May 1, 2008

The Country Girl–Peter Strikes Again

countrygirl.jpg

The Country Girl
April 27, 2008
By Leonard Jacobs

What would attract Morgan Freeman, Frances McDormand, and Peter Gallagher to Clifford Odets' The Country Girl? Perhaps it's the meat of their characters more than the play itself. Indeed, forget all the gossip you've read over whether playwright Jon Robin Baitz, credited with "material revisions" for the Broadway revival, has tweaked the script a lot or a little — this isn't Odets' keenest work. But it is plainly a commercial vehicle, with a suspenseful backstage story and a predictable romantic triangle that has the ability to ensnare. Critics noted this back at the time of the original 1950 production, which Odets staged; even with Mike Nichols at the helm, the verdict on the drama remains unchanged. The Country Girl was also a big hit in 1950, so given the star wattage on stage at the Jacobs Theatre, it's likely to become one again.

Freeman plays Frank Elgin, a talented actor whose trysting with alcohol has left him washed up. What's surprising about Frank's long-suffering wife, Georgie, played by McDormand, is she's not depicted as miserable until Act 2. For most of the play she's tolerating, mildly maternal, emphatically passive-aggressive, aloof — the simple, admirable traits of a plain country girl that McDormand embodies so well it's almost unnerving.

Gallagher plays Bernie Dodd, a sharp-mouthed theatre director who entreats his producer, Phil Cook — a spitfire of gutsy charisma from Chip Zien — to cast Frank in a new play. Remy Auberjonois gives the role of the playwright, Paul Unger, a welcome sheen of sweetness.

No one is unaware of Frank's reputation. But Bernie's a dreamer: When young, he saw Frank act in a play and has never been so captivated since. He says creating stage magic means rolling the dice sometimes, and if he can stop Frank from falling off the wagon, he promises not to draw snake eyes. (The Country Girl was partly inspired by the last years of Laurette Taylor, who created the role of Amanda Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie.)

Gallagher hits his stride immediately and never looks back. Cigarettes dangling from his mouth, his voice a corroded Brooklynese that rides Odets' clipped dialogue at a gallop, Bernie is hardnosed haggler and well-guarded artist. Usually a committed actor, Gallagher is giving one of the finest performances of his career.

And while Freeman is arguably too old for his role — the age difference between him and McDormand is striking — he too has moments that transcend the flaws in Odets' drama. For one thing, Frank is a study in deception; Odets builds the play so you believe Frank's claim, early on, that he's licked his love of liquor and that the real pain in his marriage comes from Georgie, who never recovered from the death of their child and possesses suicidal tendencies. Earnest and avuncular — two fine qualities in an actor, if curious for Frank — Freeman thus complicates McDormand's task, and she is unable to make Georgie multidimensional until Bernie reveals his love for her.

Only in the final scene — when Frank triumphs in the play despite a bit of impromptu stage combat with the ingénue, Nancy, played by Anna Camp — does McDormand unveil Georgie's psychological underpinnings, because Georgie won't ever leave Frank, even given the chance. No, she's no country girl — she's a cauldron whose lid is firmly on the pot.

Nichols and Baitz can't neutralize the play's hoarier twinges, but Tim Hatley's array of sets, Albert Wolsky's wisely understated Truman-era costumes, and Natasha Katz's chic, angular lighting make it a handsome production.

Presented by Ostar Productions, Bob Boyett, the Shubert Organization, Eric Falkenstein, Roy Furman, Lawrence Horowitz, Jam Theatricals, Stephanie P. McClelland, Bill Rollnick/Nancy Ellison Rollnick, Daryl Roth/Debra Black, in association with Jov Avnet/Ralph Guild, Michael Coppel, Jamie deRoy/Michael Filerman, Philip Geier/Donald Keough, Max OnStage, Mary Lu Roffe at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre, 242 W. 45th St., NYC. April 27-July 20. Tue.-Sat., 8 p.m.; Wed. and Sat., 2 p.m.; Sun., 3 p.m. (212) 239-6200 or (800) 432-7250 or www.telecharge.com. Casting by Tara Rubin Casting.

Filed under Uncategorized by ElliotMD (musical director or medical doctor)

Permalink Print Comment

December 12, 2007

Cabaret: Behind the scenes at Torn Ticket II

cabaret-2007-4.jpgcabaret-2007-3.jpgcabaret-2007-2.jpgcabaret-2007.jpgMitch Maxwell and Charlie Seymour directed Cabaret in 1972–the third Torn Ticket musical. Torn Ticket II performed it again in 1998. Now, go behind the scenes at the Tufts Balch Arena Theatre for their most recent version of the famous Kander & Ebb musical.


Click Here To Find Cabaret: The Making of a Musical!

Filed under Uncategorized by ElliotMD (musical director or medical doctor)

Permalink Print Comment

November 15, 2007

Welcome Tufts Magazine Readers! This is the Torn Ticket and Torn Ticket II Alumni Archives

copy-of-img_1454.JPG 

Welcome to everyone who read the Tufts Magazine notice about the Torn Ticket and Torn Ticket II Alumni Archives.

You Found Us!

You are invited to add content to the site! Let us know what you did while on the campus and what you have done since being on the campus.

By now you have had enough time to reflect on how important your musical theater activities at Tufts University were for you… please tell us all about them!

 

Pax et Lux.

Charlie Seymour Jr

Filed under Uncategorized by Charles Seymour Jr

Permalink Print Comment

October 23, 2007

Kate MacIntyre, Long Time Supporter of Torn Ticket, Dies At The Age Of 55 Of Lung Cancer

Kate MacIntyre
October 22, 2007

Kate MacIntyre, executive director of the Davidson (N.C) Business Association, died at home today after a valiant two-year struggle with cancer.

Her husband, Peter Macon, a business consultant in the international toy and textile industry, was at her side.

The couple had shared a mutual enjoyment of the theater during their student days at Tufts University in the 1970s, and then went on to different life choices, maintaining a deep friendship leading to marriage two months before Kate’s cancer diagnosis.

Kate expected the best from others because it was what she demanded of herself. She loved life and that was something a diagnosis of advanced cancer did nothing to lessen.

A journalist by training, Kate tackled her cancer treatment at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill like a reporter determined to know the truth.

Her spirit, the love and comfort she found in her life partner and her willingness to undergo experimental treatment kept her focused on having a good quality of life.

She continued to work right up to her death.

As the Davidson Business Association’s first executive director, Kate helped articulate the association's mission of promoting the town’s Main Street area, securing several thousand dollars in grants for cultural events, and launching such popular events as "Art on the Green" and "Croquet on the Green."

Kate’s vision included developing the concept of ‘hip and historic” Davidson, seeing the value of applying to the Main Street Program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and considering the attraction of creating public artworks for the town as well a farmer's market with emphasis on buying local.

Despite decreasing mobility, Kate felt it was important to be among the diners at the opening night of one of Davidson’s first Italian restaurants in September as well as Wayne Stowe’s thank you picnic on the Green.

Although not a smoker, Kate was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2005.

She volunteered to be part of a clinical drug trial for treating such cancer under the care of Dr. Mark Socinski at UNC’s Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.

She later gave public testimony on her treatment that helped the center and university be designated to receive millions of dollars in state funds to accelerate research and was among the patients recently honored by the center for this at a reception at the home of UNC President Erskine Bowles.

Kate had said in her testimony that no one should "give up on stage four cancer patients."

Early on as part of the clinical trial, aware that she was part of research that would help others after her, she said her desire was to "educate the public about lung cancer, bringing to the task the same spirit I see in breast cancer advocates."

She had worked to make people aware that by some estimates one out of every five women diagnosed with lung cancer is a non-smoker.

Kate was born in Cleveland and graduated from high school in Shaker Heights. Known to her friends as "Katie," she was also known for her ability to quickly analyze a situation and critique a problem.

She completed her undergraduate studies in three years, graduating with a degree in theater in 1973 from Tufts University in Medford, MA.

Kate earned a master’s degree from the Columbia University School of Journalism in New York in 1974. Her thesis dealt with theater development and her professors there included the late Fred Friendly, former CBS News president and creator with the late Edward R. Murrow of the "See It Now" series.

Kate also earned a second master’s degree in public administration from Golden Gate University.

During her long career, Kate held a number of executive positions both on the East and West Coasts in theater development and in advertising. Wherever she worked, she made an effort to mentor young people on her staff.

A past resident of The Sea Ranch in Somona County, Calif, Kate was former president as well as secretary of the community’s association.

Kate was known for her loyalty to those she loved, enjoyment of cooking and her devotion to her Siberian cat - Pushkin.

She cherished her baptism into St. Alban’s Episcopal Church and the Book of Common Prayer she received at the time from an assistant bishop who was also a cancer survivor.

Besides her husband Peter, and beloved Pushkin. Kate is survived by her parents, Dr. W. James MacIntyre and mother Pat, her brother Steve and wife Mo, niece Erin and nephew Patrick, extended family of step children, cousins, aunts and uncles and a number of beloved friends including her oldest from childhood, Ralph J. Hexter, president of Hampshire College in Amherst, MA

A celebration of Katie life will be held at St. Alban’s Episcopal Church in Davidson, NC on Saturday, October 27, 2007 at 10:00 am.

Donations may be made to the Kate MacIntyre Foundation, 915-18 Northeast Drive, Davidson, NC 28036. Kate’s vision will continue through the foundation to help fund cancer research as well as programs dedicate to mentoring young women.

Filed under Uncategorized by Charles Seymour Jr

Permalink Print Comment

October 4, 2007

Peter Gallagher Returns to the Great White Way - Torn Ticket Alum Returns To Broadway in The Country Wife with Morgan Freeman, Frances Dormand and Mike Nichols as Director

petergallagher.jpgThe Country Girl' returns to Broadway with Peter Gallagher

AP NEWS

Tue Oct 2, 3:18 PM ET

Mike Nichols will direct a Broadway revival of Clifford Odets' "The Country Girl," starring Morgan Freeman, Frances McDormand and Peter Gallagher, next spring.

The production will open in April at a Shubert theater, Ostar Productions and Bob Boyett said Tuesday. The date and theater will be announced later.

The play, first seen on Broadway in 1950, concerns a down-on-his-luck actor, played by Freeman, who is offered a comeback chance by a hotshot director (Gallagher). McDormand portrays the actor's wife. A 1954 movie version starred Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly and William Holden.

Nichols' last directing assignment on Broadway was the hit musical "Monty Python's Spamalot."

Freeman co-starred with Dana Ivey in the original off-Broadway production of "Driving Miss Daisy" and later appeared in the movie with Jessica Tandy. His upcoming films include "Gone Baby Gone" and the latest chapter in the Batman series, "The Dark Knight."

Gallagher was seen in the television series, "The O.C.," as well as in Broadway revivals of "Guys and Dolls" and "Noises Off." McDormand is best known for her roles in such movies as "Fargo" (for which she won an Academy Award), "Mississippi Burning," "Almost Famous" and "North Country."

Filed under Uncategorized by ElliotMD (musical director or medical doctor)

Permalink Print Comment

September 16, 2007

The musical directors of Forum revealed

cohen.JPGelliotrosenstein-1.jpg dave-hastings.jpg

Cohen and Rosenstein are physicians. Hastings just plays one on television! (better yet–he's a Dean)

Filed under Uncategorized by ElliotMD (musical director or medical doctor)

Permalink Print Comment

September 6, 2007

Ross Dolloff on the challenges of Katrina relief

Hi all – on the 2nd anniversary of Katrina it was wonderful to see Josh’s message reminding us what a pitiful job we’ve done as a nation responding adequately to the enormous challenge faced by people on the Gulf and particularly those outside New Orleans in the area where Josh lives whose plight is every bit as serious as folks in lower Louisiana but who have regularly failed to get the spotlight to adequately address their needs. I’ve been privileged over the last year to be visiting and working in the region with a group of people who have been working alongside the group that Josh has highlighted. My friends and workmates work with the Mississippi Center for Justice and through it with the STEPS coalition. While private relief efforts are very important, it can’t and shouldn’t be ignored than literally billions of dollars in federal tax revenues have been squandered and virtually none of those funds have reached those with the greatest need. The Governor of Mississippi has repeatedly sought explicit waivers from the federal Dept. of Housing and Urban Development to be relieved of responsibility to use these funds in an equitable manner that fairly serves the needs of those in the greatest economic need in favor of rich homeowners. A big part of the solution is to hold the governor accountable for the ridiculous way in which several billions dollars in available funds have been wasted and misappropriated. There is still more than a billion left that could be spent wisely if the appropriate political pressure can be applied. To supplement Josh’s email I am including here some information from my friends in the region with a set of important links to follow for more information. While most of my travels take me to Jackson rather than the Gulf (I’ll be back there in early October) I hope to come find you Josh the next time I do get all the way to the Gulf. If readers of these emails are considering offering support for the region, also please think about the folks who are highlighted in these messages and articles.
Ross Dolloff

From: Martha Bergmark [mailto:mbergmark@mscenterforjustice.org]
Sent: Saturday, September 01, 2007 1:48 PM
Subject: Katrina: Second Anniversary Update
Greetings:
I hope you’ve followed media coverage this week of the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. While we applaud every bit of the attention New Orleans has deservedly received, we’ve tried to make sure Mississippi’s continuing dire situation stays in focus. Links to some of the media coverage we worked on – including MSNBC, Salon.com, Media Matters, and Mississippi outlets including the Biloxi Sun Herald – are set out below.

Our news flashes this week from the Mississippi coast:
50,000 people remain in FEMA trailers – more than ever, this is a mark of the desperation of low-income residents ineligible to become homeowners, but who are priced out of the rental housing market and left behind in the recovery process.
Of $5 billion in state-administered Community Development Block Grant funds for housing assistance, only $1 billion has been targeted to meet needs of lower-income people – that’s just 20%, or nowhere near the 50% goal Congress set in allocating the money, or the usual 70% target for CDBG funds. With $1.2 billion still to be allocated, this situation MUST AND CAN be remedied, as MCJ’s report prepared for the Steps Coalition explains – http://www.stepscoalition.org/news/article/steps_coalition_cdbg_report
Not a single dollar of CDBG funds has yet been spent to assist low-income renters. Just $55 million has been paid out so far to 787 households under the only income-targeted program for homeowners.

Our MCJ story is vividly captured by Nicole Wallace in “Legal Wrangling,” her feature article for last week’s issue of the Chronicle of Philanthropy. The full text is set out below. Left to your imagination are the cover photo of our client Stanley R. Smith, a victim of contractor fraud, in front of his East Biloxi home, and the inside photo of Amanda Noonan Heyman, our University of Michigan Law School intern (one of eight law student interns we hosted this summer in Biloxi and Jackson), with photo credit to Will McElhinny, another MCJ volunteer.

Lawyers from Latham & Watkins, O’Melveny & Myers, and Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law joined MCJ attorneys in staffing free legal clinics held on the second anniversary this week. Our heartfelt thanks go to them and to the hundreds of lawyers, law students and other advocacy partners for making a difference in the lives of thousands of south Mississippi’s most vulnerable people. Thank you for inspiring us and bringing us hope.

Take care,
Martha

For coverage of the Mississippi story, please see especially:

From Salon:
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/08/29/gulf_coast/index.html?source=rss&aim=yahoo-salon

From Media Matters:
http://mediamatters.org/items/200708300010

From MSNBC:
http://risingfromruin.msnbc.com/2007/08/hurricane-recov.html

From Biloxi Sun Herald:
http://www.sunherald.com/212/story/128377.html

And from the Chronicle of Philanthropy, 8/23/07:

http://philanthropy.com/free/articles/v19/i21/21003401.htm

Legal Wrangling
Nonprofit law center is helping displaced Gulf Coast residents navigate the recovery maze

By Nicole Wallace
Biloxi, Miss.

When Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, Stanley R. Smith considered himself among the lucky ones. While the storm surge that accompanied the hurricane shifted Mr. Smith's East Biloxi home off its foundation, he and his wife were able within just a few months to buy a prefabricated craftsman-style cottage and hire a contractor to build it.

Roughly two years later, however, Mr. Smith and his wife are still living in a trailer that sits in their front yard alongside the unfinished house. Their contractor stopped returning phone calls about six months ago, after city inspectors started to find problems that needed to be fixed before work could continue, first with the home's wiring and then with the way the heating and air-conditioning units were installed.

Last month Mr. Smith finally turned to the Mississippi Center for Justice for help.

"I thought he was a good guy," Mr. Smith told the lawyer he met with at a legal clinic run by the center, frustration evident in his voice. "I hate to be here, but they're just not going to let me go forward, and I don't know what else to do."

Disagreements with contractors and outright contractor fraud are the most recent wave of problems the lawyers at the Mississippi Center for Justice are seeing at the legal clinics the group runs across the southern part of the state for storm survivors. In all, the group has held 55 such clinics since Katrina hit.

Help from lawyers across the country who have donated their time ­ worth twice as much as the center's $1.5-million annual budget ­ has enabled the organization to keep up with the constant demand for services.

At a clinic last month, the small waiting room of the center's Biloxi office had standing room only, half an hour before the lawyers were scheduled to start seeing clients.

"You would think that maybe by now the turnout for these clinics would start to diminish, but it really has not," says Martha Bergmark, chief executive officer of the Mississippi Center for Justice. "People still show up with their bags full of papers."

Forms and Appeals

Right after the storm struck, people needed help applying for assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Many had to file appeals when their requests for assistance were denied. Residents continue to struggle with insurance companies, title issues that need to be cleared before homeowners can qualify for rebuilding grants, eviction proceedings, and other legal problems.

Navigating the maze of recovery is daunting, especially for people with low or moderate incomes, says Reilly Morse, a senior lawyer at the center's Katrina recovery office in Biloxi.

"Even the people who are wealthy, who are politically sophisticated, who are financially literate, are stymied," he says. "Imagine what it's like for a teacher's assistant or a shift manager at a fast-food restaurant or a guy working as a dealer in a casino."

'Outpouring of Offers'

At the legal clinics, lawyers who volunteer their time listen to people's stories and ask questions to get as many details as possible. Lawyers who work for the Mississippi Center for Justice, which is based in Jackson, will take some of the cases themselves. Other cases will be assigned to lawyers from the state's two legal-aid programs, but many more will be pursued by lawyers in other parts of the country who have volunteered to work on cases remotely.

"When the hurricane first happened, we just were hit with this outpouring of offers of assistance," says Ms. Bergmark. "I realized that our biggest job was how do we say yes to these offers of assistance."

In 2006 lawyers from 20 national firms ­ recruited by the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a legal organization in Washington that works closely with the center ­ contributed more than 10,000 pro bono hours. Volunteers are on track to meet or exceed that mark again this year. The volunteer time is the equivalent of adding five full-time lawyers to the organization's small staff.

O'Melveny & Myers, an international law firm with headquarters in Los Angeles, and Bank of America each sent two lawyers to Biloxi to work at last month's legal clinic. They were joined by three law students and four lawyers from the Mississippi Center for Justice.

Stephanie Lloyd Brill, an associate at O'Melveny & Myers, was making her first trip to Mississippi, but she had been working on Federal Emergency Management Agency appeals from her New York office for about a year and a half.

In one of those cases, she and a colleague were able to help a single mother, who with her three children had been living in an apartment in Gulfport, Miss., before the storm, obtain $18,500 in assistance from the federal disaster agency to replace clothing, furniture, and other household items that were destroyed by the storm surge that followed the hurricane.

Ms. Brill says that when they started working on the case, it wasn't immediately clear why the agency had at first denied the woman's claim.

With some digging, she and her colleague found out that the FEMA inspector didn't visit the woman's apartment until several weeks after the storm. By then, the landlord had already cleaned out the apartment and had started to gut it. And the color photographs the woman sent with her claim had been scanned in black and white, a process that obscured the water line in the pictures.

After talking to the lawyers, the federal agency offered to send a second inspector to the site. Because the client had relocated her family to Texas, John Jopling, a senior lawyer at the center, dropped everything to meet the inspector when he called to say he was on his way to the apartment.

There, Mr. Jopling gave the inspector a package of materials the lawyers had prepared, including a letter from the landlord describing the damage to the items in the apartment, color copies of the photographs, and a letter written by the lawyers arguing why they thought their client was entitled to assistance.

Ms. Brill says she felt enormous relief for her client when the federal agency finally agreed to reimburse the woman for her losses.

"She had been so frustrated by the whole process, and she had lost so much," Ms. Brill says of her client. "For us to be able to help her even just a little bit was truly rewarding."

Ms. Brill has a harder time when she tries to explain what it meant to the case for lawyers to get involved. She stops and starts several times, seeming to fear sounding boastful or taking too much credit.

"You can sometimes get things done just by virtue of the fact that you're a lawyer, just because there's a certain amount of power that comes with that position," Ms. Brill says eventually. "And this is one of those instances where you can really use that power in a way that will greatly, greatly benefit someone."

Advocacy Role

While the Mississippi Center for Justice has worked hard to offer legal assistance to individuals, the organization has also been active in trying to influence government policies ­ pursuing lawsuits on behalf of low-income hurricane survivors, and advocating for their needs.

Last year the Department of Housing and Urban Development gave the Mississippi Regional Housing Authority permission to sell or transfer three public-housing complexes along the coast. Together with the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights and a coalition of local grass-roots groups, the center has been negotiating with the housing authority to ensure that as few residents as possible are displaced during renovations and that all will have the right to return.

Lawyers at the center are also part of a legal team suing FEMA in an effort to prohibit the agency from terminating housing assistance to hurricane survivors or asking them to repay benefits they already received, unless a formal appeals process is in place.

The center weighed the possibility of a lawsuit when the first phase of Mississippi's program to distribute $5-billion in federal aid to homeowners was announced, says Ms. Bergmark, the organization's chief executive officer.

The first phase of the program offered grants of up to $150,000 apiece to homeowners who had insurance and whose homes were damaged or destroyed even though they were outside the flood plain. As a result, people in the hardest-hit areas, the flood plains, didn't qualify, and of the people who did qualify, most were middle or upper-income earners.

"Phase one was just horrifying," says Ms. Bergmark, "because it really was not at all targeted on the people who most needed assistance."

But, she says, the first phase of the grant program used only a modest part of the money, so the center and its allies decided that getting involved in the process, to try to make sure subsequent phases were better, made more sense than a lawsuit.

When the state started discussing the second phase of the program, which seeks to aid low-income homeowners, the original proposal recommended that no one get more than $50,000. With one of its lawyers serving on the housing committee of the governor's Office of Recovery and Renewal, the center and other housing advocates were able to persuade the state to raise that figure to $100,000.

Advocates were also successful in getting the commission to respond to the needs of renters. A new program will make grants to help the owners of small rental properties repair their buildings if they agree to maintain them as low-cost housing for at least five years.

The grant money could be an important tool for increasing the number of rental properties in the region, says Ms. Bergmark.

"To build an apartment complex is a years-long process," she says. "If you could let a landlord who owns the house next door get a house back in shape quickly, that's going to be a family out of a FEMA trailer."

That ability to think systematically and to translate the needs of individuals into public-policy recommendations is what separates the Mississippi Center for Justice from many other legal-services groups, says David Stern, chief executive officer of Equal Justice Works, a Washington charity that seeks to promote a public-service ethic among lawyers.

"Whenever you can move upstream, where you can attack the root of the problem, rather than dealing with the consequences of that problem, you can be infinitely more effective," he says. "The number of people you can serve multiplies dramatically."

After Hurricane Katrina, Equal Justice Works raised $2-million to help provide legal services to storm survivors.

The money is paying for nine experienced lawyers to work as fellows at legal-services groups on the Gulf Coast for two years, and another 10 lawyers to work as AmeriCorps members matching lawyers and law students with pro bono opportunities in the region. One of the fellows and one of the AmeriCorps members work on the center's hurricane-relief efforts.

The money for those positions will be exhausted by May. And despite what Mr. Stern calls the "heartbreaking" need for legal assistance in the region, Equal Justice Works has had very little luck raising money to extend the lawyers' positions.

He says that it takes an extraordinary event, like Katrina, to convince law firms to give outside the cities where they are located, and that foundations' interest in the disaster has waned.

"We were successful right in the aftermath," says Mr. Stern. "We raised $1-million from the JEHT Foundation and then $1-million from law firms within four months, and since then, it's almost been nothing."

The Mississippi Center for Justice expects that hurricane survivors will continue to face legal problems related to the storm for years to come.

Lynda G. Bell, a widow from Moss Point, Miss., recently sought help because her mortgage lender was threatening to foreclose on the home she shares with her four grandchildren. Crystal Utley, the organization's AmeriCorps lawyer, calmly explained that the state had declared a moratorium on foreclosures for hurricane survivors.

Ms. Utley gave Mrs. Bell step-by-step instructions on how to file for an injunction against her lender, and warned her that some lenders don't give up, even after one had been granted.

Sometimes, said Ms. Utley, "it takes a phone call from me to say, 'I just want to make sure that you're aware that this has been filed, and if you continue, you'll be in contempt of court.'"

Then she reminded Mrs. Bell that the state moratorium was set to expire at the beginning of October.

Barring an extension by the governor, the Mississippi Center for Justice is bracing for a rush of people facing foreclosure proceedings in the fall.

Copyright © 2007 The Chronicle of Philanthropy

Filed under Uncategorized by ElliotMD (musical director or medical doctor)

Permalink Print Comment

September 4, 2007

Nick Salamone takes on Hillary Clinton

link to info and tickets:
http://www.fringenyc-encoreseries.com/index.html

HILLARY AGONISTES
1hr 35min

By Nick Salamone
Directed by Jon Lawrence Rivera

Spring 2009. Hillary in the White House. 65 million people disappear. Is the Rapture upon us? Pat Robertson, Stephen Hawking, Chelsea and the Antichrist weigh in. Can Madame President avert Armageddon. Starring Priscilla Barnes as Mrs. Clinton.

**Winner: Fringe Overall Excellence Award for Outstanding Direction

Performances at The Bleecker Street Theater

FR 9/7 - 9:30pm
SA 9/8 - 5pm
SU 9/9 - 7:30pm
MO 9/10 - 7pm
WD 9/12 - 7pm
TH 9/13 - 9:30pm
FR 9/14 - 7pm
SA 9/15 - 9:30pm
SU 9/16 - 3pm

Filed under Uncategorized by ElliotMD (musical director or medical doctor)

Permalink Print Comment

August 30, 2007

A message from Josh Foldes Azimow

copy-of-cabaret-1972-shotwell-foldesazimow-kulow.jpg
Josh in Cabaret 1972

Thursday, August 30, 2007 11:01:32 AM
This Is Part Of My Mandated Therapy

Hello TT -
Greetings from all things Southern; I trust this finds the majority of the audience faring well, if not each and every body. This is Josh Scott Azimow Foldes writing, but the fourth name - the one beginning with an 'F' - was dropped after graduation (too difficult to pronounce). Well, there's much I wish to write, but I lack the energy, truth be told, as well as the time. Oh, I suppose I ought to begin with the weather………

Well, the weather has rocked my world here in Mississippi; the news will cover New Orleans, justifiably as the demographics will markedly pronounce a greater number of folks affected - by flooding, though, due to levees breeching. Mother Nature's wrath was felt to the right of landfall, which defines the sixty miles of MS coastline. It struck so vehemently that towns - communities - were wiped away, taking not only lives but the nascent flesh to rebuild. The spirit is willing; however the 'new normal' means being OK with decreased public services, high unemployment, no affordable rental units and the like - all in the hope that one day things will be better. There's much, much that I could write about which slants negatively. Still, there's an attitude (and, no, slavery isn't still celebrated) which this little part of the world embraces…..it must be the proximity to the water, I guess: Be polite, gentle, helpful — but be an individual and play as hard as you work. And I'm here to tell you the folks are hard-workers.
Enough simplistic psycho-babble about a part of the world FEW (OF YA'LL…new?) WOULD EVER, EVER EVEN DREAM OF ACCIDENTALLY (read: possessing plausible deniability) VISITING. Apologies to TT's splinter skin-head sect.

But I kid. Actually, there's a more poignant, as well as sincere purpose to my words today.
Please allow me to shine a light on this part of the U.S., whose specific geography is the area lying between the LA and AL borders but south of Interstate 10…that's about 60 miles east to west and about 3-4 miles inland. Sure, it was declared a Disaster Area as far as 100 miles or more inland, but where I've spent the majority of the past 25 years (here on the coast) the destruction was profound, an understatement - if that's acceptable grammar.
Much has been accomplished toward recovery, generally-speaking, albeit slowly. 9-11’s template is being utilized re: Disaster Recovery; it's efficient, not streamlined, but avoids the necessary duplication of services. Enough minutiae (it's the world I currently work in, having stopped (delayed?) my quest for the elusive MSW degree which I have coveted since Tufts). The good news - I was finally enrolled in school, taking classes, and loving every minute of being A FULL TIME STUDENT. This took place all very recently, after deciding 5 years ago or so (after about 20 good years in business - both my own as well as working for others) to become "something in human services". But I'm digressing.

We need publicity first and foremost. That's the Mississippi Gulf Coast we're talking about, here, where if you listen real close….you'll hear nearly 500,000 people’s humility, working at holding on to an attitude of gratitude. Here's something I'd wager: Few of the readers could quote the Number One State rated - get this, perennially - as The Most Generous State (source GAO/IRS) on a per capita basis. Above Massachusetts, et. al. OK, so now you know that the state with the lowest education rate and income rate (also, unfortunately, perennially) is the first in giving. And, incredibly, the people won't ask. It's taken if offered - help - but only a small portion expects it. People who have been down "to these parts" are remaining, staying-on to become a Gulf Coast resident. And in pretty high numbers. My community, Ocean Springs, now has traffic issues. Of course we only have one road…..

It's easy to overlook us down here, so I'm asking anyone who might have the time, energy, or inclination to please head over to the website FinishTheJobFund.org and maybe contribute.


mississippi-recovery.jpg

Thank for reading this far - Josh

Filed under Uncategorized by ElliotMD (musical director or medical doctor)

Permalink Print 1 Comment

August 27, 2007

Tufts' own Willie Nininger: people should take notice!

He played a ghost in Follies, but he can still knock them dead.
Click on the link: http://www.youtube.com/v/zmwW7_FhXkE

Filed under Uncategorized by ElliotMD (musical director or medical doctor)

Permalink Print 2 Comments