This Week's Stories

Big Fish

 

MIAMI BEACH

Please in My Back Yard
  While the New World Symphony Project Gains More Support, Commission Stays Hesitant

 

MIAMI BEACH

Crime Stats
  Homicides Climbed by One in 2006

 

MIAMI BEACH

Multimillion-Dollar
Face Lift

  City Commission Gives Final OK to Westward Expansion of Lincoln Road Pedestrian Mall

 
MIAMI
Class-A Wynwood Development
 Opposition Is Nearly Nil for 29-Story ‘Midtown’ Area Office Building
 

MIAMI

Always Be Foreclosing
  Two Commissioners Propose Foreclosing on Abandoned Properties

 

AVENTURA
Green Light For Performing Arts Center Project
  $4.71 Million Bond Will Be Diverted To Help Pay For $10 Million PAC’s Construction
 
BAY HARBOR ISLANDS

Sidewalk Talk
  Town Gets Moving on Plans to Change the Look of Kane Concourse

 
MIAMI BEACH
Campaign Reform Rejected
 
Mayoral Candidate Brings Up Topic of Public Campaign Financing
 

 

 

 

In the Spotlight

It had been awhile since I’d been to Churchill’s Monday night, so I was a bit surprised/thrilled when I saw the brand-new stage, awnings and artwork in the patio. This is where Theatre de Underground — a sort of open-air open mike night with thespian flair — takes place each week.

There is a banner over the stage announcing the weekly affair, which somehow makes the event official. It used to be just a makeshift stage with a large spotlight aimed directly at the eyes of the performer, which makes it easy for those with a bad case of stage fright to avoid the eyes of audience members. Now it’s a mainstay.

Good thing, too, because Theatre de Underground welcomes anyone to come share their talents. There is, of course, one rule, as hostess Kristen will explain to you.

Anyone can participate, but to do so, at least 10 people have to sign up to perform. Other than that, it’s pretty much up to the participants to set the pace for the night, which sometimes goes as late as 3 a.m.

Like any other pub, Churchill’s has its regulars and that’s how I met Nicholas the Storyteller, an elderly man who seems to have jumped out of the pages of a J.R.R. Tolkien novel. Perpetually dressed in a long green cloak and carrying a staff, long-bearded Nick tells mystical fables.
Performers have 10 minutes on stage to do as they wish. The most popular format, though, is poetry — in different incarnations like rap or slam poetry. Some people read directly from their journals; others recite straight from memory. You might even get lucky and spot a few out-of-towners working up their courage and dropping some impressive rhymes about war, gas prices, the president, etc.

Local musicians like Fitzroy and Adonis Cross, who also performs poetry and stand-up comedy at times, have given impromptu performances. Not every set has to be acoustic either. Just remember to bring your own amp/cables/extra strings.

Theatre de Underground has always had a good vibe. It’s neither too hippie or too pretentious; it’s a group of talented people sharing their works with other talented people.

Theatre de Underground starts promptly at 10 p.m. Churchill’s Pub is located at 5501 NE Second Ave., Miami. Admission is $4. Call 305-757-1807 or visit ww.churchillspub.com for more information.

      Calendar Girl

calendargirl@miamisunpost.com

 

Columns

The 411

 

Editorial
  With housing budgets being slashed by the U.S. government and the Miami-Dade Housing Agency still reeling from its own recent scandals, HUD would do well to appoint an impartial observer with no ties to the area.

 

Murmurs
 
Flocking to tattoo themselves with the mark of the Beast on a Tuesday afternoon were followers of a guy who calls himself the Man Christ Jesus, as well as the Antichrist, who heads a, well, different sort of ministry. Also, Biscayne Boulevard turns 80, but continues losing its palms.

 

Wakefield
  The Public Health Trust, our local safety net, could lose major bucks if President Bush's proposed cuts go through.

 

Bound
  Damn it, Mamet, where's your humility? The American playwright pits Bambi vs. Godzilla, and John Hood is there to call the fight.

 

Art
  Photographer Silvia Lizama is the voyeur and the manipulator. Her current exhibition peers into the windows of contemporary middle-class homes in North Miami.

 

Groundwork
 
The condo-hotel concept has a lot going for it, but may have run out of steam. As a result, new Miami Beach projects are reported to be switching to hotel-only. Also, affordable condo housing is coming to Little Havana.

 

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