Showing posts with label sherlock holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sherlock holmes. Show all posts

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Holmes for the holidays

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What: The International Exhibition of Sherlock Holmes
When: Through January 4, 2015
Where: The St. Louis Science Center

Well, we finally got around to seeing the The International Exhibition of Sherlock Holmes at the Saint Louis Science Center this afternoon and I'm glad we did. The reasons why are (ahem) elementary.

The reconstruction of Holmes' sitting room at 221b is worth the price of admission all by itself, but you also get to use clue books to solve a mystery that Lestrade, in typical fashion, has bungled. Using a series of interactive exhibits, you use your powers of observation and deduction to ferret out the truth. Just make sure you allow a good two hours to go through it all (especially if, like me, you get confused by the toxicology clues..).

Dr. Joseph Bell
The model for Holmes
It's a fun way to practice the skills that made Holmes the world's foremost consulting detective. Fun for the whole family, in fact, judging from the number of families in attendance.

It's also educational, with lots of fascinating background on Holmes, his creator Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and the real-life characters who inspired Doyle to create the Great Detective. That includes, most prominently, Dr. Joseph Bell, one of Doyle's teachers when he was attending medical school in Edinburgh. Not only was Bell's prowess in deducing the illnesses of patients using observation and deduction the model from Holmes' mental process, but Bell himself bore a remarkable resemblance to the way Holmes is described in the stories as well.

The International Exhibition of Sherlock Holmes runs through January 4 the St. Louis Science Center on Oakland. Check it out, and don't forget to browse through the gift shop on the way out; there might be something there for the Sherlockian on your Christmas list.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Chuck's Choices for the weekend of January 10, 2014

As always, the choices are purely my personal opinion. Take with a grain (or a shaker) of salt.

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New this week:

James Joseph O'Neil as Elliot and
Rachael Jenison as Grace
©Photo by Jerry Naunheim, Jr.
The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis presents Michael Hollinger's Opus through February 2. "With only four days to rehearse for their most important performance ever, a world-class string quartet takes a chance by hiring a gifted but inexperienced young woman. Onstage the Lazara Quartet is pitch perfect but behind the scenes they're coming unstrung as the four artists battle the sweat, tears and pain that go into making extraordinary music seem effortless. This fascinating play is a passionate look at the delicate and complex relationships between artists' lives and their art." Performances take place at the Loretto-Hlton Center, 130 Edgar Road in Webster Groves, MO. For more information, call 314-968-4925 or visit repstl.org.

My take: I'm on the board of West End Players Guild, the group that did the St. Louis premiere of this play last April. I was a big backer of Opus in the WEPG play reading committee and remain a fan of this funny, literate, dramatic, and informed look at the often less than beautiful reality behind the performance of so much beautiful music. It's easy to be transported by (say) a late Beethoven quartet and lose sight of the fact that the performers are doing their jobs as well as creating art. Opus explores what happens when the worlds of commerce and art collide.

Mariposa Artists presents Shades of Blue—Lina Koutrakos, on Saturday, January 11th, at 8 PM. "Mixing pop, standards, originals and more with Rick Jensen at the piano and on arrangements, Lina Koutrakos's bluesy-hued voice lends itself to stories, melodies and feelings in Shades Of Blue." The performance takes place at the Kranzberg Center, 501 North Grand in Grand Center. For more information: www.brownpapertickets.com/event/530853.

My take: As someone who attended the St. Louis Cabaret Conference for (if I recall correctly) all of the years when Ms. Koutrakos was on the faculty, I'm clearly not a disinterested party here. That said, it was impossible not to be impressed by the depth of her emotional connection with the music she performs as well as her understanding of how to make that connection click with an audience. Her music director, Rick Jensen, is a powerful performer and songwriter as well as a gifted arranger. Although New York based, he has helped shape the cabaret shows on several local singers.

First Run Theatre presents Whatever Remains, a new Sherlock Holmes mystery by Jason Slavik, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 PM and Sundays at 2 PM, January 10-19. Performances take place at First Run Theatre at De Smet Jesuit High School Theatre, 233 N. New Ballas Rd. For more information, call (314) 352-5114 or visit www.firstruntheatre.com.

My take: I admit it; I'm a Sherlock Holmes fan (a Sherlockian, as we call ourselves) and have been for a long time. You'll even find some Sherlockian papers that I've written over the years at my old personal home page (now mostly abandoned). I don't know whether I'm gong to be able to see this or not (the next two weekends are pretty heavily booked for me), but I look forward to at least finding out what it's about. For those of you curious about the title, it comes from something Holmes says in "The Sign of Four": "How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?" He repeats that point in "The Beryl Coronet," "The Bruce-Partington Plans," and "The Blanched Solider" (and says something very similar in "Silver Blaze") so it's a safe bet he meant it. The dictum even inspired one of my own Sherlockian essays.  What does Jason Slavik mean by it? We'll just have to see, won't we?

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

TPTBT (The Place to Be Tonight): Wednesday, March 6

Wonder Woman's
latest incarnation
Two different events this time.  You could easily do both.

What: WONDER WOMEN! The Untold Story of American Superheroines
Where: The Lee Auditorium at The Missouri History Museum
When: 6 PM
Why: I haven't seen the film, but the title alone is enough to recommend it, at least for an old comic-book fan like yours truly. The evening starts at 6 with hands-on activities and photo booth, followed by the film at 7. The film is a "look at how popular representations of powerful women often reflect society’s anxieties about women’s liberation" and is followed by a panel discussion. For more information: info at mohistory.org.

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Sidney Paget's Holmes
What: A Study in Sherlock book discussion
Where: St. Louis Public Library Central Branch Book Club Room
When: 4:30-5:30 PM
Why: Not only am I an old comic-book fan, I'm also a vintage Sherlockian who has read the Holmesian Canon more times than I can count.  The discussion includes background information on Conan Doyle (a.k.a. "The Literary Agent" to Sherlockians, who know that Dr. Watson really wrote all those stories and novels) and context for the Victorian Era.  For more information: 314-539-0370