Co-creators of The Slugbearers of Kayrol Island cartoonist and MacArthur Award-winner Ben Katchor and musician Mark Mulcahy (of Miracle Legion) return to MASS MoCA on Saturday, July 8, at 8 P.M. with their latest creation, The Rosenbach Company. The piece features libretto and sets (projected drawings and animation) by Katchor and music by Mulcahy.
Variety.com said, "A sung-through biodrama? A chamber rock opera? A meeting of the museum establishment with the music underground? It is thrilling, charming, and altogether a knockout. Katchor’s pictures have such witty power that the slideshow alone probably would satisfy. [Mulcahy’s] haunting music is sometimes quiet and aching in unresolved melodies; other times, the driving beat is grinning and vivid.â€
The Rosenbach Company is loosely based on the real-life story of brothers Abe and Phil Rosenbach, whose emporium and rare book business became the basis for Philadelphia’s actual Rosenbach Museum and Library. Set in the “City of Brotherly Love†the story unfolds revealing a relationship even tenser than Jacob and Esau’s. The nexus between death and collecting is a recurring theme as Abe builds his collection by feeding on the tragedies of others, singing, “I most keenly feel alive when I’m at an auction.â€
Mortality and consumption recur when the audience learns that antique children’s books are rarities because babies typically teethe on and ingest the tiny volumes. Phil sires a son he refuses to recognize and Abe flatly refuses to reproduce citing children’s tendency to destroy what he loves most: “Fewer children, more books: the equation may seem unkind.â€
Mulcahy himself plays bookish Abe, and Ryan Mercy the foppish Phil. Kate Geissier portrays multiple roles serving alternately as narrator, the boys’ mother, and their fleeting love interests. Mulcahy’s score is performed live by instruments ranging from electric guitar to cello and flute. Katchor’s drawings are projected on stage in a rich and elaborate set.
The Rosenbach Company at MASS MoCA is sponsored by ValleyAdvocate.com and The Porches Inn at MASS MoCA.
Katchor is the creator of Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer and the best-selling comic strip novel, The Jew of New York. His work has won him awards, national syndication and a huge cult following. In addition to the 2000 MacArthur Fellowship, he is the recipient of the Guna S. Mundheim fellowship in Visual Arts at The American Academy in Berlin, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and an Obie Award for Best New American Production (libretto and drawings) for The Carbon Copy Building.
In 1996, Katchor co-produced a series of radio-dramas for National Public Radio. He produces a weekly newspaper comic strip entitled Hotel & Farm which appears in a dozen cities, and his monthly comic strip on architecture and design appears in Metropolis Magazine. He currently teaches at the School of Visual Arts in New York City and does extensive lecturing at museums and universities. He was the subject of a full-length profile in the New Yorker magazine by Lawrence Weschler.
Mark Mulcahy is the composer and producer of The Slugbearers and performs as a singer and musician. He lives in Springfield, Massachusetts, and is a former member of Miracle Legion. He has toured extensively as a solo performer throughout the world, including the Rough Trade 25th Anniversary Festival at Union Chapel, London. He has written and performed many themes for film and television, including music for The Adventures of Pete and Pete. The Sunday Republican says, “With a voice that falls somewhere between the Buckleys and the Wainwrights, Mulcahy offers a captivating, low-key approach, twisting lyrics in unexpected directions.â€
Tickets for Rosenbach Company are $20 for orchestra seats or $16 for mezzanine. MASS MoCA members receive a 10% discount. Tickets are available through the MASS MoCA Box Office located off Marshall Street in North Adams. Through June 30, the box office and galleries are open from 11 A.M. until 5 P.M. (closed Tuesdays). From July 1 through Labor Day the box office and galleries are open 10- 6 every day. Tickets can also be charged by phone by calling 413-662-2111 during Box Office hours or purchased on line at www.massmoca.org
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PEDA Site 9 Preparation, Member Retirement
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The redevelopment of Site 9 for mixed-use in the William Stanley Business Park is set to take off.
Edward Weagle, principal geologist at Roux Associates, gave an update on the yearlong work to the Pittsfield Economic Development Authority last week.
"It's been a real pleasure for me to work on a project like this," he said. "This is kind of like a project of a career of a lifetime for me, and I'm very pleased to see that we're just at the finish line right now. My understanding is that all the documents are in front of the commissioner, waiting for her to sign off."
Mill Town Capital is planning to develop a mixed-use building that includes housing on the site. Roux, headquartered in Islandia, N.Y., was hired assist with obtaining grant financing, regulatory permitting, and regulatory approvals to aid in preparing the 16.5-acre site for redevelopment. Approximately 25,000 cubic yards of concrete slabs, foundations, and pavements were removed from the former GE site.
Once the documents are signed off, PEDA can begin the work of transferring 4.7 acres to Mill Town. Weagle said the closing on this project will make it easier to work on the other parcels and that he's looking forward to working on Sites 7 and 8.
PEDA received a $500,000 Site Readiness Program grant last year from MassDevelopment for Sites 7 and Site 8. The approximately 3-acre sites are across Woodlawn Avenue from Site 9 and border Kellogg Street.
In other news, the state Department of Transportation has rented the east side of the parking lot for CDL (Commercial Driver's License) training. This is an annual lease that began in September and will bring in $37,200 in revenue.
Lastly, the meeting concluded with congratulations to Maurice "Mick" Callahan Jr. on his retirement.
Callahan is a former chair and a founding member of PEDA, dating back to when the board was established in the 1990s. He has also served on a number of civic and community boards and has volunteered for many organizations in the Berkshires. He is the president of M. Callahan Inc.
"The one thing that's been a common denominator back is that you've always put others before yourself. You've served others well. You've been a mentor to two generations of Denmarks, and I'm sure many generations of other families and people within this city," said board Chair Jonathan Denmark. "We can never say thank you enough, but thank you for your services, for the creation of this board, your service to the city of Pittsfield, and to all the communities that you've represented and enjoy retirement."
"It wasn't always easy to be in the position that you were in Mick, but you handled it with so much grace, always respecting this community, bringing pride to our community," member Linda Clairmont said. "I could not have accomplished many of the things I did, especially here for this business part, without you all of the Economic Development discussions that we had really informed my thinking, and I'm so grateful."
Callahan left the team with a message as this was his final meeting, but said he is always reachable if needed.
"I also have to say that a lot of great people sat around this table and other tables before the current board, and the time that I had with Pam [Green] and Mike [Filpi] sticking around, the leadership of this mayor [board member Linda Tyer], and it really, it was always great synergy," he said.
"So don't be afraid to embrace change. And you know, you got a business model. It's been around long time. Shake it up. Take a good look at it, figure out where it needs to go, and you're lucky to have leadership that you have here."
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