Showing posts with label 90049. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 90049. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Kids OFF The Couch: Houdini at the Skirball Cultural Center



Magic and Mystery from an Icon

There are figures in history for whom fascination never fades. Houdini sits high atop that list -- albeit, with shackles around his wrists! The famed magician and escape artist is such an icon of popular culture that when we saw photographs of him at Houdini: Art and Magic, a fabulous new show at the Skirball Cultural Center, we were shocked into remembering that he was actually a real person. Somehow, he always seemed like a figment of our collective imagination.

The show, which is the first to explore Houdini's life and legacy, includes the most wondrous of Houdini's props: a straightjacket, the Metamorphosis Trunk, the Milk Can that was part of his "greatest trick," and a faithful reproduction of The Water Torture Cell, one of the tanks into which he was padlocked and submerged. We stood before each object and imagined how cramped his body must have been in each vessel, and wondered what would make a man risk his life to perform such a feat. The colorful show is full of artifacts, such as never-before-seen personal diaries and photographs and a slew of contemporary art inspired by his antics. Grown-ups can pore over these rarities but kids will be more interested in footage of Houdini escaping from a straightjacket above Times Square, clips from his numerous silent films and Penn and Teller's hilarious send-up of the Water Torture Cell trick.

Best Houdini Facts: Houdini died on Halloween Day, 1926. His collection of books on magic was so extensive that his widow donated it to the Library of Congress after his death.

Best Houdini Feat: We could debate this forever, but no one would argue that Houdini was a master at marketing and self-promotion. Even if that were his most finely tuned skill, it's still incredible that he captured the imagination of the world, and continues to do so to this day. His humble origins and seemingly super-human ability to escape from bondage are thought to have represented a freedom from tyranny, an idea that captured the hearts of a generation of immigrants.

Accompanying Show: A side-bar to the Houdini show is Masters of Illusion: Jewish Magicians of the Golden Age, which is chock-full of magical toys and colorful circus-like posters that helped us understand how Houdini fit into a long history of magic. In ancient times, folks thought that magicians were practicing witchcraft. Houdini's mastery of his tricks helped popularize the skill of illusion, which led to the more modern view of magic as entertainment.

Programming Through the Summer: Check the Skirball's website for a complete listing of worthy lectures and screenings that expand upon the topic of Houdini, including strolling magicians on summer Sundays, and extensive family programing, including a Sleepover in July, and Presto Change-O, a day full of magic on Sunday, May 15 that includes a wonderful documentary called Make Believe.

Related Movies and Books for Adults: Houdini starred in several silent films, clips of which are on view in the exhibit and also on the big screen at the Skirball in July. (You can purchase them on DVD at the gift shop, too). A few interesting movies have been made about him, but none seems to have been able to truly capture the mystery that was the man. Notably, Tony Curtis played Houdini in 1953, and the esteemed director Gillian Armstrong made a film called Death Defying Acts in 2008 starring Guy Pearce and Catherine Zeta-Jones. Fiction seems to have captured the magician's aura much better, at least for our taste. We loved all three of these books, and think the trio would make an excellent summer reading list: Ragtime: A Novel by E.L. Doctorow,Carter Beats the Devil by Glen David Gold, and The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon.

Both shows will be at the Skirball Cultural Center through Labor Day weekend, so be sure to catch them before they... disappear!

Kids Off The Couch

If you like what we do, please tell a friend to sign up! info@kidsoffthecouch.com

www.kidsoffthecouch.com

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Kids Off The Couch - What's On Our September Radar Screen!



Labor Day and Beyond

Bananagrams Giveaway for best "My Perfect Summer Moment" entry

Our kids started school this week, and already Monday feels like it was 100 years ago. You know, back when we were lazing around doing last minute errands? Now it's all about backpacks, lunchboxes and homework. Our antidote? Spend Labor Day weekend doing things we'd do in mid-July -- go to a county fair, enjoy some beach food and catch the latest movie.

Labor Day Weekend: The LA County Fair opens this weekend and runs until October 3 with rides, horse races, concerts and the Body Works show. A new street festival popped up: theFYF2010 on Saturday (9/4) takes place downtown and has a cool lineup of musicians and comedians; free for kids under 10. Check out the Descanso Garden's Boddy's Big Backyard, with activities for little kids throughout Monday (9/6). Got a babysitter and nothing to do? Check out Los Angeles Plays Itself, a 2004 documentary about the discrepancies between the LA presented in movies and our city in reality. This film is not on DVD, so get to the Aero on Saturday and Sunday (9/4 and 9/5) at 7:30 PM. Chow down at two big food festivals this weekend: Taste of Beverly Hills runs all weekend, and the Los Angeles Times Celebration of Food and Wine takes place at Paramount Studios on Sunday (9/5).

Eat Like it's mid-July: The SLS restaurant group has taken over Gladstone's Malibuso drop in and see if the tourists take you for a native. For an endless summer vibe, get yourself toParadise Cove Beach Cafe (good take out, too). Pretend you're still in Maine at the Long Beach Lobster Festival on September 10-12. Our favorite sand-in-the-toes dining takes place at Back On the Beach Cafe, right in Santa Monica.

Spiffy Coastline: Keep our beaches swim-worthy and help your kids find a meaningful community service activity by participating in Heal the Bay's annual Coastal Clean-Up Day, this year on September 25. The organization rates our local beaches and runs regional clean-ups regularly; registration required.

90049 Residents Take Note: A wonderful community food-and-shopping event called FIRST TUESDAY debuts in Brentwood Village next Tuesday night (9/7). Local shops (such as Ruby Slippers and Star Toys for kids, and Habit and Jennifer Knits for moms) will stay open late and offer special deals to customers. At last, it will be easy to find some of your fave food trucks such as Don Chow Tacos, Komodo, Ahnjoo, World Fare and Coolhaus, all of which will hang around to feed shoppers if they flag. At Barrington and Sunset, from 5:00-8:00 PM.

Peel! Keep a set of Bananagrams on the coffee table to keep that lazy summer afternoon mood alive -- don't tell, but the infectious game is a great vocab booster for any age group. We are giving away a DOUBLE BANANAGRAMS to a KOTC subscriber who best describes a Perfect Summer Moment with their family. Click here and send us your story.

A Great Month at the Movies: It's a good month for date night films: just open is George Clooney's thriller, The American. An excellent (and eerie) novel by Kazuo Ishiguru's, Never Let Me Go has been turned into a film starring Keira Knightly and Carey Mulligan (9/15). We're very curious about the one children's movie on the horizon - you've seen the owl trailers for Legend of the Guardians, (9/24) based on the books by Kathryn Lasky and produced by the folks who brought you Happy Feet. For a guilty pleasure - rent the original Wall Street to get ready for the new Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps starring Michael Douglas, Carrie Mulligan and Shia LeBoeuf (9/24).Waiting for Superman (9/24) aims to do for the public education system whatAn Inconvenient Truth did for climate change: shake things up!

Secrets to Success: The biggest shock about moving from summer to school is that trusty alarm clock gets put into heavy use again and the scheduled week takes over from unstructured time. Current research suggests that both sleep and day dreaming are important factors in learning and the creation of self. For more on why sleep and day dreaming are key ingredients for your kids success in life (and justification for ranting about their screen time) read Po Bronson on the subject of sleep in his book,NurtureShock: New Thinking about Children and click here for the recent Los Angeles Times story on the benefits of zoning out.

Reality Check: Face it, you're going to have to be organized to survive the school year so click here for a free download of these super cool Organization Cheat Sheetsfrom our friends at MommyTrack'd.

Kids Off The Couch

If you like what we do, please tell a friend to sign up! info@kidsoffthecouch.com

www.kidsoffthecouch.com