Review: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind – not as enthustastic as my colleague

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‘Nausicaä of Valley of the Wind’ begins after the apocalyptic Seven Days of Fire war, in which human’s have basically destroyed the world. All that remains are a few small kingdoms and the ‘Toxic Jungle’ inhabited by gigantic mutant insects, where everything is deadly to humans.

Princess Nausicaä has managed to enter the toxic jungle and relate to it in a familiar and friendly way, learning from it and searching for a cure for the humans and the plight of the world.

The Tolmekian Kingdom seeks to destroy the toxic jungle with the weapon that began the Seven Days of Fire in the first place. Nausicaä works to prevent the use of this destructive weapon and discovers the symbiotic relationship between the toxic jungle and human civilization, as it exists. The plants of the jungle serve to purify the toxic water, tainted by centuries of human contamination and the war.

Nausicaä saves the jungle and her kingdom in the valley of the wind and befriends the monstrous insects from the toxic jungle.

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‘Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind’ was never one of my favorite Hayao Miyazaki films. However, his focus on a young female character as the savior of the planet is in keeping with many themes reverberating through Miyazaki’s films.

Released in 1984, ‘Nausicaä’ has themes of environmental preservation, the negative effects of human civilization on the planet and the dangers of nuclear warfare.

The box office success of this film lead to the establishment of Japanese anime company Studio Ghibli by Hayao Miyazaki, Isao Takahata and Toshio Suzuki, the latter two were producer of many Miyazaki films.

The State Theater’s ‘Studio Ghibli’ series continues on Wednesday 23 October, 7pm with ‘Castle in the Sky.’

Preview: tUnE-yArDs in Pontiac, MI Tuesday

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What: tUnE-yArDs

Where: The Crowfoot Ballroom

When: Tuesday 21 October 2014 – doors open at 8pm

How Much: $18 advance, $20 at the door, 21+

A wonderfully strange musician from New England, Merrill Garbus creates drum loops and layers ukulele and vocals, in addition to electric bass played by Nate Brenner.

Garbus released her first album BiRd-BrAiNs as tUnE-yArDs in 2009, W H O K I L L in 2011, and her most recent Nikki Nack in 2014.

Music by tUnE-yArDs has been featured in Orange is the New Black, Weeds and The Good Wife.

tUnE-yArDs touring members are:
Merrill Garbus – vocals, ukulele, percussion (2006-present)
Nate Brenner – bass (2009-present)
Jo Lampert – vocals (Nikki Nack tour)
Dani Markham – percussion, vocals (Nikki Nack tour)
Abigail Nessen-Bengson – vocals (Nikki Nack tour)

Preview: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind

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What: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind
Where: The State Theater
When: Wednesday 15 October
How Much: $8 students, $10 general admissions, $7.50 Michigan Theater Members

Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind is the second film in Michigan Theater’s ‘The Studio Ghibli Collection: A 30-Year-Retrospective,’ which began with Howl’s Moving Castle this past Saturday’s midnight movie and extends into December.

Princess Nausicaä fights to save the damaged planet and surviving people from destroying themselves and each other. Hayao Miyazaki’s post-apocalyptic animated film was released in 1984.

Preview: A Street Car Named Desire – National Theater Live

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What: A Street Car Named Desire
Where: The Michigan Theater
When: 7pm
How Much: $22

Michigan Theater is hosting London’s National Theater Live productions on the silver screen.
The Young Vic Theater staged Tennessee Williams’ “A Street Car Named Desire” this summer 2014 to record ticket sales. The production stars Gillian Anderson (x-files) as Blanche DuBois opposite Ben Foster (Six Feet Under, Kill Your Darlings) as Stanley with Vanessa Kirby (BBC’s Great Expectations, Three Sisters at the Young Vic) as Stella.

Blanche, an aging Southern Belle, comes to New Orleans to visit her sister Stella and her difficult and unlikable brother-in-law Stanley. Blanche’s presence creates conflict between the couple who have a passionate marriage and love life. Her proper countenance disrupts the married couple’s codependence resulting in emotional violence and the implied sexual abused of Blanche by Stanley, which leads to a breakdown in Blanche’s mental health.

A Street Car Named Desire is a Pulitzer Prize Winning Play and Academy Award Winning Film.

For Tickets Visit the UMS Website: here

Review: Cabaret

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The Musical Theater Department at Michigan is a wonderful group of highly talented individuals who love their craft. Every performance put on by the department has been well crafted and cast. The skills and passions of these student performers are infectious, especially if you happen to know two or three of them personally.
Cabaret is a very emotional production. Set in Weimar Berlin in the lead up to the rise of the Nazi party, the plot follows Cliff Bradshaw, the American novelist who falls in love with Sally Bowels, a Berlin night club performer. Their lives are tossed between the volatile political circumstances of 1930s Germany and the sordid sexual lifestyle of the Kit Kat Klub.
The performances of Sally, Cliff the Master of Ceremonies at the Kit Kat Klub and the club performers were stunning. The vocal and physical talents of the actors and dancers drew the audience into the emotional experiences of the characters in 1930s Berlin.
Based on Christopher Isherwood’s novel “Goodbye to Berlin,” and John Van Druten’s play “I Am a Camera,” Cabaret is a multi-award winning Broadway production. The production is staged at the University of Michigan for one more weekend. Be sure to reserve your tickets before they are all sold out:
Thursday Oct. 16 – 7:30pm, Friday Oct. 17 – 8:00, Saturday Oct. 18 – 8:00, Sunday Oct. 19 – 2:00 – At the Mendelssohn Theater
Tickets: $10 Students, $22-$28 general admissions

Preview: Cabaraet – for it is indeed life, old chum

What: Cabaret

Where: Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre

When: Oct. 9-19 at various times

How Much: Student tickets: $10 — General Admission: $22 – $28

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Cabaret is a musical set in Weimar era Berlin Germany as the Nazis were coming to power. The plot focuses on Cliff, an American novelist, and Sally Boules a performer at the infamous Kit Kat Klub. The story develops both inside the club and in the city of Berlin as Sally and Cliff develop a love affair during this tumultuous period of wild sex, creativity and the rise of the Third Reich.

The Michigan School of Music, Theater and Dance has a truly amazing group of students in its Musical Theater department. The challenges presented by this show reach into the historical and the physical. Cabaret is a musical with a large dose of darkness and social significance, which not all performers are frequently required to interact with.

Cabaret has won multiple Tony awards over the years and is currently on Broadway.

Cabaret is based on Christopher Isherwood’s collection: ‘The Berlin Stories.’

For more information visit the University of Michigan School of Music, Dance and Theater Website.