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Rage
Against the Machine
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| Catzie
Vilayphonh and Michelle Myers |
You know those stereotypes of Asian women? Not gonna
repeat them here (who needs to reinscribe that bullshit?), but there
are plenty of them out there related to speech, looks, sexual behavior
and more. Yellow Rage isn't about to let you leave those
dark corners of your brain untouched. With cleansing humor, anger
and trenchant spoken-word performances, the spoken word duo of Michelle
Myers and Catzie Vilayphonh have been wowing, sometimes scaring
the shit out of and inspiring audiences since they debuted at the
Def Poetry Jam in Philly in 2000. They can talk fetishes, cultural
appropriation and more — Myers teaches at a community college
in Philadelphia and helps her students compete in poetry slams;
Vilayphonh writes for two.one.five. magazine, covering fashion
and literature and much more. Myers is also a member of the group
Asians Misbehavin', and she writes columns for Anti-Racist Parent
(www.antiracistparent.com).
The duo recently released their second spoken word
CD, Handle With Care, Vol. 2 (and the first CD, Black
Hair, Brown Eyes, Yellow Rage, Vol. 1 is still available). Yellow
Rage is sponsored by the UO's Asian Pacific American Student Union
and performs at 7 pm Saturday, March 1, in Gerlinger Lounge on the
UO campus. — Suzi Steffen
Collaborative
Spirit
What's the trickiest part of launching a dance show,
post college or conservatory? All the snicky details that go along
with producing: Secure the theater, write the PR, run the tech,
manage the production — not to mention cultivate the audience
to enjoy the show. It's a daunting prospect for any artist. But
LCC's dance department has a zippy solution: Invite the community
onstage, throw them some admin support and invite everyone to share
in the fun. Enjoy the results when the Eugene Youth Ballet, Sally
Gibson, Eileen King's Kings Krew, Sarah Nemecek, the Lane Dance
Company, Margo Van Ummersen and others perform in the annual Collaborations
Dance Concert on Feb. 29 and Mar. 1 at 8 pm in LCC's Performance
Hall. Tix available at the door.— Rachael Carnes
Beware
the Shopocalypse
Think Christmas has become too commercialized? Hate
the fact your credit card debt outweighs the cash you have in the
bank? Maybe seeing a screening of What Would Jesus Buy? and
watching a performance of Reverend Billy and the Stop Shopping
Gospel Choir will inspire a change of habit good for your soul
— and wallet.
What Would Jesus Buy? (reviewed in EW
12/13/07) follows Rev. Billy and the Stop Shopping Gospel Choir
on a cross-country tour to save Americans from the Shopocalypse,
which is the end of humankind by consumerism, over-consumption and
the fires of eternal debt. Rev. Billy performs chilling exorcisms
at Wal-Mart headquarters and retail interventions at the Mall of
America and even stops at the "Happiest Place on Earth" to preach
consumerism's destruction on America.
Bill Talen created the part televangelist, part
street preacher character known as Rev. Billy as an actor in San
Francisco in the early '90s. Talen insists Reverend Billy isn't
a parody of a preacher, but an actual one (unlike his fake peroxide
blond mop of hair). The live performance by the Stop Shopping Gospel
Choir (part of Talen's Church of Stop Shopping) may be right up
your alley if you dream of an ideal local economy without big-box
stores. However, if you believe Jesus would likely want to help
as many people as possible by stretching his buck at Wal-Mart, this
may not be for you. Reverend Billy and the Stop Shopping Gospel
Choir stop in Eugene at 9 pm Thursday, March 6, at Cozmic Pizza.
$10. — Anne Pick
CORRECTION
In a 2/14 arts short about a new theater company, EW inadvertently
called it by the wrong name. The Roving Park Players (not Roving
Theatre Company) is the new company founded by Lisa Shea-Blanchard
and Vicki Harckovitch; the pair produced one free play Valentine's
Day weekend and have two free plays in the parks planned for the
summer season. Look 'em up online (www.rovingparkplayers.org)
for more info.
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