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Performance Listings

For the week of Wednesday July 2nd thru Tuesday July 8th


STAGE BY Ben Waterhouse, CLASSICAL ETC. BY Brett Campbell, DANCE BY Kelly Clarke (kclarke@wweek.com, send events to dance@wweek.com).

To be considered for listings, send information at least two weeks in advance to:

    Performance, c/o Willamette Week
    2220 NW Quimby, Portland, OR 97210.
    Phone: 503 243-2122. Fax: 503 243-1115.


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STAGE

Israel @ 60 Onstage!

[READINGS] A series of three staged readings of plays by contemporary Israeli playwrights, presented in conjunction with a summer course by Portland State University's Judaic Studies program. Shmuel Hasfari's Master of the House July 1, Roni Pinkovich's Tea July 8 and Motti Lerner's Pangs of the Messiah July 15. Lincoln Hall, Portland State University, 1620 SW Park Ave., 810-5408. 7 pm Tuesdays, July 1-15. $8 suggested donation. Map

WW PickJAW 2008

Portland Center Stage's annual playwrights festival kicks off with three readings of local work: Matt Zrebski's The Cloud Bangers, a meteorological romance, on July 8; Ginny Foster's Starvation Heights, a turn-of-the-century mystery about a deadly sanitarium, on July 9; and Hunt Holman's Willow Jade, a midlife crisis farce of rock 'n' roll and D&D, on July 10. Gerding Theater, 128 NW 11th Ave., 445-3700. 7:30 pm Tuesday-Thursday, July 8-10. Free. Map

WW PickLes Misérables

[SOLD OUT] Broadway Rose, Tigard’s accomplished but modestly funded summer musical theater company takes on Claude-Michel Schönberg’s record-smashing musical and delivers the sort of unforgettable evening of theater we’re lucky to experience once a season. Douglas Webster (Jean Valjean) sings with tremendous strength and passion; Leif Norby brings a tragic empathy to the role of Javert, saving the totalitarian policeman from being just a stern voice in a succession of ridiculous hats; the ensemble numbers are sharply directed and deeply affecting; and Darius Pierce and Lori Paschall as the ghoulish Mr. and Mrs. Thénardier are grossly hilarious. BEN WATERHOUSE. Deb Fennell Auditorium, 9000 SW Durham Road, Tigard., 620-5262. 8 pm Wednesdays-Saturdays, 2 pm Sundays. Closes July 20. $20-$30. Map

New Believers

The sequel to Fever Theatre’s iffy January workshop piece is a big step forward for the company, which has learned to temper its passion for experience creation with a sense of humor. But while there’s plenty to enjoy in this wide-ranging exploration of belief, in which audience members may be fed strawberries or have their feet bathed by an oiled-up acolyte, it’s hard to shake the impression that it’s a show about religion crafted by people with no religious upbringing. But I could be wrong. BEN WATERHOUSE. Oregon Casket Building, 403 NW 5th Ave., 381-6814. 8 pm Thursdays-Saturdays. No show July 4. Closes July 5. $10-$15. Map

The Paul Goebel Show Live!

Bridgetown Comedy brings the self-styled "King of TV" to town, along with Graham Elwood, Jim Bruce and Brian McNett. Berbati's Pan, 231 SW Ankeny St., bridgetowncomedyfestival.com. 9 pm Wednesday, July 2. $10. 21+. Map

Puppetstock

A summerlong series of family-friendly puppet theater, hosted by Moxie RX. Performers include the Dim Sum Puppet Opera Company (Aug. 28) and Penny's Puppet Productions and Mudeye Puppet Company (Aug. 29). Moxie Rx, North Mississippi Avenue and Shaver Street., 285-0701. 8 pm Thursday, Aug. 28. 10 am Friday, Aug. 29. $5, $3 children. All ages. Map

Razzle Dazzle Die!

[DINNER THEATER] Interactive murder-mystery musical dinner theater. Food by Timothy Fuhrman, murder by Eddie May. Pine Street Bistro, 221 SW Pine St., 524-4366. 7:30-9:30 pm Fridays-Saturdays. $69 per person. Map

The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

Portland Actors Ensemble kicks off its summer season of free Shakespeare al fresco with the most accessible of the Roman plays. Washington Park Lewis & Clark Memorial, Southwest Park Place and Lewis and Clark Circle., 7:30 pm Thursdays-Saturdays. Closes July 19. Free. Map

WW PickUbu Lives!

The final installment of End of the Pavement, Pavement Productions' "Micro New Works Festival," is an anthology of eight short plays about Albert Jerry's character Ubu Roi by playwrights from across the country. The Back Door Theater, 4319 SE Hawthorne Blvd., 8 pm Saturday, July 5. Pay-what-you-will. Map


CLASSICAL

Bach Cantata Vespers

This year’s series concludes with one of the best-loved of all Bach’s works, the cantatas Heart and Mouth and Deed and Life (#147, the one with “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring”) and another brand new work commissioned for the occasion, this one by young composer Joel Morris. The St. James Bach Cantata Choir is joined by professional instrumentalists (organ, oboe, trumpet, strings). BRETT CAMPBELL. St. James Lutheran Church, 1315 SW Park Ave., 227-2439. 5 pm Sunday, July 6. Freewill offering. Map

WW PickChamber Music Northwest

What better way to express your patriotism than to celebrate 20th and 21st century American composers? On Thursday and Friday the world’s finest young cellist, Matt Haimovitz, plays a kaleidoscopic solo tribute to Buenos Aires and tango singer Carlos Gardel by the world’s finest younger composer, Boston’s Osvaldo Golijov, then joins a squadron of fellow celli in Villa Lobos’ ethereal-to-exuberant greatest hit, Bachiana Brasileira No. 5 for eight cellos and soprano. The show also features some of the world’s finest musicians in works by Golijov’s fellow Argentine master, the late Astor Piazzolla; Samuel Barber’s searing String Quartet (with its inescapable Adagio, in its less syrupy original version); An American in Paris (in Gershwin’s original arrangement for a pair of pianos), and the world premiere of award-winning twentysomething composer Sheridan Seyfried’s Then Velvet Dark for piano quartet, inspired by Carl Sandburg's poem “Fourth of July Night.” CMNW’s July 7-8 shows honor 2007 Grammy-award winner Joan Tower’s 70th birthday year with the West Coast premiere of her four-movement “A Gift” (commissioned by Portlander Paul King) for piano and winds, plus Mozart’s big Divertimento for Two Horns and Strings, brimming with memorable, danceable tunes, and a Rossini trifle. BRETT CAMPBELL. Kaul Auditorium at Reed College, 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd., 294-6400. Americas: 8 pm Thursday and 7:30 pm Friday, July 3-4. Tower/Mozart: 8 pm Monday, July 7 at Kaul Auditorium and Tuesday, July 8 at Catlin Gabel School, 8825 SW Barnes Road. $10-$43. Map

Mark O'Connor Quartet

CMNW brings the Seattle-born fiddle phenom back to the Northwest with Matt Haimovitz, violinist Ida Kavafian and violist Paul Neubauer in his own “Bluegrass” quartet and more. BRETT CAMPBELL. Kaul Auditorium at Reed College, 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd., 294-6400. 8 pm Saturday, July 5. $10-$43. Map

WW PickOregon Bach Festival

The best reason to drive to Eugene this summer is the Shanghai Quartet’s appearances at the OBF. On Saturday, they join a quartet of festival regulars in Mendelssohn’s astonishingly precocious Octet and sextets by Richard Strauss and Brahms. On Monday, the group plays Barber’s String Quartet (in case you miss it at Chamber Music Northwest), arrangements of traditional and popular Chinese songs, and that most sublime of 20th century chamber works, Maurice Ravel’s String Quartet. More French fare follows Tuesday when the quartet and Festival star guest musicians play a pair of breezily brilliant 20th century works: Francis Poulenc’s wistful and witty Sextet for Piano and Winds and his friend Darius Milhaud’s nostalgic film score, The Chimney of King René; brief baubles by Saint-Saëns and Ibert; and two of the most beautiful works of the last century, both graced by harp: Claude Debussy’s magical Sacred and Secular Dances, and Ravel’s shimmering Introduction and Allegro. BRETT CAMPBELL. Hult Center for the Performing Arts, One Eugene Center, Eugene., 800-457-1486. Octets/Sextets: 7:30 pm Saturday, July 5. Barber/Ravel: 7:30 pm Monday, July 7. French Feast: 7:30 pm Tuesday, July 8. $29-$45. Map

WW PickVancouver Chinese Music Ensemble

Canada’s most esteemed Chinese music group opens the Chinese Garden’s summer series with classical (both Chinese and Western) and contemporary music for erhu (violin), dizi (flute), pipa (lute), yangqin (hammered dulcimer), zheng (harp) and ruan (guitar), sometimes leaning a bit to the sweeter side to entice non-ethnomusicological Western listeners. It's a chance to hear some of the world's most alluring music in one of the country's most enchanting settings. Food and libations are available. BRETT CAMPBELL. Portland Classical Chinese Garden, Northwest 3rd Avenue and Everett Street., 228-8131 ext. 2001. 7:30 pm Tuesday, July 8. $18-$22. 21+. Map


DANCE

Events

Culture
Alu, Take Two
BY LIZ CRAIN | Same name, better game.
2 comments
[Dish]
Thanksgiving For Lazy People
BY KATE WILLIAMS | They roast, baste, bake and clean up this holiday so you don’t have to.
0 comments
Headout
COLUMNS:
Clublist SpotlightA Better ’Stache
Headout PicksFree Radical
Sparkle And Fade
BY MICHAEL MANNHEIMER, CASEY JARMAN | The rise and fall of Everclear and The Cherry Poppin’ Daddies.
0 comments
Primer: Girls
BY MICHAEL MANNHEIMER
0 comments
Meth Teeth Sunday, Nov. 22
BY MATTHEW SINGER | Making the best of this bummer called life.
0 comments
CD Reviews: MarchFourth Marching Band, Curious Hands
WW EDITORIAL STAFF
0 comments
The Blind Side
BY ALISTAIR ROCKOFF | Sandra Bullock makes an offensive tackle.
3 comments
China Design Now Portland Art Museum
BY RICHARD SPEER | PAM’s new show unwittingly plays into the worst stereotypes of Communist China.
1 comment
Paul Mccartney: A Life Peter Ames Carlin
BY MICHAEL MANNHEIMER | A McCartney bio takes superfans a step beyond the Beatles.
0 comments
[Screen]
Big Trouble
BY AARON MESH | Precious is a raw story of survival. But it forgets the survivor.
1 comment


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