It has been quite a while since I last saw the Utah Symphony (at least for me) so I was very happy to end a long week back at Abravanel Hall with an incredible concert featuring Symphony No. 3 by Gustav Mahler. The Utah Symphony is performing the entire Mahler symphony cycle this season and next to commemorate their 75th anniversary and to honor the legacy of Maurice Abravanel. I am not very familiar with Mahler but I am starting to really appreciate his work (Symphony No. 1 was amazing). This particular piece was absolutely magnificent! The orchestra was joined by mezzo-soprano Tamara Mumford, the women from the Utah Symphony Chorus, and the Madeleine School Choir. I had goosebumps almost from the opening notes played by the horn section (eight of them). The first movement was very dramatic, featuring a rousing march and a wonderful theme played by a solo trombone. The second movement was very playful, in my opinion, with themes played by the oboes and clarinets (I love it when the woodwinds are featured). According to Mahler, this movement represents flowers and it was probably my favorite section of the symphony. The third movement included a solo trumpet played off stage and this was amazing! The fourth movement featured Mumford, who gave a lovely performance. The text is based on Friedrich Nietzsche's "Midnight Song" and I found it to be both beautiful and atmospheric. Mumford was joined by both choirs in the fifth movement and I particularly loved when the children imitated bells. The final movement was also incredibly dramatic. It started very slowly and softly and then built to an incredible crescendo featuring the timpani. This symphony is almost two hours long but the beautiful music carried me away and it seemed to last for just an instant! I really enjoyed this concert last night and I definitely recommend getting a ticket to tonight's performance. Go here for tickets and information.
Saturday, February 7, 2015
Monday, February 2, 2015
Sundance Film Festival 2015
For ten days in January, independent filmmakers, and the occasional Hollywood celebrity, descend upon Park City to screen their movies at the Sundance Film Festival and, hopefully, find studios willing to distribute them for wide-release. It is an absolutely magical time for film lovers (some travel from all over the world to be here) because many of the films are world premieres. I always try to see at least one film every year but this year I decided to go for it and see as many films as my schedule (I didn't take any time off but I am thinking about it for next year) would allow. I had the opportunity to see ten films in seven days at six venues and I loved every minute of my Sundance experience! Monday night I saw Unexpected at the Broadway Theatre. A high school Biology teacher (Cobie Smulders) discovers, unexpectedly, that she is pregnant and is conflicted about potentially losing her identity. When her best student also discovers that she is pregnant, she channels all of her emotions into getting her student into college at any cost with disastrous results. I really related to this movie because I've worked with students to help them get into college and sometimes it was what I wanted rather than what they wanted. I cried during a particularly heated scene. Tuesday night I saw Entertainment at the Broadway. This is one of the strangest films I've ever seen. A third rate comedian (Gregg Turkington) travels through the Mojave Desert to perform at a series of dubious gigs (one is in a prison), stay in one run-down motel after another, and take some bizarre field trips (an airplane graveyard) to pass the time. It was a powerful character study of a man being driven to desperation which made me uncomfortable (but that was rather the point). Wednesday night I drove all the way to Ogden (about an hour north of where I live) because I really wanted to see Brooklyn. This is a very sweet film about an Irish girl (Saoirse Ronan) who emigrates to New York in the 1950s. I really loved Ronan's performance and this is one of my favorites of the festival. Thursday night I saw People, Places, Things at the Rose Wagner Theatre. Will Henry (Jemaine Clement) is a graphic novelist who is getting over a breakup, learning how to relate to his twin daughters, and trying to date again. This movie was absolutely hilarious with lots of quick and witty dialogue ("I'm a sassy little hobbit"). I also really liked the use of actual comic strips to tell the story. Friday night I saw a double feature. First was Z for Zachariah at the Grand Theatre (a really great venue). I was so excited when I was able to score a ticket to this film at the last minute because I read the book in Jr. High and it has always stayed with me. After a nuclear war, Ann Burden (Margot Robbie), who lives in an isolated valley protected by mountains, believes that she is the only survivor. After a year on her own, she is visited by two other survivors who may not be all that they seem. The movie deviated from the book quite a bit with the addition of a third character but I enjoyed it. Next I saw Hellions at the Broadway as part of Sundance's Midnight Madness series. A pregnant teenager (Chloe Rose) must survive Halloween when a group of demon children attack her to steal her unborn child. This was actually a really awful movie but I had a lot of fun watching it at midnight with a fun crowd. Saturday afternoon I saw The Diary of a Teenage Girl at the Grand. A fifteen year old girl (Bel Powley) has a sexual awakening in 1970s San Francisco. Powley gives an astonishing performance and is considered by many critics to be the break-out star of the festival. I really loved all of the 1970s music used throughout the film, especially Heart's "Dreamboat Annie." (I really love that song). Saturday I saw another Midnight Madness film, The Hallow, at the Broadway. Adam (Joseph Mawle), along with his wife and infant son, moves from London to a remote area in Ireland to evaluate the forest for future development but he is soon warned by his superstitious neighbors that the forest is haunted by spirits. Soon, these spirits attack and try to take his son. It was a predictable plot but the tension leading up to the attack was almost unbearable and the creatures were quite scary. I spent Sunday morning at the beautiful Sundance Resort for a screening of 71. A British soldier (Jack O'Connell from Unbroken) is left behind after a riot on the streets of Belfast during "the Troubles." As he tries to make his way back to the barracks, he his both helped and pursued by various factions and doesn't know who to trust. It was a very powerful and suspenseful movie. Finally, my friends Rob and Esther gave me a ticket to see the Dramatic Grand Jury Prize winner at the Eccles Theatre in Park City Sunday afternoon and it turned out to be Me and Earl and the Dying Girl. I was excited because I really wanted to see this film but was unable to get a ticket! Greg (Thomas Mann), an awkward teenager, and his only friend, Earl, spend most of their time making movies based on classic films (Their version of Midnight Cowboy just about killed me). Greg's mother asks him to befriend a girl who has recently been diagnosed with leukemia and their friendship is both touching and heartbreaking. I absolutely loved this film and I laughed and cried through the whole thing. It is definitely my favorite film of the festival. The films this year were really great but my favorite part of the festival was getting to have so many wonderful conversations with people from all over the country. Sometimes I think that people find me to be a bit much when I start talking about music, books, theatre, and movies so it was great to talk to people who are just as passionate as I am. I am already looking forward to next year!
Note: For the past five years I have taken my students to see free screenings at Sundance. Go here for an article in the Salt Lake Tribune.
Saturday, January 31, 2015
Leaving Time
My book club chose Leaving Time by Jodi Picoult for its January selection. Picoult can usually be relied upon for an entertaining read (my book club has also read My Sister's Keeper and House Rules) and this novel is more of the same. Jenna Metcalf is a 13-year old girl searching for her mother Alice, a renowned elephant researcher who disappeared ten years ago in the wake of a tragic accident on the elephant sanctuary where she worked. Jenna enlists the help of Serenity Jones, a psychic who has lost her gift, and Virgil Stanhope, the police officer who first responded to the accident and is tormented by his inability to solve the case. The story is told from multiple perspectives, including Alice's journals detailing her research on elephants, as the three main characters search for clues about that fateful night. There is an epic plot twist at the end, of the I-can't-believe-I-didn't-see-that-coming variety, which, if you can suspend your disbelief, brings about a satisfying resolution. My favorite element of the story is the juxtaposition of Jenna's experiences with that of elephants (my very favorite animal). Much is made of Jenna's inability to remember the accident while elephants never forget. Jenna is distraught over the fact that her mother may have willingly left her behind while elephants are devoted mothers who often refuse to leave a calf who has died. I think the elephants are my favorite characters in the novel, although Jenna is endearing and the duo of misfits who help her are wonderfully quirky. I did feel that the multiple perspectives were sometimes confusing (Serenity was my favorite narrator) and there were definitely some holes in the plot, but I enjoyed the compelling mother-daughter story and I loved the elephants! If you are a fan of Jodi Picoult (and elephants), I recommend this book.
Monday, January 26, 2015
Boyhood
I am now actually able to say that I have seen all of the nominees for Best Picture (see my reviews of The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game, The Theory of Everything, Whiplash, Birdman, Selma, and American Sniper) because Boyhood was re-released in theaters and I saw a screening Saturday night. I had many preconceived notions about this film because I knew so much about it. The story centers around Mason (Ellar Coltrane) and his experiences growing up from the age of six until he graduates from high school and leaves for college. Director Richard Linklater, essentially, filmed the same group of actors for a few days each year over a span of twelve years. While he did have the outline of the story he wanted to tell, he let the script evolve and it was informed by what Ellar Coltrane was actually going through in his own life. I thought this movie would come across as a documentary and I thought that it had become the darling of the critics because filming for such a long period of time was an interesting gimmick. In spite of my determination to hate it, I was completely drawn into Mason's story. He has a very difficult life living with a single mother (played brilliantly by Patricia Arquette), who continually makes poor choices in her personal life which have devastating consequences for her children, and a ne'er-do-well father (the equally brilliant Ethan Hawke), who swoops in periodically (in a sweet GTO) with presents and demands for a meaningful relationship. It definitely has a narrative arc and it doesn't seem like a documentary at all. Nor does it seem like a gimmick; rather, it feels like a masterpiece. I am still not entirely sure why, but this movie grabbed hold of me and it hasn't let me go yet! Maybe it is because Mason reminds me so much of my students. Coltrane is absolutely magnetic and he portrays Mason so sympathetically, especially as he gets older and begins to question his place in the world. There is such a great scene between Mason and his girlfriend in a coffee shop at 3:00 in the morning (I have had many epic philosophical conversations at 3:00 in the morning) where they discuss the meaning of life. Ultimately, Mason is able to survive the mistakes of his parents and, as he is about to start college, he realizes that life is all about the moments. I have always believed that and I highly recommend this movie
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Snowshoeing in Mill Creek Canyon
Saturday morning I drove up to Mill Creek Canyon for another snowshoeing adventure. The conditions were not as great as I would have hoped (I need some new powder) but I really enjoyed being out in the fresh mountain air.
Even though there were lots of people skiing and sledding all around me, it was so peaceful. I love that I can get away from everything in less than 30 minutes. I live in a really beautiful place!
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