Tag Archives: Dick Gregory

MILTON GLASER POSTERS

MG Poster 025

MILTON GLASER POSTERS, a 700-page compendium of over 400 works by the master, is out now from Abrams.

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Thick as a brick, this compact, paperbound edition is an essential reference for anyone interested in the history of graphic design.

MILTON GLASER POSTERS—427 EXAMPLES FROM 1965 TO 2017 (New York: Abrams Books, 2018)

abramsbooks.com/milton-glaser-posters

See: anothermag.com/milton-glaser-on-his-legendary-posters

Milton Glaser, from top: Ad for Ettore Sottsass’ Valentine typewriter for Olivetti; Dick Gregory and Townes Van Zandt event poster; Mahalia Jackson concert poster; cinema poster for Phoebus Palast; 10th Montreux International Festival.

All images © Milton Glaser.

LULA WASHINGTON — WALLIS PANEL

The Wallis presents SOCIAL ACTIVISM AND THE ARTS—LESSONS FROM THE LEGACY OF DICK GREGORY, a panel dedicated to bringing Gregory’s committed activist message forward as a means to resist, confront, and counter the ongoing and potentially catastrophic reversals in our polity since the presidential election of November 2016.

Participants include Joe Morton (who recently played Gregory in Turn Me Loose at The Wallis), Tavis Smiley, Shamell Bell, and the great Los Angeles dancer-choreographer Lula Washington. Writer and UCLA professor Tananarive Due will moderate.

 

SOCIAL ACTIVISM AND THE ARTS—LESSONS FROM THE LEGACY OF DICK GREGORY, Monday, December 11, at 7 pm.

THE WALLIS, 9390 Santa Monica Boulevard, Beverly Hills.

thewallis.org/show

Tananarive Due’s blog:

tananarivedue.wordpress.com

Lula Washington.

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TURN ME LOOSE AT THE WALLIS

“Do you ever get the feeling that the planet is a bit wobbly? Like you’re waiting for something to happen? Well, don’t worry. You’re already in the equation.” — Joe Morton as Dick Gregory in TURN ME LOOSE

The Lovelace Studio Theater at The Wallis—home until mid-November to TURN ME LOOSE: A PLAY ABOUT COMIC GENUIS DICK GREGORY—was not a stress-free comfort zone the other night, and all the better for it. Occasional audience discomfort aside, Morton’s embodiment of Gregory’s attitudes, activism, and humor was a cathartic reckoning for the venue’s fortunate patrons, and recognized as such.

“My tongue was my switchblade. My humor was my sword.” — Morton, as Gregory

This empathetic look at show business through the prism of one man’s battle against the toxicity of racism was written by Gretchen Law and directed by John Gould Rubin.

“America is a country that puts on a new suit every year and never takes a bath.” — Morton, as Gregory

TURN ME LOOSE

Through November 12.

Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts

9390 Santa Monica Boulevard, Beverly Hills.

Joe Morton as Dick Gregory in Turn Me Loose; with co-star John Carlin (below). Photographs by Lawrence K. Ho.