Category: Press


A BYOB Play Blooms Downtown


by Jennifer Pelka, Feast NBC New York

Lovers of fine food tend to be lovers of all things brilliant in the cultural universe, so you’ll be glad to know that there is a play going up in Manhattan that does more than touch on the topic of eating–the actors encourage you drink your own wine and inhale the scents of live-action cooking from the stage.

You can bring your own bottle of wine to “La Vie Matérielle,” by Parisian director Irina Brook, in which five women gather around a family kitchen to cook, gossip, laugh, cry, and break into occasional song and dance. Based on the culty French writer Marguerite Duras’ memoirs and inspired by scenes from A Room of One’s Own, the cast of this show is cooking–literally, throughout the scenes. They’re hard at work on a hearty French vegetable soup, which is bubbling on the stove as you walk into the theater.

The dinner party environment is real – Brook is encouraging audience members to come to the performance with a bottle in hand to enjoy with the cast following the show, paired with a warm bowl of soup. Because Brook was determined to have real food cooking throughout the performance, the technical choreography of the show was not only built around how these women move around the stage and their springy dance moves, but it details the critical moments in making the recipe – say, for example, that they must chop an onion at the same time that they deliver a particular line.

Brook said, “my casting premise was to bring together women who were fabulous, extraordinary, strong, beautiful, intelligent women”… kind of like the dream scenario for any dinner party roster. The offbeat but extraordinary coterie includes Nicole Ansari of Deadwood, folk rocker Sadie Jemmet, former Editor of French Vogue, Joan Juliet Buck (most recently seen in Julie & Julia), filmmaker/writer/director Winsome Brown, and violinist Yibin Li. Who wouldn’t want to break bread and share a bottle with these ladies? View a video clip from the show below.

“La Vie Matérielle,” March 11 – 21 • Thursday – Saturday at 8PM • Sundays at 2:30PM
La MaMa Experimental Theater Club 74 East 4th Street New York, NY 10003 (212) 254-6468

Purchase tickets online here.

More info here.

SADIE JEMMETT ~ British Songwriter Digs Deep

by Music Blogger @ Apes For Indie

When I first heard this musician’s magic, I was on the front page of http://100000fans.com (a wonderful new site for artists).

The lead song on Sadie’s line-up peeked my interest right away with it’s hooky melody and guitar intro. Then, … the pure and completely unaffected vocals rested upon my eardrums and I was ENTIRELY sold. I then read a bit of her bio…

There was the story of a woman who had lived so fully and sometimes, quite hard, in such a modest number of years. By the sound of it though, I am happy to say she is now thriving musically. On her myspace page, the default picture showed her walking with her daughter, a peak into her life’s main priority, (aside from music of course). What amazed me most was the imperceptible barrier between songwriter and song… something that delivered an emotional reaction. Art is really good, (in my humble opinion), if it summons shared emotion without ‘TRYING’ to. It just poured forth, unedited by ego. This woman is a natural.

I listened to and downloaded the album so I could experience the songs “Entirely” …which just so happens to be the name of the lead track and my favorite on her latest effort: The Blacksmith’s Girl.

[MP3] SADIE JEMMETT: ENTIRELY

*Since I have limited time to blog with, I will only be writing about two songs from each artist featured weekly. I wish I could do more but I will leave that to the professional bloggers and podcasters. My point is, it was VERY tough choosing the second song to write about.* I chose it for personal reasons as it seemed to touch on something I too have experienced:

“Another Way To Be” manages to have an impactful chorus while remaining light as a feather. Nothing is beat into you on the track but you surely get the point.

[MP3] SADIE JEMMETT: ANOTHER WAY TO BE

I hope you will go to the sites mentioned below to check out more of this rare talent. Her videos are not to be missed as you will see the more aggressive side of Sadie and a great deal of musicianship, guitar-wise.

Bravo for Sadie Jemmett! I wish her bundles of success in her career. My hope in writing these blogs is that the artists themselves, like what they hear about their efforts. When I have more followers… I will be re-tweeting the links to all I have written to give them more exposure, which is my other main goal.

By the way, you can donate to this artist @ http://100000fans.com and download the album for free.

Here is the link to her official website as well. Note the tabs that connect to multiple social networking sites that she is on. Impressive: http://sadiejemmett.blogspot.com

After reading Sadie’s bio, I wished I, myself had some money to invest in her talent.

~Music Blogger @ Apes For Indie

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