“Dinosaurs: Land of Fire & Ice” is at the Memphis Children’s Museum through May.
Month: March 2012
Sweet Grass Next Door was all abuzz last Thursday evening during the End of Prohibition party. Patrons were dressed in “hats, spats, and pearls” and looking for love in one of the 12 cocktail specials made with Fee Brothers bitters. (Read more about the Fee Brothers in last week’s Food News.)
We sampled three of the 12 concoctions and gave each a high rating.
The French 79 (above) was tart and refreshing, made with 209 gin, lemon syrup, Prosecco, rhubarb bitters, and cranberry bitters.
The inaugural Memphis Fashion Weekend started with a bang last night. Jack Robinson Gallery was packed with local styleites looking for the kind of high fashion show Memphis sees woefully little of. What’s more, this event secures a strong place for fashion in Memphis’ future — by benefiting ArtsMemphis and up-and-coming local fashion designers.
In that spirit, the night began with the Spring line from Ellis Dixon, a Memphis native who now works out of New York City. Her line was dominated by crop tops, pretty neutrals, and feminine silks and shapes.
- Hannah Sayle
- Ellis Dixon
- Hannah Sayle
- Ellis Dixon
- Hannah Sayle
- Ellis Dixon
- Hannah Sayle
- Ellis Dixon
Next up, Carol Peretz introduced a Spring line of cocktail and occasion dresses with sumptuous textures, feminine patterns, and bold colors.
- Hannah Sayle
- Carol Peretz
- Hannah Sayle
- Carol Peretz
- Hannah Sayle
- Carol Peretz
- Hannah Sayle
- Carol Peretz
- Hannah Sayle
- Carol Peretz
And finally, Philosophy’s Spring collection wowed attendees with exquisite lace details, elegant draping, and an overall ethereal quality.
- Hannah Sayle
- Philosophy
- Hannah Sayle
- Philosophy
- Hannah Sayle
- Philosophy
Tonight we’ll be heading over to A. Schwab for the second and final evening of Memphis Fashion Weekend. Stay tuned for the next installment of Catwalking in Memphis!
River City Brewers Festival
Check out the third annual River City Brewers Festival in Handy Park, Saturday.
I’m leaving Memphis tomorrow for a vacation before Easter, but I won’t really be leaving all things Memphis and Tennessee.
For starters, how about this exchange:
“I’d go to Memphis for the ribs.”
“Now you talkin’. Best bar-b-cue in the world’s at the Germantown rib joint.”
“The Germantown Commissary. Corky’s is good.”
“I love Corky’s. They serve that pulled pork shoulder. Best anyplace.”
A feature in Bon Appetit? Two visitors at the Tennessee Welcome Center? Actually, it’s a slice of dialogue from my road read, Elmore Leonard’s new novel “Raylan,” set in Harlan County, Kentucky.
On Saturday I should get to the beach just in time to catch the sunset and the second game of the Final Four between Kentucky and Louisville, aka Coach Cal vs. Rick Pitino.
How many times will they mention Memphis-Kansas 2008? I put the over and under at four counting the pregame.
On Thursday night I can catch HBO’s offering, “God is the Bigger Elvis,” about Dolores Hart, a former actress in Elvis flicks who became a nun. God must be proud, but what does it say about a guy who drove a pretty young actress to join a convent for the next 50 years?
Finally, the Republican Party 2012 Presidential Campaign Quote of the Day, if not the Quote of the Season, comes from former Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen. An op-ed column in the Wall Street Journal Friday coauthored by former Tennessee Governor Lamar Alexander, highlights Bredesen’s comment that President Obama’s health care plan, now universally described as ObamaCare, is “the mother of all unfunded mandates.”
As the Chattanooga Times Free Press reported, it was 2009 and Bredesen was speaking of Medicaid and he supported universal health care. But “the mother of all (fill in the blank)” is the mother of all cliches, and who better to pry undecided Democrats away from Obama than a Democrat, so this one will be recycled by every politician, columnist and commentator in America who worships at the altar of the Wall Street Journal.
Knoxville band the Black Cadillacs played the Young Avenue Deli last night. Before their gig, they stopped by Ardent Studios to perform their song “Classic Fool,” off their upcoming album Run:
With spring rolling in, it seems that Memphis beer events are finally picking up once again after a very dry winter. And to kick off the season, the fourth installment of the Beer vs. Wine dinner series is coming up. For those who have not yet attended one of these events, the premiss is fairly simple: five courses are served paired with a different wine and beer for each dish, and attendees vote at the end of each course on which beverage better complimented their food. Votes are tallied at the end of the night, and so far, beer has walked away each time victorious. To keep things fair, Southwestern Beverage is sending along their wine and beer gurus, Bill Huddleston and Michael Barzizza. They not only arranged the beverage menu, but will also be present at the event to guide diners through the complexities of each pairing. The dinner will be held on April 10th at Amerigo, beginning at 6:30 p.m. Price is $60.00 a person, plus tax and gratuity. Call 761-4000 for reservations.
“God of Carnage” is Messy But Good
Chris Davis says God of Carnage is intense but well worth seeing.
Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. this morning to arguably the two biggest summer concerts announced so far.
Memphis-connected hip-hop heartthrob Drake, whose Too Far Gone was one of the genre’s biggest records last year, headlines FedExForum on Tuesday, June 5th as part of his “The Club Paradise Tour.” Drake will be bringing along of an impressive warm-up crew of emerging rap stars: J.Cole, Waka Flocka Flame, Meek Mill, 2 Chainz, and French Montana. (The last name on the list joined Memphian Don Trip on rap magazine XXL‘s recent “Freshman Class” list of 10 breakout rappers for 2012.)
Prices range from $42.75 to $93.75 and are availabe at the FedExForum box office, by phone at 800-745-3000, or via Ticketmaster.
Brad Paisley — easily one of modern country’s major artists, on record and on stage — plays the Snowden Grove Amphitheater on Friday, August 17th as part of his “Virtual Reality World Tour.” Paisley will be joined by breakout — and crossover — stars The Band Perry and up-and-comer Easton Corbin.
Prices range from $45 to $69.50 and are available at the Snowden Grove box office, by phone at 800-745-3000, or via Ticketmaster.
Nothing humanizes like vomit. It’s pretty much the same routine for all of us. First, pretending everything’s fine and knowing everything’s not. Then gagging and fighting back the spew as we search for an an appropriate place to spill our guts until we’re no longer able to contain it and surrender to wave after body-wracking wave of puke. And then finally, after all of the sputtering and the splattering, after thinking you’ve reached the lowest point of your entire life, there is catharsis.
It’s really not a terrible metaphor for God of Carnage, a deceptively ambitious one act by Art playwright Yasmina Reza, that’s getting a healthy workout at Playhouse on the Square through April 1. It’s a play about parenting, art, good pastry, excellent rum and the wonders of modern living. It’s also about how goddamn horrible most people really are, especially the civilized ones.
Much has been made of the live onstage puking in this show. Too much probably, considering how beautifully the gross-out comedy fits into this otherwise cerebral work, and how much more there is to talk about.
Carnage is unrelenting. It opens with two bright, white, upper-middle-class couples trying to agree on the language that best describes an altercation between their pre-teen boys. Was the child armed with a stick or was he furnished with a stick? Did he aggressively disfigure the other child or did he lash out because he felt threatened by the other child’s gang? And so on. It’s a painful, painfully funny exercise showing how, people can agree on words, and still be speaking two completely different languages.
Anybody who’s watched the news recently will be instantly reminded of the Trayvon Martin shooting, and the punditry’s countless interpretations of only a few known facts.
Gathered in the room: An attorney for a large pharmaceutical company who is constantly on his cell phone; his wife who works in wealth management; also the apparently liberal author of a book about the Darfur genocide and her not so liberal husband, a businessman who sells practical household items like pots and pans. They are all impossible and, once you scratch beyond the surface, extremely difficult people to like.
Reza’s play isn’t entirely realistic. It’s difficult to imagine that any of these beastly people would actually spend an hour-and-a-half together. After the first ugly impasse most would probably call it a day and let their attorneys do the talking. But the Big Pharma lawyer— nicely underplayed by Michael Gravois— says he believes in a “God of carnage.” And, as one might expect from such a believer, he actually seems to enjoy the conflict. When things heat up he ignores his phone and becomes animated, and engaged.
The cast is a director’s dream. Gravois is joined onstage by Erin Shelton, Kim Justis, and Barclay Roberts, and they all do exceptional work. Irene Crist, who most recently directed Circle Mirror Transformation at Theatre Memphis might have insisted on a faster pace and crisper performances, but instead she lets the show sprawl. And with this cast, why not let them indulge a little?
God of Carnage plays out like like some intense chamber quartet that breaks down into solos, duets, trios, as the couples square off against one another, new alliances form, old partnerships break apart, and everything settles back roughly where it began.
Comparisons have been made to Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, and to Jean Paul Sartre’s No Exit, both of which strongly put forward the notion that Hell is other people. And at times God of Carnage does seem like some delightfully nauseating offspring of these two classics. But I’m going to take an oversimplified view of the play, and assume—as many have—that Reza’s script is merely a descent into childishness. It’s the same kind of childishness William Golding depicted in his brutal masterpiece The Lord of the Flies, suggesting that even the most civilized people can fall, almost instantly, into savagery.
If you like good theater don’t let the threat of puke keep you away. God of Carnage is one of the best shows you’ll see all season.
God of Carnage is at Playhouse on the Square through April 1.