<em>Turandot</em>, the Music of <em>The Nightingale</em>, and Magic of Chinoiserie

Turandot, the Music of The Nightingale, and Magic of Chinoiserie

You could translate “chinoiserie” as “Chinese…ish,” if you want. It’s a cultural form of infatuation with the transfer student–in retrospect it may come to seem childish and superficial. But initially, there’s a flush of novelty, a flash of curiosity, and a fleshing out of another inner life through trial and error, mostly error. (In a similar way, knock-offs of products are usually not very good, most fail, and a few develop into something so good they rival the original–witness Japan’s whisky.) Continue reading Turandot, the Music of The Nightingale, and Magic of Chinoiserie

How to Survive the Blue Angels

How to Survive the Blue Angels

Every year, a certain number of Seattle residents wince at the first flight, many apparently residents of Capitol Hill. For various reasons–War machines! Scared pets! Migraines! Jet fuel smog! Wait, I-90 is closed?!–the shriek of F/A-18 Hornets sets their nerves on edge, to such an extent that even reminding them how much money Boeing makes from constructing these things doesn’t help. (A: $30 to $60 million per.) Continue reading How to Survive the Blue Angels

Intiman’s <em>Dirty Story</em> Veers From Savage Drama to Sketch Comedy

Intiman’s Dirty Story Veers From Savage Drama to Sketch Comedy

Shanley has little novel to say with his allegory—though the comparison with America’s treatment of Native Americans feels smart and the dialogue is full of Wildean wit. There is some amusement in watching Shanley spin the variations and details out. Mostly it’s an opportunity to slowly remember details of the first act and see them newly contextualized in the overt analogue suggested by the second half. Continue reading Intiman’s Dirty Story Veers From Savage Drama to Sketch Comedy