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Spark!Fishers fest kicks off with drone show, free concert

Spark!Fishers fest kicks off with drone show, free concert

The Spark!Fishers festival five-day festival kicks off June 24 with a concert followed by a drone show, and concludes June 28 with a street fair and parade.
The free opening concert will feature Sixteen Candles, an 80s band touring since 2003, at the Nickel Plate Amphitheater at 8 p.m., with the drone show to follow.
A 5K Walk/Run will be held June 25 and on June 26 the Car & Art Show will be at the Municipal Complex. A free concert June 27 features Saved by the 90s and will conclude with a fireworks display at the Amphitheater. The Ferris wheel along Municipal Drive will be open for rides June 27.
The next day the street fair and parade will close out festivities.
Here is the detailed schedule for Spark!Fishers:

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Eva Victor on Finding a New Vocabulary for Trauma in 'Sorry, Baby'
Eva Victor on Finding a New Vocabulary for Trauma in 'Sorry, Baby'

Time​ Magazine

time3 days ago

  • Time​ Magazine

Eva Victor on Finding a New Vocabulary for Trauma in 'Sorry, Baby'

Pop culture has come a long way from 1980s cinema's deployment of sexual assault as a gag (a la John Hughes' Sixteen Candles). But the grammar movies and television use to dramatize such crimes remains by and large unsophisticated. Even #MeToo thrillers and biopics, the projects that on paper appear most likely to confront the subject with the deftest hand, have been known to whiff on their promise; they either treat the abuse as the character, as in Blonde, or the character as a cypher, as in Promising Young Woman, and as such, fail to fulfill their promise as cultural commentary. Maybe these projects can be forgiven for the letdown; assault isn't easy to talk about, to reenact on set, or to watch on screen. It might just take another perspective on the subject—say, that of a comedian—to compel pop culture to expand its visual vocabulary for telling stories about it. Enter Eva Victor, whose feature debut, Sorry, Baby, premiered at Sundance earlier this year to hosannas (including a screenwriting prize) and sold to A24 for a reported $8 million at a festival where buyers weren't shelling out for much. Chief among its praises was that the movie depicts the utterly life-change effect of sexual violence on a victim while simultaneously depicting how the world continues to turn, inexorably, after they've been attacked. 'Something bad happened to Agnes,' reads the official synopsis. 'But life goes on - for everyone around her, at least.' Victor's background as a writer for sites like Reductress, and perhaps especially their Twitter video sketches (where they frantically rant about, for instance, the bright side of the USPS getting dismantled), inform the tone of Sorry, Baby. The humor comes easily but not at the expense of the somber reality it attempts to capture. Apart from writing and directing, Victor plays the lead, Agnes, a grad student in a small, rural town trudging through her days, coming to terms with an assault she endured by her advisor and professor, Preston (Louis Cancelmi); the film takes a chronologically disordered structure, beginning a year after the attack, then flashing back to that time in her life, and to that moment, orchestrated with a chilling sense of distance—a contrast to bubblier moments between Agnes and her best friend, Lydie (Naomi Ackie), who has since moved to New York City, and on with her life. Sorry, Baby doesn't make light of what happens to Agnes. Rather it finds lightness in spite of it. Here, humor—sardonic, wry, and silly—is a balm. Since its Sundance debut, the film has played many festivals, from Cannes to Independent Film Festival Boston, which picked Sorry, Baby as the capstone for this year's edition of the fest. (The film's production took place 30 miles north of the city, in the coastal town of Ipswich, though Victor's buzz was just as much the reason for attending the fest's closing night as their choice in shooting locations.) While in town for the April festival, Victor sat down to talk about how Sorry, Baby leans on comedy to express the experience of living post-assault. Excerpts of that conversation are below, ahead of the movie's June 27 theatrical release. Victor: Totally. It's interesting, because I think of Agnes as very isolated, which is in some ways the opposite of privacy; isolation is being alone, not by choice, but because you're running from something, like your fear that people will devastate you, and so you make yourself lonely for that reason. Whereas privacy is you saying, 'I've chosen to give myself this time as an act of care for myself.' I do think that as an artist, I crave privacy because that is when you get to really check in with yourself. 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But I do like when people watch with a curious eye about why certain things are happening at certain points in the film; there are little secrets along the way. So much of the joy of making a film is you do your part in creating the film as well as you can to be as effective as possible for you, and then people come to it and find what they need to find in it. That's the joy of being a moviegoer: you get to take from a film what you want. It exists to be something for different people, and to exist in these really specific ways based on what you're coming in with. In terms of humor, it's a really powerful coping mechanism, and it gets you through really dark days. Things are so bizarre and absurd sometimes that laughing is the only way through, and I do think a lot of the funny stuff happens when Agnes and Lydie are able to be witnesses together. Things are a little less funny when Lydie's not there, but when Lydie's there, they're this united front; they're kind of like warriors in this thing together, in this weird world. I think the reason the doctor scene, without giving too much away, lands is because both Agnes and Lydie are contending with how absurd the moment is, but they have each other. On some level, if Lydie's there, you know that Agnes will be okay. Yeah. And, when Agnes is alone, these two women are creating a real gaslighting energy, and she has no one to convene with and say, 'That was weird, right?' She's completely alone, and these women are so unified. Building the tone after the middle of the film was about figuring out how humor moves through that. There's the doctor scene, which does have some humor to it; then the HR scene, which is her by herself, gets a lot darker. 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I don't know. I'm figuring it out. I definitely know how I want to talk about it, and everything I want to say is in the film. So watch the film and you can figure out what I think. You mention nuance; that's something hard to come by. I feel like empathy is key. I wish that whenever I've had panic attacks while driving, John Carroll Lynch would've shown up and handed me a sandwich. Me too. That's why I made that happen for myself. Well, you have that divine power. You can make that happen for yourself. Yeah. He's wonderful. He is. Now at the risk of stating the obvious, that feels important; that scene contrasts with the scene with the doctor, the scene with HR, where there's zero empathy whatsoever. Yes, the doctor calls 'the bad thing' what it is; but he should care about how that makes others feel. Did that play into your calculus? 'How is this word going to make the people I'm showing the movie to feel?' Yeah, definitely. I made the film for the person I was that needed this film, so making sure nothing felt what would've been incredibly triggering to me, to the point where I couldn't watch it, felt important. In terms of empathy, it's an interesting question; looking at the doctor, and looking at the HR women, they're people doing what their job told them to do. These are the institutions that make it hard for people to feel safe after something horrible happens, and they are the facilitators of that. But they're not evil in their core; they're trying to do their jobs. It's just that they don't understand that their job is doing something hurtful. With the professor, Preston, Louis [Cancelmi] and I spent so much time talking about the real warmth and respect he has to have for Agnes in the scenes we see him in, so that the audience doesn't see him as a bad guy until she does. We didn't want to undermine Agnes' experience of him by showing that he has these dark colors, until it's too late, which is what Agnes experiences too. Each character being as complicated as possible, in the midst of this intense story about something really scary, was a way through it for me; it's not about good and evil, it's about these people who are incredibly flawed, who are incredibly hurtful.

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Art exhibition celebrating creativity set to open in Teddington this week

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Art exhibition celebrating creativity set to open in Teddington this week

The Richmond Art Society is set to launch its highly anticipated Summer Exhibition, showcasing an exciting collection of works by Richmond Art Prize winners. The exhibition opens with a special evening on Thursday, June 26, from 6pm to 8pm at the Landmark Arts Centre, Ferry Road, Teddington TW11 9NN. Entry is free and all are welcome. The exhibition continues over the weekend, with viewing hours from 10am to 5pm on Friday, June 27, and Saturday, June 28, and from 10am to 4pm on Sunday, June 29. Visitors can enjoy a diverse range of artwork, including paintings, prints, drawings, sculpture, ceramics, photography and digital art. A bar will be open during the Thursday opening evening, while the on-site café will be available throughout the event. The show celebrates creativity and community spirit, offering art lovers a chance to explore and purchase original works. Full details are available at

Spark!Fishers fest kicks off with drone show, free concert
Spark!Fishers fest kicks off with drone show, free concert

Indianapolis Star

time4 days ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Spark!Fishers fest kicks off with drone show, free concert

The Spark!Fishers festival five-day festival kicks off June 24 with a concert followed by a drone show, and concludes June 28 with a street fair and parade. The free opening concert will feature Sixteen Candles, an 80s band touring since 2003, at the Nickel Plate Amphitheater at 8 p.m., with the drone show to follow. A 5K Walk/Run will be held June 25 and on June 26 the Car & Art Show will be at the Municipal Complex. A free concert June 27 features Saved by the 90s and will conclude with a fireworks display at the Amphitheater. The Ferris wheel along Municipal Drive will be open for rides June 27. The next day the street fair and parade will close out festivities. Here is the detailed schedule for Spark!Fishers:

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