Notes on the Arts by Marilyn Rowland

Notes on the Arts by Marilyn Rowland

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Archive for the ‘travel’ Category

Washington, DC

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

We didn’t really stop in Washington DC, where I went to college and lived for seven years, and where entertainment abounds: both the art-music-theater-dance sort and the political kind. Instead we visited my niece in Bethesda and an old friend in Reston, and found time to talk about the arts.

Laura, my niece, has a fellowship at the National Institutes of Health, and she was studying for medical school exams the week we came. Nevertheless, she found time to meet us at Starbucks (so ubiquitous in the Atlanta area, my daughter said, that she was excited to find a rare Dunkin’ Donuts). Laura is also a fine violinist, and we compared notes on our recent orchestra experiences.

We went out to dinner with JoAnn, whom I met on my first job, long, long ago. She is now a teacher of gifted and talented students and an enthusiastic actor in community theater. She had just finished a run of “The Full Monty,” in which she played the piano accompaniest. She loved the the role because it gave her an opportunity to be funny, which is what she enjoys most, and to sing a couple of good songs.

She said some things about the theater that I found interesting: that most actors were basically shy and theater gives them an opportunity to interact with others in a scripted way, never having to grope for words or wonder how to carry on a conversation (unless you forget your lines.) I had never thought of theater that way.

She was critical of local reviewers who, she said, spend too much space summarizing a play, rather than reviewing. I had heard this criticism of theater reviewers, and have tried to minimize such summaries myself, while still providing a sense of what the play is about. I do think that reviewers should be writing for potential audiences, not for theater people, but it can be helpful for reviewers to have their reviews reviewed by those we review.

Before leaving Washington the next day, we toured American University, where I received a BA in international relations from the School of International Service. None of that frivolous arts and music stuff for me back then.

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The School of International Service on the left, and construction underway for the new building, on the right.

Falmouth, VA

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

On the second day of our trip, we passed through Falmouth, Virginia, which is adjacent to Fredericksburg, known for its Civil War battlefields and historic sites. According to the National Park Service, “more than 85,000 men wounded [here]; 15,000 killed. No place more vividly reflects the Civil War’s tragic cost, in all its forms.”

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In Falmouth is a house named the Chatham Manor, part of the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania County Battlefields Memorial. It is on Chatham Lane. Intrigued by the names, we decided to take a look at the Chatham mansion. Unfortunately, we did not have time to tour the building and grounds, since we had people to meet in the Washington DC area an hour north.

We did drive around the estate, though, on a narrow, unpaved road that twisted around a hill and through the green and flowering trees. Such a lovely, peaceful setting to reflect on the slaughter of the Civil War.

Greenville, South Carolina

Monday, April 20th, 2009

We stopped in Greenville, South Carolina, yesterday.

It has a very charming, revitalized downtown area, and the newspapegreenvillestreet.jpgr office is directly across the street from two theaters, where Broadway shows are playing, and just a block from the symphony (Yo-Yo Ma will be playing there on May 6). What fun for an arts & entertainment editor!

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There is also a little river running through the town, with a wonderful park and pedestrian bridge overlooking the waterfall. It’s beautiful, restful, and full of flowers.

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Greenville–a very entertaining place!

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