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Confessions of a Pulpiteer
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Confessions of A Pulipiteer

 

Sacramento Theater Examiner

Rehearsal photos of
"Confessions of a Pulpiteer"
the first staged reading of the
2010 Playwright's Festival of New Works
by: Barry Wisdom

Pictures

____________________________

LISTEN TO
KCSB 91.9 Santa Barbara Interview

"The Culture of Protest"
host Dick Flack interviews
Lee Boek about
Confessions of a Pulpiteer.
Musicians Mitch Greenhill
& Roberta Levitow
sing with Lee,
songs from the performance

Confessions of a Pulpiteer
[partial] Soundtrack *

I'll Fly Away

Farther Along

* Songs performed by Mitch Greenhill & Roberta Levitow.

« Crime of the Century: Wordspace, October 1, 7:30 pm | Main | Activate Yourself »
Wednesday
Sep082010

TIMES BOMB: 100th Year Anniversary Salon: a night of music & readings

Save the Date!
Oct 1
7:30 - 10:30 p.m.

W O R D SPA C E (Writers Invited to Submit:: see below)
3191 Casitas #156 (park for free in the lots at Minneapolis and Casitas!)
Los Angeles, CA

100 YEARS AGO? Union fights, Labor, Economic Disparity, Media Wars-
TONIGHT? Music, Wine, Nibbles and READINGS from L.A. writers and performers, reflections on this complicated piece of Los Angeles history.

Wordspace, Public Works, and Voice in the Well present the 1st in a series of responses to the 100th Anniversary of the L.A. Times Building Bombing. This is a collaborative project based on extensive research by Lionel Rolfe, Lee Boek, Brenda Varda and Eric Vollmer.

WRITERS ARE INVITED TO SUBMIT POETRY, SONGS, SHORT SHORT FICTION, MINI-ESSAYS, PERFORMANCE WORKS for consideration. Please send submissions to submissions@wordspace.net for consideration for this event and upcoming readings. Writers are encouraged to read their own works.

OVERVIEW of the History...for your creative consideration
:: thanks to Eric Vollmer, Lee Boek, and author Lionel Rolfe::
A century ago, the City of Los Angeles was caught in the middle of an angry struggle between Labor and Capital. Something had to give - and it did. In the early morning of October 1, 1910, a strong blast reduced the fortress-like L.A. Times building to rubble.

The Los Angeles Times bombing was the dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times building in Los Angeles, California, on October 1, 1910 by a union member belonging to the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers. Intended as demonstration that would damage the building but not human life, the explosion nonetheless started a fire which killed 21 newspaper employees and injured 100 more. Termed the "crime of the century" by the Times, brothers John J. ("J.J.") and James B. ("J.B.") McNamara were arrested under suspicious circumstances in April 1911 for the crime.

The aftermath resulted in the “Trial Of The Century” in which well-known Labor champion, Clarence Darrow, came to the defense of the McNamara Bros, while a formidable and irascible General Otis (L.A. Times), marshaled the moneyed class against them. The media and political components of this event and trial were also key elements in eliminating socialist Job Harriman as a viable mayoral candidate.
Their trial became a cause célèbre for the American labor movement. J.B. admitted to setting the explosive, was convicted, and sentenced to life in prison. J.J. was sentenced to 15 years in prison for bombing a local iron manufacturing plant, and returned to the Iron Workers union as an organizer.
KEY FIGURES:
The McNamara Brothers, Job Harriman, Clarence Darrow, Ricardo Magon, Harrison Otis, Ortie McManigal, Detective William Burns, Mrs. Ortie McManigal, Lincoln Stephans…
KEY LINKS FOR DISCOVERY:
http://www.libraries.uc.edu/libraries/arb/exhibits/mcnamara/bombing.html
http://www.usc.edu/libraries/archives/la/scandals/times.html
http://darrow.law.umn.edu/trials.php?tid=2 An amazing collection of documents
AND CHECK OUT:
http://www.publicworksimprov.com/
http://boryanabooks.com/
http://www.ruskinartclub.org/archives/voice_in_the_well.htm



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