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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Tone Madison
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230105T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230105T233000
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230101T214225Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230101T214647Z
UID:16607-1672948800-1672961400@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Sex Ed Disco Dance Party at Crucible
DESCRIPTION:A cropped version of Sruti Mohan and Elliot Jewell’s very late ’70s-designed event flyer with a prominent disco ball and rainbow. \nThe first couple weeks of the new year after the holidays can often feel muted\, introspective\, and distinctively less cheery by comparison. But consider the colorful cure for those midwinter blues at the Crucible’s Sex Ed Disco Dance Party this Thursday night\, which unites a number of Madison creatives in a fundraiser for a new\, vital documentary by videographer and filmmaker Gracie K Wallner. \nSince last year\, Wallner (Winter Is Alive\, Blood Runs Out) has been assembling a work that champions queer and inclusive sex education in our community. Not only have they gathered friends to help spread the word\, including Docx\, French Jessica\, as well as DJs Sarah Akawa\, Avalon\, and Coop there it is\, but also arranged for this event to offer safe sex supplies (courtesy of OutReach LGBTQ+ Community Center)\, paper resources\, themed cookies (confections by Blue Bedroom Records founder Cam Davis)\, and even a runway costume contest. \nWhile the doc is still in production\, it features LGBTQ+ AODA Advocate Linda Lenzke and many other active members specific to the Madison community\, including educators\, therapists\, and historians\, who shed a light on the hidden history\, changing landscape\, and universal need for queer sex education. \nAcknowledging the superlative character of Wallner’s past work\, which has oscillated between narrative and documentary modes\, their current project will undoubtedly carry a similarly sophisticated visual style and conscientious eye. Funds raised at this groovy 18+ danceathon will support all of Wallner’s efforts with interviews\, clearing image copyrights\, and commissioning original artwork. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/sex-ed-disco-dance-party-at-crucible/
LOCATION:Crucible\, 3116 Commercial Avenue\, Madison\, WI\, 53714\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125116/sexeddisco-tonehed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230106T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230106T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230101T220353Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230103T011845Z
UID:16608-1673035200-1673038800@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Ghost Wars at MMSD Planetarium
DESCRIPTION:A mockup by Thomas Ferrella from “Ghost Wars\,” featuring a US dollar scorched in bright red and etched with atom bomb symbols over its Federal Reserve seals. \nEach winter seems to facilitate a new live multimedia collaboration between video artist and cinematographer Aaron Granat and multi-hyphenate BlueStem Jazz curator and co-founder Thomas Ferrella. From Mindstorm at the Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) Planetarium in March 2020 to Shadowlands at Garver Feed Mill in February 2021\, the two have been concocting psychedelic whirlwinds of ecstatic digital visuals and and jazz-inspired electroacoustic soundscapes (led by Ferrella’s “sonic frontiers collective” You Of All People). \nTheir newest project\, Ghost Wars\, premiered at Gallery Marzen in May 2022\, but now returns to the MMSD Planetarium here\, on the nights of January 6 and 7 (both starting at 8 p.m.)\, with a decidedly incendiary political angle. If Shadowlands (part of the Winter Is Alive cooler world carnival of 2021) delved into changing wetland ecosystems in both the abstract and on vividly literal terms\, Ghost Wars pushes boundaries further in its rippling raze of the personal and public desolations of late capitalism and endless war. Its imagery\, crafted or shot by Ferrella and manipulated by Granat in real time\, draws upon familiar totems and symbols (Ferrella’s art prints\, for one) to metamorphose a tapestry of American avarice and strife. As evidenced in a short preview below\, some of the stark visual components permeating the frame involve the atom bomb-etched American dollar bills sewn into the national flag. \nAlong with You Of All People’s extended technique and effects-laden spoken word providing the melodies and textures to this live brew under the Planetarium dome\, Granat and Ferrella have enlisted other local allies to enhance the breadth of the live spectacle—including Kit Caldwell (costume design)\, Ian Van D. (sculptural performance)\, and Lauren Lynch (choreography). \nAll proceeds from both unique hour-long performances will benefit the Madison chapter of Friends Of Ukraine. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/ghost-wars-at-mmsd-planetarium/
LOCATION:MMSD Planetarium\, 201 South Gammon Road\, Madison\, WI\, 53717\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125116/ghostwars-tonehed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230107T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230107T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230102T201532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230103T011925Z
UID:16610-1673121600-1673125200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Ghost Wars at MMSD Planetarium
DESCRIPTION:A mockup by Thomas Ferrella from “Ghost Wars\,” featuring a US dollar scorched in bright red and etched with atom bomb symbols over its Federal Reserve seals. \nEach winter seems to facilitate a new live multimedia collaboration between video artist and cinematographer Aaron Granat and multi-hyphenate BlueStem Jazz curator and co-founder Thomas Ferrella. From Mindstorm at the Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) Planetarium in March 2020 to Shadowlands at Garver Feed Mill in February 2021\, the two have been concocting psychedelic whirlwinds of ecstatic digital visuals and and jazz-inspired electroacoustic soundscapes (led by Ferrella’s “sonic frontiers collective” You Of All People). \nTheir newest project\, Ghost Wars\, premiered at Gallery Marzen in May 2022\, but now returns to the MMSD Planetarium here\, on the nights of January 6 and 7 (both starting at 8 p.m.)\, with a decidedly incendiary political angle. If Shadowlands (part of the Winter Is Alive cooler world carnival of 2021) delved into changing wetland ecosystems in both the abstract and on vividly literal terms\, Ghost Wars pushes boundaries further in its rippling raze of the personal and public desolations of late capitalism and endless war. Its imagery\, crafted or shot by Ferrella and manipulated by Granat in real time\, draws upon familiar totems and symbols (Ferrella’s art prints\, for one) to metamorphose a tapestry of American avarice and strife. As evidenced in a short preview below\, some of the stark visual components permeating the frame involve the atom bomb-etched American dollar bills sewn into the national flag. \nAlong with You Of All People’s extended technique and effects-laden spoken word providing the melodies and textures to this live brew under the Planetarium dome\, Granat and Ferrella have enlisted other local allies to enhance the breadth of the live spectacle—including Kit Caldwell (costume design)\, Ian Van D. (sculptural performance)\, and Lauren Lynch (choreography). \nAll proceeds from both unique hour-long performances will benefit the Madison chapter of Friends Of Ukraine. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/ghost-wars-at-mmsd-planetarium-2/
LOCATION:MMSD Planetarium\, 201 South Gammon Road\, Madison\, WI\, 53717\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125116/ghostwars-tonehed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230118T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230124T211500
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230114T212706Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230118T213132Z
UID:16643-1674068400-1674594900@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Skinamarink at Marcus Point Cinema
DESCRIPTION:Kevin (Lucas Paul) sits on a carpeted floor facing a door in a darkened hallway. A plug-in nightlight glows to his right. \nStarting Thursday\, January 19\, “Skinamarink” also has show times at AMC Fitchburg. \nKyle Edward Ball’s Skinamarink (2022) has to be in contention for the most experimental 21st century feature to be given a wide release (and kudos to Shudder for giving a big push to such a not-for-everyone film). As with many of the most enduring horror movies\, Skinamarink is more about cultivating a vibe\, dispensing with all but the barest trappings of a plot\, which could theoretically be described as what’s happening on the other side of the TV in Poltergeist (1982). Or it can be seen as a deconstruction of cheaply made found-footage horror films like The Blair Witch Project (1999) and Paranormal Activity (2007) that have been lucrative since the advent of digital cameras\, scooping out facets of conventional narrative (analogous to what this bit does to stand-up comedy). \nSet in 1995\, Skinamarink essentially concerns young brother and sister\, Kevin (Lucas Paul) and Kaylee (Dali Rose Tetreault)\, who are lured through a door (that only sometimes exists) to a version of their house that doesn’t have their parents (Jamie Hill and Ross Paul) in it. The voice toys with them\, tries to placate them with public domain cartoons (proving that even mysterious supernatural beings fear copyright infringement suits)\, and eventually gives them violent instructions for some nefarious but undefined purpose. \nBut again\, just to emphasize the experimental nature of Ball’s approach: human faces only appear on screen a total of three times in the 100-minute runtime\, and for no more than a few seconds each time. Most of the dialogue is both hushed and distorted enough that subtitles are intermittently provided\, and the camera’s point of view is firmly the two siblings. The lens mostly points up and the large house around them\, filtered through a VHS grain that gives the swathes of black a distorted\, abstract quality that invites the viewer to mentally fill in something lurking in the darkness like a sinister version of Ken Jacobs’ The Movie That Invites Pausing (2020). If you’re prepared to bring your imagination to those dark corners\, you’ll certainly freak yourself out. \n—Lewis Peterson
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/skinamarink-at-marcus-point-cinema/
LOCATION:Marcus Point Cinema\, 7825 Big Sky Drive\, Madison\, WI\, 53719\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125059/skinamarink-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230125T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230125T220000
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230119T163105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230119T163105Z
UID:16655-1674673200-1674684000@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:The Low Czars\, The Also-Rans at Red Rooster
DESCRIPTION:The Also-Rans\, a new Madison band\, combines four musicians with a long track record in the area. Aaron Scholz added a third album to his solo discography in 2021\, the understated but powerful Third Place\, after putting his original work on ice for quite a few years. Matt Joyce is best known for his work in The Midwest Beat\, a Madison/Milwaukee band that had a long and fruitful run of jangly\, psych-blasted rock\, much of it on the strength of Joyce’s songwriting\, before they hung it up in 2019. Dan Kennedy’s career has reached confidently across charming\, jazzy soul (including his 2013 solo album Seems Like Forever) and a range of Americana elements (which can be heard in his guitar-playing with Madison band The Getaway Drivers).  \nAlong with drummer Eric Salisbury\, of country outfit The Ramble\, they’ll be showcasing work from across Scholz and Kennedy’s songbooks at first\, and eventually working on songwriting contributions from all four members. Audiences will have their first chance to hear full-band versions of songs from Third Place\, too. The Also-Rans open up here before a set from cover band par excellence The Low Czars\, which also features Scholz on guitar\, vocals\, and keys. \n—Scott Gordon \nThird Place by Aaron Scholz \nIllustration by Shasya Sidebottom.
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/the-low-czars-the-also-rans-at-red-rooster/
LOCATION:Red Rooster\, 2513 Seiferth Road\, Madison\, WI\, 53716\, United States
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/02125519/guitars-tone-2000x1500-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230126T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230126T203000
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230117T210156Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230117T210156Z
UID:16647-1674759600-1674765000@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:EO at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:In the grass beyond a ribbon-cutting ceremony\, Eo stands calmly with a garland of carrots around his mane\, a subtle nod to the canonized wreath of flowers from “Au Hasard Balthazar.” \nSeveral films in recent years have centered the emotional experiences and points of view of our fellow mammals—Viktor Kossakovsky’s Gunda (2020) and Andrea Arnold’s Cow (2021)\, to name a couple—but Jerzy Skolimowski’s EO (2022) is perhaps the first to render the life of one\, a donkey\, with the sort of psychological flair typically reserved for a human or at least a fully anthropomorphized computer rendering. \nBorrowing liberally from one of the all-time cinematic touchstones\, Robert Bresson’s Au Hasard Balthazar (1966)\, EO perseveres as a metaphysical and earthly narrative. Those disparate elements interact singularly throughout a tragic cross-country journey that begins at a Polish traveling circus where the titular donkey is adored by his ring-performance partner Kasandra (Sandra Drzymalska\, analogous to Anne Wiazemsky’s Marie in Balthazar). In a way\, EO unfolds as a love story with Shakespearean shades\, as the two are inevitably separated\, and Eo’s journey becomes one of silent reconciliation. Skolimowski and cinematographer Michał Dymek visually manifest Eo’s desire for Kasandra’s warmth that’s missing through all his wandering far and near\, her hands caressing his muzzle and mane. \nSkolimowski amplifies Bresson’s spiritual and religious Dostoyevsky parable with an urgent sociological angle. This is partly due to the setting in modern times\, but also how the film represents the contrived separations of our kind from innocent observer Eo through its use of hyperlinked vignettes. It trades tones and genres as Eo escapes or moves between places in scenes that persistently showcase the contrast between fluorescence and natural light\, recalling Terence Malick’s predilections. \nBut it would all be somehow incomplete without the dramatic heft of Paweł Mykietyn’s score\, which is almost instantaneously overwhelming—its weeping strings conjuring a certain narrative artifice of old Hollywood\, and at once establishing Eo’s migration as one that sways between melodrama and magical realism. Like Arnold’s Cow\, EO would seem to be outlying in Skolimowski’s filmography\, and yet it carries a distinctive line of romantic drama that he cultivated more than a half-century ago. EO is perhaps the sum of the director’s innermost conflicts that emerges as hope for a world where love is essential and cruelty is incidental. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/eo-at-uw-cinematheque/
LOCATION:UW Cinematheque\, 821 University Ave / 4070 Vilas Hall\, Madison\, WI\, 53706\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125056/eofilm-hed.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230127T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230127T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230114T080911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232320Z
UID:16640-1674846000-1674853200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:The Good Boss at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:Blanco (Javier Bardem) smiles as he sits at a table in his office that overlooks the factory floor of Blanco Scales. \nIn Fernando León de Aranoa’s The Good Boss\, Blanco Scales is up for a regional business award. The owner (Javier Bardem) and the business that bears his name are one\, and he will stop at nothing to project the image of a benevolent\, civically minded pillar of the community. Manipulation\, intimidation\, bribery\, adultery\, and giving in to blackmail are all deemed necessary. \nBardem sports a shock of white hair reminiscent of his Skyfall (2012) antagonist Raoul Silva\, though Blanco is more practiced at hiding any potential villainous tendencies behind a smile\, a firm handshake\, and plenty of rhetoric about fairness and how his company is “like a family.” Of course\, he conveniently ignores both the rigid hierarchy implied by such a statement\, as well as the unique capacity family has to hurt and exploit its most vulnerable members\, as any manager who’s used that phrase does. \nCase in point: Miralles (Manolo Solo)\, Blanco’s shipping manager and childhood friend\, is continually ordering the wrong parts\, thus making it impossible for the factory to fulfill orders on time. Miralles confides in Blanco that he hasn’t been sleeping\, because he suspects his wife Aurora (Mara Guil) of cheating. Blanco takes it upon himself to ask her to stop the affair until at least the end of the week\, after the award inspection committee has stopped by. \nLeading up to the official inspection\, this is just one of many fires that Blanco tries to stomp out\, as he maintains his balance in a madcap comedy reminiscent of Billy Wilder’s One\, Two\, Three (1961). The Good Boss delivers laughs\, showing how far Blanco is willing to go to maintain the appearance of being upright while ultimately raising fair points about how modern capitalism has become more inclusive by giving the most craven of individuals the opportunity to rise by stepping on the necks of their fellow workers. \n—Lewis Peterson
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/the-good-boss-at-uw-cinematheque/
LOCATION:UW Cinematheque\, 821 University Ave / 4070 Vilas Hall\, Madison\, WI\, 53706\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125059/thegoodboss-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230127T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230127T213000
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230120T205610Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232302Z
UID:16662-1674849600-1674855000@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Encore In Black And White at Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre
DESCRIPTION:A still from “Elephant In The Room” features three actors. Rikki Christman (right) points a toy gun at Joe Wahlers (left\, seated). James Burreson stands cloaked in the shadows near the center of the frame in front of a vintage coffee shop backdrop. \nEncore Studio For The Performing Arts celebrates their 23rd year as Wisconsin’s premier theater company for people with disabilities with a four-film\, 75-minute suite that pays homage to silent and early sound era cinema. “Encore In Black And White” premieres at the Mary DuPont Wahlers Theatre (just off of Fish Hatchery Road) on Friday night\, January 27\, and continues across four additional days (January 28 and 29 at 2 p.m.\, February 3 at 8 p.m.\, and February 4 at 2 p.m.). Tickets are available directly through Encore as suggested donations of $15 per general patron\, and $5 for people with disabilities\, students\, and seniors. \nWorking with four different writers riffing on four archetypal genres from the dawn of modern cinema\, universal director Heather Renken has an exemplary opportunity under this program’s umbrella to exhibit her experience and insight with local actors\, not only in longstanding connections to Encore Studio (serving as artistic associate for over a decade)\, but with Broom Street Theater and Children’s Theater Of Madison as well. \nRenken contributed on the writing side to the third short\, a colorful spin on noir tropes titled Elephant In The Room. In her recent interview with Channel 3000‘s Doug Moe\, Renken graciously cites Encore actor James Burreson’s passion for detective stories as the catalyst to its realization. \nOther screenwriters who helped bring “Encore In Black In White” to fruition include Clarice Lafayette\, who wrote the zippy piece of horror that opens the night\, Redemption. Sarah Jo Schoenhaar’s take on century-old slapstick emerges in Bona Fide\, and KelsyAnne Schoenhaar’s witty musical comedy of To Heiress Human closes the screening event on a spirited note (literally). Stick around afterward for a Q&A with the cast and crew. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/encore-in-black-and-white-at-mary-dupont-wahlers-theatre/
LOCATION:Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre\, 1480 Martin St\, Madison\, WI\, 53713\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125054/encore-elephantintheroom.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230128T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230129T153000
DTSTAMP:20260617T035456
CREATED:20230120T210051Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232242Z
UID:16663-1674914400-1675006200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Encore In Black And White at Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre
DESCRIPTION:A still from “Elephant In The Room” features three actors. Rikki Christman (right) points a toy gun at Joe Wahlers (left\, seated). James Burreson stands cloaked in the shadows near the center of the frame in front of a vintage coffee shop backdrop. \nEncore Studio For The Performing Arts celebrates their 23rd year as Wisconsin’s premier theater company for people with disabilities with a four-film\, 75-minute suite that pays homage to silent and early sound era cinema. “Encore In Black And White” premiered at the Mary DuPont Wahlers Theatre (just off of Fish Hatchery Road) on Friday night\, January 27. It continues across four additional days (January 28 and 29 at 2 p.m.\, February 3 at 8 p.m.\, and February 4 at 2 p.m.). Tickets are available directly through Encore as suggested donations of $15 per general patron\, and $5 for people with disabilities\, students\, and seniors. \nWorking with four different writers riffing on four archetypal genres from the dawn of modern cinema\, universal director Heather Renken has an exemplary opportunity under this program’s umbrella to exhibit her experience and insight with local actors\, not only in longstanding connections to Encore Studio (serving as artistic associate for over a decade)\, but with Broom Street Theater and Children’s Theater Of Madison as well. \nRenken contributed on the writing side to the third short\, a colorful spin on noir tropes titled Elephant In The Room. In her recent interview with Channel 3000‘s Doug Moe\, Renken graciously cites Encore actor James Burreson’s passion for detective stories as the catalyst to its realization. \nOther screenwriters who helped bring “Encore In Black In White” to fruition include Clarice Lafayette\, who wrote the zippy piece of horror that opens the night\, Redemption. Sarah Jo Schoenhaar’s take on century-old slapstick emerges in Bona Fide\, and KelsyAnne Schoenhaar’s witty musical comedy of To Heiress Human closes the screening event on a spirited note (literally). Stick around afterward for a Q&A with the cast and crew. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/encore-in-black-and-white-at-mary-dupont-wahlers-theatre-2/
LOCATION:Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre\, 1480 Martin St\, Madison\, WI\, 53713\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125054/encore-elephantintheroom.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR