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Iron
Pig on Tour!
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| Rebecca
Nachison in In Our Name |
After taking the New York Fringe Festival by storm
with the play In Our Name, a Eugene theater company goes
to Seattle. Actually, playwright Elena Hartwell lives in Seattle,
but she and Eugene-area actor Rebecca Nachison, who comprise Iron
Pig Productions, report that In Our Name, seen in Eugene
at the Lord Leebrick Theatre last August (see www.eugeneweekly.com/2007/08/02/theater2.html)and
in the Fringe Fest the same month, has a new venue. If you missed
the powerful piece of theater here and in the Big City to the east,
you can catch it Jan. 25 and 26 at Live Girls! Theater in the Big
City to the North.
Nachison, who moved here after a successful career
in big cities — locally, she's been in the Very Little Theatre's
Enchanted April and the Lord Leebrick Theatre's Mother
Courage, and she will star in the Leebrick's upcoming The
Busy World Is Hushed — also notes that the play is about
to be published by New York Theatre Experience in the anthology
Plays and Playwrights 2008. That will be available at www.nyte.org/pp08.htmsometime
in February, but you can read an interview with Hartwell at the
website (www.nyte.org/pp08int_hartwell.htm)to
whet your appetite. A sample: "War destroys not just the present,
but the future. And people are impacted far beyond the reach of
the battle grounds."
Oregon
Book Awards on Tour!
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OK, well, the awards themselves won't be happening
here as long as the money and funding for Literary Arts stays focused
around Portland, but hey, four of the nominees — a couple
of them winners — visit (the great unwashed poor hippies of)
Eugene at 6:30 pm on Thursday, Jan. 24, at the Eugene Public Library.
Alison Clement, whose Twenty Questions (reviewed in EW
Oct. 11, 2007) won the Ken Kesey Award for the Novel, headlines
the group. Sharing award honors is Shannon Riggs, winner of the
Eloise Jarvis McGraw Award for Children's Literature for Not
in Room 204. Two finalist dudes come along with the winning
women: Paul Merchant, poetry finalist for Some Business of Affinity,
and Ben Saunders, a UO prof and nonfiction finalist for Desiring
Donne: Poetry, Sexuality, Interpretation. Couldn't quite face
the PDX trek in December for the spendy awards announcement? Celebrate
these fine writers at our finest downtown building, where you can
buy the books from the UO Bookstore people and get 'em signed by
the Famous Award People.
Architecture
on the Web!
This week's architecture story, about rebuilding
the cities of the Balkans after the wars of the 1990s, will be available
in a web exclusive
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