Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Three Predictions for Tiger Football

The best college football team in the state of Tennessee kicks off its season this Saturday, when the Memphis Tigers host the Mercer Bears.

The Tigers will beat their FCS opponent, giving the program wins in five straight season-openers, a streak last seen from 1959 to 1963 (before the Liberty Bowl was built).

But what about some less-predictable predictions? Here are three to get the blue and gray in your blood stirring.
Larry Kuzniewski

Darrell Henderson sheds Mustangs.


• Tony Pollard and Darrell Henderson will race each other to 2,000 yards.
Few programs in the country can match this pair of speed-demons in sheer playmaking ability. Every time Pollard sets himself to return a kickoff, it’s a potential record-maker. (His six career kickoff returns for touchdowns are one shy of the NCAA record.) Henderson averaged an absurd 8.9 yards per carry last season in what amounted to shared backfield duty, accumulating 1,154 yards on the ground and nine touchdowns. (Patrick Taylor is back, too, it should be noted, and will interfere somewhat with his fellow juniors’ statistical outbursts.)

Pollard told me earlier this month that he hopes to hit the 2,000-yard mark in all-purpose yards (rushing, receiving, and returning) this fall. He had 1,647 last year, Henderson right behind at 1,630. (For perspective, All-America receiver Anthony Miller had “only” 1,498 all-purpose yards in 2017.) If Henderson and Pollard stay healthy, Memphis fans should enjoy some head-spinning Saturdays (and Friday nights), a feeling that won’t be as welcome to Tiger opponents.


• The Tigers will score fewer points than they did in 2017 . . . but they’ll also allow fewer. The Memphis program has reached new heights offensively over the last four seasons. Since the 2014 campaign, the Tigers have averaged 36.2, 40.2, 38.8, and 45.5 points per game. Last season’s team finished second in the entire country (to UCF) in scoring. But 45 points a game? That’s just not sustainable, especially with a rookie quarterback in the mix.

The Tiger defense did its share to keep opponents in games last season, allowing an average of 32.5 points per game. (For perspective, the 2011 Tigers allowed 35.0 points per game and went 2-10.) The defense will be better this season. Cornerback T.J. Carter and linebacker Curtis Akins are already stars. An improved pass rush would go a long way. So, welcome back, Jackson Dillon. (The Tigers averaged two sacks per game a year ago.) And the defense may not be exposed as often this season, the Tigers presumably shifting toward a run-first attack behind the trio mentioned above (which would burn more clock than a pass-first attack). The Tigers won’t win games this season in which they allow 45 points (as they did twice in 2017). But they’re likely to reduce the number of such games, which will help the win total.

• The Tigers will go 8-4, but earn their first bowl win since 2014.

A rookie quarterback won’t often win games by himself, but he sure can lose one (or two) with poor decision-making. How good will grad-transfer Brady White be as a starting college quarterback? Will he stay healthy? Should White be sidelined, can a freshman backup lead a team, even as talented as these Tigers?

Those are too many questions about the most important position on a football field for me to project more than eight wins. Soft schedule, you say? Nothing soft about a trip to Navy, or a road game in an SEC stadium (Missouri) or hosting a pair of teams — UCF and Houston — that consider themselves Top 20 material. The good news/bad news to an eight-win season would be playing in a second-tier bowl game in mid-December, a game I’m convinced the Tigers would win, perhaps handily.

For much more on the upcoming Tiger football season, check out this week’s print edition, hitting streets Wednesday.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Jitney, Fun Home Take Top Honors: Ostrander Winners, 2018

Fun Home at Playhouse on the Square

This season, Hattiloo completed August Wilson’s entire century-cycle with a first-rate production of Jitney, Wilson’s requiem for gypsy cab drivers working Pittsburgh’s Hill District. In the musical category, Ostrander liked Playhouse on the Square’s Fun Home, a sophisticated musical adaptation of comic book artist Alison Bechdel’s traumatic childhood. 

College Division

Set Design
The Wild Party – Brian Ruggaber, U of M

Costume Design
The Secret in the Wings – Becca Bailey, U of M

Lighting Design
The Secret in the Wings – Nicholas F. Jackson

Music Direction
Nine – Jason Eschhofen, U of M

Choreography
Nine – Jill Guyton Nee

Supporting Actress in a Drama
Five Women Wearing the Same Dress – Hiawartha Jackson, Southwest

Leading Actress in a Drama
The Servant of Two Masters – Jordan Hartwell, U of M

Supporting Actor in a Drama
The Servant of Two Masters – Tyler Vernon

Leading Actor in a Drama
Theophilus North – Ryan Gilliam, McCoy Theatre, Rhodes

Supporting Actress in a Musical
Violet – Destiny Freeman, Rhodes/U of M co-production

Leading Actress in a Musical
Violet – Jenny Wilson

Supporting Actor in a Musical
Violet – Jason McCloud

Leading Actor in a Musical
Violet – Deon’ta White

Featured/Cameo Role
Violet – Jaylon Jazz McCraven

Large Ensemble
Nine – The entire cast of ladies

Small Ensemble
Five Women Wearing the Same Dress – Ciara Campbell, Jhona Gipson, Rashidah Gardner, Mary Ann Washington, Hiawartha Jackson

Excellence in Direction of a Drama
The Servant of Two Masters – Danica Horton

Excellence in Direction of a Musical
Violet – Karissa Coady

Best Production
Violet

Ostrander Nominees and Award Winners 2018 Community and Professional Division

Excellence in Set Design
Tim McMath, Fun Home, Playhouse on the Square

Excellence in Costume Design
Amie Eoff, Shrek, Theatre Memphis Joey Miller

Shrek at Theatre Memphis

Excellence in Props Design
Betty Dilley, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Germantown Community Theatre

Excellence in Hair/Wig/Makeup Design
Buddy Hart, Rence Phillips, Charles McGowan, Shrek

Excellence in Sound Design
Joe Johnson, Eurydice, New Moon Theatre Company

Excellence in Lighting Design
Zo Haynes, Fun Home

Excellence in Music Direction
Jeffrey Brewer, Drowsy Chaperone, Theatre Memphis

Falsettos, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis

Excellence in Choreography
Travis Bradley & Jordan Nichols, Drowsy Chaperone

Best Supporting Actress in a Drama
Erin Shelton, All Saints in the Old Colony, POTS@TheWorks
Jessica “Jai” Johnson, Ruined, Hattiloo

Best Leading Actress in a Drama
Maya Geri Robinson, Ruined

Best Supporting Actor in a Drama
John Maness, All Saints in the Old Colony

Best Leading Actor in a Drama
Greg Boller, All Saints in the Old Colony

Best Supporting Actress in a Musical
Carla McDonald, Fun Home

Best Leading Actress in a Musical
Breyannah Tillman, Dreamgirls, Playhouse on the Square

Best Supporting Actor in a Musical
Napoleon Douglas, Dreamgirls

Best Leading Actor in a Musical
Justin Asher, Shrek

Best Featured Performer in a Drama
Jamel “JS” Tate, Jitney, Hattiloo

Best Featured Performer in a Musical
Annie Freres, Shrek
Carla McDonald

All Saints in the Old Colony: Greg Boller, John Maness

Ensemble
Falsettos

Excellence in Direction of a Drama
Jeff Posson, All Saints in the Old Colony

Best Production of a Drama
Jitney

Excellence in Direction of a Musical
Dave Landis, Fun Home

Best Production of a Musical
Fun Home

Gypsy Award
Christi Hall

Larry Riley Rising Star
Breyannah Tillman

Behind the Scenes
Andy Saunders.

Best Original Script
All Saints in the Old Colony POTS@TheWorks

Best Production of an Original Script
All Saints in the Old Colony

Annie Freres in Shrek

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Minh Nguyen Is New Chef at Bleu

Michael Donahue

Chef Minh Nguyen

Minh Nguyen is the new executive chef at Bleu Restaurant & Lounge in The Westin Memphis Beale Street.

“I have never been so excited in my life,” says Nguyen, 48, who was executive chef at Izakaya, owner/executive chef at Rain, executive chef/catering Yia Yia’s European Bistro, and chef de cuisine at BlueFin.

“Bleu is just the golden opportunity that I’ll never get anywhere in Memphis. Bleu reminds me of when you go to Miami, L.A., or New York. The type of food I want to bring will have that flair.”

His cuisine won’t be the food typically associated with Memphis. “You can go get barbecue anywhere.”

Nguyen wants to bring food “that’s new. Something’s that unique. Something’s that very affordable.”

Since Bleu is across the street from FedExForum and near the Orpheum, the restaurant will offer three menus – fine dining, family-oriented, and sushi.

“We are going to be doing sushi, but not sushi you find here in Memphis. The new strain of sushi is more refined. More quality ingredients done in a new way. Old sushi is out. New sushi is in.”

New sushi is made of African couscous, which is a short-grain rice, Nguyen says. “We’re going to sous vide a lot of our fish where it will look raw, but you’re actually eating a cooked product. A lot of the sauces will be more molecular. We’re going to get away from drizzling and keep the plate cleaner.”

September 27th, Ngyun says, he will “be in the kitchen.”

“We’re just really excited about what he can bring to the table,” said Chris Griffin, Bleu director of food and beverage. “We’re looking forward to it. I know he’s got a great following, so I’m glad to have those folks with us, also.”

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Categories
News News Blog

Tennessee Supreme Court: TBI Can Collect DUI Testing Fees

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) can continue to collect $250 fees from convicted drunk drivers, according to a Thursday ruling by the Tennessee Supreme Court.

The fees cover the costs of running blood alcohol tests. The TBI only collected the fees if a driver was convicted of driving under the influence (DUI).

Attorneys for Chattanooga resident Rosemary L. Decosimo argued that the ”scheme provides TBI forensic scientists with a personal and institutional financial incentive to produce blood alcohol test results that secure convictions, which, in turn, increases fees and funding for the TBI,” according to court papers.

The suit came in 2012 after Decosimo was arrested that August for DUI. She provided a blood sample and later sued to suppress the evidence the results from her case because the fee system ”violates the right to due process and a fair trial.” The case challenged the constitutionality of the TBI’s testing fee.
[pullquote-2] The fees produced $1.6 million for the TBI from 2009 to 2012, according to court documents. From 2005 to 2016, the TBI collected more than $22 million from these fees, according to documents.

In 2014, then-TBI director Mark Gwyn said his agency faced deep cuts in 2008, forcing the agency to either start charging law enforcement for testing or to close some of its labs. He said the TBI used the testing fees for equipment and training.

Last year, Criminal Appeals Court in Knoxville ruled against the fee-collection scheme. It said TBI forensic scientists had a financial interest in securing convictions based on blood tests.

“…because the collection of the…fees affects their continued employment and salary, which gives them an incentive to find that defendants’ blood alcohol content is 0.08 percent or higher,” reads the opinion.

But the Tennessee Supreme Court overruled that decision. TBI forensic scientists are salaried employees, reads the court’s opinion filed Thursday, and not swayed by the fees.
[pullquote-1] “Their compensation is not at all dependent on the results of blood alcohol tests or whether a particular defendant is or is not convicted, nor do their salaries decrease or increase based on the aggregate amount of…(testing) fees imposed or collected,” reads the opinion. “These facts alone illustrate that TBI forensic scientists do not have a personal, direct, substantial pecuniary interest in producing a particular test result.”

Further, according to the ruling, the scientists have no say over the imposition or the collection of the fees, no control over when cases are resolved, and that a scientist’s job security depends on accurate reporting, not on financial incentives.

Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery said he was “pleased with the outcome.” It upholds Tennessee law and “removes any uncertainty over past DUI convictions.” The case could have affected thousands of prior DUI cases here.

“In addition, the court pointed out that any financial incentive created by the law is far too remote to constitute a possible temptation for TBI forensic agents to falsify test results and generate fees,” Slatery said in a statement.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Tony Isbell Awarded Eugart Yerian Award for Lifetime Achievement in Memphis Theater

Tony Isbell is Krapp. I mean that in the best possible sense.

In the Ostrander Awards first year of existence Tony Isbell was one of two actors nominated in the Best Actor category. He lost. Oh well. He’d be nominated many more times and win his share of play prizes. Now, after 40 years working in Memphis as an actor, director, producer, sometimes writer and occasional cult movie star, Isbell is being honored with the Eugart Yerian award for lifetime achievement.

Isbell will be honored at the Orpheum Theatre this Sunday evening when the Memphis theater community converges at the corner of Main & Beale for Memphis’ annual theater awards, The Ostranders.

Memphis Flyer: Origin stories are a good place to start. And we’ve talked about this before because, like me, you moved here from rural Middle Tennessee.

Tony Isbell: West Tennessee.

Yes, West Tennessee. But you didn’t exactly grow up in an urban environment.

I was born in Union City and lived in a 10-mile radius of Union City and Martin until we moved to Memphis. That would have been 1978. So at this point I’ve lived more of my life in Memphis than where I’m from originally.

Tony Isbell in ‘Red’

Was theater something available to you?

No. That’s a very short answer. No. I used to say the first play I ever saw I was in. The University of Tennessee at Martin is there. And I’m sure they were doing [theater there]. But when I was a kid was a long time ago. Union City was maybe 10,000 people when I was a kid. Martin was maybe 3-4000. Something like that. So this was a small agricultural community, basically. I didn’t see theater. I saw a lot of stuff on TV of course. And at that time, there was still some stuff that was kind of like live theater. Even when I was in elementary school and junior high, there were no productions in the schools.

What were your creative outlets?

I don’t know if you can classify this is creative, but… For my family, who I love, I probably seem like an alien. I love to read. And I’d read practically anything when I was a kid. But when I discovered things that were like science fiction and fantasy and stuff that today would be called magical realism, I truly fell in love. Those were the kinds of things that I loved almost from the minute I began to read. Some of the earliest books that I remember — I can’t remember the titles — but they were Norse mythology and all that stuff about the Norse gods. Mythology in general. So anything that had a kind of flavor of the fantastic.

I did watch a lot of TV. Probably more than was good for me. But I used to pester anybody I could to read to me. They would laugh at me. In a good way. I was especially fascinated by the comics in the newspaper and I always wanted to know what does this cloud say. What does this cloud say. The act of reading just fascinated me and in Elementary School I got in trouble for reading too much. That sounds crazy, I know. We had assigned days when we could go to the school library. I’d find books that I wanted to read and we go back to class and we were supposed to do something else and I’d hold the book under the desktop and begin reading it immediately and just lose myself completely. I remember one time when the teacher called on me and I was totally in another world.

I do remember being fascinated by television when I was still fairly young, and asking I don’t know if it was my father or who it was. See, I understood the people on TV were actors. I didn’t think Gunsmoke was really happening. But it suddenly struck me — how did they know what to say? “Well, somebody writes it,” I was told. I thought that was so cool. So when I was really young I thought maybe I would be a writer. And I wrote some stuff.

You still do, don’t you?

I haven’t written anything in a long time. I wrote some things for Chatterbox. But I thought I might be a writer. I enjoyed reading too much to be a writer if that makes sense. I still get ideas and I get inspired and I start reading about things I want to do and… well…

Other than that, I grew up in a very rural environment. My grandparents had a farm. They had some dairy cows. And I would spend summers with them, not even 10 miles from where my folks lived. Both my parents worked. My mother was a factory worker. Real working class sort of thing. My dad drove a truck. He drove trucks pretty much his whole life. Not like semis but like local delivery trucks and things like that.

Tony Isbell Awarded Eugart Yerian Award for Lifetime Achievement in Memphis Theater


Did you act things out? Or were you a class clown?

No. I was incredibly shy. And in many ways, I still am. But I was not the class clown or anything like that. If anything, I wanted people not to notice me. It goes back to that reading thing. I would get so involved in reading and watching shows. So caught up in that, it almost seemed like I lost track of what was going on in the real world around me. My mother was worried about me reading so much. She was really concerned that I wasn’t getting enough sunshine and fresh air and stuff. I told you before about how one time she made me give away all of my comic books. Oh my God it broke my heart. I had Spider-Man #1. She made me get rid of it. I think I got a nickel for it. It’s worth what now? $100,000 or something? Something crazy. My mother in particular was really concerned about me reading all that science fiction. She thought it was bad for me. And she didn’t know anything about it, I don’t think. She just saw the lurid covers on the paperbacks and magazines. She thought it was bad for my brain

Did you come to Memphis for school?

I went to undergraduate school at Martin. Marie and I actually got married there. In Union City. We moved to Memphis so she could go to graduate school to get her Masters. We weren’t really planning to stay here. We didn’t think much beyond her getting her Masters. She’s a speech pathologist. She works and has worked for the state of Tennessee for almost 30 years.

When did you start doing theater?

High school. And there are two people I can point to that got me into theater. One was an English teacher named Harriet Beeler. She taught English but at some point she got certified to teach speech. So she had to take some extra courses at the University at UT-Martin, which happened to be right there. One of the courses she ended up taking was a directing class. So, for her final, all the students had to direct a short play and she approached me. I don’t know why. I guess I was a good English student. She asked about doing a small role and I’d never done anything like that before, but for some reason, something in me just immediately responded. With fear and also extreme interest. So I said okay.

Isbell and Ellis in True West.

I would have been a sophomore or junior at this time. The play was this – oh my God, like the worst Lifetime movie you’ve ever seen. Big tearjerker. I don’t remember the author but it was called The Valiant and it was about this guy who was in prison for murdering a man basically because he needed murdering. I wasn’t playing that role, I was playing a role that had about two lines. A prison guard. Beeler cast a football player to play the hero because she thought he looked right. He was very popular. Well, he didn’t come to the first rehearsal. There had been some mixup or something. But then he didn’t come to the second one. Just didn’t show up. So, I don’t know if it was the second or third time he missed that she says, “Well, maybe I think he doesn’t want to do this play.” By this point, I wanted to play that role so bad. But I was too scared to say anything. So she said, “I’m going to ask Andy to do it.” Andy was another guy in the show playing a guard. And Andy was a nice guy, but he could barely say the lines. So, after about 5 minutes of him struggling with the words she said, “Maybe we should let Tony do this.” Whatever else I may not have had, I was able to read things out loud really well and that was all she needed. She was like, “Oh good you can do it.” So I ended up doing that for the directing class and to this day I can remember how I felt before I went on stage. I was 16 or 17 and I was waiting backstage and my heart was pounding. I think I was actually afraid something bad was going to happen to me because my heart was beating so hard.

So, we went out there and did it and when it was over and we got to take a bow there was such an adrenaline and endorphin rush I literally felt high. Like I was on drugs of some kind. It was unbelievable. I’d never felt like that or imagined anything like that. It was just crazy. I was wearing this grey shirt and I had sweated so much I was wet from my elbow all the way down to my hip. I’d never done anything like that before either. I couldn’t believe it. I must have been a junior because the next year we moved to a new high school, they built a new high school. And I wound up starring in the senior play which was the first senior play we’d ever done since I’d been in that school.

With Deborah Harrison in Fool for Love.

Then I went to UT Martin and studied theater with Bill Snyder all four years I was there and did lots of acting and directing. He was an interesting guy. He was from originally from Memphis but went to Yale and was a couple of years ahead of Bennett Wood who also went to Yale. So they knew each other or knew of each other. Then he went to New York. His real thing was playwriting, he was a playwright and had a minor success Off Broadway with a play called The Days and Nights of Beebee Fenstermaker. Which is partially set in Memphis and partially set in New York. It opened the same season Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf and was one of the first acting jobs for Robert Duvall. Bill Snyder was friends with Robert Duvall and Dustin Hoffman and ended up going to Actors Studio for a while. Everything he taught at Martin was extremely Actors Studio based. it was interesting because, when he would direct we would improvise everything. You know, doing it without the dialogue. He’d say, “Okay, you’re doing the play now but don’t worry about getting the words. Just get what’s going on.” It could be helpful. He hardly ever gave us blocking; all of that evolved out of the improvisation.

The show I felt like I made my really big breakthrough on was the production of Marat/Sade, which I would actually like to direct someday.

Me too, but I don’t see that happening.

I love that show. And it’s not really done. It’s like nobody does it anymore and I think it’s just as relevant now as it was back then.

Somehow that doesn’t seem like a very Actors Studio kind of play.

I never knew why he picked any of the plays that he did.

Who did you play in that?

I played The Herald. And improvising all that stuff in the insane asylum was incredibly freeing for me. I’ve told people before, and it sounds goofy. But there was one night in particular when I felt like all my my previous acting had been in a dark room and then somebody turned on the lights. It’s hard to explain. I’ve talked to other actors and they said they never had a moment like that. But it was like I understood what acting was supposed to be like. It wasn’t just saying lines. All of a sudden I was connected emotionally and I really understood the difference, I think. From that point on I was able to access it

So, after college you move to Memphis. What was the theater scene like when you arrived here? Was it welcoming?

Yes. Well, a qualified yes. When I arrived here it seemed like the only places to do theater were Circuit Playhouse and Theatre Memphis. Playhouse on the Square had either just started or was about to start. I came down from Martin a few times to see shows at Circuit. This is when it was still over on Poplar across from Overton Park. A tiny little theater.

I’d heard it was harder to get into Theatre Memphis. At that time, Circuit was doing the kinds of shows I was more interested in. So, for the first eight, nine, or ten years – I don’t know – I didn’t do any shows at Theatre Memphis. It was mostly Circuit because they did the more interesting plays for me. Also, the theater either owned or rented a house and, in the attic there was literally a space called called The Attic Theater that held, I’m not kidding you, maybe 10 seats. Maybe 12 seats. And that’s where I did some of my first stuff in Memphis, because anybody could do anything in The Attic. I did some original scripts there. All you had to do was say, “Hey, I want to do this.”

With Mark Pergolizzi in As Is.

The first play I did on a main stage was American Buffalo at Circuit. I played Bobby the kid. That was the first show I did there. It’s a wonderful show. It was the Christmas show — to literally let you know how much things have changed. I can’t remember the exact dates but it ran like December into January.

So this is my first show in Memphis really. Alan Mullikan played the shop owner and Jim Palmer played Teach. And the review was mixed to bad. It was Bob Jennings who hated any kind of thing like that anyway. Didn’t like foul language. So this was not a good show for him to see. I remember his opening of that review and it was the first time I’ve ever been reviewed in the newspaper the opening with something like… Wait. Did American Buffalo win the Pulitzer Prize or was it just nominated.

I don’t think it won. But maybe.

Maybe it was just nominated.

Glengarry Glen Ross won a Pulitzer. American Buffalo won a Tony. But maybe it won the Pulitzer, I hate that I have such a terrible memory for these things. *

Maybe it won. Or was nominated. Because, the opening of the review was something like, “The American Pulitzer committee, whether it should or not, has seen fit to award the Pulitzer Prize for drama to American Buffalo and Circuit Playhouse, whether it should or not, has seen fit to produce it.”

Oh wow. That’s really something.

He didn’t like it at all. He said something about me to the effect of “Tony Isbell, as Bobby, the mentally retarded young thug, doesn’t seem to be acting. He simply is the part.” He didn’t mean that in a good way. That was my first review.

So you wind up staying in Memphis.
It just kind of happened that we ended up staying. I never seriously thought about going to New York or Los Angeles because, frankly, I wanted to be able to do a lot of theater. I didn’t want to spend most of my time hustling auditions for shows that you don’t get. Then Marie got a pretty good job here and I ended up going to Memphis State and getting an MFA in theater because I thought I might go back to Martin to teach. But that didn’t happen, so we just ended up staying here and over the years I’ve gotten to do tons and tons of theater, which is what I wanted to do. And a little film and TV here and there. As far as being a professional, I just didn’t want to face all that. It had no appeal to me.

You bring up film and TV so maybe we should talk a little bit about “I Was a Zombie for the FBI?”

Oh, I loved that. That’s when I was working on my Master’s. I was actually approached by Marius Penczner, who was the director. He said, “Hey I’m going to be making this movie.” And I didn’t know who he was. He had seen me in some theater stuff and thought I’d make a good villain. Especially a space alien. I don’t know if this is true but he said he wrote the part with me in mind because he thought I had a cool demeanor that would work really well.

When I signed on I told everybody that I worked during the day and we’d have to work around that. Well, damned if I didn’t get laid off my job a week or two later. Then I saw the shooting schedule and was like, “I couldn’t have done this if I still had my job.” It was kind of good in that way. We shot for several weeks. Five or six weeks. Maybe a little longer.

And this launches on cable with Attack of the Killer Tomatoes or something like that, right?

They had a premiere at Ardent Studios. They set up all these big screens because there wasn’t one auditorium big enough for all the people. There were five or six rooms they set up chairs in and you could watch on big TV screens. 20-30 people to a room. Then it actually played on Channel 5 a couple of months later. It ended up playing on the USA Network’s Up All Night. I think it was in rotation with Attack of the Killer Tomatoes and they’d play it every four to six months.

Greatest hits: What are some of your favorite shows you’ve worked on?

Some of my favorite shows I’ve acted in? The Dresser at Circuit. I played Norman and it was the first year they had Ostrander awards. Myself and Jay Ehrlicher were nominated for best actor and I lost.

Jay was nominated for playing Salieri in Amadeus?

Yes, Amadeus. Also, I did Fool for Love. I loved that play. Still love that play. I got a lot of nominations in the early years. And in the later years too. It sounds like bragging, but I got nominated a lot. Acting more than directing. And I did True West a few years later at Theatre Memphis.

With Chris Ellis.

Yes. I directed Memphis’ premiere of Prelude to a Kiss and wouldn’t mind directing that again.

I like that Craig Lucas.

I did the other show of his— the Christmas Show…

Not Blue Window. Reckless!

Yes, Reckless. Loved that show.

This is all main stage stuff more or less, but you’ve also always done independent work too. Like you said you worked in the Attic. But you also produced a show in the basement at First Congo Church long before there was a theater in the basement of First Congo Church.

Thais.

Yes, Thais. And now you have a company for doing independent work. Tell me a little about Quark.

It came about as a kind of joke. I made a joke on Facebook about Krapp’s Last Tape. There’s a line in the play, “I’ve just eaten two bananas and was only able to just keep myself from eating a third.” Or something like that. I made that joke about donuts because I had, that morning, eaten three or four donuts. Adam got the reference. I knew he was a Beckett fan. He wrote his masters thesis on Beckett and he was the one person who responded with the correct line. In a post on Facebook I said it’s the one play I want to act in rather than direct and he said, “Well, let’s.” It turned out to be such a good experience. Such positive feedback from people. Even from people I didn’t think would care for it. A few months after the show I asked Adam, how about we do this on regular basis? Just a couple of shows a year.

We’re both nerdy, so we named the company Quark. Building blocks of the universe. And that’s what we want to focus on. We started with Beckett then looked at maybe doing some Pinter and said, “Maybe we want to do new things. Or things that haven’t been done here. So we started looking for new work that engages the intellect a well as emotions.

Bye, bye, Blackbird.


I love good design and I’m not just saying that because I’m married to a designer. Good, thoughtful design — which doesn’t have to be extravagant or expensive — elevates everything. But I also love work that strips everything away but the barest essentials. That’s what I love about Quark.

I wanted to get down to just the actors, the audience, and the script and let the rest be bare minimum. The main things I’m concerned with are the actors and audience. The space, the audience, the performers and what happens between them is what’s most interesting to me.

*American Buffalo did not win the Pulitzer though playwright David Mamet was confident it would. It won 3 Tony awards and the New York Drama Circle’s Award for Best New American Play. 

Categories
News News Blog

Purple Haze Can Serve Alcohol Until 5 A.M.

Purple Haze/Facebook

A court ruled last week that the Purple Haze Nightclub can serve alcohol until 5 a.m., the conclusion of a two-year lawsuit.

Owners of Beale Street’s Club 152 sued Purple Haze owners in April 2016 to stop alcohol sales there at 3 a.m. Club 152 owners argued Purple Haze was not in the Beale Street Historic District and, therefore, could not sell alcohol until 5 a.m., like Beale Street clubs. The suit was dismissed in the Shelby County Chancery Court last week.

Purple Haze officials said the suit was “politically and monetarily motivated.” The club is located on Lt. George W. Lee Ave. across from the Gibson Beale Street Showcase venue and just down the street from FedExForum.

The club can now continue operations and sell alcohol until 5 a.m. “like every other business located in the Beale Street Historic District,” according to Edward Bearman, attorney for Purple Haze.
[pullquote-1] “Our position from the beginning was this suit had no merit,” Bearman said in a statement Thursday. “Purple Haze is finally vindicated in the matters of this lawsuit.”

A club spokesman said the two-year suit involved the Beale Street Merchants Association, the city of Memphis, and the Downtown Memphis Commission (DMC). The city and the DMC argued against later serving hours for the club last year, according to a story from WREG.

“I have been very confident in the judicial system to prevail in our favor,” said Pat Thomasson, owner of Purple Haze Nightclub. “I will continue to offer quality entertainment to the area and am pleased to be able to continue our operations until 5 a.m. I am glad this is behind us…”

A quick Google news search finds a recent string of violence in and around Purple Haze.

A Christmas-morning shooting sent one man to Regional One Health.

In March, a peace activist was shot and killed near the club.

A double shooting there in March sent a man a woman to Reiognal One.

In April, the club announced on social media it would stop playing “hard rap” in hopes of curbing violence. The Facebook post said the issue is “black on black crime outside the club that we cannot control.” Purple Haze owners were criticized for the post, apologized for it, and removed it.

In May, a fight inside the club continued outside when a man tried to run over another man with his car.

In June, a brawl inside the bar led to pregnant woman being punched in the stomach.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

The Lost World of 2001: A Space Odyssey

The Discovery on its way to Jupiter in 2001: A Space Odyssey

The first time I saw a Jackson Pollock painting in person was at the Art Institute of Chicago. The amazing thing about Greyed Rainbow was not necessarily the patterns that seemed to emerge from the visual chaos—it was that the closer I got to the 8-foot-tall canvas, the more patterns emerged. No matter how close you look, the spell is maintained. It’s art that works on both the gigantic and intimate scale.

I first saw 2001: A Space Odyssey on a beat-up VHS tape I rented from a small-town video store. I could barely understand what was happening in the story, and, to a kid raised on a steady diet of music videos, it moved very slowly. But it was absolutely fascinating to me. Even if I couldn’t say I loved it like the way I loved Star Wars, I couldn’t stop thinking about it. And I had to admit, it looked better than Star Wars. This was not space fantasy. It was a documentary from the future.

David Bowman (Kier Duella) confronts the rogue computer HAL.

Only after I read Arthur C. Clarke’s novel, which was developed in parallel with the film, did the real scope of the story sink in. This was not sci fi in the “what if flying cars?” sense, but a work that treaded in spaces usually reserved for religion. Why are we here? What is our purpose? What comes next?

As the years passed, and technology developed, I saw 2001 on bigger and bigger screens. VHS gave way to DVD, which progressed to Blu-Ray. Tube TVs went HD (yes, I had a 1080p capable CRT), then gave way to plasma and LCD flatscreens and 4K. At each turn, I made a point of watching 2001 again, and every time it looked better and better. This was not the case with all beloved films. (Remember the terrible masking job in The Empire Strikes Back that gave the TIE fighters little moving frames?) Like Greyed Rainbow, the spell was maintained no matter how close you got. Special effects created during the Lyndon B. Johnson administration have held up better over time than The Phantom Menace.

Sunrise over the Monolith

Part of the reason is because 2001 was made on 70 mm film—twice as wide as standard 35 mm film—and designed to be projected in places like the 86-foot wide screen at the Cinerama Dome in Los Angeles. The theater industry’s answer to television has always been to build bigger screens, and Cinerama was the ultimate expression of that idea. 2001 seems slow because it is designed to be immersive. Kubrick wants to give you time to look around.

For the next week, Memphis audiences will get a chance to see 2001: A Space Odyssey the way it was intended to be seen in a special engagement at the Paradiso IMAX. The Dark Knight director and Kubrick superfan Christopher Nolan has championed the film in its 50th anniversary year by striking new 70 mm film prints that have screened in theaters nationwide still equipped with the necessary monster film projectors, and the program has been so successful that MGM expanded it into digital IMAX theaters.

The myth of 2001 has grown larger than the Cinerama Dome. Countless words have been written about it by critics of all stripes. (I once did 20 pages about the anthropomorphization of technology in the film—how the machines seemed to become more human, and the people became less human.) Beginning with Clarke’s own The Lost Worlds of 2001, every book-length effort to explicate its mysteries has only added to them. Michael Benson’s recent Space Odyssey: Stanley Kubrick, Arthur C. Clarke, and the Making of a Masterpiece is the first one I’ve read that treats the film less like a quasi-religious text and more like a work of art made by flawed human beings. Particularly moving is the portrait Benson draws of Clarke as a deeply closeted homosexual who fled his native England for Sri Lanka after the prosecution of computer scientist and war hero Alan Turing for indecency. Clarke’s intellectual life may have been spent in the highest orbits, but his personal life was a string of hustlers and grifters taking financial advantage of his emotional naiveté.

Astronauts Frank Poole (Gary Lockwood) and David Bowman (Keir Duella) discuss the fate of their sentient computer crewmate HAL 9000. This composition is a reference to a shot from Citizen Kane.

Kubrick comes across as considerably less sympathetic. His ruthless business dealings drove his presumed partner Clarke to the brink of bankruptcy, and his unforgiving creative methods drove the people around him beyond the brink of madness. For four years, Clarke wrote and re-wrote narration intended to explain the action on the screen, only to have Kubrick decide at the last minute that it wasn’t needed. In the scene where astronaut Frank Poole’s body is recovered in space, the stuntman in the space suit had actually passed out from lack of oxygen because Kubrick wouldn’t allow air holes to be drilled in the helmet. The editors assembled the film without a script, because Kubrick had the whole thing in his head and refused to write it down. After the production was over, Kubrick demanded that the one-of-a-kind, slit photography machines Douglas Trumbull designed and built by hand be smashed to bits so no one could ever replicate the climactic Star Gate sequence.

But all of Kubrick’s instincts turned out to be right, and Clarke forgave him in the end. After all, if 2001: A Space Odyssey wasn’t the highest grossing film of 1968, Clarke wouldn’t have been on TV sitting next to Walter Cronkite when Apollo 11 landed on the moon in 1969. The film’s financial success was far from guaranteed. The opening night in New York was such an epic disaster that Kubrick moved to England and never came back. But like The Beatles or Kanye West, it turned out to be one one of those rare times in pop culture history when the market and the cutting edge met.

Choreographer and mime Daniel Richter as Moonwatcher. The rest of the hominids in the wordless Dawn Of Man sequence were played by teenage girls from a BBC dance troupe.

Clarke and Kubrick set out to make the “proverbial good science fiction film,” and in many ways, the future they envisioned came true. Maybe we don’t have a moon base, but the astronauts on the Discovery get their daily news from things that look a lot like iPads, and rogue computers are indeed a major problem here in the 21st century. But it also points to the limits of the Western science fiction vision. Global climate change, the most pressing scientific issue of our time, is not mentioned, and while there are women scientists (who are presumed to be Soviet Russians, by the way), there are no black people in space.

Bowman uses a tablet computer to catch up on the daily news from Earth. The iPad made its debut in 2010, the year when the sequel to 2001 was set.

Yet every other film that has dared to shoot for the same Clarke orbit as 2001 has gone down in flames. The Soviet response, Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solaris, is much more human sized. The sequel, 2010, made with Clarke’s influence but not Kubrick’s, is a mere footnote. Nolans’ own attempt, Interstellar, falls apart at the end under the weight of the director’s sentimentality and instinct to explain himself. 2001 remains a singular product of a particular time, when the American future seemed bright and limitless, and capital could still be brought to bear for great works of art. But its awe is tinged with fear, as are all good religious texts. If we are to be transformed by our technology and our knowledge, will our wisdom follow? If we are to become more than human, what will be lost? Like Hal’s red eye, 2001: A Space Odyssey looks unflinchingly at these questions, and reveals the paucity of our answers.

The Lost World of 2001: A Space Odyssey

2001: A Space Odyssey plays at the Malco Paradiso IMAX Theater August 23-30. 

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

WEVL — Time to Change the Station

As a lifelong Memphian, I’ve grown up listening to our community radio station, WEVL (89.9FM).

As a musician, playing here most of my life, it’s been a great resource for me, artistically and professionally, as well as a source of pride. (They played one of my first recordings, a lo-fi acoustic version of “Fight for Your Right to Party” when I was in 7th grade — a personal milestone). I’ve also performed and guest DJed at the station a number of times, and I will always be thankful for WEVL’s support over the years.

Yet the rapid growth of streaming has made it easier to find the excellent community radio stations in other cities — WWOZ New Orleans, WFMU New York, and, recently, WXNA Nashville. These stations are fearless in their programming — trying new DJs, shows, and formats, all while promoting the heritage of these great music cities.

There’s no greater music city than Memphis, but I can’t say that WEVL is taking the same initiative, growing and reaching out to new listeners hungry for Memphis’ sound. While I’ve been lucky to grow up on WEVL, lately WEVL has grown old on me.

It’s always been a point of civic pride that Memphis had a community radio station, while Nashville didn’t. But that changed in 2016 when some Vanderbilt-radio expats from the university’s station created WXNA Nashville. In just two years, WXNA has:

• Recruited more than 90 programmers, with no repeated or syndicated shows;

• Launched a website that instantly archives every show for listening later;

• Fostered engagement with and involvement from the community;

• Promoted and broadcast local music;

• Hosted community events featuring WXNA DJs.

WXNA is an excellent community radio station — and I’m a regular listener. But I’m not here to promote them. I’m writing because WEVL is at a crossroads. And as listener attention is pulled in so many directions, WEVL needs to turn back to its community and re-engage to survive. I’m here to ask the following of WEVL and the listening community:

• Create a strategic plan — soon. Within the next nine months, form a plan that offers a vision of the future to the community WEVL serves.

• Increase the size of the WEVL board (there are currently six open seats that could be filled) and bring the Memphis community into conversation with WEVL’s board of directors.

• Increase diversity in both programming and leadership. Memphis is more than 60 percent African American, but there is only one programmer and board member of color (the wonderful Joyce Cobb). Bring some younger members into the family (what’s the average age?).

• Add programming! In 1993, there were 82 volunteer DJs. Twenty five years later that number has dropped to around 40 — with a lot of resulting repetition in the schedule due to encore and syndicated shows.

• Promote more local music and musicians. Share show listings, book more in-studio performances, broadcast live from local venues.

For the record, over the last six months, a small group of WEVL fans attempted to work directly with the board to make some of the changes mentioned above. That effort included me, Amanda Dent (WEVL programmer for more than 10 years), and Les Edwards (former WEVL board president with a love for the station). We joined with three current board members to form the Development Exploratory Committee. We put a number of interesting ideas on the table and were making good progress toward a plan to present to the board. But then the board abruptly dissolved our committee with no explanation. It was then that we realized the board was not as open to change as we were. I’m disappointed we didn’t get the chance to make any lasting change with our committee. We had no intention of commercializing or making it slick. We simply want more of the good that’s there — diverse programming that reflects the community and is fun to listen to.

Memphis deserves community radio that reflects its standing as one of the world’s greatest music cities. I encourage WEVL programmers and listeners alike to reach out to WEVL and ask its leadership to move the station forward.

If you’d like to learn more, please visit friendsofWEVL.org.

Robby Grant is a musician and works on technology in Memphis.

Categories
News News Blog

ACLU Trial Wraps Up, Ruling to Come in September

Brandon Dill

Protesters and police officers face off during the 2016 Hernando de Soto bridge protest

Court adjourned Thursday morning in the federal trial over Memphis police surveillance on activists. 

Memphis Police Department (MPD) Major Lambert Ross was the last witness to take the stand in U.S. District Judge Jon McCalla’s courtroom. Ross was the head of the Real Time Crime Center (RTCC) during the time of the alleged police surveillance.

The RTCC houses more than 30 large, high-definition monitors displaying live footage from 1,000 cameras around the city. The footage is monitored by both civilian and commissioned officer analysts who can radio officers when incidents occur, Ross said.

Ross said that the RTCC was never used for political surveillance, but to find out where events were being held and how many people were involved. Precincts were then made aware of any large events that were ongoing in their area.

The RTCC began searching social media in 2014, Ross said. Initially, it was used to assist in solving crimes, but after the 2016 bridge protest, searches related to protests were more common. Specifically, Ross said Black Lives Matter was a recurring search term.

“I’m not going to say we chose that term, but it chose us,” Ross testified. “The event picks the search term.”

When asked if searching social media was ever done to find out if specific people would be involved in an event, Ross said no. Ross said as a black man, he “understands the right to protest” and would never interfere. As his MPD colleagues testified before him, Ross said the motivation for the monitoring was public safety.

The city and the ACLU-TN both rested their cases following Ross’ testimony and are required to submit closing briefs in writing to McCalla by Friday, Sept. 14th. Then, both sides have until Friday, Sept. 24th to respond to the opposing side’s brief.

McCalla will release the ruling after both sides have answered each others’ briefs. After court adjourned, one of the attorney’s for the ACLU-TN, Thomas Castelli, said he hopes that the trial will result in court-ordered independent monitoring of MPD, a change in their policies, and better training as it related to the 1978 consent decree.

Additionally and separately from this case, the city has filed a motion to vacate or modify the decree. The ACLU has until early October to that request.

Bruce McMullen, chief legal officer for the city of Memphis, said the city is asking the court vacate the consent decree “because it’s not really relevant today.” It predates any standard technology that law enforcement uses today, he said.

If the court isn’t willing to completely do away with the decree, McMullen said it should “at least be modified and updated so that it’s applicable to the law enforcement best practices that we use today.”

“I want to emphasize that it’s nothing we’re doing today that 155 other jurisdictions do not do in law enforcement,” McMullen said. “It’s basic law enforcement, from Skycops to body cams, which a lot of citizens supported us getting.”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Lucky Cat Announces Move to Broad

Lucky Cat officially announced today its move to the old Jack Magoo’s space on Broad. It’s been reported that they are shooting for an October 1st opening.

From the release:

This fall, Lucky Cat Ramen will move from its current location at 247 Cooper Street to 2583 Broad Avenue in the former Jack Magoo’s space. Lucky Cat’s new 5,000-square-foot location will feature expansive dining space plus an exterior courtyard and outdoor patio. Owners Zach and Sarah Nicholson plan to fully leverage their new, larger restaurant venue by also featuring live music, holding monthly dinners and adding raised outdoor planting beds. The new space is expected to open in October.

“This is an ideal and meaningful location for us,” says Zach Nicholson. “We did our very first pop-up shop just down the road at City & State and later held regular pop-up shops at The Cove. This neighborhood has been kind and supportive to us and we’re glad to be putting down permanent roots where we got our start.”

Lucky Cat, which began as a pop-up, was originally supposed to move into the Crosstown Concourse. Then they were going to go into the former location of Tart on Cooper.

Jack Magoo’s was opened in 2011. It was two stories with half a Cadillac on the outside of the building.

Lucky Cat serves ramen and a number of bao.