As with Pulitzer-Prize winning author William Kennedy and his novel of the same name, Scott Harrison chose the name “ironweed” for its “tenaciousness…it’s difficult to pull out when it takes root” and also for its looks: “While ironweed looks like a weed, it is actually a flower.” Since its...
Things to Do
- Theater Grottesco’s Twelfth Night: A View from Downstairs

In its twenty-fifth year as a group committed to “breathing life into the theatre through the creation of new forms,” Theater Grottesco (TG) and artistic director John Flax take the near sacrilegious position that Shakespeare’s comedies are “dated and silly.” Flax argues that Shakespeare stole characters and conventions “shamelessly” from the Commedia Dell’Arte tradition while ignoring the incisive social commentary that actually thinned out audiences for the Italians. Shakespeare’s comedies are “romantic and light” and focused almost exclusively on the foibles and obsessions of the...
- Scott Harrison and Ironweed Productions
Scott Harrison and Ironweed Productions: A Commitment to Quality American Theater and the Northern New Mexico Community. IP’s spring production of Doubt promises to be another successful and thought-provoking foray into American culture and belief.
- Z Space Studio’s Word for Word: James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues”

James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues” began life as a short story by James Baldwin. Set in Harlem in the 1950’s, this narrative is a jazz riff on the ersatz relationship between a good brother Brother (a married veteran and long-term high school teacher) and a bad brother Sonny, (jailbird, heroin addict, and inspired jazz pianist) that morphs into a truer, more loving connection when Brother begins to glean what playing and creating music means for his younger sibling.
What the Word for Word Company does is to adapt short stories to the stage without changing or omitting a word of the original...
- Outformation Wears Its Influences Well

It’s probably not too often that comedic insult legend Don Rickles is mentioned in the same category as Willie Nelson and the Charlie Daniels Band.
But the MySpace page for Southern rockers Outformation lists the man that Johnny Carson dubbed Mr. Warmth as one of their greatest influences.
“He’s the king,” Outformation guitarist Sam Holt said in a recent phone interview. “He taught me not to be scared, that everyone is equal and anyone can have his (tail) handed to him.”
Though life on the road for an upstart band can be tough, Holt says the collective inspiration from Rickles and other...
- Dancers Capture Spirit of Slaves

A wooden crate, a tithing box and a donkey jaw may not be typical musical instruments, but they were among the only musicmaking objects available to Peruvian slaves from Africa. The crate, which evolved from farm crates used to collect fruit, is a wooden box straddled by a player who bends down to beat the box by hand. The tithing box, a cajita, is a small, lidded box used for collections in Catholic churches. It’s played by clapping the lid open and closed and beating the side of the box with a stick. The sound of the quijada de burro, the side of a dried-out donkey jawbone, is created...
- Return to Irish Roots Re-Energizes Fiddler

When fiddler Eileen Ivers wants to recharge her energy, she spends time at the cozy cottage that she and her husband built on her parents’ land in Ireland. Outside her front door are lush, green rolling hills and fields grazed by dozens of cows and donkeys. Long walks are part of her daily ritual. She also visits local pubs that offer musical entertainment. Occasionally she’s an audience member, but often she’s the center of attention.
“My parents had a hard life in Ireland,” said Ivers, who grew up in Bronx, N.Y., after her family immigrated to the U.S. “But we’re proud of our heritage....
- Blending Styles

Art that moves along a spectrum from completely abstract to sensitive portraits is being featured in two artists’ shows opening simultaneously today at LewAllen Contemporary on West Palace Avenue. The work of Sharon Booma and Bernard Chaet, stemming from different generations and different painting philosophies, nevertheless showcases the importance of basic talent and desire in art.
Awarded top prizes and sought by collectors, Booma’s complex abstract paintings seek a balance between chaos and order using color, texture and repetition of form. What she’s looking for is a state of...
- ‘Phenomenal’ Pianist To Play With Orchestra

Santa Fe Symphony Orchestra & Chorus general director Greg Heltman remembers how awestruck he felt when he first heard Spencer Myer play the piano.
“I had been invited to attend the finals at the American Pianists Association competition in 2006 in Indianapolis,” Heltman said. “Spencer Myer performed a solo recital. He played the Barber Piano Sonata. The only word I can use to describe his playing is phenomenal.”
Myer won one of two fellowships awarded at the competition, which included a $75,000 cash prize, a recording contract and performance dates. Heltman didn’t book Myer to play...
- Rhapsody in Black

James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues” navigates two sides of the African-American experience: assimilation versus life as a perpetual outcast.
The Bay Area’s Word for Word Performing Arts Company is bringing one of the author’s finest early works to Santa Fe. The performance opens at the Lensic Performing Arts Center at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 12.
Da’Mon Vann plays the title role in “Sonny’s Blues,” a tormented jazz pianist who has rejected a conventional life.
Sonny’s brother, a schoolteacher and family man, is the nameless narrator who provides the stage direction through the original...
- Stringdusters Bring Infamous Act Back

One of the better compliments bass player Travis Book heard recently came from a barista inside a hotel lobby.
Book, his band mates from The Infamous Stringdusters and other musicians were jamming inside a Tacoma, Wash., hotel’s hallways in preparation for a bluegrass festival there when their music caught the ear of a 27-year-old working behind a coffee bar.
He told the band that he dug the sounds that filled the lobby that day — quite a compliment from a young man who up until that point only had ears for hip-hop.
“He said that’s all he listened to,” said Book during a recent phone...
