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 Cablecast and web streaming of program in serieS

      "Conversations with Harold Hudson Channer"

            Upcoming Cable Television/Web Show: 

          For details of airing see bottom of page

        

                    FRIDAY OCTOBER 28,  2011 

                                       GUESTS:

                          (Originally aired 05-08-07)

 

                               JUDITH MALINA

                

                                      

                                                  & 

                       

 

                                   HANON RZNEKOV

                                               (R.I.P.)

 

                                     

                                         Co-Directors: 

 

                                   "The Living Theatre"

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The program can be viewed in its entirety by clicking the you tube link below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aKB5CcOB4jk - JUDITH MALINA & HANON RZNIKOV

 

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More about JUDITH MALINA,HANON RZNIKOV & THE LIVING THEARTR

Judith Malina & Hanon Rznikov. The Living Theatre is an American theatre company

 founded in 1947 and based in New York City. It is the oldest experimental theatre group

still existing in the U.S. For most of its history it was led by its founders, actor Judith

 Malina and painter/poet Julian Beck; after Beck's death in 1985, company member Hanon

 Reznikov became co-director with Malina In the 1950s, the group was among the first in

 the U.S. to produce the work of influential European playwrights such as Bertolt Brecht

and Jean Cocteau, as well as modernist poets such as T.S. Eliot and Gertrude Stein. Based

 in a variety of small New York locations which were frequently closed due to financial

problems or conflicts with city authorities, they helped to originate Off-Broadway as a

significant force in U.S. theatre. Their work during this period shared some aspects of style

and content with Beat generation writers. ....In 2006, The Living Theatre signed a 10-year

 lease on the 3500 square foot basement of a new residential building under construction

 at 21 Clinton Street, between Houston and Stanton Streets on Manhattan's Lower East

 Side. The company moved into the completed space in early 2007 and opened for business

 in April 2007. The new space will open in late April 2007 with a production of The Brig by

 Kenneth H. Brown, first presented at The Living Theatre at 14th Street and Sixth Avenue in

 1963. The Clinton Street theater will be the company's first permanent home since the

 closing of The Living Theatre on Third Street at Avenue C in 1993.

 

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                                THE LIVING THEATRE

History

Founded in 1947 as an imaginative alternative to the commercial theater by Judith Malina, the German-born student of Erwin Piscator, and Julian Beck, an abstract expressionist painter of the New York School, The Living Theatre has staged nearly a hundred productions performed in eight languages in 28 countries on five continents – a unique body of work that has influenced theater the world over.

During the 1950′s and early 1960′s in New York, The Living Theatre pioneered the unconventional staging of poetic drama – the plays of American writers like Gertrude Stein, William Carlos Williams, Paul Goodman, Kenneth Rexroth and John Ashbery, as well as European writers rarely produced in America, including Cocteau, Lorca, Brecht and Pirandello. Best remembered among these productions, which marked the start of the Off-Broadway movement, were Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights, Tonight We Improvise, Many Loves, The Connection and The Brig.

The difficulty of operating a unique, experimental enterprise within a cultural establishment ill-equipped to accept it led to the closing by the authorities of all The Living Theatre’s New York venues: the Cherry Lane Theater (closed by the Fire Department in 1953), The Living Theatre Studio on Broadway at 100th Street (closed by the Buildings Department in 1956), The Living Theatre on 14th Street (closed by the I.R.S. in 1963) and The Living Theatre on Third Street (closed by the Buildings Department in 1993).

In the mid-1960′s, the company began a new life as a nomadic touring ensemble. In Europe, they evolved into a collective, living and working together toward the creation of a new form of nonfictional acting based on the actor’s political and physical commitment to using the theater as a medium for furthering social change. The landmark achievements of this period include Mysteries and Smaller Pieces, Antigone, Frankenstein and Paradise Now.

In the 1970′s, The Living Theatre began to create The Legacy of Cain, a cycle of plays for non-traditional venues. From the prisons of Brazil to the gates of the Pittsburgh steel mills, and from the slums of Palermo to the schools of New York City, the company offered these plays, which include Six Public Acts, The Money Tower, Seven Meditations on Political Sado-Masochism, Turning the Earth and the Strike Support Oratorium free of charge to the broadest of all possible audiences.

The 1980′s saw the group return to the theater, where they developed new participatory techniques that enable the audience to first rehearse with the company and then join them on stage as fellow performers. These plays include Prometheus at the Winter Palace, The Yellow Methuselah and The Archaeology of Sleep.

Following the death of Julian Beck in 1985, cofounder Judith Malina and the company’s new director, veteran Hanon Reznikov, who first encountered The Living Theatre while a student at Yale in 1968, opened a new performing space in Manhattan’s Lower East Side, producing a steady stream of innovative works including The Tablets, I and I, The Body of God, Humanity, Rules of Civility, Waste, Echoes of Justice, and The Zero Method. After the closing of the Third Street space in 1993, the company went on to create Anarchia, Utopia and Capital Changes in other New York City venues.

In 1999, with funds from the European Union, they renovated a 1650 Palazzo Spinola in Rocchetta Ligure, Italy and reopened it as the Centro Living Europa, a residence and working space for the company’s European programs. There they created Resistenza, a dramatization of the local inhabitants’ historical resistance to the German occupation of 1943-45. In recent years, the company has also been performing Resist Now!, a play for anti-globalization demonstrations both in Europe and the U.S. A month-long collaboration with local theater artists in Lebanon in 2001 resulted in the creation of a site-specific play about the abuse of political detainees in the notorious former prison at Khiam.

The Clinton Street theater is the company’s first permanent home since the closing of The Living Theatre on Third Street at Avenue C in 1993. The decision to return to the Lower East Side (at 19-21 Clinton Street, between Houston and Stanton Streets) reflects the company’s continuing faith in the neighborhood as a vibrant center where the needs of some of the city’s poorer people confront the ideas of the experimenters in art and politics from the neighborhood and those who have newly settled in the area.

Shortly after opening on Clinton Street, Hanon Reznikov unexpectedly passed away in May 2008. After having written most of the company's new plays following Julian's death, Hanon left his final work unfinished; Eureka!, based on the poem by Poe (also Poe's last major work). Judith completed the script and opened the play later that year. The first line of the review on The New York Times said, "The Living Theatre wants nothing less than to rewrite the theatrical contract."

Garrick Beck, (Judith and Julian's son), and Brad Burgess (Reznikov's former assistant) now work with Judith as Executive Director and Administrative Director, and have assembled a vibrant company, made of several generations of The Living Theatre's wonderful history and exciting future.

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Welcome to our new website. Please feel free to create topics and start discussions, as well as contribute content and create your own profile! more...
 

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Friday October 28,  2011

8

11:00 to Noon

 

 

Channel 34 of the Time/Warner & Channel 83 of the RCN 


  Cable Television Systems in Manhattan, New York.

 

The Program can now be viewed on the internet at time(o of cable casting at:

 

www.mnn.org



    NOTE: You must adjust viewing to reflect NYC time

 

 & click on channel 1 at site

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