sundries, supersized
Dec. 10th, 2010 12:00 pmSo first, thank you. We can't say it enough, and I hope to be able to say it more poetically soon.
As of now, we've raised $6,045 for our workshop production. So what happens next?
First, the fundraising period is still on. If you've wanted to contribute and haven't yet, you can until the evening of the 21st and we will continue to be very, very grateful. Having a cushion is of course always good, and we have other projects in the works including a cabaret evening, and Erica's Pygmalion creation. Plus, we're getting ready to submit Dogboy & Justine to the New York Musical Theater Festival for 2011.
I really, really, really haven't been kidding about the incredibly specificity of Weird Crap in My Brain that put this in gear, and I am so grateful for all the people and pieces that were in the right place at the right time to make this possible. Knowing Erica is a fluke. She is a New Person in a world where I don't really do new people because people sort of freak me out in spite of my whole gregarious chatter holding court thing. And she's scary talented. And it's awesome.
Anyway. On December 21st funding will close. At that point we will start getting in touch with all you lovely donors with thank you cards, information on your premium tickets (how to book or how to transfer them to someone else) and other rewards big donors have earned.
Sometime in the 5 - 14 days following that, the funds, minus Kickstarter's fees will transfer to our Amazon account, and after that, transfer to our savings account for the show. Then January shows up, we make a timeline, hold auditions, look at theaters (I have a few we're considering that we used to help us run the budget numbers) and then here we are.
If you were thinking about donating to Dogboy & Justine and want to put your money elsewhere now that we've reached our goal, we support that too, and hope that if that's your plan you'll consider another Kickstarter project targeted at working artists or the Brain Injury Foundation of America, which we'll be donating at least $200 (and hopefully more) to through a percentage of our ticket sales and audience support in the course of the workshop production.
I lived in DC during the first Gulf War, just six blocks from the White House. I protested and went to cover the protests as a student journalist. I saw cops on horses hit a man over the head with a truncheon not even a foot away from me. He collapsed to the ground bleeding profusely. The photo appeared in our local City Paper but not in any sort of national news.
There were night when the protests broke off from the official protest area illegally, and marched through the streets. One night we got cornered by cops, and it seemed absolutely clear that we were about to be hurt, because we could be, because no one was watching. And then someone pulled out a video camera. And I remember that man, probably 24, 25. He was standing right next me and shaking like a leaf. The cops told him to put it away. And he said no, over and over he said no. We were so scared. And eventually, the cops just escorted us back to where we were supposed to be.
When I think of London, it is a double image of my recent year of visits there, of sitting in a park near Westminster alone thinking about this death and mourning project thing and how I might not have done it had I known what the experience was going to be like. It was hard. It was confronting. It was personal. It was brain stretching. It was me at my absolute finest and me sometimes at my least generous.
But I also think of my childhood when I think of London. I think of Regan and Thatcher and the Cold War and AIDS. I think of older teenagers I knew who explained terrible times made for great music and everything was better in London, because people were so much angrier there. I think of Morrissey and V for Vendetta and fantasies of protests and nightclubs and the world of adults I lived more on the edge of than someone my age was supposed to.
I look at the riots in London and my heart breaks. My heart breaks for the UK. And my heart breaks for America where I despair of anyone ever getting angry enough about the right things in that way anymore. Rioting isn't good, sure. But why aren't we angry? Why are we letting the power of anger be co-opted by racists and other demagogues?
My heart breaks for London, which always seems so far away.
no subject
Date: 2010-12-10 05:37 pm (UTC)