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Blog Ina's Story Mouse News

All-Time Champion at the “Moth” Joins MouseMuse Storytellers

October 18, 20112 at The Bijou www.thebijoutheatre.com. will be absolutely thrilling for, Joe Limone and Ina opening the evening, onstage for Adam Wade, www.Adamwade.com. Adam is the 18 time StorySLAM winner at the “Moth.”  Adam is like the Garrison Keeler of the Northeast. Homey, adorable and humble. He’s able to make fun of himself. It’s a gift that has landed him nighttime TV gigs in Storytelling. The show will feature Ina doing two 8 minute stories, Joe doing a  “clliff serialized story for 12 minutes, and Adam Wade is his incredibly likable way will make you stop, look, listen and care. He’s a rare bird. Vulnerable and funny. Mark your calendars. Adam has never been around these parts. This is big stuff for MouseMuse. Yay!

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Blog Ina's Story Mouse News

Working for the Man: Some Fathers are more “Man” Than Others

We’re back at Fairfield Museum and History Center and in celebration with the Emancipation Proclamation’s 150th anniversary, our Storytellers have got some stories for you.
Richard Epstein worked for the one and only man, his father.  Liz Wachsler played a joke on a “suit” in her office who was too uptight. Harry Gambaradella took his 16 year-old grievance with his conniving boss to the cops.  Debra Coleman was enslaved by her living arrangements with each job she go. Pam Booth scared the devil out of herself when she worked malicious magic on her bad boss.
It’s going to be an amazing night of emotional connection with six incredible stories that will touch you, entertain you and make you laugh.  Won’t you join us?
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Blog Ina's Story Mouse News

Tickets are going fast” Under the Covers Where Our Voices Have Been Hiding”

 

Ina Chadwick’s MouseMuse Productions announces its alliance with The Bijou Theatre located at 275 Fairfield Ave., Bridgeport.

The Bijou Theatre is rapidly building its reputation as one of the hottest arts and entertainment venues in Connecticut. By aligning with well-known production entities such as MouseMuse Productions, The Bijou Theatre is enhancing its entertainment agenda. Maintaining its 100-year old history, the management of The Bijou Theatre invested in a complete renovation as a 202-seat multipurpose movie house and concert hall, presenting live theater and all varieties of entertainment. Amenities inside The Bijou Theatre include a top shelf bar with glass barware, table service for tapas, and a cabaret-style atmosphere.

MouseMuse Productions has been producing live storytelling events in many venues in Fairfield County for the past three years. Now, the alliance with The Bijou Theatre further enhances the power of the personal narrative as entertainment. The series entitled “Real People. Real Stories,” encompasses ensemble shows, both written and performed by the authors, (the owners of their own stories) as well as one-person shows that are inspirational and transformational in their truth telling. They are at all times riveting, poignant, often humorous, but always entertaining and provocative for further community conversation.

The first show being presented at The Bijou Theatre by MouseMuse Productions will be on September 29, “Under the Covers, Where Our Voices Have Been Hiding.” This is a one-time exclusive performance by a talented ensemble cast of mostly Fairfield County women who range in age from 30 to 81. The show was first produced by Jill Jaysen at the Seabury Center in Westport, last year and played to rave reviews and sell-out crowds two nights in a row. Each of the cast members has written their own story as if they were sharing in their diaries.

For more information, visit  www.mousemuse.com or visit  www.thebijoutheatre.com.

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Storm Postpones Writers Artists Cafe

Dear Writers,
Hope your Summer was filled with experiencing, reading and writing many stories.  We can’t wait to hear about them at our first meeting of Writers Artists Collaborative for the 2012 to 2013 season!  Join us for a Writers’ Cafe on 9/19/12.Save these dates for our monthly Fall meetings:  Held from 12:30pm to 2pm at Ina Chadwick’s house.  The address is: 2 Redcoat Road, Westport, CT  06880 (it’s next to Exit 41 on the Merritt, also knows as Route 15, and is the first driveway on the right)
September: Wednesday, 9/19/12 XXXX postponed -9/25

October: Wednesday, 10/24/12

November: : Wednesday, 11/14/1

December: Wednesday, 12/12/12

If you would like to participate in our blind submission process this month, get in touch with Margaret  via email to margaret.mousemuse.com: .We also hope you can join us for a few upcomin events fromMouseMuse Productions — visit www.MouseMuse.com for more details and the full Fall calendar:

Real People. Real Stories. (First in the Series)    Theme: Under the Covers Where Our Voices Have Been HidingDATE:  Saturday, 9/29/12TIME:  8pm to 9:30pmLOCATION:  The Bijou Theatre, 275 Fairfield Avenue, Bridgeport, CT  06604 For tickets: http://thebijoutheatre.com/films/real-people-real-stories-series-under-covers/203-332-3228$20 and $25Our own Dee Andrian will be performing!
Fairfield Museum and History Center’s Promise of Freedom: 150th Anniversary of the Emancipation ProclamationTheme: Working for the ManDATE:  Thursday, 10/4/12TIME:  7pm to 9:30pmLOCATION:  Fairfield Museum and History Center, 370 Beach Road, Fairfield, CT  06824For tickets: http://mousemuseproductions.com/mouse-events/working-for-the-man/203-247-3346$20
Bring your friends and keep writing!See you at the Writers’ Cafe next week,
Margaret and Ina
P.S.  Sophie Barnes’ poems was selected to be part of the Westport Arts Center’s “foodies!” 2012 Group Members Juried Exhibition.  Catch her at the opening this Friday, 9/14/12, from 6pm to 8pm, 51 Riverside Avenue in Westport, CT.  Congratulations, Sophie!__________________________________________

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Series: Opening Chapters. Closing Notes. Song/Writer

 

SINGER/SONG/WRITER (Words and Tunes)
Tuesday: 11/13/2012
7pm-9:00 pm

Introducing one of our Writer’s Café members;

Robert Steven Williams is very talented local lyricist and guitarist, who is about to publish his first novel will sing original stories, plus read for 10 minutes from his amazing work of fiction, “My Year as a Clown.”

Songsters and Writers onstage together for an evening that mixes words and songs.

TWO BOOTS, Bridgeport CT
281 Fairfield Avenue
203-331-1377

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Blog Ina's Story Mouse News

Mr. BIll, Oh No! It’s Too Exciting. Bosch’s Blog

To all MouseMuseians (a new term I’ve conjured up for all followers of things MouseMuse and lovers of the well told tale) – We are about to embark on a new season of Storytelling that should bring our audiences to the floor, either with tears or laughter.  Three evenings of entertainment at the Fairfield Museum and Historic Center.  Three additional evenings at the Gaelic Club in Fairfield.  Shows, produced by MouseMuse, of a slightly different tale, at the Bijou Theatre in Bridgeport.  Over 50 storytellers will grace the stages in the coming months and weave their tales of love or lust, travail and travel, work, non-work, mistakes, blunders, histories, comedic encounters and, who knows, perhaps alien adventures.  Like a story strapped to the hood of an Indy race car, we fine tune the engine, coach the driver, check the oil, fill the tank and set them loose.  We never know exactly who’s coming in first, who might have a technical problem, or even bump into the guardrail along the telling. 10 minute bursts of insight, passion, escape, and hilarity.  Join us as we set forth on six months in a row of storytelling extravaganza!

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Born in a Trunk. Stars Have to Be Born Somewhere

“Real Stories. Real People,” Theatrical Programs Chosen by MouseMuse

The Bijou Theatre has maintained its history on the outside, but oh wow on the inside, it’s tricked out to deliver entertainment, libations and a wowie experience from cabaret table or theater seats. You decide where you sit.

“I  was born in a trunk/In the Princess Theatre in Pocatella, Idaho/It was during a matinee.” That’s Judy Garland’s story in “A Star is Born.” We are giving birth to stars and a start in Bridgeport, Ct. For the Bijou Theatre.

MouseMuse is proud to announce is official alliance with The Bijou Theatre www. thebijoutheatre.com We will be producing three shows in 2012 at that wonderful venue starting on September  29, with Jill Jaysen’s spectacular ensemble, mostly local cast, from  her exclusive, “Under the Covers, Where our Voices Have Been  Hiding.” That show premiered in Westport to sell-out crowds last year.

The shows that MouseMuse and The Bijou Theatre conceptualized  could be called “spoken word,” but in an effort to let the audience know that these shows are all true stories, riveting because they’re from real life, hilarious because they’re human, and poignant because they touch the core of truth in all of us, we called it something other than STORYTELLING—our flagship shows are more like the “Moth.” People get up and they tell it like it is. Yes, we do make sure the telling is not offensive, takes ten minutes or less, but those shows are never repeated nor can they really travel. They’re in the moment. They’re reality TV in a refined form, for your life. Certainly not the Karsdashians, (unless you want to fess up?).

These shows are entities that we bring in from outside, that have been constructed from reality and had proven stage-worthy.

The shows are, at this point, performed and acted by the authors themselves.  Some have required inspired direction, such as Jill Jaysen’s “Under the Covers Where Our Voices Have Been Hiding,”

It is a highwire act of innovative entertainment that’s very different from our flagship unrehearsed but Ina and Bill vetted for excitement and entertainment programs.

Our first three shows are fully fleshed out pieces that you might see at a fringe festival or at other classical stage venues that handle more than conventional  on-script performances.

Keep looking for what’s coming up on our partners page and events pages. Summer ends tomorrow and welcome to the next season of expanding programming for MouseMuse Productions.

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Blog Ina's Story Mouse News

What a Way to End a Summer!

We finished up our Summer StoryMasters Jam at TWO BOOTS with a smash hit from 4 very different storytellers, plus 3 from the audience who wowed us —prizes were awarded to Miguel Villanueva, 3 place, (dinner at TWO BOOTS– Harry Gambardella, a bottle of red wine, and Liz Wachsler, a gift basket with tickets to the Bijou Theater.

TWO BOOTS a perfect place to let lose, throw down a beer, or a club soda if you want, and then kvell from the pizza which is rated best in the state.

We loved it there and will be back next summer with storytelling. Meanwhile we will be working to plan some small scale writer and singer/songwriter solo acts for emerging artists at TWO BOOTS in the winter when we are in Fairfield. See our events.
www.mousemuse.com

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Mouse News

A Wonderful Post From The Bijou

MouseMuse’s business partnership with The Bijou in Bridgeport is already set to be a fruitful one, and it doesn’t hurt to see blog posts which show just how much they get the importance of storytelling.

The post in particular is a wonderful read, and you can find it here.

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Mouse News

MouseMuse Now Produces Independent Storytellers, or How We Learned to Play Nice With Others

Here at MouseMuse, we love our Storytellers. Really, we do! All of this hullabaloo is, at the core, for them. Marketing interns work and slave over bright computer screens to get butts in seats so that as many people as possible will be gifted with the joy, sorrow, and all-around thrill that is a Storytelling event. Since its inception, the goal of our flagship program has been to put everyday people front and center and give them a platform upon which they can share their adventures with the world. It is safe to say that we can regard that as a mission accomplished, but there’s always more to strive for.

Aren’t there motivational posters which preach about “shooting for the stars,” or something like that? That’s what we’re going for.

The next step, faithful readers and viewers and listeners and Facebook fans, is moving beyond our own stable of storytellers and moving on to established acts looking to share their stories. These are the people with fans and awards, the storytellers who have a following. Now, we don’t mean to imply that we’re abandoning our standard Storytelling programs, but we are adding a new trick to our roster. It’s time to start producing the independent storytellers. It’s time to go big.

What does this mean? This means people who can do hour-long shows as opposed to round-robin ten-minute stories. This means the kind of people who make you feel incredible from the get-go.

This means MouseMuse is going bigger, bit by bit, and we’re thrilled by the people who are coming along for the ride. Won’t you join us?

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Blog Ina's Story Mouse News

“Expect the Unexpected” Fried Hedonism, July 10

Well, who knew? Here in our no-cheese allowed household, (an ironic twist for a mouse to be allergic to cheese) we went to TWO BOOTS OF BRIDGEPORT for our first Summer Storymaster’s jam in June and what did was discover? They have incredible pizza with non-dairy cheese. Plus they have gluten free pizza. That was unexpected. The crowd of 40 people turned out on a rainy Tuesday, and we immediately set to the task of entertaining them, feeding them with po-boys, fried calamari, excellent salads, hamburgers, fries fried in the great tradition of French fries. Hey, if you’re going to eat fried, eat good fried. We are all for hedonism 10 percent of the time.

July 10 brings us back there again. We’ve got our ambient music with guitarist Steven Epstein and vocalist Paula Darlington onstage. We have a trivia contest for the audience, a show with four veteran storytellers and contest for the three minute storytellers we pick from the hat. Nice prizes from local merchants.

The Joy of Cooking, or recipes gone awry, dinner tables that turned on you, and all things that can happen when you break bread with others.

The Masters 

I (Ina Chadwick) am telling a story about the time we were invited to a Baptism for an boy named Epstein far down in Kentucky-Derby-monied aristocracy.
Joe Limone‘s father was the lenient one in the family. He had only one rule at the table, no soda. Wonder how long it took to break that rule? Show up, find out.
Paddy Jarit and his wife sat down with another couple at an all inclusive resort and from dinner to dinner they miscommunicated because they spoke different languages.
Gina Ludlow nearly wound up eaten alive at a ceremonial table in Africa. The predatory animals were the last ones she was afraid of.

Great drinks, Great fun. Kicky and relaxed for the summer.

We are back in serious mode at Fairfield Museum and History Center in October. http://www.fairfieldhistory.org/

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Blog Ina's Story Mouse News

Try a Youth Elixir for 24 Hours

Yesterday, we found the fountain of youth. Oh, we have found it before and always in a different place because the fountain moves to where the real estate is affordable for the next generation. In New York City the fountain is gushing in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Once upon a time it splashed on me in Washington Square Park in Greenwich  Village, then in Soho and then in TriBeCa. The Meatpacking District had a brief loan of the fountain as has Hell’s Kitchen. But a trek over the Williamsburg Bridge dumped us smack into the middle of what felt like New Orleans. Dilapidated old shingled row houses with ten names on the buzzer system, auto repair yards, factories turning into edgy galleries, rock and heavy metal music clubs that used to be in Manhattan. Coffee bars to the max. Thrift shops galore. Bodegas, boutiques and bodies with piercings and tattoos that look great on them now. Boots and purple hair. I love it.
Sitting in an outdoor garden at a Thai restaurant on the densely populated-with- eateries- street, Bedford, we watched young mothers with strollers walk by, young women proud of their pregnant  bellies tighly showing  in spandex. Dogs, dogs, youth culture dogs for the City life. Small and quick on their hilarious low feet, dachshunds, pugs, and various forms of mutts that all resembled Jack Russell Terriers.
To make “my” husband ecstatic it takes used vinyl record stores that allow you to queue up  the turntables and listen before you purchase, but not for the dollar table selections I liked. They’re too scratched, but the nostalgia of the label is worth simply singing the songs in your head.
The elixir of youth permeates even the restaurants where the owners of a lovely cafe seemed too young to have earned a 24 for food from Zagat. We started for home after the Friday exodus to the country would’ve been over. Magic happened. The sun was setting behind the skyline of Manhattan and we were passing on the East River side at the East River Park in Williamsburg. A parking spot opened and we pulled in and jumped out as fast as we could to make the sky corals and grey flumes of clouds a reality for a picture. Sunset was happening fast.
A boy, a flawless looking young man carrying a skateboard, was also standing and watching in awe. He offered to take our picture. As the lights began to twinkle across the river in the high rises, our young man told us he’d just come back to Brooklyn that day. He had been living in Los Angeles. This sunset scene was what he’d longed to see again. He’d had a place on  Hollywood and Vine and was trying to make his way up the fame ladder with a band. He was a drummer, but when they lead singer

broke up with him, he left the band. He loved New York for its direct cautions to artists. He questioned Hollywood’s tendency to say “they’ll call you back,” but then never do. New Yorkers say “No thanks and goodbye. You know where you stand.”
The beautiful young man introduced himself as Ethan and asked us if we had had dinner yet? We had, but we wished we could’ve absorbed more of  Ethan’s luminescence. We talked him into exploring Rome and Paris because he’d never been out of the country.  But he loved Cities. He was thinking of Indonesia first. We said, ” view America from familiar cultures first.” He asked for a hug. We stood talking with Ethan, who was of Italian descent, in the dark as they locked the gates to East River Park.  We walked toward our luxury car, our  hard earned money in mainstream careers made me wistful. We both chose a safer path after our dreams in the arts paid off in passion, but not in true sustenance,  as we moved into family mode.
Goodbye, Ethan, we both sighed. We had exchanged personal contact information. You brought us a drop of the new fountain of youth. We will savor it.