Kool Kat of the Week: Dolph Amick Gets Down with the Original Kool Kat, “Dr. Seuss’s The Cat in the Hat” at The Center for Puppetry Arts During Their Presentation of the 1957 Classic!

Posted on: Jul 9th, 2014 By:

by Melanie Crew
Managing Editor/Contributing Writer

Dolph Amick, a modern renaissance man, (actor for stage and film, puppeteer, composer, musical director and musician) will be throwing down for the kiddies of all ages at The Center for Puppetry Arts, as “The Cat in the Hat” himself, during their production of Dr. Seuss’s beloved children’s tale that has stood the test of time, DR. SEUSS’S THE CAT IN THE HAT in its original 1957 glory, adapted for the puppet stage and directed by the Center’s Artistic Director, Jon Ludwig, running through July 20! For show times and ticket purchases, go here.

Amick, no amateur to the stage (puppet or otherwise), studied at New York University Film School as well as participated in the BFA Acting Program at the University of North Carolina (UNC) – Greensboro.  He moved to Atlanta to work for the Kaiser Permanente Educational Theatre, dispensing laughter and health education to children and teens through live performances, which included “piles of puppets”, used during their performances of “Professor Bodywise’s Traveling Menagerie,” at schools and community organizations. During this time he was persuaded to attend an open audition at the Center for Puppetry Arts and has worked hard to hone his rockin’ puppeteering skills ever since!  He has joined several casts at the Center during their performances ofWeather Rocks!”, portrayed “Wilbur”, in their performance of “Charlotte’s Web” and so much more!

ATLRetro caught up with Dolph Amick for a quick interview about his awesome experiences with the Center of Puppetry Arts, his portrayal as the walking, talking mischievous feline, “The Cat in the Hat”, his venture into acting and everything you needed to know about puppeteering!

ATLRetro: Studying film at New York University and acting at the University of North Carolina, did you ever see yourself as a ‘behind the scenes’ sort of actor? Would you say the skills involved in stage/film acting versus being a puppeteer are similar or different?

Use2Dolph Amick: If you’re asking if I anticipated becoming a puppeteer, the answer is certainly no! My formal education and the bulk of my career have been as your standard stage actor. Though puppetry has its own range of unique tools and techniques, I’d absolutely say the skills involved overlap significantly. You need to be able to interpret a script, to follow direction, to develop memorable characters and to use your voice effectively; any mask or movement work you’ve done as an actor will definitely prove helpful. I’d say the primary difference is the fact that, in puppetry, you’re frequently deprived of one of an actor’s most rudimentary tools: the physical appearance of your own body. Your face, your posture, your hands, how you move – those tools that we take for granted as actors are largely unavailable to you as a puppeteer. I mean, I assure you I’m working hard with my body as I move the puppets around, but it’s usually invisible to the audience! (laughs)   

You’ve worked with the Center for Puppetry Arts for quite a while, playing in “Weather Rocks!” and “Charlotte’s Web”.  How did you get involved with the Center? What drew you to puppet theatre?

I always found puppetry entertaining and fascinating to watch. I grew up watching the MuppetsI had a “Pigs in Space” lunchbox and all — but I never would have thought of making it my job. I think most people like puppets on some level. I took a one- semester puppetry class offered by Tom Behm at UNC-Greensboro for fun. I had some odd jobs in college using what were actually full-body puppets, amusement park mascots and such. I delivered singing telegrams dressed as a seven-foot-tall stork, entertained at birthday parties as a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle (Donatello, if you’re wondering) — but I considered them all just acting jobs, really. As it happened, I moved to Atlanta to work for Kaiser Permanente Educational Theatre, and there were some puppets in one of the shows. My director thought I had a pretty good grasp of the puppetry and encouraged me to go to the general auditions at the Center for Puppetry Arts, telling me “Oh, they hire lots of regular actors!” (laughs) After doing the work for a while, I realized that the technical challenge of puppetry was very appealing to me, and that the shows at the Center were consistently of high quality, which made me very proud. Not to mention that it’s a cool environment with an amazing group of artists. Plus, when I’m able to step back and remember that my job is moving puppets around, it always cracks me up.

What are open auditions like at the Center? Are they as grueling as live theatre auditions? Film auditions?

(laughs) Oh, my! I’d say that if auditions seem grueling, then acting may not be the best career path for a person! But seriously, the Center does try to keep them light. Like any theatre, they’re hoping someone great is going to walk in and they’re rooting for everyone who shows up. It’s very much the same as any theatre audition – maybe a monologue, 16 bars of a song, possibly some cold reading. As far as puppetry goes, they’ll frequently have people recite something simple with a hand puppet — say, part of their monologue, or maybe the alphabet, to see how their lip-sync is, and they’ll take note of how well the person is able to control the puppet’s focus; in other words, how accurately they’re able to make the puppet “look” at a particular target. Sometimes there will be another puppeteer there to move a puppet around with the auditionee, just to see how well you can move with a partner. It’s pretty fun, really.   

Use4How were you chosen for the great opportunity of getting to play America’s favorite walking, talking mischievous feline, Dr. Seuss’s The Cat in the Hat? 

(laughs) That’s probably more a question for our artistic director, Jon Ludwig, but I imagine it’s because he thought my voice and energy might suit the role; or maybe just because I have a strong right arm. (laughs) One of the really cool things about puppetry is that we get to play a huge range of characters. As a stage actor with a certain look, I might only be considered for certain roles — but as a puppeteer, I might play a little girl, a marshmallow, a thundercloud – it could be anything. Usually, Jon will bring several different people in and let them read for multiple roles, just to see what manifests itself. I feel very lucky to have been cast as the Cat. I secretly have always wanted to be one of those tall, gangly, acrobatic types like Ray Bolger or Donald O’Connor, so I’m thrilled to get my chance. 

Since this adaptation stems directly from Dr. Seuss’s book published in 1957, how would you say your portrayal is different than the other versions on the market? Specifically, the animated musical television special that aired on CBS in 1971 and the major motion picture starring Mike Myers which came out in 2003?

I can’t really comment on the film, which I haven’t seen, or the animated version, which I saw only once way back when I was very little. All I really remember from the animated version is part of a song and the fact that one of the Things had the voice of Thurl Ravenscroft! (laughs) I will say that we used the book as a constant reference. The designers incorporated virtually every element shown in the drawings into the show. Even if a side table or potted plant showed up in only one picture, it was built. We did the same with the Cat. If he was pictured in a certain pose in the book, we worked hard to make sure that image was represented in the show. And the Cat is very expressive in the drawings, so if I ever wondered how to play a scene, I was able to get a lot of information just from looking at the book.

Did you do anything special to prepare for the role? If so, what did you do?

I ate nothing but Fancy Feast for a week. (laughs) Just kidding! I did put in some extra time working on the lines. That’s a part of any show, but because the characters repeat certain phrases frequently, I found it a little easy to get confused initially, especially when I had both hands full trying to balance the Cat with a pile of props on his head and my brain was short-circuiting. Most of the preparation really occurred in rehearsal, because there’s so much partner work in this show. I’m rarely moving the Cat by myself. I usually operate the head, the torso and the left hand, with other puppeteers moving the Cat’s feet and right hand, so there is a huge amount of practice, experimentation, discussion and agreement involved to coordinate it all. I also have a two-year-old, and he and I have been reading the book and watching the DVD of the puppet show for Use5months.

“It’s fun to have fun, but you have to know how!” exclaims the Cat in the Hat.  How does a puppeteer have fun?  What’s a day in the life of a puppeteer like?

Puppetry can be physically challenging, and we get pretty exhausted sometimes. But it genuinely is a lot of fun — there’s a lot of teamwork, you get to move around a lot and you’re working with a lot of very funny people doing wacky things on a daily basis. For us, a typical day consists of some combination of two main things: rehearsal and performance. We may rehearse a show up to eight hours a day. Try this sometime at your job. Get something that weighs a few pounds. Lift it over your head. Now keep it there all day! (laughs) Rehearsals can be a bit physically or mentally taxing at times, but they’re generally a lot of fun, and we laugh a lot. On performance days, we come in, do a sound check, warm up a bit, set our props and check our puppets and do the shows. Those days are usually shorter, but represent a very concentrated burst of energy.  We try to pack an entire workday’s effort into a few hours’ worth of shows. It’s still pretty sweet to be able to shop for groceries at two in the afternoon, though.

Can you tell folks what your favorite Dr. Seuss character/book was a kid? And why?

Definitely FOX IN SOX. I read that one a lot. I loved the line “I can’t blab such blibber-blubber! My tongue isn’t made of rubber!” It was just fun to say!

What would you say is the most important attribute any puppeteer should have? Is it something you must be born with or can it be learned?

Use6Hmm. I’d say willingness to work as part of a team is key. The eyes of your director and your fellows are supercritical in puppetry, because you literally cannot see exactly what the audience is seeing, and you rely very heavily on each other for all sorts of assistance. That’s definitely something that takes practice in my opinion. Perhaps one of the most important things might be a certain willingness to be unknown, or at least second banana to an inanimate object. If you’re only in it for your ego, you’ll probably wind up being pretty disappointed. It’s a very rare puppeteer that gets stopped for autographs walking down the street. (laughs)

The Center has put a lot into their production of The Cat in the Hat, as they do with all of their productions, with the production design adaptation for the puppet stage being completed by the uber creative puppet/scenic designers.  As one of the six puppeteers in this production, can you tell our readers what a ‘full-bodied rod puppet’ is compared to your average, everyday puppet. Sounds fascinating!

The main Cat in the Hat puppet has a control rod inside his body that I can use to turn his head. There’s a trigger on the rod that opens his mouth, and he’s got short rods on his hands and feet to allow different puppeteers to control his extremities. Our resident puppet builder Jason von Hinezmeyer designed all the puppets, and they’re all brilliant! But the main Cat — “floppy-hat Cat”, as I call him — is my absolute favorite. What I think is so ingenious about the Cat puppet is the way he reflects the fluidity of Seuss’s drawings. The Cat is always drawn as very curvy through the limbs and flexible through the torso, with a distinct grace that seems almost unfettered by bone structure. The puppet is built with beadlike structures under the fur of his arms and legs — almost like a row of marbles or large pearls strung together — which gives them a certain definition of shape and a degree of mass. This allows them to hang in nice curves just like in the book when the puppet moves a hand, but also allows them to bend and wiggle any way we wish. Similarly, the Cat puppet has what is essentially a large, loose spring in his torso (imagine a Slinky) so that his body can flex and compress. Even his removable hat has a spring in it to give it a jaunty jiggle. It’s an immensely versatile puppet in terms of the variety of motion it can achieve.

What can our readers expect when they come out to see Dr. Seuss’s The Cat in the Hat at the Center for Puppetry Arts?

I believe they can expect to be truly delighted! It’s amazing to see these beloved characters that are so familiar to us actually bouncing around the stage, fully realized as tangible creations. It’s a tremendous amount of fun, and I think it’s pretty spectacular.

What’s next for Dolph Amick? More puppeteering in your future? Stage acting? Where can our readers see you next?

Well, I’m actually in the throes of composing and recording the music for the Center’s upcoming production “Shake a Tale Feather with Mother Goose”, and then I will be musical directing and performing (as a human) in “Pump Boys and Dinettes” at the Georgia Ensemble Theatre. Plus, I’m working on records for two bands, Three Quarter Ale and Burndollies. And yes, there will be more puppetry!

What question do you wish someone would ask you and what’s the answer?

“May I provide you with free on-call babysitting?” And the answer is,
“Yes!”

Can you tell us something you’d like folks to know about you they don’t know already?

I can walk a tightrope.  And when I was little, I used to blast John Williams soundtracks while I played.

All photos courtesy of The Center of Puppetry Arts and used with permission.

Category: Kool Kat of the Week | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

This Week in Retro Atlanta, July 7-13, 2014

Posted on: Jul 6th, 2014 By:

by Melanie Crew
Managing Editor/Contributing Writer

Retro Atlanta is the Kat’s Meow this week! From vintage old-time back porch hootenannies to ‘70s punk rawkin’ to psychedelic garage rock and all the blues and jazz you could ever want, Retro Atlanta is where it’s at! So, come on out and boogie on down in Retro Atlanta!

Monday, July 7

Get retro, kiddie-style at Pallookaville’s vintage cinema extravaganza with The Polka Dotted Elephant Summer Cinema Club at 10 am, with their screenings of a DOGVILLE SHORT episode (1930), LANCELOT LINK episode (1970) and featuring Wes Anderson’s adaptation of Roald Dahl’s classic tale, FANTASTIC MR. FOX (2009)! Get some soul at Blind Willie’s with Brandon Reeves! Swing on by Big Band Night featuring Joe Gransden and his amazing 17-member orchestra at Café 290 every first and third Monday of the month. Boogie on down to the Northside Tavern and spend an evening with Lola at her famous Monday Night Northside Jam!  The Beatles invade Lafont Theatre with their screening of Richard Lester’s A HARD DAYS NIGHT (1964)! Get old-school at Chastain Park with LionelRichie! Blues on down to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a bluesy helping of The Pork Bellies and some finger lickin’ BBQ!  And it’s your last chance to get monstrous at The Plaza Theateras they screen the 60th Anniversary restoration of Ishiro Honda’s GODZILLA (1954)!
 
Tuesday, July 8

Join forces with the infamous Ash as he battles the mediaeval dead at The Plaza Theater during Splatter Cinema’s screening of Sam Raimi’s cult classic ARMY OF DARKNESS (1992), at 9:30! And don’t forget to come early for some horrorific lobby shenanigans and classic horror trailers!  Or let Kool Kat Katherine Lashe and Syrens of the South seduce their way into your naughty little hearts at the Red Light Café at their Tease Tuesday: JulyEdition, with special guest Shay Blaze and performances by Nikki Nuke’m, Candi LeCoeur, Victoria Rose Nedley and so much more! Take a trip to the “Goon Docks” for swashbuckling adventures at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern for their screening of Richard Donner’s ‘80s classic, THE GOONIES (1985) during their Summer of Adventure series at 7:30 pm! Spend the night with the Duke at the Midtown Art Cinema as they screen John Ford’s THE SEARCHERS (1956) at 7 pm! Skye Paige, “Queen of the Slide Guitar” and Danny B. Harvey deliver a night of rockabilly blues and country at Blind Willie’s! Stomp on down to Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs for a night with The Cohen Brother’s Band! Sweet Georgia’ Juke Joint gets down and dirty with the Chicago/Delta blues of The Breeze Kings! Make your way to Big Tex for a night with Moira Nelligan & The Dixie Jigs and their old-fashioned Americana! Boogie on down to The Star Bar and get groovy at The Funk Godfather, DJ Romeo Cologne’s Funk Royale featuring DJ Quasi Mandisco every Tuesday! Jam it up with Joe Gransden and his jazz jam session at Twain’s in Decatur every Tuesday at 9 pm! Or boogie on down to Darwin’s Burgers & Blues in Marietta for a taste of Bill Sheffield’s acoustic roots and blues! The Entertainment Crackers get bluesy with their folksy Americana at the Northside Tavern. And rock on down to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a night with JT Speed!

Wednesday, July 9

Punk on down to The Star Bar for Ravagers, The Jetbirds, Onchi and Spoilers! Or get folksy at Eddie’s Attic with Marc Cohn! The Mar-Tans deliver their New Orleans’ funk at Sweet Georgia’ Juke Joint! The Bob Page Trio delivers a night of rockin’ blues at Blind Willie’s! The Hollidays deliver a night of soul and rock and roll at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack! Or make your way to the Northside Tavern as Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck fires it up with his rockin’ blues! It’s Ladies Night at Johnny’s Hideaway which plays hits from Sinatra to Madonna for a generally mature crowd.  Or skip school and hang out with the Goonies at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern for their screening of Richard Donner’s ‘80s classic, THE GOONIES (1985) during their Summer of Adventure series’ matinee screening at 11:30 am!

Thursday, July 10

Sex, Drugs & Bluegrass invade the Red Light Café with Nine Years Apart and Rye Baby! Get old-time with a little vintage bluegrass and string band ragtime with Blood on the Harp, Caleb Warren & His Perfect Gentlemen and Sailing to Denver at 529! Get garage rocked at The Star Bar with EasyBeat, Cosmoknox, Time Before the War and Vito Romeo! Lloyd’s RockSteady Revue delivers their ‘60s and ‘70s Jamaican soul at Trader Vic’s! Rev on down to the Clermont Lounge for a night with Kool Kat Spike Fullerton and the Ghost Riders Car Club! It’s a night of old-time country and folksy Americana in the Atlanta Room at Smith’s Olde Bar with Scarlett Hill, Andy Lees, Lady of the Lake and Deborah Vanttaelst! Or get a tasty helping of the Megan Jean Band & the KFB’s Americana punk and avant-garde tunage in the Music Room with The Jauntee and Makayan! Get the Memphis blues at the Crimson Moon Café with the Daddy Mack Blues Band! Rock out with the ‘blues woman power’ of Beverly ‘Guitar’ Watkins at Blind Willie’s! The Barry Richman Band gets bluesy at Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs! Stagger on over to Noni’s Bar & Deli for their Bitter Heroes event featuring DJ Brian Parris as he gets charmingly morose with a little New-Wave, The Smiths and The Cure! The Northside Tavern gets rockin’ with a little Chicago/Delta blues of The Breeze Kings! Get your boogie on at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack, as Chickenshack featuring Eddie Tigner, delivers some honky-tonk blues! Darwin’s Burgers & Blues gets down and dirty at their Blues Jam hosted by The Cazanovas! Get your boogie on at Mary’s, as the East Atlanta venue gets funky with their weekly Disco in the Village.  And it’s your last chance to seek the treasure at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern during their screening of Richard Donner’s ‘80s classic, THE GOONIES (1985) during their Summer of Adventure series at 7:30 pm!

Friday, July 11

Get geeky and rock your TARDIS all the way to the Masquerade for MarksterCon’s Time Lord Party at 9 pm, featuring Steam Punk tunes by TheExtraordinary Contraptions, costume contests and rockin’ vendors including Kool Kat Chris Hamer of UrbnPop! Shimmy on down to Mary’s and celebrate all things French and Mary Antoinette during their Bastille DayBlow-Out event, featuring French pop and disco and an Oh-La-La Cabaret Show! Kool Kat VJ Anthony gets sinister at his Dark 80s With a Dose of the Cure event invading the Famous Pub at 10 pm! Make your way to the Diesel Fueling Station for the opening reception of Keith P. Rein’s Slaughterhouse Starlets art installation! Or witness the battle between good and evil at Eyedrum Art & Music Gallery as they begin their two-day art exhibit, “The Visitor”, with art based on the 1979 Italian thriller by the same name, dir. by Michael J. Paradise (Guilio Paradisi)!

Funk on down to 529 for a night with Heavy Chevy and The 4th Ward Afro-Klezmer Orchestra! Rock on down to The Earl for a night with The Baseball Project and The Minus 5! Get twangy and blues on down to Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs for a night with Brian Ashley Jones and Jake &the Beanstalk! Rock out under the dinosaurs with The Pack at the Fernbank Museum of Natural History’s Martinis and IMAX event! The Ori Naftaly Band delivers a night of the blues at Darwin’s Burgers & Blues! Get your Beatle’s fix in the Music Room at Smith’s Olde Bar with Please PleaseRockMe! Or honky-tonk on down to the Atlanta Room for a foot stompin’ night with The McNifficient 7, Divorce, Inc. and The Rotating Point Source! Get your ‘90s alt-rock fix at Chastain Park with The Goo Goo Dolls! Husky Burnette blueses it up at the Elliott Street Pub! Get funky at Big Tex with the Swamp Funk Quartet! Blues on down to the Northside Tavern for a night with Stoney Brooks! Or taste the blues with a hint of soul at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack with Larry Griffith and a side of finger lickin’ BBQ! House Rocker Johnson & the Shadows get bluesy at Blind Willie’s! Stomp on down to the Crimson Moon Café for a night with Wesley Cook! Spend an evening with the greatest women in music at The Strand Theater during their song and dance revue, Diva! And as always, Time-Warp it up and get naughty with some uber musically-inclined transsexual aliens at The Plaza Theater as they continue their tradition of screening THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975) every Friday night, featuring the live cast of Lips Down on Dixie at midnight!

Saturday, July 12

Rawk on down to The Star Bar for an evening with Bigfoot, Dusty Booze & the Baby Haters, Bad Friend, Blacktop Rockets, Divorce, Inc., the Scragglers and more! Doors at 8 pm! It’s night two of the Eyedrum Art & Music Gallery’s “The Visitor” exhibit. Come on down as Contraband Cinema presents “The Mount Everest of insane ‘70s Italian movies,” THE VISITOR (1979) dir. by Michael J. Paradise, starring John Huston as an intergalactic warrior! Or go behind the scenes and spend the day at the 2nd Annual GooCon 2014 at Clayton State University, featuring events surrounding costuming, special effects make-up and props. Guests include Face-Off’s RJHaddy, Matt Silva, Tyler Green, Roy Wooley and more!

Surf on down to Kavarna for a night of old-school ‘50s and ‘60s rock with Phatlynx and Gemini 13! Rev on down to the Dixie Tavern in Marietta for a rockin’ night with Kool Kat Hot Rod Walt and the Psycho-DeVilles! Stomp on down to the Red Light Café for a rockin’ jubilee featuring Richard Buckner with special guests, The Last Tycoon and Kristen Englenz! Or get a taste of some ‘70s roots reggae at The Variety Playhouse with ZvuloonDub System!  Get funky at The Family Dog with Gravy! It’s Beatlemania at Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs as The Buggs deliver a night of Beatles favorites!  Sandra Hall & the Shadows get down and dirty at Blind Willie’s!  Get jazzy at Chastain Park with Boney James, Brian Cultbertson, Dianne Reeves and more! Blues on down to Darwin’s Burgers & Blues for a night with Damon Fowler! Jam on down to the Northside Tavern for a night with the Allman Brother Tribute Band! It’s the menacing hip-swingin’ 60s blues at The Earl with Curtis Harding, Black Linen and Kool Kat RodHamdallah! Kerry Hill jazzes it up at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack! Swing on over to Eddie’s Attic for two chances to see Joe Gransden and his amazing 17-member orchestra! Get your Beatle’s fix in the Music Room at Smith’s Olde Bar with Please PleaseRockMe! Groove on down to The Basement for a night with Strange Planet, Waking the Bates, FishHawk and ScaleModel! It’s a night of old-school punk and circus rawk at The Highlander with Lost Solstice, Till Someone Loses and Eye with Kool Kat Aileen Loy and War in my Mind! Maddy’s Ghost rocks out blues-style at Big Tex! The Ori Naftaly Band delivers a night of the blues at the Crimson Moon Café! It’s a Jukebox Giants song and dance musical revue at The Strand Theater, featuring pop music through the ages, ‘50s to ‘80s!  And as always, DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno late into the wee hours of the night.

Sunday, July 13

Rock out old-time vintage-style at Pallookaville with Kool Kat Jeffrey Butzer & the Bicycle Eaters, during their free Sunday Night Summer Concert Series running through August 24 from 7-10pm!Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs delivers their Gypsy Jazz Brunch offering up a plate of Hot Club jamming and Parisian Swing with Kool Kat Amy Pike and the Bonaventure Quartet from 12:30 to 3:30 pm every 2nd & 4th Sunday! Blues on down to The Family Dog for a night with Francine Reed & the Jez Graham Trio! Stomp on over to Big Tex for their Bluegrass Brunch with Cedar Hill! Fat Back Deluxe gets the blues at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack! Men of Motown boogie down during their song and dance revival at The Strand Theater! Make your way to the Crimson Moon Café for The Tom & Julie Show featuring tributes to tunes from the 60s to the 90s! And get psychedelic at The Earl with Avers and Twin Tigers!

Ongoing

The Plaza Theater’s retro cinema line-up, including a Mad Max Marathon, featuring all three George Miller action flicks: MAD MAX (1979), MAD MAX 2: THE ROAD WARRIOR (1982) and MAD MAX: BEYOND THUNDER DOME (1985), a screening of the 50th Anniversary of Richard Lester’s A HARD DAYS NIGHT (1964) and  Ridley Scott’s classic creepy space thriller, ALIEN (1979), runs through July 10! (LAST CHANCE!)

The Center for Puppetry Arts presents Dr. Seuss‘The Cat in the Hat’, running through July 20!

Pallookaville delivers old-school vintage tunes during their free Sunday Night Summer Concert Series running through August 24 from 7-10pm!

The High Museum gets revved during their ‘Dream Cars; Innovative Design, Visionary Dreams’ exhibit, featuring forward-thinking auto designs from 1932 to the present, running through September 7!

Nerd Film Mafia screenings at the Diesel Fueling Station following NerdCore Trivia, every last Tuesday of the month!

ICON 80s: Music Video Dance Night rocks out at the Famous Pub every Friday night with a different 80’s theme!

The Star Bar gets groovy with The Funk Godfather, DJ Romeo Cologne and DJ QuasiMandisco every Tuesday!

Steve’s Live Music’s Gypsy Jazz Brunch offers up a plate of Hot Club jamming and Parisian Swing with Kool Kool Kat Amy Pike and the Bonaventure Quartet from 12:30 to 3:30 pm every 2nd & 4th Sunday!

Boogie on down into Disco Hell at The Family Dog as DJ Quasi Mandisco delivers a night of classic funk, soul and disco the last Friday of every month

The Plaza Theater Time-Warps it up as they screen, THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975) every Friday night, featuring the live cast of Lips Down on Dixie at midnight!

Every first and third Mondays are Big Band Nights at Café 290, featuring Joe Gransden and his amazing 16-piece orchestra playing jazz and swing standards in the tradition of The Glen Miller Orchestra and other legendary groups.  Second and fourth Mondays are Bumpin the Mango, ‘The groove that makes you want to move!’

Every first Wednesday is the Graveyard Tavern’s Graveyard Swing Night, featuring the swingin’ jazz and boogie-woogie sounds of the Savoy Kings!

If you have a suggestion for a future event that should be included in This Week in Retro Atlanta or see something we missed, please email us at atlretro@gmail.com.

Category: This Week in ATLRetro | TAGS: None

Retro Review: The Plaza Theatre Celebrates 50 Years of The Beatles’ A HARD DAY’S NIGHT With a Gorgeous New Restoration!

Posted on: Jul 2nd, 2014 By:

A HARD DAY’S NIGHT (1964); Dir. Richard Lester; Starring The Beatles (John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr); Runs Friday, July 4 – Thursday, July 10 (see Plaza Theatre website for times and ticket prices); Plaza Theatre; Trailer here.

By Aleck Bennett
Contributing Writer

Has it been 50 years already? Hard to tell when it comes to something timeless, and there are few films as timeless as The Beatles’ motion picture debut, A HARD DAY’S NIGHT. Chock full of great music, wild comedy, groundbreaking direction and a witty, snappy script, it’s enjoyable enough on any occasion. But with a beautiful, newly-minted restoration, there’s no better way to commemorate the movie’s half-centenary than spending an evening at the Plaza Theatre with the “Fab Four”.

When it comes to rock & roll movies, there are generally three camps. There are straight-up documentaries and concert films, like The Band’s THE LAST WALTZ, ELVIS: THAT’S THE WAY IT IS, WOODSTOCK or Dylan’s DON’T LOOK BACK. Then there are the films where a rock star gets shunted into some generally cockamamie scenario which has musical performances conveniently hanging off of it, such as most Elvis movies or Herman’s HermitsMRS. BROWN YOU’VE GOT A LOVELY DAUGHTER. Then there are those films where you’ve got a plot and actors that serve chiefly to prop up a handful of showcase musical numbers, featuring musicians that you don’t really see outside of those isolated performances, aside from maybe five minutes of acting to establish their presence in the film. This is typical of most 1950s rock & roll movies (Elvis vehicles excluded) like THE GIRL CAN’T HELP IT, ROCK AROUND THE CLOCK and—in later years—the Ramones’ tribute to these flicks, ROCK ‘N’ ROLL HIGH SCHOOL.

Then, there are the exceptions, and A HARD DAY’S NIGHT is one of the most striking. It’s not a documentary, though it probably gets closer to the true spirit of The Beatles and Beatlemania than any documentary could. It’s not tied up in some convoluted plot that exists to just fill time between songs (that would be their follow-up movie, the winkingly self-conscious HELP!). And with The Beatles starring as themselves, it breaks away from the ‘50s template. At the time, it was truly revolutionary. There really wasn’t much else like it.

And it remains the single greatest rock and roll movie ever made.

Like Joe Bob Briggs used to say, it doesn’t have any plot to get in the way of the story. The Beatles have to make it to a TV studio for a live broadcast, putting up with Paul’s troublemaking grandfather (“He’s very clean.”) and the trappings of superstardom along the way. That’s it. But that threadbare plot allows plenty of time for the lads’ personalities to shine through and firmly establish each of them as distinct characters. It also allows ample opportunity to present The Beatles’ music organically: not only as score, but as source—in staged rehearsals and run-throughs leading up to their on-air performance.

The script is incredibly clever, providing constant tangential episodes within the film that deliver small moments of energy, so we never hit a dead spell in the journey. As a result, it plays as something of a sketch film, with the consistent forward dynamic of the band’s race to the TV studio maintaining an overarching momentum. In addition, screenwriter Alun Owen spent several days with the foursome and drew dialogue from interviews with the band to deliver Beatles “characters” that were true to each individual member of the group.

Director Richard Lester was a left-field candidate for helming the film, personally chosen by The Beatles on the basis of his work with Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan on TV and in the 1960 theatrical short THE RUNNING JUMPING & STANDING STILL FILM. Visually inventive and wildly imaginative, he not only innovatively captured live music performances, but also delivered crazed comic sequences (such as the opening chase scene, a rapid-fire interview segment and the wild “We’re out!”/”Can’t Buy Me Love” romp). It all comes across as pure giddy exuberance in cinematic form. And even though it depicts The Beatles as prisoners of their own fame, it’s also early enough that we’re still seeing them enjoying the view from between the bars. (As Orson Welles said, “if you want a happy ending, that depends, of course, on where you stop your story.”)

Acting-wise, The Beatles are surprisingly confident on-screen. Paul comes across as level-headed and charming, George as dryly droll, John as sardonic and anarchic and Ringo as sensitive and compassionate. It’s Ringo in particular that shines during a sequence in which he escapes from the TV studio to anonymously wander about town and winds up palling around with a young kid. The keen script, Lester’s deft direction and Ringo’s performance join forces to create one of the film’s most memorable chapters.

And then there’s the music. Rather than use the film to push already-existing product, aside from the previously-released “Can’t Buy Me Love” and a quick medley of hits as the basis for their TV performance, the film uses newly-composed, original material by the band. And the resulting LP, their first to not feature any cover songs, is perhaps The Beatles’ first great album. With all songs written by Lennon and McCartney, it firmly established The Beatles as a truly self-contained unit—and one that sounded uniquely like themselves, rather than a large derivative of artists that came before.

I could write for forever and never be able to capture what strange magic this film conjures. It’s pure electricity on film. It’s full of the joy of life and the living of it. Like I said before, it’s the greatest rock & roll film ever made. And what the hell, one of the greatest films, full stop. And hey! If you need more convincing to see this after all of the superlatives I’ve been piling on, it has been newly digitally restored for the film’s 50th anniversary, with a new 5.1 sound mix created at Apple Studios, and word on the street is that the end result is a marvel.

So drop what you’re doing and see this at your earliest convenience. Even if you don’t know it, you need a reminder of why The Beatles were one of the biggest phenomena of the 20th century, and there’s no more entertaining way to get that reminder than with this film.

Aleck Bennett is a writer, blogger, pug warden, pop culture enthusiast, raconteur and bon vivant from the greater Atlanta area. Visit his blog at doctorsardonicus.wordpress.com

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This Week in Retro Atlanta, June 30 – July 6, 2014

Posted on: Jun 30th, 2014 By:

by Melanie Crew
Managing Editor/Contributing Writer

Rock out in Retro Atlanta this week with a revved up rockabilly showdown, retro cinema galore and all the blues and jazz your little vintage hearts could want! So, come on out and live la vida Retro!

Monday, June 30

Get retro, kiddie-style at Pallookaville’s vintage cinema extravaganza with The Polka Dotted Elephant Summer Cinema Club at 10 am, with their screenings of a DOGVILLE SHORT episode (1930), LANCELOT LINK episode (1970) and featuring Hayao Miyazaki’s animated classic, MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO (1988)! Barrel House Bob Page fires up the blues at Blind Willie’s! Swing on by Big Band Night featuring Joe Gransden and his amazing 17-member orchestra at Café 290 every first and third Monday of the month. Boogie on down to the Northside Tavern and spend an evening with Lola at her famous Monday Night Northside Jam!  And blues on down to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a side of Dry White Toast and some finger lickin’ BBQ! 

Tuesday, July 1

Get monstrous, retro-style at The Plaza Theateras they screen the 60th Anniversary restoration of Ishiro Honda’s GODZILLA (1954) through July 7!  Or get shark-infested and swim on by the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern for their screening of Steven Spielberg’s horrifying summer classic, JAWS (1975) during their Summer of Adventure series at 7:30 pm! It’s a night of ‘70s throwback punk at 529 with Wyldlife and Dinos Boys! Make your way to Big Tex for a night with Moira Nelligan & The Dixie Jigs and their old-fashioned Americana! Boogie on down to The Star Bar and get groovy at The Funk Godfather, DJ Romeo Cologne’s Funk Royale featuring DJ Quasi Mandisco every Tuesday! Jam on down to Eddie’s Attic for a night with the Atlanta Rhythm Section! Jam it up with Joe Gransden and his jazz jam session at Twain’s in Decatur every Tuesday at 9 pm! Or boogie on down to Darwin’s Burgers & Blues in Marietta for a taste of Bill Sheffield’s acoustic roots and blues! The Entertainment Crackers get bluesy with their folksy Americana at the Northside Tavern. And rock on down to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a night with JT Speed!

Wednesday, July 2

Honky-tonk on down to The Star Bar for a revved up night with BloodshotBill & the Greensboro Gang with The Mondellos! Or punk on down to The Earl for a night with Spray Tan, Arliss Nancy, Killing Kuddles and Joseph Lazzari (Walk From the Gallows)! Ed Roland & the Sweet Tea Project rock out at Eddie’s Attic! Get revived with some back porch folk rock at Terminal West with Jamestown Revival! Swing on by East Atlanta’s Graveyard Tavern for their Graveyard Swing Night, held the first Wednesday of every month, promising an evening of swingin’ jazz and jive with the Savoy Kings! Or get folksy at Smith’s Olde Barwith Picture PerfectSkylines, Ben Gaines and Owner of the Sun in the Atlanta Room! Or shake your groove thing in the Music Room with Mercury Orkestar, Electric Attitude and Frisky Monkey! Rock on down to The Drunken Unicorn for a night of post-punk with Dasher, The Coltranes and Uniform! Get jazzy with Sal Gentile at the Elliott Street Pub! The Hollidays deliver a night of soul and rock and roll at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack! Or make your way to the Northside Tavern as Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck fires it up with his rockin’ blues! It’s Ladies Night at Johnny’s Hideaway which plays hits from Sinatra to Madonna for a generally mature crowd.  It’s a night of ‘She Bop’ at Mary’s featuring girl pop and punk! Or skip school and hit the beach at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern for their screening of Steven Spielberg’s horrifying summer classic, JAWS (1975) during their Summer of Adventure series’ matinee screening at 11:30 am!

Thursday, July 3

It’s Slim Chicken’s Honkytonk Extravaganza at The Star Bardelivering a night of live band karaoke followed by Kool Kat Julea Thomerson & Her Dear Johns! It’s a night of foot-stompin’ Americana and bluegrass at Red Light Café withConservation Theory! The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra presents their “Performance on the Promenade” event at Piedmont Park! Get jazzy, gypsy and Americana-style at Eddie’s Atticwith Jared & Amber with special guest, Michael Magno! It’s a night of roots and alt rock at The Earlwith Faithless Town, Goodnight Buffalo and New Terminus! Stagger on over to Noni’s Bar & Deli for their Bitter Heroes event featuring DJ Brian Parris as he gets charmingly morose with a little New-Wave, The Smiths and The Cure! Make your way to the Crimson Moon Café for The Tom & Julie Show featuring tributes to tunes from the 60s to the 90s every Thursday! The Northside Tavern gets rockin’ with a little Chicago/Delta blues of The Breeze Kings! Get your boogie on at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack, as Chickenshack featuring Eddie Tigner, delivers some honky-tonk blues! Darwin’s Burgers & Blues gets down and dirty at their Blues Jam hosted by The Cazanovas! Tom Hill & the Midnight Suns deliver a night of blues, rock and soul at the Clermont Lounge! Trader Vic’s delivers a night of swanky soul and rock n roll with Bogey & the ViceroyQuartet! Get your boogie on at Mary’s, as the East Atlanta venue gets funky with their weekly Disco in the Village.  Riff away with the best of ‘em at The Plaza Theater as their Cineprov group riff’s Roland Emmerich’s sci-fi action flick, INDEPENDENCE DAY (1996)at 7:30! And it’s your last chance to catch a glimpse of those monstrous bloody teeth at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern during their screening of Steven Spielberg’s horrifying summer classic, JAWS (1975) during their Summer of Adventure series at 7:30 pm!

Friday, July 4

Happy 4th of July all you rockin’ Retro-lovers! Rev on down to the B3 Bar & Grill for Kool Kat Right Reverend Andy Hawley’s “Great AmericanRockabilly Show”, featuring rockin’ tunes, vintage vendors galore, a car/bike show and a pin-up contest! And you won’t want to miss the rockin’ musical lineup of Kool Kat Hot Rod Walt and the Psycho-DeVilles, the CadillacJunkies, Hellfire Revival, The Krank Daddies, Hillbilly Casino and so much more! Or spend the day with Pallookaville at their “Fourth of July Independepallooza” event, featuring a parade at 10 am, the vivacious street marching band, the Seed & Feed Marching Abominable, a rockin’ time with the Thimblerig Circus featuring juggling, fire eating shenanigans and so much more, costume contests, corndog eating contests, all followed by a viewing for the Avondale fireworks! And fire up the blues at Hottie Hawgs BBQwith their 4th of July Bash with Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck!

The Plaza Theateris going all out tonight with its retro cinema with all running through July 10! Get futuristic Australian-style at their Mad Max Marathon, featuring all three George Miller action flicks: MAD MAX (1979), MAD MAX 2: THE ROAD WARRIOR (1982) and MAD MAX: BEYOND THUNDER DOME (1985)! Or head across the pond and rock out with 50th Anniversary screening of Richard Lester’s A HARD DAYS NIGHT (1964)!  Or get horrified sci-fi style as they screen Ridley Scott’s classic creepy space thriller, ALIEN (1979)! The Star Bar delivers a night of rockin’ glam with a David Bowie tribute band, the Pinups! Get laid-back with Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck as he delivers his Piedmont Playboys at the Northside Tavern! Blues on down to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a taste of John Sosebee’s hill country blues and a side of finger lickin’ BBQ! Get your fill of your favorite MTV videos with Kool Kat VJ Anthony at his ICON 80s: Music Video Dance Night invading Famous Pub every Friday night at 10 pm! Men of Motown boogie down during their song and dance revival at The Strand Theater! And as always, Time-Warp it up and get naughty with some uber musically-inclined transsexual aliens at The Plaza Theater as they continue their tradition of screening THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975) every Friday night, featuring the live cast of Lips Down on Dixie at midnight!

Saturday, July 5

The Star Bardelivers a night of ‘60s/Quentin Tarantino-inspired tunes with Black Linen, ExWhy and The Selfish Lovers! Skye Paige, “Queen of the Slide Guitar” and Danny B. Harvey deliver a night of rockabilly blues and country at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack! For a night of punky-tonk and outlaw bluegrass, stomp on down to the Elliott Street Pubfor The Punknecks! Rock across the pond and over to Lefont Theatre for their 50th Anniversary screening of Richard Lester’s A HARD DAYS NIGHT (1964)! For a night of alt rock, make your way to the Red Light Caféfor Jain the Band and The Space Time Travelers! Get folksy at Steve’s Live Musicin Sandy Springs with Pierce Pettis! Rock on down to 529, Indie-folk rock style for a night with Streets of Laredo, The Hunts and Book of Colors! Or get rocked at Al Bum’s Record Shop in Acworth for their Benefit for the Wounded Warrior Project featuring Hip toDeath, Rick Dang, The Lost Souls, Air Wolves, Used for Comparison, Bold Ashes, Dark Matter Halo, The Roadside and Black Capsule! The Barry Richman Band gets down and dirty at Darwin’s Burgers & Blues! Rock out with the ‘blues woman power’ of Beverly ‘Guitar’ Watkins at the Northside Tavern!  Spend an evening with the greatest women in music at The Strand Theater during their song and dance revue, Diva! And as always, DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno late into the wee hours of the night.

Sunday, July 6

Get jazzy at Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs for their Deb Bowman Jazz Brunch at 12:30 pm! It’s a Jukebox Giants song and dance musical revue at The Strand Theater, featuring pop music through the ages, ‘50s to ‘80s! Rock out with Rick Hinkle and his Baby Boomers Gone Wild event at the Crimson Moon Café, featuring ‘60s and ‘70s covers! Come on out for a second helping of Skye Paige, “Queen of the Slide Guitar” and Danny B. Harvey at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack! And stomp on down to Smith’s Olde Barfor a night of vintage-inpired Texas country with Jeremy Steding & the Rebellion!

Ongoing

The Plaza Theaterscreens the 60th Anniversary restoration of Ishiro Honda’s GODZILLA (1954) through July 7!

The Plaza Theater’s retro cinema line-up, including a Mad Max Marathon, featuring all three George Miller action flicks: MAD MAX (1979), MAD MAX 2: THE ROAD WARRIOR (1982) and MAD MAX: BEYOND THUNDER DOME (1985), a screening of the 50th Anniversary of Richard Lester’s A HARD DAYS NIGHT (1964) and  Ridley Scott’s classic creepy space thriller, ALIEN (1979), runs through July 10!

The Center for Puppetry Arts presents Dr. Seuss‘The Cat in the Hat’, running through July 20!

The High Museum gets revved during their ‘Dream Cars; Innovative Design, Visionary Dreams’ exhibit, featuring forward-thinking auto designs from 1932 to the present, running through September 7!

Nerd Film Mafia screenings at the Diesel Fueling Station following NerdCore Trivia, every last Tuesday of the month!

ICON 80s: Music Video Dance Night rocks out at the Famous Pub every Friday night with a different 80’s theme!

The Star Bar gets groovy with The Funk Godfather, DJ Romeo Cologne and DJ QuasiMandisco every Tuesday!

Steve’s Live Music’s Gypsy Jazz Brunch offers up a plate of Hot Club jamming and Parisian Swing with Kool Kool Kat Amy Pike and the Bonaventure Quartet from 12:30 to 3:30 pm every 2nd & 4th Sunday!

Boogie on down into Disco Hell at The Family Dog as DJ Quasi Mandisco delivers a night of classic funk, soul and disco the last Friday of every month

The Plaza Theater Time-Warps it up as they screen, THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975) every Friday night, featuring the live cast of Lips Down on Dixie at midnight!

Every first and third Mondays are Big Band Nights at Café 290, featuring Joe Gransden and his amazing 16-piece orchestra playing jazz and swing standards in the tradition of The Glen Miller Orchestra and other legendary groups.  Second and fourth Mondays are Bumpin the Mango, ‘The groove that makes you want to move!’

Every first Wednesday is the Graveyard Tavern’s Graveyard Swing Night, featuring the swingin’ jazz and boogie-woogie sounds of the Savoy Kings!

If you have a suggestion for a future event that should be included in This Week in Retro Atlanta or see something we missed, please email us at atlretro@gmail.com.

Category: This Week in ATLRetro | TAGS: None

Kool Kat of the Week: David Richardson, a.k.a. “Baby Doll Schultz,” Glams and Hams it up with Chris Buxbaum during Their “Schizophrenic Photogenic” Opening Party at Luckie Street Gallery!

Posted on: Jun 25th, 2014 By:

by Melanie Crew
Managing Editor/
Contributing Writer

Get dolled up in your sleaziest glam get-ups because David Richardson, a.k.a. “Baby Doll Schultz” and Kool Kat Chris (Beat) Buxbaum [December 2012; see ATLRetro’s Kool Kat feature on Chris Buxbaum, here] have a phantasmagoric ballyhoo of sizzlin’ sights, sounds and tastes awaiting your deviant little hearts at their “Schizophrenic Photogenic” opening event invading Luckie Street Gallary this Saturday, June 28, from 7 to 11 pm! So, get scandalous and strut your stuff down to the Luckie Street Gallary for a night of mischief and mayhem!

David has been rockin’ the glammed up club scene since the early ‘80s, donning provocative style and inventive transformative creations, birthing the evolution of his stage persona, “Baby Doll Schultz”!  In the late ‘80s to mid ‘90s, he was a member of Elaganza, a comedic drag troupe that performed at Atlanta hot spots: the White Dot, Blake’s, Backstreet, the Metro and various other clubs that have since closed. He’s performed with ATLRetro’s sci-fi vaudeville Burly-Q faves, Blast-Off Burlesque, was a member of The Anatomy Theatre, a band that combined electronica with performance art and even had the opportunity to portray his idol, Divine during performances at The Plaza Theatre’s screenings of John WatersFEMALE TROUBLE (1974) and PINK FLAMINGOS (1972)!

ATLRetro caught up with David for a quick interview about his love of dramatic costuming, his stimulating past performances, his love of John Waters and his upcoming rockin’ art show, “Schizophrenic Photogenic,” with Chris Buxbaum . And while you’re gettin’ voyeuristic with our little Q&A with David, experience Baby Doll Schultz in action with his former drag comedy troupe, Eleganza at the Metro, performing a parody of Tammy Faye Bakker, here.

ATLRetro: Your taste for the glamorous drag scene erupted in the early ’80s when you began getting dolled up while clubbing and performing at some infamous ATL hot spots, such as the White Dot, Blake’s, Backstreet and the Metro. What drew you to this energetic sub-culture of erotic and phantasmal proportions?

David Richardson: The fantasy and possibility that is inherent in nightlife has always had a lot of appeal for me. You can be anything or anyone you wish to be, if only for one night. You’re not required to be real or politically correct or anything. You can be a different person every night if that is your desire. The donning of makeup and dramatic attire is freeing in the sense that it allows one to play a character and inhibitions are lowered, thus allowing you to be more yourself and more the way you would like yourself to be.

Having rocked the glam club scene of the early ’80s to the ’90s, would you say the scene has changed? Any nostalgia for the old days? What would you say has improved?

The scene is definitely different now. There aren’t as many large clubs and 24-hour clubs are extinct. The average club-goer doesn’t put as much effort into their look now as back then, when everyone seemingly strived to be a fashion plate. That’s not to say it isn’t vibrant and fun today, because it is! The thing I miss most about the old days is the music; maybe because it was all new to me, but I prefer older music. Somehow it seems more meaningful. What I really dig about clubbing now is the young drag queens. They are really great. The makeup is more extreme, the looks are more fashion forward and they seem totally prepared when they hit the stage. I can’t tell you how many times I stumbled onto a stage, not knowing the words to my song and not having worked out a routine of any kind. Luckily my improvisational skills and the spontaneity of the moment saved me on more than one occasion!

You’ve shared the stage with our sci-fi punk vaudeville pals, Blast-Off Burlesque.  What was your favorite performance with them, and why?

My favorite was when we performed BARBARELLA (1968) at Dragon Con 2013 in the Glamour Geek Revue [See performance here]. It was my first time at Dragon Con and I loved it! There was such a sense of wonder and joy at Dragon Con; the dedication to costuming and achieving perfection in a look was completely evident. I got to play the “Great Tyrant”, complete with a golden unicorn horn. I made the costume for that show, which was covered with hundreds of hand-sewn feathers and took a full month to make. I am very proud of that look! I have loved every performance with Blast-Off Burlesque, but our show at Dragon Con 2013 was extra special!

Can you tell our readers a little about your glory days as a drag performer with the troupe, Eleganza?

We (Eleganza) lampooned the ‘70s and ‘80s, with our best shows being thematic. For example, we had a “Fashionquake,” where each member made a mini-collection with two models sporting fashions made of trash and disposable materials. All of our fabulous fashions were destroyed in the finale when an “earthquake” hit the club. We also had a STAR WARS night where all of the numbers were of a sci-fi nature. That night culminated in me wrestling a heckler, who was a collaborating performer planted in the audience, in a kiddie pool full of pork and beans, no less. We also had “The Joey Heatherton Bleach Marathon”, a new-wave night, a show that was a homage to the LOVE BOAT and our “Beautify America” night, where we did makeovers on audience members who we then attacked with cans of shaving cream. The troupe even created a feature length video, directed by David A. Moore, called HAVE YOU SEEN KRYSTLE LITE?, which premiered at Backstreet. The other members of Eleganza were Trina Saxxon, Clive Jackson, Superchic, Krystle Lite, Lurleen and Judy La Grange. We even had Lady Bunny as a special guest one night. Our performances were all pretty irreverent and unpolished, but we had a blast and did it with enthusiasm.

What can you tell our readers about your ’90s band, “The Anatomy Theatre”? And your rock opera play, “The Asylum” that you’d perform at the Masquerade?

The Anatomy Theatre was the brain child of my friend Myron, blending electronic music with performance-art theater. “The Asylum was an electronic rock opera of sorts set in an insane asylum. Myron was “Dr. Boris” and another friend, Carla, was “Nurse Needles”. They cured the patients by killing them. I played “Harold”, a psychosexual. My cure was electro shock therapy in an electric chair. Stacy, another friend, got a lobotomy with a power drill in the show while our friend Scott was given a scalpel to eviscerate himself. It was replete with gore and black humor. We performed the play three times at the Masquerade. Myron released two self-produced cassettes and performed numerous times, even opening for The Legendary Pink Dots and Frontline Assembly.

You’ve stated that you had the opportunity to play your favorite idol, “Divine”, on a few occasions during The Plaza’s screenings of FEMALE TROUBLE and PINK FLAMINGOS. What about her do you admire? Are there other drag queens you’d like to impersonate?

When I was a kid, I remember reading a review of PINK FLAMINGOS (1972) in the newspaper and it really fascinated me. I didn’t get to see the film until a decade later, on home video, and it got me hooked on John Waters and Divine. What inspires me most about Divine is the absolute fearlessness and ferocity she projected. She also showed me that big girls don’t have to hide in the shadows but can shake it up there with the best of them. I was really honored to play “Dawn Davenport” and “Babs Johnson” with Blast-Off Burlesque. It would be fun to impersonate Lady Bunny because her look is so iconic and recognizable.

You stated that in the late ’90s you withdrew from the rowdy nightlife and became ‘domesticated’.  It seems you’re back, and better than ever! What was the catalyst that drew you back into the fabulously raucous flame of female impersonation?

(It was a) Midlife crisis, I guess. I was wondering if my best years were behind me and decided not to withdraw quietly into seclusion. I returned to my passion, dressing up. I believe that my looks now are more accomplished and thoughtful, and I find inspiration everywhere. I even dream of outfits and concepts to hybridize into my collection of characters.

How did you and Chris (Beat) Buxbaum meet? You two seem to have a vibrant artistic relationship; one that screams out in the wicked art you two create. How did you become Chris’ saucy and sinister subject?

I met Chris Buxbaum back in the late 1980s. We had a ton of mutual friends. We didn’t actually start working together until about three years ago when he was photographing the fabulous performers of “Sukeban, a very creative group of individuals performing at My Sisters Room in East Atlanta Village [FENUXE, November 2010]. His photographs at “Sukeban eventually became his “Transformers show. From there, he approached me with the “Schizophrenic Photogenic project and naturally, I was intrigued. It doesn’t hurt that I’m a big old camera hog and a ham! It all seemed so natural and easy.

I also participated in a MODA (Museum of Design Atlanta) event with Chris and Kool Kat Caryn Grossman titled, “The South’s Next Wave: Design Challenge” [December 2012; see ATLRetro’s Kool Kat feature on Chris Buxbaum and Caryn Grossman, here]. During this event, an interior designer was paired with an object-maker and given a color theme to produce a vignette installation. They (Chris and Caryn) were paired with a fabulous cake-maker and given the color blue. The vignette was inspired by Marie Antoinette in a futuristic rococo boudoir setting. Our team went on to win the challenge, which was decided by patron’s votes for their favorite vignette.

What can our readers expect when they come to ‘Schizophrenic Photogenic’ at the LUCKIE STREET GALLERY?

A Happening! A Warhol Factory-style event is the goal of our opening. I’m very pleased and proud of what we have accomplished. The photos are stunning and hopefully each character depicted tells a story. We are encouraging patrons to attend decked out in the most extreme glamour-sleaze looks they can get their hands on. The best look will win a prize!

Do you have anything special planned for ‘Schizophrenic Photogenic’? A little rockin’ hell-raising and deviant shenanigans, maybe? Give our readers a little taste of what mischief and mahhh-velous mayhem they may find themselves mixed up in!

I will be getting into face for the bulk of the opening at a pink satin vanity, adding and layering more and more until my face is completely covered. I plan to be a cross between Liz Taylor in the film BOOM (1968) and Incan Princess Yma Sumac. A silent film, LA BOITE DE BIJOUTERIE, shot by Milford Earl Thomas, will be playing on loop for the duration of the night. There will also be live music performed by Weary Heads, featuring Chris’ son Henry Buxbaum on vocals and bass along with his band mate Andrew Boehnlein. Usually a very feedback noisy band, they are doing a special unplugged set that may include some glamorous and sexy covers. Drinks will be provided by Jennifer Betowt and Deep Eddy Vodka will be featuring four different flavored vodka cocktails!

What’s next for Baby Doll Schultz?

I fully expect the world to entertain me with experiences not yet anticipated! Foregoing such, I will create my own experiences, continuing to explore the magic of transformational costuming. There are many upcoming events which I will attend in order to support the creative efforts of others, but, as of now (for me) I am in the hands of vagabond winds and will set sail to whatever destination they take me.

What question do you wish somebody would ask you? And what’s the answer?

I wish someone would ask, “Are you bringing Disco back?” to which I would reply, “I’m bringing sexy back!”, but really, just kidding (I am bringing Disco back)! But seriously, to answer the question, I wish someone would ask me if I enjoy what I do. Too often I get asked where my ideas come from and how I come up with what I do. The answer is innate to who I am, so my looks and outfits come out of my experiences and what I want to portray. And the answer to whether if I enjoy what I do is a resounding, “Yes, yes, yes!”

Can you tell folks something about you that they don’t know already?

I am a big time movie buff; my favorites are the Italian Giallos of the ‘60s and ‘70s. Anything by Dario Argento of course, and there are also some wonderful offerings from Mario Bava. Any of the Giallos starring Edwige Fenech are stand outs for me!

All photos courtesy of Chris Buxbaum and used with permission.

Category: Kool Kat of the Week | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

This Week in Retro Atlanta, June 23-29, 2014

Posted on: Jun 23rd, 2014 By:

by Melanie Crew
Managing Editor/Contributing Writer

Retro Atlanta is the bee’s knees! Come on down and see what we’ve got on the Retro Menu for you this week! From old-school garage rock to punk to blues to films of yore, you won’t want to miss out on all the vintage shenanigans we’ve dug up for you! So, get out and get Retro!

Monday, June 23

Punk on down to WonderRoot for a night with Kidbrat, JoySpent, Diamond Thief and Sunday Whiskey!  Get retro, kiddie-style at Pallookaville’s vintage cinema extravaganza with The Polka Dotted Elephant Summer Cinema Club at 10 am, with their screenings of a DOGVILLE SHORT episode (1930), LANCELOT LINK episode (1970) and featuring Chris Noonan’s farmtastic classic, BABE (1995)! Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck fires up the blues at Blind Willie’s! Get funky and groove on down to Café 290 every second and fourth Monday of the month for a taste of Bumpin the Mango, ‘The groove that makes you want to move!’ Boogie on down to the Northside Tavern and spend an evening with Lola at her famous Monday Night Northside Jam!  And blues on down to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a side of Dry White Toast and some finger lickin’ BBQ! 

Tuesday, June 24

Stomp on down to Smith’s Olde Bar for a night with the Mississippi Shakedown and Light Beam Rider! Or make your way to Eddie’s Attic for a foot-stompin’ good time with Sundy Best! For a little Celtic bluegrass, come on down to Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs for Kelli Johnson, Jason Bailey and special guest, Barry Waldrep! Make your way to Big Tex for a night with Moira Nelligan & The Dixie Jigs and their old-fashioned Americana! Blues on down to Blind Willie’s for Blues Station! Boogie on down to The Star Bar and get groovy at The Funk Godfather, DJ Romeo Cologne’s Funk Royale featuring DJ Quasi Mandisco every Tuesday! Jam it up with Joe Gransden and his jazz jam session at Twain’s in Decatur every Tuesday at 9 pm! Or boogie on down to Darwin’s Burgers & Blues in Marietta for a taste of Bill Sheffield’s acoustic roots and blues! The Entertainment Crackers get bluesy with their folksy Americana at the Northside Tavern.  Spend the night with a 3000-year old warlord at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern during their screening of John Carpenter’s BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA (1986), during their Summer of Adventure series at 7:30 pm! And get your second helping of Kurt Russell in Carpenter’s flick at Diesel Filling Station during their screening after NerdCore Trivia!

Wednesday, June 25

Rock out grunge-era and garage rock-style at The Star Bar with Glen Iris, Dead Stars, Sharkmuffin and Blue Tower! Or punk on down to The Earl for Black Taxi, Vera Vera and Nobra Noma! Or maybe rock on down to The Drunken Unicorn for the Surrogates, Jail Weddings and The Merry GoRounds! It’s a Zydeco party at Smith’s Olde Bar with Cedric Watson &Bijou Creole! Blues on down to Blind Willie’s for a night of Chicago and West Coast blues with the Electromatics! Or have a rockin’ rendezvous at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a night of blues and funk with The Georgia Flood and some finger lickin’ BBQ! Or make your way to the Northside Tavern as Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck fires it up with his rockin’ blues! It’s Ladies Night at Johnny’s Hideaway which plays hits from Sinatra to Madonna for a generally mature crowd.  Chill out with Kurt Russell at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern during their screening of John Carpenter’s BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA (1986), during their Summer of Adventure series’ matinee screening at 11:30 am!

Thursday, June 26

It’s a night of outlaw folk and indie foot-stompin’ banjo at the Red Light Café with Brian Revels (City Mouse) & Luray and Them Wagoneers! Get your ‘70s rock fix at The Star Bar with Bigfoot and DiNOLA! It’s a night of adventure at the Fox Theatre’s Coca-ColaSummer Film Festival as they screen Steven Spielberg’s INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE (1989), at 7:30 pm with their guided Fox Theatre Movie Tours starting at 5 pm (See our Kool Kat Interview with projectionist Scott Hardin, here)! Stomp on down to The Variety Playhouse for a night with Tommy Emmanuel and Antsy McClain! Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs delivers a night of blues and funk with The Georgia Flood! Rock on down to The Earl for Band of Heathens and Waller! The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra presents their “Performance on the Promenade” event at Piedmont Park! Stagger on over to Noni’s Bar & Deli for their Bitter Heroes event featuring DJ Brian Parris as he gets charmingly morose with a little New-Wave, The Smiths and The Cure! Make your way to the Crimson Moon Café for The Tom & Julie Show featuring tributes to tunes from the 60s to the 90s every Thursday! The Northside Tavern gets rockin’ with a little Chicago/Delta blues of The Breeze Kings! Get your boogie on at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack, as Chickenshack featuring Eddie Tigner, delivers some honky-tonk blues! Darwin’s Burgers & Blues gets down and dirty at their Blues Jam hosted by The Cazanovas! Blues on down to Blind Willie’s for Sandra Hall & the Shadows! Trader Vic’s delivers a night of swanky soul and rock n roll with Bogey & the ViceroyQuartet! Get your boogie on at Mary’s, as the East Atlanta venue gets funky with their weekly Disco in the Village.  And it’s your last chance to catch John Carpenter’s BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA (1986) at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern, during their Summer of Adventure series at 7:30 pm!

Friday, June 27

It’s a night of old-school rock n roll at The Star Bar with Blake Rainey & His Demons’ record release show along with Clashinista and Anchor Bends! Get glam at The Plaza Theater as they screen Jason Miller’s documentary, THEPAST IS A GROTESQUE ANIMAL (2014) for a sneak peek into the life of Kevin Barnes, front man of the ‘90s indie pop band, of Montreal! Groove on down to the Red Light Café for gr8FLdude & frenz and Maynard Hicks & Co.! Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs delivers a night of rockin’ folk with Alex Guthrie and Jesse Tyler! For a night of psychedelic junkyard roots and Americana, stomp on down to Smith’s Olde Bar for Rolling Nowhere and Migrant Worker! Get gritty with a little Americana and cow punk at Eddie’s Attic with Alejandro Escovedo (The Nuns) and Betty Soo! Punk on down to The Highlander for The Mids, Magoo’s Heros and Space Coke! Back onthe Freakout rocks out at Big Tex! Get folkadelic at the Red Clay Theater with Trappers Cabin, The Law Band and special guest Varney Watson! Kool Kat Hot Rod Walt and the Psycho-DeVilles get revved at Motorheads in McDonough! Get your rockin’ punk fix at The Earl with WhiteMystery, Dinos Boys and Zoners! Or boogie on down into Disco Hell at The Family Dog as DJ Quasi Mandisco delivers a night of classic funk, soul and disco the last Friday of every month! Blues on down to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a taste of Fatback Deluxe! Rock on down to Blind Willie’s for DeltaMoon! Get funky at the Fernbank Museum of Natural History’s Martinis and IMAX event with Cadillac Jones! Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck delivers his Big Dang Band event featuring Lil’ Joe and The Atlanta Horns at the Northside Tavern while Darwin’s Burgers & Blues has Marty Manous! Spend an evening with the greatest women in music at The Strand Theater during their song and dance revue, Diva! Get legendary at the Chastain Park Amphitheatre with The Temptations and The Four Tops! Make your way to 529 for their ‘Movies Your Parents Like’ event at 3:30pm! Get the blues at Hottie Hawgs BBQ with Men in Blues! Get funky with Kool Kat VJ Anthony at his Funkin’ Disco event, invading Famous Pub with a little funk, soul, Disco and Pee-Wee from 10pm to 3am! And as always, Time-Warp it up and get naughty with some uber musically-inclined transsexual aliens at The Plaza Theater as they continue their tradition of screening THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975) every Friday night, featuring the live cast of Lips Down on Dixie at midnight!

Saturday, June 28

It’s day one of the 2nd Annual Old Fourth Ward Arts Festival presented by the Historic Fourth Ward Park Conservancy! Stomp on down and help celebrate the arts and rich history with Midnight Risers, BattlefieldCollective, Adam Klein and Faithless Town! Or make your way to the Luckie Street Gallary for Chris (Beat) Buxbaum’s wicked art and multi-media show, featuring his sassy subject, David Richardson! You won’t want to miss the photography, live performances, film, music and more! (Keep your eyes peeled for our Kool Kat Interview with David Richardson this week!)

Get some soul at the Red Light Café with Gareth Asher, Niko Moon and special guest, Chelsea Shag! For a night of retro power pop and garage rock, make your way to The Star Bar for Blasting Cap, Kenny Howe & the Wow! and Bruce Joyner & Atomic Clock! The Red Clay Theater delivers a night of retro-inspired indie folk rock with Griffin House! Throwing Muses delivers their ‘80s alt rock at Terminal West! Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo bring their 35th Anniversary Tour to the Chastain Park Amphitheatre with Rick Springfield! Get funky at the Elliott Street Pub with Georgia SoulCouncil! Bluegrass it up at The Family Dog with Copper Into Steel! Stomp on down to Big Tex for The Cohen Brothers! The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra presents their ‘Celebrate America’ concert at the VerizonWireless Amphitheatre playing patriotic favorites from Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture to Gershwin’s Summertime and more! It’s a Jukebox Giants song and dance musical revue at The Strand Theater, featuring pop music through the ages, ‘50s to ‘80s! Fat Matt’s Rib Shack gets the Dixie blues with Seminole Jackson! Rock out blues-style with House Rocker Johnson & the Shadows at Blind Willie’s! The Jeff Jensen Band delivers some blues and soul at Darwin’s Burgers & Blues! Get your second helping of Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck’s Big Dang Band event featuring Lil’ Joe and The Atlanta Horns at the Northside Tavern! It’s Black Out: Goth/Industrial Dance Night with Kool Kat VJ Anthony at the Famous Pub, dispensing a little Goth, ‘80s, post punk and industrial from 10pm to 3am! And as always, DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno late into the wee hours of the night.

Sunday, June 29

Stomp on down to Big Tex for their Bluegrass Brunch with David & ValerieMayfield!  Or follow the yellow brick road to the Fox Theatre for their Coca-ColaSummer Film Festival screening of the 1939 classic, THE WIZARDOF OZ at 2 pm with their guided Fox Theatre Movie Tours starting at 11:30 am! It’s day two of the 2nd Annual Old Fourth Ward Arts Festival, so come on down for the rockin’ tunes of SenoritAwesome, Truckstop Confidential and Sabbatical Year! Blues on down to The Family Dog for a night with Francine Reed & the Jez Graham Trio! Get your punk rock fix at The Earl with Merchandise, Ukiah Drag and The Pinecones! Shimmy on down to the Red Light Café for a night of Motown shenanigans with Sadie Hawkins and her “Burlesque Battle of the Babes”, Last Pasties Standing: Motown Showdown event! Men of Motown boogie down during their song and dance revival at The Strand Theater!

Ongoing

The Atlanta Lyric Theatre spams it up during their presentation of Monty Python’s ‘Spamalot’ with music and lyrics by Eric Idle and John Du Prez, running through June 29! (LAST CHANCE!)

The Center for Puppetry Arts presents Dr. Seuss‘The Cat in the Hat’, running through July 20!

The High Museum gets revved during their ‘Dream Cars; Innovative Design, Visionary Dreams’ exhibit, featuring forward-thinking auto designs from 1932 to the present, running through September 7!

Nerd Film Mafia screenings at the Diesel Fueling Station following NerdCore Trivia, every last Tuesday of the month!

ICON 80s: Music Video Dance Night rocks out at the Famous Pub every Friday night with a different 80’s theme!

The Star Bar gets groovy with The Funk Godfather, DJ Romeo Cologne and DJ QuasiMandisco every Tuesday!

Steve’s Live Music’s Gypsy Jazz Brunch offers up a plate of Hot Club jamming and Parisian Swing with Kool Kool Kat Amy Pike and the Bonaventure Quartet from 12:30 to 3:30 pm every 2nd & 4th Sunday!

Boogie on down into Disco Hell at The Family Dog as DJ Quasi Mandisco delivers a night of classic funk, soul and disco the last Friday of every month

The Plaza Theater Time-Warps it up as they screen, THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975) every Friday night, featuring the live cast of Lips Down on Dixie at midnight!

Every first and third Mondays are Big Band Nights at Café 290, featuring Joe Gransden and his amazing 16-piece orchestra playing jazz and swing standards in the tradition of The Glen Miller Orchestra and other legendary groups.  Second and fourth Mondays are Bumpin the Mango, ‘The groove that makes you want to move!’

Every first Wednesday is the Graveyard Tavern’s Graveyard Swing Night, featuring the swingin’ jazz and boogie-woogie sounds of the Savoy Kings!

If you have a suggestion for a future event that should be included in This Week in Retro Atlanta or see something we missed, please email us at atlretro@gmail.com.

Category: This Week in ATLRetro | TAGS: None

This Week in Retro Atlanta, June 16-22, 2014

Posted on: Jun 16th, 2014 By:

by Melanie Crew
Managing Editor/Contributing Writer

This summer, Retro Atlanta is smokin’ hot! So, come on out and see what we’ve found for you ‘This Week’!  Get vintage with a whole lotta revved up rockin’ ‘billy! Or catch a wave and boogie down hula-style! Or catch a few retro flicks! Or maybe, get your blues and jazz fix! Whatever you do, get off that couch and live la vida Retro!

Monday, June 16

Cure those Monday blues with a rockin’ helping of old-time bluegrass punk and folk at WonderRoot with I want Whiskey, The Marrows, Amen Lucy, Amen and Bottle Kids! Kool Kat Hot Rod Walt and the Psycho-DeVilles get revved at Summit Racing in McDonough for their Monday Night Cruise! Get retro, kiddie-style at Pallookaville’s vintage cinema extravaganza with The Polka Dotted Elephant Summer Cinema Club at 10 am, with their screenings of a DOGVILLE SHORT episode (1930), LANCELOT LINK episode (1970) and featuring Rob Reiner’s THE PRINCESS BRIDE (1987)! Get low down and dirty with Marshall Ruffin at Blind Willie’s! Swing on by Big Band Night featuring Joe Gransden and his amazing 17-member orchestra at Café 290 every first and third Monday of the month.  Boogie on down to the Northside Tavern and spend an evening with Lola at her famous Monday Night Northside Jam!  And blues on down to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a side of Dry White Toast and some finger lickin’ BBQ! 

Tuesday, June 17

Get funky at Smith’s Olde Bar with The Main Squeeze and Those Cats! Or stomp on down to The Earl and catch Scott H. Biram, the “Dirty old one man band” delivering a night of blues, hillbilly and Americana country punk with Austin Lucas! Get folksy at Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs with NikkiTalley! Stomp on down to Big Tex for a night with Moira Nelligan & The Dixie Jigs and their old-fashioned Americana! The Hollidays deliver a night of rhythm soul and rock ‘n’ roll at Blind Willie’s! Boogie on down to The Star Bar and get groovy at The Funk Godfather, DJ Romeo Cologne’s Funk Royale featuring DJ Quasi Mandisco every Tuesday! Jam it up with Joe Gransden and his jazz jam session at Twain’s in Decatur every Tuesday at 9 pm! Or boogie on down to Darwin’s Burgers & Blues in Marietta for a taste of Bill Sheffield’s acoustic roots and blues! The Entertainment Crackers get bluesy with their folksy Americana at the Northside Tavern.  And go where no man has gone before at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern during their screening of Nicholas Meyer’s STAR TREK II: WRATH OF KHAN (1982), during their Summer of Adventure series at 7:30 pm!

Wednesday, June 18

Rock out N’awlins gypsy circus style at The Star Bar with the Dirty Bourbon River Show, Bad Friend and Six Ways to Sunday! For a night of David Lynchian rockabilly and boot stompin’ cow punk, rev on over to The Drunken Unicorn for Blood Oaks, Elsa Cross and Atomic Boogie! Get your fill of roots rock at Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs with Faithless Town, The Woodstocks and Mango Tango! Blues on down to Blind Willie’s for a night of bayou blues with Crawfish Supreme & the Blues Cocatoos! Smith’s Olde Bar delivers a night of funky reggae blues with Ajeva, Five40 and TraePierce & the T-Stone Band in the Atlanta Room. Or boogie on down to the Music Room for Jonathan “Boogie” Long! Or have a rockin’ rendezvous at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a night of blues and funk with The Georgia Flood and some finger lickin’ BBQ! Or make your way to the Northside Tavern as Danny ‘Mudcat’ Dudeck fires it up with his rockin’ blues! It’s Ladies Night at Johnny’s Hideaway which plays hits from Sinatra to Madonna for a generally mature crowd.  Live long and prosper at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern during their screening of Nicholas Meyer’s STAR TREK II: WRATH OF KHAN (1982), during their Summer of Adventure series’ matinee screening at 11:30 am!

Thursday, June 19

Shake your groove thing and boogie on over to the Euclid Avenue Yacht Club for Blast Off Burlesque’s Super Sexy Swingin’ ‘70s Bingo Night featuring burly Q shenanigans, prizes and more! The Fox Theatre’s Coca-Cola Summer Film Festival kicks off tonight with Phil Alden Robinson’s classic,  FIELD OF DREAMS (1989) at 7:30 pm with their guided Fox Theatre Movie Tours starting at 5 pm! So, come on down to the Fox Theatre and learn all about movie palaces, movie innovations still being used today while taking  a gander at the projection room and don’t forget to chat up our very own Kool Kat Scott Hardin, projectionist since 1978! ATL Collective performs CROSBY, STILLS AND NASH, in its entirety at Eddie’s Attic with The Shadowboxers! Stomp on down to the Red Light Café for a night of bluegrass with 16 Coaches! Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs delivers a night of roots rock with Donna Hopkins! Rock on down to the Clermont Lounge for a night with the King delivered by the Pelvis Breastlies! For a night of retro-inspired indie dream pop, make your way to The Earl for Misery LovesChachi, Highschool Sweetheart and Little Horn! The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra presents their “Performance on the Promenade” event at Piedmont Park with selections from Barber of Seville, Brahms’ Hungarian Dances, Tchaikovsky, Dvorak and more! Stagger on over to Noni’s Bar & Deli for their Bitter Heroes event featuring DJ Brian Parris as he gets charmingly morose with a little New-Wave, The Smiths and The Cure! Make your way to the Crimson Moon Café for The Tom & Julie Show featuring tributes to tunes from the 60s to the 90s every Thursday! The Northside Tavern gets rockin’ with a little Chicago/Delta blues of The Breeze Kings! Get your boogie on at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack, as Chickenshack featuring Eddie Tigner, delivers some honky-tonk blues! Darwin’s Burgers & Blues gets down and dirty at their Blues Jam hosted by The Cazanovas! Rock on down to Blind Willie’s for Heather Lutrell! Hula on down to Trader Vic’s for a couple Mai Tais and some cool island tunes! Get your boogie on at Mary’s, as the East Atlanta venue gets funky with their weekly Disco in the Village.  And it’s your last chance to voyage into the great beyond at the Northlake Festival Movie Tavern during their screening of Nicholas Meyer’s STAR TREK II: WRATH OF KHAN (1982), during their Summer of Adventure series at 7:30 pm!

Friday, June 20

Rock on down to The Star Bar for a night of garage rock and science punk with Tiger! Tiger!, Friendship Commanders and Leucine Zipper & ZincFingers! Honkytonk on down to Smith’s Olde Bar and get your roots rock fix with Dangermuffin and the Blue Dogs! It’s a night of retro covers, from the Beatles to the present, at Big Tex with The Old New Acoustic Revue! Montana Skies deliver their cello and guitar eclectic orchestra at the Crimson Moon Ca! It’s a night of rockin’ blues and country soul at the Red Clay Theater with Rhetta Butler & Company! Get your dirty swampy rock ‘n’ roll fix at The Earl with Tim & Eric’s Pusswhip Banggang and The El Caminos! Get funky with a little soul at the Red Light Café with Gibson Wilbanks and The Get Right Band! Xavier Rudd delivers a night of Australian and aboriginal folk, blues and reggae at The Variety Playhouse with Ash Grunwald! The Tone Prophets deliver a night of retro rock and blues at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack! Blues on down to Blind Willie’s for TheJarekus Singleton Band! Cha-cha on down to the Fernbank Museum of Natural History’s Martinis and IMAX event for Salsa Dance Night with the Salsambo Dance Studio! Stoney Brooks delivers a night of rockin’ blues at the Northside Tavern while Ralph Roddenberry rocks out folksy Americana style at Darwin’s Burgers & Blues! Rock on over to The Drunken Unicorn for a little roots rock with Cody Marlowe & the DeadFlowers! The Strand Theater gets really retro with their presentation of ‘TheCivil War: A Musical Experience’, featuring performances inspired by the words of Lincoln, Frederick Douglas and Walt Whitman, running through June 21! Get your fill of your favorite MTV videos with Kool Kat VJ Anthony at his Electro Light Electro Industrial Dance Night, invading Famous Pub with synth pop, electro & more! And as always, Time-Warp it up and get naughty with some uber musically-inclined transsexual aliens at The Plaza Theater as they continue their tradition of screening THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975) every Friday night, featuring the live cast of Lips Down on Dixie at midnight!

Saturday, June 21

Get revved with Kool Kat Rev. Andy at his Rock ‘n’ Roll Riot at the Masquerade featuring the McPherson Struts slingin’ their rockabilly cow punk, a little saucy seduction with The Chameleon Queen and Musee du Coeur; 2th9s Retro, Jezebel Blue and more offerin’ up their vintage wares and a whole lotta ‘billy, so put on yer dancin’ shoes and rock on out retro-style!  Or make your way outside to the Masquerade Music Park for the AtlantaSummer Beer Fest 2014, offering up a platter of tasty brews, delicious food and retro-inspired tunes with Electric Avenue, Zero Town, Kara Claudy, Wesley Cook, Norman Frank & the Ghost Dance and Waking the Bates from 4pm to 9pm! Hula on down to Bottle Rocket ATL for their 4th Annual Bottle Rocket Summer Luau, Clam Bake & Urban Regatta, featuring Kool Kat Joshua Longino with Andrew & the Disapyramids! Put on those dancin’ shoes and get ready for a night of retro rock, Motown, funk, Big Band and more at The Basement for Electric Western’s Keep on Movin’ Rock and Soul Dance Party! Or spend the night with The King at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Center during their “Heart of the King Tribute to Elvis” event, featuring top 70’s Elvis performer, Shaun Klush and Cody Ray Slaughter delivering his take on 50’s and 60’s Elvis! Honkytonk on down to Big Tex for a night with Kool Kat Phil Stair with Grim Rooster! It’s a night of retro rock at Eddie’s Attic with the Velvet Underground/Neil Young-inspired Five Eight, later followed by Those Darlins and The Head! Rock on down to Smith’s Olde Bar for Tyler Talks to Doors, Collins Drive and TheStacktone Slims! It’s a night of Americana roots rock’n blues at the Red Clay Theater with Roxie Watson and the Michelle Malone Banned! The Family Dog delivers Jessy Carolina & the Hot Mess and their early American roots and jazz! Rock out with The Stooge Brothers at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack! Sandra Hall & the Shadows get down and dirty at Blind Willie’s! Get a second helping of The Cazanovas at Darwin’s Burgers & Blues! The Northside Tavern gets the blues Chicago/Delta style with The Breeze Kings! And as always, DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno late into the wee hours of the night.

Sunday, June 22

Steve’s Live Music in Sandy Springs delivers their Gypsy Jazz Brunch offering up a plate of Hot Club jamming and Parisian Swing with Kool Kat Amy Pike and the Bonaventure Quartet from 12:30 to 3:30 pm every 2nd & 4th Sunday! Get your ‘dunch’ on at The Earl with the Georgia Mountain StringBand! Help pay tribute to a legend at Eddie’s Attic as they present ‘My Hometown: A Bruce Springsteen Celebration’, featuring performances of his hits by Claire Campbell (Hope for Agoldensummer), Drew Beskin (KoolKats The District Attorneys), Chris Stalcup, the Flint Hill Specials, Nathan Beaver, Rex Hussman, Kristen Englenz, Mike Killeen, Spencer Smith and more! Shimmy on down to the Red Light Café for a saucy southern burly Q extravaganza with The Savannah Sweet Tease Burlesque Revue! Stomp on down to Big Tex for their Bluegrass Brunch with the DecaturBluegrass Association (D.B.A.)! Men of Motown boogie down during their song and dance revival at The Strand Theater! And rock on down to Terminal West for The David Wax Museum! And spend the afternoon at the Fox Theatre’s Coca-ColaSummer Film Festival as they screen Ernest B. Shoedsack and Merian C. Cooper’s monster classic, KING KONG (1933) at 2 pm, with their guided Fox Theatre Movie Tours starting at 11 am!

Ongoing

The Atlanta Lyric Theatre spams it up during their presentation of Monty Python’s ‘Spamalot’ with music and lyrics by Eric Idle and John Du Prez, running through June 29!

The Center for Puppetry Arts presents Dr. Seuss‘The Cat in the Hat’, running through July 20!

The High Museum gets revved during their ‘Dream Cars; Innovative Design, Visionary Dreams’ exhibit, featuring forward-thinking auto designs from 1932 to the present, running through September 7!

Nerd Film Mafia screenings at the Diesel Fueling Station following NerdCore Trivia, every last Tuesday of the month!

ICON 80s: Music Video Dance Night rocks out at the Famous Pub every Friday night with a different 80’s theme!

The Star Bar gets groovy with The Funk Godfather, DJ Romeo Cologne and DJ QuasiMandisco every Tuesday!

Steve’s Live Music’s Gypsy Jazz Brunch offers up a plate of Hot Club jamming and Parisian Swing with Kool Kool Kat Amy Pike and the Bonaventure Quartet from 12:30 to 3:30 pm every 2nd & 4th Sunday!

Boogie on down into Disco Hell at The Family Dog as DJ Quasi Mandisco delivers a night of classic funk, soul and disco the last Friday of every month

The Plaza Theater Time-Warps it up as they screen, THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (1975) every Friday night, featuring the live cast of Lips Down on Dixie at midnight!

Every first and third Mondays are Big Band Nights at Café 290, featuring Joe Gransden and his amazing 16-piece orchestra playing jazz and swing standards in the tradition of The Glen Miller Orchestra and other legendary groups.  Second and fourth Mondays are Bumpin the Mango, ‘The groove that makes you want to move!’

Every first Wednesday is the Graveyard Tavern’s Graveyard Swing Night, featuring the swingin’ jazz and boogie-woogie sounds of the Savoy Kings!

If you have a suggestion for a future event that should be included in This Week in Retro Atlanta or see something we missed, please email us at atlretro@gmail.com.

Category: This Week in ATLRetro | TAGS: None

The Revolution Will Be Served: Jeff “Beachbum” Berry Mixes at the Hukilau and Takes us Through the Past, Present, and Future of Tiki

Posted on: Jun 11th, 2014 By:

By S.J. Chambers
Contributing Writer

From Wed. June 11 through Sun. June 15, Ft. Lauderdale, FL will be getting the Tiki treatment as enthusiasts seeking “a mini-vacation” replete with umbrella-garnished drinks and exotica tunes gather at the Bahia Mar Resort for the 13th annual Hukilau. It sounds just like the type of vintage vacation ATLRetro needs, so we will be on location sending you social media postcards from the event.

Tagged as the world’s most authentic Tiki event and founded by Christie “Tiki Kiliki” White, Hukilau has been keeping this retro culture of Polynesian kitsch and tropical libations alive and well since 2002, where the first festivities were Atlanta-born at Trader Vics. The event ventured South in 2003, to honor the Mai Kai Restaurant, one of the last original Tiki establishments left that serves Don the Beachcomber’s original recipes while entertaining dinners with an authentic Luau floor show. Each year has always outdone the last, bringing out performers such as Robert Drasnin and Los Straitjackets, renowned artists like Swag and Bosko, and the foremost Tiki gurus like Sven Kirsten, and Duda Leite. This year looks to be no different as the Hukilau has a full schedule of musical acts like The Intoxicators, performances by Marina the Fire-Eating Mermaid (Medusirena), and seminars by cocktail historians Philip Greene and Jeff Beachbum” Berry.

Jeff "Beachbum" Berry. Photo by Rimas Zailskas.

With six books and two apps based on his tropical findings, Berry is the foremost mixologist of Tiki Drinks, and has become the most sought-after consultant and critic of the Tiki and retro-bar scene. He was included among “25 Most Influential Cocktail Personalities of the Past Century” by IMBIBE magazine and has been called “one of the instigators of the cocktail revolution” by ESQUIRE. In addition to that, he has been featured and published in BON APPÉTIT, FOOD & WINE, NEW YORK TIMES, WINE ENTHUSIAST, among many other premier publications, and has had his drinks served in the premier bars around the world like Paris’ Le Tiki Lounge, San Francisco’s The Smuggler’s Cove, and the Windy City’s new Three Dots and A Dash.

His latest book, POTIONS OF THE CARIBBEAN, is a riveting coffeetable-style book that traces the Tiki cocktail’s main ingredient, rum, through its inception as a West Indie intoxicant and its evolution to becoming the main ingredient to the 1950s U.S. Tiki craze.

In his introduction, he writes that: “POTIONS is basically an answer to a question I asked myself 30 years ago, sitting in a restaurant I couldn’t afford while sipping a drink I didn’t understand. The restaurant was Trader Vic’s, the drink a Navy Grog. Why did I like this drink as much as I did? Where did it come from? Why couldn’t I figure out what was in it?” It would take sussing out the problem in four books until the a-ha moment occurred: “…it finally began to dawn on me that, almost without exception, the drinks served in my beloved South Pacific-themed restaurants and bars all had their roots in the Caribbean. For more years, than I care to admit, I’d been swimming in the wrong ocean.”

Berry could not find any text that made the Tiki/Caribbean connection, so he set out to create that text, and POTIONS was the result. The Caribbean, of course, is not a light topic, and its bloody history of colonial conquest and Imperialism makes for subject matter darker than the oldest, molasses-infused rum. Under another’s pen, a book about this region could be daunting and obviously depressing, but with rum and cocktail archeology as the book’s focal point, Berry is able to write in a smart and anecdotal manner that makes for fast and enjoyable reading while not shying away from the West Indies brutality. Plus, it is chock full of historical and delicious recipes, including 16 unpublished recipes as well as 19 unpublished in book form.

ATLRetro was fortunate enough to pre-game with the Beachbum and discuss his new book, as well as get the scoop on his TOTAL TIKI app, his Hukilau seminar, and the future of Tiki. We worked up such a thirst, he was kind enough to share with us his honorary recipe he crafted for the annual occasion. Mahalo!

How long have you participated with the Hukilau. This is its 13th year? What do you think its biggest contribution to Tiki culture has been?

I think I’ve been going since 2006. And I haven’t missed one yet.

I think what it has done is served as a kind of a matrix for every aspect of Tiki culture on the Eastern seaboard. It’s provided a focal point for everybody to gather and exchange what we found, because it’s all vintage stuff, but it’s like people that live in New York, or they live in Washington, DC, or they live in Louisiana, or they live in Tennessee, and they find things at thrift stores and swap meets, and there’s really not a whole lot of people in a 100 miles radius, sometimes, of you that are into this stuff. So what the Hukilau does [is lets] you can bring all this new stuff you’ve found there and either share it, or sell it, or make people aware of it, and it’s kind of added to the knowledge bank of what the mid-century Tiki scene was like and what existed then, and it’s also a great way for people to compare notes…even what everyone [is] wearing. It even comes down to that sometimes….

It’s that, it’s the music, the actual history, the archeology, cuisine and drinks. The Hukilau provides this short gathering and exchange for all [of] this stuff. I think what’s specific to Tiki culture [is that] people bring that back with them, and they feel like that there is a Tiki culture and its not just something they’re into and nobody knows what it is; that there is this shared subculture they can all be a part of, and that kind of fosters the culture and stresses it and deepens it.

You will be presenting your sold-out seminar Tikis Dark Ages: From Fern Bars to Rebirththis Thursday. What can attendees look forward too?

What the seminar is going to be about is mostly the 1980s and the 1990s—those were Tiki’s dark ages. That’s when the whole Tiki craze crashed in the 70s with the dawn of disco and margaritas took over for Mai Tais and everything that we know and love…just kind of crashed and the dark ages ensued when you couldn’t get a decent drink, and it all seemed like it was totally hopeless to ever see that stuff come back again.

I think everybody at the Hukilau probably lived through the Tiki dark ages. It isn’t really a young crowd; everybody was around and drinking in the 80s and 90s, most of them anyway. So, I think it will be more of a personal story of how the whole revival came about, out of the ashes, if you will.

When did the revival begin to surface again?

It surfaced in little pockets around the country. Before the Internet, you had a big resurgence of it in Southern California, because it never totally, really went away. There was beach culture, there was surf culture, hot rod culture, the whole lounge music revival and rat pack stuff, rockabilly, tattoo culture, and all that stuff was just sort of this subcultural stew in L.A. in the 90s, and Tiki was part of it. It was just one aspect of it, and nobody really differentiated between any of these things—it was all just underground retro culture—and then Tiki kind of broke off and came in to its own in the early 2000s.

The internet vulcanized the whole underground subculture thing, and everybody sort of became into one thing more than another thing. So Tiki branched off—and then you were either into hot rods, or into rockabilly, or you were into Tiki. It wasn’t like you were into all of that stuff, which everybody originally was, and then everybody focused on what they loved the best because they had groups and chat rooms, like Tiki Central, where they could geek out on it all.

So, the Internet was a huge factor in the Tiki revival in the late 90s, early aughts, and then the cocktail revival [happened.] So, that whole craft cocktail scene, which really looked down its nose at Tiki in the beginning–nobody wanted to touch Tiki drinks with a 10-foot pole; if you ran a craft cocktail bar, you were doing pre-prohibition and 19th century classics–but eventually they started to see the worth of the drinks, and they embraced it, and that really helped lift Tiki up. Because once Tiki drinks became popular, Tiki bars started opening again and more mainstream articles were written about it, and now we are where we are.

That is interesting that the craft cocktail revival didnt embrace Tiki at first, and that touches on something Ive always been puzzled about, and that there seems to be two different craft cocktail schools of thought. Theres the people who worship Hemingway, Fitzgerald, the roaring twentiesand now that seems to be coming through MAD MENthen theres the Tiki componentthe tropical, Polynesian vibeand Ive always been puzzled how the two were related or not related to each other. In your book, when you immediately make the point that actually all these tropical drinks come from the Caribbean and not the South Pacific as they are themed, and when you get into Hemingway and Cuba and the art of the daiquiri, it begins to make sense the two worlds should co-habit, but it seems like the people who are interested in one cocktail culture over the other have different vibes they are going for. I cant see the Don Draper wanna-bes hanging out with the Trader Dons.

Potions of the Caribbean

POTIONS OF THE CARIBBEAN (Cocktail Kingdom) is the sixth book in Jeff Berry's Beachbum Berry series.

That’s a really good point and it’s something that’s getting shaken out right now. I was just in Chicago in February…I checked out a lot of the new super high-end craft cocktail bars that were not Tiki, and they all had Tiki drinks on them! Like, there’s one drink called the Jungle Bird, which you can get at every craft cocktail bar now—craft cocktail bartenders love it because there is Campari in it, that’s their gateway to Tiki drinks—but you can go to a non-Tiki craft cocktail bar in Berlin, London, Dubai, Tokyo, New York, San Francisco, and you will find tiki drinks on the menu now. Almost all of them do the original Trader Vic Mai Tai, the Jungle Bird, most of them will do a Zombie. They’re all starting to embrace it…. I think once all those prejudices—that you have to be pre-prohibition, or you’re Tiki, or that you are this or that—is all starting to meld into one general cocktail vibe. And Tiki drinks are taking their place in the canon alongside all the Jerry Thomas stuff, and the Fitzgerald stuff, and all that.

MAD MEN was actually kind of a synthesizer for Tiki. I forget what season it was, but there’s one season where Don Draper and one of his potential mistresses are hanging out in a hotel bar drinking Tiki drinks, and then the next season they ended up in Hawaii and at the Royal Hawaiian. [See “The Doorway,” episode 1 of season 6]. Tiki was a huge part of the MAD MEN era and a huge part of the sixties, and they paid attention to that in several of the episodes. I haven’t binged out on the last season or two, but they were definitely moving in that direction before I stopped keeping track of it.

A sense of travel was integral to the whole backyard Polynesianlifestyle back in Don Drapers time, which stemmed from so many having served in the South Seas, and the nostalgia they would feel for the Pacific when back in civilian life. If they experienced an aspect of the Polynesian lifestyle first hand, why did they not care that the drinks they were drinking were not from the place they were travelingtoo?

You just hit on the entire theme of Sven Kirsten’s books, and the $64,000 question about this whole thing. Nothing about Tiki is authentic; it’s all faux. It’s all this made up mid-century American faux-naive take on primitive culture. Anything exotic, anything that was the other—if you look at record albums from the 50s—exotica music—you saw voodoo mixed up with Hawaii mixed up with African drums mixed up with Samba. It didn’t matter to these people as long as it was exotic and not red-blooded, bland, Eisenhower America. They just sort of lumped it all together in this umbrella term of exotica…and you go to Tiki places where there’d be African masks that had nothing to do with Oceania and it didn’t really concern anybody in the American middle-class suburban culture of the 50s and 60s that this stuff wasn’t authentic.… People took lots and lots of liberties, and Sven touches on this in his last book.

So is that the modern appeal of Tikithe pure fantasy? That its a packaged idea you can play within?

This cocktail guy named Robert Hess summed it up when someone asked him what he thought Tiki meant, and he thought it was a mini-vacation. And I think that’s why the trend is going mainstream. It’s not so much a sub-culture theme anymore, it’s big money now.

There’s a place in Chicago called Three Dots and a Dash serving 2000 drinks a night, and it’s a Tiki bar, and it’s expensive and it has a velvet rope where people wait to get in. That’s what’s happening to Tiki right now, and certainly that’s what’s been happening for years in places like London, like at Mahiki, where Madonna and the Royal Family go drop thousand of pounds a night. So what you’re finding is it’s this mini-vacation and I think people are into that. The worst it can get with the economy and the political situation, with global warming, with all the things that can kill you or ruin your life, that’s all good for Tiki. People flock to Tiki bars and the worse it can get the better Tiki bars are. It’s a mini-vacation, an escape.

Lets talk about the TOTAL TIKI app, which features 250 exotic recipes based on your research for original recipes as well as your own concoctions. You mentioned earlier that everyone at the Hukilau are an older crowd and that there arent going to be that many millennials thereis Total Tiki an attempt to pull millennials into the fold?

Absolutely! When I was in my 20s looking for a good drink and couldn’t find one, I started looking in used bookstores in the cocktail book section, and going to swap meets looking for old menus, or went to the library, because, I grew up in Southern California and knew the names of these places, and so had a starting point. But, I really wish there had been books like the Beachbum books or this app, to know what people were drinking in the 1950s, 70s. I found all my stuff in thrift stores, so if somebody goes to a thrift store in the year 2050 and finds POTIONS OF THE CARIBBEAN, or, I guess there may not be books anymore, so they go online and find the app, they can take the pulse of what people were drinking in our age, and that would be really cool. That was what I was looking for—[what were people drinking] in a previous age. But, yes, definitely, the app is an attempt to introduce this style of drinking to people who would not ordinarily have been exposed to it just because they weren’t around it during it.

And millennials—the younger bartenders who I meet are totally into it. It’s not an easy thing to master. It’s one thing to make a perfect three-ingredient, pre-prohibition drink, or master the Manhattan, or the Old Fashioned, but to take an eight to 10 ingredient Don the Beachcomber-style punch and balance that out and make it work, and make everything that is in play serve the drink, that’s not an easy thing to do. So it is a good way for bartenders to stretch their muscles and expand their repertoire. They really get into it once they’re exposed to it.

One of the things I really enjoyed about the book was that you were able to implicitly explain the trinity basis (rum, lime, and sugar) of a good tropical cocktail and give a basis of balanced drinks. I really found the evolution of how we think of drinking fascinating, i.e, with prohibition, people began to drink weak to strong, and then afterwards people like Hemingway promoted strong to weak, and from there how everything has perhaps gotten a little out of balance, especially in the dark ages, as youve said. So, where are we noware we all making crappy cocktails thanks to Papas instructions, or?

I didn’t mean to come off in the book as someone pointing fingers on drink-making today. I think we’re living in a Golden Age. The book stops in the 1990s, when things became really horrible–you know, the whole Jimmy Buffet, boat-drink thing, and the Miami Vices. It doesn’t really encompass the revival, the cocktail revolution, which we’re living through now. Drinks from the Caribbean aren’t that good now, because it’s all just tourist and cruise-ship drinks, but in the States, and really around the world, the cocktails have never been better, as far as I’m concerned.

I think if you took someone from pre-prohibition America and put them in 2014, in New York, I think they’d be much happier drinking now than they were then. I think there is an incredible amount of talent out there. There’s a whole new way of looking at drinks, the whole farm-to-glass thing, where people are paying a lot more attention to ingredients and are using ingredients that would have only been used in food before, and we also have stuff available to us now…spices, flavorings, fruits, herbs that never would have been available to anybody in that quantity before. It really is a great time to be alive in drinking, I think.

What the book is mostly trying to do, is just to take a look back and sort everything out. To me, the one other book out there that really gave me—I mean every time I looked up Caribbean drinks there were a few recipes here, or there were a few paragraphs in a book there, or they were general histories of the Caribbean which didn’t mention drinks at all, which I thought was weird because drinks played a huge part of it. I learned as I went. I didn’t really know a whole lot about it. I wanted to know a whole lot about it. I wanted to read that book, so I had to write it, basically.

The intent was to contextualize the drinks. Daiquiri, Mojito, Planter’s Punch—where do they come from, and how do they fit into the local cultures that gave birth to them? Who did they inspire? I mean, in this case, they inspired Trader Vic and Don the Beachcomber, and all the stuff that we love, so that’s what the book was. I was just trying to give a context of these drinks that are just floating out there, and there are bits and pieces about them on the Internet. And there is a lot of misinformation about them too, completely unsupported nonsense is printed on the Internet and it goes viral and everyone thinks it’s correct, and I ran into a lot of that, and I didn’t know the difference either until I started doing research for the book. So, it’s just a history of what’s come before, and of course it’d be a great bonus for people who are reading it—Millennials reading it now who work in the cocktail industry—to find inspiration in it, and it does seem to be happening, at least here in New Orleans. I’ve talked to a lot of the local bartenders who are taking it and running with it and adapting some of the old recipes they’ve found in it.

So, now, all that knowledge and research is going to go into your own bar in New Orleans?

Yes! I’ve always said that I didn’t want to open a bar because it was too much work, and I wasn’t kidding, it really is a lot of work. But, my wife Annene [Kaye] and I are foisting ahead. It’s going to open in September, and it’s called Latitude 29, and it will be a Tiki bar. New Orleans doesn’t really have a full-scale Tiki bar/restaurant, luckily for us, so we’re hoping we’re going to be the first. We’ve got Bosko, the legendary Tiki carver/ceramist, doing our interior…, and the head bartender, Steven Yamada, is going to be coming down to the Hukilau with me and helping me with the seminar too.

Beachbum drink recipe

BEACHBUM'S OWN. Photo by Annene Kaye

So you are not going to be writing for a while.

Yeah, I’m a saloon keeper now, and I’m putting away the keyboard for a while and giving this a go and seeing how we do. The bar is the new work. I am writing a menu for it, and that’s the writing I’m going to be doing is writing the menu. It’s really cool to have a home forthe drinks and to be able to serve them to the best of my ability to people. That’s going to be really cool. That’s the next step in the evolution. I’ve been writing about them for a while now, and now I’m actually going to get to make some of them. I’m really looking forward to that whole chapter.

BEACHBUM’S OWN
(this exclusive recipe will be served at the Hukilau by Jeff Berry)
3/4 ounce fresh lemon juice
3/4 ounce unsweetened pineapple juice
3/4 ounce orange juice
3/4 ounce passion fruit purée
3/4 ounce Licor 43
1 1/4 ounces El Dorado 5-year Demerara rum
1 1/2 ounces light Puerto Rican rum
Shake well with plenty of crushed ice. Pour unstrained into a Beachbum Berry mug (pictured) or a double old-fashioned glass.
 

S. J. Chambers is a writer from Tallahassee, FL. When not found drafting pool-side, she is sublimity-seeking on the road, or in the air, and sometimes in a glass. I often have insomnia and suffer from Ativan panic disorder. She blogs irregularly at www.selenachambers.wordpress.com.

Category: Features, Wednesday Happy Hour & Supper Club | TAGS: None

Kool Kat of the Week: October and Beyond; Mary Fahl & the Wolves of Midwinter

Posted on: Jun 10th, 2014 By:

by Anthony Taylor
Contributing Writer

Eddie Owen presents Mary Fahl in concert Saturday, June 14 at the Red Clay Theater, in Duluth, GA at 8 pm. For tickets and additional information call (404) 478-2749 or go here.

Mary Fahl’s soaring contralto vocals first gained public notice with her debut album as lead vocalist and co-founder of October Project, with their self-titled album (“October Project),  on Epic Records in 1993. The combination of Julie Flanders’ lyrics, Emil Adler’s melodies and Fahl’s controlled “banshee wail” created an unforgettable musical storm of an LP which spawned the hits, “Return To Me” and “Ariel.” October Project toured in support of Crash Test Dummies and Sarah McLachlan to positive reviews. The band’s second album, FALLING FARTHER IN, showed artistic growth and was well received critically, but failed to chart significantly. After a headlining tour of the U.S., the band was dropped by their label and parted ways. The band has since reformed without Fahl, and is now a trio with Flanders, Adler and original OP keyboardist and vocalist Marina Bellica.

Fahl went on to a solo recording career, releasing  THE OTHER SIDE OF TIME in 2003, FROM THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON in 2011 and LOVE AND GRAVITY in late 2013. Though she frequently plays in the northeastern states, Saturday’s show at the Red Clay Theater in Duluth marks her first performance in Georgia since her days with  October Project.

ATLRetro: October Project played a great show at the Buckhead Theater and had a memorable live performance on 99x radio in 1994. What took you so long to come back to the south?

Mary Fahl: It was logistics mostly. Atlanta is a long way from home and with the loss of 99X I was not sure I was getting any airplay in the region. 99X broke October Project in a really big way and that show at the Buckhead Theater was amazing for us.

Is your show on Saturday with a backing band, or a solo acoustic setup?

This will be a solo acoustic show.

Tell folks about your songwriting process. What comes first, music or lyrics?

In most cases, the music comes first. That being said, I keep notebooks all over my house just in case I hear something interesting or have an idea. Those notes often end up in my songs.

You’ve talked of your love for Dusty Springfield, Pink Floyd and Bob Dylan in the past. What new music are you listening to?

I listen to a lot of film score composers mostly. My current favorite is Alexander Desplat. As for singer/songwriters, I love Laura Veirs, Sufjan Stevens, Gillian Welch and Ane Brun. There are so many!

First Aid Kit seem to be influenced by you and by your own influences (their song “Emmylou” covers similar ground to your “Like Johnny Loved June”). How do you see your legacy asserting itself?

Interesting you should mention First Aid Kit. I just discovered them! As for any legacy, that is so hard to say. I suppose time will tell. Sometimes all it takes is one person who listened to you when they were young. My sound grew out of the British Folk sound of the ‘70s with Sandy Denny, Linda Thompson, that sort of thing. Nobody sounds like that now.

Youtube is full of videos of you singing with OP and solo singing covers and originals as well. What will fans see at your show at Red Clay Theater?

I will do some OP, lots of my own songs, some covers and of course some DARK SIDE OF THE MOON. I like to give my audience the performance equivalent to a full, rich meal.

How did you get involved with Anne Rice and THE WOLVES OF MIDWINTER? “Exiles,” the song chosen for Rice’s audio book of the novel, is on your latest album, “Love & Gravity”. What else should we know about the album?

Anne wrote me a letter two years ago after she discovered that October Project had hoped to get a song into the movie version of INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE. When my album was nearly complete, I asked her if she wanted a copy and she said she did. She was going to be in New York City, so I sent my publicist over with a copy. Afterward, Anne handed her a galley of  THE WOLVES OF MIDWINTER inscribed to me, with, “Tell Mary she’s in the book.” My publicist immediately volunteered me to write a song for the audio book version of the novel. Only later did I find out that I only had 10 days to get the song written, recorded, mixed and mastered. Needless to say, much nail-biting and nausea ensued, but Anne’s writing is so powerful and vivid, it made it easy for me to immerse myself in the world of the characters and the song kind of wrote itself. I was also fortunate to have John Lissauer as my co-writer/producer. I brought the lyrics to him and he came up with a fabulous, very moody and dramatic melody that perfectly evoked the mystery and sensuality of the book. I haven’t heard anything about a film version of the book, but I think it would make a fabulous movie.

As for the rest of the album, most of the songs came out of the life I was living for the past six years. They were songs that I had to be able to render with just myself and a guitar if need be. You have to realize, I write a lot of songs, but I shelve a good portion of them. Any song I do on a regular basis has to be one that has stood the audience test and I have to find something new in a song every time I sing it. A song has to get to me every time or it just won’t make the cut. That being said, I love “How Much Love.” It’s one of the few songs on the record I didn’t write. It was written by Patsy Foster.  I heard the song in a record store in Philadelphia 20 years ago and always wanted to cover it. It’s really special when you hear a song for the first time and immediately fall in love with it. I also love “Gravity: Move Mountains, Turn Rivers Around.” There’s a line in the song “I’ve seen you move mountains, turn rivers around, defy the force of gravity with both feet on the ground.” It was written for my husband, who, in the words of the wonderful author/healer Caroline Myss, “defies gravity.”

Time heals all wounds. Any chance of a reunion with October Project?

Time does heal, but a reunion is difficult to fathom. We’ve all moved on. I sincerely doubt they’d want it and me with all the wonderful experience I’ve garnered since OP broke up, could never go back to that kind of a situation.

Step into the time machine and give some advice to eighteen-year-old Mary Fahl.

Hmmm, “Believe in yourself – and practice your guitar!!”

Anthony Taylor is a writer and an expert on retro-futurism, classic science fiction and horror films and television, and genre collectibles. He is the author of ARCTIC ADVENTURE!, an official Thunderbirds™ novel based on the iconic British television series by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson. His website is https://Taylorcosm.com

 

All photographs are courtesy of Mary Fahl and used with permission.

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RETRO REVIEW: Splatter Cinema and the Plaza Theatre Camp It Up at SLEEPAWAY CAMP!

Posted on: Jun 9th, 2014 By:

Splatter Cinema presents SLEEPAWAY CAMP (1983); Dir. Robert Hiltzik; Starring Felissa Rose and Jonathan Tiersten; Tuesday, June 10 @ 9:30 p.m. (free photos in a recreation of a scene from the film start @ 9:00 p.m.); Plaza Atlanta; Trailer here.

By Aleck Bennett
Contributing Writer

Friday the 13th is upon us this week, and Splatter Cinema has taken the bold step of avoiding Crystal Lake altogether. Instead, they and the Plaza Theatre bring you a blood-soaked classic from another camp: Robert Hiltzik’s SLEEPAWAY CAMP!

Horror movies are disreputable. If you have any doubts about that, ask yourself how many horror films have won Oscars versus, say, movies from any other genre. Ask yourself how many times a horror movie has been handicapped right out of the gate by critics for simply being a horror film. Ask yourself how many times a great horror film has received only qualified praise (“it’s good…for a horror movie”).

So, yeah. Disreputable. Marginalized. Ostracized.

But slasher flicks? Doubly so. At least.

Sure, they’re typically formulaic. Then again, so are gangster pictures. So are westerns. So are films noir. (Nobody walks into DOUBLE INDEMNITY and thinks, “I’m sure Fred MacMurray is going to get out of this just fine.”) But limitations sometimes produce great art. John Carpenter’s HALLOWEEN? Great art. Hitchcock’s PSYCHO? Great art. Tobe Hooper’s THE TEXAS CHAIN SAW MASSACRE? Great art.

SLEEPAWAY CAMP? Well, not even I am going to argue that this is great, much less art. But it’s fascinating. Sure, it was obviously designed to capitalize on the whole “people are getting slaughtered at a summer camp” trend that was raking in bucketloads of cash in the 1980s, and as a knockoff of an already-critically-maligned series, it’s automatically more disreputable than most.  But it’s visceral and pulpy in a way that 90% of FRIDAY THE 13TH films most definitely aren’t. It constantly teeters on the brink of ridiculousness, has a definite and palpable sense of danger, and pulls off the most insane climax of any entry in the slasher movie subgenre.

The plot is paper-thin, seeming to be merely a hook upon which to hang multiple corpses. Introverted Angela and her protective cousin Ricky are sent to Camp Arawak for the summer. There, she is bullied and attacked by a series of people, all of whom wind up dead at the hand of an unseen killer stalking the campgrounds. Superficially, this doesn’t appear that different from most entries in the FRIDAY series. But one thing that sets SLEEPAWAY CAMP apart is whom the film targets.

Typically, in FRIDAY THE 13TH movies, most of the victims are the camp’s counselors and staff, generally vulnerable women (and the occasional vulnerable guy). Their deaths are all the more likely if they have just had sex, are contemplating having sex in the near future, or have a passing interest in potentially having sex at some point in their lives. But in SLEEPAWAY CAMP, most of the people who get killed are the campers themselves. In slasher cinema, this is generally not done. It’s out of bounds. Kids are innocents, and our killers’ knives are out for those who have transgressed some kind of warped code of adult morality. But not here. At Camp Arawak, the kids and adults are jerks and bullies, and nobody is safe. This alone would make the movie one of the more morally questionable entries in the slasher field. Add in the increasingly bizarre ways in which people are slaughtered (beehive? curling iron?) and you’ve got reprehensibility writ large.

But beyond the victims being targeted and the means of their destruction, what also makes this film stand out from its competitors is its relentlessly odd tone. There are tons of slashers that attempt to inject some humor into the mix, but few do it with as straight a face as this movie. Other films, for instance, might play up the character of camp owner Mel Costic as an over-the-top bit of comic relief, as he constantly tries to spin the series of outlandish murders as simple accidents. But while he’s obviously something of a caricature, he’s no more or less overtly comic than any other adult in the picture. He’s the equivalent of Paul Bartel in Joe Dante’s PIRANHA: a comic authority figure, but not a jokey figure. He is, at least, more relatable than Angela’s aunt Martha, who seems to exist in some weird state of hyper-eccentricity that feels like it’s been borrowed from some other movie altogether. The presence of renowned character actors like Mike Kellin (as the aforementioned Mel Costic) and Robert Earl Jones (father of James) lends a level of credence and gravity to these roles that would otherwise be ham-handedly played for comedic effect. As a whole, the character work in the movie seems to work on an almost delirious TWIN PEAKS-ish level, where we’re thrown off because what we’re seeing is funny, but it’s not parodic or written as explicit comedy. And when it combines with the horror of the film’s content, it’s…off-puttingly humorous.

And that’s not even getting into the whole psychosexual aspect of the movie that just traipses giddily all over the line dividing “sympathetic” and “offensive” and builds up to a twist ending that has left jaws firmly planted on floors since 1983.

Upon release, the movie was generally ignored as just another kids-at-camp-getting-killed flick. But even then, there were rumblings of this being something bigger than that. I remember, after first seeing it as a VHS rental, talking with friends of mine about how mind-blowingly nuts the movie was. How inventive the kills were. THAT ENDING. And in the years since, a sizable cult has grown up around this movie as tales of its oddball charms have circulated among horror fans. Today, the movie holds an impressive 82% favorable rating at RottenTomatoes.com. From critics who really ought to know better.

So here we have one of the more disreputable entries in arguably the most disreputable subgenre of an already disreputable genre. And it has developed a large following and overwhelmingly favorable critical consensus. It has traveled the full circle of sleaze all the way back around to ultimate acceptance, like someone made a John Waters movie completely by accident.

So take some time out of your busy mid-week schedule to visit the kids at camp. No, not Crystal Lake. The other one.

Aleck Bennett is a writer, blogger, pug warden, pop culture enthusiast, raconteur and bon vivant from the greater Atlanta area. Visit his blog at doctorsardonicus.wordpress.com

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