Quantcast
Channel: Culture & Arts
Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live

Read This New Book To Grasp The Brutal Reality Of Asian-American History

$
0
0

The Fortunes, Peter Ho Davies’ second novel, reads like a very unusual hybrid between a novel and a short story collection. It’s written in four long sections, titled “Gold,” “Silver,” “Jade,” and “Pearl,” each of which tells a different person’s story. Together, of course, the pieces make a larger whole: a story of Chinese America through the decades, including many fragments that are tempting for white Americans to leave out.


“Gold,” set during the California gold rush, follows Ah Ling, a character based on a real manservant whose diligence supposedly inspired his employer, railroad baron Charles Crocker, to employ Chinese labor on the Central Pacific Railroad. Ho Davies digs deep into Ah Ling as a character, painting him as the orphaned child of a Tanka sex worker and a john, a white “ghost.” Sent to California by his extended family to seek his fortune ― or, rather, sold off by his family to get him off their hands ― he labors first in a laundry, alongside a prostitute named Mei Mei with whom he falls in love, though she’s embittered by a young life spent satisfying the sexual urges of white men. Then he finds work as Crocker’s personal valet, always seeking a piece of the golden plenty he hoped to find bursting from the ground in America.


“Silver” jumps forward to a more knowable historical figure, Anna May Wong, known as the first Chinese-American film star. Her body of work, her celebrity, and the pervasive segregation, exoticization and discrimination she faced have largely been brushed aside in retellings of the Golden Age of Hollywood, but her vamping photos and measured interviews remain.


“Jade” focuses on the killing of Vincent Chin, who was brutally beaten to death with a baseball bat by two white men after a racially charged altercation at a club in a Detroit suburb. It was Chin’s bachelor party; after four days in the hospital, he died. He was buried on what was to have been his wedding day. Ho Davies takes the voice of an unnamed Chinese-American friend who was with Chin when he died, and who has been present through the trials and the groundswell of Pan-Asian-American activism that was born from the aftermath, but who still can’t forgive himself for running away from the fight.


The final section, “Pearl,” is a contemporary story, an extended vignette about a half-Chinese, half-white American man, John, who is visiting China for the first time. He’s there, with his white wife Nola, to pick up the Chinese baby they’re adopting.


With four distinct historical moments, the novel shifts dramatically in style and tone at times. “Gold,” though it opens with a hilarious, sharply written scene, struggles the most to find a rhythm. During this more straightforward historical fiction tale, depicting a more distant era in gleaming detail, Ho Davies allows Ah Ling to slip into what sometimes seems like anachronistic language, modern social justice observations irrepressibly voiced through his character. When Crocker mentions hearing that some Chinese laborers had been buried in an avalanche while working in the mountains, Ling notices “that he couldn’t recall the exact number of Chinese ― ‘ten or fifteen supposedly’ ― and this from a man who could tell you the price of a shovel in 1854.” It’s chilling, but it also feels a rather fine detail to pick out in a time of so much open exploitation.


Of course, these moments of historical uncertainty have another source ― embarrassingly, I can’t say I’ve read any primary sources about the quotidian life of Chinese immigrants during the gold rush. Part of the joy and value of The Fortunes lies in its vivid survey of the history of Chinese people in America, and many readers, especially non-Asian-American readers, might find their eyes opened to a new understanding of the Chinese-American historical identity. The thriving traffic of Chinese women sold into sex work in California gold rush towns, the anti-miscegenation laws that later prevented Anna May Wong from marrying any of the white co-stars and industry players with whom she was involved, the horrific abuse of Chinese labor on the railroad, and the reality of hate crimes against Asian-Americans ― much of the ground Ho Davies dramatizes is glossed over in American history lessons and brushed aside with quips about Asian-Americans being “the model minority,” or “basically white.”


Turning to Anna May Wong and Vincent Chin, Ho Davies’ prose seems to grow more pointed, more specific, perhaps because their lives (or deaths) are more familiar. In Wong’s dreamy vignettes and musings, he has her reflect on conversations, career moments that forced her to examine her identity. Is she a star? An actress? Chinese? American? A lovable woman or a temporary diversion?



“She isn’t a star, she thinks later. Or an actress. But something in between. The first Chinese star, they call her, and it’s the qualifications that are crucial. First. Chinese. A star may play only him- or herself, but she is supposed to play a race. How can she be herself and represent millions, both at once?
The Fortunes


Vincent Chin’s friend, looking back decades after the slaying, wants to remember his friend as he really was: rebellious, yet eager to fit in, to be all-American. As a man who wouldn’t run away from a fight, even though he had a loving mother and future wife to live for. Yet he’s also afraid to remember the last night he spent with his friend, as they were confronted by Ronald Ebens and his stepson, Michael Nitz, Ebens reportedly shouting, “It’s because of you little motherfuckers that we’re out of work!” (He was referring to the Japanese auto manufacturers, and Ebens was employed at the time.) He’s afraid to remember how the pair later spent 30 minutes following the friends, trying to find them, before tracking them down and smashing Chin’s head in with a baseball bat.


Ho Davies’ deliberate circling of the event is implacable, as the narrator darkly picks apart racist jokes and plays with the language of casual racism. The inevitable scene, too, is gut-wrenching. But the surrounding questions of what it all meant ― for Asian-American activists, the community, for Chin’s family, for the friend himself ― also leave the reader spinning.


The final section offers the most knotted questions of all, with a conflicted John, half-Chinese, adopting a Chinese baby with his white wife. Every past section in The Fortunes informs the one that follows, just as history informs the present, and this section is informed by all that has come before. The cumulative trauma of so much bigotry, violence, and hate can’t be dropped with the ease that every character seems to want. Adopting a Chinese baby can’t be as simple, for the white couples John and Nola are with, as making sure the baby eats Chinese food. But at the same time, John grew up without speaking Chinese, as an American ― did that mean he’d lost touch with himself, as these adoptive parents feared their child might? John’s parents, and now John and Nola themselves, struggle with what it means for a Chinese person to choose a white partner, with all the unsteady power dynamics that attend that interracial romance. The Fortunes doesn’t have an answer to any of the many painful identity questions posed here.


Actually, The Fortunes is the kind of book that raises far more questions than it resolves. Not only does it present a vast swathe of often-ignored history, in deftly fictionalized form, it’s an empathetic book, not just to its protagonists but to its secondary and tertiary characters and even, often, to its villains. It questions motivations, feelings, intentions, rarely certain despite the author’s fictional imperative. Sometimes I found myself wondering ― why is Vincent Chin’s friend curious at all about the kind of father-stepson relationship Chin’s killers had? Why should I care? 


But The Fortunes isn’t out to convince you that you should care about that, or anything in particular. Instead, it’s doing what a great novel should do: revealing what there is to care about and to think about. Even better, it’s revealing those questions about a slice of history that America needs to be dealing with.


The Bottom Line:


In a thought-provoking, sharply written, four-part novelistic chronicle of Chinese-American life, The Fortunes proves uneven at times but the powerful prose and themes shine through. 


What other reviewers think:


The Guardian: “A challenging work, the novel uses multiple eras to riff on questions of race and belonging: how to be American in a non-white skin? How to be Chinese, American, neither or both? Is it possible to acknowledge these questions while answering a further one: how, finally, to live?”


New York Times: “Davies clearly has a subtle conceit in mind. If he invokes a litany of ethnic clichés and stereotypes, it’s not in order to subvert or endorse them, but to identify where authenticity is possible regardless.” 


Who wrote it?


Peter Ho Davies is the author of the novel The Welsh Girl, which was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize, as well as two collections of short fiction. In 2003, Granta named him one of the Best of Young British Novelists. Half Welsh and half Chinese, he grew up in England and now lives most of the time in the United States, where he teaches at the University of Michigan.


Who will read it?


Readers who love historical fiction, especially about America’s past, and fans of multigenerational sagas.


Opening lines:


“It was like riding in a treasure chest, Ling thought. Or one of the mistress’s velvet jewel cases. The glinting brasswork, the twinkling, tinkling chandelier dangling like a teardrop from the inlaid walnut ceiling, the etched glass and flocked wallpaper and pendulous silk. And the jewel at the center of the box ― Charles Crocker, Esquire, Mister Charley, biggest of the Big Four barons of the Central Pacific Railroad, resting on the plump brocaded upholstery, massive as a Buddha, snoring in time to the panting, puffing engine hauling them uphill.” 


Notable passage:


“She isn’t a star, she thinks later. Or an actress. But something in between. The first Chinese star, they call her, and it’s the qualifications that are crucial. First. Chinese. A star may play only him- or herself, but she is supposed to play a race. How can she be herself and represent millions, both at once? And who does she represent them to? To themselves or others? Who does she think she is? An outraged Nationalist critic has demanded. She wishes she could stay.


“Not a star, then. A star gives off its own light. Another celestial body, a moon, reflecting others’ light.” 


The Fortunes
by Peter Ho Davies
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $27.00
Published Sept. 6, 2016


The Bottom Line is a weekly review combining plot description and analysis with fun tidbits about the book.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Your New Favorite TV Show Is A Former Web Series About Weed

$
0
0

High Maintenance” is easily described as a show about a marijuana dealer. And it is a show about a marijuana dealer. Created by married-duo Katja Blichfeld and Ben Sinclair, the series focuses on a purveyor of pot who winds his way into the lives of myriad New Yorkers, all of whom have one thing in common: they’re in need of weed.


But “High Maintenance,” once a web series of varying lengths on Vimeo and now a part of Friday night programming on HBO, is so much more. The Guy, as the quietly hip dealer is known (played by Sinclair himself), is certainly the show’s center of gravity, yet it’s the satellite characters, some of the most uniquely built and sharply acted personas on television, that stand out.





From “Homeless Heidi” to manic pixie Chad to “Stomp”-ambitious Esme to innocent niece Kate, these are the kinds of characters that provoke a knee-jerk reaction amongst viewers, many of whom will be pleasantly surprised or wholly embarrassed to see their seemingly unique quirks played out on TV. With realistic and improvised dialogue, scenarios that are simple and tethered to life, Blichfeld and Sinclair have managed to write and produce a show, ostensibly about pot, that is just a gorgeously-lit and perfectly tarnished mirror reflecting early to mid adulthood in all its glory. Through The Guy, we meet some of the most humanity-depraved and wholesomely good people to grace the small screen.


With a bendable central plot, “High Maintenance” ― as a web series ― was whatever it wanted to be. Now that it’s on HBO, it’s bound to grow and expand on a premise that’s bursting with potential ― and a fair amount of smoke.


Thankfully, for those new fans who’ve yet to happen upon the Vimeo magic, you can head straight to HBO and watch all 19 of the early webisodes. In honor of the high times ahead, here is a guide to the those original episodes, ranked.



19. “Stevie”


“Stevie” is the debut episode of “High Maintenance.” So, if this were a traditional show, I would recommend that you watch it first to understand who exactly The Guy is (answer: a weed dealer with a charismatic personality who is just as human as your are). But, given that “High Maintenance” in webisode format is not a traditional show, you can watch “Stevie” ― named after a pertinent Stevie Nicks reference, I assume ― at any point in your viewing adventure. It is one of the shortest in the bunch, illustrating just how damn good Blichfeld and Sinclair are at squeezing emotion and action into just a few minutes of viewing time. ― Katherine Brooks


18. “Helen”


This episode revolves around a sweetheart named Patrick who, aside from tending to his Helen Hunt obsession and baking PB&J bars, tends to his bedridden mother. He orders some weed and proceeds to mildly panic while getting dressed before The Guy arrives. He comes, they chill, though Patrick is clearly a little out of his comfort zone. The Guy leaves Patrick with some pink kush, which Patrick promptly tucks into a drawer along with countless other tiny unused baggies. It’s a heartbreaking but memorable episode, one that captures the cooped-up loneliness that can so easily eat at your being and make you forget how to interact with fellow humans, especially ones you would like to be your friend. ― Priscilla Frank


17. “Olivia”


In “Olivia,” we meet two of the worst human beings on the planet ― a man and a woman ― who act out the jealousy, cattiness and belligerence you save for your nastiest days. They are, of course, hilarious as they banter back and forth, ridiculing a phantom woman named Olivia for posting enviable photos on Instagram and trash-talking a friend’s new boyfriend the second they exit a seemingly cordial double date. Also, in this episode we are treated to a worst-case scenario for The Guy: he’s selling to a couple of people who are ready to take advantage of him and be oh-so deplorable in the process. ― KB


16. “Elijah”


It’s Passover! The Guy makes a delivery to the Waxman family seder, on behalf of the evening’s hired chef who’s trying to woo a rebellious daughter who can’t stand being with her family without a little of “Daddy’s little helper.” The Guy shows up just as little Ben Waxman is opening the door for Elijah (the Jewish prophet you save a glass of wine for at Passover) and the already tense holiday dinner gets far stranger. In the HBO intro to the episode, Ben Sinclair explains that his mom is a cantor, and thus Passover seders have always held a special place in his heart. I hope they went down exactly like this. ― PF


15. “Dinah”


Chad, the main character in “Dinah,” is somewhat of a recurring character. In commentary available on HBO, the “High Maintenance” creators describe him as a “manic pixie dream boy” and “millennial soft boy” who’s really just a narcissist. In this episode, he is the freewheelin’ bro who stays with his couple friends, two people less than thrilled about his antics. He is the best amalgam of all your current, 20- or 30something guy friends who just want to live life, man. 


Note: Kether Donahue (from “You’re the Worst”) plays the girlfriend, and she should be in everything. ― KB


14. “Trixie”


“Come stay with us in our sleep loft space, only two blocks from the L train.” In this episode, a couple (Candace and John) decides to AirBnB a spare bedroom in their apartment ― while they’re still occupying the place. Not surprisingly, the subtenants suck, for various reasons including but not limited to creepiness, noise, food stealing and a predilection for comedy shows in Times Square. I love this episode because it stars real-life couple Candace and John, whose chemistry is exquisite to watch. ― PF


13. “Qasim”


“Qasim” begins like an episode of “Black Mirror” and ends like an episode of “Black Mirror.” It is an episode of “Black Mirror,” maybe? The two main characters meet at a cycling class, bond over their shared love of exercise and health, and end up going on a date during which the eccentric artist character Scott admits to his adherence not only to a strict workout and sleep regiment, but also to a Scientology-like lifestyle. As usual, the ending is gorgeous. ― KB


12. “Jonathan”


“Jonathan” guest stars comedian Hannibal Buress as himself and follows him around performing, touring, chilling with fangirls, and existing in the strange space between civilian life and fame. His daily grind is shaken up, however, when a shooting occurs during one of his sets. The rest of the episode features Hannibal grappling with the senseless violence through modern-day coping mechanisms like weed and Twitter. Buress’ character, torn between comedy and gravity, finds himself depressed somewhere in the middle, and the episode itself operates in this uncertain middle ground. It’s a great example of how the show braces topical issues in ways that don’t feel preachy or forced, and opts to linger in ambiguous middle ground rather than make a grand declaration. ― PF


11. “Esme”


Okay. Bear with this episode. Some people, I’ve come to understand, find Esme, the main character, a bit irritating. But, wow, is she inventive. Esme is part of a rival all-women weed dealing collective, who actually dreams not-so-silently of becoming a “Stomp” performer. When The Guy and Esme collide, she is sick and tired of rejection, and you, dear viewer, won’t be able to stop imagining yourself, at the very end of your rope, feeling the same way. ― KB



10. “Jaime”


A couple preps dinner when they notice a mouse stuck in a trap. Terrified, they take the only proper course of action and order some weed. The Guy heads to the house and kindly suggests that, instead of letting the mouse, which the women have christened Jamie, suffer, they should put it out of its misery and kill it. After first attempting to hot box the mouse into heaven, The Guy takes one for the team and smashes it with a cast iron skillet. “I just seasoned that!” one of the traumatized ladies responds. A short and light hearted episode, “Jamie” is peak The Guy — spacey, resourceful and a bit unhinged. ― PF


9. “Geiger”


Step 1: Watch “Geiger.” Step 2: Immediately go online to search for any and all tools you might need in the wake of an apocalyptic scenario. Like... a Geiger counter. This episode really tests the range of this show, introducing a little bit of the speculative fiction-esque vibes that make “High Maintenance” something greater than a comedy. ― KB


8. “Brad Pitts”


It’s 4/20 and The Guy is delivering some goods to Ellen and Ruth, who, not a seasoned smoker, is looking to stimulate her appetite while fighting stomach cancer. The Guy returns later in the evening to find Ellen wigging out from getting too high, while Ruth can’t stop laughing. Instead of calming Ellen down, The Guy decides to mess with her a little before peacing out. It’s one of the few episodes that doesn’t center on millennial clients, and touches on the medicinal properties of weed. The episode’s tenderness is balanced by The Guy’s impish intrusion, and willingness to bamboozle a terrified older lady. ― PF


7. “Sufjan”


This episode will ring too true for some Brooklyn-based couples in New York City. The plot: Woman and man live in cute neighborhood, woman and man get priced out of cute neighborhood, woman and man start dreaming of a palatial home with rooftop access so they settle for a rent-stabilized apartment a solid hour away from the nexus of their former existence. “Sufjan” is one of those episodes I watched and thought, yup, I’ve uttered those words before. I am her. ― KB


6. “Ruth”


The Guy sets up two of his clients on a blind date. There’s Ruth — who appeared in earlier episode “Brad Pitts” — a weed-smoking woman recovering from stomach cancer. And Victor, a lonely-seeming security guard and self-defense class punching bag who also enjoys getting high. The two meet up at a diner for a painfully awkward exchange, until they decide to get high. The show beautifully captures the way magical marijuana-induced conversations can hop between being nonsensical and raw, silly and momentous. Their super sweet date takes a turn when Victor pees after touching a hot pepper, which seems to really, really, really hurt. ― PF


5. “Sabrina”


“Sabrina” depicts everything I want in a weekend away with friends: A house in the woods, proximity to food and booze, and enough emotional outpouring and gentle ribbing to remind you why you all care to spend time together in the first place. You will watch this episode and immediately cast your closest pals as each and every weekender. (Someone is Chad.) Oh, and there are mushrooms. ― KB


4. “Rachel”


Matthew Crawley (Dan Stevens) plays Colin, a stay-at-home dad trying to make some headway on a script. He procrastinates, however, by shopping for women’s clothing on the internet. When The Guy comes over for a delivery, Colin is wearing a (super cute) dress, prompting the dealer’s awkward yet understanding response: “I have another customer who cross-dresses — [he’s] very frumpy.” The episode embodies the show’s ability to take on other “taboo” behaviors beyond weed smoking, regarding them with a similar attitude of openness and humor. ― PF


3. “Genghis”


Genghis communicates a fact worth repeating: being a teacher is hard. Students in New York City are particularly adept humans who, yet to truly face the hardships of adulthood, can lack a little empathy. “Genghis” follows a young, asexual man (also in “Dinah”) who’s just abandoned a cubicle job to become a teacher(’s assistant) ― and it’s no fairy tale. This episode is a great example of how carefully this show can craft a character in just 15 minutes or so. ― KB


2. “Matilda”


The Guy gets a visit from his chatty tweenage niece Kate — played by Blichfeld and Sinclair’s real niece — who is in town from Phoenix and really wants to see “Matilda.” Broadway tickets ain’t cheap, and The Guy has to hustle to make enough money while keeping his line of work under wraps. The musical doesn’t end up happening, but the two wind up at feminist TEDx talk in Brooklyn that ends the night right. The Guy is wonderfully awkward and charming in his attempts to interact with a miniature human, and this is one of the few episodes viewers can glimpse into his life outside of work. ― PF


1. “Heidi”


The episode is named for the character Heidi, played by the amazing Greta Lee. It begins with a simple juxtaposition: In the opening montage, we’re introduced to what appears to be a couple enjoying the early, but settled moments of an OKCupid relationship. (Think: loads of brunch.) Cut to a scene on a New York city subway, in which The Guy is seated next to a uniformed individual who’s grotesquely cutting his nails on the train. “Heidi” is such a beautiful example of how this show rests effortlessly on the unrelated short stories of people living in the city, yet can easily whip back to its center ― The Guy, the man with the weed, a philosopher-king so constant in the lives of those he services. 


In the commentary available at the beginning of every old episode on HBO, Sinclair and Blichfeld admitted that, when they made this episode, they realized “this is what the show is about.” It’s the perfect way to get hooked on “High Maintenance.” ― KB


“High Maintenance” airs at Friday, 11 p.m. ET, on HBO.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Edward Albee, Pulitzer-Winning Playwright, Dead At 88

$
0
0

Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Edward Albee, whose provocative and often brutal look at American life in works such as “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” earned him a reputation as one of the greatest American dramatists, died on Friday in Montauk, New York. He was 88.


He died in the late afternoon at his summer home in Montauk, a seaside fishing hamlet on the eastern tip of Long Island, after suffering a short illness to which he apparently succumbed, Albee’s assistant, Jakob Holder, told Reuters.


Holder said the playwright was not alone at the time of his death, but declined to furnish any further details.


Albee once told the Paris Review that he decided at age 6 that he was a writer but chose to work in the format of plays after concluding he was not a very good poet or novelist. His works would eventually rank him alongside Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller and Eugene O’Neill in American drama.


Albee described a playwright as “someone who lets his guts hang out on the stage,” and the innards of his own works included a powerful anger as he pushed themes such as alienation, resentment and the dark underside of life in the 1950s.


In the preface to his play “American Dream,” Albee described his approach as “an examination of the American Scene ... a condemnation of complacency, cruelty, emasculation, and vacuity ... a stand against the fiction that everything in this slipping land of ours is peachy-keen.”


The harsh humor and ferocity that prevailed in his more than 25 works long divided critics and audiences, earning Albee as much condemnation as praise. He always returned the volley of attacks, calling his critics fools and his Broadway audiences “placid cows.”


“Art should expand the boundaries of the form and, simultaneously, it should change our perceptions,” he told his biographer. “I despise restful art.”



SNUBBED, THEN ACCLAIMED BY PULITZERS


Albee made his name, and shocked audiences, when his scathing drama “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” opened on Broadway in 1962. Actors Arthur Hill and Uta Hagen starred as a married couple, George and Martha, who invite two friends over for an evening that deteriorates amid vitriol, drunkenness, profanity, emasculation, cruel mind games and physical abuse.


Albee said he took the name for his best-known work from a bit of graffiti scrawled in soap on the mirror of one of his favorite Greenwich Village bars.


The original production ran for 644 performances on Broadway. It went on to win a Tony Award for best play, spawned two successful Broadway revivals and was made into a popular movie in 1966 that featured Oscar-winning performances by Elizabeth Taylor, who starred opposite Richard Burton, and Sandy Dennis.


Although the stage version was selected by a Pulitzer Prize jury for the 1963 drama award, the Pulitzer advisory board overruled the jurors because of the play’s controversial nature.


No drama prize was given that year, but Albee went on to win three Pulitzers, in 1967 for “A Delicate Balance,” in 1975 for “Seascape,” and in 1991 for “Three Tall Women.”


Albee also won a 2002 Tony for “The Goat or Who Is Sylvia,” the story of an architect who falls in love with a goat, which marked Albee’s return to Broadway after almost 20 years. In 2005 he received a lifetime achievement Tony.


Albee was adopted shortly after birth by a wealthy New York family that sent him to elite schools - two of which expelled him - but he had no desire for social status. His rejection of the family values and preference for an artistic lifestyle led to the clashes with his strong-willed mother that he chronicled in “Three Tall Women,” his most autobiographical work.


Albee moved to New York’s Bohemian heart, Greenwich Village, at the age of 20 and worked a variety of jobs, including telegram messenger. He tried poetry and fiction before his first play, “The Zoo Story,” a one-act work about loneliness and class separation, was staged in 1959.


Other noted works included “Seascape,” which Albee directed when it opened on Broadway in 1974 and had an absurdist twist - an elderly couple are joined on the beach by two human-sized talking lizards as they consider their relationships.


“A Delicate Balance” also examined uneasy family dynamics. Albee wrote the script for the movie version of “A Delicate Balance,” which starred Katharine Hepburn, Lee Remick and Joseph Cotten.


Albee’s long-time partner, sculptor Jonathan Thomas, died in 2005 at age 59.


 


(Writing and reporting by Bill Trott in Washington; Additional reporting by Leslie Adler in New York; Editing by Steve Gorman)

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The End Of 'Bridget Jones's Baby' Sets Up The Potential For A Fourth Installment

$
0
0

Even if it feels like every studio movie garners a sequel nowadays, it’s rare to see a female-fronted trilogy. Except for “The Hunger Games,” no lucrative franchise ― let’s say three or more installments ― with a singular female lead springs to mind. Especially not one that doesn’t involve a weapon more piercing than self-deprecating sass. This weekend, that changed. “Bridget Jones’s Baby” opened 15 years after the original, “Bridget Jones’s Diary,” and 12 after its inferior sequel, “The Edge of Reason.” 


That’s a particular point of pride for Sharon Maguire, who directed 2001’s “Bridget Jones’s Diary” but says she skipped out on 2004’s “Edge of Reason” because she’d become a “breeding machine.” If anything, having kids readied Maguire to helm this particular chapter in our beloved Bridget’s life. (Hi, Renée Zellweger! Welcome back.) Paul Feig and Peter Cattaneo were originally tapped to direct, but they exited the project in the wake of delays and reported creative differences. By the time Maguire signed on, the story focused on Bridget’s quest to determine whether her pregnancy is the result of a one-night stand with a rich American who developed a dating app (Patrick Dempsey) or her old flame Mark Darcy (Colin Firth).



“The sequels and remakes that get made now are the Marvel world and the comic-book world and that sort of thing,” Maguire recently told The Huffington Post by phone. “A franchise about a character who we go from her 30s into her 40s with, I don’t think that exists, really.”


Even though this year’s belated sequels ― “Zoolander 2,” “My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2,” “Independence Day: Resurgence” ― have underperformed, Maguire said she feels no added pressure from Working Title and Universal Pictures to ensure “Bridget Jones’s Baby” hits a certain box-office threshold. (”Baby” is competing against yet another unpunctual sequel this weekend, “Blair Witch.”)


But our question is whether the studios are already plotting a fourth installment. Hugh Grant, who played Bridget’s boss and lover, Daniel, sat this one out, having “battle[d]” over his dislike for the initial script. The movie announces his absence toward the start (spoiler alert): Daniel died in a plane crash. But at the very end, it’s revealed in a newspaper headline that Daniel has been found, one year after his alleged death. It feels, on one hand, like a cute in-joke. On the other hand, it blatantly establishes the chance for an additional “Bridget Jones” entry revolving around Daniel’s resurgence.



Maguire swears the studio did not ask her to insert the joke to segue to a fourth film. But, especially amid the fairly warm reception “Baby” has received from critics, it seems all too likely that a boardroom conversation about extending the franchise further will at least take place. Maguire was brought on to direct in June 2015. Production began that October, and Maguire was told to eye a September 2016 release. She delivered the movie to the studio less than a month before it opened, on a relatively modest $40 million budget. 


“We just took it to the wire and screeched to the halt with it, like that scene from ‘Broadcast News,’” she said. 


To boot, Helen Fielding, the author of the Bridget Jones novels and the co-author of the scripts, wrote another book in 2013 in which Bridget has not one but two children. That means Fielding's most recent book technically takes place after "Bridget Jones's Baby." Maguire said she isn’t privy to conversations about what might land the coveted green light. All she needed after wrapping the film was a vacation. 


“It’s interesting because I don’t think anybody involved in this ever expected there to be two, let alone three,” she said.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Alan Yang Gave The Sweetest Speech About Asians On TV At The Emmys

$
0
0

The sight of Alan Yang and Aziz Ansari jumping from their seats at the Emmy Awards was charming enough. But Yang topped himself on Sunday night with a swoon-worthy speech about the value of seeing characters who look like him on television. 


Yang and Ansari won Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series for the “Master of None” episode “Parents.” Ansari stood by his co-creator looking thrilled, especially as Yang, who has also worked on “South Park” and “Parks and Recreation,” discussed the dearth of Asian characters onscreen.


“There’s 17 million Asian-Americans in this country, and there’s 17 million Italian-Americans,” Yang said after rattling off a typical list of thank-yous. “They have ‘The Godfather,’ ‘Goodfellas,’ ‘Rocky,’ ‘The Sopranos.’ We got Long Duk Dong. So we got a long way to go, but I know we can get there. I believe in us. It’s just going to take a lot of hard work. Asian parents out there, if you could just do me a favor and just a couple of you get your kids cameras instead of violins, we would be all good.”

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

A Tribute To Sarah Paulson And Holland Taylor's Emmy Love-Fest

$
0
0

We would like to take this moment to thank Sarah Paulson and Holland Taylor for sharing their love with us on this particular Emmy Awards night. We are forever blessed.


It all started Sunday afternoon, when Holland began tweeting support for her beloved Sarah. 






Alas, Holland was stuck in New York, where she is prepping for a Broadway show. Red carpets everywhere wept.






Sarah showed up to the Emmys (looking flawless) with Marcia Clark, whom she played on “The People v. O.J. Simpson.” (Technically, we already knew she would do this.) Marcia also looked flawless. 



And then Holland reacted to Sarah’s flawlessness in real time. 










Again, half an hour later.






At the end of an interview with Giuliana Rancic, Sarah gave Holland a sweet shoutout: “Hi, Holland! If you’re watching, Holland Taylor, I love you.”


Of course, Holland was watching. Of course!






She continued to tweet exclamatory support throughout the evening, including this bobblehead of Sarah’s “American Horror Story: Hotel” character.






But the best part was when she tweeted at Debra Messing ― twice. Be still our gay, gay hearts.














When Sarah won for “The People v. O.J. Simpson,” she concluded her acceptance speech with, “And Holland Taylor, I love you. Thank you.”







And then Retta! Ugh, of course Retta would love Holland Taylor.










It’s too much. We’re too blessed.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Awe-Inspiring Images Pay Tribute To Canada's Radical Black Feminists

$
0
0

Mary Bibb was born in Rhode Island around 1820 as the daughter of free black Quakers. After becoming one of the first black woman teachers in North America, she involved herself in the anti-slavery movement.


However, following the 1850 passing of the Fugitive Slave Law, which demanded that all escaped slaves in America, including her husband, abolitionist Henry Bibb, be returned to their masters upon capture ― even if found in free states ― Bibb moved to Canada. Upon relocating, she and her husband began housing fugitive slaves in their home. Together they started publishing a newspaper, Voice of the Fugitive, the first major paper aimed at black Canadians. 


Today, Bibb is considered the first black woman journalist in Canada. And yet, most Canadians do not even know her name. Self-taught artist Naomi Moyer, herself a black woman living in Canada, was disturbed by the lack of awareness surrounding figures like Bibb, women that Moyer could identify with and look up to.



“The school curriculum here is just as flawed and deficient as it is in the States,” Moyer told The Huffington Post. “Not one teacher, from kindergarten to college, gave me any book to read that was written by a black woman, let alone a black Canadian woman. The only kind of exposure most black people really got about ‘blackness’ or the black experience was through media and pop culture from the States.” 


Moyer realized that it was extremely important for her to learn the names and stories of the women shaping Canadian black history. If no one else was going to teach her, she would do the research herself. The print series “Black Women in Canada” integrates Moyer’s research with graphic visuals that bring the under-acknowledged heroines to life.


“One of my biggest concerns going into this project was getting my facts right,” Moyer said. “A lot of the women that I chose to focus on, even though their stories are paramount ― there was still very little information on them.” Similarly, without access to many photographs of her subjects, Moyer struggled to capture their appearance accurately with little source material. 



Moyer’s mixed-media works are made with a combination of acrylic, stencils, ink, pencil and paper on Masonite board. In one image, a black-and-white Bibb writes by candlelight, her backdrop a fiery juxtaposition of oranges and purples.


Another depicts Rosa Pryor, the first black woman to own a business in Vancouver ― a restaurant called Chicken Inn ― holding a flailing bird, its feathers floating alongside her, before a bulging yellow sun. Other subjects include the Coloured Women’s Club, crediting with coining the term “self help,” and the Black Cross Nurses, who were some of the few healers for black communities in the early 20th century available.



Moyer’s artworks ― graphic, vibrant and brimming with passion ― use images to share the histories that might otherwise have gone overlooked. The stories she chose to immortalize don’t adhere to the traditional mainstream narratives of the genius, the hero or the leader. Rather, these women endured the most egregious of conditions to serve their communities and stand up for what’s right in a peaceful, and often quiet, manner. 


Now, Moyer is doing all she can to make sure these stories are heard and appreciated. “I wanted folks to know that these women were brave and defiant,” she said. “These women were feminists who did lots of radical acts to serve black communities in Canada when the government failed to do so. I wanted to turn the few sentences that were written about these women from history books and online into a huge, colorful punch in the face.”


The artist hopes her prints will affect young black women in Canada not used to seeing themselves represented in school lessons and history books. “I’m hoping that, with these posters, the stories of these women will carry on and continue to motivate and inspire.”


Browse and purchase Moyer’s prints here.


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Gritty Black-And-White Photos Peek Backstage At A '90s Strip Club

$
0
0

Warning: This article contains nudity and may not be appropriate for work environments. 



The year was 1997. Photographer Yana Toyber was in her first year at New York’s School of Visual Arts and picked up a job at Shenanigans, a strip club in Midtown, to help pay the bills. 


“It looked like a neighborhood dive bar with two tiny stages, a long bar, and a small private area hidden behind a curtain,” Toyber wrote in an email to The Huffington Post. “It was next door to an all-nude strip club called Dangerous Curves which wasn’t allowed to serve alcohol. Customers would often come to Shenanigans to get liquored up and go next door for the all-nude show.”


Intrigued by this subculture few had access to, Toyber decided to document the world of Dangerous Curves through candid, behind-the-scenes photos. The resulting series, called “Backstage,” is a Larry-Clark-inspired glimpse into New York nightlife in the ‘90s, shot in high-speed black-and-white film. 



The gritty images capture women getting ready for showtime ― putting on heels, applying makeup, and goofing around in the locker room.


“I was really just having a good time in this seedy world,” Toyber said. “I made new friends and started developing my photographic eye. It was exhilarating! I knew I entered a world not everyone had access to and I took full advantage it.”


Shenanigans has since shut down, and ‘90s trends like leopard print and chokers have faded in, out of and right back in style. But Toyber’s series remains as a playful peek back in time, chronicling the in-between moments that might have never been remembered had Toyber not been there to witness them.


You can purchase Toyber’s photos in the zine “Backstage,” published by Paper Works NYC. In the meantime, check out a preview of her series below:


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


This Iconic Artist Photographed Thousands Of Men -- Now They're All In One Place (NSFW)

$
0
0

Bob Mizer, the photographer behind the first magazine unambiguously dedicated to the gay male community ― Physique Pictorial ―is being honored with the release of a new book that chronicles his life, work and legacy.


Bob Mizer. AMG: 1000 Model Directory is a two-volume collection that features a massive amount of the models and iconic images showcased throughout the course of Mizer’s career, accompanied by biographical information about many of the models. 


Mizer, who was born in 1922 and died in 1992, was known for pushing societal expectations, understandings and conceptions of masculinity and sexuality in the 1940s and ‘50s and is cited as a major influence on later legendary artists like Robert Mapplethorpe and David Hockney.


Bob Mizer. AMG: 1000 Model Directory is limited to 7,500 copies and includes a bonus hour-long DVD featuring 18 of hours of film.


Check out a selection of images from the book below and head here for more information.


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Did You Know Ground Mummy Was Used to Paint Some of History’s Most Famous Artworks?

$
0
0

This article originally appeared on artnet News.



Did Eugène Delacroix‘s most famous painting, “Liberty Leading the People,” which recently made headlines in France’s controversial “burkini” debate, make use of Mummy Brown, a pigment made from ground-up ancient Egyptian human remains?


That’s the theory put forth by National Geographic, which notes that the pigment was popular among European painters beginning in the 16th century, if not earlier, and was still in use at the turn of the 20th century. (Disturbingly, mummy dust was also an ingredient in a number of medicines of the time.)


“Specific documented accounts of Mummy Brown being used in particular works seem to be hard to come by,” admitted art historian Philip McCouat in the Journal of Art in Society, but there are records of several artists, including Delacroix, as well as a number of early Pre-Raphaelite painters, stocking the color in their studios.



Philip Gilbert Hamerton’s 1883 tome The Graphic Arts: A Treatise on the Varieties of Drawing, Painting, and Engraving, for instance, notes that sometime between 1824 and 1854, Delacroix added Mummy Brown to his palette, which also featured such pigments as Zinc Yellow, Laque Rouge de Rome, and Vermilion. Liberty Leading the People was painted in 1830.


Not everyone who used Mummy Brown, however, was aware of its distasteful origins. In his book Something of Myself and Other Autobiographical Writings, Rudyard Kipling recounted a colorful anecdote about his uncle, Pre-Raphaelite Edward Burne-Jones, who once came running downstairs with a tube of Mummy Brown paint, proclaiming that “he had discovered it was made of dead Pharaohs and we must bury it accordingly.”


Mummy Brown also wasn’t a particularly good pigment technically, because it faded with time. Today, the closest you can get to it is probably Bauxite Mummy, which is made from minerals like hematite and quartz, as opposed to dead human bodies treated with bitumen and asphaltum for mummification.



The venerable artist supply store, Roberson’s of London, was perhaps the last company that produced the Mummy Brown pigment, according to a 1964 Time article. “We might have a few odd limbs lying around somewhere,” a company director told the magazine, “but not enough to make any more paint. We sold our last complete mummy some years ago for, I think, £3. Perhaps we shouldn’t have. We certainly can’t get any more.”


Over half a century later, Roberson’s has left its sordid past behind, getting rid of its last lingering mummy parts during a buyout in the 1980s. “There’s no more mummy brown around,” company representative Gary Bowles assured Nat Geo.


Follow artnet News on Facebook.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

We’re Way Too Hard On Female Characters, Hollywood Screenwriter Explains

$
0
0

When Kara Holden read Carrie Pilby, a novel about a teenage girl who navigates first forays into dating and sex armed only with her own neuroses and stiff morality, she knew she wanted to make it into a movie.


A screenwriter who got her start selling a script called “The Inner Bitch” to Paramount, Holden is interested in young adult stories and stories that shine a light on their character’s flaws, allowing them room for growth. Carrie Pilby, a young adult novel with a quirky, genius heroine, is that kind of story.


“I got the book, I read it, and I was just blown away by it. I love that the character started out thinking she knew what the world was, and over the course of the book she learned that the world is so much more complicated,” Holden told HuffPost. “She kind of had a black-and-white mentality, and discovered that there was a lot more grey in the world. I’m a big fan of J.D. Salinger, and Franny and Zooey, so obviously I was never going to adapt Catcher in the Rye, but when I read Carrie Pilby, I thought, this is the closest thing to it.”



I love that the character started out thinking she knew what the world was, and over the course of the book she learned that the world is so much more complicated.
Kara Holden


Like Salinger’s protagonist Holden Caulfield, Carrie Pilby has a few grating tics ― she displays her intelligence by name-dropping authors, she approaches the world chin-out, asserting her beliefs. And, as with Caulfield, we’re charmed by Pilby’s naivety; she is 19, after all.


Holden’s film adaptation of Carrie Pilby screened at Toronto Film Festival this month, and was warmly received ― for the most part. One notable commonality among the less forgiving reviews: they focused on the protagonist’s “likability,” rather than how she fits into the context of the film and how she grows over the course of it. 


“Although she apparently has an IQ of 185, curmudgeonly Carrie hasn’t quite worked out that she’s a massively entitled brat,” reads a Hollywood Reporter review.


“Its naval-gazing [sic] protagonist [is] not nearly as unusual or delightful as we’re meant to think,” a Variety reviewer writes. “Carrie is a young woman who too often annoyingly thinks and acts like a bratty teen, complete with an ‘Ewww’ attitude toward all things sexual.”


The question of “likable” protagonists was a buzzy one in the book world a few years ago, when Claire Messud, author of The Woman Upstairs, spoke out against those asking her about the unsavoriness of her woman protagonist. In a Publisher’s Weekly response, she cited works featuring characters with questionable motives — Notes from Underground by Dostoyevsky, Sabbath’s Theatre by Philip Roth. 



“These books I love, they’re all books by men ― every last one of them,” Messud wrote. “Because if it’s unseemly and possibly dangerous for a man to be angry, it’s totally unacceptable for a woman to be angry.”


Is this what’s at play in critical takes of “Carrie Pilby”? Holden thinks so. “It’s so true,” she said. “And what do we want? In a film, you’re watching it because you want to see someone learn something. And hopefully you’re learning something, too ― you know, in an entertaining way, obviously.” 


In addition to a Salinger construction, Holden likens her character to classic cinematic curmudgeons: John Cusack in “High Fidelity” and Hugh Grant in “About a Boy.”


“Hugh Grant can get away with it,” Holden said. “And ‘High Fidelity,’ I mean, John Cusack’s character is a mess, but you love him. You love him. I feel like, you know, that’s another way that gender equality needs to come in. We need to allow women characters to have all facets. To be flawed, to be wonderful, to be frustrating, to be inspiring. Because we are all those things. Period.”


The portrayal of women on screen isn’t the only gender-related issue in Hollywood that Holden has encountered personally. She’s found that her successes have resulted from submitting her work to studios with women executives ― of which there are few. 



We need to allow women characters to have all facets. To be flawed, to be wonderful, to be frustrating, to be inspiring. Because we are all those things. Period.
Kara Holden


“The decision-makers sometimes pick the people who reflect them, and so if most of the decision-makers are men, it makes sense that they feel comfortable hiring men,” Holden said. “I love working with men, I love working with women, but I do think we need to have more women. They bring something unique and special to films that we need.”


Holden has also found that, in spite of her longtime interest in action movies, she has been “balked at” for proposing that she write one herself.


“People think that women write one thing,” she said. “[But] men write great female characters and male characters. If you’re a writer, hopefully you can have both of those voices in your repertoire. I love adventure films and I love action as well as romantic comedy. I hope that I’ll be able to write those in the future.”


She found solace from gender-based discrimination, however, while working on “Carrie Pilby,” a film written, directed and produced by women.


“It was absolute heaven, to be real,” Holden said. “There was just a wonderful atmosphere of collaboration and a really calm way of problem-solving and all wanting to be on the same page. There was something a little special about the fact that we were all women. It sounds cliché, but there was a nurturing feeling around the room. Everyone wanted to encourage each other. And that encouragement, I feel, lead to something great.”

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Harry Potter's Famed Privet Drive House Is On The Market

$
0
0

Harry Potter’s childhood home is officially on the market.


The house we all know as 4 Privet Drive in Surrey is actually in Martins Heron, a suburb of Bracknell, located less than an hour from London in Berkshire, England. The house was picked in 2001 to serve as the dreaded Dursleys’ family home in the “Harry Potter” films.





The house is listed at £475,000, or roughly $619,000. It has three bedrooms, although you could probably squeeze in a fourth in the cupboard under the stairs.


The home boasts a spacious backyard perfect for playing football, rugby or blowing up your Aunt Marge like a balloon. It also has a modern kitchen, in case you feel like baking cakes that a mischievous house elf will drop on your guests. 





The home’s exterior was featured in the first film, “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” though interior Privet Drive scenes were shot on a set. If you end up losing out on this house in a bidding war, you can visit a replica at Warner Bros. Studio Tour in London.


Take a look at the photos below to see if 4 Privet Drive is worth your half million pounds. If its magical history doesn’t entice you, we hear it also has
excellent access to the M3/M4 motorway and an updated alarm system, in case the Dark Lord comes a’knocking.







H/T Daily Mail

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Meet This Year's Getty Images Instagram Grant Winners

$
0
0

Beyond the excessive filters, the pucker-faced selfies and the salacious bots, Instagram hosts a truly impressive number of great photographers who have heartfelt stories to tell.


Thanks to the ubiquity of smartphones, those photographers cover a wide and growing portion of the world, allowing unprecedented access to communities that might otherwise go unnoticed.


In honor of those photographers, Getty Images last year launched the “Instagram Grant,” a program “designed to recognize and support photographers documenting stories from underrepresented communities around the world using Instagram.” The three winners of the grant receive $10,000 and mentorship from one of Getty Images’ photojournalists.


This year’s winners selected by a panel of judges are: Christian Rodriguez of Uruguay, who focused on teen pregnancy in the country; Ronny Sen of Calcutta, India, who highlighted the struggles of people who live in Jharia, a coal-rich city that has been on fire for more than 100 years; and Girma Berta of Ethiopia’s capital city, Addis Ababa.


Honorable mentions were given to: Daro Sulakauri (@darosulakauri) from The Republic of Georgia; Ako Salemi (@f64s125) from Tehran, Iran; and Andrew Quilty (@andrewquilty), an Australian photographer based in Afghanistan.


An exhibition featuring the winners’ work will be free and open to the public from Sept. 21-25 at Photoville in New York City.


Scroll down to see their photos and to read their interviews with The Huffington Post. Interviews have been edited for length and clarity. 


Girma Berta



How did you get started with photography?


I had been doing graphic design and a bit of painting for a while, and during those times I got exposed to many photographs while I was browsing the internet. I fell in love with so many photographs back then. And one day I just felt like photography might be the next frontier I felt like I had to conquer. I love a good challenge and this was it. I decided to get out and begin capturing my city.


What misconceptions do people have about Addis Ababa that you’d like to set straight?


The misconception is that Addis is an all-pretty tourist destination, with the usual hotspots of the city. And there are numerous photos that show its beauty. There is nothing wrong with photos of that sort, but they only tell a small fraction of the city’s real life. My pictures illustrate what is really going on in the city’s day-to-day life, the beautiful, the ugly and everything in between. And that is what I want to set straight. 


Is there any particular population you tend to focus on? What about them draws you in?


My pictures usually focus on the average working-class people in my city and their interaction with it in their daily lives. I go far and wide, documenting various things they do. And recently I have discovered an interest I have developed is my photography of elderly people and their lives.


Is there anything else you want people to know?


I want people to take more photos of themselves living in their daily lives as well as their daily happenings. I want photography to be part of their daily lives. Because as a culture, photographing subjects and also being photographed is slightly frowned upon. I want it to be as normal as eating food. I want people to even take it a step forward and start telling stories with their pictures because there so much to tell. It takes many more people to document all those great stories. No one person can do this.


Ronny Sen



How did you get started with photography?


It was a journey with many beginnings and many dead ends. When we were growing up in Salt Lake in Calcutta in the late ‘90s and early 2000s, the kind of life my friends and I had back then, I don’t remember if we wanted to become anything at all … Mobile phones weren’t there and photography wasn’t as popular as it is today. It was much slower and quieter. We lived through that whole transition until now. So much has changed in such a short period of time. 


I remember very specifically that I was quite drawn to photography, and before I knew it, it just became like a mad obsession … like some sort of a game you suddenly fall in love with. It was indeed a game initially, it became craft and language and communication and art at a much later stage. Now, it is something else completely, which is another conversation.


Back then, life as usual was going on, but photography eventually gave a certain shape, a kind of a rhythm to all of this madness. I had stories to tell and I knew that only I had these stories to tell and photography was the only option that was available. That was the only thing I could do or I knew about. There was a sense of identity as well. When you do nothing and you have a camera and you are looking for adventure and freedom and so on, and people ask you, what you do? I was tired of telling people that I don’t do anything, and then I started saying that I was a photographer and people believed me…


But with time, slowly, steadily, the obsession got more problematic and there was no escape. Photography then became like a life and death thing in no time. 


What do people who live in Jharia think of the fires, and what is being done about them?


The underground fire in Jharia has been burning for more than 100 years now. People who inhabit that space have seen this since they were born. So they are totally aware of it and it’s very much a part of their life. 


Many villages which were once thriving with life don’t exist anymore. While some people have left these areas and shifted elsewhere for better jobs and opportunities in other cities, there is a big population which calls Jharia home and keeps on shifting along the blasting mines. They are mostly dependent economically on this huge coal industry. They don’t have any other skills. So, even if there is fire and subsidence, they don’t have any other choice but to keep moving along the mines. 


Various small and at times extremely ambitious projects were initiated to rehabilitate these people affected by the fire and subsidence, but nothing substantial has been achieved so far. Some houses were built for some of these affected people as a part of the rehabilitation and resettlement project which were far away from the mines. The one-room apartments were extremely small for these families, and on the other hand there was no livelihood opportunity for them. So, people who were shifted started moving back to different mines again. 


This is a place where historically literally everyone has failed, the Maharajas, the British Raj, the government of India, the Communists, the Mafia, and now is the turn of the Multi Nationals who will also eventually fail. I have imagined this space to be at the end of the world after everything has been extracted. What remains after that is what I am interested in. So, the basic premise begins with the future.


I want to share my concerns with a larger audience. Because, the story is not only specific and limited to India at all. It is just a coincidence that Jharia is here. It’s an economic, environmental and deeply political problem which is predominantly visible all across the world. There are many areas which I am trying to touch upon with this body of work. The fact that it’s a complex issue and it doesn’t only deal with mining but how it is done and about the people who are the most affected and so on. I hope that this can initiate a dialogue and show people a small glimpse of a possible future that is coming towards us. 


What inspired you to document the people who live there?


I had never seen people living with fire literally burning under their houses. It’s like magic realism. It’s simple daily life of people in one of the most extraordinary and unbelievable, almost inhabitable sort of setup. Who will believe this? You have to show photographs to make people believe this.


Is there anything else you want people to know?


Another magic realism story: There are many in Jharia almost on every street corner, but this one is so bizarre and pathetic that’s it’s almost funny. Whenever there is blasting inside the mines, there is a rain of stones on the villages nearby. It literally rains stones from the sky.


So, a man was watching a cricket match on TV inside his house and nearly every day in the afternoon the nearby mine was blasting. Most of the coal mines in Jharia are into open cast mining now. During the blasting, a big piece of stone flew and pierced through his rooftop and landed on his TV, breaking it completely. The man, in disgust, shock and anger, took up the TV in his arms and barged into the mine from where they were blasting. He went inside one of the officers’ rooms and to register his protest, he threw the broken TV on the floor in front of the officer and said that the blasting has broken his TV and he needs to be compensated with a new one. 


Christian Rodriguez



How did you get started with photography?


I began to explore the visual arts from an early age. I studied different techniques in painting, drawing and fashion design, among other things. The move to photography was almost natural and provided one more way to explore and discover the arts. For many years it was just a hobby. I have gone through different areas of photography: social events, weddings, fashion photography, advertising and photojournalism. Currently I am interested in working on long-term projects, developing a much more reflective and paused photography.


What inspired you to focus on teen mothers?


All the projects I develop are linked, in one way or another, to my personal life or family. I am the son of a teenage mother; my mother had me when she was 17 years old and she was a single mom, a pattern that constantly repeats in the issue of teenage pregnancy. One of my sisters was a mother at the age of 16; clearly this reality has always been very close to my life, so that is why I decided to work on this topic. 


As the son of a teenage single mother, raised by my grandmother, and the fact that I did not meet my biological father until the age of 33, my world has always been focused on women. I have been very lucky to be surrounded by wonderful women who have influenced me and inspired me to work on these issues.


I am interested in exploring the feminine world not only visually, but also by looking at how cultural practices influence the way women relate to their environment, usually due to inequality; how some canons are still imposed nowadays by distant or ancient cultures; and how this affects relationships with the opposite sex. I want to show an everyday, contemporary vision of women and their environment.


What misconceptions about teen pregnancy in Latin America would you like to set straight? 


There is a standardization and blaming of the girls. They say, “The girls are too precocious, they are looking for relationships at a very young age.” We have a group of 10- to 14-year-olds of high vulnerability. It is a group that has no voice or awareness of the things that happen. There is a very high percentage that result from abuse; we believe that a child under 14 has no ability to authorize and consent to a sexual relationship. There are many cases of violence, incest and clear sexual abuse.


It’s not just education, poverty and information; there are several elements. The persistence of teenage pregnancy is talking about a gap in gender equity, a gap that is manifested in maintaining traditional roles. Teenage pregnancy is associated with gender violence in a broader sense, including physical, symbolic, psychological and economic violence.


The visibility of this issue and the implementation of medium and long-term measures are essential to generate a change. More work is needed on the empowerment of girls. The achievement of true equality in decision-making will develop in equity in life projects. The day that life projects for boys and girls become similar, teen pregnancy will decrease.


 Is there anything else you want people to know?


The persistence of teenage pregnancy continues talking about a gap in gender equity, a gap that still shows the remains of traditional roles and in the acceptance that their body is a vehicle for other things. Maternal mortality speaks of a gap in the exercise of women’s rights. There is little autonomy and ability for making decisions. If we keep on working on empowering girls at very early ages in the achievement of true equity in decision-making, we will also have equity in life projects. The day in which life projects for boys and girls become quite similar, teen pregnancy will decrease.


Latin America needs long-term programs to reduce teen pregnancy, and girls need to have greater opportunities in order to finish their education programs. The aim of the project is not only to give visibility to the issue but to show solutions to this problem through an educational multimedia piece.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Kristin Chenoweth Croons A Johnny Mercer Classic On Her New Album

$
0
0

Kristin Chenoweth put her signature spin on a Johnny Mercer classic for her new album, “The Art of Elegance,” and The Huffington Post has an exclusive first listen. 


Of her decision to record “Skylark,” the Emmy and Tony Award-winning singer-actress told HuffPost, “This has always been one of the most interesting melodies and beautiful lyrics. It doesn’t seem to be overdone.”





Due out Sept. 23, “The Art of Elegance” is Chenoweth’s fifth studio album. It features her take on a number of American Songbook classics, including “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered,” “They Can’t Take That Away From Me,” and “Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart.” On Sept. 8, HuffPost Entertainment debuted Chenoweth’s version of Charlie Chaplin’s “Smile,” which is also featured on the album. 


“The Art of Elegance” kicks off a busy fall for the 48-year-old star. On Nov. 2, she’ll open at New York’s Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in “My Love Letter To Broadway,” an all-new concert act. In December, she’ll star alongside Harvey Fierstein, Ariana Grande and Jennifer Hudson in NBC’s “Hairspray Live!” 


Watch Chenoweth in the recording studio speaking about “The Art of Elegance” below. 




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

This Norman Rockwell Painting Sums Up Being A Woman On The Internet

$
0
0

Anyone who says being a woman is easy is probably a man.


Between the wage gap, the policing of our uteruses, the catcalling and the mansplaining ― we’re still a long way from gender equality, especially, for women of color. 


Which is why the meme-ification of Norman Rockwell’s 1959 painting, “The Jury,” is so poignant and hilarious. Because, well, if we can’t laugh at how ridiculous the world can be to women, we’d probably never get out of bed in the morning. 


















The painting, which depicts a woman being pressured by the 11 male members of the jury she’s on, was a social commentary. In 1959, women still weren’t allowed to be jurors in every state and many other states limited their participation.


These pushy male jurors don’t just resemble juror no. 3 or juror no. 7 from “Twelve Angry Men.” They resemble today’s state of affairs in an eerily close manner.


Especially, this guy:






Stand your ground, lady juror. We know it's been nearly 60 years, but you’re still a boss.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Move Over Piglet, There's A New 'Winnie-The-Pooh' Character In Town

$
0
0

The Hundred Acre Wood is famously home to at least one bear, tiger, pig, donkey, kangaroo, rabbit and owl. Come Oct. 6, it will also count a penguin among its residents.


Just in time for the 90th anniversary of the late A.A. Milne’s classic children’s book Winnie-the-Poohthe arbiters of Pooh’s estate have announced a new character. Penguin, as he’s known, will make his first appearance in the second authorized sequel to Milne’s series of books, The Best Bear In All The World,  set for publish this October.


The Best Bear In All The World will consist of four seasonal short stories (”Autumn,” “Winter,” “Spring” and “Summer”) written by four contemporary authors. As you’d expect, Penguin meets Pooh in “Winter,” having made his way to Sussex on “a rather snowy day,” according to story writer Brian Sibley.


“While pondering what other toys Christopher Robin might have owned but which were never written about, I remembered seeing a photograph of father and son playing on the nursery floor with Winnie-the-Pooh and ― a penguin!” Sibley explained in a statement.



“The thought of Pooh encountering a penguin seemed no more outlandish than his meeting a kangaroo and a tiger in a Sussex wood,” he added, “so I started thinking about what might have happened if, on a rather snowy day, Penguin had found his way to Pooh Corner…”


The characters in Milne’s original books (Winnie-the-Pooh was published in 1926 and The House at Pooh Corner in 1928) were based on the toys his son Christopher Robin ― the namesake of another Hundred Acre Wood regular ― owned. Winnie-the-Pooh, a teddy bear from Harrods, was named for Winnipeg, the Canadian black bear at ZSL London Zoo. 



Sebastian Wormell, Harrods archivist, speculated on whether or not the penguin in the photograph above originated at Harrods, as well.


“Harrods is famous as the original home of Winnie-the-Pooh, but the Toy Department where Mrs. Milne bought the iconic bear hosted a huge array of stuffed animals,” he said. “In the early years of the 20th century, toy penguins soared in popularity as the exploits of Antarctic explorers such as Shackleton and Scott fascinated the public. We believe that the toy pictured could be ‘Squeak’, which originated in our 1922 catalogue and came from ‘Pip, Squeak and Wilfred,’ a popular cartoon-strip.”


Egmont Publishing pointed out in a press release that ZSL London Zoo didn’t open its Lubetkin Penguin Pool until the 1930s, but noted that penguins ― including black-footed penguins like the one that appears in “Winter: in which Penguin arrives in the Forest,” may have been kept on-site in an enclosure for diving birds.



The first official sequel to Milne’s series ― Return to the Hundred Acre Wood ― was published by David Benedictus in 2009, illustrated by Mark Burgess. 


Beyond Sibley, Paul Bright, Kate Saunders and Jeanne Willis have also been tasked with bringing Pooh back to life in The Best Bear in All the World, which will be published with more drawings by Burgess in the style of the original E. H. Shepard illustrations. 



The Best Bear in All the World will be released on October 6, 2016, by Egmont Publishing. The 90th anniversary of Winnie-the-Pooh will take place on October 14, 2016.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Grammar-Fixing App Is The Ultimate Mic Drop For Pedants

$
0
0

Correcting people’s grammar, unsolicited, in a social context, is rude. Right? We can all agree on that.


That said, we can’t help but quietly enjoy the new iOS sticker pack Grammar Snob, which allows users to overlay red-pencil corrections of common grammar, spelling and usage errors onto their iMessage chats.


Corrections for a few particular peeves of ours appear in the set, including lose/loose, couldn’t care less, and properly placed apostrophes.



As much as an editor’s soul might warm to more red-pencil marks everywhere, does the world really need more pedantry? Mashable, Engadget and The Verge snarked that Grammar Snob is “the perfect app for people who are objectively the worst,” “ready to ruin your friendships,” and a way to “make enemies for life,” respectively.


Yes, the power to bring conversation to a screeching halt by boldly and colorfully humiliating your interlocutor’s adherence to standard written English is a mighty one, and it must be wielded with care.


Here are some general guidelines:


DON’T correct your best friend’s spelling of “lose” vs. “loose” when she sends you an emotional text about the death of her beloved pet rabbit.


DO correct your frenemy’s use of “could care less” when she messages you something callous about the death of your best friend’s rabbit.


DON’T scratch out “expresso” in a second date invitation from a promising suitor, overlaying it with a chilly “espresso.”


DO scratch out “your” in a bitter text from a Tinder match who’d been unsuccessfully angling for a booty call, overlaying it with “you’re.” (”You’re a frigid bitch” is much more grammatically satisfying to read.)


And of course, always remember that correcting others’ grammar can be classist, ignorant of variants in dialect, and might make you look like the fool yourself.  



With immense emotional power comes immense responsibility, young texters. Use these Grammar Snob stickers, but don’t use them thoughtlessly ― unless you wish to find yourself without annoying Tinder bros and bosom friends alike.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Dignified Portraits Of Rescue Dogs Will Melt Even The Iciest Of Hearts

$
0
0

Little Lowell, pictured above, was found by police on a brutally hot day in May. Locked inside a portable kennel for quite some time, Lowell was dirty, dehydrated, soaked in urine and desperate for food.


Thankfully, Little Lowell was rescued by the Humane Society of New York and promptly underwent surgery to have a bad eye removed. After a long recovery process, he was adopted by a couple living off Fifth Avenue. Lowell is now 6 years old and living in a great New York neighborhood. 


This painfully cute little fur ball is but one subject of Richard Phibbs’ portrait series “Rescue Me,” depicting dogs rescued by New York’s Humane Society. The complete series is soon to be available in unbearably cute book form, thanks to Aperture. The book pairs each photograph with a written description by journalist Richard Jones, who describes each animal’s journey from abhorrent conditions to peace and safety. 



“My portraits of homeless animals are not meant to make people feel sad,” New York-based photographer Phibbs writes in his introduction. The photographer has volunteered at the Humane Society since 2012, working to protect the animals who have no control over how their lives take shape.


“The goal is to find every animal a home. I hope to inspire people who are thinking of getting a dog or cat to ‘adopt instead of buy.’ By sharing your home and your life with a homeless animal, you become part of this great awakening, this transformation of human consciousness that recognizes the essential value of all living beings.”


Just looking at these dogs’ wide-eyed, slobbery-mouthed faces is almost too much to handle. Imagining them out on the New York City streets will make your heart hurt. 



Propped against a blank backdrop, the pups become dignified photographic subjects. After long stretches of neglect, abuse and horrific living conditions on the streets, the canines are given their place in the spotlight, a chance to assert their standing as beautiful and strong living creatures. And, also, really, really cute ones. 


The simple but powerful photographs make plain the strong trust between photographer and subject. As Virginia Chipurnoi, President of the Humane Society of New York, explains in the book, for these animals ― so long maltreated and ignored ― expressing their true natures is a difficult task.


“Because life has been so unkind to so many of them,” Chipurnoi writes, “it is often difficult to break through their defenses. To discover the spirit of life in a dog that has almost given up trying to find a place of peace takes great skill and patience. Richard manages to capture that spark in each dog by engendering a trust that allows the animal to reveal itself.”



One dog particularly attached itself to Phibbs during the photography process ― a long-haired Chihuahua named Finn. The photographer felt an instant connection with the little guy, who he describes as “affectionate and spunky with an outsize personality.” Phibbs ended up adopting Finn and the two have been together ever since. 


Still, for every dog that finds a home, hundreds more are without shelter, food, or love. Phibbs hopes his images portray shelter dogs in a new light, inspiring all who encounter them to consider adopting a dog in need for themselves. If you’re so inspired, head to the Humane Society of New York’s website to see how you can help a pup in need. 


“Rescue Me” will be released on October 28, 2016. A book launch party in its honor will be held at Aperture Gallery, New York. 


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Architect Turns Abandoned Stadium Scraps Into Beautiful Bags And Bus Stops

$
0
0

An architect in Indianapolis is giving old sports stadiums a second life by turning their bones into projects that serve the community. 


Michael Bricker grew up in Indianapolis and got his master’s degree in architecture in Texas. In 2008, he moved back to his old city, where demolition was starting on the RCA Dome, the former home of the Colts.


As he drove past the site most days, Bricker couldn’t help but wonder what would happen to the industrial fabric that served as the stadium’s roof. He estimated that if a company were to try and install such a thing somewhere today, it would probably cost at least $10 million.



Bricker ended up convincing the demolition company to save the dome. But then he had to figure out what to do with it.


“Sustainability, just that word, was just starting to become more of a commonplace term and approach,” Bricker said. “When we first were reaching out to folks to help us do this, they didn’t really understand why we were doing it. They were like, ‘What? What’s in it for you?’”


“We were just kind of like, ‘Well, this seems like a really valuable resource that no one has a plan for, so let’s at least just not let it go into the landfill,’” he added. 



Laden with nearly 13 acres of Teflon-coated fiberglass, Bricker founded the nonprofit People for Urban Progress. Working with local designers, they created a line of purses and wallets using some of the durable dome fabric. The first run of 1,000 pieces made $70,000. Half of that money went to cover costs, and half was funneled into community projects.


The bags were originally envisioned as souvenirs for local sports fans, but interest in the well-crafted accessories has spread beyond Indiana. 



PUP’s model is to use the earnings from the products they sell ― along with some donations and small grants ― to salvage other stadium leftovers and work on projects for the community. Using the roof material, they built several shade canopies at parks and urban gardens.



When Indianapolis’ Bush Stadium was demolished in 2012, PUP salvaged 9,000 seats. Some of those were sold to fans, raising funds to turn the others into benches at bus stops that lacked seating. There are now 50 “Pupstops.”


Bricker said the group is tapping into the power of fandom and nostalgia to celebrate the city.


“Transit is often designed to be invisible,” he said. But the memorable baseball seats call attention to the bus system ― and to the people who use it, and their needs.



PUP is also working on opening the Fabrik Bank, where they’ll store the materials they save ― including five miles of banners and other fabric used for the Super Bowl in 2012 ― and make them available for public use.  



PUP is tackling a problem that many major cities face. Supported with millions of public dollars, new stadiums are erected to placate teams, bolster a city’s image and attract tourists. But it’s common for a new stadium to make obsolete an existing structure, one that there’s not really anything wrong with. These old venues usually end up abandoned or demolished, which can seem like an incredible waste.


Here’s what happened when the roof of the Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan, was deflated and left to the elements, a little over a decade after the Detroit Lions moved to Ford Field:



Not all stadiums suffer the same fate. The Houston Astrodome has been deteriorating since it was last regularly used in the early 2000s. But the site is protected by the Texas Historical Commission and the city is considering development plans.  


When the 49ers’ old home in San Francisco was demolished last year, the construction company planned to recycle over 95 percent of the materials, according to GreenBiz.



Bricker’s project goes beyond recycling by taking an overlooked resource and returning it to the public. At the same time, it’s diverting waste from landfills.


“As cities age, increasingly their buildings are getting replaced, and particularly their stadiums,” he said. “These are often buildings that people really love... and we’re celebrating them a little bit more, extending their utility.” 



In Indianapolis, reuse and sustainability are no longer alien ideas. Developers have started contacting PUP before demolition begins, and Bricker is making recommendations to city stakeholders about what material to use for banners and other items so PUP can repurpose them later.


“They’re thinking about the life cycle and that process earlier on, and I think that’s the first step,” Bricker said. “It shouldn’t be an afterthought ― it should be the first thought. And I think we’re inching that way.”


H/T CityLab



_____




Kate Abbey-Lambertz covers sustainable cities, housing and inequality. Tips? Feedback? Send an email or follow her on Twitter.   


_____



-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Why Lin-Manuel Miranda And His Dad Are Incredibly Proud To Be Latino

$
0
0

Lin-Manuel Miranda’s desire to represent Latinos and their unique experiences in predominantly white spaces began long before his incredible Broadway success. 


In an intimate conversation for NBC with his father, Luis A. Miranda Jr., the “Hamilton” creator discussed how being one of very few students of Puerto Rican descent in his high school ignited a desire to embrace and share his culture with his peers.


“There’s sort of two ways of dealing with being an outsider, being a minority culture in a school. You either blend in or you grab that flag and you wave it as hard as you can,” he explained in the special Hispanic Heritage Month-themed interview with NBC. “And I think I was very much of the grab the flag school, particularly in high school when I realized this is awesome. I bring something to the table that my peers don’t. I bring dope Latin music, and I bring dope food. And I live in a part of town where it’s really different from the rest of New York, and it’s actually really exciting.”





The 36-year-old award-winning composer and performer, who directed his high school’s production of “West Side Story,” went on to explain how he used theater to teach his peers about his Puerto Rican heritage. “It became an opportunity to bring my culture to school, and instead of a negative thing like, ‘Oh, no, there’s no Latinos,’ it’s like, ‘Oh, no, I’m gonna bring what being Puerto Rican is,” he said. 


The father-son duo also recalled how their family celebrated Three Kings Day (Jan. 6), and how they’d each explain the holiday to non-Latino children.


The younger Miranda said he described the celebration as an “extra Christmas,” when he was a kid to his non-Latino peers but his father had a much different take. When children asked why the kings didn’t visit their home, his dad would joke: “Unfortunately, you’re not one of the chosen ones.” 


Watch the Mirandas reminisce about their family’s past, and the ways in which their shared culture has influenced their respective careers in the video above. 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images