Hey friends,
Hope you're having a good Tuesday.
++
I posted the last two weeks' essays on my website. For those that didn't get a chance to read them, they're now preserved:
These two are the beginning of a series of essays I want to write on the future of theatre. Next week, I'll have a new essay on the Cult of Algorithms, and theatre's role within this new world.
I also have lots more previous writing on my blog, if you want to check it out. (Though my recent writing is way better!)
++
Recently I've been heavily considering starting a podcast focusing on conversations around theatre, and the future of storytelling. I would talk to directors, designers, writers, artists, actors, leaders, and creators. There's a few OK theatre podcasts out there, but none that have quite whetted my appetite. If you have any ideas on this, shoot me an email. I plan on launching in November.
++
Today's issue has a lot more film stuff!
Notes from the Week đ˝
Jenna Wortham on White Filmmakers Addressing Whiteness
Following up on last week's piece on good criticism, I wanted to highlight Jenna Wortham's recent piece for the New York Times.
It specifically analyzes a few recent movies by white filmmakers that deal with race and whiteness. What I think is interestingâand so importantâis how Wortham makes a point that it's essential that white filmmakers (and we can extrapolate this out to artists in general) unpack their own whiteness and privilege, especially when dealing with a story that touches on race in any way:
And what a relief. As a friend put it to me recently, âThis is white peopleâs job now,â meaning that itâs time for white people to start helping one another see themselves in terms of their race and all the undeserved, inherited privilege that comes with it. Itâs a self-examination that knows the difference between âwokeâ and self-awareness, and leans toward the latter. Itâs not easy work. âWhite progressives can be the most difficult for people,â Robin DiAngelo writes in her groundbreaking book, âWhite Fragility,â because she and others âdo indeed uphold and perpetuate racism, but our defensiveness and certitude make it virtually impossible to explain to us how we do so.â
She examines why the movie The Nightingale, while problematic, is more successful than the critically acclaimed Last Black Man in San Franciscoâprecisely because its white creator avoids addressing his own whiteness in a story about gentrification. If Everything is Cinema, and an artist is inseparable from their life, then this is a major shortcoming.
The connection between fashion and theatre
It seems every week I link to a different something from playwright Jeremy O. Harris, which I take as a sign that we need more theatre artists making waves. But I really enjoyed his appearance on the We Don't Even Know podcast, and thought they touched on a few really great topics (the messy entanglements that make up pop culture like Black Panther, the idea that art that makes you mad is provoking something unconscious, the erasure of black influence on theatre). What I've been most taken with, though, is Harris' connection with fashion, which is discussed at 23:21.
Anna Wintour and GQ both highlighted Jeremy as someone who could change fashion's relationship with theatre (!). Harris' instagram stories frequently feature Gucci and other high fashion brands. Both fashion and theatre share an inherent theatricality, and both are best experienced in person. But while fashion has managed to use the internet to build its industry and has invigorated an entire new generation of fashion-obsessed kids online, theatre has almost completely fallen flat in that regard. What lessons can we learn from that?
Josh Safdie's favorite NYC movies
A24 and the art of good marketing
Speaking of the Safdie Bros., A24 is releasing their new film, Uncut Gems, this November. (I couldn't be more excited, and thought Good Time was easily one of the best movies of 2017.) I regularly am amazed at how great A24 is at building a brand around producing and releasing high caliber independent films. They have been on a pretty incredible streak, and their social media presence is outstanding. There's a lot that theaters can learn from them.
Recently, they have been releasing book versions of the scripts of their movies, with essays and photos, which have sold out. They look undeniably sexy (and Moonlight has a foreword by... Frank Ocean, and an essay by Hilton Als):
I think there is a lot of room for innovation in script publishing in theatre, as well. 3 Hole Press is one of the only companies doing anything interesting in this regard.
More Assorted Links I Liked:
A Strange Loop released its soundtrack. Give it a listen.
The Rhetoric of the Hyperlink. A brilliant essay from 2008 by Venaktesh Rao, if you're interested in how the internet has shaped language and thinking: "The hyperlink is the most elemental of the bundle of ideas that we call the Web. If the bit is the quark of information, the hyperlink is the hydrogen molecule. It shapes the microstructure of information today."
Would you make your art if you were the last person on earth?
End Note
art by samuel yates
++
Thatâs all for this weekâthanks so much for reading!
If you enjoyed this, please forward it to some friends. If youâve been forwarded this email and want to receive The Curtain every Tuesday, sign up below:
As always, you can reply directly to this email and Iâll receive it. So feel free to do that about anything, like comments or compliments or dog videos.
See you next week,
-Gus