Tag Archives: Eric Marciano

ERIC MARCIANO AT MOMA

Eric Marciano’s feature THE AGE OF INSECTS—and the shorts SPIN CYCLE and NARROWCAST—will screen at MoMA this weekend as part of the show CLUB 57: FILM, PERFORMANCE, AND ART IN THE EAST VILLAGE, 1978–1983.

The director will introduce the films, which were made during a transitional period when, per Marciano, “film married video and had a baby called digital.”*

 

ERIC MARCIANO—THE AGE OF INSECTS, SPIN CYCLE, NARROWCAST, Saturday, February 3, at 4 pm.

TITUS 2 THEATER, MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, 11 West 53rd Street, New York City.

moma.org/calendar/events

americanmontage.com/age-insects

See fright.com/edge/AgeOfInsects

 

Eric Marciano, The Age of Insects (1990), from top: Jack Ramey; Marciano directing Dallas Munroe. Images courtesy Eric Marciano.

Dr. Benedict

The Age of Insects Eric and Dallas-1

THE JIMMY DONAHUE STORY

This week—in the CLUB 57 program ERIC MARCIANO FROM FILM TO VIDEO—the Museum of Modern Art will screen Marciano’s jazz-infused take on alcoholic walker Jimmy Donahue, as well as the filmmaker’s mid-nineties 35mm work NARROWCAST.

THE JIMMY DONAHUE STORY and NARROWCAST

Monday, January 29, through Sunday, February 4, continuous gallery screenings.

Through April 1.
Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd Street, New York City.

Eric Marciano, The Jimmy Donahue Story (1981), written and produced by Marciano and Ignacio Valero.

From top:

Bill Brovold.

Barlo Perry, underground at Times Square subway station record shop.

Brovold and Perry drinking.

Perry and Frank Sinatra album in Ross Rare Records window on University Place.

Brovold and Perry.

Apartment scene with Victoire Taittinger, Brovold, and Perry (4).

THE BOOK OF CLARENCE AT MOMA

When writer-director-lyricist Lee Breuer and composer Bob Telson fused Sophocles to the African-American church experience in The Gospel at Colonus, Clarence Fountain and the Blind Boys of Alabama were cast to collectively portray Oedipus—an event that vaulted Clarence and his group into mainstream recognition.  Thirty-five years later, the Museum of Modern Art will present the world premiere of the documentary THE BOOK OF CLARENCE as part of its Doc Fortnight 2017.

Conceived and directed by Breuer—and co-produced by filmmaker Eric Marciano (the upcoming Shapes of Rhythm: The Music of Galt MacDermot) and musician Sam Butler, Jr. (a former member of the Blind Boys)—this American Montage release is an in-depth account of the gospel giants who began singing together in 1939 and won their first in a string of Grammy awards sixty years later. It’s also the story of how a great artist of undiminished spirit faces failing health and the inevitable end of his road.

Gospel is the basis for rhythm-and-blues, soul, rock-and-roll, and hip-hip, and in the African-American church, the more fire-and-brimstone the orthodoxy, the edgier the music. It is this raw, driving gospel sound exemplified by Clarence and Sam that appeals most to secular audiences who might be least inclined to embrace some of its underlying messages.

 

THE BOOK OF CLARENCE, Saturday, February 18, at 7 pm in Titus Theater 1, followed by a discussion with Lee Breuer and Eric Marciano.

Additional screening on Sunday, February 26, at 2 pm, followed by a discussion with Marciano.

MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, 11 West 53rd Street, New York City.

moma.org/calendar/film

americanmontage.com

Image credit: American Montage.

thumbnail