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More News from the Hollywood Fringe Festival

Frank Smith, Ryan Harrison and Jen Burton in Roger Wodehouse. Photo by Trisha Harrison

The Hollywood Fringe Festival continues through June 30 and there are still plenty of plays left to satisfy most appetites.

We dropped in on three, and while not all of the plays were great, everything was fun and interesting.

Best by far wasLost Moon Radio Presents Roger Wodehouse’s Androgymnasium,a long title for a delicious look at what might have been the BBC equivalent ofSesame Street, if that show had a drug-crazed androgynous rock star as it’s host. Imagine David Bowie doing Mr. Rogers, with a low-rent Stones playing in the background.

Ryan Harrison is delicious (and surprisingly sincere) as Roger Wodehouse, who is both an international rock star and a fashion icon (as he tells you several times). This show is billed as the only surviving copy of the TV series, which ran four episodes (and a little more) and then was canceled, with all the tapes, save this beta-max copy found at an oriental swap meet, burned. Roger’s band included the befuddled but loveable Terence, Roger’s oldest mate (Will Maier) and the comedy is partMonty Python, partSaturday Night Live and all original. The sold-out house loved it. One performance remains June 29 at 6:30 p.m.

The Real Housekeepers of Studio Cityis a world-premier musical being given its first showing at the Fringe. It features not only a real housewife (who wants to star in the show of that name), but a host of housekeepers. After all, you can’t be on reality TV if you do your own housework. The songs, with music by Joe Greene (no, not Giuseppe Verdi) and book and lyrics by Heidi Powers and Tom Moore, needs a bit of work, but it has its heart in the right place: squarely in the middle of the satire bulls-eye, and stars Lani Shipman as Ashley, who was deserted by her husband after five years in suburbia. Ryan O’Connor is Scot, her gay best friend. Together they bring a little believability to a show that is part fantasy, part reality. Its last performance was June 28 at 7 p.m.

Neko, Barbara Ishida’s new play about a cat, a grandmother and two grand-daughters dealing with that grandmother, that vicious cat and the early death of their mother, got an earnest performance despite technical difficulties (their projection system wasn’t working Thursday evening). The performers were interesting, the play slightly less so, but with the projection system intact it might have been better. One performance, June 30 at 10 p.m., remains.

Only two days remain for this year’s Fringe, but more than 60 plays are scheduled, so you can still go and see some interesting theater for little money, served up with a lot of love.

Tickets are all around $12.

Details:(323) 455-4585;www.hollywoodfringe.org
Venue: Fourth Annual Hollywood Fringe Festival
Location: 6209 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles

Burning Garcetti’s Ear

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Town Hall Meeting Gets Positive Reviews, Many Wonder If He’s Listening

By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

Despite the brightly lit marquee on the Warner Grand Theatre that read, “Mayor-elect Eric Garcetti, Getting L.A. Back to Basics,” local resident Donald Galaz of Project Street Legal believed that few outside those that got the email would have known anything was going on in the almost 90-year-old building.

“You would think that they didn’t want anybody to really know about this event,” Galaz said.

The Last Stop of Garcetti’s Listening Tour

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The mayor-elect attempts to lower expectations while show that he’s listening

By James Preston Allen, Publisher

On the evening of June 20 Los Angeles Mayor-elect Eric Garcetti held the last of seven town hall meetings to garner support and input from his city-wide constituents. Although the house of the Warner Grand Theater was never more than a quarter filled with citizens from many parts of both the 15th District and the city at large there were many notables in attendance and many neighborhood council representatives–they seemed to at least be engaged in the premise of the meeting. This was Garcetti’s nod towards a more progressive, populist and open municipal government, that is all too often criticized for “not listening.”

Forever Gifted and Black

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Grand Performances Pays Tribute to Nina Simone on July 5th

By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

I really didn’t expect Jonathan Ruddnick to come back with an equally important show this year after he put on the phenomenonal “Go With Gil” tribute to the iconic Gil Scott Heron. But he’s doing it in tribute to the legendary Nina Simone in partnership with the incredible Dexter Story. Nina would have been 90 years old this year. This year also marks the 10th anniversary of her death.

Like last year, Jonathan will be using this tribute to show off Los Angeles musical talent pool. But to do it, he enlisted the help of Dexter, who has managed a lot of artists from coast to coast, served as marketing director and for record labels ranging from Bad Boy Records to a producer at Sony Music. He’s also a multi-instrumentalist artist in his own right who has released a CD recently called Seasons. It seems that this year, Jonathan bought on a real heavy hitter with vision to pull off the Nina Simone Tribute.

Fear of a Black (& Brown & Yellow) Electorate

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By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor

“Throwing out pre-clearance when it has worked and is continuing to work to stop discriminatory changes is like throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet.” – Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Shelby County v. Holder, dissent.

“I believe that when politicians feel the heat, they see the light.” – Congressman Keith Elison (D-MN), on the possibility of getting a new Voting Rights Act law passed by this Congress.

“Make no mistake, the 2014 election started today.” – MSNBC’s Chris Hayes

On June 25, the Supreme Court struck the biggest blow against civil rights since Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896, striking down a key section of the 1965 Voting Rights Act as unconstitutional.

Fringe Festival

By John Farrell, Curtain Call Writer

If you love theater, there is no better place to be through the end of the week than Hollywood.

That’s where the annual Hollywood Fringe Festival is taking place, and there is something for every taste, from serious plays to one-man (or -woman) shows, from magic to musicals, and from Shakespearean parodies to small theatrical productions that are experimental and that you’ll want to see when they find a bigger home.

They are cheap, too. You can see several plays on June 28, 29 and 30, and still have change left for a cocktail at Fringe Central. Fringe Central is one of more than 20 venues in Hollywood — or nearby —that are presenting these productions. This is the fourth annual Hollywood Fringe Festival, modeled after the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, which has spawned copycats in New York, San Francisco, Minnesota and cities worldwide.

Hungry Women

By John Farrell, Curtain Call Writer

Hungry Womanis Josefina Lopez’s latest play.

The play is a look at a Latina from Los Angeles who flees to when her life, her love, the very meaning of her life, is in jeopardy.

Hungry Women, based on her novel of the same name, opened this week at Casa 0101, the theater she founded in Boyle Heights. The play is often charming and the central character, Canela (Rachel Gonzalez), is a compelling actress.

Power Analysis Workshop

Join the Long Beach Coalition for Good Jobs & a Healthy Community as they take a take a closer look at the Long Beach City College Board of Trustees, starting at 5 p.m. July 10, at the MHA Village.

The group will learn how the board operate, what powers they have and the community can make their voices are heard.

The goal of this workshop series is to take the discussion from the People’s State of the City to the next step by using popular education to deepen our understanding of how local government works. Participants will build collective knowledge of where branches of government get their power, how it impacts the community and how residents can ensure local government works for all Long Beach residents.

Visioning the Future for the Main Library

Councilwoman Gerrie Schipske is hosting a community meeting on “Visioning the Future of the Main Library,” starting at 12:30 p.m. June 29, at the El Dorado Library Community Room in Long Beach.

Request for Qualifications Hints Someone Wants to Move Main Library.

Click hereto read the Request for Qualifications sent to developers and others about possibly tearing down City Hall and the Main Library and building new structures. Did you know that the RFQ also raises the possibility that the Main Library could be moved out of being near City Hall?

Theft of the Courthouse

Where there’s no justice, democracy fails

By James Preston Allen, Publisher

… as through this

world I’ve wandered
I’ve seen lots of funny men; Some will rob you with a six-gun,
And some with a fountain pen. –Ballad of Pretty Boy Floyd by Woody Guthrie

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The U.S. Supreme Court continues to send down split decisions on our civil rights. On the one hand, it overturned a portion of the 1960s Voting Rights Act, while on the other, they struck down the Defense of Marriage Act, commonly referred to as DOMA (For details, read Senior Editor Paul Rosenberg’s Fear of a Black (& Brown & Yellow) Electorate).

Yet, closer to home, the Los Angeles Superior Court, by administrative action not challenged by any constituency or attorney bringing a civil rights lawsuit, has closed access to thousands–if not millions of citizens– to their local courthouses. The San Pedro Courthouse stands as a prime example of this miscarriage of justice.