At the East Falls Church Metro station, this lady has her Harper number all covered up!  Where's Harper? Not in the District of Champions for the Washington Nationals World Series Championship Parade, Nov. 2, 2019!/photo by Patricia Leslie
Baby sharks take over Nationals Land! Like near the East Falls Church Metro station, Nov. 2, 2019 and on ears of ladies, and I saw a man wearing baby shark sunglasses. Attention:  Ball Players:  Let's do it again!/Photo by Patricia Leslie


patricialesli@gmail.com