Hey everyone! I've just spent a great deal of time catching up my blog on all the fun events of the summer so far. I hope you'll take the time to read them and comment! First of all, there's one for June 2 when I met David Archuleta, then there's my account of Adam Lambert's glamazing GlamNation concert on June 22, then there's an entry about the Pride Parade on June 27, and finally one about the incredible Japanese play I saw on July 8 called Musashi!New York State of Mind
My new life in the big city!
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
A Bunch of Updates--Then I'm Off to Tucson!
Hey everyone! I've just spent a great deal of time catching up my blog on all the fun events of the summer so far. I hope you'll take the time to read them and comment! First of all, there's one for June 2 when I met David Archuleta, then there's my account of Adam Lambert's glamazing GlamNation concert on June 22, then there's an entry about the Pride Parade on June 27, and finally one about the incredible Japanese play I saw on July 8 called Musashi!Thursday, July 8, 2010
Musashi: A Play by Hisashi Inoue


Turning Swords Into Slapsticks
Behold the mighty samurai, standing tall and vigilant, their hard faces fixed in forbidding scowls. Tremble as they draw their long swords and assume their martial positions. Watch as they stumble and fall, shouting at one another like forcibly separated school bullies, after having had their ankles tied to those of three other men. Observe them as, still solemn-faced, they join a ritualistic chorus line, dancing delightfully across the stage to what sounds like accordion tango music.
No, it’s not easy for a samurai to keep his dignity in “Musashi,” the richly entertaining Japanese production that opened this summer’s Lincoln Center Festival on Wednesday at the David H. Koch Theater, where it runs only through Saturday. The unsmiling 17th-century rival warriors at the center of Hisashi Inoue’s remarkable play, directed by Yukio Ninagawa, are every bit as adamantine and blood-lusty as films like Akira Kurosawa’s “Seven Samurai” taught us to believe their breed were.
Yet events — not to mention a focused team that includes several Zen Buddhists and a retired, motherly dancing girl of many names — conspire to chip away at the single-mindedness of Musashi Miyamoto (Tatsuya Fujiwara) and his archenemy, Kojiro Sasaki (Ryo Katsuji). And though their names, and their resoluteness, are legend in Japan, Musashi and Kojiro don’t stand a chance against the elaborate and multifarious theatrical magic that a venerable playwright and director have gathered against them.
The name of Musashi is as familiar in Japan as those of Wyatt Earp and Billy the Kid are in the United States. A swordsman, military strategist and painter born in the 1580s, he lives on eternally in the Japanese imagination as a superhero of folklore, literature, action movies and video games. This latest incarnation of him was inspired by a wildly popular novel (by Eiji Yoshikawa) first published as a newspaper serial in the late 1930s. Mr. Inoue has taken as his departure point that book’s opening scene, which details the first fight between Musashi and the younger Kojiro.
Musashi is the victor in that encounter, but he allows Kojiro to survive. Mr. Inoue’s play is a speculation — poetic, satiric, fanciful and heartfelt — on what might have happened had these rivals met again six years later.
Samurai aficionados hoping for a fantasy rematch for the ages will be disappointed, though. Musashi and Kojiro may show up in the play to make war, but Mr. Inoue, a dedicated pacifist who died earlier this year, is determined to have them make nice instead.
To that end, he has placed his angry young men in a rural Buddhist temple, where Musashi, followed by a vengeance-maddened Kojiro, has come for a three-day retreat of silence. He will find many things in this temple during the next few days, but — lucky for us — silence is not among them.
The road to enlightenment is long in “Musashi,” occupying more than three hours of surprisingly fleet-footed stage time (performed in Japanese with English supertitles). And were I to reduce its plot and moral to a bare synopsis, you would probably think that the show is sweet but simplistic. Yet though “Musashi” is at heart an extended parable, which deals more in archetypes than specific psychological portraits, there is nothing simple-minded in the way it works out the title character’s destiny.
For what has been created here is a ravishing dialogue among forms of storytelling and theater, enacted with delicate precision and robust humor by the ensemble. Celebrated for his genre-blending productions of Shakespeare, Mr. Ninagawa (whose “Modern Noh Plays” were seen at Lincoln Center five years ago) is a master of artful eclecticism. “Musashi” is, in some respects, a classic Noh drama, with that genre’s ritualized rhythms and sounds. But “Musashi” uses a stately form with a warmly reverent irreverence that doesn’t preclude a fertile sense of humor. It is telling, for example, that one of the central characters is, he admits, addicted to Noh and can’t help himself from inventing and performing the stuff on the spot.
That’s Munenori Yagyu (Kohtaloh Yoshida), a middle-aged swordsman and adviser to a shogun, who has come for the opening of a new Zen temple, presided over by the monk Soho Takuan (Naomasa Musaka) and his abbot, Heishin (Keita Oishi). They have been joined by two female patrons: Mai Kiya (Kayoko Shiraishi), the former dancer, and the younger Otome Fudeya (Anne Suzuki).
These disparate souls take a particularly avid interest in the fortunes of Musashi and Kojiro. And each of them also has a tale to tell. Well, many tales to tell, and the competition is sometimes heated as to which teller will prevail. “Musashi” often suggests a “Decameron”-style omnibus of narratives related by strangers brought together in isolation. The forms these stories take are myriad, and in some cases they appear at first to be real events, happening in real time, rather than carefully wrought narratives.
I don’t think it’s giving away too much to say that, our visiting samurai aside, all the characters in “Musashi” are actors of a sort, artists of a hybrid theater of their own making. As one says toward the end, “We know how you people like plays.” And this group is especially skilled and inventive at layers of performance.
Mai, for example, in the first act deliciously performs (with Otome) a song about the ghost of an octopus, horribly put to death by fishermen. In the second act she proves herself equally adept at creating a shameless soap opera-ish confession of her wanton youth and the child she bore and lost. Munenori is forever offering analyses of Japanese political structures and warcraft. But he is also given to those antic mini-Noh recitations, including one he’s developing about the vengeful son of a badger.
The sermons of Soho Takuan and Heishin tend to take the darnedest detours. But then nothing in “Musashi” follows a boring old straight line. It is equally possible for the conversation to be interrupted by a (blissful) stylized dance or an attack (which arrives down the aisles, so keep your legs to yourself) of marauding warriors, whose course of bloody retribution was set off by (I swear) a tea-tasting competition.
These diversions aren’t merely there to divert, though that they do in all senses of the word. Every element in “Musashi” feeds a grand design in ways you don’t quite appreciate until it’s over. That includes a set (by Tsukasa Nakagoshi, adroitly complemented by Jiro Katsushiba’s lighting and Masahiro Inoue’s sound design) that evokes traditional Noh theater, medieval Japanese prints and living, breathing nature.
Among the play’s many enchantments is a forest of tall trees that, as they bend and sigh, appear to be listening and responding to the actors. Early in the show those trees actually seem to walk, advancing forward on the stage as if to summon you into the very particular world they help define. It proves to be an irresistible invitation.
MUSASHI
By Hisashi Inoue; directed by Yukio Ninagawa; music by Akira Miyagawa; sets by Tsukasa Nakagoshi; lighting by Jiro Katsushiba; costumes by Lily Komine; sound by Masahiro Inoue; hair design by Yuichi Akiba; fight choreographer, Masahiro Kunii; choreography by Uran Hirosaki and Juraku Hanayagi; Noh supervisor, Yoshiki Honda; Kyogen supervisor, Mansai Nomura; assistant directors, Sonsho Inoue and Naoko Okouchi; produced by HoriPro Inc. A Ninagawa Company production, presented (in Japanese, with English supertitles) by the Lincoln Center Festival, Nigel Redden, director. At the David H. Koch Theater, Lincoln Center; (212) 721-6500. Through Saturday. Running time: 3 hours 15 minutes.
WITH: Tatsuya Fujiwara (Musashi Miyamoto), Ryo Katsuji (Kojiro Sasaki), Anne Suzuki (Otome Fudeya), Naomasa Musaka (Soho Takuan), Kohtaloh Yoshida (Munenori Yagyu), Kayoko Shiraishi (Mai Kiya), Keita Oishi (Heishin), Yukio Tsukamoto (Chusuke), Kunihiro Iida (Jinbei Asakawa), Fumiaki Hori (Kanbei Asakawa) and Takeshi Inomo (Yuzen Tadano).
Sunday, June 27, 2010
GLBT Pride 2010
This entry actually written July 20, 2010On July 19, I headed to the "Summer Stage" in Central Park to check out this year's Pride Rally. I watched the performances of a couple musicians and comedians, but then grew bored because I didn't have a friend with me. Overall though, the Rally looked to be a much bigger deal than it was last year. Except that this year they didn't have Dustin Lance Black as a speaker. So, you know.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Adam Lambert's GlamNation Tour



Then the third act pumps it back up in a celebration of love and self, with electro-rock numbers "Sure Fire Winners," "Strut," "Music Again" and his current single "If I Had You." That marks the end of the official set, but as we all hoped, Adam treated us to an encore, with his killer renditions of "Mad World" and "Whole Lotta Love." The band played with a New Age-y acoustic rock vibe for these songs. His band, by the way, is fantastic and I love them! Monte Pittman, the lead guitarist, is especially impressive with his solos in "Sleepwalker" and "Music Again."
Saturday, June 19, 2010
One Year Anniversary! And Some Updates
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
David Archuleta Book-signing at Borders

So there I was just checking my Twitter feed on the afternoon of June 2, and I saw that David Archuleta said he was doing a book-signing to promote his book Chords of Strength here in New York at Borders in Columbus Circle! Believe it or not, I wasn't positive at first that I was going to go. I was worried about homework. After some debating in my mind, I realized that I was being stupid. How could I pass up an opportunity to meet David Archuleta just because I had some worthless homework to do? I mean, that's just kind of laughable.


