On Friday, January 12th, Oliver Conant (Author/Director) and Justyna Kostek (Author/Star) will host a One Night Only performance of their one-woman tour-de-force musical, DIETRICH RIDES AGAIN, about the life and times of Marlene Dietrich.
Playing for one night only on Friday, January 12th at the Dixon Place Theatre (161A Chrystie Street - in the Lower East Side), DIETRICH RIDES AGAIN will be directed by Oliver Conant and choreographed by Madeline Jaye. Musical Direction and arrangements are by George Cork Maul. Miss Kostek's costumes are by Derek Nye Lockwood.The show's iconic score will feature: "Puttin' On The Ritz", "The Laziest Gal In Town", "You're The Cream In My Coffee", "Falling In Love Again", "Look Me Over Closely", "Lili Marlene", "Mother Have You Forgiven Me", "Hot Voodoo", "You Do Something To Me", "The Boys In The Backroom" and "Where Have All The Flowers Gone".
DIXON PLACE PRESENTS DIETRICH RIDES AGAIN
One Night Only
January 12th
For Reservations: www.dixonplace.org/performances/dietrich-rides-again/ or 1-212-219-0736
Tickets
$15 - in advance
$18 - at the door
$12 (Seniors and Students with Valid ID)
Marlene Dietrich began acting shortly after her promising career as a concert violinist was cut short by (according to one story) an injury to her wrist while performing a complicated piece by Bach. Needing to support her family in inflation ridden post World War I Berlin she took to the stage, first as the private pupil of the great avant-guard director and theatre impresario Max Reinhardt, performing in over two dozen plays and cabaret acts. While still in her twenties she was featured and then had leading roles in many silent German language films. Although she was married all her life she had multiple affairs with both men and woman and expressed her sexuality and what we would now call "gender fluidity" with insouciance and panache. In 1929 she landed the coveted role of 'Lola Lola' in Josef von Sternberg's The Blue Angel, one of the first truly successful talkies and a kind of culmination of German expressionist film style. Immediately after the premiere of The Blue Angel, Marlene Dietrich set sail for America and Hollywood where she was under contract and made six more films with Von Sternberg as well as other classics of The Golden Age of Hollywood. Throughout the thirties her fierce anti-Nazi convictions led her to giving away a lot of the money she was making from films like Morocco, Shanghai Express, Blonde Venus and others to help her colleagues - technicians, actors, composers, writers - get out of Hitler's Germany and ultimately to joining the US Army where she performed often, on or near to the front lines with the 5th Army in the European Theatre. After the war she gave "Victory Concerts" in London, Paris, Berlin and Salzburg, where she was heckled by Germans unwilling to forget or forgive her contribution to the defeat of the Third Reich. Through the nineteen-fifties, sixties and seventies she returned to the stage - the place she loved the best - in what was in effect a one woman show consisting of songs from her films such as "Falling in Love Again" from The Blue Angel and "The Boys in the Backroom" from Destry Rides Again, a comedic Western with Jimmy Stewart created largely by German exiles, as well as some unexpected favorites like Pete Seeger's "Where Have All The Flowers Gone." She died almost penniless in a luxurious apartment on the Avenue de Montaigne provided for her by the French state. When her coffin was carried out it was draped with the French flag on which were placed her Legion d'Honneur in recognition for her service in defending France during World War II. In Germany her coffin, now draped in the flag of the Federal Republic of Germany, was lowered into a grave beside her mother. In her public utterances and in her autobiography Dietrich declared that her participation in WWII was the most important thing she ever did. It won her the United States Medal of Freedom, the first woman to receive the honor.
Born and raised in Poland, where she began her work in experimental theatre at a very young age, Justyna Kostek trained in theatre arts including mime, storytelling, commedia dell'arte, cabaret at The Commedia School in Copenhagen and then established the successful and award-winning theatre company, Atelier Teatral, in Denmark. As the company's Artistic Director she also starred in and/or directed many of its highly acclaimed European productions. Her New York credits include the musicals Helen of Troy, NY; Women of History Show, Bound to Rise, The Unhappy and The Cheating Flea. Kostek has big plans for her newly incorporated company Just More Theatre, Inc.
Oliver Conant has worked extensively as the esteemed and 'go-to' director in New York's off-off Broadway theatre scene. A ten-year member of the Medicine Show Theatre Ensemble, he directed its main stage plays and a revival of the Barbara Vann's 1984 Obie Winning for direction musical Bound to Rise. Other directorial credits include a revival of David Lindsay-Abaire's Kimberly Akimbo for Nicu's Spoon Theatre, and a triumphant manga and anime Romeo and Juliet for Queen's Shakespeare. As a child he was introduced to Greta Garbo by Salka Viertel and has, since then, felt somehow drawn to the extraordinary congregation of talent in the émigré community in Hollywood. Conant is also an actor who was featured in the Warner Brother films Summer of 42 and Class of 44, after which he travelled east to open on Broadway in Jean Kerr's domestic farce Finishing Touches.
GEORGE CORK MAUL is an East End composer, pianist and performance art specialist. He studied music composition with Isaac Nemiroff at Stony Brook where he earned a B.A. and went on to do graduate work in electronic music with Bulent Arel and classical style with Charles Rosen. After touring for several years and working as a studio musician, he began composing a wide range of serial and tonal music. His credits include modern songs, suites and dance pieces, contemporary operas, musicals, music for software and recently, pieces for string orchestra. His compositions have been performed in Italy, Ireland, Canada and the United States. He can be seen performing at North Fork vineyards, Long Island libraries, art openings and other venues.
Madeline Jaye'S Choreography and Musical Staging credits include The Astonishing Times of Timothy Cratchit (WorkShop Theatre) five plays/musicals for The Medicine Show Theater Company, industrials for Mattel Toys, Inc., IBM, Bell South, Barbie Fashion Summit, Dole Foods' Easter on the White House Lawn, Hewlette Packard, Love, Valor ,Compassion! (American Academy of Dramatic Arts) as well as: On the Verge, Dancing at Lughnasa, ART, and the NYU Practicum (at Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute). She teaches Ballet, Jazz/Theatre Dance and Movement at LSTFI and LSTFI-NYU programs (since 1995). Concurrently, she has been on the Dance faculty at AADA, Steps Studio and Third Street Music School and guest teacher and/or substitute at AMDA, Broadway Dance Center, Steffi Nossen School of Dance and LaGuardia HS of Performing Arts. Privately, she teaches acting/ speech presentation and Effective Communication to clergy, trial attorneys and business executives, as well as coaching young performers for auditions and performance. Madeline has performed as a dancer/singer/actor on stages across USA, Europe, Japan, and the Middle East and on Film/TV (USA, Egypt, Germany), and spent 3 years as a Radio City Music Hall Rockette. She holds a BA with Honours in Dance, from Butler University with additional years of training as an actor and singer in NYC. She is the creator of Jaye Actors Movement: Bridging the Gap, a movement program designed to incite fluency between dance, singing and acting training. With Ron Navarre, she is co-creator of Actors LaunchTM, an audition and career preparatory workshop for actors.
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