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PSST: It’s About Damn Time

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By Andrea Serna, Arts Writer

Ron Linden’s curated show PSST — pronounced either as “psssst,” like you’re trying to catch someone’s attention or, perhaps, “pissed,” as in pissed at it taking so long for local artists to get the recognition they deserve. Linden would have you take your pick.

PSST: Art is San Pedro 2000 – 2012 was intended to showcase nationally and internationally renown artists living and working in San Pedro. Linden was frustrated because despite their reputations in the art world, the artists in PSST weren’t getting their just due, particularly in the context of Pacific Standard Time, a Getty Museum led effort that documented the birth of the Los Angeles art scene from 1945 to 1980.

UndocuQueers Set Out to Create Dialogue

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By Zamna Avila, Assistant Editor

On Aug. 4, The Center Long Beach is hosting Undocuqueer, an informational session exploring the challenges of undocumented gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender youths in their dual roles, including a double coming out process and their fight to attain higher education.

The event’s mission is to raise awareness about the intersection of both identities and create unity among the LGBT community.

An Old Quandary

By Lionel Rolfe

Now that they have found the “God particle,” maybe it’s time to solve far lesser but still deserving and perplexing questions of existence. Perhaps it’s not exactly parallel, because the discovery of the God particle answers more about how the universe came into existence than the far more tangential question of how life was born.

Still, most people would say the universe be damned. If we’re not sleep deprived or hungry, romance remains the foremost thing on most people’s minds. Romance plunges us into emotional maelstroms at the mere glimpse of cleavage. The joys, the ecstatic moments, merge with the mundane in the construction of the bonds with which people are bound.

Harbor Currents-Theatre/Film–July 27, 2012

July 28
Suzanne Westenhoefer!
Suzanne Westenhoefer performs, at 8 p.m. July 28, at the Long Beach Center Theater. In the past year, she’s ended up on the cutting room floor of a movie in post-production, gotten a divorce, re-entered the insanity of the dating world, all of which have created more laughter-inducing opportunities than she ever thought possible.

Suzanne’s new material is based on her ever-changing view of life after…well, everything. She’s a brand-new woman around town with striking insights based on a jilted year that has finally – thankfully — ended. Stick with her and she’ll take you for a ride on the wild side with plenty of Pinot to keep itinteresting.
Details: (888) 873-3554; womenonaroll.com
Venue: Long Beach Center Theater
Location: 300 E. Ocean Blvd., Long Beach

RLn Review of Lorca in a Green Dress

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By John Farrell, Theatre Critic

Federico Garcia Lorca is better known in the United States for his death than his life. The poet and dramatist was murdered by fascist soldiers at the beginning of the Spanish civil war. His body was never found.

Recently Long Beach Opera offeredAinadmar, an opera by Osvaldo Golijov that explored his life and death. It’s his afterlife that is the important part inLorca in a Green Dress.This ambitious surrealist look at Lorca’s forty-day long passage through Purgatorio written by Nilo Cruz, was directed by Jennifer Sage Holmes and it stars five… yes, five different actors as the dead poet, depicting every part of himself including his sexual desires (Lorca was gay). Two women also play parts of his very diverse character. The production is currently being staged at the Casa 0101 Theater in Boyle Heights

Cevapcici Festival Cancelled, San Pedro Image as Destination Town Takes a Beating

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By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

The Cevapcici festival is off and so is San Pedro’s designation as a destination spot in Southern California travel magazine, Westways, said one of the organizers, Slobodan Dimitrov–explaining that they came up a dollar short and a day late in raising the funds to host the second annual event, after failing to secure grants from the local neighborhood councils, which were significant donors last year.

Mitt Practicing His Stump Speech at the Dinner Table


Slyp & Trimingham Progressive Cartoons

From the Dizzital Artworkx Studio. Visitbartslyp.comfor more.

The Tragedy of Macbeth at Studio Theatre–An experiment that deserves repeating

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By John Farrell, Theatre Critic

Like his play,Hamlet, Shakespeare’s TheTragedy of Macbethis so filled with memorable lines, memorable speeches, that seeing it onstage is a little bit of an English quiz. The Witches? Who can forget “Double, double, toil and trouble”? How about Lady Macbeth’s unforgettable hand-washing. Or Birnam Wood? Macbeth is one of Shakespeare’s unforgettable stories, a bloody tragedy that might make John Webster envious and with poetry and psychological insight into ambition-driven lives that Webster never managed.

A Crisis of Ethics

By Sherry Hernandez, Member of Occupy San Pedro

On July 17, a group from Occupy Fight Foreclosures in Los Angeles met to attend the meeting of the County Board of Supervisors in hopes of addressing our hopes of getting a moratorium on foreclosures until the Homeowners Bill of Rights goes into effect.

Within the group were less than a handful of home buyers who wanted their grievances heard.

POLA Announces Retail Development Opportunity

San Pedro — The Port of Los Angeles and Councilman Joe Buscaino announced a 30-acre retail development opportunity, July 26, at Ports O’Call Village in San Pedro.

The announcement for a request of qualifications initiates a search for commercial real estate developers to redevelop the San Pedro waterfront property, known as Ports O’Call Village. POLA plans to select a master developer to carry out a comprehensive redevelopment of the property and enter into a long-term lease.

The area is near recent enhancements such as the USS Iowa Battleship and marketplace, Crafted.