Saturday, February 1, 2014

Theater: Glassheart - A Very Different Beauty & The Beast (& Fairy Tale Friend Megan Reichelt Is Getting Rave Reviews For Her Performance!)

One of our beloved fairy tale news-blog friends, Megan Reichelt of The Dark Forest, is busy bringing magic to the stage and "illuminating" a different side to this beloved fairy tale (sorry, Megan - the puns are difficult to resist!) in the company of Rorschach Theatre. The play is titled Glassheart, and was written and created by Reina Hardy.


While Rorschach's production of Beauty and the Beast doesn't have singing silverware, flirtatious furniture or dancing dinner plates, it does have a one last magical servant of The Beast's, who keeps him company in this after-the-failed-fairy-tale story. 

She's a quirky, upbeat and particularly chatty lamp, named "Only" (thanks to a random dictionary choice) and actually has a hat that lights up, underscoring her magical nature [and potential] as well as the hope and dreams within her. In her own way, she helps bring the truth to light, (again - very sorry!), including truths about herself. This delightful and layered character is being played by our dear Ms. Reichelt - and getting great reviews on her performance to boot! 

Here's a blurb remix (multiple blurbs, re-blurbed into one):
Beauty never showed up, so the Beast... left. Now, holed up in a tiny, shabby Chicago apartment near a 7-11, with his only remaining magical servant and friend, a lamp, he waits; hoping for lower cost of living and better luck with girls. The downstairs neighbor has a band, the landlady makes suspiciously delicious gingerbread, then one day, a U-Haul arrives… 
In the space between now and always, GLASSHEART confronts the universal uncertainties of love, fate and free-will and a relentlessly cheery lamp discovers what - and who - must be sacrificed for an ordinary life.
Much of what I've seen with regard to this particular production of Glassheart, and the talented cast, shows a fun and creative approach to both the craft and in bringing the story to magical life. 

Here's an excerpt from a (somewhat cheeky) review by the Washington City Paper, explaining a little more of the thrust of the play:
In Glassheart... (the Beast) has traded in his castle for a Chicago walk-up, the kind bookstore clerks can afford. This we know because the sleep-deprived manic pixie dream girl who just moved in next door has come to work in a bookstore. The beast’s lamp—apparently the last of the walking, talking home appliances who like their master yearn to be restored to human form—is determined to play matchmaker because, as you’ll recall, only true love can break the curse that reduced a shallow prince to a drooling, shedding, feral monster, at least part of the time.
I must recommend reading this review HERE by the MDTheaterGuide for a great overview. As it discusses the performances more than the actual story it's difficult to clip excerpts to be posted out of context that still make sense, so just go read it. Although brief, it explains a lot of the nuances of the story as portrayed by the company.
Even though this retelling is set in a modern apartment in downtown bustling Chicago, with the Beauty and the Beast fairy tale front and center and the small, but obvious impossibility/magic of Lamp/Only a crucial part, it would be easy to feel this was disconnected from the real world, but one of the things I love most about it is how very "now" this play feels. Somehow it is both magical yet modern. Tweeting, Facebooking and "Vining" various aspects of the production help that too, giving it a life beyond the performance space. 

Take a look at some of the tweets from the rehearsals (you can get a personal behind-the-scenes look and meet the cast - with extra fairy tale questions bonus! - via Megan HERE), along with some more great performance shots (note: the rose pot is the last remnant of the Beast's castle, so you can intuit a little more significance when you see it in the photos):
Had to add this one, even though it wasn't technically in the rehearsal tweets!
Tell me you're not intrigued!

Here's what Reina Hardy (the playwright and creator of Glassheart, among other productions) said about Glassheart when interviewed by the Austin Chronicle last year:
AC: Regarding Glassheart: What made you want to bring those Beauty and the Beast characters into our reality? 
RH: It's just one of those things that gets into your head and stays there, worrying you until it turns into a play. I was very taken with the idea of the Beast's reduced circumstances, and of making the magical servant the main character, and I tend to write a lot of plays that imply there's a lot more to the world than what most people notice. ...Glassheart is about broken, scared people trying to be human.
Here's an excerpt from an article, again by the Austin Chronicle, on the premiere production of the show (ie, this is from Shrewd Productions and NOT Megan's current staging), explaining a little of the plot and the characters (note: the pic is also from the premiere production, not Rorschach Theater's):
Hardy's take on the fairy tale is intriguing and seems to relish in its own magic. Through the many years, the lamp and the Beast have developed a curiously loving relationship in which he regularly barks and snarls, but he also reads to her from the light that she gives off. In fact, the Beast is a true bibliophile. Some of the most endearing moments of Glassheart come when the Beast abandons his animalistic grunts and growls in favor of an earnest love of stories and books. The neighbor, Aoife, has come to Chicago to work at a bookstore (natch), and her quirkiness allows her an entrée into the fairy-tale world. She has the patience to tolerate the weirdness in the Beast's apartment and the loneliness necessary to give him a chance.
Throughout this story looms the presence of the witch, an odd, powerful woman with desires of her own. Evil she may be, but she's also a character with deep and sympathetic desires. Her efforts to manipulate the story away from the conventionally happy ending form the conflict of Glassheart.
And just to show you the sense of humor this play is being done with, I just had to include some cast roars... (after the jump... it autoplays but the sound is muted until you choose it not to be.)

I'm also going to add a somewhat spoilery overview of the story (though the ultimate ending is kept secret), so if you - like me - are unable to get to the show and satisfy your curiosity, hopefully it will take the edge off, as well as show you more about why Megan is so very excited about doing this (and we for her!).
✒ ✒ ✒  ✒ ✒ ✒  ✒ (click the "Read more" link below this line for more) ✒ ✒ ✒ ✒  ✒ ✒ ✒  ✒

Some More "La Belle et La Bete" Concept Art from François Baranger (To Tie You Over Till My Main Post Later Today)

Fraois Baranger never ceases to delight with these paintings, does he?

Once again, he's released some truly beautiful concept paintings for Gans' La Belle et La Bete - and they're stunning, just like all the others!

Gosh, I can't wait to see this movie...

Friday, January 31, 2014

Article: "Out Of the Bottle" (aka I Have An Article in La Vie Sirene's Genie Issue Today!)

Scheherazade by DrawingNightmare
Look! Joy Siren made very kind noises about my article idea and found room to sneak it into Siren Life, aka La Vie Sirene, today. Even though my title - "Out Of the Bottle" had already been used by another lovely writer, hopefully you still get the idea... It's all about genies this month, except my article is more fact than fiction... 
The image at the head of the post is of Scheherezade, one of my favorite female fairy tale characters. She was strong, resourceful, resilient and her weapon was stories (including those about genies). Scheherezade was a 'bomb girl' of a different kind and she would have related to the struggle I discuss in the article very well.

You can read the whole article HERE and scroll back through the month for lots of information, stories and whimsy on genies (as you might imagine, our favorite Jeannie is a regularly featured).

Big thanks to Joy Siren for making room for my unusual little article.

Enjoy!

For A "Belle" Desktop...

... or wherever you'd like to have this. It's a pretty big file with emphasis on fairy tale magic, in case you'd like to use it for your wallpaper or to be inspired in any other way. I believe it was created for fans, so go ahead and grab it for your screen. :) (Click on it to see how large and lovely it is.)

Disabled Disney Princesses

I'm not feeling up to writing a huge essay on disabilities in fairy tales, or the idea that princesses and heroines need to be "restored" to whole bodies and minds by the ends of fairy tales (feel free to link us to a good article if you know of one), but it's no secret that, along with POC (people of color), disabled people feel under-represented by Disney (and most everyone else) with regard to princesses and recognized heroines. And a recent set of images, showing just that, recently went viral.

It's one of the reasons I ADORE the How To Train Your Dragon movie - they didn't shy away from disability, nor make it an excuse for lack of heroism, but instead, used it as an opportunity for a different form of heroism.

But, in this case, it's Disney being under-fire for not providing a decent example to little (disabled) girls in the form of princesses-with-differences and one Italian artist, aleXsandro Palombo, took it upon himself to both bring the lack of representation to people's attention and, in a way, to change that.
"I have decided to portray disabled Disney's characters because they never create a disabled character and I think that they should consider that there are so many disabled people in the planet, it's a fact," he wrote (to The Huffington Post). "Two years ago I had a rare form of cancer and some parts of my body are now paralyzed after surgery to remove it," the Italy-based Palombo continued. "I am now a disabled person, and every day I have to deal with all forms of discrimination and humiliation. Through this series I wanted to give visibility to this problem. I think that disabled people doesn't [sic] match Disney's standards of beauty so my message is very simple: Disabled people have rights and are part of the world."

I do like that the National Disabilities Organization has not only responded but had some good things to add. As reported by the Daily News:
Experts say the artist’s campaign is much-needed.
“One out of every five Americans has a disability of some kind,” Carol Glazer, president of the National Disabilities Organization, told the Daily News.
“So when you portray popular iconic figures, like Disney princesses, without any of them having disabilities, you’re cutting out 20% of the population.”
Glazer applauds TV shows like “Push Girls” and “Glee,” which put stars who use wheelchairs in the spotlight, and slammed the suggestion the shows are exploitative.
“People who call that insensitive are not really seeing the whole picture of disability,” she said. “All you’re saying is that there’s a broad range of people in this world. And that’s an important message.”
Susan Stout, interim president and CEO of the Amputee Coalition, said she would love to see one of Palombo’s princesses on the big screen.
“We want everyone to know it is possible to live well with limb loss,” she told the Daily News. “A Disney Princess would help raise awareness and, in turn, acceptance of limb loss.”
Interestingly, I expected Ariel to be in a wheelchair with a tail, among these images but although she's seated in a chair, there's no tail (which makes me think the artist isn't considering disabled people stories so much as disabilities being represented in icons, if you follow me). It's a shame as I think it's a missed opportunity. Especially considering the banner of "Do You Still Like Us?" written above the group in one of the pics.

One of the first "photos" of a mermaid I ever saw as a child was of one in a wheelchair and it immediately brought home to me how a) difficult it must have been/be for the little mermaid to get along in our world and b) how brave she was to do it anyway, even when it was easier to stay home in the sea.

I'd like to see Marissa Meyer's response to this, particularly the picture of Cinderella with her false/robotic leg. It's very much like her Cinderella cyborg, Cinder, from the Lunar Chronicles series, a Cinderella perspective I feel has a lot to say to this particular concern of "lack of representation among princesses and heroines".

Interestingly, I didn't hear a lot from the NDO (National Disabilities Organization) when How To Train Your Dragon not only hit the big screen but was a great success. I think that portrayal of Hiccup, in such a straight forward manner, is the approach needed, should a Disney (or Pixar) princess ever have special needs - just the facts and the story, together.
Hiccup's false foot (How to Train Your Dragon)

In this vein, it would be interesting to see some fairy tale retellings that used the hero or heroine's special needs (or disabilities via illness or accident) as part of the story the way Ms. Meyer did or Dragon did.

You could actually say that Elsa has "special needs". But she wasn't portrayed as such specifically and I have a feeling it's gone right under the radar of anyone who might like to feel it represents them. Instead her "different-ness" has become a flag for gay rights and equality - another leap in interpretation I find interesting, since the born-differently/disabled parallel is more literal.

What does that say about society - and us - then?There is one excerpt I want to finish with here - part of a post in which someone did some deeper thinking about what various aspects of princesses and characters portrayed by disney might represent, but focusing on Elsa, who most clearly DOES have a disability.

From The Word/ copycollective:
Disney has depicted a range of characters with disabilities in Princess films over the years, namely
·         Seven men of short stature in Snow White (achondroplasia or dwarfism is a recognised disability)
Ariel - The Little Mermaid (C) Disney
·         Ariel in Little Mermaid (at times she can’t walk and at others she can’t talk)
·         Aurora in Sleeping Beauty (she’s in a coma for much of the film and may have brain injury)
·         the Beast in Beauty and the Beast has a debilitating disease that causes dysmorphism or physical malformations
·         Pocahontas believes she can talk to animals, commune with spirits and understand unknown languages, which makes her a savant, possibly on the autism spectrum or she may be delusional
·         Cross-dressing Mulan is very clumsy and may be living with ataxia, a movement disability
·         Tiana in The Frog and The Princess believes she turns into an animal. This may be psychiatric therianthropy or delusions associated with schizophrenia.
·         Rapunzel in Tangled clearly had a form of polycystic ovarian syndrome that resulted in excessive hair growth
·         Merida’s mother Elinor from Tangled and her brothers Harris, Hubert and Hamish all turn into bears – a similar dilemma to Tiana in The Frog and The Princess. These may be just delusions created by drug abuse but they also may be symptoms of mental illness. 
These disabilities are usually “inflicted” on the characters by a “wicked witch” or a “curse” and are often resolved (cured) at the end of the film by true love (a different form of magic). 
Yet it is in Frozen that we see Elsa, the character with a disability that is both a “power” and a “curse”, as being the subject of two very different treatments as a result of her condition. 
Elsa has a condition that makes things she touches become frozen, which can be a good thing – she can create ice castles in the air – and causes problems (she accidently puts ice into her sister’s brain).
Elsa the Good, (C) Disney
Her parents’ response is to lock her away, to not let anyone see her, to have her learn to control her emotions and to be a “good girl”. She and her family become very isolated. 
It reminded me of how families with children with disabilities would put them in institutions, send them to special schools (we don’t see how Elsa was schooled) and generally cut them off from mainstream society. Both Elsa and her sister, Anna, suffer loneliness as a result of Elsa’s isolation – much in the way that families with members who had a disability did in the past. 
Elsa runs away to the mountains and embraces her condition and the power it gives her. Interestingly, when she does so, she becomes much more womanly. She sheds her “good girl” clothes and walks with a wiggle; she creates a beautiful palace and becomes more queen-like.
ElsaPose
Elsa - the Snow Queen (C) Disney
However, she is even more isolated than when she was shut in a room by her parents. In her room she could talk through the door to her sister or the servants. In the ice palace, she is alone except for the snowman and a Yeti-like beast that she creates. Clearly, in the Disney cosmos, disability is a reason to isolate people in the most extreme way. 
Anna, when she learns of Elsa’s “power” (curse) wants to investigate what can be done, she wants the condition out in the open and she wants to use relationship to address it.
It seems odd to me that Elsa’s parents don’t ever try to get help for her to learn to control her emotions (psychiatric treatment) so that she can manage her condition. They seek advice from a troll when she is a child but no further intervention is sought until she comes of age. 
The intersection of sexuality and disability in Elsa’s life is like a double threat and echoes the experience of many women with a disability. The disability may be tolerated when they are children but when they become women the disability needs to be dealt with more strictly. In extreme situations (in real life) this has resulted in many women with intellectual disability being sterilised. In Elsa’s case, she has to run away to become a woman but is seen by some as a “monster”.
Anna works to get Elsa to return to the city so that it can be removed from the permanent winter she accidently created by letting her emotions loose. By Anna’s self-sacrifice – she takes an injury meant to kill Elsa – Elsa’s heart melts and she is now able to control her condition. She uses it to create beauty.
You can read the rest of the article HERE.

There's so much more I would like to write on this  - like the athlete/model who has those beautiful false legs and the disabled sports heroes and service people of all kinds who keep serving in new ways , despite serious and permanent injuries but I simply don't have time. (If you're inclined, feel free to add your thought in the comments - I'm sure many people, though quiet and unlikely to comment in return, would be interested to read them, particularly on this topic!)

I have a feeling if Disney purposed to do something about "disability representation" it may be too specific and focused, making it seem more unusual, in a way, than it is. What do you think? How would you like to see Disney deal with representing disabled peoples?

Additional sources: HERE & HERE

Thursday, January 30, 2014

'La Belle et La Bête' - Drool-Worthy Concept Art by François Baranger

Detail of concept art for La Belle et La Bete by Francois Baranger

As promised, here are a ton of gorgeous concept images created by French visual development artist, François Baranger (I'm going to include everything of his for La Belle et La Bête, even though some I've posted before, so it's all in one place).
With the release of behind-the-scenes videos just this past week as well as the new trailer, Baranger yesterday kindly uploaded his concept paintings and sketches to share, now that it's no longer quite as "spoilery" (if you've seen the new trailer I posted earlier today, that is).
One of the very first concepts of the Beast with his long white coat - so classic!
A very early concept painting (clearly much of this stayed in the film)
While most films have more than one concept artist, Mr. Baranger was the lead on Belle et La Bête, and you can see why. The final film reflects his vision and images often so very exactly, it's easy to sometimes confuse the two, or to feel we're just looking at a different angle of the same scene. Amazing (both on the part of the artist AND the Director in using the visuals provided to him).


Baranger: "First concept I've done for the movie. It depicts the secret sanctuary of the Beast, hidden in a giant rosebush."
I'm thinking the last painting might be what Belle is looking for/about to find in the thorny tangle we see her pushing through in the trailers...

We also now know what this is - a giant statue carrying out the Beast's revenge:

This is apparently one from a (sadly) deleted scene. It looks magical! (Not that the film seems to be lacking in that department, by any means.):

And these ones I've posted before, starting with the very first one Baranger released and his statement about working on the film with Gans:

Baranger: "Here is the first concept for Beauty and the Beast I'm allowed to show.  It depicts the dining room, which has already seen on the pictures given to the press. I was in charge of the visual development of this movie over a year, and I can say that it was a great moment for me. Christophe Gans is a director fully aware of the importance of a good preproduction, and he trusts the artists. So, once again, it was a real pleasure to work with him."


Looks like Belle may have originally been escorted to the Beast by her father but in the trailer it shows her taking the decision into her own hands, much to the horror of her father and the men around him.
So, does the above image show some of that "magic mirror" or is that my imagination? I also noticed in the scene with the vines (?) attacking through a doorway, Belle was perched just like this in a very similar dress while men in front of her were reacting in terror to the attack. (GoshI love seeing how the story and concepts change over the production! Story is such an "alive" thing and this is even more true for fairy tales than other stories too.


Mr. Baranger also weighed in on the "will Belle at La Bête be released in the US" question:

François Baranger has worked (and is working) on a number of films which you can see his art for at his website HERE and on the CGHub HERE. Mr. Baranger is also on Facebook HERE and you can follow his work there too.

I can't confirm that the image below is also Baranger's but I haven't found any other concept art by anyone else from the movie and this is definitely Gans' La Belle at La Bête. I'm including it just in case, and because it would have needed Baranger's approval, even if it wasn't. :)
By the way, in case you're curious, apparently he works in photoshop but instead of using a Cintiq his "beast" of a tool (his description), is an Intuos A3 tablet (the largest available).

I'm so glad he was chosen to work on this fairy tale! I truly hope there's an "art of" book for this - so much behind-the-scenes beauty, not to mention how amazing the on-screen result is as well. *insert heart icon in whichever style you prefer here!* Can't wait to see this!