A Brautigan Book Club Trilogy
We’re thrilled to have been invited by Literature Wales to curate a trilogy of events for the very first Dinefwr Literature Festival in West Wales. We've specially created each of the three events to commemorate the occasion:
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Replicating the Please Plant This Book project which has our guests participate in the planting of 'books' and creating a Brautigan garden then taking home poetry and seeds to grow
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Taking the audience on a night-time journey filled with poetry and music along the Tokyo-Montana Express. Gruff Rhys (of the Super Furry Animals), Martin Carr (you may know him from the Boo Radleys) and H.Hawkline are contributing new songs inspired by Brautigan, and we'll catch a sneak peek of the UK premiere of an exciting modern opera, Tonseisha - The Man Who Abandoned the World by LA-screenwriter Erik Patterson, with music by award-winning composer Kim Ashton.
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A chaired conversation with Ianthe Brautigan reading from You Can't Catch Death and her sharing some new work with us.
“The time is right to mix sentences
sentences with dirt and the sun
with punctuation and the rain with
verbs, and for worms to pass
through question marks, and the
stars to shine down on budding
nouns, and the dew to form on
paragraphs.”
– from Please Plant This Book, Brautigan
Proceeds collected will go directly towards: Transport for Ianthe Brautigan from San Francisco to Wales - we had a kind donation of flights fall through at the very last minute; a week's rehearsal space for the actors and musicians, petrol money for the three cars driving from London to Wales, warm beds for those who physically not able to camp during the festival.
Did you know: Richard Brautigan self-published and distributed for free 6000 copies of Please Plant This Book in the Spring of 1968. It consisted of eight packets of garden seeds, each printed with a poem. Four were flowers and four were vegetables
People whose work you'll be enabling:
- Fuchsia Voremberg - writer & illustrator, recreating the Please Plant This Book project with performer Adrian Gillott
- Actors Jamie Wood, Sean Patterson, Vera Chok, director Gary Merry, co-producer Tilly Brooke, and production manager Jack Robson. We're transforming Erik Patterson's play into an opera and showing an excerpt.
- Soprano Philippa Boyle who divides her time between Italy and the UK, having trained in Rome with Renata Scotto.
- Solo flautist Ilze Ikse, Royal Academy prize-winner, mentored by BBC Symphony Orchestra principal flautist Michael Cox
- Kim Ashton, prize-winning composer who's written and conducted world over. Listen to examples here.
- International pop stars and musicians Gruff Rhys, Martin Carr and H.Hawkline who have kindly donated their time to write and perform new songs together through their shared love of Brautigan's writings - I want to give them petrol money and bake them a cake to say a thank you for their support!
- Ianthe Brautigan, daughter of Richard Brautigan and a gorgeous writer, reading from her work and sharing her new writing plans with us.
Did you know: Brautigan’s book, The Tokyo-Montana Express, is a collection of one hundred and thirty-one sections inspired by memories of travelling between Japan and Montana. Each section represents a separate stop along a journey, a station along a metaphorical rail line joining the two disparate worlds. He defended the format of this collection as “another way of looking at things.”
Sponsorship in kind we're gratefully receiving:
- Everyone's using their own cars in a car pool, bringing their own tents and camping if they can
- Discounted use of rehearsal space
- Donated development, rehearsal and performance time from the entire team of professional performers
- Voluntary involvement in the project
- Printing of copies of Please Plant This Book at cost, to be distributed for free at the festival
- Waiver of rights from Ianthe Brautigan, Erik Patterson and Kim Ashton to perform material they control at this festival
- Online blog space, support and publicity from reading charity, The Reading Agency
Did you know: Ianthe \i(a)-nthe, ian-the\ is pronounced eye-AN-thee. It is of Greek origin, and means “violet flower“. Mythology: a sea nymph, daughter of Oceanus.
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