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Events for the week

thursday july 17 Second Annual Have a Ball: Over 40 artists from North Texas and around the country swoop in to contribute work for a very good cause--the continued health of Dallas' McKinney Avenue Contemporary, the artspace dedicated to nurturing theater, poetry, film, and visual art from Dallas and around...
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thursday
july 17
Second Annual Have a Ball: Over 40 artists from North Texas and around the country swoop in to contribute work for a very good cause--the continued health of Dallas' McKinney Avenue Contemporary, the artspace dedicated to nurturing theater, poetry, film, and visual art from Dallas and around the world. Dallas faves Brian Bosworth, Kristina Bowman, Steve Ralston, Mark Ross, Albert Scherbath, Judy DeSanders, and Judy Walgren join New York artists Giles Lyon, K. Olsen, and Vaal; Los Angeles artist Richard Hawkins; and Houston artist Travis Pfeiffer to collectively blow a multimedia "horn o' plenty" to trumpet the good word about the MAC. The event happens at 8 p.m. at The ART Bar, 2803 Main St. For info call (214) 522-8399.

Soul Rep's Second Annual New Play Festival: With a home performance space in Fair Park's African-American Museum and a new, more aggressive publicity machine working behind it, the Soul Rep Theatre Productions aims to dig in for the long haul the way Fort Worth's Jubilee Theatre has--by performing groundbreaking original work in an African-American voice. Soul Rep's Second Annual New Play Festival is a strike in this direction, with the company staging a marathon of six new one-acts by folks within the company (including artistic director Guinea Lada) and outside the city (Sacramento artist Chris Herod). Performances are Thursday and Friday, 7:45 p.m. and Saturday, 6 p.m. through July 26 at the Dallas Theater Center's Kalita Humphreys Theater on Turtle Creek. Tickets are $5-$10. Call (214) 565-0186.

friday
july 18
Stonewall Business and Professional Association: Public relations guy, gay activist, and once-maligned author Hunter Madsen must feel a certain vindication now that his 1989 book After the Ball has proven to presage the oh-so-humdrum, nitty-gritty issues that have found themselves on the top of the 1997 gay agenda--marriage and adoption rights, employee protections and benefits, etc. Unfairly pegged as a "gay conservative," Madsen is, in fact, a brilliant contrarian who had the nerve to challenge the dreary revolutionary dogma of the New York-L.A. gay intelligentsia with an arsenal of wicked wit and common sense. He will, of course, find a sympathetic audience in the suit-and-tie set of the Stonewall Business and Professional Association, who host Madsen. The event starts at 11:25 a.m. at Sammons Center for the Fine Arts, 3630 Harry Hines Blvd. at Oak Lawn. Tickets are $15-$20. Call (214) 521-5342.

Little Jack Melody and His Young Turks: With the release of their third Carpe Diem CD, my charmed life, the Denton-based ensemble Little Jack Melody and His Young Turks must be bracing themselves for the hyphenated string of adjectives that the local and national press drag out every time they write about this fantastically talented group. "Neo-cabaret-avant-pop-post-lounge-anti-songwriter-quasi-jazz-semi-orchestral"--pop music writers construct descriptions like monstrous Lincoln Log sculptures to get the essence of what these potently lyrical popsters accomplish. Deep Ellum's quintessentially moody hangout The Lava Lounge plays host to Little Jack's CD release party. The Paul Slavens Trio opens for Little Jack and the Boys at 8 p.m. at the Lava Lounge, 2604 Main. Call (214) 698-3020.

Dallas Visual Art Center's Annual Membership Show: Of the Dallas Visual Art Center's total current 850 members, 650 have contributed jewelry, painting, illustrations, prints, sculpture, photography, film and video work, etc., to the 1997 Annual Membership Show. This makes the largest contribution ever to a DVAC membership show. Eastfield College music professor Enric Madriguera helps the group celebrate with a performance of Spanish classical standards from his critically acclaimed 1996 release Old World/New World. The 1997 Membership Show opens with a reception July 18, 6:30-8:30 p.m., when Enric Madriguera performs. The show runs through August 22 at 2917 Swiss Avenue. Call (214) 821-2522.

saturday
july 19
The Bodycheck Concert: Like so many Dallas performance ensembles, Groundlevel Dance Company is a loose association of independent artists who've worked with other local companies that will rear its head every once in a while to present a show. The three artistic directors of Ground Level--Shanon Leyrer, CoCo Loupe, and Angela Sharp--are familiar to anyone who's caught DecaForms, Moving Collaborations, or one of Karen Bower Robinson's programs at the Deep Ellum Opera Theatre. They each present three original bits of choreography to a show they're calling "The Bodycheck Concert"--works with names like "Nudge Me at Six," "the story of me," and "LaLa Polka." Performances happen Thursday-Saturday, 8 p.m., and Sunday, 2:15 p.m., at Deep Ellum Opera Theater, 3202 Elm St. Tickets are $8-$10. Call (214) 828-0377.

Hemlock: A Greek Diner Tragedy: After having sponsored some of her own excellent original work as well as shows by Dalton James, Extra Virgin Performance Cooperative artistic director Gretchen Swen has decided to call it quits--but not before one last go-round with the Virgin. Hemlock: A Greek Diner Tragedy is a new play by Bob Jude Ferrante that "marries vaudevillian farce with Orwellian-style musings on rationality, institutionalized religion, and the failure of humankind to live up to the precepts of Western civilization." Ferrante has had his work produced off-Broadway and in London; he'll be attending the premiere of Hemlock with his wife. Performances happen Thursday-Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 4 p.m. through August 10 at the Swiss Avenue Theater Center, 2700 Swiss Avenue. Tickets are $8-$10 (Sundays are pay-what-you-ought-to). Call (214) 941-3664.

Depth of Field: You can learn more from your enemies than from your friends, the old saying goes. But when you're an independent artist being alternately ignored by the city at large and snickered at behind your back by other ignored artists, honestly constructive criticism can be hard to come by. Moving Collaborations and N.M. Productions, with help from the city of Dallas, has just completed its second annual six-week program called "Fieldwork," for which artists working in every genre you can name got together once a week for three hours to air their unfinished business. All participating artists promised to be only constructive in their criticisms. The performance art, dance, mime, visual art, standup, and other disciplines that were developed during 1997 Fieldwork are now available for a wider audience that includes you. Performances happen July 17-19 at 8 p.m. in the Bath House Cultural Center, 521 E. Lawther. Tickets are $6. Call (214) 369-0900.

sunday
july 20
The Lorca Project: ComaTheatre and the McKinney Avenue Contemporary join forces with a couple of Dallas' best theatrical talents to pay tribute to the legendary gay Spanish poet and playwright Federico Garcia Lorca. Anyone who's ever read the hallucinatory, multi-sensual assault of Lorca's New York poems knows that this particular wordsmith cries out for a multimedia analogue of his stunning lyrics. Raphael Parry from the Undermain Theatre and Tina Parker from Kitchen Dog Theatre oversee the live performance of ComaTheatre's The Lorca Project, hopefully trimming some of the group's ragged edges and keeping them focused on scenes, segments, and verses from various Lorca plays and poems. Performances happen July 18 and 19 at 8 p.m. and July 20 at 2 p.m. at the McKinney Avenue Contemporary, 3120 McKinney Avenue. Tickets are $8-$10. Call (214) 953-1622.

Basically Beethoven Festival '97: When do you recall a classical music program that was designed not just for your enjoyment, but to encourage your participation--even if you've never picked up an instrument in your life? The Basically Beethoven Festival '97, a series of four free chamber music concerts throughout the summer, begins each show with a prelude program called "For the Love of Music" that, while it doesn't allow direct participation in the actual performance, is delivered in a how-to instructional manner to answer audience questions about playing instruments. The National Association of Negro Musicians presents the July 20 prelude show. Then, members of the Fort Worth Symphony slide into "String Quartet Favorites" by Haydn, Mozart, Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky, and Borodin. The show starts at 3 p.m. in the Dallas Horticulture Center in Fair Park. It's free. Call (214) 520-2219.

monday
july 21
Lugosi: Hollywood's Dracula: Martin Landau's marvelous turn as Bela Lugosi in Tim Burton's Ed Wood brought long-overdue attention to the meteoric rise and tragic end of one of America's great character actors. Those horror film buffs hungry for more about this eccentric legend can catch the USA Film Festival's southwest premiere of director Gary Don Rhodes' Lugosi: Hollywood's Dracula, a new documentary about the life of the Hungarian stage actor turned B-movie staple that includes behind-the-scenes footage, home movies, and interviews with family members and co-workers. Rhodes, who also authored a biography of Lugosi, discusses the subject alongside Fort Worth Star Telegram movie critic Mike Price. The Light Crust Doughboys provide live musical accompaniment to the proceedings. The film screens at 7:30 p.m. at the Lakewood Theatre, 1825 Abrams Rd. Tickets are $7-$20. Call (214) 821-NEWS.

tuesday
july 22
Maxim Mogilevsky and Sean Botkin: When Maxim Mogilevsky sits in front of the piano, he's often whipped in a hair-flying frenzy that we've come to associate with those instrumentalists who let the music overtake them. And yet, critics seem to agree that he doesn't pound Prokofiev and Rachmaninoff; all his concentration is in his fingers. Sean Botkin, meanwhile, is the more reserved performer of the two, although he shares a love of the bombastic Rachmaninoff with Mogilevsky. Maxim and Sean have joined forces for a two-night presentation of European classical greats sponsored by the Rachmaninoff Memorial Recitals. Maxim Mogilevsky plays July 21 and Sean Botkin July 22; the show starts at 7:30 p.m. at the University Park United Methodist Church, 4024 Caruth. Tickets are $8-$15. Call (214) 369-9365.

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