and
MORE!
and
MORE!
FRI
OCT 23, 2009
Truth or Dare BOOKS / READING
Truth or Dare

Rebecca Brown is Seattle's smartest writer, and Seattle is home to tons of smart writers. If you've ever read one of her essays—which effortlessly bounce between Nathaniel Hawthorne and transubstantiation and the Beach Boys and sex—you're excited about this event already. Tonight, Brown and two other smart writers, poet Eric McHenry and playwright Keri Healey, will read brand-new pieces on the theme of "truth or dare." And for the first time ever, Hugo House has commissioned a hiphop artist—the up-and-coming Macklemore—to participate. Come for Brown, but expect to find a favorite new artist or two. (Hugo House, 1634 11th Ave, 322-7030. 7:30 pm, $15–$25.)

Mapplethorpe Party VISUAL ART
Mapplethorpe Party

Before Robert Mapplethorpe started pissing off the religious right—hell, before he even really knew how to be a gay man in the world—he shot Polaroids. They're nothing like the formal, neoclassical images he made later; these are raw, exploratory, sexily unsteady. Imagine the shivers that went through photo scholar Sylvia Wolf when she rediscovered them. Later, Wolf became director of the Henry, which is also celebrating four other new shows with this party. (Henry Art Gallery, 4100 15th Ave NE, 543-2280. 8–11 pm, $6–$10.)

Also Suggested Today: Truth or DareMapplethorpe Party
SAT
OCT 24, 2009
Seattle Lesbian & Gay Film Fest

SLGFF 2009 sprints to a close with another weekend of queer screen delights. Today's best bets: Stuck!, the jailhouse-noir dyke comedy starring the mighty Karen Black (4:30 pm at Admiral Theater); Prayers for Bobby, the Lifetime-TV weepie featuring Sigourney Weaver as the unforgiving Christian mom who drives her gay son to suicide, then spends the rest of her life atoning (7 pm at Central Cinema); and One Night Stand Up: Drag Queens, a filmed stage show featuring Jackie Beat, Miss Coco Peru, and Varla Jean Merman (9:30 pm at Cinerama). (Full schedule at www.threedollarbillcinema.org.)

SUN
OCT 25, 2009
'Rock 'n' Roll' THEATER
'Rock 'n' Roll'

Rock 'n' Roll isn't one of Tom Stoppard's great plays (it's no Arcadia or Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead). But a merely good Stoppard still beats almost anyone for wit, intelligence, and the sticky warmth of human relationships. It begins in Oxford, 1968, as a Czech PhD student runs home after the USSR has invaded his home country. The play ping-pongs between London and Prague, fusty British Marxists and Czech longhairs who just want to make "socially negative music." Plus: sex, drugs, and you-guessed-it. The excellent cast (especially Anne Allgood as a cancer-stricken professor of Greek) elevates the script from merely good to glowing. (ACT Theatre, 700 Union St, 292-7676. 2 and 7:30 pm, $10–$55. Through Nov 8.)

MON
OCT 26, 2009
Jonathan Lethem BOOKS / READING
Jonathan Lethem

Jonathan Lethem's best novels superimpose genre fiction onto what we might otherwise recognize as something like real life. In The Fortress of Solitude, a coming-of-age story passes through the panels of a superhero comic (and through the cocktail-party dilemma: flight or invisibility?); in As She Climbed Across the Table, a wry breakup story crawls into a sci-fi wormhole. Lethem's latest novel, Chronic City, sounds promisingly like more of the same: In an almost-real Manhattan, a former child star longs for a fiancée stranded in the international space station. Hosted by Stranger books editor Paul Constant. (Sunset Tavern, 5433 Ballard Ave NW, 634-3400. 7 pm, $5/free with book purchase at University Book Store, 21+.)

TUE
OCT 27, 2009
The Return of Slashacre THEATER / FILM / JOKES
The Return of Slashacre

Ever since Ivar Haglund scuttled his schooner off Alki Point in 1851 and founded "Hagtown" (name later changed to "Seattle" when it was discovered that "Hagtown" means "anal hook" in Salish), indie-horror-comedy has been our fair city's number-two export (after Aplets but just above Cotlets). Slashacre—a collaboration between Crypticon and the Beta Society—celebrates that storied tradition with a fine collection of hee-larious spookies from Seattle and beyond. Blood Squad performs its horror- movie-improv; Andras Jones, star of A Nightmare on Elm Street 4, gives mystical advice; and David Katims, of Friday the 13th Part 3, tells jokes. (Historic University Theater, 5510 University Way NE, www.thebetasociety.com. 8 pm, $10, all ages.)

WED
OCT 28, 2009
'C.A.T.' VISUAL ART
'C.A.T.'

Matthew Offenbacher is a very clever artist, but he is also very sincere. Does art take itself too seriously? His paintings seem to ask this question all the time, while also having an almost spiritual dimension. Usually he paints wildlife—linking modernist abstraction with, say, beavers or otters or weasels—but in this show, he pushes the point further by featuring his lazy house cat as if the cat were any other muse-model. The cat is pictured at rest and in motion; there's even a view the cat might have had when it was once stuck up a tree. (Howard House, 604 Second Ave, 256-6399. 10:30 am–5 pm, free.)

THU
OCT 29, 2009
Greil Marcus BOOKS / READING
Greil Marcus

Greil Marcus brought serious intellectual ambition to rock-and-roll criticism—he also spawned a million pretentious rock critics. But you have to admire the ambition of Marcus's new book. In over a thousand pages, A New Literary History of America attempts to do for American history what Marcus did for rock criticism. Pieces by Jonathan Lethem and Sarah Vowell and other literary geniuses bring vivid life to American history (Edison! Tarzan! Alcoholics Anonymous!), with Marcus's unparalleled critical smarts nimbly guiding the whole monstrous book. (Central Library, 1000 Fourth Ave, 624-6600. 7 pm, free.)

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