810 W. Lake St., Mpls Open 8 am-2am daily

Restaurant/Bowling (612) 825-3737 Theater (612) 825-8949


Golmah: The Jewish Wonder Woman (4-26)
Bryant-Lake Bowl Cabaret Theater
Minneapolis, MN
Share this event:


Written and Performed by Cia Sautter with Michael Hauser and Dagmara Gutman
Directed by Cynthia Uhrich
Art Direction by Paige Dansinger

What if the legend is wrong? What if the real story was even more fantastic? Golmah offers drama, humor, entertainment, and even audience participation to find out what really happened in the classic tale of the Golem. There really was a Rabbi named Judah Loew, who supposedly made a Golem creature for protecting Jews against oppression. But what actually happened?

The main storyteller in Golmah offers how the women of Prague actually made the first creature. While the women are successful in making a Golmah female Golem - they begin to question whether or not they should have done so. The story deals specifically with violence against a minority group and women from the past, but raises issues about our own society.

Cia Sautter is the writer and main performer of Golmah. She dances, acts and tells stories to translate old tales into modern dramas. With a doctorate in Religion and the Arts from the Graduate Theological Union, she brings a wealth of training and experience to her work. Though she has learned many dance forms, Cia now focuses on Flamenco. Inspired by acting study, especially at the Globe theatre in London, she gradually developed Storydance Theatre, using a combination of active storytelling and dance, and has performed at small venues and schools, in larger shows with Anda Flamenco, featured as a soloist in Zorongo student shows, and performed nationally and internationally at conferences and events. Cia has a new book published by Routledge on The Performance of Religion: Seeing the Sacred in Theatre.  Her previous publication, The Miriam Tradition, was appreciated by many for its emphasis on womens contributions to the performing arts in Jewish community life.

For this performance, Cia works with flamenco guitarist Michael Hauser. He is the Father of Flamenco in the Midwest and has studied with several of Spains grteat flamenco guitarists, including Luis Maravilla, Nino Ricardo, Justo Badajoz, and Juan Maya Marote.  He has received numerous grant and honors, and has taught most flamenco guitarists in the local area.

Dagmara Gutman will serve as an additional dancer for the performance.  A longtime flamenco dancer and performer, Dagmara has studied flamenco locally with Susana Di Palma and Kristina Di Sacramento, as well as with teachers in Spain. Locally she performed solo work with the group El Fredo. Dagmara is Jewish, born in St. Petersburg during Soviet times, and also skilled in Russian Gypsy dance and a published poet. She brings her dramatic flair and rhythmic expertise to this production.

Praise for Golmah:
Cia Sautter uses story-telling to present her imaginative metaphysical concept of the Golmah. She backs it up with an intelligent script and her fine acting Need some inspiration? Go see this show!   Flamenco artist Kristina de Sacramento (Larrson)

Really fun performance. Wonderful mix of storytelling and flamenco dancingI loved the story, the ritual, and the dance! - Audience member

https://www.facebook.com/cialuna
https://www.facebook.com/cialunastorydance/
http://www.mnartists.org/cia-sautter

NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES.
Get Tickets
There are no active dates for this event.
Powered by  
 
Tickets may still be available and if so, they will be released at door time, which is 6:00pm. We don't offer same-day reservations over the phone or online, but you are welcome to call for availability. If you would like to purchase a ticket, please come to the box office any time between 6:00pm and showtime. If you have additional questions, please call 612-825-8949.

Location

Bryant-Lake Bowl Cabaret Theater (View)
810 West Lake Street
Minneapolis, MN 55408
United States
Map is loading...

Categories

None

Contact

Owner: Bryant-Lake Bowl Theater
On BPT Since: Oct 03, 2006
 
Rachel Clark


ShareThis Copy and Paste