Bohemian On A Shoestring

Arts and culture-related events for $15 and under

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Number Five is a ...tam-tam player?

A Grand Opening for an Only-in-Brooklyn-esque Institution

Location: LemurPlex
Date June 11, 2006 (The event is past, but it looks like the LemurPlex will be hosting other activities and classes "for children and adults" in the future)
Cost: Free
Bohemian Factor: (Speculative) High
Geek Factor: (Speculative) High

While it is, unfortunately, a bit too late to attend the open house event at LemurPlex, which I missed this past Sunday, it sounds like the grand opening of this new headquarters was a fascinating experience for the truly romantic, old-school robotophiles among us who wait in line to get into Heddatron and still get misty-eyed at the phrase Number Five is Alive.

Not to be confused with scary prosimians that look like raccoons on steroids, the League of Electronic Musical Urban Robots (LEMUR) was founded in 2000 by musician/engineer Eric Singer, and, according to their web site, “LEMUR's philosophy is to build robotic instruments that ‘play themselves.’ In LEMUR designs, the robots are the instruments.” Hmm, is this really a philosophy per se , or just promotional copy? Yet how can I bring myself to pick on a group that created, as they did this past March, custom robotics for an all-mechanical version of Antheil's Ballet mécanique, which was written for “three xylophones, four bass drums, tam-tam, two pianists, seven electric bells, a siren, three airplane propellers and sixteen synchronized player pianos"??

While only folks in D.C. were lucky enough to witness such an, um, well, complicated aural experience, New Yorkers in lower manhattan can, for free, check out Drumming on the Ceiling, an interactive installation at 45 John Street, that sounds considerably less melodic, but could nonetheless be interesting.

I shall have to visit LemurPlex in the future, but if any of you have heard their work, do send me a comment!

Thursday, June 08, 2006

The Goat Ate My Homework
"The Death of Little Ibsen" combines whimsy with Nordic neurosis.

Location: Chelsea's Sanford Meisner Theatre (Running Through June 11)
Cost: $20 (A little steep for a bohemian on a shoestring, I know)
Bohemian Factor: Moderate
Geek Factor: Low


Watching a famous tortured artist writhe helplessly in ennui is much more entertaining when his inner demons harmonize in a singsong duet, rather than the boring interior monologues that the rest of us get. Such is the fate of playwright Henrik Ibsen, or rather, Little Ibsen, as he is called in Wakka Wakka Productions’ “The Death of Little Ibsen,” which is about to complete its extended run at the Sanford Meisner Theatre in Chelsea. Careening through various biographical tidbits, the puppet Ibsen (Yes, puppets again!) regretfully contemplates his career choices, his legacy as a playwright and poet, and - as some of us would like to infer from his biography- his lousiness as a boyfriend.

Wakka Wakka doesn’t hesitate to exploit a medium where realism is besides the point, opting to reject narrative for vaudeville. “Little Ibsen” condenses Ibsen Dramaturgy 101 into visual capers, surreal voiceovers and, yes, silly little songs. In the first wordless scene, Ibsen is conveniently pulled from the womb with prematurely large, white sideburns. As a precocious, brooding student, he feeds one of his first rejected manuscripts to an adorable goat, initiating what seems to be a series of tempestuous transactions with cute animals. (Perhaps there is a deeper metaphor going on here? Ibsen scholars, anyone?) When the first of a series of women declares passionate love to a less-than-ardent playwright, she wins him over by girlishly declaring “I love your hair. And you’re so smart!” (Gee, if only this tactic was as effective for the rest of us.) It also helps that she bares her puppet breasts at this juncture.

Henrik Ibsen the puppet articulates lofty goals for his art and his social beliefs, but his aspirations at the grandiose are undermined by his wide-eyed, Candide-like innocence when coping with the results of his own bad decisions, as well as his voice, which is very close in timbre to Fozzy Bear. Kirjan Waage, who designed the puppets, and the other actors/puppeteers imbue even the most minor characters with admirable characterization, as do the other actors/puppeteers while dressed appropriately in Victorian garb.

How autobiographical are Ibsen’s plays in which an artist single-mindedly pursues his craft, immersed in foreign adventures and infidelity while his loved ones are left behind? Did he regret running away from his illegitimate child? Did he agonize over whether there should be limits to the rights of the individual? Although the hour- long production brings these lofty and thoughtful questions to the table, they are not explored in depth, apparently, since they can be breezily touched upon with a sight gag, or better yet, a song, delivered by whimsical “demons” in the shape of large overstuffed sausages with carrot-stick noses.

Then again, in one hour’s time, who wants pedagogy when you can get a serenade?