ISSUE . September 11th 2008
 

CP 2008 Fall Guide
City Paper's guide to the fall arts and music

Still Singing A Rainbow
Sipping scotch and shooting the breeze with children's TV legend Dear Old Captain Noah
by Shaun Brady
The Magical Ark has been in drydock now for 14 years and will soon be on display, along with puppets, props and costumes, when the new Please Touch Museum opens next month. But Captain Noah has yet to hang up his cap and uniform for good.

Kids in the Hall
by Shaun Brady
When it opens its doors on Oct. 18, the Please Touch will breathe fresh life into Memorial Hall, the architectural gem built for the 1876 Centennial World's Fair that has been neglected and underutilized for decades.

The Genre Jumper
Greg Giovanni makes one fine mess of theater art.
by Deni Kasrel
The private Greg Giovanni is a voracious bookworm. But on the public side, he's recognized for being a provocative and often outrageous director/playwright/actor.

Ink, Sweat and Tears
Rising hip-hop producer Stress plays through the pain.
by Deesha Dyer
His father would be proud: Eighteen years after entering the music world, Stress is on top of his game.

Classical Calendar
by Peter Burwasser

Dance Calendar
by Deni Kasrel

Jazz Calendar
by Shaun Brady

Opera Calendar
by Peter Burwasser

Rock/Pop Calendar
by Jesse Delaney

Roots Calendar
by Mary Armstrong

Theater Calendar
by Mark Cofta

Visual Art Calendar
by Robin Rice



Editor's Letter:
The Trial
Let's talk Fumo.
by Brian Howard
The man is a lightning rod: a favorite South Philly son or a beacon of what's wrong with politics.

Slant:
Time to McPanic?
Why liberals are taking their coffee with cream, sugar and despair.
by David Faris
The idea that candidates for the second-highest office in the land should be able to answer simple questions has been successfully redefined as a central plank in the vast left-wing conspiracy against the heartland.

Feedback:
Letters to the Editor
What You Say
"Over the past eight months, he's been more of a social butterfly than an impetus for change."



Naked City :: Buying Up BabyBuying Up Baby
Philly-area Disc Makers acquired Portland's CD Baby. How come?
by A.D. Amorosi
Disc Makers is a company that manufactures about 40 million CDs a year, duplicates CDs and DVDs, and produces custom merchandise and graphic design for promotional printing. Why would a company like this go further into the music biz at what some are calling its lowest point?

Icepack
Amorosi on the news, nightlife, gossip and bitchiness beats.
by A.D. Amorosi
There is mourning to be done on this day. We will do so. But you can't help but feel that an America reborn from those gray ashes is all about a fresh start, a furious start.

Running Numbers
A scholarly look at the digits that matter.
by Nick Norlen
I guess now I don't have to bother checking on whether they have chariot parking.



News :: Fumo's FutureFumo's Future
What you can expect to hear in the state senator's trial.
by Tom Namako
It's important to first understand what, exactly, federal prosecutors say they have on Fumo, beyond general terms like mail fraud, wire fraud and obstructing justice. Fumo, they say, used the public's money to buy an amazing array of stuff for himself, and then tried to hide that from authorities.

The Bell Curve
City Paper's Quality-o-Life-o-Meter
When news breaks in Philadelphia, we make jokes.

Citizen Mom:
The Birds and the Bees at the RNC
The whole thing gave me a weird flashback to when I was 15, standing on a church altar and holding my best friend's baby while he was baptized. I certainly don't recall applause, however, and while I heard Laura called many names by many people during those difficult years, "hero" wasn't one of them.

More-Public Park
Is City Council giving Fairmount Park to the people? Or to the wrong people?
by Diane Fiske
The Fairmount Park Commission is threatened with abolishment in the form of a proposal to place Fairmount Park under the control of the mayor and City Council.



Arts :: Wreck and Affect
Art:
Wreck and Affect
Thomas Frank is mad as hell, and he's not going to take it anymore.
by Joel Tannenbaum
"When I wrote What's the Matter With Kansas? it was about 50/50: people that agreed with me and people that really, really disagreed in a really visceral kind of way, And now I can't get anybody to defend the Bush administration. The only defense people can come up with is to say he's not a real conservative, which four years ago they would never have said."

Fest Bets: Week 3
Short Previews
How Philly Moves | Media Addicts | oOOoOoOo

Re-View:
Fantastic Four
Douglas Blau, R. Crumb, Kate Gilmore and Odili Donald Odita at the Institute of Contemporary Art
by Robin Rice
This sort of fetishistic contortion is something Crumb's fans come to the show to admire, the limber young person offering surprisingly juxtaposed views of a round-cheeked face and coordinating underpants.

Web Exclusive
Arts Picks:
VI Degress
Sat., Sept. 13, 8 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 14, 7 p.m.; $25, Mandell Theatre, Drexel University, 3141 Chestnut St., 610-453-6365, gokashproductions.com.
by Mark Cofta
This new play by Lincoln University grad Kash Goins dangles an intriguing juxtaposition.

Rock 'n' Roll
by Joel Tannenbaum
We get to enjoy Rock 'n' Roll for what it is: a clever, exuberant and often tragic exploration of the relationship between individuals and ideology.

Center for Architecture Open House
by Aaron Moselle
Now that the American Institute of Architects' Center for Architecture has found a new space across from the Convention Center, Philadelphians will be all the more encouraged to take a closer look at their own city.



Last Chance
Catch it or Regret It
by Molly Eichel
allTURNatives: Form + Spirits 2008 | Beyond This Time and Place: Children's Books in England | Aline Smithson: Shadows and Stains

Arts Agenda Picks:
Been There/Done That
Erotic Literary Salon
by Rachel Frankford
I thought some of it was pretty hot, but my companion was grossed out. Then again, he's more accustomed to the Jenna Jameson oeuvre.

Just Do It
Fulfilling a Prophecy: The Past and Present of the Lenape in Pennsylvania
by Dominic Mercier
It's a shame most of us don't know much about the Leni Lenape people beyond our third-grade lessons on Billy Penn and their appearance in the works of James Fenimore Cooper.

Galleries

Museums/Exhibits

Performing Arts

Readings/Book Signings



Movies :: Burning Down the HouseBurning Down the House
The Coen brothers switch it up for their No Country follow-up.
by Sam Adams
After No Country for Old Men, it would be easy to dismiss Burn After Reading as a lark, but there's a bitter aftertaste to the movie's sugary farce.

Wise Words
Penn Cinema Studies Presents Frederick Wiseman
by Shaun Brady
"Some people think that to make a documentary film, all you really need to do is have a camera and shoot."

Cold Open
Bangkok Dangerous
by Drew Lazor
Gaunt line readings and relatively homoerotic training sessions aside, Nicolas Cage really isn't the problem here.

Repertory Film
Your weekly guide to local film events, festivals and under-the-radar screenings.
Send repertory film listings to molly.eichel@citypaper.net.



Music :: Twisted SistersTwisted Sisters
Getting to the roots of the Sisters 3's mutant folk music.
by M.J. Fine
Their dad, Dennis, calls them "the indie Partridge Family."

Reconsider Me:
Less Loved
My Bloody Valentine | Patti Smith and Kevin Shields
by M.J. Fine
What sets Shields apart from every other pedal-pusher is his insatiable taste for texture. Loveless teems with woozy white noise and tons of tremolo.

Soundadvice
Get Out!
Why? | Sam Phillips | Beachwood Sparks | GZA | Philadelphia Ceili Group's 34th Annual Traditional Irish Music and Dance Festival

Music Picks:
New Monuments
Mon., Sept. 15, 8 p.m., $10, with John Wiese, Morally Gray and Kudler/Fraser Duo, Circle of Hope, 1125 S. Broad St., second floor, bowerbird.org.
by Shaun Brady
The pair create brooding, nightmarish urban landscapes, akin to a Takemitsu score for a David Lynch film.

The Duhks
Fri., Sept. 12, 7:30 p.m., $16, with Luke Doucet, Tin Angel, 20 S. Second St., tinangel.com.
by Mary Armstrong
"Mighty Storm," about the 1900 flood in Galveston, Texas, has never passed from the common folk repertoire, but the Duhks' modern edges can't help but make you wonder what we've learned in the ensuing century.

Martha Wainwright
Thu., Sept. 11, 6 p.m., $21-$33, World Café Live, 3025 Walnut St., 215-222-1400, worldcafelive.com.
by M.J. Fine
It's as raw as it gets, but Wainwright's impeccable lineage ensures there's a heavenly choir to blunt the blow.



Food :: Gimme FictionGimme Fiction
A faux-Paris feel isn't all that Parc has to offer.
by Trey Popp
It is perhaps an irony that all of this wonderful fiction is in service of bistro food, but in the end, who cares? With 80 of the best sidewalk seats in town and a multi-zoned interior that never loses focus, Starr's simulacrum of a Parisian brasserie is a terrific place to eat and drink.

Feeding Frenzy
Restaurants opening, closing and pending
by Drew Lazor
Pub & Kitchen | Cream and Sugar | Home Slice

Groan-a Lisa
Da Vinci's shortcomings aren't hard to decode.
by David Snyder
Borrowing its name from the scholar, Da Vinci Ristorante recently slid into Tre Scalini's old digs across from the singing fountain at 11th and Passyunk.

What's Cooking
Get Out!
by Drew Lazor
Sly Fox Beer Dinner at Le Virtù | River City Festival | Second Annual Beer Olympics | The Dance of the Ripe Tomatoes | Ninth Annual Jenkintown Jazz and Brewfest

You Ask We Answer
Culinary Mysteries Solved
Q: I'm looking for interesting but inexpensive chef's tasting menus. Any suggestions?

Small Bites
Little Vittles
Fork in My Hand | Mediterrasian.com | Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient | Pumpkin Cheese Pie at Beiler's Bakery



Agenda :: Rhyme and Reason
Agenda Lead:
Rhyme and Reason
GZA is still Genius.
by A.D. Amorosi
"As I waited to get the record finished, it went from a 'GZA Presents' thing — me throwing out MCs from our camp — to me striving to make it mine. The more I'm on there, the better."

Agenda Picks:
What We Heart
Screens 'N' Spokes Prints
by Nikki Volpicelli
A pretty kitty sits atop an old-fashioned big wheel bike in front of a blue-and-white cityscape in Nate Duval's three-color print, while a UArts student who goes by Dr. Pizzoli opts for piling rich colors on top of each other to form a dreamlike monster with a bike-wheel belly.

Just Do It
Songs of the City
by Lori Hill
To celebrate the new issue of Next American City, the mag teamed up with loyal reader and occasional volunteer Doug Sell for a party where Sell will spin songs about cities, towns or "any songs with a sense of place."

Just Do It
I'll Eat All of You: Sendak and Food
by Andrew Thompson
The Rosenbach Museum talk will focus on how food plays into Maurice Sendak's works, often as a stand-in for sex, aggression and all things pleasure principle.

On the DL
One Nation Under a Uke
by John Vettese
One Nation Under a Uke Sat., Sept. 13, 7 p.m., Green Rock Tavern, 2546 Lehigh Ave., 215-203-0840 The ukulele is a pretty ridiculous instrument when


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