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A young boy paints in an arts in education poster

Advocating for Arts Education

Okay friends, it’s the time of your school districts are making plans for next year, Arts Advocacy Day just happened here in the USA, and politicians are planning for fall elections before people check out for the summer. Therefore, this blog is devoted to fabulous writings and research on the importance of arts education and arts at the heart of common core academic learning. First off, there is an awesome cyber clearinghouse for arts research, and I highly recommend it if you are a one-stop-shopping kinda person: www.artsedsearch.org Here’s a portion of a recent research posting on said site, with

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Hands making shapes against a yellow wall

Body Language: How to unpack the non-verbal parts of communication

Communication is about more than just words—it’s tone of voice, body language, and facial expressions.  Cadence, eye contact, gestures, body angles, and weight placement all have implications, which change depending on the social situation, the cultural background of speaker, and the status of the participants. As an actor whose specialty is Physical Theatre, and also as a person with a keen interest in interaction, empowerment, and culture, I have given a great deal of my life’s attention to these non-verbal cues. Along those lines, I have taught workshops with some wonderful college students who are going into health-related fields, and

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Marie Sirakos, artist and playwright

Performance and Community: interview with Marie Sirakos

I am just finishing up being directed by the great Marie Sirakos in a performance of the internationally acclaimed children’s book, “My Father’s Dragon,” in celebration of the author’s 90th birthday. Marie is a playwright and community events organizer whose work includes a piece called Empty Chairs, an art-installation, community driven work about loss and suicide. Marie is a personal hero of mine, and it is an honor to interview her for this week’s blog. Q. Hi, Marie! It’s a pleasure to have you here! A subject dear to my heart is the interrelationship between Performance and Community. You have been

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Students perform for a workshop

On Teaching Intimacy (theatre is life)

I recently taught a workshop on Dramatic Improvisation for a Comedy Festival focused on Improvisation and Stand-Up comedy for adults. Mine was the first workshop of the day (a Saturday), and I had anticipated a small turnout of people, mostly men, who might resist all but the hilarious and shallow. Why? Because Dramatic Improvisation only works with deep vulnerability and an almost intimate relationship with a scene partner, who may be a stranger. It’s hard to do, and if the commitment to the scene partner is not complete, the scene is unsatisfying. It’s also not necessarily funny (although it can be),

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A girl wearing a headdress mask

Arts and Empowerment

Playwrighting is about creating a means for people to empower themselves, grow, explore, find joy, and reach out to a larger community through theatre. Without even meaning to, the best and best intentioned of us shape content, form, and process direction to our understanding and comfort level. This process is one more attempt to get away from “colonialism” style thinking (Marino, 1997) where the facilitator or director reproduces the imbalance of power as well as his or her own belief system in the very group that is supposed to be expressing themselves. Since we want to encourage responsible citizenry and

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by 3rd graders about Chaos Theory and Fractals

Playwrighting and Playbuilding: How to bring the arts to life

Playwrighting: from the words “play” and “wright”. Play: (2) brisk, lively activity involving change, variation, transition, or alternation: dynamic action; (3) the representation or exhibition of some action or story on the stage or in some other medium. Wright: (1) to create, shape or a person who does so, usually in wood in combination (shipwright); (2) to work into shape by artistry or effort; (3) to fashion with particular adherence to form or style. The arts are in effect the Rosetta Stone for transition, possessing both ontological and technical knowing. They also require a process approach that really works only when

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A small girl at a water pump in Afghanistan

Afghanistan: a traveling player’s journey

I learned just a few days ago that will be going back to Afghanistan in the fall of 2013—eleven years after my first incredible visit. I have the honor of going over with the Afghan Friends Network, and have begun making the flurry of arrangement even as my mind and heart are in wind and fire. I have realized that it is hard for many people to understand why this part of the world is so very compelling for me, so I share below an interview I did with Lillie Marshall of Teaching Traveling. Journey in peace, friends. “When people

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Holly Adams in her studio recording an audiobook

Working with Children on the Asperger-Autism Spectrum

I am a performer, playwright and Teaching Artist with a long history and much training in working with people whose perceptual/interactive experience of the world is on the fringe of typical association. In 2012, I was hired by 3 Tier Consulting to do theater workshops with children on the Asperger-Autism spectrum in Watertown and Fort Drum. Most of these children come from families with a spouse in the active armed forces, oftentimes also facing a possible move to another base; although we ran 2 sets of 2 weekly sessions about six months apart, only one boy was in both sets. Fabulously enough,

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Kakeru performs Raven Brings the Light

Raven Brings the Light to the People

So many celebrations that begin in late fall and run into dead of winter are about finding (or bringing) light in the darkness, both literally and metaphorically. One of my favorite stories is Raven Brings the Light, of which there are many versions. A beautiful version was performed for Northern Exposure, in an episode is called “Seoul Mates”. (It weaves together a variety of winter solstice themes, and ends with a Raven pageant). Below I have reprinted from Native Online a wonderful version. May your heart be filled with light. There was a time many years ago when the earth was

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Holly narrates a novel in her booth

How Popular Fiction Can Make a Difference

This blog is about how popular novels can and do move the general public’s assumption of What Is Okay forward in wonderful ways—in other words, you can stop hatin’ on chick books as an auto-response and look a little deeper to find the forces making slow but big changes in how women perceive themselves and are perceived by others. Yup, I am about say that romance novels are important. The idea for this blog came to me as I had just finished narrating the wonderful romance by Joan Reeves, “The Trouble with Love” (shameless plug—it’s available at Audible Inc) and

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