A hero’s journey through fundamentalist Christianity, proletarian revolution, and the Internet’s invention to the ultimate spiritual question: What does it mean to “love your neighbor as yourself”?
Now in development, the musical combines old-time gospel, blues, rock, rap, contemporary musical theater, and full-on opera. The show is based on a forthcoming memoir by Andrew Himes.
I love this quote. It creates an irresistible tension between our present reality and the world of our imagination. We are compelled to resolve the tension through our own acts of courage and compassion.
Only a few months ago, I started voice lessons with Mark Power, a Seattle-area voice coach, composer, and a singer/performer in many operas and musicals. I knew little about Mark's personal background, but I gave him a copy of the book I published in 2011: The Sword of the Lord: The Roots of Fundamentalism in an American Family. My book tells the history of fundamentalism over the past two centuries, and connects that history with the history of my own family across the generations.
Kinyarwanda: Forgiveness is Freedom, a new movie from talented African American director Alrick Brown, is not a movie about genocide, though it is set in Rwandan during the 100 days in 1994 during which over 1,000,000 Tutsis were killed by Hutus in an internecine bloodbath.
Please donate to help create and produce the musical for the first time (we hope) by late spring, 2013.
Revival! is powered by Shunpike. Shunpike is the 501(c)(3) non-profit agency that fuels innovation in the arts by building productive partnerships, cultivating leadership and providing direct services to arts groups of all kinds. Learn more at shunpike.org. For donations above $1,000, send a check to the order of "Shunpike" with a note designating "for the support of Revival", addressed to Two Careys Productions, 4669 Eastern Ave. N., Seattle, WA 98103.