Sunday, December 14, 2008

Interview with Mark Goldthorp and Daniel Boys from Avenue Q

(If you're already familiar with what Avenue Q is about, you'll find the interview here.)

We had a somewhat serendipitous visit to London's West End this year. Having left the conference post champagne but pre potential embarrassment (trust me on this), we meandered over Waterloo Bridge towards theatre land, passing a beleaguered Paul O' Grady, aka Lily Savage being swamped outside the ITV studios by fans from his home town - "I shop with your mother in Sainsbury's, Paul!" one woman exclaims.


(Yes, it's a terrible photo.)

It wasn't celebrity spotting we were doing though, and we didn't stop for an autograph. That night I was introducing Niamh to one of my favourite boroughs of New York, a "real life" neighbourhood populated by a variety of characters, celebrity, human and not so human. Yes, we were heading towards the Noel Coward Theatre for the evening show of AVENUE Q. And, almost needless to say, I was excited.



This was to be the third time I'd seen the show in London. Since being introduced to it over a year before, the appeal of the characters, the music and above all the songs has drawn me back like a familiar favourite film, where you know the script but watch anyway. Indeed, how could I not like it, this remarkable adult homage to Sesame Street with its premise of

"Life may suck on AVENUE Q but being jobless, homeless, politically incorrect, having sex (whether hetero, homo or porno... and that’s just the puppets) are just some of the topics featured in the terrific songs of this show."


Puppets you say? Yep. From Wikipedia:
The show is largely inspired by (and is in the style of) Sesame Street: Most of the characters in the show are puppets (operated by actors onstage), the set depicts several tenements on a rundown street in an Outer Borough of New York City, both the live characters and puppet characters sing, and short animated video clips are played as part of the story.
However the focus on this street is not on education, but on sheer entertainment. We follow Princeton, a bright-eyed enthusiastic college graduate who discovers Avenue Q as he tries to follow his dreams and discover his ever-elusive purpose in life.

It's no fairy tale though - he has to deal with failed celebrities, closeted and porn addicted puppets, inter-racial marriages, the distraction of a busty blonde, homelessness, racism, an ever decreasing bank balance and all the problems faced by people in their twenties and thirties, "thus making the show more suited for the adults who grew up with Sesame Street."


(Photos from Avenue Q)

We take our seats at the back - only restricted view available, we're told. I'm consoled by the fact I've seen it before - poor Niamh though won't get the full effect. However, just as the theme starts and the curtains part, an usher directs us to empty aisle seats a few rows from the stage, a lot better than those we had. Characters appear on stage, voices are raised in song:
"You work real hard and the pay's real low, and ev'ry hour goes oh, so slow. And at the end of the day there's no where to go but home to Avenue Q!"
and I relax for the first time that day, indulging in the sheer enjoyment of knowing the show and amusement at the reaction of those who don't. Familar faces - Christmas Eve, the Japanese therapist, Kate Monster, the Bad Idea bears, Lucy the Slut and TV's Gary Coleman - who has ended up as the superintendent on Avenue Q - fill the theatre with laughter, song and smart ass dialogue.

It's almost a pity I'd played the soundtrack so much in the house - Niamh was very used to the songs, thereby losing the surprise of the lyrics. From "What do you do with a B.A in English?" through "It sucks to be me", "If you were gay (that'd be okay)", "Everyone's a little bit racist", "The Internet is for Porn" and the incredibly poignant "There's a fine, fine line" it's all I can do not to sing along but instead distract myself with the gasps of shock, laughter and appreciation from a new-to-the-show audience who thoroughly enjoy themselves.

No mere puppet or muppet show this - it's a show that goes right for the funny bone and refuses to let go.



Now in its third year of the London production, the show has had over 1,000 performances and outstanding reviews. "It's not every show that manages to be tongue-in-cheek and hand-on-heart" says The Independent; "A hip, happening, adult puppet musical with a difference" says the Sunday Express, while the New Statesman rates it as "Riotous. A night bursting with invention, bawdiness and dollops of stage chutzpah".

Since its New York opening in 2003, its won several Tony Awards, including the award for best musical, and the soundtrack was nominated for a Grammy in 2004.



The challenge for the audience is to try take it all in. The live action mix of human and puppet can prove an intentional distraction as the puppeteers act as much in character as the figure they hold in their hands.

In the big cast scenes, where most of the characters are on stage, you'll find yourself watching the puppet more than the human, almost believing that it's the foam-and-wire ensemble singing with Gary Coleman about Schadenfreude: "The world needs people like you and me who've been knocked around by fate. 'Cause when people see us, they don't want to be us, and that makes them feel great." or giving the racial acceptance message "If we all could just admit that we are racist a little bit, even though we all know that it's wrong... maybe it would help us get along".

For any West End actor, going out night after night delivering the same lines and lyrics must be quite an endeavour. Add to that the pressure of puppeteering, of making the audience believe that puppets can have sex or be gay or be addicted to porn or fall in love and the commitment and talent of the actors comes to the fore. With this in mind, I went to meet Daniel Boys and Mark Goldthorp, two of the show's main puppeteers and actors to ask a few questions and find out more about what they do.



Mark plays three of the puppet characters on stage - internet favourite Trekkie Monster, Nicky, the well intentioned but lazy flatmate and one of the Bad Idea Bears. A wonderful actor, voice over artist and singer, his theatrical pedigree includes such high profile west end shows as Les Misérables, Beauty and the Beast, Me and My Girl and Whistle down the Wind.

Daniel, who plays main character Princeton and Rod, the closet gay liberal, is possibly best known this side of the water for his participation in Any Dream Will Do (BBC1’s search for Joseph) and When Joseph met Maria has an equally impressive portfolio including Sweeney Todd, West Side Story, Grease and Rent.



When I meet the guys, after an unexpected but hugely appreciated tour of the set - the bed the puppets have sex on has a real fitted sheet and pillowcases, the money they collect during the "Give me your Money" scene goes to charity and only certain cast members or the puppet master (yes there is one) can touch the puppets - they're warmly welcoming, polite and bizarrely, in character.

As I shake hands with Princeton, I repress the childish urge to giggle - it's like meeting Kermit. Equally, as much as I want to hug Trekkie Monster, the presence of the puppet master reminds me we have a job to do here. Photos taken, we talk about the show.

So, over 1,000 shows in, multiple audiences, cast changes, the same songs and characters now for over a year – obviously it’s a good experience but is Avenue Q as much fun for you both as it was at the beginning?
Mark (MG): Yes!

Daniel (DB): Absolutely, I love the show and have done since I first saw it so getting to go on every night with a cast and crew who are all such good fun and to see an audience having such a great time is a real joy.
Was the puppeteering element of the role (which can be quite physical at times) a difficult thing to get used to?
MG: Yes, it was at the beginning. You can never stop learning – I love that with both puppetry and acting.

DB: There is no doubt that the puppetry is one of the hardest things about the job. Puppetry is/was a new skill to learn and a very difficult one too. It hurt my arm a lot in puppet school and rehearsals but I’m used to it now and have become quite attached to the puppets.
You both have very varied musical and television backgrounds. Does Avenue Q allow you to bring as much of you that you’d like to the stage?
MG: I find there’s a lot of me in the show, both good things and bad!

DB: Obviously the show is about the puppets, but I’m loving showing a comic character role side to me which I’ve never been able to show before.
If you each have a favourite scene or song to perform from the show as any of your characters, what is it?
MG: The obvious ones I’m afraid, 'If You Were Gay', 'The Internet is for Porn', and I love 'I wish I could go back to College'.

DB: My favourite scene and song to perform is 'Fantasy'. We get to see Rod in his true colours and get to see his vulnerability. It's also a great song to sing.
If you could be another character (human or puppet) or choose a song to sing from the show, what would it be?
MG: The song would be “I’m Not Wearing Underwear Today” and the character of Gary Coleman but that would never happen!

DB: Well I do love singing along to “The More You Ruv Someone” in the dressing room!


Who do you think is the best character in the musical?
MG: The most well written is Kate Monster as she has the biggest journey but its all relative

DB: I think Kate goes through the most emotionally but of course I’m biased – I love Rod!
How much does the audience reaction influence how you’ll play a show on a night?
MG: We try not to let it affect us but it does have some affect, especially if they’re quite a quiet audience.

DB: It can be tough sometimes if it’s a small or quiet audience but you have to treat every show like a first night.


You’re in the middle of cast changes – does that affect the dynamic of your performances much?
MG: Not for me, no

DB: A lot! Julie [Atherton - the original Kate Monster/Lucy the Slut for over a year] is very different to Rebecca [Lock, who left the show in November]. They’re both fantastic but obviously it’s hard after a year of doing it to suddenly have to change. It’s fun exploring the characters again.
On a personal level, what would be a West End/Broadway role that you’d love to make your own?
MG: One that has not been performed yet.

DB: Either Marius in Les Misérables or possibly Fiyero in Wicked. I’d also really like the opportunity to create a new role in a musical – a challenge I’ve not yet tried.
With the news that the show will close next year, what, if any, are your plans? Do you think you’ll miss playing your characters?
MG: No plans, and I will miss the everything about the show very much.

DB: I will miss it so much. As for my plans, I just hope to keep working. I love singing and musical theatre but would really like to do some TV or film. I’d also like to do an album at some point.
Finally, would you join Avenue Q on tour and play in Dublin? (Especially if we were buying the Guinness?)
MG: Yes to the Guinness! The other question, talk to my agent!!

DB: I love the show , but unfortunately I think a year and a half is long enough in a show (although the Guinness is tempting!)


As we leave the Noel Coward Theatre, I resolve to return before the show ends its run on March 28 next year. I've had a brilliant evening - Niamh too, though she thinks she'd have preferred not to know the songs beforehand - Darren and Lottie, you're warned - but it was great fun. Highly recommended for laughs and one of my favourite shows, ever.

Outside we pass Joanna Ampil, who has put in a storming performance as Christmas Eve. She's delighted by my praise and practically skips up the road. I'm half tempted to join her, singing my own favourite, For Now.
"For now we're healthy. For now we're employed. For now we're happy, If not overjoyed. And we'll accept the things we cannot avoid, for now... Don't stress, relax, let life roll off your backs... everything in life is only for now"
You can catch Avenue Q at the Noel Coward Theatre, at Covent Lane in London WC2 (very close to Leicester Square). Tickets start at £10, the performance lasts approximately 2hrs 15 mins (including a 15 min interval) and show times are 8pm Monday to Thursday, Friday at 5.30pm and 8.30pm and Saturday at 5pm and 8.30pm. You'll find out more information on the official website here.

You can also find some of the show's songs on my Blip channel here:



A big thank you to Niamh, Kasey, Marion, Mark and Daniel for making this happen. Brilliant night, great experience :)

Friday, December 05, 2008

Liveblogging TV3's Apprentice Finale on Monday night



I am seriously loving Le Cirk at the moment. A new(ish) bar and hotel on Dame Street, Dublin 2, Laura, Philip and all the staff there have been extremely welcoming and accommodating to bloggers over the last while, and of course is the venue for the bloggers Christmas dinner on December 16.

It's pretty much become my local (and I live in Blanchardstown!) and my office - a great venue for meetings.



In this vein, we've arranged a dedicated seating area for the live blogging of the final episode of TV3's The Apprentice. Darren has full details of when and where, but we'll have free wifi, a big TV, pints and laughter in Le Cirk on Monday night, so come along if you're free. Everyone is welcome - the more the merrier. See you there!

Obama ran, so we could fly

Loving this piece of street art shared by @LanceArmstrong on Twitter earlier today.



It reads:

Rosa Parks sat so Martin Luther King could walk.

Martin Luther King walked so Barack Obama could run.

Barack Obama ran, so we could fly.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

The Brothers Movement - Blind


I'm looking forward to seeing The Brothers Movement live in Crawdaddy later on tonight. I like their new single, Blind, which is available on DownloadMusic.ie.

I'd say we can expect to hear more of this group in the months and years to come.

Visiting the Nora Dunne Gallery: Ben Dunne knows art



A quick google search on Ben Dunne reveals a few things. Firstly he's a "business tycoon". Secondly, he believes in "real, better value" and thirdly he's opening an art gallery. In a recent interview he said:

"The Nora Dunne Gallery will be a friendly place, a place of quality.

"It will be a place where everybody will be welcome, where people will buy many, many pictures and get lots and lots of pleasure out of looking at those pictures."
I find art one of those tricky things to talk or write about. While I can appreciate the creativity, hard work and effort that goes into a piece, I have difficulty envisioning it hanging above the fire place. The price tag on most Irish art in galleries is also forbidding.

Take a quick walk at the top of Stephen's Green Shopping Centre to look at the art in their gallery. Here's a portrait of Bono for €3,700. Try a still life for €2,700. Even a simple watercolour of Connemara will set me back €570. All lovely pieces of art in their own right, but not right for me.

I've never bought a piece of art other than photographs. I've never been able to afford it or see it as an investment.

This, however is something that Dunne wants to change for people with his gallery. He told Ronald Quinlan :
"The whole way that people sell art or buy art in this country will be changed with the opening of the Nora Dunne Gallery. It will change an awful lot of the old ways of doing business in art.

People think because they spend big money on a picture, that it must be very good. The first thing they want to remember is that if they buy it from a gallery, 50 per cent of what they're paying at least is going to the gallery. In my case it's going to be 25 per cent maximum."
Certainly looking around the gallery yesterday highlighted just how he plans to bring this to life. Ably assisted by curator Karen Harper, one of the most genuinely friendly and enthusiastic people I've ever met, gathered in this gallery is a wide range of art at very reasonable and realistic prices.







From cityscapes to seascapes, photographs to stained glass, huge oil paintings to small portraits, Karen's choices represent a huge range of the best of Irish art. "I have a simple criteria" she tells me. "If I could do it myself, I wouldn't sell it here"

Certainly with artists including Philip Gray, Ailve McCormack, Rita Pettigrew, Vincent Keeling, Gerry Flaherty, Elsie Sheridan, Tony Murray, Anne Louise McDermott and a pleasant surprise for me, Sean O Dwyer, there's a unifying theme or choice in the paintings - they are paintings that you could envisage in your home.


Yvonne O' Neill's work.
"Black suit lovers
Red lips pout
Perfect poise...
Lashes flutter
Red nails flash

Swinging hips the dance begins...
Intimate strangers
Perfect partners"
"We're not out to suit the 4% of art collectors", says Karen, "They're catered for. We want to provide the general public with art at affordable prices. I wouldn't choose anything for here that I couldn't see in somebody's home". Indeed, with almost 40 sales since they opened on October 14, it's difficult to argue with such a sentiment.



Comments in the guest book reflect the welcoming nature of the place: "The gallery is lovely. Very relaxing place. Great variety of pictures" writes Claire from Rathmines. "Great to have such a lovely gallery in the area - great art" is written by Shirley from Kimmage. "Well done, will be back again". "Very impressed will be back". "Well done, Ben Dunne." others add.

Even the ones that ask for a coffee shop will be catered to. "That's on the way", says Karen. "Ben thought it better we focus on one business first without worrying about two. But we have all the facilities in place. He's passionate about this place. He wants it to be right".



The coffee shop won't be the only addition. "We've got space upstairs for classes", Karen says, "There's been great interest already. Between felting, patchwork, jewellery, oil, pastels and life drawing, this place will be a hive of activity. The gallery itself can be rented out for occasions too".

Karen, herself a jewellery designer and experienced curator knows every artist exhibiting personally at this stage. "The application process is simple - we ask them to email in three images of their work including the sizes and the price they see it as selling for. If I like it, I take it from there. Ben has seen every piece of art in the gallery - so much so that he came in recently and told me one of the images on the website was upside-down. He's given some of his personal collection to the gallery also."



Indeed the artists themselves seem to have no elitism or snobbery attached to their work - they present it and themselves as simply as possible. Rather than the usual qualification and CV based biographies in some galleries, this gallery chooses to present the artists as they are, real people.



Ailve McCormack: "My Art work doesn't have a specific theme running through it. If I like something I paint it. I am not interested in recreating a scene from relity but more concerned with capturing a particular moment in time."


Gabriella Szazo: "I have never studied the art of drawing or painting, I don't think it is necessary to use studied methods at all. I hope my paintings speak for themselves"


Elsie Sheridan: "I am a self taught artist. Having loved to paint all my life, it was not until 2001, when I gave up working full time to concentrate on painting that I made real progress. I put a lot of effort into developing my own way of expressing my reaction to whatever visually stimulates me. I paint in a strong passionate style using paint liberally.

I see painting as a challenge to improve and grow as an artist. This challenge will take the rest of my life, but what a joy it is to be able to do the one thing I love to do. Paint."






As for the name - it's named after Ben's mother, herself an artist. When asked, Ben said
"It means that I'm going to stick at it, and I hopefully will make it successful. You don't name something after your late mother without it stirring up a certain amount of emotion and love, and a desire for it to be successful and stand for the standards that my mother had."


When asked to choose my favourite piece, I hesitate. My familiarity and respect for Sean's work points immediately to The Traveller (above), but Elsie Sheridan's work (and story) has grabbed me too. I find Vincent Keeling's work so impressive but would happily have Rick Mettler's Phoenix above the fireplace. There's so much choice, so much expression, it's so accessible and attractive that I find it difficult to choose a piece I don't like.



In the end I settle for Phillip Gray's I see the light. A massive canvas, it presents a stark landscape with two figures in the distance. The photo above does it no justice - as indeed the photos I've taken can't capture the gallery's real essence - I'd have happily looked at it for ages, something Karen admits she enjoys from the vantage of the reception desk where herself and the lovely Catherine Michael are ready to welcome people.



The gallery is having its official opening tonight, Saturday 29 November from 6 to 8pm. "Come experience the atmosphere for yourself" is the invitation. All are welcome, though the rumour that Bono will be there may not, in fact, be accurate. With this sort of place and welcome though, you'd never know who'll walk through the doors. I'll certainly be back, hopefully with a credit card.

The Nora Dunne Gallery is open Monday to Friday 11am to 7pm and Saturday 11am to 5pm. It's based on Kimmage Road West and you can see more of their art here and find their blog here.

Friday, November 28, 2008

A review of the Late Late Toy Show 2008

*Meh*

That's about it really. Nothing majorly memorable, though I thought the choir from St Mary's School for Deaf Girls (website here) was interesting.

Nothing traditional or what you'd be alright seeing - no Billy Barry kids, no Zig and Zag, Podge and Rodge, Dustin or Soky, no June Rodgers or anything related to Irish acts or performances on over Christmas.

No focus on Irish toymakers or manufacturers. No memorable appearances from major celebrities or personalities apart from Top Gear presenters Jeremy, Richard and James. Nicky Byrne dropped in with the twins. Sarah Ferguson popped in for a minute or two basically to say she was in Eason's of O' Connell Street tomorrow at 12 noon. McFly put in a mediocre performance. There was a video plug from Ben Stiller and Chris Rock for Madagascar 2. Nothing worthwhile, nothing unique.

As David pointed out, only two Irish authors mentioned in the book reviews, they cut to ad break during Kilkenny's St Canice's Jazz band performance - who had arranged a special medley for the show and no doubt practised loads and Pat referred to the whole I don't want the tickets incident of last week so much that it became tedious.

As Suzy said, the camera work during the dance-fusion exercise by the Hood Rats was appalling. Some of the young presenters - Gabriella, the book reviewer, Robert the milkshake maker and Mark Boylan from Offaly were excellent, but overall it was stilted, over rehearsed and wooden.

More and more it's just one long advertisement with little personality, humour or soul. There were few aww moments, no opportunities for children to shine, no inspiring or emotional moments.

Fine, The Late Late Toy show, Irish tradition that it is, has never been brilliant, but surely to God it could be better? In fact, the only thing that made it any way interesting were the conversations on Twitter and the live blog, something Anton seems to have agreed with.

Is The Late Late Toy Show only on because it's a tradition, not that there's a need for it?

Did you see it? If so, what did you think? And if not, did you purposely not watch it?

Liveblogging the Late Late Toy Show 2008

We're just in the break before it. Let's give this a go!

Yep, I trust Tommy too!





It's been cool to see the amount of people willing to give credit to Tommy Collison for the work he puts into his blogging. His reaction is great too.

Fair play to the one who organised this. 'Twas fun!