Remember Blue Man Group? The Seinfeld-era performance art/comedy show is still packing in the tourists down on Lafayette Street—and at theaters across the country, including Las Vegas. What started out as a weird pantomime stunt performed on the street outside '80s nightclubs clubs is now a multi-million dollar enterprise, recognizable in the mainstream and referenced on TV shows like Arrested Development. But founders Chris Wink, Matt Goldman and Phil Stanton are never ones to coast, and today they introduced an updated version of their long-running show. It's got giant iPads—you know, for kids!
Blue Man Group Updates Shtick with "GiPads"
Actor And Director Could Be Evicted By The Blue Man Group
East Village actor and director Sturgis Warner isn't just facing eviction from his apartment of more than 30 years — in a theatrical twist that adds insult to injury, he might get kicked out of his home by the producers of the Blue Man Group. In 2001, the moneymen behind the indigo-hued performance troupe purchased the building that houses their theater on Lafayette Street's Colonnade Row, where the 59-year-old thespian has lived in a fifth floor walk-up since 1978. Since then, the producers have been buying out tenants to convert the residences into their own apartments, a move that housing laws allow.
Elsewhere in the ist-a-verse
All across the Ist-A-Verse (or at least the American parts thereof), writers and editors are in the midst of enjoying their three-day weekend. But after the week we've all had, we feel like the break is not only needed, but deserved. Just look at everything we've been doing!
Spalding Gray's Stories Left To Tell
Three years after his death, Spalding Gray: Stories Left To Tell has opened at Minetta Lane Theater. Running through May 13th, the performance features five actors surrounded by stacks of marble notebooks, similar to those Gray filled in his lifetime (up to 300). Selections from "Swimming to Cambodia," "Monster in a Box" and other monologues are read, but perhaps more insightful and often eerie are his unpublished works. From his last entry (a tape recording from December 18th, 2003): "Everything's in my head now, my timing is all off. Tomorrow is the day I'm going to kill myself."
Bradford Reed, Pencilina Inventor and Musician
Bradford Reed is the inventor and probably the only player of the pencilina, an instrument that he describes as "an electric ten-stringed collision of the hammer dulcimer, slide guitar, koto and fretless bass with six pickups of varied types" and looks something like a surf board caught up in a fishing net. He has played with King Missile, the Blue Man Group band and has composed for film and animation. He has appeared on MTV, Sound FX and the Tonight Show, as well as on the streets of New York.


