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| SKATSAREE AND OTHER
TALES FROM NATIVE CALIFORNIA |
Project Title: Skatsaree and Other Tales from Native California
Recipient Organization: ShadowLight Productions
Lead Artist: Richard Marriott
Genre and Date Awarded: Performing
Arts, April 1997
Premiered: November-December 2000 at SomArts Theater
in San Francisco, Arcata Dancenter, Arcata, California; Yreka Community
Theater, Yreka, California; and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts,
San Francisco.
Storytellers Charlie Thom and Clarence Hostler, visual artists
Debora Iyall, Brian Tripp, I Made Moja, and Tim Lee Smith, folklorist
Deborah Bruce and puppeteers and designers of ShadowLight Productions—directed
by artistic director Larry Reed—created two shadow plays
for family audiences based on California Native American stories. Skatsaree
and Other Tales from California, in part, were developed in
response to the celebration of California’s Sesquicentennial.
Premiered at several venues in Northern California in late 2000,
these tales are part of a longer project, Dreaming California,
an exploration of California’s cultural heritage.
The artistic content and artistic partnerships for this piece
changed significantly after the grant was awarded. Originally proposed
and funded as “Sutter’s Gold,” the Sesquicentennial
work was going to explore the social conflicts set in motion by
the Gold Rush through the story of Johan Sutter. Collaborators
planned to adapt the play from L’Or, a novel by
French surrealist poet and author Blaise Cendrars. Richard Marriott,
composer and conductor of the Club Foot Orchestra, was to develop
and perform an original score for the piece.
However, as they began telling the state’s story, members
of ShadowLight Productions felt the need to step back and examine
the land and its people prior to European occupation. The first
phase of production focused on Native California stories that date
back thousands of years. As planned, the plays featured Balinese
shadow theater accompanied by live music and live actors. Shadow
casters used puppets, masks, and silhouettes to enact the narrative
behind a large screen. Richard Marriott, the lead artist supported
by the Creative Work Fund grant, did not participate, but collaborated
with Shadowlight on a later project, “Encarnacion,” which
premiered in 2002.
The collaboration began with a Hupa story from Clarence Hostler
that had been passed down to him by his grandmother. ShadowLight
writes in the final report, “Hostler’s ancestral fire
pit has been dated at 7,000 years, thus this story from the High
Dance People is as old as the tribe’s presence in California.” The
title story, “Skatsaree” describes a man’s spiritual
quest and the lessons the world offers him about responsibility
and balance. Project collaborators developed the visual and sound
elements for the story over a three-month period. The second piece, “The
Salmon Sisters” was developed following the same pattern.
It was based on a Karuk story contributed by visual artist and
musician Brian Tripp and narrated by Karuk elder Charlie Red Hawk
Thom. ShadowLight writes: “It has been our truest collaboration
to date amidst a group of exceptionally diverse artists.”
The project introduced a video component to the work of ShadowLight
Productions. Several television stations expressed interest in
broadcasting the stories, which have great potential as pieces
for touring to schools and community centers. Further, the artists
were invited to perform the works at the Jim Henson Festival of
International Theater in 2002.
Artistic director Larry Reed founded Shadow Play Theater Company
in 1972, and ShadowLight Productions was incorporated as a nonprofit
in early 1995. The company is an ensemble of creative artists from
diverse cultural backgrounds who explore the theatrical use of
shadows. Performed behind and in front of a large screen, ShadowLight’s
original productions expand the expressive range of traditional
shadow theater through contemporary American technology and stagecraft.
ShadowLight Productions has received two UNIMA-USA citations for
excellence—puppetry’s highest honor—for Wayang
Bali (in 1993) and for In Xanadu (in 1994).
LEAD ARTIST
Richard Marriott
Richard Marriott studied with Pauline Oliveros, Dominick Argento,
Ali Akbar Kahn, and Masayuki Koga; designed synthesizers with Serge
Tchrepnin; and recorded with The Residents before forming San Francisco’s
Club Foot Orchestra in 1983 as a vehicle for his compositions.
In 1987, he wrote a score for a new soundtrack to the expressionist
classic film "The
Cabinet of Dr. Caligari", which the Club Foot Orchestra presented
live at the Mill Valley Film Festival. The success of this project
was repeated with many other silent classics. The Club Foot Orchestra
also has composed and recorded the soundtrack for the "Twisted
Tails of Felix the Cat,” an animated series for the 1995
season on CBS-TV. In addition, Marriott composes music and is a
sound designer for the multimedia market.
RESUME HIGHLIGHTS
Awards
- Meet the Composer, for
collaboration with Della Davidson on “Ten P.M. Dream” (1992).
Dance Scores
- “Ten P.M. Dream,” produced
by the Della Davidson Dance Company, Theater Artaud, San Francisco,
California (1992)
- “Community,” produced
by the Christopher Beck Dance Group (1988).
Opera
- “Happy Hour Becomes
Electra,” libretto by Kathleen Cramer, produced by Overtone
Theatre, San Francisco (1991 & 1993); produced by Olan Jones,
Los Angeles (1995)
Theatre
- Troilus and Cressida, by
William Shakespeare, produced by Berkeley Shakespeare Festival
(1988)
- Cymbeline, by
William Shakespeare, produced by California Shakespeare Festival
(1990)
- Merchant of Venice, by
William Shakespeare, produced by California Shakespeare Festival
(1992)
Film
- Rising Sun, directed
by Philip Kaufman (additional music credit) (1993)
- Silver into Gold,” directed
by Lynn Mueller (Academy Award Nominee, Best Documentary) (1986)
Soundtracks for Silent Movies (Sole Composer)
- The Cabinet of Dr.
Calligari, performed by the Club Foot Orchestra, premiered
at the Mill Valley Film Festival (1987)
- Nosferatu, performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, premiered at the BACVA Award ceremony,
San Francisco State University (1989)
- Hands of Orlac,” premiered
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Castro Theater, San Francisco (1997)
Soundtracks for Silent Movies (Artistic Director, Collaborative
Scores)
- Metropolis, performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Castro Theatre, San Francisco (1991)
- Sherlock Jr., performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Castro Theatre, San Francisco (1992)
- Pandora’s Box, performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Castro Theater, San Francisco (1995)
Selected Performances
- Nosferatu, performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, New Music America, Brooklyn Academy
of Music (1989)
- Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Metropolis performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra at the “Exhibit of Degenerate
Art: the fate of the avant-garde in Germany 1933-1945,” Smithsonian
Institution, Washington D.C. (1991)
- Pandora’s Box, performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, The Walter Reade Theatre, Lincoln
Center, New York (1995)
- Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Sherlock
Jr. performed by the Club Foot Orchestra at the Walter
Reade Theatre, Lincoln Center, New York (1996)
Recordings
- Wild Beasts, performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Ralph Records (1986)
- Kidnapped, performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Ralph Records (1987)
Soundtracks on CD and Laserdisc
- Metropolis, performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Heyday Records (1991)
- Sherlock, Jr., performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Rastascan Records (1993)
- Sherlock, Jr., performed
by the Club Foot Orchestra, Kino Films (1995)
OTHER COLLABORATING ARTISTS
Larry Reed
Larry Reed, artistic director of ShadowLight Productions, is a
theater artist and film director with a strong interest in inter-cultural
communication. At Yale University he majored in French, specializing
in French theater. Subsequently, in the Peace Corps, he worked
as theater director for the Costa Rican University and National
Theaters. In 1971 he earned his MFA in filmmaking from the San
Francisco Art Institute. Since 1972, he has been studying and performing
Balinese mask and puppet theater. After intensive study with master
artists in Bali, in 1972 he formed the Shadow Play Theater Company.
The Company brought Balinese theater to university campuses and
festivals in the United States, Canada, and Europe. In 1995 he
founded ShadowLight Productions, a nonprofit organizations. His
translations have appeared in Asia Theater Journal and
the University of Hawaii press.
Resume Highlights
- In 1986 at the Institute
International de la Marionette in France, he led a six-week workshop
on Balinese Wayang for professional puppeteers. He also was commissioned
to create a shadow play of the Conquest of Mexico for
the New Music America Festival.
- In 1988, in Jakarta,
Indonesia, he was the first Balinese shadow theater representative
at the Indonesian National Shadow Theater Festival, making him
one of the few Westerners ever invited to perform at the festival.
- In 1989 he was an artist-in-residence
at the San Francisco Exploratorium, working with light and shadow.
- In 1990 he created a
shadow setting and figures for the Santa Fe Opera and Los Angeles
Opera productions of Orfeo, with Marilyn Horne in the
title role. He was the projection designer for Body Cak, a
Balinese co-production with Keith Terry and I Wayan Dibya.
- In 1991 he designed
shadow effects for the Mark Taper Forum/ITP production of Freedom
Song. He designed and directed Dream Shadows, a
radical setting of Javanese Gamelan and dance at the Headlands
Center for the Arts and the Cal Art Contemporary Music Festival.
- In 1993, he began developing In
Xanadu, a large-scale shadow piece for actors and puppets,
at Theater Artaud and at Puppetry ’93, both in San Francisco.
He received a Citation for Excellence from UNIMA (the International
Puppeteers Organization) for his work with Balinese Shadow
theater.
- In 1994, he presented In
Xanadu at New York’s Public Theater as part of the
International Festival for Puppet Theater and in San Francisco
at the Cowell Theater. The work was selected for a Citation
for Excellence from UNIMA, nominated for a theatrical design
award by the American Theater Wing, and it attracted the attention
of the prestigious Spoleto Festival, U.S.A.
- In 1995, he received
a National Endowment for the Arts special projects grant to produce The
Wild Party, based on the jazz age poem by Joseph Moncure
March with original music by Bruce Forman. The Wild Party premiered
in San Francisco at Theater Artaud and was featured at the Eugene
O’Neill Theater Center’s National Puppetry Conference.
He also directed Sidha Karya, a collaboration with Gamelon
Sekar Jaya.
- In 1996, he designed shadow
effects for the American Conservatory Theater production of Shakespeare’s Tempest.
He performed two free presentations of Wayang Bali in
South Park, San Francisco. At the Walter Spies Festival in Ubud,
Indonesia, he created a performance of Mayadenawa, which
involved an entire neighborhood. Throughout October, ShadowLight
presented The Wild Party at SomArts Theater as part
of the citywide celebration of Bohemian culture.
Charlie Thom
- Karuk Elder, singer, and storyteller Charlie Thom is a full-blooded
Karuk Indian from Northern California. He was brought up in the
traditional cultural setting and Native way of life by his grandparents
and tribal elders. He is cofounder of Earth Circle Association,
a Native American educational nonprofit, and has dedicated his
life to preserving and promoting the ancient culture.
Clarence Hostler
- Storyteller and narrator Clarence Hostler is a Hupa-Yoruk-Karuk
ceremonial dancer, singer, and artist. Hostler mentored the project,
contributing stories, ideas, and cultural understanding. He dedicates
much of his time and energy to the sacred aspects of traditional
culture.
Debora Iyall
- Debora Iyall is a member of the Cowlitz nation of Washington
State. She is internationally known as the lyricist/vocalist
of the ‘80s
band Romeo Void. A visual artist, she founded Ink Clan, an
intertribal printmaking project.
I Made Joja
- I Made Moja is a prominent Balinese artist with a background in
traditional ink and watercolor painting. His work has been shown
internationally and featured in numerous books on Balinese art.
LINKS
www.iyall.com.
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