SPRING AWAKENING at Weekend Theater

Spring Awakening, which won 8 Tony Awards on Broadway, is the next production of the Weekend Theater.  It opens this weekend and runs through July 1.  Steven Sater and Duncan Sheik adapted Frank Wedekind’s 1891 play about the trials, tears, and exhilaration of the teen years. The three central teens are Wendla, the naïve, newly pubescent one, who is struggling with feelings that are foreign to her; Melchior, the intellectual, knows exactly what his feelings are, but is struggling with the unfair amount of power adults possess; and Moritz, the disempowered, is basically struggling with everything and doesn’t know how to relieve the pressure surrounding him.

The cast features Jessica Smith, Garrett Houston, Will Nicholson, Hannah Blackburn-Parish, Justin Holzknecht, Garrett Whitehead, Jhonika Wright, Sarah Richardson, Noah Whitney, Nick Abel, Emily McDow, Lana Hallmark and Tony Spicer.  The production is directed by Ralph Hyman with music direction by Lori Isner.

The performances are at 7:30pm on Friday and Saturday evenings and at 2:30 on Sunday afternoons.

Architeaser June 5

Yesterday’s Architeaser was four animals which are over the door of the main entrance to the Museum Center building. Two of them were winged griffin-like animals with scaled tails while the other two are large cats such as jaguars. Built as a railroad terminal in 1927, it later served as the press building for the Arkansas Democrat. In 1998, a $12 million adaptive reuse was completed. The building is now home to restaurants, offices and the namesake Museum of Discovery.

Here is today’s Architeaser.

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Little Rock Film Festival Awards

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This past Sunday, the Arkansas Times Closing Night Awards Gala took place at the Clinton Presidential Center.

The Audience Award went to Wolf, directed and written by Ya’Ke Smith.

The Made in Arkansas Awards were:
Charles B. Pierce Award Best Film Short Film — “The Man in the Moon” (directed by Kim Risi)
Best Director — Edmond Prince (Imraan Ismail) “Shattered”
Best Actor — Sam Pettit “Cain and Abel”

The World Shorts Award went to “The God Phone,” directed by DC Marcial

The LRFF Youth! Awards were:
Youth Film Award — “Colors in White” Fayetteville High School
Youth Spirit Award — Har-Ber High School
THEA Foundation Scholarships — “Ratical” Hot Springs High School; “Colors in White” Fayetteville High School

The Music Video Awards:
Arkansas Music Video — Swimming
Music Video — The Memory Tapes

The Diamond Award went to filmmakers Jay Russell and Jeff Nichols.

Oxford American Best Southern Film — Pilgrim Song, directed by Martha Stephens

Golden Rock Award for Best Documentary Film — High Tech Low Life, directed by Steohen Maing

Golden Rock Award for Best Narrative Film — Beasts of the Southern Wild, directed Benh Zeitlin

Architeaser – June 4

Yesterday’s Architeaser featured wrought iron dragons which grace the doorways to the Pulaski County Courthouse on Markham Street.  There are three sets of these dragons which were incorporated to the George Mann designed structure.

Here, for today, is another set of mythical creatures.

Arkansas Arts Center a Blue Star Museum

The Arkansas Arts Center is a proud participant in the Blue Star Museums, a collaboration among the National Endowment for the Arts, Blue Star Families, the Department of Defense, and more than 1,500 museums across America to offer free admission to all active duty military personnel and their families through Labor Day 2012. Leadership support has been provided by MetLife Foundation through Blue Star Families. The complete list of participating museums is available at www.arts.gov/bluestarmuseums.

“Through Blue Star Museums, the arts community is extending a special invitation to military families to enjoy over 1,500 museums this summer,” said NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman. “This is both an opportunity to thank military families for their service and sacrifice, as well as a chance to create connections between museums and these families that will continue throughout the year. Especially for families with limited time together, those on a limited budget, and ones that have to relocate frequently, Blue Star Museums offers an opportunity to enjoy one another and become more fully integrated into a community.”

“As we enter the third consecutive year of the Blue Star Museums program, we are happy provide an opportunity for our nation’s service members and their families to connect with our national treasures,” said Blue Star Families CEO Kathy Roth-Douquet. “Through this distinctive collaboration between Blue Star Families, the National Endowment for the Arts and more than 1,500 museums across the United States, military families have an unparalleled opportunity to visit some of the country’s finest museums for free.”

This year, more than 1,500 (and counting) museums in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and American Samoa are taking part in the initiative, including more than 300 new museums this year. Museums are welcome to join Blue Star Museums throughout the summer. The effort to recruit museums has involved the partnership efforts of the American Association of Museums, the Association of Art Museum Directors, the Association of Children’s Museums, the American Association of State and Local History, and the Association of Science-Technology Centers. This year’s Blue Star Museums represent not just fine arts museums, but also science museums, history museums, nature centers, and 70 children’s museums. Among this year’s new participants are the American Civil War Center at Historic Tredegar in Richmond, Virginia, the New Mexico Museum of Space History in Alamogordo, NM, the Cleveland Botanical Garden in Cleveland, Ohio, the Children’s Creativity Museum in San Francisco, California, the Menil Collection in Houston, Texas, and the World Figure Skating Museum & Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Architeaser – June 3

Yesterday’s Architeaser was one of the masks on the side of Robinson Center Music Hall.  Built from 1937 to 1939, it was designed by George Wittenberg and Lawson Delony, as well as associate architect Eugene Stern in a modified art deco style with neo-classical elements.

Today’s Architeaser is below.

Little Rock Film Fest – Final Day

The final day of the 2012 Little Rock Film Fest starts with a flash back to the 80s as Some Kind of Wonderful is screened with actor Lea Thompson in the audience.  At 3:20 on Sunday afternoon Thompson will participate in a discussion of Women in Film.

The Closing Night Film is Stella Days which will be screened at 8:30pm at Riverdale Cinema.

Prior to Stella Days will be the Arkansas Times Closing Night Awards Gala at the Clinton Presidential Center.  After the closing film, a Wrap Party will be held at Crush Wine Bar.

Jeff Nichols, who will be one of the honorees at the gala will participate in a conversation earlier in the day.

Films screened on the sixth and final day of the LRFF with filmmakers present include A Sister’s Call; Eating Alabama; Leave Me Like You Found Me; The Gleaning; Tchoupitoulas; First Winter; Think of Me; Wolf; The List; Conlon Nancarrow: Virtuoso of the Player Piano; Running the Distance;  and Go the Distance: Helping End Homelessness. Other films screened include Town of Runners and The Dynamiter.

Several series of shorts will be shown.  Best of the Little Rock 48 Hour Film Project, and LRFFYOUTH! Shorts will both be screened with filmmakers present.

The Ark Shorts screened on the final day are (in the Road Most Traveled grouping) “Tree,” “John Wayne’s Bed,” “The Proposal,” and “StillLife.”  Filmmakers will be present for these as well.

The World Shorts which will be screened are (in the Let’s Talk About It grouping) “Crossing,” “Lost Night,” “Contra el Mar,” and “The Sea Is All I Know”; (in the Closing In grouping) “The Carnival Is on Fire,” “Infinity,” “Abigale,” “Homecoming,” “The Darkness Is Close Behind”. Filmmakers will be present at the screenings.

The Central Arkansas Library System is playing host to a Family Day of family friendly films on Sunday afternoon.