Category: Performance


Fred Ho author of Diary of a Radical Cancer Warrior: fighting Cancer and Capitalism at the Cellular Level

Friday, October 28th, 2011
Nov ’11
20
2:00 pm

Sunday, November 20, 2pm – Non-Fiction
Fred Ho author of Diary of a Radical Cancer Warrior: fighting Cancer and Capitalism at the Cellular Level ($25.00 Sky Horse Publishing)

Fred Ho special book publication and cd release party and signing of Fred Ho’s DIARY OF A RADICAL CANCER WARRIOR: FIGHTING CANCER AND CAPITALISM AT THE CELLULAR LEVEL (Sky Horse Publishing) and the release of his new recordings SNAKE-EATER (featuring Fred Ho’s Saxophone Liberation Front) and THE SWEET SCIENCE SUITE: A SCIENTIFIC SOUL MUSIC HONORING OF MUHAMMAD ALI (featuring Fred Ho and the Green Monster Big Band). Purchase price of the book and one cd (you must chose between a selection at the event): $25 (a great deal for a new hardcover book and a brand new cd release!), including the first performance by Fred Ho in Philadelphia since the recurrence of colo-rectal cancer. For more information: Teresa Shoats 267.456.7882 or Thaddeus Squire 215.760.1634.

Women’s Writing & Spoken Word Series presents Debra D’Alessandro & Rosetta Williams

Saturday, August 20th, 2011
Sep ’11
21
7:00 pm

Wednesday September 21, 7pm – $5 Cover – Multi-Genre

The Women’s Writing & Spoken Word Series presents

Debra D’Alessandro & Rosetta Williams

Debra D’Alessandro is an activist, educator and entertainer with a wide range of performance and broadcast experience. An award-winning broadcaster, Debra D’Alessandro is host and producer of Amazon Country. Founded in 1974 Amazon Country is the nation’s longest running lesbian/feminist radio program. Debra has hosted the show since 1996, and has received two Philadelphia Gay News Lambda Awards and a 2003 OutMusic Special Recognition Award for her work on Amazon Country. From 1999 to 2005, Debra hosted weekly call-in TV talk shows, “Philly LIVE: Your Gay and Lesbian Community Connection” and “OutLoud” on WYBE public television. The two-time Emmy-nominated “Philly Live” was America’s first live gay-themed television talk show. Debra has worked in the fields of reproductive health, domestic violence, and LGBT civil rights. Since 1993, her “day job” has been designing continuing education programs on HIV and other public health issues for health care providers. She completed her Masters in Columbia University’s Executive Master of Public Health program in 2008.

Rosetta Williams

Hosted with live music by Cassendre Xavier!

Always includes a Mixed-Gender Open Mic! Streams LIVE at www.moonstoneartscenter.org, click on the Watch Live button. Founded in 2002 by Cassendre Xavier, the Women’s Writing & Spoken Word Series is a nurturing environment that celebrates women in the craft of multi-genre writing. For submissions and other information, please visit www.WomensWritingSeries.org

 

BASH: Latter-Day Plays by Neil Labute

Saturday, August 20th, 2011
Sep ’11
14
8:00 pm
Sep ’11
16
8:00 pm
Sep ’11
17
8:00 pm

Wednesday September 14, 8pm – Tickets: $15; Students $10Theater

Friday September 16, 8pm

Saturday September 17, 8pm

BASH: Latter-Day Plays by Neil Labute

Starring Joe Matyas, Pascale Smith & Josh Totora; Directed by Pascale Smith

BASH is a collection of three darkly brilliant one-act plays, a trio of confessions that echoes works by the classical Greek playwright Euripides. In Iphigenia In Orem, a Utah businessman in a Las Vegas Hotel room confesses a horrifying crime; in Medea Redux, a young woman recounts the tragic consequences of her relationship with her middle school English teacher; in A Gaggle of Saints, a young Mormon couple recreate the shocking and violent consequences of a getaway weekend in New York. Join us for an intimate evening of theater as three daring and talented young actors take the audience on a trip through this trio of personal accounts that challenge the viewer to examine and re-examine the complexities of evil in everyday life.

“Neil LaBute is not one to shy away from the darker aspects of life, as exhibited in his work. His 2000 play Bash: Latter-Day Plays is certainly no exception. Composed of three one-acts, this play illustrates the evil inherent in everyday life through four characters: a charismatic young business man, a disturbed mother, and a beautiful couple. Each character confesses to a horrible crime, and while the events recounted are violent and shocking, the most terrifying aspect is the plausibility. The characters are so realistic and ordinary they create an unsettling intimacy, both physically and dramatically. As each actor address the audience directly in a small, bare theater, there is a tension of truth created in the atmosphere.

Probably one of the most interesting aspects of this play is the author. Neil LaBute studied theater at Brigham Young University; a college in Utah owned and operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints. While at BYU, he converted to the Mormon faith. He then went on to numerous plays that pushed the envelope in terms of what was accepted in such a conservative religious school. Some of his plays were shut down after their premiers. On one occasion, college authorities locked the theater to prevent a performance. In Bash, his depiction of three essentially good members of the Mormon Church committing violent crimes got him “disfellowshiped” from the church, after which he formally abandoned his relationship with the faith.

This play is one that will make you think. Each character gives you a human face to the monsters shown in news stories—the person who attacks another based on ethnic, religious, or sexual differences, the parent who kills their children, the person who chooses to sit back and watch these crimes manifest. This work makes you wonder—is we all capable of excusing an atrocious act? “— Director Pascale Smith, August 14, 2011

Pascale Smith made her film debut in M. Night Shyamalan’s The Village (2004) and has since appeared frequently on stage and screen. Awards include Best Lead Actress in Drama for her performance in the role of the Stage Manager in Thornton Wilder’s Our Town and Best Major Supporting Actress in a Drama as Titania/Hippolyta in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, both at Stagedoor Manor.

Pascale is a member of Philadelphia’s Outside the Box Theater Company where she recently performed the role of Amanda in Timothy Mason’s The Less-Than-Human-Club, and of Tangle: Movement Arts, where she will appear as an aerialist in their 2011 Philadelphia Fringe Festival production of Amersand. She makes her directing debut in her 2011 Fringe Festival production of Neil Labute’s BASH. She has performed her original songs throughout the Philadelphia area at venues such as Ardmore’s Milkboy Coffee and Triumph Brewing Company in Old City.

Pascale studies acting privately with Lisbeth Bartlett and Melissa Dunphy, and at the Actors Center in Old City, Philadelphia. She studies songwriting and guitar with Judah Salem Kim of the popular band Stonethrown. She trains aerial acrobatics at the Philadelphia School of Circus Arts, where she specializes in Lyra. When not performing, Pascale enjoys writing plays, singing close harmony with her three sisters, and baking.

 

coEXISTdance presents: “To by 5″

Saturday, August 20th, 2011
Sep ’11
10
8:00 pm
Sep ’11
11
2:00 pm

Saturday September 10, 8pm – Dance

Sunday September 11, 2pm

coEXISTdance presents: “To by 5″

(For tickets, please contact the Festival Box Office, (215) 413-1318 or visit www.livearts-fringe.org.)


As artists, pioneers, and motivated, passionate individuals, Kelly Adorno and Kathleen Glynn strive to link the general world and the “artistic world” more closely. The partners aim to produce work choreographed with specific and personal ideas; while also inviting audiences to enjoy, absorb and mold their own interpretations. Ms. Adorno and Ms. Glynn value the sacredness of dance as a universal language and expression. Both choreographers set out to successfully transform whole thoughts and feelings into movement; the two are fascinated with the invaluable instrument of the human body and its infinite movement potential. coEXISTdance appreciates all forms and expression and will work to blend more art forms together, using them to inspire and overlap with each other.

 

National Black Arts Spoken Word Tour Presents “Hush Harbors: Speaking the Names Of Katrina”

Friday, August 5th, 2011
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)

NATIONAL BLACK ARTS SPOKEN WORD TOUR

Sunday, July 31st, 2011
Aug ’11
1
10:00 am
Aug ’11
8
10:00 am
Aug ’11
15
10:00 am
Aug ’11
17
10:00 am
Aug ’11
22
10:00 am
Aug ’11
24
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!!!!


AUTHORS, POETS & SPOKEN WORD RECORDING ARTISTS ARE AVAILABLE FOR SITE VISITS:

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)


We have presented at over 30 schools (public, charter, boarding and catholic) schools in the Philadelphia area. We will also be bringing to the City various popular artists who have achieved prominence through books, play, recordings and appearances on radio, television and film on stations such as BET and HBO, etc. These Artists are available to do classroom presentations with discussion and/or an auditorium performance that will highlight the prevention of violence and crime. Please let me know what days you maybe able to bring them to your school and what type of budget you have available.

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.

Josiah Wise & SunShowers

Saturday, March 12th, 2011
Mar ’11
28
9:00 pm

Monday, March 28, 9pm – Music – $5 Cover

Josiah Wise & SunShowers

Josiah Wise is a native of Baltimore Maryland, is a recent graduate of The University of the Arts where his concentration was in Jazz Studies. Shorty after saying farewell to college life,and entering a world of mystery, Josiah blindly moved to Paris, France; During his time abroad, he explored, composed and performed with various local musicians. He has recently returned from France and is excited to reconnect with his Philadelphia band. Nothing else brings Josiah greater joy than singing with the magicians that he spent two years building an ever-mutating fortress of sound with. Josiah Wise has been performing within the Philadelphia music circuit since the summer of 2008 and has been blessed to gain a fun audience of people who enjoy the energy of his live shows.

“Doing what feels right”, has been the arrow that’s directed his music, and also allows him to remain present musically. As the wreath ozzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzvmusic that is genuine and fresh, as well as bless the ears of his listeners along the way.

SunShowers is a duo band that plays eclectic original music and many covers, from soul to country. The band consists of two players, Greg Moore and Vinchelle Woods.  The couple started writing and playing music two years ago out and about in the city of Philadelphia, in churches, on streets, cafes and many other places. Some of their inspirations are Sly and the Family Stone, Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band, St. Vincent, Paul McCartney and many others.

“A History of The Black Man in America”

Friday, March 4th, 2011
Mar ’11
30
6:30 pm

Wednesday, March 30, 6:30 & 8:00pm – $10.00 tickets

Group rates for lower cost tickets are available.  For more information call (215) 820-7571 or (267) 230-0317 or mauricebrianhenderson@yahoo.com

National Black Arts Spoken Word Tour & Adelphia Repertory Touring Company Presents

“A HISTORY OF THE BLACK MAN IN AMERICA” or “NIGGERS…..the word, the meaning, the action”

A staged adaptation that chronicles the trials and tribulations of the Black Man in America. Starring, Written and Directed by Maurice Henderson

In the Future a Woman Shines Bright

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

Wednesday, March 2, 7pm – $10 Admission -Theater

In the Future a Woman Shines Bright – a theater presentation on Frances Ellen Watkins Harper featuring Sekai, written by Stephen C. Satell.

A one person production on Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, the best known African American poet and novelist of the nineteenth century, who lived at 10th and Bainbridge Streets. Excerpts from this play were presented during our A Brighter Coming Day: Rediscovering Frances Ellen Watkins Harper program last month. Portraying Harper is Sekai, who began acting at Freedom Theater and has performed at Walnut Street Theater, The Adrienne Theater and at the Black Theater Festival.

In the Future a Woman Shines Bright

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011
Mar ’11
2
7:00 pm

Wednesday, March 2, 7pm – Theater

In the Future a Woman Shines Bright – a theater presentation on Frances Ellen Watkins Harper

Featuring Sekai, written by Stephen C. Satell

A one-person production on Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, the best-known African American poet and novelist of the nineteenth century, who lived at 10th and Bainbridge Streets. Portraying Harper is Sekai, who began acting at Freedom Theater and has performed at Walnut Street Theater, The Adrienne Theater and the Black Theater Festival.