Monday, May 31, 2010

A Biography of WB Yeats


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William Butler Yeats was born in Dublin in 1865, the son of a well-known painter, John Butler Yeats. Yeats spent his childhood between Dublin, Sligo and London. Although born into the Protestant Ascendancy he became involved in the Celtic Revival which was a movement against the cultural influence of English rule in Ireland and which sought to promote the spirit of Irish native heritage.

In 1889, Yeats met Maud Gonne, then a twenty-three year old heiress and ardent Nationalist. Yeats developed an obsessive infatuation with her beauty and outspoken manner. She was to have a profound influence on his poetry and indeed on his life. He proposed to her four tines but each time was rejected partly due to his refusal to participate in her national activism.

In 1903 to Yeats' absolute horror she married the Irish nationalist Major John MacBride. In 1899, Yeats, Lady Gregory, Martyn, and George Moore established the Irish Literary Theatre for the purpose of performing Celtic and Irish plays. They opened the Abbey Theatre in December 1904, Yeats' play Cathleen Ni Houlihan featured on the opening night.

He married George Hyde-Lees in 1916, they went on to have two children Anne and Michael. He was appointed a senator of the Irish Free State in 1922. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1923, the prize led to a significant increase in the sales of his books, for the first time he had money and he was able to finally repay his debts. He died at the Hotel Ideal Sjour In Menton, France in 1939. He was buried in France but in 1948 his body was moved to Drumcliffe, Co. Sligo. His epitaph reads Cast a cold Eye/ On Life, on Death./ Horseman, pass by.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

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Friday, May 28, 2010

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Thursday, May 27, 2010

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Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Making Your Bach

Are musicians musical by nature, are athletes born to run, jump or swim?
Or are these skills as a result of their environment and socialisation?

Generally, it has been accepted that it is some combination of the two elements of nature and nurture that influence the development of an individual, and their specific competencies.
This study focuses on the significance of parents in the development of these specialised interests and skills. Musical ability has been chosen as a case study. The study covers the topic from the perspective of both parents and children and addresses the concepts of a musical brain, the potential genetic influence of parents, and the motivation and the methods used to create an environment conducive to the development of these skills.

This topic explores my macro world through the study of my cross-cultural component. This component addresses the role of parents in the development of other specialised interests and skills. In this case, I have chosen to study the development of skill and interest in athletic and sporting activities.

My initial hypothesis was that parental influence would be extensive, and relating to both genetics and the environment, however the degree and process would vary depending on the values, ideals and circumstances of the family, and on the chosen skill.

Creating Gene-iuses
The Genetic Role of Parents in the Development of Specialised Interests and Skills

Undoubtedly one of the most obvious and universal contributions to the development of a child by his or her parents is the passing on of their genetic material. This material, a combination of genes from both parents, contains base instructions for the individual to be created. This chapter recognises this significant contribution from parents on a social and cultural level and focuses on the perceptions of this and on whether or not these genetic instructions extend to the presence of innate abilities and skills, especially musical and athletic aptitudes.

In both musical and athletic endeavours there has been research in to the ideas of a "musical brain" and "raw" athletic talents. The foundation of these ideas is the genetic influence of parents on their children.

For example, extensive research has been conducted into the brains of talented musicians, in comparison with non-players. Researchers at Germany's University of Heidelberg studied the nerve cell "grey matter" in the auditory cortex of professional, amateur and non-musicians and found that musicians generally had more activity in this area and that even amateur musicians had 65% more brain matter in this area and the area was 37% more active. However, the researchers were still unable to determine whether the musicians had developed bigger brains through playing instruments or if having a bigger brain gave them musical ability. Another German study at the University of Tuebingen supports the latter, again exploring the notion of a musician's brain being "wired" differently for enhanced sound recognition and ability.

Evidence of a musical brain and genetic predisposition to musicality is further supported by familial case studies such as that involving the Bach family, and also studies of other musical prodigies. The presence of many musical prodigies in one family strongly suggests a genetic link, especially when outstanding ability is displayed much before environmental influences have had a lengthy time to socialise the child.

"This quality is one that develops so early in most marked cases that its innateness cannot be questioned. A Bach, matured at 22; a Beethoven, publishing his compositions at 13 and a Mendelssohn at 15, a Mozart, composing at 5 years, are the product of a particular protoplasm of whole tenacious qualities we come to realise when we learn that the Bach family comprised twenty eminent musicians and two-score others less eminent"

The presence of 40 talented musicians in a family, some of the most famous of which had musically matured on exiting adolescence, has strong implications for the presence of some genetic influence. The extent of this influence, with current data, is impossible to determine.

Similar cases supporting a genetic predisposition to a skill are found in studies of athletic ability. The concept of the 'born athlete' is one that supports the social glorification of our sports champions and motivates their high social status.

One of the most interesting and controversial studies of athletic superiority is Jon Entine's book, Taboo: Why Black Athletes Dominate Sports and Why We're Afraid to Talk About It. In his book, Entine makes it exceptionally obvious that people of African descent appear to have a natural flair for running faster and jumping higher than those of other ethnic backgrounds. While the issue of racism and superior races is frowned upon in sports, Entine's statements are not without justification:

"The qualifying time for the men's 100 meters for this year's Olympics was 10.6 seconds, considered slow by modern standards. Nonetheless, Norway could not produce a qualifier for the Sydney games. This came as no surprise to Olympic analysts, as no Norwegian has ever topped 10.08 in the 100 meters. Neither has a runner from Finland (10.27), Denmark (10.23), New Zealand (10.27) or Taiwan (10.27). In fact, no runner of Caucasian, Hispanic or Asian descent has ever cracked the 10-second mark in the100 meters"

This evidence implies a genetic predisposition in those of African descent to run faster than those of other racial backgrounds. It is a valid conclusion, then, that within African populations there are trends of genetic difference that predispose members to these skills. Darwinian natural selection would suggest that these genetic differences occurred as a response to the unique African environment.

In Questionnaire 1: Musical Interest and Ability, 65% of participants 'disagreed' or 'strongly disagreed' with the statement that, "Musical ability is inherited, as opposed to being learnt", and none of the participants 'strongly agreed' with it . This data is indicative of the large extent to which individuals acknowledge the environmental influence on the development of skills, which is addressed later in this report.
Some participants, 23%, were reluctant to place one influence over the other, one commenting that it "can be both" . The validity of this data is questionable, particularly because of the small sample size used, and so is more indicative of a trend than providing statistics that could be reliably generalised to a larger population.

The concept that the role of a parent can be both environmental and genetic was further supported in my qualitative research. One participant, a vocalist and pianist in her own right, and the mother of 17 yr old vocalist and pianist, was asked if she believed there had been any significant genetic influence on the development of her daughter's musical skills, she replied, "Most definitely - both parents are musicians! In my family both my parents love music passionately and sing in choirs. All of my siblings have shown some musical ability, and all have displayed untrained singing ability."

This support of a genetic influence did not exclude the idea that a child's environment plays a very important role in the development of interests and skills. When asked what elements of her daughter's environment and lifestyle are suitable to the development of a strong musical affiliation, she replied, "I ensured that music was playing a lot. Lots of singing and dancing. I actively encouraged interest by providing an environment that allowed music to be listened to and played, and there are plenty of musicians in my social circle."

Will G Hopkins, of the University of Otago, New Zealand, said the following in regard to the potential genetic influence of parents:

"Genes are responsible for about half the variation in physical performance between individuals in the population. Genes also account for half the variation in the response to physical training. Genes are probably even more important than training in explaining differences in performance between athletes. Talent identification and selecting an appropriate partner are therefore logical approaches to creating elite athletes."

This quote harbours the concept of a new role of parents in the development of specialised interests and skills, or rather, the development of children specialised for certain skills! With genetic engineering technology on the rise, will parents ever have the opportunity to manipulate the skills of their children on a genetic level?

While there are many stories, theories and ideas regarding the weight genes carry in the development of specialised abilities in the individual, the is not conclusive quantifiable evidence. If, or when, a definite genetic influence is identified for musicality, it is unlikely that it will conclusively describe the extent to which genetics predispose an individual to a specialised skill. I predict that, due to the interplay between genetic predisposition and the environment, this would be a case of continuous variation and a figure would be difficult to assign to any population as a whole.

One of the most relevant quotes found throughout my secondary research into the role of parents in the development of their child's specialised interests and skills was that, "Genes don't give some athletes an innate ability...But there can be no doubt they give them an innate capacity." This statement provides a concise conclusion to this chapter. It acknowledges the significance of a genetic contribution, albeit not on of a directly inherited ability, and implies that if an inherited capacity is nurtured in an individual's micro environment then that capacity can evolve into an interest and ability.

Is it just in their nature?
The Environmental Role of Parents in the Development of Specialised Interests and Skills

Regardless of the potential genetic influence of parents on the skills of their children, a child's environment has fundamental and extensive influence on the development throughout childhood and adolescence of an individual, and of their personal specialised interests and skills.
Some of the potential subjects of this influence, adolescents in this case, participated in Questionnaire 1: Musical Interest and Ability. They appear to acknowledge the significance of parental support in their response to the statement, "Musical ability is inherited, as opposed to being learnt". A majority of participants, 65%, specified that they 'disagreed' or 'strongly disagreed' with this statement. However, many participants were unsure, or unwilling to place one spectrum of influence over another (23%) .

The creation of an environment and the provision of opportunities by parents were addressed in all facets of research conducted and were identified as some of the most significant influences of a parent in the socialisation of their child, and the development of that child's specialised interests and skills. Also explored in this area of study was what motivates parents to encourage specialised interests and skills and how they go about doing so. The consolidation of information gathered from both my micro world and the macro world suggests that the role of parents on an environmental level is highly significant.

The motivation of parents was found to be one based in the presence of a common interest, a value of the skill, or a value of the development and process of acquiring the skill.
Secondary sources indicate that in the case of both musical and athletic skill, it is likely that one or both parents of an involved child show personal interest in the same area. The children of physically active parents, for example, are much more likely to take up a sport than children whose parents do not play sport.

Parents have great significance as role models, being the most important people to whom a child relates in their earliest years. The idea of "social heritage" was explored in relation to interest in physical activity by Pfister. In interviews with footballers conducted in his study, all were found to have learned the game by kicking a ball with their fathers and/or brothers, and all tennis players were found to have parents who also played tennis.

This concept was not supported by my results from Questionnaire 1: Musical Interest and Ability, in which there was a fairly even spread of participants who strongly agreed or strongly disagreed with the statement that "One or both of my parents display a strong interest and/or skill in the musical field". This result, however, is challenged by later questions in the same questionnaire, which results indicate that the majority of participants felt that, generally, their parents had a significant influence on the development of their chosen specialised interests and skills, and that they share musical tastes with their parents, suggesting a common interest.
This inconsistency probably shows a flaw in the questionnaire rather than a contradiction, possibly due to the small sample size used in the quantitative data.

One of the most telling of the questionnaire results was the strong support of the statement "I would still be a musician if my parents did not display any interest or skill in the musical field" by participants. 49% of participants strongly agreed and 29% of participants agreed with the statement. I found this challenge to the significance of the role of parents was of great interest, however it was undermined by the identification of many ways in which participants' parents had provided support in their endeavours.

When considering parents as catalysts for musical and athletic development, it becomes imperative to recognise the values common to the parents of talented children. With regard to musical interest and ability, these include the value of education and achievement, rewarding children when they succeed, having high expectations of oneself and others and have the self-discipline to achieve set goals.

Similar values are seen in cases involving athletic development. For example, Ben* is a father of three children who all participate in athletic activities ranging from football and soccer, to ballet. When asked what motivated him to encourage the development of athletic interest and skill in his children, and why he values this interest, he replied that a "pursuit of excellence and supporting pride in self achievement. I like seeing my children achieving goals they set themselves. I value interest because I believe being fit in body can complement being mentally active and social interaction".

A strong value of education was identified in a number of interviewed parents, and the selection and methods of musical education can have a very significant effect on the development of a child's musical interest and skill.

Suzuki Talent Education is both a philosophy and a method of music education that embraces the total development of the child. The basis of the philosophy is that, "man is the son of his environment", that is that the environment of an individual is an extremely significant influence on that person's overall development and competencies.
Regarding inherited or innate abilities, Suzuki says, "I have no doubt that people are born with hereditary physiological differences, but I believe that a person's abilities grow and develop depending on the stimulation from outside."

Regarding musical ability, Suzuki states that, "Musical ability is not an inborn talent but an ability which can be developed. Any child who is properly trained can develop musical ability just as all children develop the ability to speak their mother tongue. The potential of every child is unlimited" , and that, "an unlimited amount of ability can be developed when parent and child are having fun together" .

The second of those quotes is the one most relevant to this area of investigation. Parents play a crucial role in Suzuki Talent Education. This role extends to attendance of all lessons, taking notes and becoming the home teacher. Parents also help to create a loving, encouraging and understanding environment and attend workshops, concerts and graduations.

During childhood and adolescence, the genetic role of my parents was amplified in the construction of environments and social practices, such as live music at social gatherings. This encouraged my own ability and the value I place on music as a means of entertainment and creative expression, and as a source of emotional connection and social interaction with others.
Other research supports the idea of the chosen interest being incorporated into family activities and outings. This is seen as a means of sustaining the child's interest. Parents also provide the resources, materials and technology required to further facilitate a child's creative and specialised interests.

I was also given the opportunity to perform to various audiences from a young age with my father in his work and this active encouragement of performance developed my skills and boosted my confidence through positive reinforcement, while also demonstrating musical performance as a potential source of income. Other individuals of my age group were also found to have extensive performance opportunities, formal and informal, and state this as a significant influence on the development of their musical achievement and enthusiasm.

In my questionnaire, 92% of participants identified that they were actively involved in performing groups such as bands and theatre groups, or had entered in to competitions.
Hector*, a 17 year old self-taught electric guitarist and trained cornetist, said that his extensive performance opportunities have, "helped in the development of important and personal ways of dealing with stress and nerves" and that performance, "builds confidence once you are recognised for your skills...motivates for future performances" and creates, "a drive to better yourself to further impress your potential audience".

The implications of a love of performance as a motivation for musical improvement place parents at the forefront of skill development. In creating these performance opportunities parents are able to contribute not only to the development of musical skills, but to the development of a performer with confidence.

Elements of the Suzuki environment, associated with Talent Education, are ones that were found to be quite common to the households of musical children. The home environments of children with specific interests, especially musical ability, are busy and productive, and in many cases are very focused on the chosen area of interest. These environmental elements are complemented by information gathered during self reflection, stating that live music was a common form of entertainment at social gatherings and that music has been a, "quintessential part of my home environment for as long as I can remember."

This is further supported by results from quantitative and qualitative methodologies. In Questionnaire 1: Musical Interest and Ability, 74% of participants agreed or strongly agreed with the statement "I consider listening to and/or playing music to be common place in my household". Further support is found in an interview with a mother of an adolescent daughter, who identified the following as her actions to encourage the development of musical interest and skill within her home environment:

"I ensured that music was playing a lot. Lots of singing and dancing, buying toy instruments and making learning music fun. Having lots of live music at social gatherings and always having instruments in the house, and talking about music."

The creation of these environments and opportunities can be linked to the more practical roles of parents, in particular those relating to financial support.
Practical parental support ranges from the purchase of instruments, travel to competitions and lessons. Without these superficial materials, it is doubtful that my interest or ability could have developed from such a young age, or with such intensity. Similarly opportunities and conditions for sporting activities are essential to a developing interest and are often provided by parents. These could include equipment, transport and information.

The role of parents on an environmental level was found to be quite diverse and extensive, ranging from buying equipment and social status to pre-natal care. There were some commonalities between my case study and cross cultural study, such as the values shared by parents motivating their children's interests and skills. Both children and parents recognised the significance of this influence and offered very thoughtful and insightful qualitative responses. The questionnaire results used are sound representations of trends, however, due to sample size, offer limited statistical reliability.

When all the song and dance is done...
Conclusion

As research progressed my hypothesis was both fulfilled and exceeded. I found that both aspects of influence were considered significant in musical and athletic ability, and domains of influence that I had not considered became apparent as research continued. There was primary and secondary acknowledgement of both arenas; however it appears that there is far more primary research being conducted in to the environmental influence of parents.

A recurring conclusion, from both primary and secondary research, was that apparently innate, genetic-based abilities were fostered in the environments created by parents due to a personal interest, a value of the skill or a value of education. This ultimately resulted in an acknowledgement of the diversity and extent to which parents play roles in the development of their child's specialised interests and skills.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Six Perfect Gifts for Your Guy


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Admit it--it can be tough shopping for guys. They're often passionate about their likes and dislikes--and worse, if you're like most girls, those likes and dislikes don't exactly resemble your own. If you're at a loss as to what to give your guy for Christmas, his birthday, or any other major gift-giving holiday, we're here to help out. Here are six never-fail ideas to make your guy fall in love with you all over again.

A gift voucher - No, really. Guys aren't as sensitive as women when it comes to the hidden meaning of a gift. Most women believe that if a guy gives her a gift voucher, it means he doesn't care enough about her to really give any serious thought to what she likes. But with guys, that's often not the case. Every man usually has an obsession he's carried over from adolescence--whether it's electronics, grilling, outdoor activities, sports, or games. All these obsessions have one thing in common--a preoccupation with complex, expensive equipment.

Guys are very knowledgeable about the equipment involved in their obsession, and are often very picky--try getting your golfer guy a club when you know nothing about golf, and chances are you'll buy the wrong one. But get your golfer a generous gift voucher to a golf store, and he'll be thrilled. Find out what your guy's obsession is, and get him a nice big gift voucher. Believe me, he'll be pleased.

A classy poker/grill/wine set - Whatever your man is into, chances are there's a fancy set for it. If he likes to BBQ, get him a nice set of grill tools. If he's a poker player, get him a poker set in a nice hardwood box. Don't get too technical--if his obsession is fishing, for example, you'd better let him buy his own rod, unless you know a lot about fishing too. But there's no reason not to get him a great-looking box to keep his lures in.

A hand massager - Even guys like to feel pampered. An electric hand massager can be just the thing he needs to unwind after a long day. Guys tend to like harder, faster pressure than women do--so look for a powerful massager with several settings, so he can adjust.

An exotic car experience - Every guy has a dream car. You can probably tell what your guy's is by being observant--notice what cars he checks out when you're out together. If you can't tell one car from another, ask him--chances are he'll grab the opportunity to talk about his favorite car. Surprise him by renting his dream car for a day. Let him take it to work, out with the guys, or on a quick weekend getaway with you. It's a gift he's sure to talk about for years.

Concert or Theatre tickets - Most men have at least one music obsession. Find out what his is, and check online to see when they are coming to your town. Even if the concert's a long way off, go ahead and buy him the tickets -- it will definitely give him something to look forward to. And if you want him to think you're a really amazing girlfriend and you really don't mind not going, tell him he doesn't have to take you. He might want to take his best friend who's also a big fan. With a selfless gesture like that, your boyfriend is sure never to forget this gift.

A magazine subscription - Does he like Windsurfing? Get him a subscription to Windsurfing Magazine. Is he into cooking? Get him Fine Cooking Magazine. Like music? A subscription to Rolling Stone should be just the thing. Want to send him a naughty message? There's always Playboy. Other Good general choices for guys include Maxim, Arena, and GQ. Chances are he'd never think of subscribing to a magazine himself, but would love one as a surprise.

Buying your guy a gift doesn't have to be a stressful experience. These tips ought to be all you need to get off to a great start on gift-giving, and get your guy a present he's sure to remember and appreciate.

Monday, May 24, 2010

History of the Parthenon

As we gaze upon the ruins of the Parthenon let us try to visualize it as it was in the time of Pericles, when it stood supreme, surrounded by other buildings, each an architectural masterpiece, for what we see today is but the empty shell of Athena's temple. It is more than a miracle that in a changing world it has withstood the ravages of time, fire, earthquakes, war, and religious fanaticism, and that its honey-colored marble, mellowed by almost two thousand five hundred years of Attic sun, still forms a tangible link with the past, bearing witness to the immortality of man's spirit.

While the Parthenon was scrupulously respected by the Romans the intolerance of the Early Christians completely blinded them to the superlative beauty of Greek Art, in which they saw only the evidence of paganism. During the first centuries of our era it was a common occurrence for Christians to mutilate or completely destroy priceless works of art.

After serving as the sanctuary of Athena for a thousand years, the Parthenon was essentially intact apart from some repairs to the roof after a fire in the second century AD, when, in accordance with the edict of the Emperor Theodosius concerning pagan temples, it was converted to Christian worship in the fifth century. The drastic structural alterations involved in transforming it into the ornate Byzantine church of Divine Wisdom (Aghia Sophia), later dedicated to the Virgin Mother of God (Theotokos) violated its beauty. At the east the pronaos was largely destroyed to make way for an apse, the opisthodomos at the west end became the entrance and the Parthenon proper the narthex. The blank partition wall between the cella and the Parthenon proper was pierced by three doorways, the inner columns were removed and replaced by a Byzantine colonnade, a vaulted roof substituted for the coffered ceiling and the walls covered with paintings. During the alterations considerable damage was done to the sculptures; the Birth of Athena represented in the east pediment was all but totally destroyed when the pronaos was pulled down.

In 1209 the first French ruler of Athens, Otto de la Roche, adapted the Parthenon to Catholic worship and consecrated as the church of Sainte Marie of Athens. Later, in 1456 Athens fell to the Turks and the Parthenon was converted into use as a mosque, though fortunately without any further structural changes.

In 1674 the Marquis de Nointel, French Ambassador to the Sublime Porte, obtained permission to visit the Acropolis. Among the members of his suite was the draughtsman Jacques Carrey, who made a series of drawings of the sculptures of the Parthenon. These drawings, four hundred in number, are now in the National Library in Paris and constitute an invaluable record of the state of the sculpture at that time.

In 1676 the Acropolis was visited by two friends, the French Physician Jacques Spon and Sir George Wheler, who were the last two travelers to see the Parthenon before it was severely damaged by gunfire in 1687. The book describing their voyage to Italy, Dalmatia, Greece and Asia Minor appeared in 1678 and contained the first scientific description of the ruins of Athens.

On 26th September 1687 a shell from a Venetian mortar crashed through the roof of the Parthenon, which the Ottomans were using as a powder magazine. In the tremendous explosion that followed, the naos, pronaos and fourteen columns of the peristyle were shattered. Further violence was done to the sculpture by Morosini's clumsy and unsuccessful attempt to lower Athena's chariot from the west pediment, and the Parthenon suffered still more damage when the Turks regained Athens in the following year.

In 1787 Count Choiseul-Gouffier, French Ambassador to the Sublime Porte, transported to Paris a portion of the frieze from the outer wall of the naos and two metopes, which he had retrieved from the mass of fallen masonry. Fourteen years later his example was followed, though on an infinitely larger scale, by Lord Elgin, British Ambassador to Constantinople. Eighteen figures from the pediments, almost half the frieze and fifteen metopes from the Parthenon, one of the Caryatids and a column from the Erechtheion, some small pieces of sculpture from the Temple of Athena Nike, as well as a statue of Dionysus from the choregic monument of Thrasyllus that stood above the Theatre of Dionysus, were among the two hundred and fifty priceless Greek marbles which Elgin ravished from the Acropolis and other places in Greece and shipped to London between 1803 and 1812.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

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Saturday, May 22, 2010

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Thursday, May 20, 2010

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One Liners THE MASK "IT'S PARTY TIME. P, A, R, T. WHY? BECAUSE I GOTTA!" MOVIE LINE YOUTH T-SHIRT- All Colors Review






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Update Post: May 20, 2010 19:00:20

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

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Update Post: May 19, 2010 18:10:09

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Check Out 10474 10473 Drama Masks Comedy & Tragedy

10474 10473 Drama Masks Comedy & Tragedy Review






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Update Post: May 18, 2010 18:00:09

Monday, May 17, 2010

Pretend Play and Dress Up Encourages Imaginative Play

A child's imagination is something to be encouraged and treasured. Young children learn many skills through imagination, from independent play, interactive play, language and cognitive skills to name a few. Pretend play and dress up are wonderful ways to allow your child to dream and act out all sorts of fun adventures.

There are a wide variety of excellent toys available to enhance their imaginative experiences some of which include; cooking and baking toys, dress-up costumes, gardening toys, housekeeping toys, money and banking sets, spy gadgetry toys, tools and puppets.

Your child probably watches you preparing and cooking meals everyday. There are many cooking and baking toys available that allow your child to have hours of entertainment. Some of the wonderful toys manufactured are; picnic baskets (complete with play bread, cheese, lettuce, hot dog and bun, ketchup, corn on the cob etc.), bakery sets, plastic food sets, a wide variety of tea pot sets, pots and pans, dinnerware sets (complete with plates, utensils, bowls and cups) and coffee sets. It's easy for your child to set up their own little imaginary kitchen with ovens that actually bake cookies, working mini refrigerators, plastic refrigerators, microwaves, stoves, barbecue's and toasters. Little shopping markets complete with plastic store items and cash registers can be purchased, along with gum ball machines and sno-cone machines, the list really is endless.

Dress up play is a favorite among all ages of children, whether it's dressing up in dad's baseball uniform or having fun with mom's closet. There is a great variety of all sorts of different types of costumes, masks and accessories for children to select from. Costumes come in designs such as fireman and police uniforms, doctor and veterinarian uniforms, engineer suits, magic hats with cape and gloves, dresses, waitress outfits, cherubs, devils, witches, ballerina and popular character suits with capes and muscle chests to name a few. Great accessories such as crowns, tiara sets, ninja swords, light sabers, cowboy hats, purses complete with keys and cell phones, doctor and medical kits and magic kits can be found. Dress up play allows your child to use their imagination in a fun way through role play and acting out adventures.

For all the young outdoor landscaping enthusiasts there are wonderful gardening tools and accessories available. Little wheelbarrows are made in plastic and metal designs (tiny metal designs look and work as well as the adult counterparts), both helpful at removing dirt, weeds and gravel around the yard. Metal and plastic gardening pails, watering cans, mini gardening sets (complete with mini rake, shovel and trowels), gardening aprons, gardening totes with seeds (mini rake, shovel, trowel and pail), gardening rakes, shovels and gardening gloves can also be purchased. Other adorable gardening sets include planters, seeds and tiny fairy cottages ready for planting around.

Probably the only time your child will enjoy housekeeping is when they are young. Most children seem to love helping out mom or dad with cleaning and simple household chores. With this said you'll find many housekeeping toys to keep your child busy and entertained for hours on end. Vacuums, cleaning sets (complete with broom, mops, gloves and pails), talking irons and ironing boards, working sewing machines and clothes washers are a few of the items to be found.

An encouraging and fun way to help children understand early on how money works is to have them play with money and banking toys and games. There are a variety of cash registers available complete with play money, fake credit cards, price scanners, price check microphones and readouts offering learning opportunities for several skills from motor skills, mathematical skills and cognitive skills.

Today there are more spy gadgetry toys available than ever before. There are spy listeners (allowing children to listen in on other rooms or to use as stethoscopes), detective sets, mini keyboard transmitters allowing children to send text messages to each other, spy goggles, motion detector sets with infrared sensors, spy cameras available in sunglasses or wristband styles (complete with real film) and walkie talkies. Spy pens come with a variety of options from activated motion alarms, flashlights and magnifying glasses. These toys not only offer hours of entertainment but toys such as the motion detectors and infrared sensors teach children basic electronic skills.

Kids love to do things around the house just like dad or mom, especially anything to do with tools. Complete tool sets for children are available with tool belts, tool chests and tool boxes. Any tool imaginable from saws, levels, planers, wrenches, screw drivers, drills and hammers can be found. Workshops (complete with bins to store tools) with work horses and work benches can provide the base for all your child's building adventures. And for when your child ventures outdoors to do some work there are mini working wheelbarrows, weed trimmers, lawnmowers, rakes, shovels, hoes, chain saws (with sound effects) and leaf blowers to complete the job. Of course you'll want to be sure they always wear their hard hat.

Lastly, another popular part of pretend play is the use of puppets. Puppets can be found in hand puppet, finger puppet, bath puppet, baby puppet, pop-up and marionette designs. Along with puppets there are puppets accessories and wonderful puppet theaters to add to the fun. There is no end to the available puppet designs from cartoon characters, fantasy (fairies, wizards), people and animals (aquatic, birds, bugs, dinosaurs, dogs, farm animals, fish and frogs to name only a few). You and your child can either make a puppet theater or purchase one of the many puppet theaters offered from tabletop theaters, floor standing, doorway and marionette theaters. Pop-up puppets are a fun way to play peek-a-boo with a child or hide and seek. Puppets are a great way to interact and have imaginative play with your child.

Imaginative play is an important part of play. Role playing and dress up allow children to experiment with the different roles of the people they observe. The toys and accessories that surround your child will let them identify with different characters and try out various domestic roles. Imaginary play helps children to adjust more easily to the challenges of our everyday world.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Why Give in to Peer Pressure

You all have different reasons for giving in to peer pressure. Most of you spend as much time with your peers as you do with your parents, siblings or relatives. Some of your peers may be your close friends as well. This is what makes it doubly difficult not to give in to their demands and suggestions.

Peers can become like family. Because you deeply care about your peers as you would care about your siblings and family, they can really put pressure on you to comply with their wishes.

Thus, peer pressure is very hard to resist for even the most disciplined. Even when you know that something is wrong and harmful, you may end up going along with it if you aren't careful to say 'no' and mean it.

Here are some reasons why you may give in to peer pressure.

1. You want to be liked. Most of you want to be accepted by others, and by agreeing to go along with your peers, you feel that they will like you more. This is not always true though.

2. You want to look cool. If you are doing something that really scares you or that you are afraid of, you may be harming yourself and suppressing your values. And this isn't very cool at all.

3. You don't want to let your peers down. Many times, your peers will have different ideas about what they want you to do with them on a daily basis. So, if you decide to assert yourself, this won't necessarily let them down but let them know that you have opinions on different issues as well.

4. You don't want anyone to be mad at you. Sometimes asserting yourself can make other kids less mad at you. If your peers really care about what you think, they shouldn't get mad at you if you disagree with them. Instead, they should accept your opinions even if they don't agree with them.

5. You don't want to be made fun of. True friends and peers don't make fun of you if you don't agree to go along with them. They simply let you do what you think is right for you.

6. You don't want to be left out. If your peers care about you, they won't make you feel left out if you don't go along with something they're doing. They will simply let you make your own decisions about what you will agree to do and will not agree with.

7. You're afraid of losing a friend. Genuine friends and peers don't pester you or threaten your friendship if you don't agree with something that they are about they do. Instead, they want to know what you think about what they are about to do.

So the next time your friends and peers want to do something that you aren't comfortable with, don't give in and assert yourself. Your friends may respect you more and you will definitely respect yourself even more as well.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Tips For a Great Masquerade Ball Themed Prom

Masquerade proms are becoming very popular in the United States and other countries right now. This is because having a masquerade themed prom is a unique, memorable, special event that is enjoyable for all. Masquerade ball proms are very elegant and lots of fun, and who doesn't enjoy wearing a beautiful masquerade prom mask?

Reasons to Choose a Masquerade Ball Prom Theme

There are many great reasons to choose a masquerade ball theme for your prom. Proms with a masquerade theme get to stand out by the shear uniqueness of a masked ball prom. The masks are beautiful, elegant, and serve as great mementos long after the event is over.

Also, there is a certain novelty that a masquerade ball has that other prom themes just cant match. Everyone loves the illustrious, mysterious feeling that attending a masked ball brings, and a masked ball prom is no different. In addition, the pictures of the attendees wearing their masks look beautiful and luxurious. All of your friends will get jealous when you tell them that your prom was a masquerade prom!

Finally, the best reason to choose a masquerade theme for your prom is because there is nothing more enjoyable for the guests, the young women and men, than dressing up in their beautiful masquerade masks. At our masquerade mask company, we handle many masquerade proms, and we often hear back from our satisfied customers that they have been the best prom celebrations that the school has ever had.

Tips for a Great Masquerade Prom

Over the years, our mask company has provided beautiful masks for many masquerade themed proms. With this experience, we have accumulated some great tips that will ensure that your prom is successful as well. In the following points, we will share our top tips for making your masquerade ball prom a successful event that your students will remember for the rest of their lives!

1. Choose a color scheme of between 1-3 colors. This is the best way to have a cohesive, wonderfully aesthetic event. When the colors of the masks and the outfits of the prom-goers combine, especially in pictures, it is a truly beautiful sight.

2. Choose a variety of masks. Prom-goers, especially the women, love to have unique, individual masks that make them feel special and different, yet gorgeous and elegant. Choosing a wide variety of masks ensures that the girls at your masquerade prom are satisfied, and dont feel like everyone else has their mask as well!

3. Consider using the masks as table decorations for your masquerade prom. Our masks look wonderful as table decor, and really compliment the atmosphere of a masquerade ball prom. Get creative with the masks and the theme of your prom!

These tips will help you plan a great masquerade ball prom that the students are sure to remember for a lifetime. A masquerade ball theme for your school's prom can turn it into one of the best events that you'll ever have!

Friday, May 14, 2010

Check Out Theatre of Hate - Mask on Black with no Logo - 1" Button / Pin - AUTHENTIC EARLY 1990s!

Theatre of Hate - Mask on Black with no Logo - 1" Button / Pin - AUTHENTIC EARLY 1990s! Review






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Update Post: May 14, 2010 16:20:22

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Check Out One Liners THE MASK "IT'S PARTY TIME. P, A, R, T. WHY? BECAUSE I GOTTA!" MOVIE LINE YOUTH T-SHIRT- All Colors

One Liners THE MASK "IT'S PARTY TIME. P, A, R, T. WHY? BECAUSE I GOTTA!" MOVIE LINE YOUTH T-SHIRT- All Colors Review






One Liners THE MASK "IT'S PARTY TIME. P, A, R, T. WHY? BECAUSE I GOTTA!" MOVIE LINE YOUTH T-SHIRT- All Colors Feature


  • "IT'S PARTY TIME. P, A, R, T. WHY? BECAUSE I GOTTA!"
  • Graphic Colors May Vary Accordingly to Shirt Color.
  • These shirts are hilarious! Make a statement, have Fun!
  • 100% USA Premium Cotton
  • DONT FORGET: OUTER REBEL OFFERS FREE GIFT WRAPPING AND MESSAGING FOR ALL PRODUCTS!!



One Liners THE MASK "IT'S PARTY TIME. P, A, R, T. WHY? BECAUSE I GOTTA!" MOVIE LINE YOUTH T-SHIRT- All Colors Overview


1 Liners makes the most stylish shirts with cinemas greatest lines. Seeing entertainment as a second language, they strive for humor, as well as quality.


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Information Post: May 13, 2010 16:10:06

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Puppy Grows and Knows Your Name - Life Like Puppy

Puppy Grows & Knows is a new Fisher Price computerized dog that teaches small children to properly care for their pets. It also teaches a small child responsibility because it is their personal ownership, their own dog and baby to take care of. The size of this toy dog is 14.10" h x 12.00" w x 8.30" l and weighs 4.15 pounds. As the child shows this toy puppy the love, attention and TLC that all animals really want and need, the puppy will grow into a bigger dog in four days. Its body, legs, ears and tail will grow, little by little, each day, as the child interacts with it daily, playing its programmed games. Two games include singing songs and playing a barking game. The puppy can be taught to know its name, child's name, friend's name, and personal things about the child, such as the child's birthday.

This cute little puppy comes in white poodle or yellow golden retriever, and has a CD-ROM with it in order to program it to interact with your child. This interactive dog is an educational toy teaching values and responsibility. This puppy also comes with a tape measure so the child can measure it daily and watch it grow, as well as a little brush, bone, puppy growing chart, and a puppy ownership certificate with the child's name and the puppy's name that the child personally names it. As soon as the puppy grows to its full size, it can be returned to puppy size again for more entertainment, love, bonding and sharing.

A happy customer who recently bought this product for her three-year-old daughter states, "I purchased this puppy through Amazon for my daughter's Christmas present this year. She loves the puppy that she has named 'Bubbles', and has played with it every day since she got it. As the puppy grows over the four days it says more and more, and interacts with its owner. We thought at first that we had a faulty puppy, as it only 'grew' on the first day and not on the other days, but reading-up on the internet we found that if you replace the 'demo' batteries it comes with, then it functions correctly. We love this toy."

Therefore, this is a Christmas toy to be included on every family's shopping list, especially if they have a small child younger than six years old in their household. It is also perfect for an only child who needs a playmate. It will keep your toddler busy for hours, bonding and sharing, like a small child and its new best friend, and treating it like a real dog, as the child lugs the cute little toy around. It is a perfect training mechanism for a real dog, some day, as the child grows up and matures to be able to take care of a real animal. Puppy Grows Is on the must-have list for every toddler this Christmas!

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Physical Theatre and Commedia Dell'arte - An Interview With Wyckham Avery


Image : http://www.flickr.com


Q: How did you start in physical theatre?

A: When I was a teenager I was very lucky to have worked with Dan Hurlin who is a phenomenal performance artist, writer and teacher. We didn't talk about the work as a genre like 'physical theatre' or 'realism' or 'absurdism' we just worked very physically. He taught me that acting was sweaty and theatre didn't have to look like real life. As I got older and found myself wanting more than what my Stanislavsky-based work was giving me, I started searching for other styles that paralleled my work with Dan, which eventually brought me to the Dell' Arte International School of Physical Theatre.

Q: What is physical comedy and what are its distinguishing factors?

A: Physical comedy is telling a comedic story with one's body insteaad of relying on words. Words can be used, but the actor doesn't rely on the words to get the story across. It's slapstick from commedia dell' arte, the old school Jerry Lewis kind of thing. Things need to be big in physical comedy. Most physical comedy these days is seen in cartoons, everything from Tom and Jerry and the Road Runner to the feature films like "Shrek." One of my favorite movies is "The Triplets of Bellville" which is an animated film that came out of Europe a few years ago. There is a little dialogue in the film and the bodies and movements of these cartoon characters are so filled with meaning and visual stimuli in their performance it's amazing. It's an interesting study in how physical theatre or performance works and how you tell stories, physically, as opposed to verbally.

Q: What is Commedia Dell'arte?

A: Commedia Dell'arte is a Renaissance Italian form of theatre and the term means the "comedy of art." It was popular in the 15th and 16th Centuries when troops of actors performed traditional stock characters, mostly in three-quarter mask. The traits of these stock characters were familiar to the audience, the style of acting was improvisatory, but actors didn't start cold as they would in an improv game these days. The gist of each particular scenario was standard, but what exactly transpired was improvised. As these actors had worked together for years and knew each other's work and characters well there was a platform to work on, literally and figuratively. They performed wherever they could gain an audience's attention - whether it was on a platform or wagon. They didn't draw a highbrow audience paying lots of dollars to see them. They had to pull in an audience and then pass a hat to collect coins.

The influences of Commedia are here today. You can see it in The Marx Brothers. You'll even find Commedia's stock characters and plotlines in Shakespeare's comedies such as "Love's Labors Lost." All art forms either change with the times or die off, and in a sense, that's what's happened to Commedia. Very few companies still work in the Commedia style, but I think actors can learn a great deal from working in that style. I'm excited about an advanced Camp Shakespeare at the Shakespeare Theatre Company for teens this summer that I will teach. We'll work with a group of teenagers on improvisation, mask, and physical comedy and create a Commedia play.

Q: What distinguishes Commedia Dell'arte from other forms of performance?

A: Commedia Dell'arte is fifty percent physical and fifty percent verbal. Because it's in mask, it has to be incredibly physical, some of the actors might be tumblers or dancers. Broad physical gestures are integrated with witty speech so that actors aren't standing around talking or expressing their emotions through small gestures.

There was no such thing as a black box theatre during the Renaissance; audience members couldn't watch an actor's deep pain or joy through the actor's eyes. There was no - lights down on the audience and spotlights on the stage. This was the time of lit audiences. Finding ways of amplifying, communicating to the audience, what actors were doing or experiencing was necessary. There were no programs for the audience; they couldn't read in advance that this guy was playing this or that character. The things that we take for granted now didn't exist then.

Performers had to fight to get an audience in the Renaissance. They had to draw them in. If they were performing outside on a wagon, they had to get people's attention, they had to work with the audience. There were 2,000 people in the Globe. It was a very different audience than we have today. People walked around selling oranges and beer and if audiences couldn't hear, see, or understand the actors or story, they could lose interest and their attention. Today it's easy to keep the attention of the audience because there's nothing else to look at. The lights are out and the only place to look is straight ahead. But that wasn't always the case. There were a lot of distractions for the audiences, they were checking out what the royalty was wearing, or who was sitting with whom, or looking for someone to go out with. It was all very social.

Q: What about the stock characters?

A: Stock characters are archetypes - the old miserly man, the crafty servant, the braggart soldier, or the young lovers. They're with us even today - we can see them in the Simpsons" and they've been part of theatre for years. In commedia, each character had traditional costumes, mask, signature props, poses, stances, actions, plot function, relationship to the audience, relationship to other characters. When the audience saw the guy with the long, pointy, droopy nose, wearing tight trousers over skinny legs, they knew it was Pantalone. He was the misery old man of high social status. Arlechinno (Harlequin) was a servant, the spry one always looking for food. Each stock characters had signature lazzis

Q: What are lazzis?

A: Lazzis are the running gags, stunts, and pranks that were performed by the characters. Arlechinno might have a bit about a fly that is bothering him that he tries to catch and eat. It was another way to physicalize and display character to the audience. The stock characters can reach beyond the traditional fourth wall, as we know it.

Q: What do you mean about reaching beyond the fourth wall?

A: Today, while actors understand that the audience is there, the characters, themselves, don't. Realistic drama and realistic acting has a give and take with the audience, but it's subtle. Good actors can sense what's happening in the audience and work that, but it's much more overt in these earlier forms. When film started, and with it the beginning of realism, that distinction wasn't made. Characters then performed with an awareness of the audience. In Shakespeare, it's very clear at certain moments that the character is talking to the audience, and a lot of people believe that it's actually happening even more, it's just not as evident. Several Shakespeare companies take everything to the audience and actors make a lot of eye contact with the audience. Shakespeare and Company in Massachusetts and the American Shakespeare Center in Virginia approach their productions this way.

In clowning, audience contact is crucial. It's a give and take between the audience and the performer in a very direct way. Some people balk at that, like it's the audience participation thing, but it's different - it's not about dragging someone up on stage and making them do stupid things.

There are different worlds of clowning ranging from the traditional circus clown to the existentialist clown like with "Waiting For Godot." Clowns have a sort of resiliency. Tragic things can happen around them, but they bounce back, they are resilient, nothing crushes them for too long. They're not childish or stupid, but there is a naivety to them because the regular logic of our world doesn't necessarily apply. Clowns tend to be very physical and often many of them don't use language at all, so they have a universal form of communication.

Q: Are there skits or are the actors just performing improv?

A: Both, the actors have their clowns' personage that they've developed and they might have an outline of what happens in their skit, scene or production, but how they get from each point can change a lot each time they do it. It's similar to improv theatre today, the same skills are being used - it's about taking in and responding to what's given to you on stage, whether it's from your partner, or the audience, or the chair. Anything can be your partner in clowning, whether it's a human or inanimate object, and you take advantage of that. In regular theatre, if your shoes squeaked, you'd try to figure out a way to diminish it, whereas in clowning, you exploit it. You exploit your own faults in clowning. It's a challenging way to work. The history of clowning is huge and you can find clowns in most cultures. In America, we have a very definite circus clown archetype - the Bozo or the sad hobo clown of the circus - with heavy makeup, floppy shoes and the squirting flower. But clowning doesn't have to be about walking on stilts and juggling. 500 Clowns out of Chicago doesn't wear red noses; they paint their ears red and are sort of scarier looking. Bill Irwin, who is probably the best clown we have in this country, doesn't always work in a red nose. He did when he first started out with the Pickle Circus in San Francisco, and he started developing a theatrical movement that he called New Vaudeville with shows such as The History of Flight and Largely New York, which incorporated much of his clowning expertise and physical comedy.

Q: Why don't we see more of these types of performing now in Washington?

A: There's seems to be a reticence here for different forms of theatre. Street theatre and busking is illegal. In other cities around the world, there are international buskers' festivals, where all sorts of street performers do amazing things.

The growth of Fringe festivals has allowed artists to explore and experiment with different types of performances, and the Festivals allow the audience to experience theatre in ways they hadn't thought of or known about. In this city, people say there's no audience for different kinds of theatre, but I'm not sure that's true. Especially when you look at the success of the Capital Fringe Festival, and companies like Synetic. Other cities seem to foster physical theatre better than this area, but I have hope for DC. Chicago, San Francisco, and Philadelphia are probably the three biggest areas for more physical theatre, including puppetry, mask, clown, and multimedia and everything in between. Some of it's crap and some of it's amazing and a lot of it lies in between - that's great. We want all of that here, too.

Q: Would you talk some about your background and training?

A: I went to undergraduate school in New Mexico State and studied with Mark Medoff, the playwright, who was the head of our program, and I got my MFA from Catholic University in Washington, D.C. While in college, I interned at The Actors Studio in New York. That was before James Lipton and the establishment of the school. Back then, it was just actors in a room attending their American method of acting sessions twice a week. It was during that internship that I figured out that the traditional approach was not for me. That's not to say I didn't appreciate it; there are some brilliant method actors, but I knew I'd never be one of them. All I knew at that point was that method acting and realism were not for me, but I didn't know what was. Luckily, in graduate school I was introduced to a vast array of modern, nontraditional, nonrealism theatre which I really liked.

I was always interested in Shakespeare because it is so big and expressive, and like many people around here, I toured with Shenandoah Shakespeare in Staunton, Virginia. Everybody knows Shakespeare's good, people get that, but before I worked at Shenandoah Shakespeare, I didn't really understand why Shakespeare is so extremely good. When you're speaking those words every day for several years, you find so much more in it. You find out how amazing Shakespeare really is and the Shenandoah Shakespeare style of working, I think, helps illuminate the play and the text for both the actors and audience. But even then, I still knew that there was this whole other world of performance that I wasn't really tapping into.

I later worked in a company in New York called the Collapsable Giraffe which is sort of a devised theatre group or ensemble. We would be in a room, have some inspiration or text and just create. Most of the people there, besides me, had worked or were still working for The Wooster Group in New York, which is a theatre which uses new forms and techniques in producing new and established works. The Collapsable Giraffe and The Wooster Group share a similar esthetic that I find interesting and exciting. From there, I trained at the Dell'arte International School of Physical Theatre in Blue Lake, California, where I was taught clowning, commedia, and overall physical theatre.

Q: What was that training like?

A: It was great, but it was difficult. They were hard on us students and we probably collectively cried more than laughed during training. We laughed too, but we all separately and collectively cried a lot. One teacher was scary. At times, he yelled and threw tennis balls at us while we were on stage - with the best of intentions. He wasn't trying to hurt us - his goal was to keep us in the present and reactive on stage. Some people tried to stay in character and dodge the tennis balls and that made him throw even more balls and yell even louder. As actors, we were so ingrained in our method of acting and training that even in clowning we put blinders on and refused to react to outside things. In clowning, that's really what it's all about. It's being present and taking in what's happening in the space, whether it's in the audience, in the air ducts, or a squeak in your shoe. We all experienced frustration in trying to find that unexplainable place of fully living in that clown personage. We wanted it so badly, and the more we wanted it, the more it seemed to elude us and the more frustrated we got. We didn't speak on stage for months because their belief is that the movement comes first and the voice comes after. Like children, we learn to walk before we learn to talk.

Q: What's so difficult about clowning?

A: Clowning is about going to a very scary place. A lot of people in clowning pick what they find most humiliating about themselves and exploit it. When you really push on those places you avoid, it opens you up to a lot of new and exciting places and freshness. You've got to have a thick skin and be really resilient in clowning. When I started in clowning I thought I was resilient, but in retrospect, I don't know if I really was. This kind of training is not for everybody, but it is very valuable. Mask and clowning skills are incredible tools for traditional modern realist actors to have. Jackie Chan is very clowny and very funny. It's genius how he understands physical comedy in an elevated way in the midst of violence.

Q: What do students learn in your clowning and physical theatre classes?

A: It's sort of unlearning everything that we've learned about acting in some ways. Students in acting classes have been told not to make audience contact, that when it's done, it seems faked or contrived. But with clowning, that's the trick, connecting with the audience and making the performance real. The actor is still in character and has the same objectives, but is sharing and interacting with the audience and the environment instead of performing for the audience.

This is where a whole connection happens, part of which is indescribable. When the mask connects with the audience, it's riveting and dynamic, a kind of magic happens that is inexplicable. Clowning is more traditional than modern acting, but in our modern view of acting, actors can get away with not being in the moment. With clowning, it's really what it's all about - the actors have to be open and respond to whatever is happening.

Actors can feel vulnerable because they can't rely on techniques they're comfortable with. People communicate a lot through their eyes and facial expressions. Actors tend to act a lot with their faces because they've learned that from watching movies and television. By putting on masks, we've cut off that method of communication and that leaves us with having to find other ways to communicate. The mask becomes the translator, the transducer of the character, and those emotions that would otherwise be expressed through our faces are sent through our bodies.

Sometimes an actor on stage may pull back, and if that actor has on a mask, that pulling back is magnified. Things that worked without the mask, don't translate, they're not large enough to communicate to the audience what's going on. Working with a mask becomes second nature with practice. It's not a big effort forever. Any technique becomes easier with practice, it's just a matter of getting used to using your body to express the characters and make contact with the audience.

Q: Would you talk about your approach to teaching clowning and physical theatre?

A: Good teachers of these forms don't necessarily teach, they provoke, they set up circumstances for actors to work through and learn by doing, as opposed to lecturing about it. I can tell students to be in the moment and play with their surroundings until I'm blue in face, but they won't get it until they experience it. The actual doing of it is where they're going to start to learn it and experience it.

The beauty of the teaching and learning of acting is that there are a million different approaches and what most people get taught is that you will learn a lot of things, some of which will work for you and some won't. There are brilliant method actors in this world who are amazing, breathtaking. They found a path that works for them. That doesn't mean it works for everybody.

For instance, I don't like the separation of voice and movement, where the physical work happens in one class on one day and the voice work happens in another on another day. Even in my studies, we learned voice a couple times a week, for an hour, that was it. I found a disconnect in learning how to match what we were doing vocally with what we were doing physically. We were making these big dynamic shapes with our bodies and feeling our hearts out, but some people had never had any voice training and they couldn't be heard or understood because they couldn't elevate their voices up to what they were doing with their bodies. One of my goals when I get my Ph.D. and become a professor is to develop pedagogy where actors' voices and bodies are trained simultaneously.

Q: What would the Avery technique be?

A: I'm still developing it and that's why one of the reasons I'm hoping to begin a Ph.D. soon. Right now, it's all in notes and ideas. There were some really wonderful moments at Dell'arte where we studied Tai Chi. For the most part, Tai Chi is fairly silent because it's a meditative martial art, but a couple of times the teacher played music, which took us to another level. One day, in voice class while working on harmony and singing together, we practiced Tai Chi and that helped us find different connections. Many people have a tendency to hold their breath while doing something strenuous. In acrobatics class, we did forward rolls, cart wheels, or whatever, down the mat, while humming or singing. It's hard to do, but it's serves actors in two ways - it keeps them breathing and in touch with their voice, while exerting themselves physically. Things like that are key.

Q: When did you get into the arts?

A: I was always around the arts as there are a lot of musicians in my family. My grandmother is an incredible jazz pianist and she still plays in her jazz band that jams every month at her house. My uncle has been a singer/entertainer for at least thirty years. My mother is a musician and an incredible singer. She studied music in college, teaches music, and plays standup bass. As a small child, I attended the rehearsals of shows for which she directed the music. My father, though not trained in any particular one, was a great appreciator of the arts. My sister is a visual artist, and as with me, her interests have moved around. She went to the Parsons School of Design and while she's worked in a lot of different media, she now has her own business making custom mosaics and doing tile installation.

As a kid I wanted to take ballet lessons and to learn how to dance. I grew up in a very small town in New Hampshire so there wasn't much opportunity for that, but as soon as opportunities for acting came around, I jumped right in. I was also very lucky. An incredible performer and puppeteer named Dan Hurlin, who is also from New Hampshire, is a professor at Sarah Lawrence. When I was a teenager, he ran a children's theatre in New Hampshire so I got to train with him. We loved him, we thought he was amazing, but outside of our little world, we didn't know how respected and amazing he really was. His work, though I didn't know it at the time, formed part of what my aesthetic is now - looking for challenging and new ways of performance.

My father supported the arts and me in them. I was a biochemistry major in college studying to be a genetic engineer, but I remember as a child my father saying to me, you know, you might want to act and he used all kinds of little schemes to move me towards acting and the theatre knowing that's really where I'd end up. He always knew I'd be in the arts, even when I didn't know it.

Monday, May 10, 2010

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Sunday, May 9, 2010

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Saturday, May 8, 2010

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Friday, May 7, 2010

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Thursday, May 6, 2010

How to Use a Thermal Scope

A thermal scope is an ocular device that can be held, strapped to a helmet, environmental protection mask, fire arm or many other devices. A thermal scope allows the user to see in darkness, smoke, rain or fog. Its design purpose was for military forces to use during night operations but there are also many civilian applications as well.

Unlike image enhancement (the green light night vision devices), they do not rely on any light sources. A thermal imager gathers the infrared energy that is emitted by objects and then produces the image. The quality is much clearer than image enhancement technology. They scopes can be cooled or uncooled. The uncooled variety is the most common. They can be operated at ambient temperatures and are more portable. The uncooled thermal scopes rely on a cryocooler to mute any thermal noise created from the scope. The result is a much crisper image with incredible detail. This type of technology is quite expensive and the higher resolution models are not currently available for sale. Property owners are starting to utilize this technology for many reasons. As a security option, it adds an extra layer of protection to camera monitoring systems. Some models can see farther than 20 miles and since they do not emit any light, they are nearly impossible to detect. It can easily see into the darkest corners or spot intruders hiding in debris or foliage. Many homeowners concerned about their heating or air conditioning bills hire energy auditors who use them to locate the cracks where the air is escaping. They can also be used to spot any effluents leaks from the structure or even condensation spots to aid in mold eradication.

They can be found at all levels of society. They are commonly used in search and rescue operations. Firefighters can benefit from the use of a thermal scope in situations where rooms are filled with smoke. There are many useful purposes for them in medical research as well. Some airports have started adding thermal technology to their security systems to screen passengers for high body temperatures which could be a sign of a contagious virus such as the H1N1. Archeologists use thermal scopes in aerial searches for ruins and even paranormal investigators are using them these days. As thermal scope technology continues to improve, we will start see even more exciting applications.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

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Tuesday, May 4, 2010

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Monday, May 3, 2010

Do Not Allow Anything From Your Past To Restrict Your Future Usefulness

Silas and Paul, move on from Philippi in Greece and arrive in Thessalonica, where they look for the synagogue. They looked for the place of prayer. They looked for that setting where people at least had a belief in God. "As his custom was, Paul went into the synagogue." We read all about this at the beginning of Acts Chapter 17 in the New Testament

This man has had bad experiences among the Jews, and with the Jews, but still he realises that this is where he is to begin. Paul does not permit the past to colour his present, and like His Saviour, Jesus Christ, Paul goes back to the synagogue.

Do not allow anything from your past limit your service for Jesus Christ. If something has to be dealt with, have it dealt with, and then get on with you ministry.

On the Sabbath day it was the custom of Jesus to go and worship in the synagogue at Nazareth.

When we belong to Jesus - when we are born again - converted - anointed with the Holy Spirit - there is that desire - that longing - to worship the Living God - to praise and pray and hear His Holy Word - and to meet together in fellowship with the people who belong to Jesus.

This is one of the signs to the world that we are disciples of Jesus Christ. When we are found faithful in fellowship - among the people of God, and with the people of God - we remind the people of God.

The apostles were certainly a sign of the presence of God in Chapter 16. Lydia, the girl with the python spirit - the pimps who had their income curtailed - and then the jailer and his family - all these people were reminded of God in different ways. Paul and Silas had marks on their backs, and news of the baptisms would soon get out. God was certainly at work in the city of Philippi.

We are dealing with facts in these Chapters. These are actual events and incidents and happenings. These are real people and it is all of this so very vivid.

In what ways are we signs to our communities? How do we remind people that there is a God? Are we real and for real, or do people consider us as hypocrites - rather good actors? Remember, that is what the word 'hypocrite' means - it comes from the world of theatre where a man hid behind a mask. To consider and meditate upon the lessons and implications of Chapter 16 will always be immensely valuable.

In Acts 17, Paul and Silas arrive in Thessalonica, and for three Sabbaths Paul is reasoning with these Jews from the Scriptures. He is opening up the Word of God and teaching the people that it was necessary for Christ to suffer and be crucified and rise again from the dead.

When Paul is speaking to Jews he quotes from the Scriptures. His desire is to ground his preaching and teaching upon The Word of God. Paul has a great love for The Word of God, and he seeks to impart that to people, everywhere he goes.

Paul preaches that it is this Jesus Who was crucified and Who is now risen - it is He Who is the Christ - the Messiah. He is the Saviour Who is able to save you from your sins.

Jesus Christ is the One Who is able to save us from our sins.

He not only saves us from the penalty of sin, but He gives us that ability to stop committing these sins. He takes away the taste for certain wrong actions, and the desire to behave in wrong ways. Jesus takes all this from us from us.

There was a response. Some believed and sided with Paul and Silas. Quite a number realise that they were sinners and need Jesus Christ to deal with their situation. Some of the prominent women-folks realised that they too were sinners, requiring Jesus Christ the Saviour.

BUT! The Jews, who did not believe, were moved with envy. They allowed themselves to be influenced by bad motivation. Religious jealousy grew in their hearts, and that is a terrible thing. It can still be very real.

What is happening is this. The religious people who were closed to Jesus Christ, see other people who were open to Jesus Christ, receiving His Love and Mercy and Forgiveness and Peace and Blessing.

They become jealous, and do horrible things out of jealousy. Religious jealousy can make a man do appalling things.

These closed hard unbelievers got hold of some rabble-rousers of the worst kind, and they set the city in an uproar. This is a rent-a-gang. There is a riot.

They assaulted the house of Jason, where Silas and Paul were based, and look at the accusations - "These men who have caused trouble all over the world have now come here. They are defying Caesar's decrees, saying there is another king, one called Jesus."

The mouths of those hard closed critical men are filled with distortion, exaggeration, and lies - and yet, in what they say, there is a degree of truth - but NOT the whole truth. It is not all true. They make false charges. In an old translation, the apostles were accused of turning the place upside down. It was everyone else who was upside down. Paul and Silas, by their preaching and teaching, are seeking to turn the world the right way up.

BUT, unbelievers cannot see that. They never have. They never will.

We see here how disciples of Jesus Christ are revolutionaries in the highest and best and finest sense. They are always seeking to change people's wrong ideas about God, and wrong ideas about themselves.

Being a disciple of Jesus can mean a revolution in so many areas of our lives, and this is where we see one big difference between being religious and being a disciple of Jesus Christ.

Paul was not preaching contrary to the laws of Caesar, yet, he was saying there was another King - JESUS - but not as a rival. Similar things were said when Jesus was born.

How do you react, and how will you react, when you are falsely accused because of your faith in Jesus
Christ and as a consequence of ministering faithfully in the power of the Holy Spirit?

Sandy Shaw

Sunday, May 2, 2010

John Ratzenberger and His Roles in Pixar Movies

John Ratzenberger is an actor most famous for his role as a mailman named Cliff Claven in the 1980s sitcom Cheers. This was the place for his funnyman lines, being the sort of Know-it-all guy with an inflated ego.

Ratzenberger's got a unique voice and Pixar has kind of regarded him as their good luck charm. They create a character for him to voice if one hasn't been integrated into the story at the time.

Of all the Pixar roles Ratzenberger's gotten to play, the one that's his favorite is P.T. Flea, the hot-headed ringmaster of the Circus Bugs. John loves this character because he's so on edge and unpredictable.

What are the other characters he plays in Pixar films? Let's go through the list and find out.

Toy Story, Toy Story 2 and Toy Story 3 (coming June 2010): John Ratzenberger's Pixar movie role in the Toy Story movies is Hamm the piggy bank. Hamm is pals with Mr. Potato Head and they do well together with their sarcastic wit. Hamm's a bit of a pessimist and likes to take pot shots at his fellow toys, often jumping to the wrong conclusions about them too quickly.

A Bug's Life: In the second Pixar film, as mentioned, Ratzenberger's role was that of P.T. Flea, ringmaster for the troupe of Circus Bugs. He's greedy, demanding and obsessed with money. Being a highly irritable bug, he fires the troupe after they failed the "Flaming Death" performance.

Monster's Inc.: In 2001, John Ratzenberger's role in Monsters Inc. was for The Abominable Snowman, a monster who had been banished from Monstropolis some time ago. Mike and Sulley were also banished when they discovered Henry Waternoose's agenda and were sent to the snowy Himalayan mountains where they meet Mr. Abominable. Looming and frightening at first, he quickly greets the two with "Welcome to the Himalayas!" and is a hospitable, gentle creature. Personally, he is my favorite Ratzenberger-voiced character!

Finding Nemo: The role John plays in this film is unique; it's not a single character, but a school of moonfish. Marlin and Dory cross paths with the school of moonfish as they search for a way to get to Sydney, Australia. The moonfish swim together with remarkable precision and can make pictures of such shapes as an octopus and the Sydney Opera House. They poke fun of Marlin by making his shape and moving his mouth as he explains something to Dory, whom he's upset. In the end, the moonfish make a brilliant, flashing arrow, pointing the way to the East Australian Current, the superhighway direct to Sydney.

The Incredibles: Stick around to the very end for The Incredibles, because John Ratzenberger's minor role doesn't occur until, literally, the end of the film. After the Parr family (The Incredibles) defeat the Omnidroid and Syndrome, they think they're back into a life of normal routine. As the family is leaving the track event Dash just finished, a villain named The Underminer breaks through the surface of the parking lot in an enormous drilling machine. He's a mole-like monster who declares war on peace and happiness. The Incredibles family don their masks, ready for the challenge of defeating a new bad guy.

Cars: Big, lovable and loyal, Razenberger's role on this Pixar film is Mack, a 1985 Mack Semi-Hauler who wears the red and white Rust-Eze cap and pulls the fancy, state-of-the-art container for Lightning McQueen. Even when the rest of McQueen's crew quit on him for being so arrogant and obnoxious, Mack sticks by him. McQueen later demands that Mack drive all through the night to get to LA for the tiebreaker race of the Piston Cup. Mack can barely stay awake though, and finally dozes off when a gang of street racer cars put on some pretty music. This is when the trailer door opens and Lightning McQueen's adventure begins.

Ratatouille: Ratzenberger's role for Ratatouille is in a restaurant full of colorful characters. He plays Mustafa, the head water of Gusteau's in Paris, France. Mustafa is a plump man with a thin mustache. He's great at taking orders, but only if they're off the menu. When the feared food critic Anton Ego snidely tells Mustafa to "Serve me some fresh perspective," the waiter looks like a deer caught in the headlights, frozen with fear and confusion. What's that supposed to mean, he wonders.

WALL-E: John plays John in WALL-E. John is one of the passengers aboard The Axiom starliner who is lost in his own world with holographic screens and a sedentary lifestyle. Robots wait on him every moment of the day and in the movie John mistakes WALL-E for a drink-bot and falls out of his chair. This is what "wakes" him up and the small robot introduces himself to John. Later on, John meets Mary, another passenger who has been awakened from the oblivion around her. Together they watch EVE and WALL-E space dancing outside and then they notice one another, feeling an attraction. They help one another save babies when Auto tries to take over the ship and John shows some real leadership qualities.

Up: Ratzenberger's role in this Pixar film is Tom, a construction worker on the site surrounding Carl Fredricksen's home. John relates to Tom because he used to be a house framer before his career in acting took off. Tom is friendly toward the old man Carl, and makes an offer on the house on behalf of his boss. But his answer is met with a face full of wind as Carl points the leaf blower at him. Carl then takes Tom's megaphone and insults his boss, to which Tom shouts back urgently that he's not with him. Poor Tom!

These are the Pixar Roles that John Ratzenberger has played thus far. I hope that Pixar continues this tradition along with the many other fun traditions in their animated films. The characters and roles Mr. Ratzenberger shall play in future films will be so much fun to listen for as we sit in the theater immersed in a great Pixar story.