Cross – dress to impress

Cross – dress to impress: get mixed up in Shakespeare’s cheeky ‘Twelfth Night’ at Chickasaw Civic Theatre

It’s been at least a decade, and likely more than two, since Chickasaw Civic Theatre has staged a Shakespeare play, according to CCT board member Steven Alsip.

That’s just one of the reasons why you should catch CCT’s production of the Bard’s crazy cross-dressing comedy “Twelfth Night,” which opens on Friday, Feb. 27 and plays for two consecutive weekends.

“This is Shakespeare at the height of his comic genius and its very accessible to a modern day audience. I know the play very well and just had a vision to do it” said director Bill Watts. “The characters are just so memorable and the funniness comes not just in the plot, but in the way the characters interact. They’re so delusional. They don’t understand themselves.”

“Twelfth Night” is believed to have been written circa 1601, and the plot is a wacky, tangled web of love affairs, practical jokes and drunken revelry. The action takes place in the ancient West Balkan region of Ilyria, which is proximal to modern-day Croatia.

A shipwreck washes twins Viola and Sebastian ashore at different times and both believe the other died in the disaster.

Viola washes up first and decides she wants to be a servant to Ilyria’s Duke Orsino. To do so, she disguises herself as a young man and takes the name Cesario. Cesario/Violet falls in love with Orsino, who is obsessed with the rich countess Olivia. Olivia is totally disinterested in Orsino, and becomes smitten with Cesario.

When Sebastian eventually appears on the scene, things get even more bizarre.

To add to the play’s chaos, a group of miscreants are playing pranks on Olivia’s prudish tattletale steward Malvolio.

At one point, the merry pranksters convince Malvolio that Olivia is in love with him, and that he should put on garters and yellow stockings because that’s what turns Olivia on.

In truth, Olivia is repelled by those adornments.

Basically, “Twelfth Night” is a big, beautifully muddled romantic mess, and unlike most of Shakespeare’s comedies, all the dangling threads don’t get neatly tied at the end.

“It doesn’t really reconcile,” Watts said. “Not everyone marries.” Watts said he appreciates the play’s lack of a perfect conclusion.

“The play isn’t all sugar and roses, that’s what I like about it,” he said. “It’s got sweetness and a kind of melancholy…it touches on the edge of tragedy at times.”

Watts, who spent time studying theatre in England during the 1970s, is intimately acquainted with the play. It was the focus of his English literature master’s thesis and he’s directed as well as acted in the play several times.

His production incorporates elements of an authentic Shakespearean theatre experience.

“When you see my show you’ll notice that there’s no curtain. I’m doing that intentionally, because at (London’s) Globe Theatre (where many of Shakespeare’s plays were performed during his lifetime) you didn’t have a curtain and you had entrances from the back,” he said. “Most of my exits and entrances are coming from the back because a lot of lines are written for those kinds of entrances and exits.”


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Gorgeous period costumes and live Renaissance music from the Phoenix Quartet, will add even more authenticity to the proceedings.

One thing Watts is not doing is having men play all the roles, which was the custom in Shakespeare’s time.

“Twelfth Night’s” cross-dressing element would have been even more curious back then when you consider that Viola would have been played by a young man playing a woman disguised as a man.

This gender-bending riot of a play may seem way to confusing to follow. But it’s actually a piece of cake for the audience.

“Twelfth Night” is highly relatable and updatable; so much so that it was the basis for the 2006 movie “She’s The Man,” which transferred the action to a modern-day boarding school.

In “She’s The Man,” Amanda Bynes plays Viola and Channing Tatum plays the Orsino character, renamed “Duke” for the update.

Emily Ericson, who plays Viola in the CCT production, was a “She’s The Man” fan long before she had any clue that she’d one day star in the masterpiece that inspired it.

“It was one of my favorite movies from when I was younger so that helps. It’s a great movie,” she said. “It was just so funny and so relatable in many ways. I had no idea it was based on a Shakespeare play. It was just one of those chick flicks you love when you’re younger.”

Ericson, 17, is taking on quite a challenge for an actress her age.

Although “Twelfth Night” is an ensemble piece, the plot hinges on the witty, winsome Viola. According to Ericson and Watts, she’s the character that causes her cohorts to drop their over-the-top posturing and get real.

Watts said its wonderful to watch Ericson volley among the characters.

“She’s just this diminutive little person that’s thrown about by all these people-and everyone’s bigger and taller than she is,” he said. “She registers fear so well on stage. Its just really kind of cute the way she looks up there. She’s got wonderful natural reactions to things.”

The process of becoming Viola has been quite an education for Ericson.

“I’m just trying to fit in with the rest of the cast really,” Ericson said. “Everybody else is so experienced and so amazing. It’s a bit intimidating.”

Ericson’s “intimidators” include as Joe Fuselli as Orsino, Lesley Roberts as Olivia, Michael Green as prankster Sir Toby Belch and John Campbell as Malvolio.

According to Ericson, there’s one simple reason to get mixed up in the multi-layered madness.

“‘Twelfth Night’s’ great and everyone should come see it,” she said.

Read More: www.marieprom.co.uk/prom-dresses-2014-2015

Katy Perry and others popularizing an explosion of wearable tech

Katy Perry and others popularizing an explosion of wearable tech

Wearable technology means Google Glass or Apple Watch to most. But for a few designers and fashionistas — including Katy Perry — it sometimes refers to skirts, dresses, handbags and suits.

Perry became a client of a brand called CuteCircuit after her stylist saw an exhibit featuring its LED-illuminated Galaxy Dress at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. Perry ordered a similar gown (which the designers had five days to complete) and wore it to the Met Ball in New York in 2010, making headlines around the world.

Perry has since worn CuteCircuit designs on “American Idol” and “The Voice” of Germany. CuteCircuit showed for the first time at New York Fashion Week a year ago, and one of its handbags debuted on Net-A-Porter.com last fall.

“We live in a digital era, with everyone constantly on Instagram and Pinterest and Facebook, but fashion hasn’t changed for hundreds of years,” said creative director Francesca Rosella, who launched CuteCircuit in 2004 with Ryan Genz. “We really wanted to move innovation into the garments we wear.”

CuteCircuit isn’t the only brand integrating technology into fashion. Like many first-generation tech efforts, some of the results are more novelty than reality for now. But these examples, featured at a recent Museum of Science and Industry event, are nudging the needle forward.

A motorcycle jacket from Umbilical Sport, with LEDs embedded in the leather. The lights on the back and shoulders of the jacket illuminate when the rider uses his or her turn signal or applies the brakes. “It gives drivers another viewpoint for safety,” museum head curator Kathleen McCarthy said. Bicycle apparel applies similar technology.

The Oricalco shirt from Grado Zero Espace, woven with preprogrammed memory threads that automatically scrunch up the long sleeves when the air grows warm. The sleeves lengthen when it cools.


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The Climate Dress from Diffus Designs with soft circuits integrated into the embroidery. They sense varying levels of carbon dioxide in the air and activate LED lights in the dress when levels rise. “You can breathe on it and watch the dress light up,” McCarthy said. It’s both a statement on climate change and on air quality in the immediate vicinity.

The Geometry Darling handbag designed by Alison Lewis for Switch Embassy. It has a full spectrum LED screen embedded behind a leather cutout. Colors can be changed via an Android phone to coordinate with clothing. Similarly, the brand’s Theia bag has an LED screen on the front of the bag that can display preset images as well as customized phrases.

A paparazzi-repelling miniskirt by CuteCircuit. If someone snaps a flash photograph of someone wearing the skirt, the reflective properties of the glass microspheres in the fabric will glare, rendering the wearer invisible in the picture.

Laser-cut necklaces by Anke Loh with a sensor that converts the wearer’s movements into varying light patterns on the jewelry. Digitally printed scarves, also by Loh, incorporate stretchable circuits to display microscopic photos from the Chicago-based designer’s long-term research project with epilepsy patients.

The fiberoptic Heartbeat Dress designed by Alison Lewis for Switch Embassy. It looks like a typical little black dress, but has biometric sensors. “If you’re wearing it out and started dancing and your body temperature and heart rate go up, the light pattern on the dress changes,” McCarthy said.

A wedding dress from Atelier LeonLeon. A Tetris-loving bride ordered it after seeing an exhibit in the Netherlands featuring its creator. The illumination can be changed via a remote control device, held by the wearer or those around her.

“One of the very interesting things is fashion is becoming social space,” McCarthy said. “You can interact with clothing in new ways and your friends can interact with your clothing in new ways.

“There are fascinating times ahead.”

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No more moobs, ‘butt’ Naturally!

No more moobs, 'butt' Naturally!
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A British brand has claimed to have come up with jeans that can flatten stomachs and smooth away love handles. Another, for men, claims to make ‘moobs’ and beer belies kaput.

You’ve probably heard about the dreaded ‘muffin top’ – the result of one too many of those doughnuts, butter chickens, late night barfis and pizzas – but now thanks to science, or perhaps just a clever marketing gimmick, there seems to be an end to that. And it’s got absolutely nothing to do with exercise! Dubbed the ‘muffin stop’, the jeans feature a high, curved waistband and an inner support panel that the makers claim will “ensure that any wobbly bits are held within the trousers, rather than bulging over the top.” And as if this didn’t sound like an engineering marvel, apparently these can also “flatter the bottom and make it more pert.”

And while these might sound like a godsend for ‘bottom-flatterers’ everywhere, it elicits mixed reactions from some of our ramp-scorching ‘Shapely Susans’! “I don’t think it’s entirely a gimmick as different fits and cuts in clothing can definitely enhance or minimize body structure depending upon your body type. So, it may be useful for those who want to enhance their body shape. But as for me, I exercise and work hard to keep my body fit and natural looking so I don’t need any of this stuff!! But evidently, back in its native England, these shortcuts to a ‘shapelier you’ – they apparently sold a hundred pairs a minute, in all the four colors that they are available in. The leggy Diandra Soares, for one is all for it, even though she probably doesn’t need it! “Yeah, bring it on! If it works – I would love a pair! Wish they could enhance the calves as well. But then, I guess it is better to take the workout route, get the booty you want and look great in anything!

Others, like Malaika Arora-Khan of the enviable-figure fame, dismisses this downright. “I think they are too gimmicky. And as I don’t need any enhancement, I wouldn’t go for a pair myself.” But model Binal Trivedi, who is known to experiment a lot with various looks and fashions would probably give it a shot. “Wow, really?!” she exults, continuing, I wish it was just so easy… Yeah, I would try them out of curiosity because you do get jeans that accentuate your assets and work for a particular body type and then if just one pair would work for all the problem areas, then why not?? I secretly wish they would come up with something like that. They would be a hit.”

But its clear that the medical fraternity is not in great agreement. Abdominal surgery expert Dr Yash Kumar, asserts, “Obviously, these jeans are not a medical solution to anything. At best, it can help to give the wearer a particular shape for the duration of time they wear it. Nonetheless, as long as they are not too tight and restrict blood flow, I don’t see any harm in ladies wearing them.” While obesity consultant and cosmetic physician Dr Manjiri Patankar concludes, “Body image is very important for self confidence. There are procedures like ultrasonic lipolysis endermology and mesotherapy that work wonderfully on resistant fat cells, cellulite and loose skin.”Read more at:evening dresses

Georgia Salpa goes searching for the perfect wedding dress in Dublin

Georgia Salpa goes searching for the perfect wedding dress in Dublin

The half-Greek beauty is still looking for her perfect gown

Celebrity Big Brother contestant Georgia Salpa has gone in search of her perfect wedding dress – in her home town.

Shopping til she drops in Dublin boutique Folkster, the beautiful brunette modelled some bridal bling teasing her social media followers about what her wedding dress style could be.

Known for their bespoke wedding gowns and vintage inspired bridesmaid dresses, Folkster is favourite of Irish celebrities with TV stars such as Blathaid Treacy and Sinead Kennedy wearing their stock on red carpets.


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The stunning half Greek model posted a pic on her Instagram page of some delicious looking cupcakes which hinting that she may have bought more than just one dress in the popular boutique.

“Aaw thank you @louisekavanagh you’re so sweet,” Georgia wrote.

“You were missed today!! We found the dresses xxxx”

The AR model is getting married this year with Italy being hotly tipped as her wedding destination.

The lingerie model has been busy since she landed back home and has already visited top hair stylist Ceira Lambert to update her tresses.

The Dublin native showed off a rare, extension-free selfie to her social media as she prepared to have her hair spruced up by the celebrity hairdresser.

Posting the pic online, the soon-to-be married model shared: “Short hair what do you think? Quick pic before Getting my new set of @goldfeverhair by @ceiralambert.”

Read More: www.marieprom.co.uk/cocktail-dresses

What to wear, deciphering dress codes

What to wear, deciphering dress codes

The spring social season is right around the corner, which means there will be plenty of moments to say “I have nothing to wear!” What can make this even more panic-inducing is when the dress code reads “creative comfy” or “casual chic,” leaving partygoers scratching their heads. Fear not. There are ways to navigate the style end of the social #Seen.

Casual Chic: Think jeans or leggings, a pretty blouse or blazer, and either a pair of wedge booties or stilettos (if the idea of a casual dress or skirt seems dull). Jewelry can always dress up an outfit or lend a pop of color. For men, it’s all about dark jeans and a dinner jacket or a nice button down and cashmere sweater. Bowties are always a yes.

Parisian Chic: When an invitation comes with a city attached to the word “chic,” focus on the style of a designer from that part of the world. This could mean a color scheme, particular pattern or accessories that embody that region. It never hurts to surf Pinterest for inspiration.


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Creative Comfy: Ladies, break out your flat shoes. This is a perfect time to wear easy, comfortable clothes in cheerful colors or prints with shoes made for walking. For men, tone down the polished vibe and let everyone enjoy that hipster ‘stache.

Funereal Cocktail Chic: Whenever there is a very specific type of clothing required focus on a color palette. The obvious choice for this would be black, but think outside the box and wear something unexpected like white (which is worn to funerals in the eastern part of the world). Remember, clothes are meant to be fun, so take risks and enjoy the costume aspect of specific dress codes. When in doubt, opt for a little black dress or dark suit and add excitement with accessories like hats, brooches or long gloves.

Black Tie Optional: The little black dress is always appropriate here, but it’s always nice to glam things up with a long gown. Try www.renttherunway.com if the idea of spending hundreds of dollars on a dress for one night is too much to handle. If showing off the gams is more your speed, pick a shorter dress that has embellishment to help amp up the glam factor. For men, a nice suit will do … coordinating pocket square and tie are always a plus.

Read More: www.marieprom.co.uk/long-prom-dresses