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The Community Library

“Cage Shuffle” by Paul Lazar

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

June 21, 2021

Presented in collaboration with Sawtooth Productions, LLC.

Cage Shuffle is a 50-minute dance/theater solo. In Cage Shuffle Paul Lazar speaks a series of one-minute stories by John Cage from his 1963 score Indeterminacy, while simultaneously performing a complex choreographic score by Annie-B Parson, choreographer of David Byrne’s American Utopia on Broadway. The stories are spoken in random order with no predetermined relationship to the dancing, yet chance serves up its inevitable and uncanny connection between text and movement. Cage’s humor, intellect and iconoclasm find ideal expression in this new work which adds dance to Cage’s original performance instructions: Read stories aloud, paced so that each story takes one minute, using chance procedures or not.

This performance was held outdoors on the Library’s Donaldson Robb Family Green.

Cage Shuffle premiered in 2017 at the American Realness Festival in New York. It has since toured throughout the United States, Europe, and Brazil, at venues such as North Carolina’s Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, Seattle’s Base: Experimental Arts + Space, Chicago’s Links Hall, Minneapolis’ Walker Art Museum, New York’s Town Hall, as well as at universities and festivals .

“One of my favorite pieces ever. The Cage stories are good to begin with, amusing in a zen kind of way, but when further randomized and amplified with the dance, and with Paul’s voice – well, it becomes no longer a rarified Cage piece but is transformed into something accessible to everyone.”
– David Byrne

Paul Lazar is a founding member, along with Annie-B Parson, of Big Dance Theater. He has directed, co-directed, and acted in works for Big Dance since 1991, including commissions from the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Walker Art Center, Dance Theater Workshop, Classic Stage Company, and Japan Society. 

Outside of Big Dance, Paul has directed numerous productions including Young Jean Lee’s Obie Award-winning, “We’re Gonna Die.” Paul also directed “Bodycast: An Artist Lecture” by Suzanne Bocanegra and featuring Frances McDormand at the BAM Next Wave Festival in 2014, as well as “Major Bang” for The Foundry Theatre at St. Ann’s Warehouse. Paul has performed in numerous works by The Wooster Group, and he has acted in over 40 feature films, including Snowpiercer, The Host, Mickey Blue Eyes, Silence of the Lambs, Beloved, Lorenzo’s Oil and Philadelphia. His awards include two Bessies (2010, 2002), the Jacob’s Pillow Creativity Award in 2007, and the Prelude Festival’s Frankie Award in 2014, as well as an Obie Award for Big Dance in 2000. Paul has taught at Yale, Rutgers, The William Esper Studio, and The Michael Howard Studio, and he currently teaches at New York University.

Watch excerpts from Cage Shuffle HERE, courtesy of Wave Farm.

Paul is also directing the Sawtooth Production of Samuel Hunter’s A Case For the Existence of God, a play set in Twin Falls, Idaho, running June 30 through July 10, 2021, at the Reinheimer Ranch in Ketchum.

ZOOM – Tech Help Desk with Paul Zimmerman

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

Second Tuesday of the Month | June-September

Do you need one-on-one technical support for some of those more difficult technology challenges you’re facing?

This virtual Help Desk offers 15-minute slots with Paul Zimmerman, the Library’s tech guru, to help you answer your most pressing questions.

The help desk is hosted on Zoom. Meeting information will be sent to registered attendees.

Email mwilliams@comlib.org to sign up.

OUTDOORS – Tech Help Desk with Paul Zimmerman

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

Fourth Tuesday of the Month | June-September

Do you have questions regarding your computer, tablet, phone or smart watch? Paul Zimmerman can help you! Stop by the Library’s Cimino Plaza between 5:00 – 7:00 pm to have all of your questions answered.

The Cimino Plaza is outside the entrance to the Children’s Library at the corner of 4th and Walnut.

Email mwilliams@comlib.org with questions.

YOUTUBE: Stamping their Legacy: Honoring the Nisei Soldiers of WWII

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

WATCH THE PROGRAM
 
The United States Postal Service has issued a commemorative stamp titled Go for Broke: Japanese American Soldiers of WWII that will be available beginning June 3, 2021. The Postal Service announced:
 
With this commemorative stamp, the Postal Service recognizes the contributions of Japanese American soldiers, some 33,000 altogether, who served in the U.S. Army during World War II.
 
For a time, these second-generation Japanese Americans, known as Nisei, were denied the opportunity to fight despite being American citizens. Many were forcibly removed to incarceration camps for fear their loyalty lay with the country of their parents rather than the country in which they were born and raised.
 
They were, however, eventually formed into what became one of the most distinguished American fighting units of World War II: the all-Japanese American 100th Infantry Battalion/442nd Regimental Combat Team.
 
Thousands of other Nisei served as translators, interpreters, and interrogators in the Pacific Theater for the Military Intelligence Service (MIS), nearly a thousand served in the 1399th Engineer Construction Battalion, and more than 100 Nisei women joined the Women’s Army Corp.
 
The stamp art is based on a photograph of a member of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, whose motto was “Go for Broke.” The photograph was taken in 1944 at a railroad station in France. The stamp was printed in the intaglio print method. The color scheme of the stamp is patriotic, and the type runs up the side in a manner suggestive of the vertical style in which Japanese text was traditionally written. The stamp was designed by art director Antonio Alcalá.
 
As part of our 2021 virtual education series in celebration of the 20th anniversary of Minidoka National Historic Site, the National Park Service and Friends of Minidoka invite you to join on Sunday, June 13th, for a special program to dedicate the Go for Broke stamp and commemorate the rich legacy of Idaho’s Japanese American soldiers who served in the US Army during WWII. 
 
This program is brought to you by the National Park Service and Friends of Minidoka in partnership with Boise State University School of Public Service, ACLU of Idaho, The Community Library, the Boise City Department of Arts and History, and the Japanese American Citizens League and produced by Japanese American Memorial Pilgrimages.
 
Join the livestream on the Japanese American Memorial Pilgrimages YouTube or visit www.minidoka.org/events for more information. 

ZOOM: Audacious Read Book Group: “One Hundred Years of Solitude”

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

2021 AUDACIOUS READ

One Hundred Years of Solitude

by Gabriel García Márquez

 Fourth Tuesday of Each Month | 3:00-4:00 p.m. | Zoom

Of Gabriel García Márquez, the writer Salman Rushdie said, “No writer in the world has had a comparable impact in the last half-century.” In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech in 1982, García Márquez stated, “In spite of [. . .] oppression, plundering and abandonment, we respond with life [. . . . W]e the  inventors of tales, who will believe anything, feel entitled to believe that it is not yet too late to engage in the creation of [. . . . a] new and sweeping utopia of life [. . .] where love will prove true and happiness be possible.” His novel One Hundred Years of Solitude invites an extended reading to be immersed in the world of a mythical village in Colombia and multiple generations of the Buendía family.

We will read and discuss the novel at a pace of about 50 pages per month so that we can read deeply, find connections, and be absorbed by the world that he creates.  

Reading Schedule

January 26          Introduction. Read through ~ page 18
February 23       ~ page 58
March 23            ~ page 101
April 27               ~ page 140
May 25                ~ page 180
June 22               ~ page 222
July 27                ~ page 267 
August 24           ~ page 313
September 28    ~ page 354     
October 26         ~ page 397
November 23     ~ page 417
December 28       Conclusion. Discuss all of it!   

The Community Library Contact:

Jenny Emery Davidson  | jdavidson@comlib.org | (208) 806-2620

A Conversation with Playwright Samuel D. Hunter

July 7, 2021 by kmerwin

WATCH THE PROGRAM

UPDATE: This program is moving indoors to the Library’s John A. and Carole O. Moran Lecture Hall. Chairs will be spaced out in the room. If you would prefer to join us virtually, you can watch the event HERE on Livestream.

MacArthur Genius award-winning playwright and Idaho native Samuel D. Hunter will discuss bringing his new play to the stage this summer in Sun Valley. Like all of Hunter’s work, this play, A Case For the Existence of God, is set in Idaho, this time in Twin Falls. Paul Lazar, a staple of the downtown New York theater scene, directs.

In conversation with Jenny Emery Davidson, the Library’s executive director, and Jonathan Kane of Sawtooth Productions, LLC, Hunter will discuss his process as well as the challenges of taking a play from the page into a fully fledged production.

 

Sam Hunter

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