Search

Gregarious Expressions

by Alicia Lynn Grega

Author

AliGrega

dramatist. instructor. designer. director. artist. poet. mother (empty nest). feminist. aspiring Buddhist and mediocre yogi. Living, working, creating, and learning the hard way in the Electric City.

If You Can Play Scranton: A Theatrical History, 1871-2010 by Nancy McDonald: Excerpt

I studied an early, cardstock-bound copy of this book while working on my NeoVaudeville grant presentation back in 2009. It’s a little fact-heavy but boasts a few memorable anectdotes and is a worth $13 for those interested in vaudeville and theatrical history –especially if they’re from Scranton.

I’m personally curious to read the last chapter — as one of the few journalists covering theater in Scranton for the past decade (as well as consistantly working on the production end in my freelance life). and I’ve never met or spoken with the author as far as I can remember but according to her bio she has participated in local cemetery theater productions.

-ag

“If You Can Play Scranton is a theatrical history of America as seen through the famous performers who came to Scranton, Pennsylvania. It discusses performances by the best known actors and actresses of the tragic and comic stage, ethnic performers, vaudevillians, musical comedy, concert, orchestra and band performers from 1871-2010. At the turn of the 20th century, Scranton was one of the most famous try-out towns for legitimate stage productions. The sophisticated taste of its audience, created by extensive exposure to world renown talent, continues to this day.”

via If You Can Play Scranton: A Theatrical History, 1871-2010 by Nancy McDonald: Excerpt.

wooden square test run: abstract architecture tile project cont’d

Managed to get the paper peeled from the acrylic gel medium and adhere these first test images to a couple of three-inch wooden squares before leaving for work this morning.

Pretty psyched about the results. The commissioned works will use four-inch ceramic tiles in a vanilla hue and probably be a touch less grungy looking than these. I do like that you can see the wood grain as part of the resulting image here, though.

Looking forward to comparing the water slide decal method with this process.

-ag

Abstract architecture tile project in process

First round of three inch photo paintings on its second coat of gloss acrylic gel medium drying.
The “gel transfer” directions didn’t say the paper would curl up like this but it shouldn’t be a problem in the long run.
One print stayed flat, no idea what I did different.

20111204-173338.jpg

The photos are architectural details from historic Scranton buildings. Some were take many years ago on film and processed in a traditional darkroom by Professor Spats. The other were taken by me last week with a Nikon digital SLR. The film prints were scanned and both then edited in photoshop.

These will dry overnight after a third coat has been applied and the the prints can be soaked and the paper removed from the acrylic medium, which will supposedly have absorbed the ink.

I have waterslide decal ink jet
paper in the mail just in case. 😉

I’ll let you know how it works out.

-ag

Video- Syfy’s Neverland

This Is Our World – Neverland : December 4-5

The two-night Syfy original miniseries Neverland, a prequel J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan, airs this weekend, Dec. 4-5 at 9/8c.

Preview suggests this will be fun to watch even if its flawed. -ag

via Syfy Video – Neverland – This Is Our World – Neverland.

http://widget.syfy.com/singleclip/singleclip_v1.swf?CXNID=1000004.10035NXC&WID=48e10f5e9dbb50aa&clipID=1361483&folderID=1319925

Hipster things I don’t get: Ugly Christmas Sweater T-Shirts (via The Exhibitionist)

You know hipster irony has gone too far when …

(or am I the only one who doesn’t think these things are amusing?)

-ag

 

yeah... don't get it

Ugly Christmas Sweater T-Shirts Are Apparently A Thing Now – San Francisco Art – The Exhibitionist.

OK, now I want an iPad.

LetterMpress™ Overview – YouTube.

The Revolution Will Not Be Spotified via Utne

A most intriguing question: Where has all the protest music gone?  Michael Fallon’s “This Art is Your Art” series is a more worthy read than I had anticipated.

“It’s possible that we live in a time when our values have turned so inward into personal introspection and self-regard that we find it impossible to gather together and sing about a common cause. Or else protest music may simply be too embarrassing a relic of the past, of a time when such well-meaning sentiment actually meant something. Today is a different age, we prefer to think, when problems are so complex, so difficult to solve that they’re not even worth bringing up in polite society.”

via The Revolution Will Not Be Spotified — Arts and Culture — Utne Reader.

Are we content to live with the classics of the past that still speak to today? I’m sure there are songs out there expressing the frustrations of the times, we’re just not being exposed to them on a grand social scale. Our options are dumbed down by mass media or the more obscure findings of our own explorations that aren’t widespread.

I’d love to see some good playlists addressing this. The author gives us a good start at the end of this piece. What songs would you add to the mix?

-ag

my sister’s fridge

20111105-180457.jpg

winter holiday 2011 ad

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑

Common Play Factory of Scranton

building positive culture for community progress

McLuhan Galaxy

A repository of McLuhan-related news, conferences, events, books, articles, links & general information.

Black Scranton

The Overlooked Community of Scranton, Pennsylvania

Drama Lit Blog 2.0: BU School of Theatre

Curated by upper level Dramaturgy & Literature students of the BU School of Theatre

Seven Kitchens Press

Pie for everyone.

Girls on Fire: Constructions of Girlhood in YA Dystopian Fiction

Women's Studies & Feminist Research and English Studies, Western University

Gagging on Sexism

The good, the bad, and the stupid in manga/anime, movies, books, and more from the view of a feminist

Girls Biking to Work

Practical bicycle fashion for the working Jane

Word Fountain

The Literary Magazine of the Osterhout Free Library

Read On. Write On.

because words have power

Laurie Mac Reads

meandering on & off the page

800 Recovery Hub Blog

Written by people in recovery for people in recovery

Clever Girl Magazine

Journal seeking women's literary submissions...

But I Digress...

Do you walk to school, or do you carry your lunch?

Kindness Blog

Kindness Changes Everything

Kal Spelletich's Art

This is the blog of Kal Spelletich. CONTACT: Spellkal (at) gmail.com + Art, technology, humans and robots, and, well, the journey http://www.kaltek.org/

50 Ordinary Women

doing extraordinary things

undergroundzero

independent theatre festival