Friday, 12 February 2016

The latest book I have read ...



George Orwell's 1937 non-fiction book The road to Wigan Pier whose first part chronicles his experience among the miners' lives in the Northern part of England with its second part more of an essay approach on Socialism has left me astounded, not only because of the relevance many of the issues raised still resonate today but mostly because of the insightful, detailed, compassionate and direct way in which he addresses them.
 
 
I regret not having acknowledged his brilliancy when I was at University, possibly because I was too young to fully understand the context and strength of his words, though I recognise it is never too late to further explore what one wasn't able to at a younger age.
 
 







" A searing account of George Orwell's experiences of workingclass life in the bleak industrial heartlands of Yorkshire and Lancashire, The road to Wigan Pier is a brilliant and bitter polemic that lost none of its political impact over time. His graphically unforgettable descriptions of social injustice, slum housing, mining conditions, squalor, hunger and growing unemployment are written with unblinking honesty, fury and great humanity."







 

Wednesday, 10 February 2016

On the latest film I have watched ...


"Right now, wrong then" by Hong Sang-soo, which has been awarded two rather distinct prizes at both the 9th Asia Pacific Screen in Brisbane (best actor) and the Locarno Film Festival in Switzerland (the Golden Leopard), exceeded all my expectations and had me  pondering on the details one is sometimes unconsciously unaware of and which may eventually and in many cases ultimately dictate the different outcomes and decision taking in or within a given scenario. 






















I felt the way this South Korean film was presented was rather ingenious and clever in a fairly simple way - the same romantic scenario setting played out twice  with markedly different results. The first part being actually called "Right then, wrong now" as opposed to the second part which is the title of the film  "Right now, wrong then."











The two main actors were outstanding in their performances, with Jung Jae-Young having been awarded  a prize for best actor. The role he plays in the film requires quite a few deep expressions and behavioural attitudes, which are rather difficult to convey but which he masters in absolute perfection.  The degree of intimacy created by the film producer and the photography director  can't help but take the audience into the scenario setting as if we were the ones being exposed.
 





"Watching a man yearn for a woman isn't the defining characteristic of the film; it's the many intersections and little differences at play that will find Right now, wrong then a place in narrative studies courses."






 



 
 
 
 

Wednesday, 3 February 2016

Shopping for the children of Calheta ...


I have gone shopping for the children of Calheta, namely for those children, whose "godparents" either live out of continental Portugal or trust me with the sellecting of their presents. What seems to always get me down is not so much walking in and out of shops which are on sales so as not to spend too much but the fact that there is a group of "recurrent" godparents who simply don't care.


The fact that I've been doing this for over six years hasn't diminished my committment and whenever I go shopping I always seem to carry the image of certain (not to say most) children in the back of my mind ... the way they were when I first met them and the growing confidence and self-esteem they have been developing since they have realised and actually felt someone somewhere thought and cared about them. It's much more than the provision for the school needs and the little presents (although many of them had never had any or many ...).



















Ivanilde Elena in October 2014 (left) and when I met her in 2010.



















Rosana in 2010 (left) and when I handed her the presents and the godmother's letter in October 2014. 




Happiness and dreams come in small doses ... but maybe the happiness one gets by thinking about others' happiness is what really counts ...

















Presents for Silvana (left) and Ivanilde Elena (right).




















Presents for Patrick (left) and Eduardo (right).




















An additional present for Herber (left) and presents for Ismael (right).
















Presents for Artemisa (left) and Nolita (right)




I am still far from having everything ready before the trip in one and a half month's time but I am happy with  what I have managed to organise so far. Wish I could get more "godparents" involved in this process, not to mention in the actual travelling there with me. 

My regular travelling companion and "godmother" to one local girl, Marie Hélène has just become a mother herself and will possibly not fly there with me for a while, yet on the other hand Noëlle will be going there with me for the second consecutive time.




We are looking forward to setting foot in Calheta soon ... because we know how important it is for the local children ... as well as for us ...













Tuesday, 2 February 2016

The latest book I have read ...



"No one cares about talent. Mediocrity is easier to deal with, and less trouble." - Sergey Prokofiev's diaries 




This was one of the first sentences I was drawn to during the reading of this incredibly well written biographical book on Sergey Prokofiev (Sergey Prokofiev by Daniel Jaffé), whose life I knew very little about, with the exception of maybe a few aspects related to his musical works.
 
In a rather naive type of approach on my part I had imagined someone with his talent  and musical virtuosity would have gone through life without too many difficulties, being solely dependant on and acknowledged by what he had to offer audiences and in no way had I ever thought the political events would have forced him to shape his career and in a rather direct way suffer despite the admiration and support of key figures.
 
His notoriety came with a price and so did his return to the USSR in his final years. Prokofiev's life was particularly rich and Daniel Jaffé's biograpphy is more than a mere compehensive approach to who Prokofiev really was, once it covers his circle of friends and the women who played an important role in his life.  

 
 
"All attempts to play down to the listener not only inherently underestimate his cultural maturity and the development of his taste - they also contain an element of insincerity. And music that is insincere cannot endure."














































There are plenty of black and white photographs of Prokofiev in the various stages and important moments of his life in this book, and despite being too detailed (musically speaking) at times it does nevertheless provide readers with a thorough intimate portrait of such an outstanding character that goes well beyond the simple composer.
 
 
It has taken me longer to read it than I had initially expected it would but it' s been more than worth it in as much as apart from his personal life it made me ponder on a lot of other aspects that still resonate today as far as creativity and being oneself are concerned.















 

Friday, 29 January 2016

National Theatre Live transmission of Les Liaisons dangereuses by Christopher Hampton at El Corte Inglês Cinema, Lisboa - The 28th of January 2016


Considered a brilliantly revived adaptation of the classical French epistolary novel by Choderlos de Laclos Les Liaisons Dangereuses exceeded my expectations not only because of Christopher Hampton's witty approach, the whole decor but most of all  due to the brilliant interpretation of Janet McTeer in the role of Marquise de Merteuil, Dominic West as Vicomte de Valmont and Elaine Cassidy as Madame de Tourvel.


Other characters, such as the waiter and the young Cecile de Voslanges, whose acting roles were not as "vibrant" as the three main characters in the overall play were equally played with a remarkable distinctiveness by Theo Barklem-Biggs and Jennifer Saayeng.























I couldn't have possibly spent three hours in "better company". Despite the fact that  Choderlos de Laclos' novel dates back to 1782 the games of seduction, revenge, power and the fragile aspects or strengths in relationships still resonate today with slightly different contours, bearing in mind the epoch they are associated to  in the play -  a Pre-revolutionary France.


Directed by Josie Rourke to mark the play's thirty year anniversary Liaisons Dangereuses has won the Evening Standard awards for best play, which doesn't surprise me at all ... what did surprise me though (and maybe it shouldn't) was the fact that there were only twenty one people (apart from my daughter and I) watching this Live transmission ... in a room prepared to welcome many more guests.


I'd better not say what I feel about the Portuguese Theatre public (or absence of it) as it would sound rather presumptuous on my part but I wish people were more culture oriented and attended these venues as much as they attend shopping malls (el Corte Inglês was crowded) because they 'd realise what they really missed (in this case just around the corner ...)


























"Theatre at its most seductive and sinister" - The Evening Standard.


"One of the best stage adaptations ever written." - The Observer.












Wednesday, 27 January 2016

' Graphic representation of a play ... or just "may" ...


The more I look at these latest sketches made and photos taken at a theatrical play my daughter participated in the prouder I feel of her and what she stands for. Being an artist in a country like ours comes with a price ... and what a high price it is ...

 
The unquestionable love of performing arts and the recognition of the public is virtually all most artists have apart from the struggle to physically and emotionally survive, so as to bring their art forth ...  























 
 
 
 
May creativity live on (with or without "higher" recognition) ...

 May "real" artists be praised wherever they are ...
 
May artists go on for the sake of the few who need their art ... (sometimes as much as they themselves do) ... 
 
May ...

May ...








 

The latest film I have seen ...


Being an epic Western adventure type film The Revenant  would not necessarily be among my personal choices as far as films are concerned, yet the fact that it was inspired by the experiences of a frontiersman and a fur trapper in 1823 together with having received worldwide appraisal led me to go and see it at a local Cinema, more out of curiosity than any special willingness to do so. 
 
 
 
 




I must be honest and say I felt it was too visceral and raw for my personal taste though I must equally confess the interpretations by Leonardo Di Caprio and Tom Hardy were rather impressive and Emmanuel Lubezki's cinematography worth being praised.






 
 
 
 
 
 
 
"(...) alone amid the empty, unforgiving expanse of nature is The Revenant able to achieve what it truly aspires to be: a contemplative exploration on the human will to survive." - Jason McKiernan