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UNL Today Archive

Mon, Jul 11, 2005

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July 11 - July 17, 2005


Movies On The Green
LAWN NORTH OF KIMBALL HALL, THU 9PM
Free 'Movies on the Green' Feature Film Classics

The stars will shine once more on the University of Nebraska-Lincoln campus during the annual Jensen's Cinema 16 Collection series, "Movies on the Green," presented by the Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center and the University Program Council.

Screening will take place on six consecutive Thursday evenings, July 7 - Aug. 11. This week's film is "The Blue Lagoon" directed by Randal Kleiser from the year 1980. Lawn chair and blanket-toting patrons will also be able to enjoy movie classics including "A Clockwork Orange" by Stanley Kubrick (1971), "The Revenge of Frankenstein" by Terrance Fisher (1958), "The Heartbreak Kid" by Elaine May (1972), and "American Grafitti" by George Lucas (1973).

All of the screenings are presented on the grass in front of Kimball Recital Hall located at 12th and R streets (extended). Screenings are free and open to the public and begin at dusk (approximately 9 p.m.). Popcorn and soda is sold at the screenings. Film commentary written by Jensen's Cinema 16 Collection donor Jerry Jensen will be distributed free of charge.

Co-sponsored by Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center and UPC, the series is presented with the assistance of and donations from Jerry Jensen, Kimball Hall, International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees Local 151, Friends of Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center, and US Bank.

MRRC | UPC
 

ROBERT HILLESTAD TEXTILES GALLERY
Hillestad Gallery Shows Quilts of Political and Patriotic Persuasion

"Partisan Pieces: Quilts of Patriotic and Political Persuasion," an exhibition of quilts with political and patriotic themes, will be on view at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Robert Hillestad Textile Gallery from June 3-Aug. 31.

he exhibition includes approximately 17 quilts from the International Quilt Study Center's Ardis and Robert James Collection, and explores the impact of war, politics and political candidates on 19th- and early 20th-century American women's quilting designs. There will be a variety of examples of the "Whig Rose" pattern, also known as the "Democrat Rose." These red and green applique quilts are outstanding examples of technical skill and early innovative design put to a partisan purpose. Patriotic quilts using stars, flags, federal eagles, campaign ribbons and kerchiefs will round out the display. All the quilts in this exhibition are visual reminders of a time when women had no public forum. Against all odds, these quilts survive to give us evocative insights into the ways American women expressed political and patriotic sentiments during an era when they could not vote.


ROBERT HILLESTAD TEXTILES GALLERY
 
 

STUDIO AND HOWELL THEATRES, TEMPLE BUILDING
Productions for All Ages Comprise Nebraska Repertory Theatre 2005 Season

 
Bus Stop

Bus Stop

Nebraska Repertory Theatre, the professional wing of UNL's Department of Theatre Arts, announces its 38th Season including two main stage comedies and a musical for the entire family.  New Artistic Director, Virginia Smith, associate professor of Theatre at UNL, announces a Season of Journeys!  Smith said, "The image of embarking on a journey is such a perfect metaphor for this season.  We've selected plays exploring journeys about finding community, love and freedom.  At the same time, as an organization we're on a journey of redefinition and reinvigoration that will make us an even more vital part of the artistic community of Lincoln."

Androcles and the Lion by Aurand Harris is a romp through the old fable of the slave who takes the thorn out of the lion's paw only to receive payment for his kindness when the lion spares his life later. This journey to friendship and freedom is told in Commedia style with Fred Stuart as the miserly Pantalone, Jim Hopkins as the braggart Captain and Jeremy Kendall as Androcles. This version is full of slapstick, live music and song. Performances are in the Studio Theatre, third floor Temple Building, 12th and R streets. Performances are set for July 16, 17, 23, 24, 30, 31 at 2:00 PM. Tickets to Androcles and the Lion are $15, $12 for faculty/staff and senior citizens, $7 for student/youth.  Lincoln Children's Museum and Folsom Children's Zoo members may take $2 off of regularly priced tickets. There is also a 5 for $25 special. This special allows five people of any age to attend the same performance for just $25.

Resident Alien by Stuart Spencer is a play about an alien abduction in the most comic way. A Martian bus boy jumps the "Mother Ship" in northern Wisconsin and joins the local residents in a journey of finding community as he makes sly, insightful and often hilarious comments about our society.  Performances are in the Howell Theatre, first floor Temple Building, 12th and R streets.  Dates and curtain times are July 16, 20, 21, 29, 30 and August 3 at 7:30 PM.  Audience members are invited to join the cast for a wine and cheese reception following the July 7 opening performance.

William Inge said that Bus Stop is his exploration of all different kinds of love.  Imagine a bus stranded on the Great Plains in a blizzard.  The people on the bus and the people in the restaurant where it stops discover love in all its various guises.  We guarantee that on one of our hot Nebraska nights you'll be cool on the outside and warmed on the inside.  Performances are in the Howell Theatre, first floor Temple building, 12th and R streets.  Dates and curtain times are July 14, 15, 22, 23, 27, 28 and August 4, 5, 6 at 7:30 PM.  Audience members are invited to join the cast for a wine and cheese reception following the July 14 opening performance.

Individual tickets to Resident Alien and Bus Stop are $20, $18 faculty/staff and senior citizens, $10 student/youth.  Season tickets, which include three admissions to any or all of the productions, are $40, $35 for faculty/staff and senior citizens.

Nebraska Repertory Theatre tickets are available through the Lied Center Ticket Office, 301 North 12th Street, PO Box 880157, Lincoln NE 68588-0157, 402-472-4747 or 800-432-3231 Monday through Friday 11 AM to 5:30 PM and one hour prior to performances in the designated theatre lobby. For more information about the Nebraska Repertory Theatre, or to volunteer as an usher, please contact Julie Hagemeier, General Manager at 402-472-1619.


NEBRASKA REPERTORY THEATRE
 
GREAT PLAINS ART MUSEUM
Gude, Murphy Exhibition Continues This Week At Great Plains Art Museum

 
The Silence Is Golden

Deborah J. Murphy, "The Silence Is Golden" 2005, prismacolor on board

Parallel exhibitions featuring the work of two Great Plains artists will open June 3 and run through July 31 at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Great Plains Art Museum. "From the Heart of a Regionalist: Paintings by Anthony Benton Gude" will include nearly 60 works, mostly oil paintings, but also a number of watercolors and drawings. "WaterWays & Other Perspectives" will feature 13 Prismacolor drawings by Deborah J. Murphy of Omaha, all completed in the last two years. Both artists will be featured at an opening reception from 7-9 pm June 3 at the museum, 1155 Q St., Hewit Place. The receptions and exhibitions are free and open to the public.

"These are two wonderful exhibits and each is powerful in its own right, although they do complement each other in some ways," said Reece Summers, curator of the museum. "The two artists work with different materials, Gude mostly with oils and Murphy with Prismacolor pencils, but both look at the landscapes of the Midwest and Great Plains, and the interactions of humans with the natural world."

Gude attended the School of the Museum of Fine Art in Boston in 1986-87 and later studied at the Art Student's League in New York City, focusing on drawing and paint. He mastered the Venetian technique of oil painting, a system that employs the use of monochromatic under painting to develop form and composition before the color is painted on. The many layers of paint give the final result a stronger body. His recent commissions include four historical murals covering 480 square feet for the St. Joseph River Boat Partners in St. Joseph, Mo.; "The Benton," a portrait of a stern-wheeler, for The River Club in Kansas City, Mo.; and a mural, "A Century of Service," 8 feet by 12 feet, and five paintings of various Kansas themes for Western Resources in Topeka, Kansas.

Gude and his family live on a small farm in southeastern Marshall County, Kan. (county seat Marysville). The farm was originally purchased in an unusual fashion by his grandfather, muralist Thomas Hart Benton (1889-1975). Benton painted a picture of the farm's barnyard and silo, sold the painting and purchased the farm with the proceeds of the sale. A native of North Platte, Murphy has been a professional artist for more than 30 years and has shown extensively around the Midwest, where her work has been collected both publicly and privately. She is known primarily for her Midwestern landscapes, and in recent years has come to prefer using Prismacolor pencils to capture the texture and colors of prairie vegetation. She uses poster board of a particular texture that allows her to build many layers of color. Murphy, who earned a bachelor's degree in music education at the University of Nebraska at Kearney (then Kearney State College), was the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in painting in 1994 and a Distinguished Achievement Grant from the Nebraska Arts Council in 1998.

The Great Plains Art Museum is part of the Center for Great Plains Studies at UNL. It is open from 10 am to 5 pm Tuesday through Saturday and 1:30-5 pm Sundays. It is closed Mondays.


GREAT PLAINS ART MUSEUM
 
MARY RIEPMA ROSS MEDIA ARTS CENTER
Continuing This Week at the Ross: Enron: The Smartest Guys In The Room, Look At Me.

UNL's Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center presents the documentary Enron: The Smartest Guys In The Room, and Look At Me, the newest film from French director Agnes Jaoui.


now showing at the ross

Enron: The Smartest Guys In The Room is a searing examination of the corporate accounting scandal that reveals the psychology of greed and corporate corruption that facilitated the company's rise to power and its fall. When Enron went bankrupt in 2001, the principals walked away millionaires--but later faced legal proceedings and jail sentences. Meanwhile, many employees and investors were left with nothing, not even their 401k retirement savings. Shedding light on the new economy of the 1990s when predictions and book-cooking flourished without actual profits, the film shows how it was not Enron alone but a network of bankers, traders, and accountants who turned a blind eye to the company's clearly suspicious numbers. CEO Ken Lay and top dogs Jeff Skilling and Andy Fastow give candid interviews that illustrate their skill at deflecting hard questions and egotistically boasting about the company's success. In one of the company's cold and calculated moves--which caused the California power outages, and lead to the ousting of Governor Gray Davis--Enron employees are shown laughing at forest fires. Unbelievable footage of employees reveals unbridled greed, lust for risk-taking, and guiltless cheating, all while thinking they could never be caught. Finally, a few brave whistle-blowers stepped forward, including Bethany McLean, author of the Enron book upon which this film is based, who wrote an article in Fortune magazine calling the company's bluff. A remarkable documentary that packages the events of the scandal into a cohesive story, this is one film not to miss.

Look At Me is the story of Lolita Cassard, a young woman of twenty years who has it in for the entire world because she doesn't look like the girls in glossy magazines, who doesn't look a thing like her young mother-in-law, and who would so much like to feel beautiful, at least in her father's eyes, if only her father's eyes could find her. However, this is also the story of a man named Etienne Cassard, who doesn't see other people much at all, because he's busy looking at himself, feeling older, a man who very likely wanted for love himself, who struggled long and hard to find his place in the world. This is the story of a writer named Pierre Miller, who has lost faith, who doubts he'll ever meet with success, who meets with success and who meets Etienne Cassard. This is the story of a singing teacher, Sylvia Miller, who believes in her husband, at least in his talent, but who has doubts about her own and that of her pupil, Lolita - until she realizes she's the daughter of Etienne Cassard, the author she admires so much. This is the story of human beings who know exactly what they'd do if they were somebody else, but can't handle being themselves very well, who are very simply struggling to find out who they are.

More information is available at the Ross website.


MRRMAC | ENRON: THE SMARTEST GUYS IN THE ROOM | LOOK AT ME