Tuesday, April 17, 2012

NE 2nd Avenue Review

Maybe it’s all cosmically related. I’ve been reading To Kill a Mockingbird for the umpteenth time. Shortly after Martin Luther King Day and just on the crest of Black History Month, one of those magical moments occurred. In To Kill a Mockingbird, young Scout Finch thinks of her father and says, “Atticus was right. One time he said you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them.” Atticus suggests, “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view... Until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it.”

For three nights, January 19, 20, and 21, Puerto Rican born, Miami bred Teo Castellanos celebrated the 10th anniversary of his stunning, prize-winning one-man show, NE 2nd Avenue. In it, he walks in the shoes of 8 characters – literally. Pumping Take It to the House and Trick Daddy, Castellanos dances, prances, and romances characters and audience alike, channeling characters embodying the jitney route from downtown through Little Haiti. He uncovers his city – our city – from inside the skin of 8 characters, changing shoes as he changes characters, coaxing tics and nuance throughout. It’s all quite uncanny. He spares no one linguistically – this is not a play for Rick Santorum. Yet it is fast, sweet, funny, sentimental, and brash at the same time – within the span of one character sometimes. It is also often moving. This is the Miami we live in – our reality – our characters.

One deals drugs in his namesake Wynwood and another is a kindly Jamaican. The jitney captain is a story telling Haitian; a hilarious African-American mother hangs laundry. The show is sealed with a riveting Jewish Cuban Israeli Lebanese story. Are these based on real people and their real Miami existence? Forget the portrayals for a second; Castellano attacks the writing like a drone.

In another life, Teo Castellanos must have been a bus driver. How else could someone so effectively observe, perceive, distinguish, differentiate, appreciate, and turn into such disparate characters found – well on this long stretch of street rarely populated by artists save for those devotees of what we call the four elements, rapping, spray-painting, breakdancing, and DJ ing. In The Music Man, it is said best about Harold Hill – you gotta know the territory.

I was in a seat at the Gables Stage a decade ago when Castellanos first performed it. I knew the streets, but not Miami’s streets. I know them much better now, in many ways, thanks to Castellano. (Disclosure time: he and I are good friends. I love the guy!) On Miami’s streets, he has been a younger teacher to me. In these ways, he has been a local treasure and mentor to many. Ask brilliant young Miami playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney, whose electrifying The Brother’s Size cast Castellano, or DJ Spam, who dropped the soundtrack for Castellanos’ Fat Boy, or Matthew Hill, wicked drummer in Scratch & Burn.

In NE 2nd Avenue, Teo Castellanos reveals a beautiful mind, climbing in the skin of others, and walking in their shoes. We in the audience are along for the ride – in our city – Castellanos’ Miami.







Spring Fashion




Friday, October 7, 2011

Occupy Your Time at a Protest Nearby

Glenn Beck (remember him?) called Jon Stewart a moron for comparing the Occupy Wall Street movement to the Tea Party movement. I wouldn't go that far, but it is clear they are quite different. For example:
  1. The Tea Party was old, white, and rich  retired, distinguished, and rich.
  2. The Tea Party is not brainwashed like Herman Cain 98% of African-Americans.
  3. The Tea Party had the country's best interest in their own money on their mind. (Got my mind on the money and the money on my mind -- the only thing they have in common with anyone black except for Allen West, Herman Cain, Michael Steele, and Clarence Thomas)
  4. The Tea Party should have gotten have never gotten arrested.
  5. The Tea Party is a grass roots movement fully funded by the billionaire Koch Brothers and sponsored by FOX.
  6. The Tea Party protests were respectful and never angry.
Respecting the Office of the President

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Rest in Peace Gil Scott Heron

It's not just Chris Bosh who is underrated

Look these up:

Must Be Something
A Lovely Day
Better Days Ahead
Song for Bobby Smith
Song of the Wind
Save the Children
Speed Kills
Home is Where the Hatred Is
Your Daddy Loves You
Back Home
Peace Go With You Brother
Rivers of My Father
We Almost Lost Detroit
The Prisoner
Lady Day and John Coltrane
Angel Dust
Spirits
Cane
The Bottle

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hQ_oTvfMoY