Entries categorized as ‘ericidle’

The Rumormill…

June 5, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Straight from our gossip hotline (310) 928-3159.

* Chris Lowry, Luminato’s Director of Programming will be DJing at The Drake at 9:30.

* Last night at Not the Messiash, Eric Idle was wearing a Luminato Festival tee-shirt! Way to go to show support, now someone get that man a fabulous Luminato hat too!

Please note some of these things come from anonymous tipsters, so double check before makin’ any major decisions based on these scoops!

Think you saw something someone else wants to know? Pass it on and who knows…if your tip is our tip of the day you might just win something cool!

Categories: ericidle · luminato · music · tipline

Not the Messiah, but close

June 3, 2007 · 3 Comments

Shannon Mercer probably has as much fun performing Not the Messiah, Eric Idle’s oratorio follow-up to Spamalot, as the audience has watching it.

“We haven’t stopped laughing since we started,” she said during an interview this weekend. “This is fun. This is funny.”

Mercer, a soprano, plays Brian’s love interest in the performance, a stage interpretation of The Life of Brian.

Christopher Seiber, who began his association with Idle playing Galahad in Spamalot, was ready to go on stage the moment he heard the show was even a possibility.

“After we opened Spamalot in Chicago, Eric said ‘I’ve got something for you,’” Seiber said. “I said, ‘It’s a definite yes.’” Hearing the first demo CD for Not the Messiah cemented the deal.

“We just couldn’t wait to get it in front of an audience,” Seiber said.

Monday, June 4 is the last night.

Categories: christopherseiber · comedy · ericidle · shannonmercer

The First 24 hours

June 3, 2007 · 1 Comment

Most of the world’s more prominent festivals, Edinburgh & its Fringe and Spoleto included, started out as very small seedlings. A few events tied together by a core idea conceived and produced with little more than a scribble on a napkin and a handshake, and nurtured by a few passionate visionaries and lots of luck.

After spending 24 hours here, it’s clear that can never be said of Luminato—even if its future size will eventually dwarf the first. This is a powerful creativity initiative driven less by the enthusiasm of a few visionaries, although it does not lack for them, than by the collective passion of a great many.

It shows in the amount of quality happenings: the number of contributions from established performers and artists is more characteristic of an event with a long history than a rookie.

Over the past 24 hours we have seen and done all of the following, and we still didn’t get to even 1/10 of what was on offer:

  • Eric Idle’s (of Monty Python fame) new  comedy,  Not the Messiah
  • A conversation between Philip Glass and Leonard Cohen
  • A robotic chair that, on its own with absolutely no human intervention, falls completely apart and then recreates itself by finding each individual piece
  • Luke & The Apostles and Sylvia Tyson, both part of the original ’67 Summer of Love Toronto music scene, singing some of the flashback favorites
  • A brilliant interpretation of Leonard Cohen’s poems and never before publicly viewed artwork by Philip Glass
  • Partied at the opening of the Daniel Libeskind-designed addition to Royal Ontario Museum, the Lee-Chin Crystal
  • Heard Chantal Kreviazuk  sing at a relatively intimate outdoor venue

Stay tuned as we post details and reviews of these events.

Categories: art · comedy · ericidle · leonardcohen · luminato · philipglass

Eric Idle: The Messiah of Comedy?

June 2, 2007 · Leave a Comment

It wasn’t an everyday performance of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. You could tell because people were clapping along.

Eric Idle was there, so the orchestra was playing the “Liberty Bell March,” the John Philip Sousa military march that Idle and his Monty Python co-conspirators appropriated as their theme song. This was the world premier of “Not the Messiah,” Idle and co-writer John Du Prez’s follow-up to “Spamalot” – fortunately, though, the Roy Thomson hall wasn’t decked out in Broadway-style set dressing. The concert hall kept its everyday woodwind-meets-giant-xylophone décor, with no accoutrements. It’s the performance that made the place seem different (and, indeed, the audience, some of whom were in tuxedos and evening gowns, others in jeans and Reeboks).

“Not the Messiah” was an oratorio, complete with orchestra, choir and soloists (including one other “Spamalot” alum). But the show doesn’t start out that way – Idle encouraged Peter Oundjian – the orchestra’s conductor and, oddly enough, his cousin – to play three short classical pieces before the intermission. It’s an effort, Idle said later, to combine classical music with popular comedy, increasing its accessibility to those of us who attended hoping for jokes about rear admirals and transsexual lumberjacks. The challenge isn’t lost on him.

“How hard is it?” he asks at the Luminato opening gala, beverage in hand. “Well, we’re following Elgar and Beethoven. Not too (expletive deleted) hard.”

Not too expletive-deleted hard at all, despite Idle’s sarcasm. Following the basic plot of Python’s film “The Life of Brian,” “Not the Messiah” opens on a deceptively apocalyptic note. Soon enough, though, it evolves into what we all want – endless jokes about history and sex, religion and the psychology of idiots. Nor does the music itself disappoint; Peppered with sly references to the classical and the baroque, it slips from apocalyptic to doo-wop with no effort, delving into gospel, klezmer, and one song about the People’s Front of Judea that sounds like Ennio Morricone went on a weekend bender with Stephen Sondheim and consequently developed a ridiculous sense of self-parody.

And all of that happens before the tartan-clad bagpipers show up.

From there it’s nonstop: Lots of flamboyant flourishes and finishes. Monty Python’s “Lumberjack Song” re-visted. Christopher Sieber (who played Gallahad in Spamalot) sings the praises of crucifixion. And the most singularly odd impression of Bob Dylan ever attempted in a symphony hall.

At the end, there are curtain calls. Many curtain calls. When asked how many there were, Idle later said he’d lost count.

“Not the Messiah” is playing at the Roy Thomson Hall Saturday, June 2 and Monday, June 4.

Categories: comedy · ericidle · luminato · theater