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Evento
TAMMY FAYE STARLITE CELEBRATES 40 YEARS OF MARIANNE FAITHFULL'S BROKEN ENGLISH
Tammy Faye Starlite performs Marianne Faithfull's Broken English in its entirety -- an oxymoron, in keeping with the albums inherent nihilism -- for one month of Thursdays at Pangea this coming March. Performances are set for March 7, 14, 21 and 28.
She had previously presented her Cabaret Marianne performance piece that The New York Times called "a jaw dropping show." In his review, Stephen Holden wrote, "Tammy Faye Starlite went all the way: impersonating Marianne Faithfull, rock music's 'fallen woman', with an uncanny accuracy. Her simulation of Ms. Faithfull's vocal style and combustible blend of arrogance and scabrous sarcasm only begins to tell the story." Tammy Faye originally performed Broken English at Lincoln Center, Joes Pub and The Metropolitan Room; later she performed Marianne Faithful: Exposed at Joes Pub and McCabes in Los Angeles. Thereafter, she took Cabaret Marianne on the road to Provincetown, Chicago and St. Louis.
When Marianne Faithfull released Broken English in 1979, she shattered all preconceptions, glass ceilings, walls and doorways. She claimed her identity and emerged as herself after years of playing the roles of pop princess, rock-royal consort, fallen angel, and tattered waif, roles for which she never auditioned nor truly wanted. Through the power of this album she became what she had always been: passionate, tender, knowing, uncensored and unashamed. The album, in its unabashed desire and rage and profound excavation of the human spirit, still resonates today. Its not a relic. Its a reality.
Tammy Faye Starlite will do her utmost to keep the fire aflame and honor the integrity - no, the intensity - of the record while trying to heed a Marianne dictum: "We fucked up, now were free!" In view of this assertion, its easy to see why The New York Times' Stephen Holden proclaimed Tammy Faye's Marianne Faithfull portrayal to be "easily the most revelatory show Ive seen."
Marianne Faithfull has commented on the legacy of Broken English in recent years, suggesting, "It was simply the world seen from my point of view. It wasn't a conscious statement on the world... Broken English is very personal.. the songs, the covers that I did, simply happened to be songs I believed myself. "Working Class Hero", "The Ballad of Lucy Jordan", "Why DYa Do It", were written by other people, but I could have written them myself."
Broken English, from the time of its initial release in 1979 through the present day has been seen as a benchmark work in terms of its raw honesty and the revelations it conveys.
"Now, as Marianne Faithfull, British pop's queen of survival, Starlite resurrects 1979s Broken English as a thoroughly modern tale of adventure, abyss and hard-won vengeance one of the most brutally frank albums of its time, made flesh again, in poignant lethally honest character." - David Fricke/Rolling Stone
All Sales Are Final. NO REFUNDS
SEATING AT PANGEA IS COMMUNAL. OTHER GUESTS MAY BE SEATED AT THE TABLE. THERE IS A $20 MINIMUM PER PERSON (FOOD OR BEVERAGE). DINNER SEATING BEGINS AT 6:00PM.
THE HOUSE OPENS ONE HOUR BEFORE THE SHOW. SEATING IS FIRST COME FIRST SERVED.
LATE ARRIVALS WILL BE SEATED AT MANAGEMENT'S DISCRETION.
Downtown's intimate supper-club Pangea is the ultimate in alt, playing home to some of the best in alt cabaret. The New York Times recently called it "a bohemian oasis not unlike the fabled Max's Kansas City from days gone by."
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UbicaciónPangea (Ver)
178 Second Avenue
New York, NY 10003
United States
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