Welcome

More and more I want to stay close to you,
this way I can travel far from home,
and return back with new eyes,
new stories,
a new tongue.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

It's a HIT!

 So far we've done six shows and each one gets better and better. I've been doing some post show interviews with the kids, and without fail they are loving it. The show is doing what I hoped it would too. The folks at the Kennedy Center are delighted and so am I. 

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Onstage at Kennedy Center

Here is the set/video screen for Man of the House onstage at the Kennedy Center. We open in three days. 

Friday, October 25, 2013

Loading in tomorrow!!

We've been rehearsing for five days in room 6 of the opera's suite. A gas to hear the basso profundo warming up as Pablito (our 13 year old hero) goes through his paces in scene after scene of The Man of the House. Karen Jenson's video design is really cool, the pblocking/staging too. The more I discover about this kid the more I like him. 

Tomorrow we load onto the stage for lighting prep and our first hours on the boards of The Family Theater. 

First shows are Tuesday!!!

Friday, October 18, 2013

First run through

We had our first full run through tonight and it went  well. The music was really in good shape, the 20 people who were in attendance give us great ideas and feedback in the Q&A. Starting to feel like there's a good piece here. I always knew there were good bones, but now I'm starting to recognize that this play has substance, and maybe even significance.

Hope to y'all at the Kennedy Center!!

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Man of the House update

The premier is in just over two weeks, October 29. We will have two shows for kids at the Kennedy Center, and then on until November 6.  Public shows are on November 2 and third, tickets are still available.

The pressure is on.

The next two weeks will be filled with rehearsals, video design, music composition and arrangements, discussions with lighting designers and others. Very very excited about this new project, hope you can come!

dg

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Update

Very excited for where we are with Man of the House now.  The set piece/screen is looking great, the projections are coming along, pretty much got the script memorized, and had a great music writing session with Daniel Kelly.


Thursday, September 19, 2013

Man if the House update

The Man of the House - update

43 pages memorized.
Videos selected.
Costume designed.
Props ordered.
Apartment in Washington rented.
Stage manager on board.
Lighting designer on board.
Composer/musician on board.
Video designer/director on board.
Kennedy Center marketing team on board.
Kennedy Center Education team terrifically helpful.
Parking pass at KC requested.
Set/screen designed and 1/2 way complete.
Writer/Actor/Producer thrilled.


Tuesday, September 10, 2013

WORLD PREMIERE - THE MAN OF THE HOUSE at The Kennedy Center!

Dear World,

It is really real...The Man of the House, the new play I've been writing and rehearsing for the past two years will premiere at the Washington DC's remarkable Kennedy Center on November 2nd and 3rd. 

Check it out right here --  http://www.kennedy-center.org/events/?event=KOTAA

I'll be posting updates, excerpts and photos as we proceed through the next few exciting weeks.

Onward,

d.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Southeastern Theater Conference Keynote

I am going to being part of the exciting Southeastern Theater Conference next week delivering a talk called "The Warrior and The Fool: Being an Artist in These Hard Times".  Check out the conference here: https://www.facebook.com/setc.org

Lots of workshops and speeches, lots of opportunities too.  I'm looking forward to hearing Eric Booth, and seeing Steve Wangh.

d.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Memphis, Clarksdale, the blues...

Clarksdale, Mississippi is said to be mecca of the blues, and judging by the pilgrims who come here from around the world it just might be.  Tonight at Red's there were folks from 10 states and as far away as Australia, and last time there were people from Japan, France, Germany, and Canada...something about the blues that speaks across borders, across languages, and into the stuff.

Tonight I heard "Kingfisher", a 14 year-old guitar wizard, not for flashy licks, but for deep knowing, solid feel, and soulful maturity well beyond his years.  Couldn't help but think that this kid possesses a wisdom from somewhere else...that kind of musicianship and soul just can't be conjured in such little time...wondered about where it came from, whether it is inborn, whether it comes from someplace, from someone.  Clarksdale is the place of the crossroads where Robert Johnson sold his soul to the devil in exchange for his musical talent.  Kingfisher has so much mojo I wonder if that spell is alive and well in this town.

There's a juke joint festival down here April 12 and 13, get here if you can.  Stay at Hobson's Plantation, drink cheap beer, open your ears, and prepare yourself for gritty transformation in the kettle of the blues.  JUKE JOINT FESTIVAL WEBSITE

Monday, February 4, 2013

SAVE THE DATE: Imagination, Inquiry and Innovation Institute Conference


Acceptance speech from International Performing Arts for Youth (IPAY)

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International Performing Arts for Youth
Lifetime Achievement Award
David Gonzalez' Acceptance Speech
January 2011

The fairy tale just took a twist. 

I’ve traded cows for beans, I’ve made wishes to magical fishes, I’ve negotiated with beasts and fairies, I’ve slain, and (like Sondheim’s storyteller), I’ve been slain, I’ve risen from the ashes, yes, like you, I’ve journeyed into the wood, and now, miraculously, by your good graces, I am home safe and crowned.

Robin, June, Bert, my esteemed colleagues and friends we all know this could easily be you. I am humbled to be standing here before you, and in the spirit of our community I accept the Mickey Miners award in the name of the unsung, the unknown, the worker bees behind the scenes, the ones who aren’t with us today, who taught us, who fought with us against the tide, who wouldn’t abide the facile or docile, yes, to the nameless tributaries, and to the as yet unborn future artists that will nourish the values of art we hold dear.

In a recent interview I was asked about the choice to be an artist.  What compels someone to commit ourselves to this absurdly uncertain, and certainly absurd, road? It is a wonder that so many of us actually take the detour and get “off the grid” when so many viable possibilities, alternatives and conventions surround us. Yes, sometimes it is ego pure and simple, but we all know that that is rare, and mostly passing. The truth is, while each of us has a story, at the root of that story is the overwhelming necessity to matter to the world, to make a difference in young people’s lives, however small, through our capacity to imagine, to create, and to wonder.

I was seven years old in 1963 when I heard on a little brown transitor radio that President Kennedy had been shot, I watched his funeral on TV, the black horse-drawn wagon mournfully carrying his body down Pennsylvannia Avenue, John-John’s tiny salute…With my grandmother I watched the news every night, we adjusted the rabbit-eared antenae to still the image to see the water cannons blasting black protesters in Newark, and Watts, I saw the funerals of Martin Luther King Jr, of Bobby Kennedy, and I saw the body bags coming home from Viet Nam day after day, the daily tally of US dead, of Vietcong dead.  I saw much but could do nothing.  These images were the cradle of my consciousness – how could I stand by, how can anyone stand by passively when the fires of hatred and war are raging all around us.  I root the answer as to why I do what I do to the dissonance between my youthful innocence and the troubled times I was born into.  

And that is my question today -- Is there enough outrage?  Why were 23 Afghan civilians killed by a U.S. drone last week?  Why is Bradley Manning in solitary confinement, looking at 52 years in prison? Why did we allow the administration to suppress the photos of our dead returning home from Iraq and Afganistan for so long?  No, we oughtn’t pound politics into kid’s heads, but neither should we keep them ignorant of their world. 

In closing may I ask that our work invigorate the imagination, liberate free thought, embody true joy, and help create an activated citizenry that will respond with loud voices against injustice so that no more innocents be killed in our name, and so that the masks, and truths, of tragedy and comedy be friendly companions to our days.

Thank you.