The Florida Book Review
  • Home
  • Miami Book Fair 2022
  • Classic Florida Reads
  • Feature: Elizabeth Bishop
  • Feature: Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Feature: Jack Kerouac
  • Poetry
  • Fiction
  • Crime Writing
  • Florida SF/Fantasy
  • Young Adult
  • Children
  • Tales & Legends
  • Nonfiction
  • Florida History
  • Nature and Environment
  • Florida Sports
  • Florida Politics
  • Food & Drink
  • Travel
  • Music, Arts, & Architecture
  • Past Features
    • Zora Neale Hurston
    • Stephen Crane
    • John D. MacDonald
    • José Martí
    • Vivian Laramore Rader
    • Wallace Stevens
    • Dan Wakefield
    • Tennessee Williams
  • Past Events
    • Miami Book Fair 2021
    • Miami Book Fair Online 2020
    • Miami Book Fair 2019
    • Miami Book Fair 2018
    • Miami Book Fair 2017
    • Miami Book Fair 2016
    • O, Miami 2016
    • Miami Book Fair 2015
    • Miami Book Fair 2014
  • Florida Presses & Journals
  • Blog
  • About Us

DASS Literature and Jazz at the Olympia Theater

3/8/2016

1 Comment

 
Picture
Photo: Courtesy DASS
      On February 3, Miami's literary community gathered at the opulent Olympia Theater, long a mainstay of the city's small but dedicated creative class. The event, hosted by the Downtown Arts and Science Society (DASS), drew hundreds of patrons for a dramatic reading of works by four local authors, accompanied and interpreted by an experimental jazz quartet.
     DASS's curator, author Raul Guerrero, says this is exactly the kind of "intellectual flirting" its members enjoy every month. Drawing on the concept of the salon, which flourished during the European Enlightenment and enjoyed a heyday during the Parisian jazz age of Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein, DASS functions as a local social club that discusses themes ranging from science and innovation to literature and music.
     This Wednesday offering produced a conversation among many different art forms: literature, drama, music, and architecture, housed under the Olympia's gilded dome.
     Coincidentally–or perhaps not–each of the four authors chose a passage that focused on the nature of father-daughter relationships. Pairing literature with jazz–especially stories like these, turbulent re-tellings of traumatic experiences–was a natural fit. Gary Thomas and his quartet produced melodies that could please a discerning jazz lover, while setting up a dialogue with each story.
     Kicking off the evening, Chantel Acevedo read from her latest novel, The Distant Marvels. A Cuban-American author who recently returned to her native Miami as a professor in the University of Miami's English department, Acevedo chose to read the excerpt herself. Acevedo's selection looked at the protagonist's complicated relationship with her bullish father, a devout follower of Jose Martí in his fight to liberate Cuba from Spanish rule.
     Stacy Conde's The Red Speck followed. The author opted for a dramatic reading by actor Terrell Fritz, whose magnetic boom and startling tenor served her story well. Driving along on a bleakly rainy evening, father and daughter mentally spar, their secret musings heard only in their own heads - and by the audience. His anger, at first seeming to be  meant for a foolish wife, unraveled before the audience: it was his daughter he had called “a cunt,” and not the gold-digging woman he refused to divorce.
     Between Conde and Acevedo, viewers got a real sense of the difference between a  reading and a dramatic interpretation, and how they affect the way a work is consumed.  The audience was abuzz with chatter between the readings, discussing what they’d just heard.
     Understanding how persona and prose play off one another, novelist J.J. Colagrande produced a kind of virtual reality. His geeky schoolboy demeanor led the audience through a sort of video game, the protagonist cycling through the stages of teenage angst, as he read from his work-in-progress, a coming-of-age story called Reduce Heat and Continue to Boil.
     After an actor's reading of Vanessa Garcia's White Light, a story loosely based on the writer's own struggle with losing her father during an important moment of her career, the quartet strummed its final tune.
Exploring the velvety halls of Miami's oldest theater, patrons lingered for an hour longer. Some stayed for the cocktails, others for the conversation, the sound of literature buzzing in their ears.

          —Nicole Martinez

1 Comment
    Picture
    Please support your local independent bookstore.

    The FBR Blog


    Follow @FloridaBkReview
    Follow us on Facebook.

    Archives

    May 2021
    March 2018
    February 2018
    May 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015

    Please note: Since our webite move in 2015 we have archived older blog posts.

    Categories

    All
    Books And Books
    Chldren's Books
    Cookbooks
    Crime Writing
    Denise Duhamel
    Ed Irvin
    Fabienne Josaphat
    Fiction
    Florida Book Awards
    Florida International University
    James O. Born
    James Patterson
    James W. Hall
    Jazz
    Jeffrey Fernandez
    John Dufresne
    Julie Marie Wade
    Les Standiford
    Lynne Barrett
    Miami
    Miami Center For Writing And Literature
    Murder On The Beach
    Nina Romano
    Olympia Theater
    Poetry
    Shakespeare
    Sleuthfest
    Tim Dorsey
    Vero Beach Book Center
    Victoria Kann

    RSS Feed

The Florida Book Review — Miami, Florida
© Copyright The Florida Book Review 2007-2022