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| 9:00 pm |
Tuesday, August 9, 2011 – 9pm EST
Closed Set with Ray Garman
Watch Live: www.moonstonelive.org
| Aug ’11 |
| 9 |
| 9:00 pm |
Tuesday, August 9, 2011 – 9pm EST
Closed Set with Ray Garman
Watch Live: www.moonstonelive.org
| Aug ’11 |
| 29 |
| 7:00 pm |
Monday, August 29, 7pm – One Night Only – $10.00
National Black Arts Spoken Word Tour Presents
“Hush Harbors: Speaking the Names Of Katrina”
Part III of the National Touring production trilogy that chronicles the Katrina Storm Drama & Gulf Coast Tragedy as Ceremonial Reconciliation. Published as a chapbook and recorded live in Atlanta as a CD compilation, this production was conceived and directed by Maurice Henderson and has been staged throughout the United States as a postscript to the initial dramatic installment of”Wade in the Water”. This touring theatrical series began with “Wade in the Water” which was hosted by Danny Glover and was subsequently held over several times in New York at the National Black Theatre in Harlem, where it achieved critical acclaim, standing ovations and sold out attendance.
Theater is air conditioned and is not wheel chair accessible.
Seating is limited – please rsvp for tickets at (215) 820-7571 or mauricebrianhenderson@yahoo.com (Group Rates are available)
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| 10:00 am |
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| 10:00 am |
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| 10:00 am |
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| 10:00 am |
NATIONAL BLACK ARTS SPOKEN WORD TOUR & ADELPHIA REPERTORY TOURING COMPANY
Present
2011 Summer Day Performance Series @ MOONSTONE ARTS CENTER
Back by Popular Demand!!!! A full month of discounted and low cost Performances about Peace: Violence and Crime Prevention for all ages during the Month of August 2011!!!
Low Cost and Discounted Group rate tickets are available at $5.00 per person (50% Discount off General Admission Tickets of $10.00) or special arrangements can be made for performances with a workshop to be hosted at your facility or Summer location. Each performance is 1 hour! Checks and Credit Cards will be accepted!!!!
Monday, August 1, 2011 – 10:00am
“Ain’t You Bad or Aren’t You Kool”
(A Violence Prevention performance about how youth try to fit into groups instead being themselves and the trouble that follows them)
Wednesday, August 3, 2011 – 10:00am
“Around the Block to a Brave New World”
(A Violence Prevention performance about what happens in different neighborhoods and what it takes to grow up happy and proud)
Monday, August 8, 2011 – 10:00am
“I Am Somebody”
(A Violence Prevention Performance about ego-tripping and the development of your own personality without the influence of gangs and other harmful things or people)
Monday, August 15, 2011 – 10:00am
“PEACE in the HOOD”
(A production about Peace and what young people can do to maintain it throughout their home, school and community)
Wednesday, August 17, 2011 & Wednesday, August 24, 2011 – 10:00am
“To Be Young, Black & Gifted with Rap”
(A Violence Prevention production about how Spoken Word and positive Rap Music can be used to influence young people to do the Right Thing!!!!)
Monday, August 22, 2011 10:00am
“Can We All Just Get Along”
(A production about the cause and effects of Violence in Urban Communities and how there is a necessity for Peace amongst young people)
Special Arrangements can also be made for other specified and personally selected days and times of the week at Moonstone Arts Center!!!!
Other Performances for Camp and Classroom Visitation (which can be adapted to any space or recreational area)
Themes: Violence & Crime Prevention
(“Ain’t You Bad or Aren’t You Kool”, “I Am Somebody”, “To Be Young, Gifted and Black with Rap”, “The OOPS Upside Your Head,” “NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND – An Arrested Development”, “Around the Block to a Brave New World,” “Holler If You Hear Me” and Other performances)
Feel free to contact me about specific titles and artists appearance roster. You are invited to forward this communication to other Coordinators of Summer Camps, and School Association Officials, etc.
Sincerely yours,
Dr. Maurice Henderson
nationalblackartsspokenwordtour@yahoo.com
mauricebrianhenderson@yahoo.com
(215) 820-7571 05 (267) 230-0317
The National Black Arts Spoken Word Tour’s performances, presentations and staged adaptations have earned sold out attendance, standing ovations and back by popular demand request for return engagements at venues and convening such as the Jacksonville African-America Writers Conference in Florida, The Tavis Smiley Y2L Conference in Washington, D.C., the International Poetry Festival and Concert Series in Virginia, the Hip Hop Forum in Georgia, the Allied Media Conference in Ohio, the Independent Music Conference in Philadelphia, the Grassroots Media Conference in New York, the Hip Hop Generation Conference in Wisconsin, the Marcus Garvey School in Tennessee, the International Black Writers Conference in Illinois, the Black Students Business Association Conference in Michigan, the Jim Isler Conference in North Carolina, the International Writers and Artists Conference in California, Hurston-Wright Foundation Conference of Maryland, the Celebration of Black Writing of Philadelphia, Houston’s Shrine of Black Madonna in Texas,Stamford Downtown Festival in Connecticut, Smith’s College African Students Conference in Massachusett and the National African American Student Leadership Conference in Mississippi.
| Aug ’11 |
| 26 |
| 7:30 pm |
Friday August 26, 7:30pm – Science Fiction
Philadelphia Fantastic Presents
Darrell Schweitzer
Darrell Schweitzer (born August 27, 1952) is an American writer, editor, and essayist in the field of speculative fiction. Much of his focus has been on dark fantasy and horror, although he does also work in science fiction and fantasy. Schweitzer is also a prolific writer of literary criticism and editor of collections of essays on various writers within his preferred genres. From 1988 to 2007 he co-edited Weird Tales, sharing a World Fantasy Award in 1993 with colleagues John Gregory Betancourt and George H. Scithers. His most recent book is Living with the Dead, a collection of interconnected short stories issued by PS Publishing in 2008.
| Aug ’11 |
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| 5:30 pm |
Thursday August 25, 5:30 – $5 Cover – Against Censorship
Artists Against Censorship: A Literary Event
“Poet Saw Wei was imprisoned for two and a half years for hiding an anti-government message in a poem. Mao Thawka, also a poet, died while serving 20 years for writing a poem critical of the military. Burmese comedian Zarganar is serving a 35-year sentence for publicly criticizing the government’s failure to assist victims of Cyclone Nargis. These men and those currently in prison are the unsung heroes of Burma. They have been censored and wrongfully imprisoned by their government for speaking the truth.
In 2005, I (Michelle Tooker) visited Yangon, the former capital of Burma. I quickly fell in love with the lush landscapes and gilded pagodas dotting the horizon, but it was the interaction I had with the Burmese people that most inspired me. They are the most resilient and welcoming people I’ve met in any country I’ve visited. As a poet and writer, I value my creative freedom. The people of Burma deserve theirs too.
So join me, Tamara Oakman and members of the Philadelphia Chapter of the U.S. Campaign for Burma in raising awareness on this issue and $3,938—$2 for each political prisoner.
Raffles will be held as well as an open mic. Light refreshments for sale. Proceeds to benefit the U.S. Campaign for Burma.Visit http://tinyurl.com/artistsagainstcensorship for more information. Or contact Michelle Tooker at michellemtooker@yahoo.com or 845-591-8960.
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| 23 |
| 7:00 pm |
Tuesday August 23, 7pm – Poetry
The Moonstone Poetry Series Presents
Linda Lerner & Lamont Steptoe
“[Linda Lerner is] the author of fourteen poetry collections, the most recent, Takes Guts and Years Sometimes, Something Is Burning in Brooklyn, Living in Dangerous Times, City Woman, Because You Can t I Will. March Street Press published The Bowery and Other Poems which was a Small Press Review pick of the month. I have been twice nominated for a pushcart prize. In 1995 Andrew Gettler and I began Poets on the line, (http://www.echonyc.com/~poets) the first poetry anthology on the Net for which I received two grants for the Nam Vet Poets issue. The anthology will be kept permanently on line though we stopped publishing it in 2000. I have given numerous readings in the tri state New York City area as well as around the country. Last April I read at the Popular Culture Society in Boston. My poems have / will recently appeared in Tribes, Onthebus, The Paterson Literary Review, The New York Quarterly, Home Planet News, Van Gogh s Ear, Danse Macabre, Chronogram et.al. Linda Learner llerner@mindspring.com
Lamont B. Steptoe is an African American with Cherokee ancestry, born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A graduate of Temple University, he is the author of twelve collections of poetry and the editor of two collections by South African poet, Dennis Brutus. Steptoe is the founder/publisher of Whirlwind Press, a Vietnam veteran, father and photographer. He is the recipient of an American Book Award, a Pew Fellowship in the Arts, two fellowships from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and an inductee of the International Hall of Fame for Writers of African Descent by the Gwendolyn Brooks Center at Chicago State University. His work appears in the Longman/Penguin anthology of African American Literature edited by Keith Gilyard and the Oxford University Press Anthology of African American Literature edited by Arnold Rampersad. His most recent books are A Long Movie of Shadows, Crowns and Halos and Oracular Rumblings and Stiltwalking.
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| 8:00 pm |
Friday, August 19, Doors 7pm / Show 8pm - $5
The Last Word Open Mic
The LasT WorD ROCKS!
St. Skribbly LaCroix hosts the most provocative, raucous and innovative open mic in Philadelphia. The LasT WorD is ground zero for the “Movement for a DoPeR PhiLLy.” It is an all-ages monthly open mic/performance art fiasco orchestrated by Saint Skribbly LaCroix and features readings and performances by the most eclectic performing artists in the Tri-State area and abroad. The mic is OPEN to absolutely ANYONE! For open mic or other info please send an email to thelastwordrocks@gmail.com or visit www.facebook.com/thelastwordrocks.
This month the LasT WorD is host to the Rockers! BBQ Weekend, a 4-day, DIY music and arts festival featuring live music, performance art, bodypainting and ending with a bbq at Lemon Hill Park. It kicks off on Aug. 18th at Rockers! Closet on 4th & Queen. The LasT Word is on Aug. 19th LiVe from the MoonStone Arts Center featuring a tribute to longtime friend of the LasT WorD, the late Kuryakin Flowers aka KOP. and Team LasT WorD battles the FuZe SLAM team as they return from the national competition in Boston.
| Aug ’11 |
| 20 |
| 9:00 pm |
Saturday August 20, 9pm – $10 Cover – All Ages – Jazz
Speed of Three & Fries/Greenfield Quintet
[Speed of Three] is the come together of three adventurous and broad-minded improvisers that explore the abstract and eccentric sides of music. The combination of trumpeter Danny Gouker’s ingenious mind, drummer Robert Martino’s unique palette of sounds and vibraphonist Patricia Franceschy’s virtuosity make this collaboration persuasive and extraordinary.
The Fries/Greenfield Quintet is a newly-spawned collaboration between guitarist Bill Fries, saxophonist Sam Greenfield, pianist James Santangelo, bassist Sandy Eldred, and drummer Kevin Daly. This band is interested in playing well-crafted, contemporary jazz that draws upon a wide variety of compositional influences. They are always striving to find new ideas to assist them in creating a fresh, unique musical space as these five musicians get to share their exciting original music among friends and music fans throughout the greater Philadelphia area.
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| 18 |
| 7:00 pm |
Thursday August 18, 7pm – Non- Fiction – Alternative Media
The LA Vanguard, ThisCantBeHappening!, and the Future of Alternative Journalism
The staffs of two remarkable alternative news organizations, the Los Angeles Vanguard of 1976, and ThisCantBeHappening!, a current online alternative newspaper, will come together to tell the stories of these two publications, and discuss the alternative media, past present and future. All those who care about the future of real journalism are invited to attend this forum.
In the spring of 1976 in Los Angeles, the venerable Free Press, one of the nation’s pioneer alternative weekly newspapers, died. Popularly known among its readers as “The Freep,” the paper was converted overnight into a vehicle for massage parlor ads, featuring porn stories, primarily. The last editor of the paper, veteran journalist Tom Thompson, walked out. He, and his law-student wife Dorothy, promptly called a meeting of journalists who had written for the magazine–people like Ron Ridenour, Dave Lindorff and Ben Pleasants, as well as others in the city–and proposed that the group figure out a way to start a new alternative newspaper. Thus was the Los Angeles Vanguard created.
For over a year, the LA Vanguard, run as a collective, with the editor/writers owning half the publication in return for working for a very meager weekly wage, and a funder, liberal Democratic activist and plumbing supply wholesaler Jim Horowitz, owning the other 50% in return for a $50,000 investment, took the city by storm. The paper, in its short life, exposed rampant violence against citizens by the para-military Los Angeles Police Department, invasive practices of the phone company, Pacific Telephone (often on behalf of police agencies), judicial corruption, and nuclear hazards. The publication won awards in its 14-month run. It also attracted the unwanted attention of the LAPD “red squad”, the Public Disorder Intelligence Division, which dispatched a young female undercover cop to infiltrate the paper in the guise of an aspiring freelance writer, hoping she could uncover the paper’s contacts inside the police and sheriff’s departments. The LAPD also worked to destroy the paper another way, by applying secret pressure to the paper’s ad sales agency, saying if they did no work to sell ads, but only pretended to be trying, while collecting fees for their non-service, the agency’s owner’s son, busted for drugs, would be let off. This vile campaign ultimately killed the paper, which was folded by the staff, who thought erroneously that it not commercially viable.
Last June, journalist Dave Lindorff, who had been running a mildly successful news blog established in 2004 called ThisCantBeHappening!, decided to convert his one-man project into an online newspaper. He invited several other journalists whom he knew well and respected both as reporters and as human beings, to join him as a collective to found ThisCantBeHappening!, a daily online newspaper of politics and culture. Two of those journalists, like Dave, are local people–John Grant, known to many for his long activism in the peace and anti-war movement, particularly as a member of Veterans for Peace, and Linn Washington, Jr., a professor of journalism at Temple University and a long-time columnist with the Philadelphia Tribune. Rounding out the collective is New York journalist Charles M. Young, a legendary figure in rock and roll journalism.
In its one year of publication, ThisCantBeHappening! has been read by tens of thousands of people across the US and around the world, and has broken stories no other media have touched, or would have touched. It was the only publication in the US to air the dramatic cell-phone video of Israeli IDF soldiers executing at point blank a young American on the deck of the Gaza aid ship the Mavi Marmara. TCBH! broke the story that Raymond Davis, arrested in Pakistan and charged with murder for the execution slaying of two young men on motorcycles in Lahore, was really a CIA contractor. Two TCBH journalists ran a gun test on a slab of concrete, proving that death-row inmate and journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal could not have shot and killed Philly police officer Daniel Faulkner as described by prosecution witnesses, because there were no divot marks around the body where the missing shots would have had to have landed. Most recently it published an eye-witness report on the secret mass killing and abuse of wild horses by the federal Bureau of Land Management. The paper has provided the only real coverage of populist sheriff’s candidate Cheri Honkala, who vows to make the department an agent for the people, instead of the courts and the banks. It also gave readers the only review they’ll ever find of the Pentagon Channel on cable TV. All this on a budget of $400 for the year!
Meet the staffs of these two extraordinary newspapers, and join in the discussion of the future of alternative journalism. Free drinks and snacks.