Photos of the Beat Poet, Allen Ginsberg
Ever since the Dresser attended Anne Waldman's tribute reading of Allen Ginsberg's poem "Howl," she has had it on her list to see the National Gallery of Art's exhibition "Beat Memories: The Photographs of Allen Ginsberg." The show closes September 16, 2010. On August 28, 2010, the Dresser made her way to the exhibition through throngs of Tea Party folks who were leaving the "nonpolitical" event at the Lincoln Memorial where the Reverend Martin Luther King delivered his "I Had a Dream" speech 47 years on this day. The Dresser feels sure the spirit of Allen Ginsberg was hovering just outside the NGA to witness white men and women, some of them carrying "Don't Tread on Me" flags and dressed in Tea Party t-shirts and occasionally National Rifle Association ball caps, high on the religious rhetoric of conservative broadcaster Glenn Beck and the veiled political comments of presidential hopeful Sarah Palin.
THE HUMANITY OF GINSBERG'S PHOTOS
The exhibition of 79 works displayed in three rooms is comprised of black-and-white photographs. These photos are portraits of Ginsberg and the people he knew, including such notorious literary characters as William Burroughs, Jack Kerouac, and Gregory Corso. The show also included photos of his family members like his paternal grandmother whom he called Buba--Buba who had come to America, learned English, and had written a patriotic essay in her broken English entitled "God Blast America."
Dare the Dresser say that the young Ginsberg in those 1950s style glasses with black frames (he often handed over his camera to friends like Bill Burroughs to have shots of himself taken) looked a lot like some of her own family members? Besides the fascination with his poems "Kaddish" and "Howl" and the weekend she spent in 1980 at a small conference in California, Pennsylvania with Ginsberg himself, the Dresser suddenly realizes the bearded poet (this was always the visage she knew) always seemed more familiar to her than just some celebrity poet--familiar, family, these words both come from a Middle English root meaning "of a household." Nonetheless, Ginsberg was not self-centered. He also captured family members of his friends. Still, these photos of people he only came in contact with because of his friends seemed to validate his own family situation, that is, ordinary people who, like his mother (she was institutionalized with mental problems), wore life on their faces like an open book.
THREADING THE BACK-STORIES
Despite the predominance of male portraits, what impressed the Dresser was the humanity threaded by the running commentary of Ginsberg. In surprisingly legible handwriting, the controversial poet wrote the back-stories of each photograph. For example, a 1990 photo of singer-songwriter Bob Dylan shot in New York City explained how moments after the photo was taken a group of homeless men chased Dylan and Ginsberg out of the small city park because they believed the pair were shooting photos of them.
Clearly some of the plain portraits benefit from the back-story inscriptions. For example, the 1964 shot of an old Jack Kerouac. Ginsberg says this photo made Kerouac look like the late senior Kerouac. And again note how Ginsberg had his eye to his friend's family.
There are also images that speak a world by themselves but clearly benefit from Ginsberg's text. The 1953 drawing room shot of Burroughs and Kerouac shows the Naked Lunch author, eyes closed with hand out to the younger man. Without reading Ginsberg's words, one knows Burroughs is instructing Kerouac with some impassioned counsel.
Ginsberg wrote these words which also serve as the title of the photo, "Now Jack as I warned you far back as 1945..." According to Ginsberg, Burroughs was telling the On the Road author (On the Road was written in 1951 but not published until 1957) he needed to sever the strangling ties to his mother. Kerouac, who called his mother Memère (which means granny or grandma in French), said his mother was the only woman he ever loved.
One funky photo shot in Tangier serves as a symbolic still life of the Beat Generation that includes Burroughs, composer-novelist Paul Bowles (he holds a camera), and Gregory Corso. In the background are two teenage boys crouching behind these men as if they were eager to catch their fire. However, Ginsberg's text calls the boys shades and said they died young.
Relationships clearly were a theme of importance to Ginsberg who notes on a portrait of Lucien Carr that this was the man who introduced Ginsberg to Kerouac. Further Internet research also informed the Dresser that Carr, who stabbed a man to death--the man had been stalking Carr for years, also introduced Burroughs to Kerouac. (Dear Reader, you might know that Burroughs accidentally killed his wife when he was trying to shoot an apple off her head with an arrow.) Kerouac was nabbed as a material witness in the murder Carr committed and to extricate himself from jail after his father refused to help him, Kerouac married his girl friend Edie Parker (that marriage was annulled after one year). One of the Ginsberg photo shows Jack and Edie on a bed with their feet pointing to an open window. She is sitting up and he is lying down. They look like friends hanging out on a dark day with nothing to do. Nothing to do except let Ginsberg shoot a photo of them.
Overall, Ginsberg had some unusual friends--there are photos of Carl Solomon (the man Ginsberg met during a stay in a mental institution and who figures into the poem "Howl") and Wavy Gravy (a Vietnam antiwar demonstrator and the chief of security at Woodstock). Clearly many of Ginsberg's friends were outside ordinary social boundaries, but so was he.
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Shakespeare's comedy is a complicated story that weaves together the pending wedding of immortals Duke Theseus of Athens and the Amazonian Queen, Hippolyta with the parent-defying teenage hormones-gone-wild love chase of mortals Hermia, Lysander, Helena, and Demetrius. Further complicating the story is a fight between Oberon, king of the fairies, and his queen Titania who refuses to allow an Indian changeling to be given over to her husband as his henchman. The madcap extra is a group of tradesmen who prepare a play for the wedding entertainment of Theseus and Hippolyta, but accidentally get mixed up with the mischief Oberon has his man Puck exact on Titania.
Camille Assaf costume design and Elsen Associates hair and makeup design for the collective set of fairies are both whimsical and artful. All the fairies except Oberon have red hair. Everyone in the magical community is dressed in green. Outfitted in pajamas, the children fairies--in real life they are part of the Arlington Children's Chorus--have untamed topknots that make them look like they get their hair combed once a month, if that. The named fairies--Cobweb, Peaseblossom, Mustardseed, and Moth are dressed as estate maids (short green dresses with frilly white aprons) and use feather dusters. While Oberon wears pajamas, he also wears a silky robe that closes only with a sash. Titania wears a sparking gown that makes her look like a mermaid. Could it be that the costume designer padded--here the Dresser drops in the softer British word--her bum?
Other characters, mortal and immortal, wear contemporary clothing including Bottom, who, as leader of the entertainment for the royal bridle pair, sports a Batman outfit.
On July 24, 2010, the Dresser attended the last performance of
To witness
by 


Like Homer's epic poems the Iliad and Odyssey, The Ramayana involves war, an arduous journey, love and honor (or duty versus desire), and the mix between gods and humans. The main character is a blue-skinned god named Rama. The multi-talented and good-looking Andreu Honeycutt portrayed the ideal man-god Rama. His acting, singing, and dancing convinced the Dresser that Rama was a magnet for love and hate, two opposite emotions associated with charismatic leaders. 
On May 15, 2010, composer
The event was funded in part by grants from the D. C. Commission on the Arts and the
Levine School students and faculty played seven works by seven composition students. All of the compositions included percussion. The Dresser will discussion what she learned following the order of composition presentation.

Bass for Picasso, which runs at New York City's Theatre Row's Kirk Theatre until May 23, highlights a dinner party given by a food critic. The focus of the meal is a whole fish prepared according to a recipe by Alice B. Toklas, the woman who for most of Gertrude Stein's adult life prepared the majority of the great Modernist's meals. The guests and chef in Ryan's play are all Lesbian or gay and they are all in crisis over the partners they have or once had.
She plays the food critic who has only one leg to stand on. The other leg, which she removes to menace her unfaithful partner Pilar, is artificial. Yes, Anita Hollander is an amputee who does not hold back. Despite the title that links the food critic and her partner who is an art detective (she authenticates artworks), the story does not belong to them. By the end of the play, the Dresser realized that this is the story of Kev, Bricka, and Joe. They are not only linked by past relationships but also by the play Kev has written at their expense. Did Kate Moira Ryan mean to keep this a secret or did the playwright lose control of her characters? 

The work is by composer
Chenault anchors his poetic libretto about the larger-than-life boxer, nicknamed "the brown bomber," through the memories of a sick old man confined to a wheelchair--Louis at the end of his life and now a shadow boxer fending off the ghosts of his former days. The audience learns that Louis came into the ring with stringent rules that helped promote him as a clean-living and honest fighter, who did not gloat over a fallen opponent. While Champion Louis did not smoke, drink, or do drugs, he was frequently seen in the company of white women despite having a loving wife and supportive mother. His fights with the German boxer Max Schmeling put the eyes of the Nation on him as a political warrior against the Nazi government. However, Louis's military service demonstrated that the people of the United States were still racially prejudiced. By the end of Louis's life, his wife Marva had divorced him twice (Louis was married four times though that is not brought out in the opera), he was in serious debt to the Internal Revenue Service, and he had a severe problem with hardcore drugs like cocaine. 
Quick came to the Dresser's attention with her poetic novel 
What's Slide about? If the audience puts their attention on Rinde Eckert, who plays the role of Renard, they will see a psychologist who runs an experiment where he shows participants out-of-focus slides to gauge how much time it takes them to identify the object once it is shown in focus. Next Renard adds a shill who disagrees with the unsuspecting participant to further confound the participant's need to defend his original guess on the unfocused object. One of the things Renard talks about is the "ritual humiliation" of not guessing correctly. Eventually Renard comes to the conclusion, "Some things are better left unsaid. No sense in clearing up the past. Leave questions unasked."