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San Franciscan born to the stage turns (Kerry) political defeat into therapy (through drama!)
San Francisco Chronicle ^ | 2/28/05 | Edward Guthmann

Posted on 02/19/2005 10:50:28 AM PST by mountaineer

Election Day 2004 was a bitter pill for San Francisco actor Dan Hoyle. He'd just spent 10 days in Florida -- knocking on doors, working 16- hour days to defeat George W. Bush. When the votes came in and John Kerry's defeat became clear, Hoyle felt angry, then "incredibly sad" and finally numb.

"Life passed before my eyes, and I just sort of nodded. Because you can't interact any more: There are too many thoughts and emotions flooding through you."

So many on the left remain shell-shocked, locked in a tenuous, self- protective denial, in the wake of Nov. 2. But Hoyle, who at 24 is boyish, earnest and brimming with curiosity, is using his theater skills to wrestle down despair. In "Florida 2004: The Big Bummer," a one-man show running through March 4 at the Marsh, Hoyle turns defeat into therapy and finds absurdist humor in his 10-day Florida ordeal...

Displaying a gift for mime and vocal mimicry ... Hoyle populates "Florida 2004" with real-life characters he met during the campaign. He calls it "journalistic theater" -- a hybrid of reporting and play-making.

When he sat down to write "Florida 2004," "It just fell out of me," Hoyle says in the Noe Valley home he shares with his parents, comic actor Geoff Hoyle and San Francisco State lecturer Mary Winegarden.

Apart from a sober, emotional coda ("I'm so angry -- my parents worked too hard for me to inherit this"), Hoyle has fun with "The Big Bummer." He makes no secret of his dislike for Bush, but also lampoons the dewy-eyed flakes and raging egomaniacs who populated the get-out-the-vote efforts; the truck drivers, Vietnam vets and surly, unregistered voters he met while canvassing door-to-door.

(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: actor; bush; drama; kerry; kerrydefeat; pathetic; thearts
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To: just me
I didn't like it when Clinton won, I just got with my life. What is wrong with these fools?

What's wrong with these fools? Are you kidding? The question is: What's wrong with these bird-brains who pony up the dough for this "journalistic theater"??

...Hoyle says in the Noe Valley home he shares with his parents, comic actor Geoff Hoyle and San Francisco State lecturer Mary Winegarden.

Now this is good writing! B/c dollars-to-doughnuts says there's not a soul reading those above lines that doesn't see in his mind's eye both this "Noe Valley home", and "comic actor Geoff Hoyle and San Francisco State lecturer Mary Winegarden" look like.

LOL! I for one see a lot of house plants ...I mean a lot of house plants... in all kinds of containers; and a porch step that's been in need of repair for a long time...

21 posted on 02/19/2005 11:43:40 AM PST by yankeedame ("Born with the gift of laughter and a sense that the world was mad.")
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To: mountaineer
Isn't that just precious!!

When the terrible sadness and depression of 11/2/04 becomes an intolerable burden, living in San Francisco is much, much better than Florida. Florida doesn't offer the freedom, salvation and Bushless bliss that the cool waters under the Golden Gate do. Ta-ta you stupid, commie scumbag!!

22 posted on 02/19/2005 11:44:09 AM PST by Tacis ("John ("What SF-180?") Kerry - Still Shilling For Those Who Would Harm America!")
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To: mountaineer

October 2004

Also on the move is actor and writer Dan Hoyle. Hoyle's home is on Sanchez Street, where he was reared by his parents--master comic Jeff Hoyle and Mary Winegarden, a lecturer at San Francisco State University. In 2002, he traveled the world after receiving a Circumnavigator Club grant to study the effects of economic globalization.

Circumnavigator, his solo performance chronicling that trip, debuted at Chashama Presents in New York in May and subsequently received an enthusiastic reception at the Marsh on Valencia Street. The initial five-week run in July and August was extended through Sept. 25. Then Hoyle took a two-week break to tour the show on college campuses while also working on a documentary film with his brother Jonah about swing states in the coming presidential election. Circumnavigator reopens for a two-week run at the Marsh, 1062 Valencia Street, Thursdays through Saturdays, Oct. 14 through 23. (Call 826-5750 for tickets, which are $10 to $14.)

Of his extended run, Hoyle says, "It feels pretty amazing because I knew I wanted to do a show when I left on my trip, but I was a 22-year-old college kid, and I didn't know that I could have success in the real world--I don't think anyone knows until they do--and so it's been hugely inspiring."

Hoyle, who recently graduated from Northwestern University with a double major in history and performance studies, has big aims. "I'm trying to bring the complexity of what people can do in journalism and writing into an entertaining form," he says. "This whole idea of lived experience as theater is exploding. There's a hunger for realness, and there's nothing more real than somebody recreating their own experiences, especially if it's about some real issues and not just about the crazy casseroles my grandmother used to make. Of course, you need both. Theater needs to work its magic in human stories. And that's the great challenge for me, bringing these nuanced things into theater in a way that's going to engage people. Instead of reading about something in the New York Times, they'll be seeing it and experiencing it," he says.

Hoyle attributes his success to his supportive family, and to his director Charlie Varon, who, he says, "has a genius for pulling out what is interesting and possibly amazing in somebody's lived experience." He is also grateful to the community of friends he's known since he was a kid, who packed the house early on and created a buzz. In January, Hoyle will leave for Nigeria to study oil politics for a year on a Fulbright scholarship. Will it result in another show? You bet.


http://tinyurl.com/3rqya


23 posted on 02/19/2005 11:45:01 AM PST by kcvl
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To: mountaineer
He calls it "journalistic theater" -- a hybrid of reporting and play-making.

So this guy is Dan Rather's replacement then?

24 posted on 02/19/2005 11:45:35 AM PST by Happygal (liberalism - a narrow tribal outlook largely founded on class prejudice)
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To: kcvl

What?? I thought this was the guy who worked at Jiffy-Lube.

25 posted on 02/19/2005 11:47:12 AM PST by yankeedame ("Born with the gift of laughter and a sense that the world was mad.")
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To: mountaineer
Melanie Wise, English, Michael Martin, English, Brian Strang, English, and Mary Winegarden (his mother), English/World and Comparative Literature, helped write the chapter "Same Struggle, Same Fight: A Case Study of University Students and Faculty United in Labor Activism," which appears in the book "Moving a Mountain: Transforming the Role of Contingent Faculty in Composition Studies" recently published by the National Council of Teachers of English. Several other authors also helped write the chapter.
26 posted on 02/19/2005 11:47:56 AM PST by kcvl
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To: mountaineer
BEMOANABATION PING

If pinheads like this bozo put half the effort into growing up as they put into sobbing over politics they'd turn out to be pretty good people.

27 posted on 02/19/2005 11:50:15 AM PST by Psycho_Bunny (“I know a great deal about the Middle East because I’ve been raising Arabian horses" Patrick Swazey)
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To: kcvl
In 2002, he traveled the world after receiving a Circumnavigator Club grant to study the effects of economic globalization.

According to the story I posted, he's also about to embark on a Fulbright scholarship grant to some other foreign country to study something or other that has nothing to do with the theatre. (This offends me somewhat, as my sister was a Fulbright scholar who actually accomplished something through her grant-funded studies, instead of wasting it on political claptrap). When will this punk consider working for a living, I wonder? Of is that too much to expect of the fuzzy-headed left?

28 posted on 02/19/2005 11:51:08 AM PST by mountaineer
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To: yankeedame

I see at least one hanging bead doorway.


29 posted on 02/19/2005 11:51:15 AM PST by Jeff Chandler (The people previously responsible for this tagline have been sacked.)
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To: just me

If you follow the DUmmie FUnnies (I strongly suggest you contact P-J Comix and get on the ping list), there were DUmmies, many of them who either admitted to lots of "self-medication" or professed their "clinical depression."

In hundreds of elections, there has never before been such an animal as P.E.S.T. I guarantee that after Clinotn won either election, there were no conservatives posting "I can't get out of bed. I get on the computer for a few hours a day, then I go back to my dark bedroom, exhausted. It has been this way for 2 weeks" (a close to accurate re-enactment).

For us, we square our shoulders, take the hit, recognized Klintoon's chameleonality, and fight another day.

The standard Left inability to actually use their brains is demonstrated in their response to the president who got the most votes in the history of the USA.


30 posted on 02/19/2005 11:51:20 AM PST by freedumb2003 (We will win with the Sword Of Teamwork and the Hammer Of Not-bickering!)
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To: mountaineer
Since Hoyle moved back to San Francisco in 2003 he's been temporarily living with his parents, in a tiny room carved from the garage.

Oh yeah, I want to just immerse myself in the insight and profundity of guy who lives in his parents' garage.

31 posted on 02/19/2005 11:52:44 AM PST by Trailerpark Badass
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To: just me

" I didn't like it when Clinton won, I just got with my life. What is wrong with these fools?"

When Clinton won, Republicans looked in the mirror and asked what can we do to make America better - hence the Contract With America.

After President Bush won, Democrats ran around screaming that Bush is bad. This strategy will not bring them any closer to winning an election: keep up the good work Howard Dean - hahahaha!

Holtz
JeffersonRepublic.com


32 posted on 02/19/2005 11:52:53 AM PST by JeffersonRepublic.com (The 51st state is right around the corner.)
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To: kcvl

The National Council of Teachers of ENGLISH published a book with the title "Moving a Mountain: Transforming the Role of Contingent Faculty in Composition Studies" ?!

Which English do they teach, the kind they speak on Uranus?


33 posted on 02/19/2005 11:54:36 AM PST by Jeff Chandler (The people previously responsible for this tagline have been sacked.)
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To: mountaineer
"When he sat down to write "Florida 2004," "It just fell out of me..."

Sounds as though he suffers from a spastic colon....

34 posted on 02/19/2005 11:59:09 AM PST by Joe 6-pack ("It takes a big man to cry, but it takes a bigger man to laugh at that man.")
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To: GSlob
he used to be "a student at the progressive Waldorf School in Pacific Heights." One more reason to have reactionary schools.

The "Three R's" as taught at "Progressive" schools:

Ranting

Rampaging

Ravaging

35 posted on 02/19/2005 12:00:37 PM PST by ApplegateRanch (The world needs more horses, and fewer Jackasses!)
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To: Joe 6-pack

Yeah, that happened to me once. I was sick for days.


36 posted on 02/19/2005 12:01:24 PM PST by mountaineer
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To: Trailerpark Badass

Get a Life

37 posted on 02/19/2005 12:04:23 PM PST by Jeff Chandler (The people previously responsible for this tagline have been sacked.)
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To: ishabibble
Didn't Princess Diana support some campaign against land mimes?

What was that? Land mines? Oh.

Nevermind.

38 posted on 02/19/2005 12:18:24 PM PST by libsrscum (I think, therefore I FReep.)
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To: yankeedame

39 posted on 02/19/2005 12:25:43 PM PST by El Conservador ("No blood for oil!"... Then don't drive, you moron!!!)
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To: Psycho_Bunny

It will never happen. Chances are his parents are still just as immature and out of touch with reality as he is. The Peter Pan Syndrome is genetic to liberals. The Never-never Land of academia and the entertainment world is full of these misfits.


40 posted on 02/19/2005 12:34:17 PM PST by kittymyrib
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