Monday, August 17, 2009

POWERHOUSE — with puppets

We'll just quote part of the press release for this intriguing production currently running at the New York Fringe Festival (ecstatic reviews posted at bottom):
With puppetry and live action, swing dancing and physical comedy, POWERHOUSE tells the story of a brilliant man who wrote music that nearly every American has heard and yet almost no one can identify. It’s 1936 and 27 year-old Harry Warnow has it all — a beautiful wife, a hit record, a recording company, a publishing company, his very own swing orchestra and a new name: Raymond Scott. But in 30 years he would be virtually unknown. Secluded in his home studio, he would spend his time writing commercials and inventing futuristic music machines. Unbeknownst to Scott, however, his music had become imprinted on the minds of millions. For years, the animators at Warner Bros. had been scoring their Looney Tunes cartoons with Scott’s life’s work. This would be his legacy — and he never knew. Featuring puppets playing cartoons, people playing machines, and machines playing music, the acclaimed Sinking Ship Productions presents the world premiere of POWERHOUSE at the 2009 New York International Fringe Festival.
You can download a pdf of the show's press release here. The production opened Saturday. Scott's son Stan Warnow was impressed, emailing: "It was well done and inventive. Staging and directing were very good. It was fluid and moved right along, lots happening on stage." Although we haven't yet seen the production, we met with Jon Levin and Josh Luxenberg a few months ago while they were researching the project. Their absorption with the details of Scott's legacy conveyed impressive intentions to tell the story respectfully, if idiosyncratically. And they were nice guys, so we're cheering them on.
Update 1: reviewed by The New York Times Arts Beat:
Powerhouse, which somehow manages to pack very funny puppetry, exuberant dance numbers, fascinating historical tangents, a mountain of narrative and a vivid sense of period mood into one steam train of a drama, is the rare Fringe show that lives up to its title.
Update 2: Another satisfied customer: "Every element was perfect and brilliantly creative. It's what live theater can be that no other medium can match." Update 3: TimeOut New York: "... a kinetic and visually enchanting production. Aiming to honor the mad, creative urge to perfectly transmute ideas into art, Powerhouse succeeds beautifully." Update 4: Doesn't anyone not like this show? Update 5: Andrew loved it (and so did Andrew): "Powerhouse is that rare Fringe Fest gem that doesn’t come across like a drag show on steroids." Update 6: Jeff Winner attended the August 22 performance and met some of the cast, including Erik Lochtefeld, who plays the lead. Jeff reports:
Finally, after all these years, I met Raymond Scott! I had read he was only about 5'9", but apparently that was just part of the Scott mythology. He's actually 6'5". Photographic evidence:
Photo: Das Überbabe

6 comments:

  1. Hi- thanks for the post/ recommendation! The show was also written up in the New York Times if you're interested: http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/17/at-the-fringe-powerhouse/

    Thanks again!

    -Jesse

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  2. Thanks, Jesse. We added a pull quote from the review.

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  3. Here's a review with a clip from the Powerhouse routine.

    -Lou

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  4. Saw the Wednesday performance- very impressed. Made me go right out and check out this web site, among other things. I've been a long time fan of electronic music, but somehow the name of Raymond Scott had missed my senses, although his sounds and musics had not. I would like to know what he thought of other pioneers in the 50's.

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  5. I noticed another mention in the Friday edition of THE NEW YORK TIMES:

    Leading the Everything Else category is “Powerhouse,” a fascinating bio-play with puppets about the obsessive vision of the musical innovator Raymond Scott (who dreamed up many of the sounds used in Looney Tunes cartoons). It breathes fresh life into the old idea that what makes someone a great artist can be the same thing that makes him a less-than-great person.



    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/21/theater/21fringe.html?pagewanted=2

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  6. We went to the show last nite - the final performance of the regular run. It was frenetic, clever, existential fantasia, hugely entertaining. The sell-out crowd was with it every second of the way. They were very receptive even though it was hard to tell how many were aware of RS before the show.

    The biggest revelation for me was finally "getting" the Quintette music as dance music. I never hear it that way, but of course that is what it was meant to be, not concert hall performances.

    I hope the show gets a post-Fringe life; it deserves one.

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