Rhode Island Weekend: Experimental film, local music, national comedy and ‘Angels in America’

Our picks for this weekend: experience handmade films with live music in Pawtucket, a brilliantly absurd comedian at The Vets, two standout musical performances, and a modern classic of American theater.

See handmade film with live musical accompaniment on cello and trumpet
See handmade film with live musical accompaniment on cello and trumpet
Share
See handmade film with live musical accompaniment on cello and trumpet
See handmade film with live musical accompaniment on cello and trumpet
Rhode Island Weekend: Experimental film, local music, national comedy and ‘Angels in America’
Copy

Looking for some tips on what to do this weekend, and beyond? We’ve got you covered. Here are a few recommendations from Ocean State Media’s Mareva Lindo and James Baumgartner.

Spotlight: Live music & handmade film at Frankie Mundo’s. Saturday, October 11.

Cellist Lori Goldston and trumpeter Greg Kelley will be playing live improvised music accompanying “handmade films” from the Interbay Cinema Society archive. Event organizer Sam Shorr says that you’ll see “image leading over plot (with) celluloid manipulation, black and white, scenes from nature manipulated in a very visual way. Sort of, experimental visuals accompanied by nice music.”

Along with the film, there will be an interactive sculpture on display from artist Bim Ditson. Sam describes it as “wooden chainmail” made with scrap wood turned into interlocking rings. The whole sculpture is over 15 feet long and weighs more than 300 pounds.

Wooden chainmail sculpture from Bim Ditson
Wooden chainmail sculpture from Bim Ditson
Bim Ditson

After the film and music, the audience can try their hands at the Gif-O-Graf animation machines to make their own short films. We profiled Sam Shorr and Willy DeConto and their animation machines last year. It’s a fun way to quickly make 2-dimensional animations using drawings and paper cutouts.

Frankie Mundo’s is at 27 Exchange Street, Pawtucket. The doors open at 7 p.m. and the performance begins at 8 p.m. on Saturday, October 11.

Gif-O-Graf animation machines will be on-hand for the audience to try their hand at making simple, 2-D animations.
Gif-O-Graf animation machines will be on-hand for the audience to try their hand at making simple, 2-D animations.
Gif-O-Graf

Other events to check out:

Chris Fleming at The Vets, Saturday, Oct. 11

Fleming is incredibly smart, goofy, physical, absurd, and a master at starting with a tiny observation and bringing the audience on a 5-8 minute journey that would previously have been unimaginable. Check out some of his stand-up on his YouTube channel.

More details about Fleming’s performance at The Vets here.

Bird & Augur at Stone Soup Coffeehouse, Saturday, Oct. 11

The duo is influenced by labor and protest songs, with a sound that includes beautiful harmonies, fingerpicking on guitar and banjo, and some storytelling, as well.

More details about Bird & Augur at Stone Soup here.

Bird & Augur are playing at Stone Soup Coffeehouse at the Music Mansion
Bird & Augur are playing at Stone Soup Coffeehouse at the Music Mansion

Asher White at AS220, Wednesday, Oct. 15

The incredibly talented and prolific Asher White brings her collage pop to the AS220 Main Stage with opener Space Camp. We talked with White for a studio session in 2023.

More details about Asher White at AS220 here.

“Angels in America - Part 2: Perestroika” at the Gamm Theatre through Oct. 19

Tony Kushner’s epic, “Perestroika,” picks up where “Millennium Approaches” left off, diving even deeper into the lives of its unforgettable characters as they confront illness, identity, and the shifting tides of history. As the AIDS crisis intensifies and personal worlds begin to unravel, heaven and earth collide in a powerful reckoning with hope, justice, and the possibility of change. And if you missed part one, the Gamm has a video to help you catch up.

More details about “Angels in America” at the Gamm Theatre here.

L to R: Haas Regen (Prior Walter), Gabrielle McCauley (Harper Pitt); Background front row, L to R: Jeff Church (Mormon Father), Rachael Warren (Mormon Mother); Background back row, L to R: Tony Estrella (Mormon Son), Rodney Witherspoon II (Caleb)
L to R: Haas Regen (Prior Walter), Gabrielle McCauley (Harper Pitt); Background front row, L to R: Jeff Church (Mormon Father), Rachael Warren (Mormon Mother); Background back row, L to R: Tony Estrella (Mormon Son), Rodney Witherspoon II (Caleb)
Cat Laine

Got an event you think we should highlight? Send your tips to Mareva Lindo at mlindo@oceanstatemedia.org.

USDA says it will not send out food stamp money in November due to the federal shutdown. Now, Rhode Islanders are grappling with how to make ends meet
Federal cuts to Medicaid could leave up to 50,000 Rhode Islanders without health insurance, straining the state’s already limited primary care system and putting communities like Central Falls - where half the population relies on Medicaid - at particular risk, according to Dr. Michael Fine
Gov. Dan McKee says the state will shift $6 million from other federal programs to help feed Rhode Islanders as SNAP benefits run out — while Attorney General Peter Neronha joins a multistate lawsuit against the Trump administration to restore funding
The R/V Endeavor, which spent the last 49 years operating out of URI’s Narragansett Bay Campus, was retired last month. Possibly took a tour of the vessel before it’s decommissioned
New protections for federal workers, credits for low-income customers on the way
Rescheduling after federal stop-work order puts two dozen laborers out of work