Chloe Sevigny stepped out with her Big Love castmates-slash-sister-wives Jeanne Tripplehorn and Ginnifer Goodwin for the GLSEN Respect Awards. GLSEN is the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network and they were presenting an award to Modern Family for its positive depiction of a family headed by a same sex couple.
So let’s see what we have here. Chloe looks like she made her dress out of a nun’s habit. Jeanne looks like she’s trying to be Amish. Ginnifer looks cute as hell, but then again, when doesn’t she? Questionable (and awesome) fashion choices aside though, yay to these three for showing their support!
Fashion Enchantment
Monday, October 11, 2010
Friday, July 23, 2010
Katie Holmes talks First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy's wardrobe in History Channel miniseries
Jacqueline Kennedy (l.) and Katie Holmes (r.) in the History Channel's 'The Kennedys.
Forget the fact that she was married to the President, Jackie Kennedy had great style and that seems to be one of the main reasons Hollywood's First Lady loves playing her.
Katie Holmes can't stop gushing about the wardrobe belonging to the former First Lady, whom she plays in The History Channel's upcoming miniseries "The Kennedys."
"Her clothes were magnificent," Tom Cruise's other half told UsMagazine.com at the premiere of her new film, "The Extra Man."
"We have these wonderful seamstresses who are creating beautiful dresses that are obviously replicas of real things she wore.”
According to Holmes, her old friend Giorgio Armani, for whom she created a clothing line two years ago, designed two of the dresses she wears in the film.
"Her great style was both appropriate for every event that she went to and also classic, and also things that were wearable," Holmes told Usmagazine.com
And the actress appears to be keeping her figure in check for the role. According to her "Extra Man," director, she often brought "the best" cookies to the set of her last film but didn't indulge much herself.
"They were these extremely fattening chocolate chip cookies that she probably just took a nibble of," Shari Springer Berman told People.com.
Despite focusing on Kennedy's style, however, Holmes reminded UsMagazine.com that the President's wife was also "an artist, a writer, an illustrator and an editor."
The "Batman Begins” star said she explores similar artistic outlets with her family.
"We're always sort of creating new things, whether it's a party or, you know, a script or a movie," she told People.com. "We try to have a very creative household."
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/
Lady Gaga's a fashion plate, but it takes more for her to be an icon
In recent days, Lady Gaga has performed-- in a blood-smeared bodice -- at an AIDS fundraiser hosted by Elton John and been honored -- along with Beyoncé -- with an award for video of the year by Black Entertainment Television. She has been entertaining her fans via Twitter and on her Monster Ball tour, during which she looks like a cross between Catwoman and Gene Simmons. After witnessing a live performance by the fearless fashion gamin at this spring's Costume Institute ball at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, it's accurate to say she works hard for her applause and she earns every bit of it. Gaga knows how to entertain.

Though she's been in the spotlight for barely two years, folks, particularly fashion types, have been indiscriminately tossing around the word "icon." They apply it to Lady Gaga because she has the audacity to wear Kermit the Frog coats, Philip Treacy millinery sculptures, Alexander McQueen tentlike cloaks and Giorgio Armani crystal-studded scaffolding.
The fashion industry has found a kindred spirit in Mistress Gaga, as she is willing to wear the most dramatic -- and at times, absurd -- runway creations onstage. Her choices are well beyond the range of average pop stars who choose their costumes for effect but also with the unwritten rule that those costumes must make them look good. There doesn't seem to be any such governing principle in Gaga's decisions. She gives herself over to shock and showmanship.
In that way, she is reminiscent of Sir Elton, whose early costumes could be both playful and outlandish and never seemed geared to making him look either cool or comfortable onstage. Indeed, Gaga once performed at the piano wearing the equivalent of a Thanksgiving Day float. It was a testament to her stubborn tenacity that her look is, if not everything, then at least a fundamental aspect of her message.
If not for the get-ups, she wouldn't have made such a splash in the culture. And Gaga is nothing if not a wonder to observe. But when Oprah Winfrey -- one of the co-hosts of the Costume Institute party -- introduced Gaga, it was with such overwrought aplomb, with such breathless references to art, humanity and spirituality, that one might have thought Gandhi, Mother Teresa and Michelangelo had somehow formed a band.
Personal expression
There's power to be had in style, but there's limited muscle in a wardrobe of outlandish frocks. It takes time, proof of influence and perspective, not just a wardrobe of freaky clothes, before a performer can be declared a fashion icon.
As with a lot of young female pop stars with a flair for exhibitionism, a mantra of personal expression and a fascination with catwalk style, all roads lead back to Madonna, by way of Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears. With her lengthy career, Madonna convinced no small number of young women that sexual provocation is a feminist power play. She used her costumes in videos and concerts as tools for furthering her subversive stance against traditional femininity and the roles of women in a male-dominated culture.
For her "Like a Virgin" video, she turned the notion of the blushing bride upside down as she danced and strutted in her virginal whites, making clear through movement and innuendo that the woman singing was anything but a virgin. In "Material Girl," her homage to Marilyn Monroe, Madonna -- dressed in a fuchsia satin gown and about 10 pounds of glittering jewelry -- cut down another cultural cliche about gold-digging women. And while Madonna was forever dubbed the "Material Girl," the reality was that the song delivered a wholly different message. The guy who wins Madonna's heart is the one who hides his wealth and power and woos her with a bouquet of daisies and date night in a dusty pickup truck.
Madonna's early use of costuming was powerful, and she had thoughtful and daring collaborators. Her work with Jean Paul Gaultier was significant: His bullet bra and her inversion of lacy unmentionables into high-end outerwear changed cultural ideas about decorum, discretion and privacy.
Hordes of teenage girls mimicked Madonna's street urchin style, her rows of wrist bangles and her floppy mass of dishwater-blond hair tied up in a scarf. But she also influenced the design industry, ushering in a more urban-based version of sexuality, one that had glamour as well as grit.
Onstage, Madonna wore clothes that were more exciting than street clothes but not so extreme as to be unfathomable costumes. It was somewhere in between, a hyper-realized version of ready-to-wear. The result was that Madonna could catapult a designer to fame, not just in the pages of People magazine but on the runways.
Celebs turn to design
What has Lady Gaga done for fashion? Nothing. At least not yet. But it doesn't really matter. She comes out of today's muddled culture in which an often-photographed starlet who has exhibited no evidence of good taste can become a designer. No, this is not a reference to Lindsay Lohan, who has been so frequently maligned in this space. This is a reference to Spears, who has designed a line for Candies that will be sold at Kohl's. What has Spears recently donned that would make anyone believe that she has taste? What has she worn that was unique?
We have confused garish outlandishness for creative swagger. Lady Gaga has worn clothes designed by some of the top names in the fashion business: Treacy, Armani and the late McQueen. The effect has been dazzling -- but it has just been stuff. The get-ups have not advanced the conversation about style or brought any dynamic, intellectual topic to the table. Sure, she tells her fans to be free, to be who they were meant to be. That's nice. But that doesn't make a person iconic.
In the current climate, a person can be dubbed a fashion -- or pop culture -- icon without having forced a reassessment of certain assumptions or without standing for something larger than herself. Lady Gaga received this title because we noticed her, because Barbara Walters declared her "fascinating," and because she is unafraid of taking a Bedazzler to her eyelids or wearing lace hosiery as a face mask.
To be sure, Lady Gaga is a product of the times, a creative soul who understands the power of image and the importance of mythmaking. She knows that to break through the cultural clutter, something more than mere talent is required. One needs a look, a persona and extraordinary luck.
Lady Gaga has all of those things. But that doesn't make her iconic; that just makes her smart, and it makes us dupes.
From: http://www.washingtonpost.com/

Though she's been in the spotlight for barely two years, folks, particularly fashion types, have been indiscriminately tossing around the word "icon." They apply it to Lady Gaga because she has the audacity to wear Kermit the Frog coats, Philip Treacy millinery sculptures, Alexander McQueen tentlike cloaks and Giorgio Armani crystal-studded scaffolding.
The fashion industry has found a kindred spirit in Mistress Gaga, as she is willing to wear the most dramatic -- and at times, absurd -- runway creations onstage. Her choices are well beyond the range of average pop stars who choose their costumes for effect but also with the unwritten rule that those costumes must make them look good. There doesn't seem to be any such governing principle in Gaga's decisions. She gives herself over to shock and showmanship.
In that way, she is reminiscent of Sir Elton, whose early costumes could be both playful and outlandish and never seemed geared to making him look either cool or comfortable onstage. Indeed, Gaga once performed at the piano wearing the equivalent of a Thanksgiving Day float. It was a testament to her stubborn tenacity that her look is, if not everything, then at least a fundamental aspect of her message.
If not for the get-ups, she wouldn't have made such a splash in the culture. And Gaga is nothing if not a wonder to observe. But when Oprah Winfrey -- one of the co-hosts of the Costume Institute party -- introduced Gaga, it was with such overwrought aplomb, with such breathless references to art, humanity and spirituality, that one might have thought Gandhi, Mother Teresa and Michelangelo had somehow formed a band.
Personal expression
There's power to be had in style, but there's limited muscle in a wardrobe of outlandish frocks. It takes time, proof of influence and perspective, not just a wardrobe of freaky clothes, before a performer can be declared a fashion icon.
As with a lot of young female pop stars with a flair for exhibitionism, a mantra of personal expression and a fascination with catwalk style, all roads lead back to Madonna, by way of Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears. With her lengthy career, Madonna convinced no small number of young women that sexual provocation is a feminist power play. She used her costumes in videos and concerts as tools for furthering her subversive stance against traditional femininity and the roles of women in a male-dominated culture.
For her "Like a Virgin" video, she turned the notion of the blushing bride upside down as she danced and strutted in her virginal whites, making clear through movement and innuendo that the woman singing was anything but a virgin. In "Material Girl," her homage to Marilyn Monroe, Madonna -- dressed in a fuchsia satin gown and about 10 pounds of glittering jewelry -- cut down another cultural cliche about gold-digging women. And while Madonna was forever dubbed the "Material Girl," the reality was that the song delivered a wholly different message. The guy who wins Madonna's heart is the one who hides his wealth and power and woos her with a bouquet of daisies and date night in a dusty pickup truck.
Madonna's early use of costuming was powerful, and she had thoughtful and daring collaborators. Her work with Jean Paul Gaultier was significant: His bullet bra and her inversion of lacy unmentionables into high-end outerwear changed cultural ideas about decorum, discretion and privacy.
Hordes of teenage girls mimicked Madonna's street urchin style, her rows of wrist bangles and her floppy mass of dishwater-blond hair tied up in a scarf. But she also influenced the design industry, ushering in a more urban-based version of sexuality, one that had glamour as well as grit.
Onstage, Madonna wore clothes that were more exciting than street clothes but not so extreme as to be unfathomable costumes. It was somewhere in between, a hyper-realized version of ready-to-wear. The result was that Madonna could catapult a designer to fame, not just in the pages of People magazine but on the runways.
Celebs turn to design
What has Lady Gaga done for fashion? Nothing. At least not yet. But it doesn't really matter. She comes out of today's muddled culture in which an often-photographed starlet who has exhibited no evidence of good taste can become a designer. No, this is not a reference to Lindsay Lohan, who has been so frequently maligned in this space. This is a reference to Spears, who has designed a line for Candies that will be sold at Kohl's. What has Spears recently donned that would make anyone believe that she has taste? What has she worn that was unique?
We have confused garish outlandishness for creative swagger. Lady Gaga has worn clothes designed by some of the top names in the fashion business: Treacy, Armani and the late McQueen. The effect has been dazzling -- but it has just been stuff. The get-ups have not advanced the conversation about style or brought any dynamic, intellectual topic to the table. Sure, she tells her fans to be free, to be who they were meant to be. That's nice. But that doesn't make a person iconic.
In the current climate, a person can be dubbed a fashion -- or pop culture -- icon without having forced a reassessment of certain assumptions or without standing for something larger than herself. Lady Gaga received this title because we noticed her, because Barbara Walters declared her "fascinating," and because she is unafraid of taking a Bedazzler to her eyelids or wearing lace hosiery as a face mask.
To be sure, Lady Gaga is a product of the times, a creative soul who understands the power of image and the importance of mythmaking. She knows that to break through the cultural clutter, something more than mere talent is required. One needs a look, a persona and extraordinary luck.
Lady Gaga has all of those things. But that doesn't make her iconic; that just makes her smart, and it makes us dupes.
From: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
The "Salt" Premiere Shakes Up Hollywood
Los Angeles – Collective sighs of relief echoed down Hollywood Boulevard as Brad Pitt joined his superstar partner Angelina Jolie at the massive premiere of her new action flick "Salt." Jolie looked gorgeous as always in a skimpy black beaded minidress, but Pitt looked positively stunning after months of sporting a mountain man grizzle of facial hair that obscured his handsome visage.
But that's no more, and as Hollywood's golden couple crossed the street in front of Grauman's Chinese Theatre on Monday, July 19, to greet the masses of fans gathered there, the fight was on to get a photo with the beautiful pair. Genially signing autographs and posing, both Pitt and Jolie were all smiles.
The duo had left their six children at home for the night, for Philip Noyce's violent CIA spy thriller "Salt" is rated PG-13, but a surprising family member was on hand for the celebration. Jon Voight, Angelina's long-estranged father, walked the red carpet with his son James Haven, Jolie's brother, thus proving that the three have made peace with the past and are all finally getting along as a family.
And speaking of family, at an earlier press event, Jolie explained what made her decide to take on the physically challenging title role of Evelyn Salt.
"I'd just had babies and I'd been at home for a year and a half when I decided to do 'Salt,'" she recalled. "I felt like it was complex enough and all those wonderful things, but I also knew that it would be really good for me to jump around and get active after that time. It's important to do something that kind of gets you out of yourself, gets you physical and strong."
Also making the glittery scene on the red carpet and at the elaborate after party were Liev Schreiber, Jolie's co-star in the film, his life partner Naomi Watts, and action fans including Antonio Sabato, Jr., Kristin Cavallari, Sharlto Copley, Charlotte Ross, Amber Heard, Gretchen Rossi, Oscar Nunez and Mary Jane Rajskub.
From: www.yahoo.com
Superhero Fashion Police! Hot Capes & Bat-Nipples
Mark Fellman/Paramount Pictures; Fame Pictures; Jaime Trueblood/Columbia Pictures; Warner Bros. Entertainment; Paramount Pictures/Marvel
This week, Comic-Con, the annual celebration of all things fanboy (and fangirl), kicks off in San Diego. Angelina Jolie, Milla Jovovich and other queens of kick-ass will mingle with fans—well, OK, they'll talk to fans. From a very safe distance.But with so many of these A-list types now walking around in tights, capes and catsuits, it's high time the Fashion Police took a closer look at the emerging styles. We're talking Seth Rogen's vest, Scarlett Johansson's leatherish pants, Russell Brand's bat-nipples, and all that.
So behold! Our new gallery, Superhero Fashion Police.
Monday, July 19, 2010
Denver fashionista hasn't forgotten her Aurora roots
AURORA | It’s not easy to nail down Brandi Shigley’s roots.
Since starting her own startup handbag business at the age of 23, Shigley has become a staple of the cultural scene in Denver, contributing to its fashion and music scenes. As the founder and CEO of Fashion Denver, Shigley’s seen the company grow into a regional collective that draws input from designers and artists from across the state; as the lead singer and keyboard player in b.sous, she’s made waves in the homegrown music scene with her unique brand of riff-driven romantic pop.
As much as she belongs to Denver cultural scene, Shigley, 34, is also apt to detail her personal history, how she was born in the Philippines and adopted by an American family when she 16 months old.
Considering her stints living in Southern California and her success selling handbags in boutiques in Paris and London, Shigley’s background seems all the more complex.
But Shigley is straightforward when she speaks about her home base.
“Aurora is where I grew up,” Shigley said from the Fashion Denver headquarters in Denver, a 1,400-square-foot space that includes office space and a showroom. “From the age of 6 1/2 to 22, I lived in the same house near Trails West ... My teachers at Smoky Hill High School definitely made a big impact, growing up at Trails West and being in girls ensemble definitely reflects who I am as a musician in my adult life.”
While Shigley’s creative influence has grown beyond her roots in Aurora, she’s still committed to finding local talent from her old digs. Fashion Denver’s upcoming summer fashion market titled “Enchantment” will feature designs from several native Aurora artists, as well as other contributors from across the state. The event will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 11 at 770 Pennsylvania St. in Denver, featuring jewelry, accessories and clothing by local designers.
“It’s a seasonal event. The point is to really showcase our local talents in a historical place in Denver,” Shigley said, referring to the event’s base at the Grant Humphreys Mansion. “It’s where the public can not only learn and shop through our local designers, they can also learn a little bit of history ... Designers will be from Aurora, Blackhawk, Broomfield, Thornton ... They know about Fashion Denver.”
For Lesley Arden, the Fashion Denver forum has proved to be a launching point for a new career as a designer. Arden, 40, started designing tutus more than a year ago for her two daughters.
“I have two little girls, a 5-year-old and a 2-year-old. In doing tutus, you would want something specific. It seemed that when we looked for something, they were a little bit cheesy,” said Arden, an Aurora resident. “A lot of it was just for play.”
Just a year later, Arden has started wholesaling her products to stores in the metro area, and also has launched her own limited liability company called House of Arden. Arden, whose tutus hang in the Fashion Denver gallery, said that connecting with a network of like-minded artists has helped her form new ambitions.
“Brandi’s been great. I think I have an idea on how to do the children’s market. My tutus are a little bit more expensive — they’re really full. Fashion Denver has definitely got me into more of an urban market, which is where they need to be, just a lot of really positive feedback,” Arden said. “This is something I do want to make into my full-time job to replace the day job,” she added, referring to her current post in commercial insurance.
Arden said connecting with Shigley, a fellow artist with roots in Aurora, has opened her eyes to a thriving local fashion community.
“Between having the daytime job and working on tutus until 11:30 at night, and two kids, it makes it a little (harder). That’s why I think people like Brandi are great. I definitely want to take this outside of Colorado,” Arden said. “It’s an interesting thing. When you’re out in the suburbs, it seems like everybody is out here to raise their kids ... (But) there’s a gal that I just found, researching, that is actually out here who has the baby T-shirts. There’s someone right down the street who’s doing what I’m doing.”
Arden’s recent shift in career goals aligns with Shigley’s general philosophy, an approach she’s taken since she started her first handbag business at the age of 23.
“I realized while making handbags that the thing I was most passionate about was the business aspect of things. By being able to share what I learned from having my own handbag business, that’s what I’m most passionate about is seeing other people do what they love,” Shigley said. “It goes back to my whole motto of, ‘Do what you love, love what you do.’”
From: http://www.aurorasentinel.com/
Since starting her own startup handbag business at the age of 23, Shigley has become a staple of the cultural scene in Denver, contributing to its fashion and music scenes. As the founder and CEO of Fashion Denver, Shigley’s seen the company grow into a regional collective that draws input from designers and artists from across the state; as the lead singer and keyboard player in b.sous, she’s made waves in the homegrown music scene with her unique brand of riff-driven romantic pop.
As much as she belongs to Denver cultural scene, Shigley, 34, is also apt to detail her personal history, how she was born in the Philippines and adopted by an American family when she 16 months old.
Considering her stints living in Southern California and her success selling handbags in boutiques in Paris and London, Shigley’s background seems all the more complex.
But Shigley is straightforward when she speaks about her home base.
“Aurora is where I grew up,” Shigley said from the Fashion Denver headquarters in Denver, a 1,400-square-foot space that includes office space and a showroom. “From the age of 6 1/2 to 22, I lived in the same house near Trails West ... My teachers at Smoky Hill High School definitely made a big impact, growing up at Trails West and being in girls ensemble definitely reflects who I am as a musician in my adult life.”
While Shigley’s creative influence has grown beyond her roots in Aurora, she’s still committed to finding local talent from her old digs. Fashion Denver’s upcoming summer fashion market titled “Enchantment” will feature designs from several native Aurora artists, as well as other contributors from across the state. The event will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 11 at 770 Pennsylvania St. in Denver, featuring jewelry, accessories and clothing by local designers.
“It’s a seasonal event. The point is to really showcase our local talents in a historical place in Denver,” Shigley said, referring to the event’s base at the Grant Humphreys Mansion. “It’s where the public can not only learn and shop through our local designers, they can also learn a little bit of history ... Designers will be from Aurora, Blackhawk, Broomfield, Thornton ... They know about Fashion Denver.”
For Lesley Arden, the Fashion Denver forum has proved to be a launching point for a new career as a designer. Arden, 40, started designing tutus more than a year ago for her two daughters.
“I have two little girls, a 5-year-old and a 2-year-old. In doing tutus, you would want something specific. It seemed that when we looked for something, they were a little bit cheesy,” said Arden, an Aurora resident. “A lot of it was just for play.”
Just a year later, Arden has started wholesaling her products to stores in the metro area, and also has launched her own limited liability company called House of Arden. Arden, whose tutus hang in the Fashion Denver gallery, said that connecting with a network of like-minded artists has helped her form new ambitions.
“Brandi’s been great. I think I have an idea on how to do the children’s market. My tutus are a little bit more expensive — they’re really full. Fashion Denver has definitely got me into more of an urban market, which is where they need to be, just a lot of really positive feedback,” Arden said. “This is something I do want to make into my full-time job to replace the day job,” she added, referring to her current post in commercial insurance.
Arden said connecting with Shigley, a fellow artist with roots in Aurora, has opened her eyes to a thriving local fashion community.
“Between having the daytime job and working on tutus until 11:30 at night, and two kids, it makes it a little (harder). That’s why I think people like Brandi are great. I definitely want to take this outside of Colorado,” Arden said. “It’s an interesting thing. When you’re out in the suburbs, it seems like everybody is out here to raise their kids ... (But) there’s a gal that I just found, researching, that is actually out here who has the baby T-shirts. There’s someone right down the street who’s doing what I’m doing.”
Arden’s recent shift in career goals aligns with Shigley’s general philosophy, an approach she’s taken since she started her first handbag business at the age of 23.
“I realized while making handbags that the thing I was most passionate about was the business aspect of things. By being able to share what I learned from having my own handbag business, that’s what I’m most passionate about is seeing other people do what they love,” Shigley said. “It goes back to my whole motto of, ‘Do what you love, love what you do.’”
From: http://www.aurorasentinel.com/
Musical Spells Cast in Theatrical Margins
Ruben Santiago-Hudson and Linda Emond in “The Winter's Tale,” a Shakespeare in the Park production, with a score by Tom Kitt. Mr. Kitt wanted the music to be live and intimate.
Few terms in the realms of musical composition and theater are as imprecise, let alone patronizing, as incidental music. The phrase has long been applied to music that provides atmosphere, accompanies an action or enhances the mood or moment in a play. The word incidental suggests that such music should call no attention to itself.
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Related
Theater Review | 'The Winter's Tale': Jealousy, Blow Thy Mighty Winds! (July 2, 2010)
Theater Review | 'The Merchant of Venice': Railing at a Money-Mad World (July 1, 2010)
Driving the Drama, Musically, Along ‘Utopia’s’ Leaps and Bounds (March 21, 2007)
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Yet since the 17th century when Purcell wrote ingenious music for English plays, notable composers have written music for the theater that was hardly incidental. Grieg composed nearly 90 minutes of music for Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt.” The original 1876 production lasted some five hours. Grieg later extracted two popular orchestral suites from the score. But those who know “In the Hall of the Mountain King” only from the suite would be stunned to hear the chilling original version, with includes a shrieking chorus and thunderous percussion.
Mendelssohn’s beloved incidental music for Shakespeare’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream” is so elaborate that it was not hard for later composers to fashion the various pieces into an evening-length ballet score. American Ballet Theater recently performed Frederick Ashton’s magical 1964 ballet “The Dream,” using John Lanchbery’s effective arrangement of Mendelssohn’s music. On the other hand, many fine composers have embraced the deferential approach to writing incidental music while still showing that such scores can be arresting and sophisticated on their own terms. Two good examples can be heard in New York at the Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park productions of “The Winter’s Tale,” with soft-spoken, precisely rendered incidental music by Tom Kitt, and “The Merchant of Venice,” with an atmospheric, intricately textured score by Dan Moses Schreier.
Mr. Kitt is best known for his Tony Award-winning score for the rock musical “Next to Normal,” which also brought the Pulitzer Prize in drama to Mr. Kitt and his collaborator Brian Yorkey, who wrote the book and lyrics. The songs are woven almost continuously into “Next to Normal,” the story of how a woman’s struggle with bipolar disorder affects her family. Although the songs basically adhere to generic rock and pop styles, the music teems below the surface with rich details, and the score abounds in intricate ensemble writing.
But in “The Winter’s Tale” Mr. Kitt’s acute ear and originality come through even more. His score is a triumph of the less-is-more approach to incidental music.
“The Winter’s Tale” tells of Leontes, the king of Sicilia, who irrationally concludes that his wife, Hermione, has been unfaithful and borne a baby girl to his childhood friend Polixenes, the king of Bohemia. A wondrous mix of enchantment, comedy, mysticism and exotica, the play cries out for music to set the scenes and connect the threads. In a recent telephone interview Mr. Kitt, 36, who majored in economics at Columbia, recalled his first planning sessions with Michael Greif, the director of “The Winter’s Tale” (and also of “Next to Normal”).
“I was kind of surprised by Michael’s vision for music in the production and by how much music he wanted,” Mr. Kitt said. There were to be long stretches of underscoring, when music played in the background, as well as themes and songs that would recur, Mr. Kitt explained.
He wanted the music to be live, meaning nothing recorded. To keep it intimate (and the budget reasonable) he wrote the score for just four musicians: a violinist, a cellist, a percussionist and a conductor playing a digital keyboard synthesizer.
From the first strains, you hear isolated two-note intervals and softly piercing clusters played in haunting repetition. What comes through immediately is that the chords, riffs, fragments and themes have been chosen with precision.
“I wanted to pick the notes so that they counted,” Mr. Kitt said. “I did not want to overpower the play, or make the music too dense.”
The play’s settings are ambiguous and sometimes nonsensical: one scene takes place in the deserts of Bohemia. Deserts in what is the modern-day Czech Republic? Mr. Kitt took this looseness as license to have fun. In the opening scenes in Sicilia, the music sounds almost Indian, with hints of ragas and cyclic riffs. But later, in Bohemia, the music has a rustic, dancing Eastern European character.
When the accused Hermione, standing trial, proclaims her innocence and invokes the judgment of Apollo, we hear an eerily beautiful extended episode. The music is anchored by a sustained pedal tone, with searching intervals floating above and bits of phrases that slowly coalesce into an insistent five-note theme.
The “Merchant of Venice” music, which is recorded, is comparably engrossing but of a different style entirely. Though Mr. Schreier has a sizable résumé of scores for the theater, he may be best known as an astute sound designer, especially for his work in recent years on productions of Stephen Sondheim musicals, which consistently sound less amplified and more natural than typical Broadway shows.
For “The Merchant of Venice,” directed by Daniel Sullivan, Mr. Schreier’s music is thick textured and lush, with multiple overlapping elements: choralelike chords, melodic bits, hazy clouds of harmonies. Yet every strand comes through with striking clarity, and nothing sounds overlayered.
When Mr. Schreier wants to shake up the audience and intensify a scene, the music becomes a din, with scrambling scales moving every which way, as in the music of Steve Reich, or a burst of chimes and metallic clanking. But when tenderness is called for, a simple melody on a consoling oboe or a wash of chords, like out-of-focus Debussy, is subtly heard.
Sometimes a play demands that incidental music be more pervasive and powerful, as with Mark Bennett’s near-symphonic score for “The Coast of Utopia,” which played at the Lincoln Center Theater in 2006-7. Because this nine-hour Tom Stoppard trilogy spanned decades of mid-19th-century Russian history, philosophy and culture, strong music was needed to bring cohesion to the narrative, which boldly jumped time periods and locales.
But it’s Shakespeare who seems to have brought out the best in composers for the theater in recent years. Although Jeanine Tesori is best known for her scores to the musicals “Caroline, or Change” and “Shrek the Musical,” her most enthralling work, for me, was her enchanting score for Nicholas Hytner’s production of “Twelfth Night” at Lincoln Center more than a decade ago.
Ms. Tesori went to percussion stores all over New York asking to see the instruments that no one ever rented, the more exotic the better. She wound up writing an otherworldly score played on Tibetan temple bowls, gongs, wood blocks and hand drums, along with guitars, woodwinds, strings and more. But all the sounds were natural, nothing was amplified, and the music she wrote was rich with mystical modal harmonies and plaintive melodic lines.
My favorite backstage story about incidental music involves the composer Virgil Thomson, who wrote the score for the landmark 1936 production of “Macbeth” presented by the Negro Unit of the Federal Theater Project, with the young Orson Welles directing a black cast. Welles set the play on an island that could have been Haiti in the 19th century. The witches were voodoo priestesses. A troupe of authentic African drummers was recruited to play along with the pit orchestra. The lead drummer professed to be an actual witch doctor.
Thomson wanted real voodoo music for the voodoo scenes. But when the African musicians played some, he thought it sounded a little tame. He kept pressing them, asking, “Is this stuff really voodoo?” The African musicians assured him it was. Finally, under Thomson’s grilling, they admitted it was not, that is was just some spells to ward off beriberi. They did not dare use the real thing since, naturally, it would have worked.
The scores to “The Winter’s Tale” and “The Merchant of Venice” cast only metaphorical spells, of course. But composers who want a model of how to write effective incidental music should head over to the Delacorte Theater.
From: http://www.nytimes.com/
Few terms in the realms of musical composition and theater are as imprecise, let alone patronizing, as incidental music. The phrase has long been applied to music that provides atmosphere, accompanies an action or enhances the mood or moment in a play. The word incidental suggests that such music should call no attention to itself.
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Yet since the 17th century when Purcell wrote ingenious music for English plays, notable composers have written music for the theater that was hardly incidental. Grieg composed nearly 90 minutes of music for Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt.” The original 1876 production lasted some five hours. Grieg later extracted two popular orchestral suites from the score. But those who know “In the Hall of the Mountain King” only from the suite would be stunned to hear the chilling original version, with includes a shrieking chorus and thunderous percussion.
Mendelssohn’s beloved incidental music for Shakespeare’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream” is so elaborate that it was not hard for later composers to fashion the various pieces into an evening-length ballet score. American Ballet Theater recently performed Frederick Ashton’s magical 1964 ballet “The Dream,” using John Lanchbery’s effective arrangement of Mendelssohn’s music. On the other hand, many fine composers have embraced the deferential approach to writing incidental music while still showing that such scores can be arresting and sophisticated on their own terms. Two good examples can be heard in New York at the Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park productions of “The Winter’s Tale,” with soft-spoken, precisely rendered incidental music by Tom Kitt, and “The Merchant of Venice,” with an atmospheric, intricately textured score by Dan Moses Schreier.
Mr. Kitt is best known for his Tony Award-winning score for the rock musical “Next to Normal,” which also brought the Pulitzer Prize in drama to Mr. Kitt and his collaborator Brian Yorkey, who wrote the book and lyrics. The songs are woven almost continuously into “Next to Normal,” the story of how a woman’s struggle with bipolar disorder affects her family. Although the songs basically adhere to generic rock and pop styles, the music teems below the surface with rich details, and the score abounds in intricate ensemble writing.
But in “The Winter’s Tale” Mr. Kitt’s acute ear and originality come through even more. His score is a triumph of the less-is-more approach to incidental music.
“The Winter’s Tale” tells of Leontes, the king of Sicilia, who irrationally concludes that his wife, Hermione, has been unfaithful and borne a baby girl to his childhood friend Polixenes, the king of Bohemia. A wondrous mix of enchantment, comedy, mysticism and exotica, the play cries out for music to set the scenes and connect the threads. In a recent telephone interview Mr. Kitt, 36, who majored in economics at Columbia, recalled his first planning sessions with Michael Greif, the director of “The Winter’s Tale” (and also of “Next to Normal”).
“I was kind of surprised by Michael’s vision for music in the production and by how much music he wanted,” Mr. Kitt said. There were to be long stretches of underscoring, when music played in the background, as well as themes and songs that would recur, Mr. Kitt explained.
He wanted the music to be live, meaning nothing recorded. To keep it intimate (and the budget reasonable) he wrote the score for just four musicians: a violinist, a cellist, a percussionist and a conductor playing a digital keyboard synthesizer.
From the first strains, you hear isolated two-note intervals and softly piercing clusters played in haunting repetition. What comes through immediately is that the chords, riffs, fragments and themes have been chosen with precision.
“I wanted to pick the notes so that they counted,” Mr. Kitt said. “I did not want to overpower the play, or make the music too dense.”
The play’s settings are ambiguous and sometimes nonsensical: one scene takes place in the deserts of Bohemia. Deserts in what is the modern-day Czech Republic? Mr. Kitt took this looseness as license to have fun. In the opening scenes in Sicilia, the music sounds almost Indian, with hints of ragas and cyclic riffs. But later, in Bohemia, the music has a rustic, dancing Eastern European character.
When the accused Hermione, standing trial, proclaims her innocence and invokes the judgment of Apollo, we hear an eerily beautiful extended episode. The music is anchored by a sustained pedal tone, with searching intervals floating above and bits of phrases that slowly coalesce into an insistent five-note theme.
The “Merchant of Venice” music, which is recorded, is comparably engrossing but of a different style entirely. Though Mr. Schreier has a sizable résumé of scores for the theater, he may be best known as an astute sound designer, especially for his work in recent years on productions of Stephen Sondheim musicals, which consistently sound less amplified and more natural than typical Broadway shows.
For “The Merchant of Venice,” directed by Daniel Sullivan, Mr. Schreier’s music is thick textured and lush, with multiple overlapping elements: choralelike chords, melodic bits, hazy clouds of harmonies. Yet every strand comes through with striking clarity, and nothing sounds overlayered.
When Mr. Schreier wants to shake up the audience and intensify a scene, the music becomes a din, with scrambling scales moving every which way, as in the music of Steve Reich, or a burst of chimes and metallic clanking. But when tenderness is called for, a simple melody on a consoling oboe or a wash of chords, like out-of-focus Debussy, is subtly heard.
Sometimes a play demands that incidental music be more pervasive and powerful, as with Mark Bennett’s near-symphonic score for “The Coast of Utopia,” which played at the Lincoln Center Theater in 2006-7. Because this nine-hour Tom Stoppard trilogy spanned decades of mid-19th-century Russian history, philosophy and culture, strong music was needed to bring cohesion to the narrative, which boldly jumped time periods and locales.
But it’s Shakespeare who seems to have brought out the best in composers for the theater in recent years. Although Jeanine Tesori is best known for her scores to the musicals “Caroline, or Change” and “Shrek the Musical,” her most enthralling work, for me, was her enchanting score for Nicholas Hytner’s production of “Twelfth Night” at Lincoln Center more than a decade ago.
Ms. Tesori went to percussion stores all over New York asking to see the instruments that no one ever rented, the more exotic the better. She wound up writing an otherworldly score played on Tibetan temple bowls, gongs, wood blocks and hand drums, along with guitars, woodwinds, strings and more. But all the sounds were natural, nothing was amplified, and the music she wrote was rich with mystical modal harmonies and plaintive melodic lines.
My favorite backstage story about incidental music involves the composer Virgil Thomson, who wrote the score for the landmark 1936 production of “Macbeth” presented by the Negro Unit of the Federal Theater Project, with the young Orson Welles directing a black cast. Welles set the play on an island that could have been Haiti in the 19th century. The witches were voodoo priestesses. A troupe of authentic African drummers was recruited to play along with the pit orchestra. The lead drummer professed to be an actual witch doctor.
Thomson wanted real voodoo music for the voodoo scenes. But when the African musicians played some, he thought it sounded a little tame. He kept pressing them, asking, “Is this stuff really voodoo?” The African musicians assured him it was. Finally, under Thomson’s grilling, they admitted it was not, that is was just some spells to ward off beriberi. They did not dare use the real thing since, naturally, it would have worked.
The scores to “The Winter’s Tale” and “The Merchant of Venice” cast only metaphorical spells, of course. But composers who want a model of how to write effective incidental music should head over to the Delacorte Theater.
From: http://www.nytimes.com/
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