Wednesday, October 19, 2016

LACMA & Disney Team Up To Tell 'Beauty and the Beast' Tale on Snapchat

It seems an unlikely pairing, but if you've seen any of LACMA's Snapchat posts (Los Angeles County Museum of Art), you'll know they are the kings of bringing fine art into pop consciousness by way of pithy commentary, a healthy sense of humor and internet memes. (In other words, LACMA's bringing art history to the streets.) LACMA were an early adopter of the Snapchat app and their social media team are constantly seeking imaginative ways to bring art into people's lives by such methods as encouraging people to "catch all their Pokemon" (using Pokemon Go), while retaining their museum's world wide respected fine art status.

For Disney to team up with these unlikely-yet-brilliant social media savvy folk is just smart and we must admit, now that we've seen a preview of what's about to be shared, we're seriously thinking about downloading Snapchat for the OUABlog newsroom.
The four-part series will kick off on LACMA’s (@lacma) Snapchat account tomorrow, October 19th, and conclude on Oh My Disney’s (@OhMyDisney) account on Thursday. 
If this is a taste of what's to come, we are happy to trust LACMA on this one and get on board. Take a look at the tale preview!

But the fun doesn’t stop there — beginning this month, LACMA, the largest art museum in the western United States, will launch the digital collaboration on the Oh My Disney Snapchat account. Drawing from over 130,000 works in LACMA’s encyclopedic collection, which spans thousands of years and from all around the globe, the teams will use references from pop culture, filters, memes, and whimsical hand-drawn Snapchat overlays to retell some of Disney’s most iconic stories in a lighthearted and contemporary tone. The collaboration will continue on a bi-monthly basis. 
“LACMA’s intentionally humorous Snapchat account not only has made important artworks from our collection vastly more accessible to new audiences, but it has also allowed us to explore these artworks from new points of view,” said Michael Govan, LACMA CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director. “Partnering with Disney—one of the most influential and dynamic storytellers of our time—is a perfect marriage of two Los Angeles institutions that love to engage the public with images.” (source)
And from Disney:
“Our Snapchat campaign with LACMA opens up new ways for our audiences to experience art and their favorite Disneystories,” Dan Reynolds, VP of Content and Audience Development, Disney Consumer Products and Interactive Media, said in a statement. “The LACMA Snapchat account already captures that contemporary and culturally savvy voice and tone that our OhMyDisney Snapchat audience loves, and this collaboration is a natural way to add a little magic to art and storytelling to reach a new generation of art and Disney fans alike.”  (source)
And just because it's fun, here are some more of LACMA's Snapchat hits. 
Can you guess the reference?
 



 There's a more complete version of "LACMA drops Bohemian RhapsodyHERE.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Untapped Treasures: Art Installation "Forest Fruit" (Please DO Touch the Display)

Note: This article is from our giant store of almost-complete-but-unpublished posts. We've been cleaning up our bedraggled drafts, archived images and incomplete stories that were never quite posted due to the constant deluge of fairy tale news (it's a good problem to have) and are finding a treasure trove of un-shared things! We can't bear to hit the delete button on these awesome nuggets and are choosing, instead, to share, so are beginning a new semi-regular column titled Untapped Treasures. The stories posted under this title are all new, not re-posted or from our archives, so it's still news to many people. It's just not as current as our usual content, though we will endeavor to post any updates to the story at the bottom of the article, should there be any current news on the subject.  Enjoy!
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Described as "following a Hansel and Gretel style trail" this textile installation, which showed at the Norfolk and Norwich Art Festival in 2015, and exhibited in February this year as well, encouraged children to play and feel, find the stories hidden in the installation and to also create their own.

From the Norwich Evening News:
The installation - called Forest Fruit - is by Belgian artist Naomi Kerkhove.
It is described as an installation where “a child’s imagination is king,” and people are invited to follow the threads of Ms Kerkhove’s intricately woven textile landscape and untangle their own unique patchwork of stories.
From WP Zimmer:
In her performances Naomi Kerkhove invites the audience on a poetical trip through a black and white miniature universe stitched together with a sewing-machine. In her youngest interactive installation, the audience can enter this world of wonders by themselves. With Forest Fruit Kerkhove assembles elements out of old and recent work, touring the audience around a world that reminds us of a workshop and a playroom, towards a place where your own imagination becomes tangible. You activate the different installations yourself and disentangle a patchwork of impressions and stories by following a thread which inevitably leads back to you.
Sounds pretty neat we think!

Here's a little explanation from the artist and a festival coordinator.
You can see the full trailer for Forest Fruit art installation HERE.

Update October 2016:
From the February 2016 Exhibition in Holland (via auto-translate):
Naomi Kerkhove
Embroidery is hot and sewing is not only home industry. It may also be art. That shows the installation of the young artist Naomi Kerkhove.Naomi discovered one day that you can draw with a sewing machine. Meanwhile, she sews smooth miniature worlds.'Forest Fruit' is the place where you can see and feel all sewn stitching her wonderful white miniature world. If you are in her black and white world enters you fall from one surprise to another. 
You will be guided in a world that is a cross between a workshop and playroom. In this universe walk shapes and thoughts together and your imagination is slowly taken in tow. You can also get to work with many construction and gently unravels a patchwork of impressions and stories, along a thread which inevitably leads to yourself.An interactive, poetic and playful installation for all ages.

Naomi Kerkhove is currently an artist in residence at wpZimmer in Antwerp.

Monday, October 17, 2016

October is Fairy Tale Studies Month at Wayne State University Press! (aka SALE!)

Ho-ly cow, Batman!*

Wayne State University Press is having a 30% off their entire fairy tale studies series for the whole month of October!
Series in Fairy-Tale StudiesSeries Editor: Donald Haase, Wayne State University
This book series is devoted to works that significantly advance our understanding of the fairy tale as it has taken shape across history and a broad range of media. The series illuminates both the production and reception of the fairy tale as it has appeared in print, film, modern media, the visual and performing arts, and other cultural forms.
If you are interested in fairy tale studies, you know these books are on the pricey side. While they're worth every penny, it does make it difficult for the average worker bee to add volumes to their personal library, so a chunky 30% reduction in price is a little like Christmas-come-early (if you're buying for yourself that is).

Take a look at the awesome variety of titles available:


        
        Examines director Jacques Demy's
use of the fairy tale as a means
to explore issues of gender, sexuality,
and class
.
But wait there's more!

With each book you get these set of free steak knives...

Just kidding.

Wait.

Fairy tales and knives would actually be a great promo!

But there's something better.

The 30% off is extended to:

  • All the Marvels & Tales journals (swoon!)
  • All the Fairy Tale Review collections (double-swoon!)


What a bad time for the Once Upon A Blog kitty to be empty! And what are our chances of finding a winning lottery ticket in the local mall parking lot..? (The last question is directed at our fairy godmother, should she happen to not be too busy this month. Tall order, we know. It is, after all, Halloween month and fairy godmothers get unusually busy the closer it gets to midnight on October 31st.)

Go HERE to start filling your cart and exercising your fairy tale brain muscles - and don't forget to add code FT16 at the checkout!

* We're guessing Batman gets extra mentions during Halloween month and if there are points to be had for doing so, we're in.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

This Adaptation of Paul Gallico's "The Snow Goose" Is Magical & Haunting

Today we're sharing magic from the past, made accessible again via the wonder that is the internet.

We will admit, straight away, that given something to watch or listen to that's longer than a couple of minutes feels like a chore and "yet another thing to fit in" to our already busy days, but we urge you to at least try. Even just 3 minutes of this presentation will give you an idea of the magic of this production, even though it is barely the introduction to the story.
           
This incredible storytelling adaptation of the novella The Snow Goose: A Story of Dunkirk, by Paul Gallico, and was written by Spike Milligan and Ed Welch. It seems impossible to explain just how haunting and wondrous it is. Everyone we know introduced to it has marveled at how "fairy tale like" it is, yet it isn't, strictly, a fairy tale, though there is, most definitely, magic in this story, as well as the presentation.
                   
Spike Milligan is known largely for his humorous writing, both for children and adults, but this narrative adaptation he wrote for recording is sensitive, transporting and haunting, as is his storytelling.
                   
The music is, for the most part, a perfect match. Performed by the London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Ed Welch, the music sets the scene, the atmosphere and contains some of the most beautiful music you are likely to hear.
                             
In short, it's a masterpiece of wonder-storytelling that combines the arts of narrative and music while accessing the individual's imaginative sense in the most immersive way. More than that, it stands up to the test of time. You'd never believe this was released in 1976. It feels timeless and classic.
         
We hope that, being the weekend, you will have the opportunity to make the time to listen, in a quiet place, with no distractions, where you can be transported and be able to smile, cry and look to the skies for a glimpse of the sky princess.

The illustrations in this post are by Angela Barrett, who is well known for her fairy tale work, particularly Beauty and the Beast and Snow White.

Enjoy.
 


Saturday, October 15, 2016

The Latest on Disney's 'The Nutcracker and the Four Realms'

The Nutcracker by Niroot Puttapipat
(All silhouette illustrations by Puttapipat)
Although the film isn't due out until 2018, Disney's Nutcracker and the Four Realms keeps popping up in casting coup headlines and looking at the list below, confirmed as of October 15, 2016, it's quite a stellar one.

The most recent addition, announced this last week, (October 11, 2016), is that comedy favorite Miranda Hart, has just signed on to play a comical fairy named Dew Drop. While you'd think that might gives you some clues as to how this film might develop, the rest of the casting makes it difficult to pin down, though the possibilities are intriguing.

We know the movie will be a fantasy and family movie, with at least some ballet, and there will be funny moments. Though funny tends to be stock-in-trade for family fare, how that happens can be surprising, so we hope that we are (surprised in a good way).

While news of Hollywood stars, Keira Knightley, Morgan Freeman, Helen Mirren and Mackenzie Foy is impressive, it's hard to beat the excitement of seeing the American Ballet Theater's first African-American ballerina*, Misty Copeland, be added to the cast as the lead in the big solo dance piece.

Though it isn't clear if Copeland will have any other role through the course of the movie it's still a history-making move on the part of Disney to cast her, and we know there will be at least one legitimate dance piece in the film, which is quite a departure from the live action films Disney has done to date. (This will also be Copeland's big screen debut.)
Misty Copeland - Principal American Ballet Theater
It means Disney will be, at the very least, giving a nod toward the classic and much-loved two act ballet, traditionally watched over the Winter/Christmas season.

It also would seem, especially due to Copeland's ballet solo, that we'll be hearing Tchaikovsky's classic music, which is wonderful. It's not Disney's first time using Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker score, with the original Fantasia exploring the magic wonder of the natural world and the changing seasons in perfectly complimentary animation. We admit we have hopes that Disney will perhaps pay a little homage to the beloved animation sequences from Walt's art experiment, and with the art and effects direction of films like Maleficent, Alice and Cinderella paving the way, the possibility of that happening in a magically-real sense are very possible.

We also know, however, that the writer, Ashleigh Powell, worked on the script for two years before Disney quietly bought it in a "competitive situation", last year, so it's unlikely the bones of the script have a Disney connection, but the potential for including the concept of seasons, (Four Realms folks!) and an homage to the original Fantasia being explored via production design and other art departments working on the film, is a definite possibility.

Here's the cast so far:

With Morgan Freeman in Drosselmeyer's role we envision a few different directions, not the least of which might be related to Copeland and her role. Drosselmeyer is an elusive figure, sometimes benevolent, sometimes cruel, always mysterious, and with much more complicated motives, in attending the Christmas party and giving Clara the enchanted nutcracker, than most explorations usually tap.

We do hope it's something juicy for the legend to sink his teeth into.

So far the only official description of the plot is...
 A young girl is transported into a magical world of gingerbread soldiers and an army of mice.
 ...which could go many different ways. (Gingerbread soldiers against hungry mice would seem to be at a large disadvantage, don't you think?) Otherwise it sounds kind of bland.

The Disney film is set to use Minley Manor, in Hampshire, England, as one of its locations (we're guessing Clara's house), so we're definitely in for a large scale, lavish production.
Minley Manor
Whatever happens with the film, it's pretty much guaranteed to be better than the 2009 effort of The Nutcracker in 3D (which included Nazi planes... and, er, songs - yikes! We never quite reach 'The End' on that one.)

We're looking forward to seeing which way Disney's version goes.

We also know it will be based on ETA Hoffman's story, The Nutcracker and the Mouse King, which is actually quite a bit longer, and darker, than the ballet. The ballet wasn't based on Hoffman's story, exactly, but instead a lighter version adapted by Alexandre Dumas. His story is much closer to that of the beloved ballet, which,  although contains Hoffman's creations, has quite a different emphasis. Dumas, however is not credited with the original story in the IMDB production database, which is usually very accurate about attribution. Instead Hoffman is given full credit, and we are taking that as a good sign.

Why, you may ask?

Well here's some background on Hoffman, who was a genuine German Romantic, and the themes and ideas that stirred him to write, compose and paint. You'll see how it's directly related to the type of story our society could use in our present social (and political) climate. From NPR (emphasis in bold is ours):
Hoffmann was actually named Ernst Theodor Wilhelm Hoffmann, but he changed the Wilhelm to Amadeus out of admiration for Mozart. And he didn't just write about music, he also composed it. He drew, he painted and — again, here's the connection to this time of year — Hoffmann wrote stories, spooky tales that trespassed the border between fantasy and reality. They were such famous stories that other composers read them and set them to to music throughout the 19th century — for example, Jacques Offenbach's opera, The Tales of Hoffmann. 
One of the episodes in The Tales of Hoffmann is based on a story called "The Sandman," in which evil inventors create a robotic girl. It was also — loosely — the basis for Leo Delibes' comic ballet Coppelia, about the misadventures of a young man who falls in love with a life-size dancing doll. 
Inanimate things come to life in many of Hoffmann's stories. He was a champion of the imagination run wild. 
... Jack Zipes says Hoffmann was rebelling against the dominant movement of the time, the Enlightenment, and its emphasis on rational philosophy. "He believed strongly, as most of the German Romantics at that time, that the imagination was being attacked by the rise of rationalism ... throughout Europe," Zipes tells Siegel. "The only way that an artist could survive would be to totally become dedicated to another way of looking at the world, and to reclaiming nature, reclaiming innocence, reclaiming an authentic way of living."
People are already speculating parallels between the Alice live action movies and Nutcracker, with the plot of a young girl, after battling a Mouse (or sometimes Rat) King with her nutcracker doll that's come to life, being transported to the fantastical Land of Sweets, where, frankly, anything can happen. (We might get a clue early on as to the tone, if the Mouse King happens to have seven heads, as he was originally written.)

The addition of "Four Realms" to the title suggests an adventure or traveling story, which, to us sounds more interesting than being stuck in the Palace of Sweets watching a parade of dancing candy and live dolls. It also suggests season and maturation - a theme Disney didn't seem to be able to manage in trying to get Snow Queen off the ground, but perhaps they've found the right avenue here. We admit we always found the second act of the ballet story rather saccharine, with the sense that it didn't fit the journey Clara was 'encouraged' into by Drosselmeyer, and we are wondering if there isn't a movement back toward Hoffman's original ideas and intentions in the story, which are less sweet and light and, importantly, less easy to dismiss, and they're certainly possible to reflect in metaphors of seasons and growing up.

Again from Jack Zipes via NPR:
"What is interesting are the names, sometimes, that Hoffmann uses sometimes in 'The Nutcracker and the Mouse King,'" says German professor Jack Zipes. "The family in his story, in contrast to the ballet, is called Stahlbaum, which means 'steel tree.'" Marie, (Ed note: whom Dumas changed to Clara) Hoffmann's protagonist, "is imprisoned within the regulations of the family, the family follows rituals in a prescribed way, and she feels somewhat constrained by this." 
Then, Marie's strange and provocative godfather, Drosselmeier, appears.
"It's very difficult to translate the word 'Drosselmeier,' but it's somebody who stirs things up," Zipes says. "And Drosselmeier certainly shakes things up. He brings these amazing toys that he's made, and ignites the imagination of the young people in the celebration of Christmas.
If these ideas are explored in the film, as would resonate with the current cultural conversation, the potential for an excellent film here is huge.

Dare we hope?

We'll keep you posted as more news from this interesting looking film becomes available.


Fairy Tale Bonus of the Day:
It was recently announced that Misty Copeland will be returning to Southern California to dance The Nutcracker ballet in Orange County.
American Ballet Theater - Snowflakes from The Nutcracker
The American Ballet Theater will be bringing their production of The Nutcracker to the Segerstrom Center for the Arts for a run of shows. Of them, the company has announced Misty Copeland will be the principal dancer on December 9 and 16 and the evening show on December 17. The lead will rotate through other members of the company for each show, so on other nights you might catch Hee Seo, Isabella Boylston, Gillian Murphy or Stella Abrera performing the famous role.The American Ballet Theater production of The Nutcracker runs from December 9 to 18 at Segerstrom Hall. Performances are at 7pm with matinees on Saturday and Sunday. Tickets are $29 to $279.  

*Principal is the highest rank in a ballet company.