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on June 18, 2010
carolyn surrick
Posted project update #2it's almost the summer solstice....
Post Comment...and therefore the end of our kickstarter experiment. And thank you, thank you, thank you to everyone who pledged.
It's possible we won't make our goal (and I say that with a smile!) but in spite of that we're still moving forward. James is busy choosing photographs, Lily and I are rethinking the order of the first half, five of the musicians will be performing some of the new music at our concert in San Luis Obispo in July and I'm busy working on corporate sponsorship.
In case you didn't read the fine print - if we don't meet our goal, no funds will change hands. So your credit card will not be charged. Some people might think that our goal was too high but it's only about 30% of the real cost of creating the show, and with six musicians, two narrators, one director and a technical director to pay...it's a big chunk of change!
Anyway, I hope that you can come to the premiere in October at the Met. It is so rare in this world to have the opportunity to work on a project that really, truly thrills. We would like to thrill you too.
Every time I got an email saying that someone had pledged, and I looked and saw a name I knew, it made me smile. Thanks you guys! xoxoxo carolyn
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on May 19, 2010
carolyn surrick
Posted project update #150 minutes of awesomeness
Post CommentWe started with 20 minutes of awesomeness last January in New York. At least that's what Ryan called it, and he was pretty dead-on. The Arts Presenters conference was happening, we were showcasing at the Warwick hotel, and I had pneumonia, but we had a 20 minute slot to perform a piece of this show for the very first time.
For that 20 minutes we started with an instrumental overture, went into this amazing poem by Jim Harrison to the music of "What Wondrous Love is This?." Then Neal Conan read from Dexter Filkins' "The Forever War" with Jackie starting "Old Cluck Hen" on the banjo and Hanneke joining in on fiddle. From there we played this incredibly beautiful 18th century Scottish tune called "Hector the Hero" which led into Lily reading from James Agee, and then she read Lucille Clifton's poem about visiting a slave graveyard at a southern plantation which made me cry, and the pictures that our director, James Hanrahan, picked to be projected while all of this was going on, were perfect. It was awesome. Truly. Time stood still.
Then we worked on it more in LA and got to 28 minutes done, then a few weeks ago we put together the rest of the show and did a private preview here in Annapolis. We did the first half of the first half, and the second half of the second half. 50 minutes all told.
Sometimes you don't know if the work will stand up to critical scrutiny. You don't even know if the hair standing up on the back of your neck because it feels so right, so consonant, you don't even know if that will translate at all to an audience. So you jump.
And we jumped off the cliff, performing parts of the show that were five months old, and parts of the show that were two days old - and it worked.
Six musicians, Neal Conan from NPR, actress Lily Knight (she's been in EVERYTHING, go ahead and look up her IMDB page, her work is prodigious.) and these intense and true photographs from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Putting it together has been long, labor intensive, brilliant, frustrating, complex, and more about the process later. Gotta run.
carolyn -
on May 17, 2010
First Person: Seeing America - Ensemble Galilei, Narration, & Photos from the Met by carolyn surrick
First Person: Seeing America is an extraordinary collaborative project featuring photographs from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, narration and music.
Funding Unsuccessful (06/21/2010)
