Local Bookstores Keep the Conversation Going Online

Before Marin County’s shelter-in-place orders went into effect in March, Corte Madera’s Book Passage boasted a nearly daily schedule of live events with authors reading and talking about their latest literary works.

Many other North Bay booksellers did the same, bringing renowned writers to their intimate venues. Though the doors remain closed at shops around the region, the events are moving online.

Book Passage’s “Conversations with Authors” is a live online series of free sessions with top writers and thinkers that are less of a formal reading and more of an insightful discussion. Registration guarantees you a spot in every upcoming event, and the audience participants will have the chance to ask questions and engage in the conversation themselves.

Book Passage’s schedule of conversations includes a talk between award-winning journalist and author Joan Ryan and scholarly writer Phil Cousineau on Saturday, May 23, at 4pm. Ryan‘s fascinating new book, Intangibles: Unlocking the Science and Soul of Team Chemistry, explores how sports teams bond and work together to achieve a singular goal.

The next day, Sunday, May 24, novelist Julia Alvarez and essayist Jaquira Diaz engage in a conversation centered around Alvarez‘s timely new novel, Afterlife. On Wednesday, May 27, bestselling author John Grisham joins the conversation series, talking with Book Passage founder Elaine Petrocelli about his new novel, Camino Winds. Join the conversations at bookpassage.com.

With nine locations in the North Bay, Copperfield’s Books has become a community hub in three counties, where authors gathered to share their literary works. As the current shelter-in-place that looms over the North Bay during the coronavirus outbreak keeps Copperfield’s closed for in-stire events, the company is hitting the web with their own web events.

On Thursday, May 21, Berkeley-based author Adam Hochschild appears via Zoom to talk about his new nonfiction work, Rebel Cinderella, about early 20th century social activist and feminist icon Rose Pastor Stokes.

The next week, on Thursday, May 28, authors Veronica Roth and Charlie Jane Anders come together for an engaging discussion on the theme of “Kill Your Darlings: Why Writers Imperil Their Heroes.” Roth is best known for her popular young adult books like the Divergent series and her new novel, Chosen Ones. Anders is the former editor-in-chief of io9.com, the popular site devoted to science fiction and fantasy, and she is the author of the highly acclaimed science fiction novel, City in the Middle of the Night.

The next day, May 29, longtime sports columnist Lowell Cohn revisists 40 years of covering Bay Area sports in his new memoir Gloves Off. On Wednesday, June 3, an assembly of poets read their works on the theme of “Poems for a Dark Time.” All of these events are free to attend, and all begin at 7pm. Visit copperfieldsbooks.com or register through Eventbrite to receive your Zoom invite through email.

Other local bookstores going online include Point Reyes Books, which hosts Jazmina Barrera, author of On Lighthouses, and Philip Hoare, author of In Search of the Soul of the Sea, in a conversation about lighthouses, the ocean, and more as a benefit event for the Point Reyes National Seashore Association on Saturday, May 23, at 7pm.

Point Reyes Books also hosts writer and biologist Merlin Sheldrake and bestselling author Helen Macdonald in a conversation about Sheldrake’s book Entangled Life, which shows the reader the world from a fungal point of view, on Friday, June 5, at Noon. Visit ptreyesbooks.com or register on Eventbrite to attend these virtual events.

Napa Bookmine is another bookshop that is temporarily closed to the public due to Covid-19, but the store is still accepting online orders, and now it gets into the virtual realm for author events and online book clubs.

On Wednesday, May 27, Napa Bookmine’s monthly Feminist Book Club, which meets to discuss books exploring feminist issues, will be held virtually on Zoom. This month’s book is Octavia E Butler’s Parable of the Sower. The book club meets at 6:30pm.

The next day, May 28, Lowell Cohn talks Gloves Off with Napa Bookmine and the Napa Library in a virtual author event at 7pm. Following that, on Friday, May 29, at 6pm, author Katie M Flynn appears in a virtual conversation with writer Kara Vernor. That talk will be focused on Flynn’s book The Companions, an insanely timely novel that deals with a highly contagious virus, uploaded consciousnesses, and a chain of events that that sweeps from San Francisco to Siberia to the very tip of South America.

Napa Bookmine’s online schedule also includes a Virtual Resilience Book Club, in partnership with the Cope Family Center and Resilient Napa, that will discuss the book How to Talk so Little Kids Will Listen: A Survival Guide to Life with Children Ages 2-7, led by Cope’s Director of Programs, Julie Murphy on Sunday, May 31, at 4pm. Visit napabookmine.com to register for these and other virtual events.

Healdsburg Jazz Festival Stays Connected with Online Listening Party

The board of directors of the Healdsburg Jazz Festival have decided not to hold the festival as scheduled this summer due to the Covid-19 outbreak, though they are looking for ways to keep jazz alive in the North Bay in 2020.

Those ideas are currently taking shape in a series of “Staying Connected” online events, starting with April’s jazz-history class on the legacy of Duke Ellington. This month, the lessons continue with a free history class and listening party celebrating Jazz & Samba music on Sunday, May 24, at 5pm via Zoom.

The class will specifically explore the beginnings of Bossa Nova in Brazil and chart its growth within the world’s jazz-music scene through a curated playlist of music and insight from several expert guests.

Dr Sherry Keith, an associate history professor at San Francisco State University, leads the online gathering. Dr Keith lived and taught in Brazil for many years, and she also teaches classes on social sciences, women’s history in Latin America and more.

Professional percussionist and educator Ami Molinelli accompanies Dr Keith in leading the class. Molinelli specializes in Brazilian and Latin percussion and co-leads the Brazilian and Jazz ensemble Grupo Falso Baiano.

Joining Dr Keith and Molinelli in discussion will be special guest artists Jovino Santos Neto and Claudia Villela. Santos is a Latin Grammy-nominated pianist and composer, and Villela is a five-octave Brazilian Jazz vocalist.

All together, the artists and experts will  follow how Brazilian Jazz made its way to the West Coast Jazz scene in the late 1950s and early 1960s and the playlist will highlight artists like Chet Baker, Stan Getz, Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughn.

The Jazz & Samba class on May 24 is free and open to all ages, though registration is required to receive the Zoom Invite.

In addition to this ongoing jazz history series, Healdsburg Jazz Festival is staying connected to the community during the stay-at-home orders with several other online offerings.

For students–and their parents–grades K-5, Healdsburg Jazz created the Virtual Jazz Village Campus on its website. The virtual campus contains classes from musicians and educators like Molinelli, who offers a digital lesson for kids grade 2-5 on how to use cups around the house as instruments, with techniques and tips on keeping rhythm, using drumsticks and more.

Other virtual classes include a history of call-and-response music by multi-faceted musician Brian Dyer; a bilingual class on son jarocho–a music genre from Veracruz, Mexico–with award-winning artist and educator Maria De La Rosa; and more.

For jazz fans, the festival’s website also boasts a series of videos featuring musicians performing their favorite tunes, such as Sonoma County native and tenor sax master Rob Sudduth playing Thelonius Monk’s “Ask Me Now” and New York City-based jazz pianist and Healdsburg Jazz Festival friend George Cables performing several songs from his living room.

The Healdsburg Jazz Festival “Staying Connected” campaign also offers audio playlists, and forums for fans and musicians alike to keep the discussion going. Click here to get connected now.

Celebrate Wavy Gravy’s Birthday with a Quarantine Concert

Poet, activist, cultural icon and lifelong clown Wavy Gravy always makes a big deal out of his birthday, often hosting massive concert events that raise money for his beloved SEVA Foundation.

Those popular concerts draw hundreds of friends and fans together at venues like the Sweetwater Music Hall in Mill Valley and the SOMO Events Center in Rohnert Park. Obviously, those concerts are not going to be possible during the Covid-19 outbreak.

Instead, Wavy Gravy invites the public to help him celebrate his 84th birthday this weekend with a special online “Quarantine Concert.” Featuring a collection of never-before-seen archival videos from the past 12 years of shows, the “Quarantine Concert” is viewable online now through Sunday, May 17, at Seva.org.

Folks who have attended Wavy’s previous birthday parties can attest to the massive array of stars that are always on hand, and the performances collected in the video include David Crosby and Graham Nash’s intimate acoustic rendition of the Crosby, Stills & Nash song “Guinnevere;” Dr. John and Buffy Sainte-Marie’s spirited piano/tambourine duo that begins with “When the Saints Go Marching In,” goes into Dr. John’s hit song “Iko Iko” and ends with a “Happy Birthday” outro; and an extended jam with Chris Robinson, Bob Weir and others playing the Grateful Dead’s song “Sugaree.”

The two-hour concert video, introduced by Wavy Gravy, also includes appearances by Ani DiFranco, Blind Boys of Alabama, Bonnie Raitt, Hot Tuna, Jackson Browne, Jason Mraz, New Riders of the Purple Sage, Poor Man’s Whiskey, Roy Rogers, Rising Appalachia, Ruthie Foster, Steve Kimock and Steve Earle.

Funds raised from donations will go to SEVA Foundation, which Wavy Gravy co-founded in 1978 with Dr. Larry Brilliant (a leader in the World Health Organization’s smallpox-eradication efforts), spiritual philosopher Ram Dass and others. The foundation provides eye care to communities around the world with little to no access, partnering with doctors and hospitals to perform acts like cataract surgeries that restore sight for as little as $50.

Catch the “Quarantine Concert” this weekend at Seva.org. Happy birthday, Wavy!

2020 Sonoma County Israeli Film Festival Continues in Virtual Form

For its fifth year, the Sonoma County Israeli Film Festival was meant to run through the month of March at the Rialto Cinemas in Sebastopol.

Featuring four films, this year’s fest focused on a bevy of themes including gender identity, love and aging as well as the ongoing Israeli–Palestinian conflict; except the festival only got through a single week before Sonoma County’s shelter-in-place took effect to limit the outbreak of Covid-19.

Like many other events that could adapt to the internet, the festival–hosted by Jewish Community Center Sonoma County–recently transformed to a virtual streaming series, letting ticket holders to the canceled screenings still watch the festival’s films from home.

This week, the Virtual Sonoma County Israeli Film Festival is offering a film not previously included in the 2020 lineup, 2014’s The Dove Flyer, available for streaming between Sunday and Monday, May 18–19.

Next week, the festival concludes with a bonus streaming of another new-to-the-festival film, 2004’s Turn Left at the End of the World, available May 25–26. This streaming is complimentary for any existing ticket holders to any of the festival’s films.

Both The Dove Flyer and Turn Left at the End of the World deal with universal themes of immigration, clashing cultures and love, and both are critically acclaimed for their mixtures of drama and humor. Get tickets to the online screenings here.

Remembering pop icon Little Richard

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Richard Penniman has departed the stage! Known as Little Richard, with his self-proclaimed moniker “The Architect of Rock ’n’ Roll,” another pioneer has left us. Along with recording artists, both black and white, including Sam Cooke, Chuck Berry, James Brown, Fats Domino, Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly and Jerry Lee Lewis, whose respective songs and rhythms graced our lives, Little Richard left us with some great visual and musical memories.

Rooted in Southern gospel and R&B, the sound Little Richard helped pioneer transitioned into what was known as “race music” and eventually evolved into rock & roll. Little Richard brought to it a flair for the flamboyant. With his “Boston Blackie” pencil-thin mustache, large pompadour, outlandish costuming and physical gyrations on the piano, he “shocked and awed” his audience.  

Where Elvis Presley, with his choreographed hip-shake, was the distant storm observed off the coast, Little Richard had already made landfall with hurricane strength, bringing his sweat and sexuality to the stage. He was a “dangerous” man! His influence was undeniable. Many recording artists acknowledged “borrowing” from him. One only has to look to the 1960s, with the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and Sly and the Family Stone; to the ’70s, with Elton John, David Bowie and Bruce Springsteen; and to the ’80s, with Prince. Neil Young stated, “Little Richard? That’s rock & roll.”

He was not without his demons. Raised in a religious environment, he suffered; unable to reconcile his music, his “effeminate” behavior—especially during the 1950s—and being a black man in the South. Drug usage also took its toll and caused him to take extended time away from the stage, to perhaps reflect and again seek solace in his religion. He became a preacher for a while.  

But, like the true artist with all the contradictions, Little Richard eventually returned to his true calling and learned to rise above and hopefully accept his place in the universe. 

We certainly did!

“Wop-bop-a-loo-bop-a-lop-bam-boom!”

E.G. Singer lives in Santa Rosa.

In the Neighborhood

It is rather unsettling, to say the least, to read that a reporter is using his so-called credentials to ignore and make light of the Shelter in Place order (“Town and Country,” May 6). It means: Shelter. In. Place. It does not mean go to other small towns and wander around and spread whatever virus you might have. 

Would Mr. Howell like it if I came to his neighborhood with my brown bag lunch, walked around his house a few times and then sat on his lawn or at his curb and ate my lunch and breathed on his family? Please, stay in your own neighborhood. Shelter in your own place. Not in mine.

Julie Gargliano

West Marin

Vegans and Big Pharma

The author of this article (Open Mic, May 6) says “the root cause of Covid-19 is … eating meat.”

Don’t ever run an idiotic column like this again. The author is a self-described physicist who’s “in software.” He is an expert on absolutely nothing related to meat or Covid-19.

Don’t ever again insult our intelligence as readers—or as billions of people around the world who eat meat every single day and don’t die of Covid-19. 

Frankly, you used to be an “alternative newspaper“ that fought against established medicine and big institutions. Now you’re just regurgitating the same propaganda from Big Pharma and big medical/government institutions. You buy the BIG LIE of Covid’s grossly exaggerated death rates, hospitalization rates, infection rates, with no concern for your readers or the journalistic skepticism you always brag about.

What the hell happened to this publication?

Rex Allen 

San Rafael

Novato Theater Company celebrates centennial online

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Novato Theater Company was just days away from opening their ambitious staging of the Who’s “Tommy” when Marin County’s shelter-in-place orders shuttered the production in mid-March.

“It was a very dark weekend in my life,” says director and choreographer Marilyn Izdebski. “You nurture this baby and right when it’s going to open, you know, it was horrible.”

Izdebski, who is also president of the company’s board of directors, adds that the lack of information regarding the sheltering timeline has put everything on hold at NTC.

“We postponed ‘Tommy,’ we cancelled ‘Sordid Lives’ [set to open May 21], we had our next season all mapped out, and we can’t even go forward with our next season until we know when and if we can open,” Izdebski says.

Novato Theater Company also rearranged another major event—their own centennial celebration—held this month. The gala event, “Sharing the Spotlight,” was to be a sit-down dinner and showcase featuring theater stars from all over Marin.

Now, “Sharing the Spotlight” is a live-streaming fundraiser happening online Saturday, May 16, at 7pm. Hosted by actor and longtime NTC-member Mark Clark, the streaming gala will feature a variety of live and recorded musical performances from the homes of several NTC members and alumni, as well as special guests from other local groups, all accompanied by an online auction with special, one-of-a-kind items.

Like many other arts groups in the North Bay, Novato Theater Company has operated under many names and resided at several different venues during its 100 years. Shirley Hall, the company’s longest-running member, first joined the organization in 1966.

“I think it’s grown a lot from just being a little community theater with a lot of shows written by members of the theater, into doing wonderful productions of musicals and plays over the years,” Hall says.

Hall was set to star in this month’s production of “Sordid Lives,” and while she laments that production’s cancellation, she is confident NTC will survive the sheltering.

“They’ve been homeless twice through no fault of their own, and now we have other challenges facing us, but the theater company seems resilient, as is obvious for all the years they’ve been here,” she says.

Until theaters can return to normal, online events like NTC’s “Sharing the Spotlight” will continue to engage local audiences from a safe distance.

“We have a tremendous responsibility to our patrons, our members and our staff to wait until it is absolutely safe to re-open,” Izdebski says. “I don’t think theater is dead, but it’s going to be on hiatus for a while and it’s profoundly sad, I think. We as a people need theater in our lives to express the emotions that are part of the human experience.”

‘Sharing the Spotlight’ streams live on Saturday, May 16, at 7pm. Visit novatotheatercompany.org for details.

Left Edge Theatre Offers Online Twist of Annual Showcase

Left Edge Theatre always likes to involve the public in planning next season’s shows with their annual spring fundraising Season Showcase.

Usually, the theater company takes to the stage at their space in the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts and presents several scenes from plays in consideration for the forthcoming season, and the attending audience votes on those they most want to see fully produced.

This year is anything but normal, and the ongoing shelter-in-place has kept audiences away from local theater. Left Edge knows that the show must go on, and the group is moving the Season Showcase online for a virtual event happening over Zoom.

Tickets are limited and going fast for the two online showcases, happening Saturday, May 16, at 7pm and Sunday, May 17, at 2pm. $30. Visit Left Edge Theatre’s website for tickets and watch the video below to get hyped for the showcase.

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North Bay Favorites to Play Heartfelt Virtual Variety Show

West Sonoma County’s beloved Occidental Center for the Arts often hosts live music, readings, art exhibits and more, though the sheltering orders have shuttered the nonprofit venue and others like it.

This weekend, the OCA takes to the web to connect with the community with the Arts In Our Hearts Virtual Variety Show, featuring a cavalcade of performers. Hosted on Youtube, the free streaming show will feature popular North Bay artists like Stella Heath, Emily Lois, Kevin Russell, Laurie Lewis and a dozen others live from their homes.

This event is free to all and will be shown on YouTube. Tune in on Saturday, May 16, at 8pm, and get more details at Occidental Center for the Arts’ website.

HopMonk Holds “In the Meantime” Concert Series

With locations in Sebastopol, Sonoma and Novato, HopMonk Tavern is a North Bay institution that usually hosts weekly concerts featuring local and touring stars. Yet, the Covid-19 sheltering has kept the stages empty at all three locations since mid-March.

The folks at HopMonk Tavern know there is no substitute for live music, so they are offering the next best thing with their new online concert series, “In the Meantime.”

Between their Sebastopol and Novato locations’ social media sites, the series will host artists and acts performing live from their homes, and the schedule includes Alison Harris on May 14, Megan Slankard on May 15, Dirty Cello on May 16, Bob Hillman on May 20 and several other performances slated through the end of the month.

Visit the Facebook pages of the HopMonk Sebastopol and HopMonk Novato locations for a full schedule and details.

Local Bookstores Keep the Conversation Going Online

Book Passage, Copperfield's Books and others host free virtual readings and discussions with renowned writers.

Healdsburg Jazz Festival Stays Connected with Online Listening Party

Web event on May 24 is part of festival's online slate of offerings.

Celebrate Wavy Gravy’s Birthday with a Quarantine Concert

All-star archive of concert video is available to watch online through May 17.

2020 Sonoma County Israeli Film Festival Continues in Virtual Form

For its fifth year, the Sonoma County Israeli Film Festival was meant to run through the month of March at the Rialto Cinemas in Sebastopol. Featuring four films, this year's fest focused on a bevy of themes including gender identity, love and aging as well as the ongoing Israeli–Palestinian conflict; except the festival only got through a single week...

Remembering pop icon Little Richard

Richard Penniman has departed the stage! Known as Little Richard, with his self-proclaimed moniker “The Architect of Rock ’n’ Roll,” another pioneer has left us. Along with recording artists, both black and white, including Sam Cooke, Chuck Berry, James Brown, Fats Domino, Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly and Jerry Lee Lewis, whose respective songs and rhythms graced our lives, Little...

In the Neighborhood

It is rather unsettling, to say the least, to read that a reporter is using his so-called credentials to ignore and make light of the Shelter in Place order (“Town and Country,” May 6). It means: Shelter. In. Place. It does not mean go to other small towns and wander around and spread whatever virus you might have.  Would Mr....

Novato Theater Company celebrates centennial online

Novato Theater Company was just days away from opening their ambitious staging of the Who’s “Tommy” when Marin County’s shelter-in-place orders shuttered the production in mid-March. “It was a very dark weekend in my life,” says director and choreographer Marilyn Izdebski. “You nurture this baby and right when it’s going to open, you know, it was horrible.” Izdebski, who is also...

Left Edge Theatre Offers Online Twist of Annual Showcase

Left Edge Theatre always likes to involve the public in planning next season’s shows with their annual spring fundraising Season Showcase. Usually, the theater company takes to the stage at their space in the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts and presents several scenes from plays in consideration for the forthcoming season, and the...

North Bay Favorites to Play Heartfelt Virtual Variety Show

Occidental Center for the Arts hosts the online event on May 16.

HopMonk Holds “In the Meantime” Concert Series

With locations in Sebastopol, Sonoma and Novato, HopMonk Tavern is a North Bay institution that usually hosts weekly concerts featuring local and touring stars. Yet, the Covid-19 sheltering has kept the stages empty at all three locations since mid-March. The folks at HopMonk Tavern know there is no substitute...
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