Parlor Performance November Update! Featuring Joyce Aimee, Ronnie Jayne, Roy Zimmerman & More! ~ At Steinway Hall / Fields Pianos - 12121 W. Pico Blvd, West LA

Parlor Performance November Update!

Featuring Joyce Aimee, Ronnie Jayne, Roy Zimmerman & Others!  

Steinway Hall/Fields Pianos  

12121 W. Pico Blvd, West Los Angeles

 1 Door W. of Bundy - Level P2 - Park free in lot.

 RSVP to Jeannine Frank:  Jeannine@FrankEntertainment.com

Parlor Performance November Update

Entertaining Ideas from the Historical to the Hysterical!

 

In a nutshell (details in boxes below)! 

 

* Coming soon to Steinway Hall 

     Friday, Nov. 14 @ 8pm * Chantuese Dangereuse Joyce Aimee

     Wednesday, Dec. 3 @ 8pm * Musical humorist Ronnie Jayne & friends!

     Saturday, Dec. 13 @ 8:30pm * Singing Political Satirist Roy Zimmerman  

Plus… Jeannine’s "Suitcase Charity Yard Sale" table at each of the above shows!

 

* Here, there & everywhere! Howard Rosenberg, Dave Frishberg events!

* Special request for wonderful friend in need!  

* Carla-bration update — a few items still available!

* Parlor Classifieds including Writers Bloc discounts!

* Discount coupon to Steinway Hall performances! (see pink coupon below)

Information & RSVP: Jeannine@FrankEntertainment.com * (310) 476-6735

 

Parlor Performances @ Steinway Hall presents
 
An Evening with Chanteuse Dangereuse Joyce Aimee
Accompanied by her Musette Accordion with Ron Snyder at the Piano!

 
Friday, November 14 at 8pm * $25  
 
Dubbed the Chanteuse Dangereuse by Josephine Baker at NY’s Hotel Pierre in 1962, Joyce has been performing since age three — entertaining and recording nationally and internationally — accompanying herself with her Musette accordion. Recently, she enjoyed several sold out appearances at the Gardenia about which the late Mr. Blackwell wrote: "Pure magic! She looked absolutely fabulous and had us all mesmerized with her inimitable charm and husky voice. A rare and magnificent performer that has the ability to tell life’s stories through song." 
 
Born of a French mother and Russian father, Joyce has a gypsy in her soul, as her wanderlust attests. Joyce managed and produced the American Folk Ballet for 25 years and also managed Agnes DeMille. She served 15 years as Commissioner of the Arts in LA County. Don’t miss a wonderful evening of songs and stories – a very special evening with an outstanding entertainer. More about Joyce: www.aimeeentertainment.com/aimee.htm

 

    

An Evening of Music and Comedy with Ronnie Jayne & Friends 
 
Wednesday, December 3rd at
8pm * $25
 
Ronnie Jayne began her professional career performing at the popular Catskill Mountain Resorts and throughout the East Coast. Her versatile talents as a singer/pianist/comic and songwriter soon took her to
Las Vegas for a seven year run. She has been on several international tours and was a featured performer with Bob Hope.


Ronnie creates special material for conventions and organizations, including Star-Kist Tuna, Metropolitan Transit Authority, the American Heart Association, Goodwill Industries, Xerox and more! If you had to describe her in one word, that word would be "FUN". Her performances are energetic, and she always comes in with a positive attitude. 

 

 

Singing Political Satirist Roy Zimmerman’s PEACENIK!
"a latter-day Tom Lehrer."
Los Angeles Times  

 

Saturday, December 13 at 8:30pm * $25

 

Roy Zimmerman writes fiecely funny songs.  Now he takes satirical aim at the absurdities of the Holidays.  PeaceNick is 90 minutes of Lefty-Pacifist-Humanist Seasonal satire - music to listen to while the presents get unwrapped and the Bush administration comes unglued.  Happy "Christma-Hanu-Rama-Ka-Dona-Kwaanza"!


Zimmerman was the creator of the hilarious political satirical quartet The Foremen (Warner/ Reprise recording artists) and has been compared to Tom Lehrer in the LA Times and elsewhere. Roy (on his own or with The Foremen) has opened for Bill Maher, Dennis Miller, George Carlin and Paula Poundstone. His private arsenal of edgy musical delights includes hilarious send-ups of mega-mergers (Multi-National Anthem), the 60s (Psychedlic Relic), healthcare and politics. Roy’s Creation Science 101 was YouTube’s #1 pick last year and has garnered nearly a million hits!  
 
Steinway Hall @ Fields Pianos * 12121 W. Pico Bl. (1 door w. of Bundy * Level P2) 

Park free in lot! * RSVP to Jeannine Frank * Jeannine@FrankEntertainment.com  

 

Coming to other venues: Howard Rosenberg, Dave Frishberg

 

* Thu., Nov. 20 * 7:30pm *  Village Books, Pacific Palisades * Witty Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Howard Rosenberg & Charles Feldman (formerly w/ CNN) speak & sign their new book, No Time No Time to Think: The Menace of Media Speed and the 24-Hour News Cycle. More at www.notimetothinkbook.com  & www.howardrosenberg.org 

 

 

  
* Carla-Bration update!  A big thanks to all who participated in September’s fundraiser for Carla Zilbersmith. LA Times jazz critic Don Heckman’s reviews the evening at: http://irom.wordpress.com/2008/10/08/live-carla-zilbersmith/  & his pre-show feature on Carla can be found at http://irom.wordpress.com/2008/09/22/cd-review-carla-zilbersmith/ . Read Carla’s review (Sept. 5) at:  www.carlamuses.blogspot.com  

A few silent auction items remain! E-mail me a bid for any items below and I’ll notify the highest bidder via e-mail by Monday at noon!  

1) Alexandra More’s acclaimed Celebrity Staged Play Reading Series — season pass for two!  Valued at $160. More info at www.westsidejcc.org or at 323-938-2531 ext 2225
2) A pass to one of Beyond Boroque artist-in-residence Terrie Silverman’s workshop for writers and performers. More info at www.creativerites.com

3) Two Parlor Performance passes to see Joyce Aimee on Fri. 11/14

4) Two Parlor Performance passes to see Ronnie Jayne on Wed. 12/3

5) Two Parlor Performance passes to see Roy Zimmerman Sat. 12/13 

 

 

 

 

Save $5 off your next Parlor Performance at Steinway Hall when you reserve a week or more in advance!  Good for up to 6 people!  RSVP to Jeannine@FrankEntertainment.com

 

Offer Expires: Dec. 31, 2008

DOCTORS WITHOUT BOARDERS NATIONAL TOUR - Coming to Santa Monica Pier - Friday, October 31st thru Sunday, November 2nd, 9:00 AM - 5:30 PM

DOCTORS WITHOUT BOARDERS NATIONAL TOUR

A Refugee Camp in the Heart of the City

Coming to Santa Monica Pier

Friday, October 31st – Sunday, November 2nd

9:00 AM - 5:30 PM

Parking Lot 1 North, Santa Monica Pier (Parking lot just north of the Pier)

This event is free and open to the public. Please allow 40-60 minutes for the tour.

Reservations are recommended for groups of 15 or more.

To schedule a group, please call Rachel Belt at: 212-763-5707

 

Video

See the introductory video for A Refugee Camp in the Heart of the City

Interactive Map

Preview the exhibit through the new interactive map.

 

Video

Watch a tour clip from Minneapolis featured online for The Rake Magazine.

Facebook

Related Events

Interested in Working with Doctors Without Borders Overseas?

 

Saturday, November 1, 2008 - 2:00PM
Ken Edwards Center
1527 4th Street, Santa Monica

 

Put Your Ideals Into Practice: Recruitment Information Session
All prospective medical and nonmedical aid workers: join us for a presentation, film, and question and

answer session to learn more about how you can become part of Doctors Without Borders’ field work.

 

Saturday, November 1st, 2:00 PM - Soldiers of Conscience - Agustín Aguayo, Pablo Paredes & Others - Discussion with WWII & Iraq Military Resisters - Japanese American National Museum, LA

Free Event

Soldiers of Conscience – Discussion with WWII & Iraq Military Resisters  

With Agustín Aguayo, Pablo Paredes, Cedrick Shimo, Maricela Guzman & Dr. Shirley Castelnuovo

Saturday, November 1st, 2:00 PM  

Japanese American National Museum - 369 E. First Street, Los Angeles 90012

American Friends Service Committee - Los Angeles


SOLDIERS OF CONSCIENCE


November 1st, 2008
Saturday, 2:00 PM


Photo of Cedrick Shimo © Thomas Sanders

 

Can American soldiers be ordered to participate in military actions which they believe are morally wrong?

Join AFSC and the Japanese American National Museum in a discussion with military resisters from the Iraq War and World War II.


Where:
Japanese American National Museum
369 E.
First St., Los Angeles  90012

Map / directions />” src=”http://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=1863a5c9e6&view=att&th=11d455b9cdb200ff&attid=0.4&disp=emb&zw” /></span></font></a></p>
	<p>             </span></font><strong><font color=Event is Free.

For a free museum admission that day, RSVP online >

 

Cedrick Shimo, a Japanese American who served in World War II, was assigned to a unit of "potential troublemakers" after protesting travel restrictions placed on Americans of Japanese descent.

 

Agustín Aguayo, a conscientious objector who was court-martialed for refusing a second deployment to Iraq, and sentenced to eight months in prison.

 

 

Pablo Paredes, a conscientious objector who was court-martialed for refusing to board a Navy ship bound for Iraq , and sentenced to three months hard labor.

 

 

Also:
Dr. Shirley Castelnuovo will talk about her new book, Soldiers of Conscience: Japanese American Military Resisters in World War II.

 

…and Maricela Guzman will give a brief history of the American Friends Service Committee’s involvement with the Japanese American community.

For more information,                              call (213) 489-1900.

 

 

 

 

 

American Friends Service Committee
634 S. Spring
St., 3rd Floor, Los Angeles , CA 90014
Phone: (213) 489-1900 | Fax: (213) 489-1910
losangeles@afsc.org | losangeles.afsc.org

National website: www.afsc.org

“DIVIDED WE STAND” - Two Free Screening - Thursday, October 30th, 7:30 PM - Pasadena City College ~ Sunday, November 2nd, 8:00 PM - Akbar Screening Room in Silver Lake

Two Free Screenings of

 

DIVIDED WE STAND

Thursday, October 30th, 7:30 PM

Pasadena City College - Harbeson Hall

1570 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena 91106

Parking on Hill Avenue, Lot #10 – NW Campus

 

Also

 

Sunday, November 2nd, 8:00 PM  

Akbar Screening Room  

4356 Sunset Blvd., Silver Lake 90029

(323) 665-6810

 

Emmy-winning filmmakers, Tom Drew and Mike Bloecher will be in attendance

for a discussion of the film and politics in general after each screening.

 

 

This Thursday, Oct 30, @ 7:30 PM, Harbeson Hall the Pasadena City College, College Democrats and

College Republicans are sponsoring a FREE screening of "Divided We Stand", a folksy road trip documentary (78′) exploring the country’s political, cultural divide on the cusp of the last presidential election. "Divided We Stand"

was broadcast nationally earlier this year on the Dish Network and has played in several film festivals.

 

If you are not familiar with the project, the film’s trailer can be viewed at this link, where you

can also purchase the DVD or watch the doc in it’s entirety on the SNAG FILMS window:

 

http://www.indiepixfilms.com/film/2186

 

Given the current political season "Divided We Stand" is particularly timely and

if you have any interest in politics you should find this doc especially entertaining.

 

Please forward this invite onto other politically-minded friends and associates.

 

THANKS FOR YOUR INDIE DOC SUPPORT!

 

Tom

Director

"Divided We Stand

 

Memorial/Celebration Honoring & Remembering Tony Russo - Saturday, November 15th, 3:00 PM - Crescent Heights Methodist Church - 1296 N. Fairfax Blvd., West Hollywood

Memorial/Celebration

Honoring & Remembering the Life of

 

Tony Russo

October 14th, 1936 - August 6th, 2008

 

Saturday, November 15th, 3:00 PM

 

Crescent Heights Methodist Church
1296 N. Fairfax Blvd., West Hollywood 90046

 

Among those Honoring and Remembering Tony will be

 

Daniel Ellsberg, Lee Boek, Ross Altman, Barry Schier & Frank Dorrel

 
Contact Lee Boek:  323 661 0524

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

LA Times Obituary - Friday, August 8th, 2008

Anthony J. Russo, 71; Rand Staffer Helped Leak Pentagon Papers

By Elaine Woo, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 8, 2008

 

Anthony J. Russo, a Rand researcher in the late 1960s who encouraged Daniel Ellsberg to leak the Pentagon Papers and stood trial with him in the Vietnam War-era case that triggered debates over freedom of the press and hastened the fall of a president, has died. He was 71.

Russo, who lived in Santa Monica for many years, died Wednesday of natural causes in his native Suffolk, Va., according to a spokesman for the Suffolk Police Department. Russo had been in poor health since he had a heart attack three years ago.

In 1971, Russo helped Ellsberg copy a classified government history of the Vietnam War that Ellsberg later supplied to the New York Times and other newspapers. Dubbed the Pentagon Papers after the Times published extensive excerpts and analysis, the secret study provided evidence of lying by government officials, including several presidents, about the scope and purposes of the war.

Ellsberg went on to become an antiwar icon, sought-after lecturer and author, but Russo was relegated to a few lines in history books. His supporting-role status — "the notion that I had just been a Xeroxer" — rankled him to the end.

Russo was born in Suffolk on Oct. 14, 1936. He studied aerophysics at Virginia Tech in the late 1950s before earning a scholarship to Princeton University, where he shifted his focus to engineering and public affairs. In a foreign relations course during his third year at Princeton, he learned about the Rand Corp.’s work in Vietnam. The tumult of the ’60s was underway, and Russo decided to leave school and apply to Rand.

At the Santa Monica think tank, Russo was assigned to the Viet Cong Morale and Motivation Project. His research in Vietnam radicalized him. His support of the Viet Cong, the communist army opposed by the United States and South Vietnam government, was controversial and sparked the interest of Ellsberg, a former Defense Department analyst who by 1968 was also working at Rand.

Ellsberg, who described Russo as his best friend at Rand, asked his colleague to brief him on the Viet Cong project. "I explained how the so-called enemy, the Viet Cong, and the North Vietnamese, were actually the legitimate parties and how the U.S. presence was illegal, immoral and unwise. I supplied him with reams of documentation," Russo later wrote in a personal account of the period. He was fired from Rand a short time later.

During one conversation with Ellsberg, he learned of a secret study commissioned by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara that chronicled the origins of the war. Ellsberg said that it showed that the U.S. had falsely charged North Vietnam with an act of unprovoked aggression in the Gulf of Tonkin, the basis for President Lyndon B. Johnson’s broadening of U.S. involvement in the war in 1964.

Russo said that when he heard about the fabrication of the Gulf of Tonkin incident, he urged Ellsberg to "turn that over to the newspapers."

Ellsberg was shocked by his friend’s subversive suggestion. "This was an extraordinary thing for someone who had until recently held a top-secret clearance to say to anyone, least of all to someone who still had a clearance," Ellsberg said Thursday in a statement distributed by the blog antiwar.com.

Russo’s and Ellsberg’s accounts differ on when the latter conversation occurred. Russo said it happened in late 1968; Ellsberg said that it was in September 1969, after he had read several volumes of the Pentagon Papers that had been stored at Rand. That was when he called Russo and asked for his help.

"I asked him if he knew where we could find a Xerox machine," Ellsberg said, "and within an hour he got back to me with the word that his then-girlfriend had a machine in her office we could use."

What followed were several weeks of furious copying behind locked doors of the girlfriend’s Hollywood advertising agency. The documents were given to New York Times reporter Neil Sheehan in March 1971. Publication of the first installments in June sparked an FBI manhunt for Ellsberg and an unprecedented attempt by the Nixon administration to restrain the newspaper from publishing any more of the information Ellsberg had provided.

Russo was harassed by police and placed under surveillance. When he was subpoenaed by a grand jury, he refused to testify against Ellsberg and was jailed for 45 days. A few days before Christmas 1971, both men were indicted on charges of conspiracy, theft and espionage.

Although Russo’s name was listed before Ellsberg’s in the court papers filed by the government, everyone called it the Ellsberg trial. This description only added insult to injury, as far as Russo was concerned. He believed that Ellsberg wanted to keep the limelight to himself and saw Russo as "horning in on his thing."

The co-defendants were quite unalike in many ways. Russo was large and rumpled, Ellsberg trim and elegant. Russo spoke in the rhetoric of a left-wing rebel, while Ellsberg, a former Marine, was far more measured.

Once the trial was underway, they clashed repeatedly on strategy. Russo wanted to radicalize the proceedings with defense witnesses such as activists Tom Hayden and Howard Zinn, but Ellsberg preferred more established figures, such as McGeorge Bundy and Theodore Sorensen, both of whom had worked in the Kennedy administration.

Perhaps none of it mattered. The case against them was dismissed May 11, 1973, after the court learned that a covert team had broken into the offices of Ellsberg’s psychiatrist looking for information to discredit the star defendant.

The break-in had been committed by operatives from the White House, whose crimes had come at the behest of Nixon and his top aides. Nixon resigned from office Aug. 9, 1974.

Russo, who worked for the Los Angeles County Probation Department after leaving Rand, returned to work for the county when the trial ended.

After his retirement and his mother’s death in the early 1990s, he moved back to Suffolk but continued as an activist for peace and other causes. He was married and divorced twice and had no children.

Lee Boek, a friend for more than 20 years, said Russo had a contrary streak and "never felt he got the credit he deserved" for his role in publicizing the Pentagon Papers.

He risked his life and his jobs. He suffered a lot for it," Boek said, adding that his friend saw himself as "a real patriot of this country, someone who fought for right and justice."

On Thursday, Ellsberg sought to give his former colleague and co-defendant his due.

"The fact is I will be eternally grateful to Tony for his courage and partnership in what proved to be a useful action," Ellsberg said. "He set an example of willingness to risk everything for his country and for the Vietnam that he loved that very few, unfortunately, have emulated."

Special Screening of “BAM 6.6 - Humanity Has No Borders” - A Beautiful New Film about IRAN - Saturday, November 29th - 7:30 PM - Raleigh Studios, Hollywood - I Love This Film - Frank Dorrel

You Are Invited to a Special Screening of

“BAM 6.6”

A Beautiful New Film about IRAN

Saturday, November 29th - 7:30 PM

Raleigh Studios  

5300 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles 90038

 

 Meet Director Jahangir Golestan

Tickets are $5 - RSVP to Frank Dorrel at: 310-838-8131 –Email: fdorrel@sbcglobal.net

 

 “As U.S. government leaders and both presidential candidates are talking about the possibility of going to war against Iran, I would recommend that every American see ‘BAM 6.6’.  I loved this film!” – Frank Dorrel

 

If there is one country we all need to know more about, it is Iran. Even with all the attention it receives, many Americans have no idea what Iran and its people are really like. We need to inspire our children to take pride in their heritage, and inspire our non-Iranian neighbors to find out what Iranians are really like.

 

BAM 6.6 documents events surrounding the massive earthquake that destroyed the ancient city of Bam in 2003. The movie is a tale of two Americans, Tobb Dell’Oro and his fiancée Adele Freedman, who were caught in the earthquake. It’s the story of travelers intent on going to the other side of the fence and experiencing a culture for themselves. Breaking down boundaries. It’s also the story of the Iranian people’s unfailing generosity in the face of absolute adversity. It demonstrates that humanity has no borders and that we find good people everywhere.

 

Can a movie bring about change? Jahangir Golestan, an Iranian-American from Laguna Beach, believes so. He has spent four years of his life making it. He continues to devote all of his energy to spreading its message. BAM depicts humanity at its best & shows the human race’s ability to live in harmony and peace. This is a message which is desperately needed, perhaps now more than at any other point in our history.  ‘BAM 6.6’ won Best Documentary, Best Original Story and Best Director at the Noor Film Festival.

 

‘After viewing Bam 6.6, I could not stop thinking about how the world needs more films that reach to the very core of what really matters in this world, who we really are, and what really brings us all together. Watch this film. Your heart will thank you for it.’- Lime Radio host and producer Claire Papin.

 

‘An incredible documentary. This is footage of Iranian people who are just like you and me here in America. This

film shows the compassion of Iranian people towards these American tourists. Eighty percent of Americans never travel abroad to experience other cultures. This is a must-see film.’ - Antiwar Radio host Scott Horton.

 

Can a movie make a difference? The answer is a resounding yes. It shouldn’t take a catastrophe to bring

human beings together across boundaries – but when it does, we should learn from it.

 

For more information or to purchase copies of BAM 6.6 go to:  www.essenceofiran.com

 

 

BAM 6.6

Saturday, November 29th - 7:30 PM

Raleigh Studios

5300 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles 90038

 

 Tickets are $5 - RSVP to Frank Dorrel: 310-838-8131 – Email: fdorrel@sbcglobal.net

Office of the Americas’ 25th Anniversary Celebration - Sunday, November 16th ~ Honoring Sean Penn, Mike Farrell, Martin Sheen & Veterans For Peace - The Sheraton Gateway Hotel LA

Office of the Americas‘ 25th Anniversary Celebration

OOA Logo

Sunday, November 16th

The Sheraton Gateway Los Angeles
6101 West Century Blvd., Los Angeles

 

Dinner & Program - 6:00 PM - $200
Main Program - 
7:30 PM - $35

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Honorees Include:

Sean Penn, Mike Farrell and Veterans For Peace

Special Tribute to Martin Sheen for 25+ Years with OOA (in absentia)

Don White ~ Presente!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Program:

Blase Bonpane, Theresa Bonpane, Deborah Haggis, Paul Haggis,

Henry Howard, Ron Kovic, Jim Lafferty, Maxine Waters

 

Musical Entertainment:

OOA Songsters ~ Larry Dilg, Blase Dillingham, Tom English

 

Master of Ceremonies:

Maria Elena Durazo

 

Dinner Host:

Shae Popovich

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Tickets:
       Please reserve ____ tickets to the dinner + program at $200 each.
        
       I/we would like a vegetarian meal.  Number ___________
 
       Please reserve ____ tickets to the main program only at $35 each.
         
       I’m sorry I cannot attend, but enclosed is my contribution of $_______ to
           help OOA in its work for peace and justice.
              
 
Name___________________________________________________
Address_________________________________________________
City_____________________________State_________Zip_______
Telephone (day)____________ (eve)_________ Fax____________________
E-mail______________________________________________
Credit Card # (for charges of $50 and above): _____________________________Exp. date_______

 

 

Office of the Americas
8124 West Third Street
Los Angeles, CA  90048

Phone: 323-852-9808
Fax: 323-852-0655

shae.popovich@gmail.com

www.officeoftheamericas.org