How's your memory?

Smelling roses while you sleep improves your memory.

While tofu has shown to decrease memory in the elderly, tempeh consumption can help memory function.

Anne Hathaway was 8 years older and 3 months pregnant when she and Shakespeare got hitched.

The full title of "Romeo and Juliet" is actually "The Most Excellent and Lamentable Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet."

Goldfish have a memory-span of at least three months


If someone gave you a quiz right now, what are you the chances you'd know the actual story of Romeo and Juliet, most of the details, or, at the very least, who was the Montague and who was the Capulet? Or would you beg for at least a few minutes of time with Wikipedia and/or a trip to the local bookstore to hurriedly read the back cover before you had to take this quiz? Would you worry that you were suffering acute memory loss, or consider starting to do crossword puzzles to improve your memory?

Nature Theater of Oklahoma takes the momentary panic/embarrassment/general cluelessness you are feeling as you think about this quiz and make it an entire, hilarious production. A Philadelphia premiere, Nature Theater of Oklahoma's Romeo and Juliet is a conglomeration of the fleeting fragments of memories and conversations of the details that comprise and orbit the epic, often-referenced, tragic love story.

Taking the stage at this year's Festival. Don't forget.

Romeo-and-Juliet

Rocco's Modern Art

National Endowment for the Arts Chairman Rocco Landesman toured Philadelphia yesterday, exploring our city's murals and Crane Arts Building as part of his "Art Works" tour.

He cited Philadelphia as an example of the kinds of changes in arts policy he is trying to implement, saying, "I don't know how many times I've said it in the last few months: 'We've got to look at what they're doing in Philadelphia.'"

Go Philly!

Read the article from the Inquirer here: www.philly.com/philly/news/local/86128427.html

And read Rocco Landesman's post about Philadelphia on the Art Works blog here: http://www.arts.gov/artworks/?p=954

Announcing the Centerpiece Show of the 2010 Festival

We're Thrilled to Announce the Centerpiece Show of the 2010 Live Arts Festival...
DANCE
by Lucinda Childs, Philip Glass, and Sol LeWitt

DANCE by Lucinda Childs
Photo by Sally Cohn


"DANCE offers liberation through confinement, infinite variation through sameness; it conveys the elemental desire to move to music, to dance" - The New York Times

Lucinda Childs will bring her rarely performed signature work DANCE to the 2010 Philadelphia Live Arts Festival this September. In this seminal collaboration featuring music by Philip Glass, dancers seamlessly interact with a film by Sol LeWitt to create a powerful retrospective of the human form in motion and an exploration of musical movement, rhythm, and harmony.

CLICK HERE for a clip of a recent production of DANCE at The Joyce Theater.

Performances will be held at the Kimmel Center's Perelman Theatre.
Tickets and a full schedule will be available at www.livearts-fringe.org beginning in May.

The presentation of Lucinda Childs' DANCE in the 2010 Philadelphia Live Arts Festival is supported by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage through Dance Advance.
Dance Advance

The Philly Fringe "New Artist Workshop"

Are you an artist considering a show for the Philly Fringe this year, but are new to the Festival and unsure if you can?

Come meet the Fringe staff and have all your questions answered at the New Artist Workshop. We positioned this workshop before the participation deadline, giving you three whole weeks to decide!

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010 @ 6:00 PM
The Live Arts Festival & Philly Fringe Administrative Offices
919 N 5th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19123


Pizza & refreshments served.
Please RSVP to John: john@livearts-fringe.org

How Philly Moves Unveiled Today!

Spontaneous dancing erupted in the Mayor's Reception Room this morning upon the announcement of a project that will place a vibrant new work of community-based public art on the parking decks facing Interstate 95 at the Philadelphia International Airport. We're talking about a 50,000 square foot mural, incorporating the photographic work of its designer, artist Jacques-Jean "JJ" Tiziou.

Scheduled for completion in June 2011, this project is set to be one of Philadelphia Mural Arts' greatest accomplishments as it transforms a highly visible, dull facade:


into a brilliant representation of our city's life, culture, community, and artistic vision:



Visit This Page to learn more. And see the video in our previous blog entry.
Congratulations to Philadelphia Mural Arts and to JJ Tiziou!

"Feastival" in February's Philadelphia Magazine!

Looks like Philadelphia Magazine is on to us.


Open this month's issue to Brooke De La Villanova's High Society column in the "Pulse" section, and here's what you'll find:

High Society: February 2010

By Brooke De la Villanova

How I love artsy people! Restaurant glamour-puss Audrey Claire threw a launch party that drew power couple Sharon Pinkenson and Joe Weiss, legal eagle Bernie Munley, entrepreneur David Grasso, Memphis Flats developer Greg Hill, Fringe-y Nick Stuccio, and Stephen Starr, among others. Being launched: Feastival, which despite its Seinfeldian name promises to be delish. On September 15th, 25 top chefs will whip up edgy fare in Northern Liberties to raise money for the edgy Live Arts and Philly Fringe festivals. Bon appetit, munchkins. ....


"High Society", indeed. For more info on this star-studded evening, Click Here!

What the Philly Metro doesn't know (yet!)

From Philly Metro, Thursday, January 28, 2010:

"Reasons it was fun to live, work, and play in Philly
Why have we all had such a good time in Philly over the past decade? Here's just 10 of the reasons for it

#1 Tables turned: Thanks to powerhouses such as Stephen Starr; Marc Vetri; Jose Garces and Michael Solomonov, not even New York can pretend we don't have a dining scene to reckon with these days.
...
#3 Philadelphia Live Arts/Philly Fringe festival: This gigantic gathering of local, international, amateur and professional artists has been kicking since 1997, but it gets a little bigger, a little weirder, and a little more can't-miss every year."

But here's what the Metro doesn't know (yet!): Those powerhouse restaurateurs are in partnership with this year's festival, to bring you Feastival.
For more info on what will be the #1 reason it's fun to live, work, and play in Philly in 2010, CLICK HERE

How Philly Moves

What happens when the City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program brings together the Philadelphia International Airport, Philadelphia Parking Authority, and photographer JJ Tiziou?


Come find out what happens, and participate in the announcement by Mayor Michael Nutter and Deputy Mayor Rina Cutler of an extraordinary new work of community-based public art that will celebrate How Philly Moves.

Date: Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Time: Doors open at 9:30am. Presentation begins at 10:00am.
Location: City Hall, Mayors Reception Room - 2nd floor (please bring photo id to enter building)

Featuring live music provided by members of the ferocious and recklessly joyful West Philly Orchestra

This is about you, Philly. See you there.

Now! Calling All Artists to Participate in the 2010 Philly Fringe!

It's that time of year again! You can now access the 2010 Fringe Artist Participation form by clicking HERE!

Participate in the 2010 Philly Fringe!
The 2010 Call For Artists begins January 25 and ends April 2.


Are you an performing artist with an "anything goes" ethos and an "I'll just do it myself" attitude? Join the Fringe, and bring your vision to an audience free from all curatorial barriers.

Be one of the 200+ acts that turns our city into a performing arts Mecca and gives Philadelphia a creative blast of energy every year.

16 days of theater • dance • comedy • musicals • circus arts • visual arts • poetry • opera • puppetry • storytelling • rock n roll

Performed all across the city at art galleries • theaters • basements • churches • rock clubs • abandoned lots • row homes • flatbed trucks • storefronts • sidewalks • parks • bars • graveyards • museums • underpasses • parking lots • cafes • train stations • night clubs • swimming pools • buses • rooftops • benches • booths • boats • driveways • cars • tennis courts • grass-fields • places you didn't know existed.

The Philly Fringe wants you! Join the ranks of the risk-taking artists who have made the Festival a Philadelphia tradition since 1997.

Come One, Come All

For Questions, please contact john@livearts-fringe.org

To register: Click Here!

Deadline for participation: April 2, 2010

January 2010 Live Arts Festival Second Thursdays Series

JANUARY 2010'S FEATURED ARTISTS AND PROJECTS

Whit MacLaughlin / New Paradise Laboratories
(FATEBOOK, 2009)

Dare to take a peek inside the brain of Whit MacLaughlin, the Artistic Director of New Paradise Laboratories and mastermind behind 2009's FATEBOOK. FREEDOM CLUB (in collaboration with The Riot Group); MORT (the third part of NPL's American Party trilogy preceded by BATCH and PROM); and his newest idea, F@#CK COMPUTERS. For more advance details on the new works, click here.

Miro Dance Theatre
Amanda Miller and Tobin Rothlein of Miro Dance Theatre will be showing a slideshow of their recent trip to India where they performed their newest work, How am I Not Myself? In the work, two classically trained dancers, one in Ballet and the other Bharatnatyam, examine the questions that come with dance, identity, and moving beyond the classical form. At the age of four Amanda Miller and Viji Rao began their classical training on opposite sides of the world. Now, thirty years later, following professional classical careers, they are both engaged in their own unique forms of contemporary dance. In How am I Not Myself? they join with video artist Tobin Rothlein to look at their transition from classical to contemporary with an exciting dialogue of movement and multimedia and a celebration of the contemporary and the unclassifiable.

Makoto Hirano and Ben Camp
Ben Camp and Makoto Hirano will be showing a few scenes that may or may not make it into their upcoming work, PunchKapow. PunchKapow is an original devised piece in development by Ben, Alex Torra, Makoto, Charlotte Ford, Mikaal Sulaimon, and Brett Cassidy. The piece is inspired by representations of violence and how much fun they can be - comic books, action movies, video games, and anime. People love violence, and we want to dive into the joy of fighting as much as the darkness. This piece is the first for an organization called Team Sunshine Performance Corporation, and will priemere in November.

WHERE AND WHEN
January 14, 2010 at 7pm
The Festival Studio
919 N 5th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19123
FREE (but limited) onsite parking + street parking abounds in the neighborhood
Cost: FREE

WHAT IT'S ALL ABOUT
On the second Thursday of each month, artists from the Live Arts Festival artist residency program or a guest artist from the region talk about their work process and share their musings, imaginings and ideas that are the inspiration for what will eventually evolve into a new work. They'll be casual, intimate gatherings, so anything goes. The artists may perform segments of new work, tell stories about their un-traditional research, or just discuss what they're currently imagining for their upcoming piece. Your questions and feedback for them throughout the event are warmly welcomed. In traditional Festival-style, free beer will be offered to all!

JANUARY'S PRE-SERIES BONUS EVENT
For this month's Second Thursdays Series, you'll enter the Festival studio through AREA 919's gallery space. Between 6pm and 7pm, visit AREA 919 for a glass of wine and their Antique Collection of 18th and 19th Century works in stone, marble, iron, and wood from Europe, India, China, and America. For more information: www.area919.com

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