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ISSUE . August 28th 2008
 

Crowded House
Live Arts Festival + Philly Fringe
by Carolyn Huckabay
Usually we sit around the art meeting talking about upcoming issues and trying to come up with a couple of striking images that might work on our cover. This time we had a million of 'em. That's Fringe for you.

All The World's a Stage
These artists put their shows in weird places. Weirdness ensues.
by Deni Kasrel
"The audience is sitting on the same earth where people and their stories lie buried beneath. Obviously, we don't need props — we have everything there for us already. ... It adds a reality to the stories that you couldn't find elsewhere."

Six Degrees of Pig Iron
How To Get From Skateboarding to Taxidermy in One Simple Step.
by Mark Cofta
So, even though its artists wander, Pig Iron never dies, says Rothenberg. "I was talking to Julia Stratton, a local sculptor and my landlord for the past seven years, about all the projects in the festival that James, Manu, Geoff, Suli and Dito are doing, and she said, 'You did it. You really did it. You told me you were trying to change the face of theater in Philadelphia, and now it's happened.'

Pop Shop
Poking Fun at Consumerism in Matsune & Subal's Store.
by Natalie Hope McDonald
Matsune says for the "Eraser Head" piece, for example, a customer pays $3.90 to stand on a pedestal and have Subal draw a portrait of him or her. Matsune then rubs out portions of the portrait with an eraser and the crumbs from the subtraction are then handed to the customer in an envelope. The manipulated portrait remains on exhibition.

Have It Norway
The European Lesson Takes the Ugly American to School.
by A.D. Amorosi
With a chat about those stereotypes as its basis, Stuccio and Stromgren hashed out The European Lesson over dinner of reindeer and whale at the latter's Oslo apartment. Next thing you know, Stromgren's choreographing Philadelphia actors and toying with notions of international, national and personal identity.

What's My Line?
FLUXtask Returns to Kenzo to Make You Act Cuckoo.
by Joel Tannenbaum
"Make yourself a mask of someone you don't know here, and wear it as you introduce yourself to them as them, like, 'Hi, I'm you.'"

Along Came a Giant Spider
For Verdensteatret, It's All About Volume.
by Jakob Dorof
This time around, Verdensteatret's own ambassador is a 10-foot-tall spider born of the junkyard heap, and their picture of the world appears drawn from a palette of ambient noise, floating silhouettes, the unnerving and the unexplained.

Of a Certain Age
Philly Photographer RA Friedman Creates the Art of Antiquity the Old Fashioned Way.
by A.D. Amorosi
While you'll be able to spot him with his head buried deeply under the black focusing cloth of a photographer, his charges — that means you — can become everything from a lion-girl to a hermaphrodite to a snake and beyond.

Fest Bets (A-H)
Short Previews
Bonus Web Content
24-Hour Comedy Marathon | 7 Veils | 9/11: A Day in the Life of a People | A Streetcar Named Durang | ACCIDENS (matar para comer) | ... And Piano Make Three | Another Sleepy Dusty Delta Day | Brain Fucked | Chick | Disco Descending | The Disillusionist | The Don and Julie Show!!! | Everyone | Factor T | Festus the 3-Legged Wonder Dog | Flushdance | Gas | The Giant Squid | Have a Nice Life | From Head to Toe | Head Shots | HerStory | The Hoppers Hit the Road

Fest Bets (I-Z)
Short Previews
Bonus Web Content
In Flux | Janet 2.0 | LIVE! LIVE! LIVE! Hoity Meets the 'Hood | Lost Animation of the 20th Century | The Maguffin | Manic Swell | THE MeLTING BRiDgE | SÃ-WU: Safe Again with You | Sea of Birds | S.H.A.V.E.D. | Straight Up Vampire | Stuporwoman | Thee Spectacular Waterboarding Adventure | Through Their Eyes | Waiting for the Ship from Delos | Wawapalooza 2: Get Shorti



Editor's Letter:
Obama and Original Sin
by Brian Howard
And, as it turns out, Philadelphia, we hosted Little Georgie's coming-out party. No, Philly didn't vote Bush. But it stings to be, essentially, ground zero for two terms of civil-rights butchering, foreign good will squandering, nation-unbuilding abominations.

Slant:
Xu Sixpack?
Even though China is run by an autocratic society, the current and future economic prosperity that the leadership is bringing to its citizens is likely to have a dampening effect on any grassroots effort to change the government drastically.

Loose Canon:
Beyond the Blue Bin
We leave a trail of waste that recycling alone cannot erase.
by Bruce Schimmel
At last, Philadelphia is doing what the RAC — the city's official nongovernment experts — have long asked for. And what the Recycling Alliance — a coalition of advocacy groups, armed with 10,000 signatures — has demanded.

Feedback:
Letters to the Editor
What You Say
It is apparent that no one in his family ever escaped a Siberian prison camp, gave compulsory service to the Soviet Army or faced resettlement for disagreeing with the prevailing ideology.



Naked City :: Megawords Made FleshMegawords Made Flesh
How — and why — a free arts magazine will become a storefront in Chinatown.
by A.D. Amorosi
For 30 days, Megawords' frequent contributors and like-minded friends will take over a burnt-orange storefront in Chinatown to allow the mag's playful personality to "come to life," according to co-founder Smyrski.

Icepack
Amorosi on the news, nightlife, gossip and bitchiness beats.
by A.D. Amorosi
Or did summer only truly get grisly when Bob & Barbara's and Tritone were nailed with L&I violations? And having all of New Jersey stay home due to high gas prices has hurt. Wait. That was the best part of summer. No matter.

Running Numbers
A scholarly look at the digits that matter.
by Nick Norlen
Philadelphia public schools return to session Sept. 4, but the Running Numbers Absurdly Gifted Pupils Program does its learnin' outside the classroom. Here's your syllabus.



News :: Khat in the ActKhat in the Act
Officials seized 63 pounds of an exotic substance. Do officials care?
by Isaiah Thompson
Sure, they know about it, they say. Plenty of people in Philadelphia chew it. Both men say they no longer do — but with as little vehemence as if saying they no longer do Jägerbombs.

The Bell Curve
City Paper's Quality-o-Life-o-Meter
When news breaks in Philadelphia, we make jokes.

Arts and Shaft
The folks who guard Philly's most valuable art are fighting for better working conditions.
by Boyce Upholt
His pay as a security guard at the Philadelphia Museum of Art — a little over $10 an hour — is hardly enough for him to provide for his four kids. And he gets no sick leave.

Political Notebook:
Destination Denver
by Mary F. Patel
U.S. Congressman Chaka Fattah , in line with his wife, Channel 10 news anchor Renee Chenault-Fattah and their family, apparently decided that waiting in line was not an option, so after conferring with airport police, he and the family were escorted to the front of the line and checked in. Pays to be a congressman, right?


Arts this Week is Fringe Coverage
Check it out!



Arts Agenda :: Last ChanceLast Chance
Catch it or Regret It
by Tami Fertig
Bonus Web Content
Wildeornes | The Heart Is a Dagger Above All Else | Background Information

Arts Agenda Picks:
Just Do It
State Fair
by Mark Cofta
Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote only one movie musical — but after the phenomenal success of Oklahoma!, South Pacific and The King and I, staging the beloved State Fair was inevitable.

Just Opened
Streets of Philadelphia Lego Gallery
by Sierra Tishgart
Rather than give up, Renthal opened an art gallery as a means to present his vision for the waterfront, using everyone's favorite toy, Legos, to create a 9- by 38-foot model of Penn's Landing.

Galleries
Galleries are usually open Tuesdays through Saturdays; please call the gallery for exact days and hours.

Museums/Exhibits
Museums and exhibits have varying schedules;please call for exact days, hours and prices.

Performing Arts
Please call the phone number listed with the venue for specific dates, times and ticket information.



Movies :: Disc-y BusinessDisc-y Business
Missing work on Labor Day? Make it your job to snag these DVDs.
by Sam Adams
Some of Chow's funniest touches, like casting a hulking man with a dubbed-in voice as an awkwardly large little girl, might cause parents more confusion than children, but they'll both end up charmed in the end.

Spreading Germs
by Shaun Brady
While Crash's life follows the standard biopic arc, Grossman plays down Behind the Music dramatics in favor of an adoring portrait of an artist masterminding his own demise.

Repertory Film
Your weekly guide to local film events, festivals and under-the-radar screenings.
Send repertory film listings to tami.fertig@citypaper.net.



Music :: Is All that Jazz?Is All that Jazz?
Bassist Todd Sickafoose walks the line between Pitchfork and Down Beat.
by Shaun Brady
"Of course it's a jazz band," he says. "I'm trying to write music that has a lot of improvisation that we play in clubs for people listening and drinking. I guess that's jazz music."

Web Exclusive
The Singer Comes First
Picking bluegrass legend Larry Sparks' brain before this weekend's big festival.
by Mary Armstrong
Labor Day weekend is this country's time for honoring working people. It's also the traditional time for the Delaware Valley Bluegrass Festival, celebrating its 37th birthday this year.

Aid or Invade:
Cambodia
Rodney Anonymous vs. The World
by Rodney Anonymous
Ben Stein is a dick; and no CD, no matter how good, is going to help us forget for one minute just what a dick Ben Stein is.

Soundadvice
Get Out!
Spindrift | Dub Trio | The Paper Raincoat | Origin | Gjerstad/Nilssen-Love Duo with Marshall Allen

Music Picks:
Satoko Fujii ma-do
Wed., Sept. 3, 8 p.m., $12, Rose Recital Hall (Room 419), Fisher-Bennett Hall, University of Pennsylvania, 3340 Walnut St., 866-468-3401, arsnovaworkshop.com.
by Shaun Brady
Even at its quietest, in improvised segments of scraping strings and squealing horn, there's an electric impatience to this musical collage, a sense of ideas forcing themselves forward, shoving past the obstacle of time.

Violens
Sat., Aug. 30, 9:30 p.m., $10, with Relay, Ape School and Pink Skull, Johnny Brenda's, 1201 Frankford Ave., 215-739-9684, johnnybrendas.com.
by Kevin Pearson
Guitars chime, choirboy vocals echo and synths stab atop stumbling rhythms. While such naval-gazing nostalgia is nothing new, Violens ditch the anoraks and attack their songs with enough energy to make them complete reinventions rather than rote reinterpretations.

September Saxophone Extravaganza
Sept. 3-30, Chris' Jazz Café, 1421 Sansom St., 215-568-3131, chrisjazzcafe.com.
by Shaun Brady
Distill jazz into one iconic image, and you'd almost have to arrive at the saxophone. It's the instrument most associated with the music in its modern guise, and has been since the days when big swing bands yielded to the fiery blowing sessions of bebop.



Food :: Marble GiantMarble Giant
The décor at Eric Ripert's long-awaited 10 Arts is awe-inspiring. The food is getting there.
by David Snyder
The most significant element 10 Arts borrowed from Philadelphia is the restaurant's philosophy of making seasonal, locally sourced ingredients a priority. But in the context of Philadelphia's highly evolved fresh and local dining scene, 10 Arts offerings are too safe and do not stand out in the crowd.

Feeding Frenzy
Restaurants opening, closing and pending
by Drew Lazor
Privé | Betty's Speakeasy | 1225 RAW Sushi & Sake Lounge

Christian Rock
by Trey Popp
The food at Paxia is neither as creative nor as bizarre as Frida Kahlo's oeuvre, in which cactus fruits morph into bleeding wounds and the serrated innards of carved watermelons resemble medieval torture devices. But then there probably aren't many museum-goers who come out of a Kahlo exhibition saying, "Man, I'm hungry!"

What's Cooking:
The Week In Eats
Get Out!
by Claire Bullen
McGillin's Oktoberfest | Memphis Taproom Mystery Beer Weekend | Ortlieb's Prix Fixe and Jazz | So Long to Summer Food Tour

Top 5:
Ocean City Sweet Treats
Dessert Island
by Monica Weymouth
1 Chocolate-Covered Salt Water Taffy | 2 Monkey Bread | 3 Mallon's Homemade Sticky Buns | 4 Chocolate Chip Funnel Cake | 5 Kohr Brothers DIY Dessert

You Ask We Answer
Culinary Mysteries Solved
Q: I need to bring a side dish to a Labor Day party, but I'm no cook. Which markets have some unusual options, and will any of them be open on Labor Day?

Small Bites
Little Vittles
Dogfish Head Palo Santo Marron | Every Freaking! Day with Rachell Ray | Individual Pie Slice Pan from King Arthur Flour | Dock Street Bohemian Pilsner



Agenda :: Kinky Text
Agenda Lead:
Kinky Text
Forget that other guy — WWKD?
by Molly Eichel
"But I've gotten criticism from Willie [Nelson] about not using e-mail. He thinks that keeps you out of the loop of the world. Of course, when he told me that, he was smoking a joint the size of a large kosher salami."

Agenda Picks:
What We Heart
Labor Day Weekend Edition
by Rebecca Grites
In the spirit of Labor Day, you will inevitably be crashing your sort-of friend's cousin's neighbor's beach house at a most untimely hour. These kind of things deserve more than a scented candle of appreciation.

In The Event That...
Inspired by Shawn's Beam Routine, You Ended Up in the ER
by Sierra Tishgart
All classes integrate strength building, flexibility work, balancing techniques and a Madonna-worthy upper body workout.

Phillyanthropy
Get Up, Get Out, Get Involved
by Jen Portante
From the upcoming election to the iffy economy to the temperature of this morning's latte, everyone has something to complain about. But now, fellow whiny Philadelphians, we have a willing audience.

Just Do It
Vote for Homes! Registration and Education Training
by Joel Tannenbaum
You might have heard the Sisters of Mercy nun recently on "Radio Times," politely but thoroughly eviscerating Center City District CEO Paul Levy over his depiction of homelessness in Rittenhouse Square.


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Three rounds with the Killers of Comedy — and their friend Danny Bonaduce.
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