Calendar

Jan
12
Fri
PLAY: “Lifeboat” @ Northwest Children’s Theater
Jan 12 @ 7:30 pm – Feb 4 @ 2:00 pm
PLAY: "Lifeboat" @ Northwest Children’s Theater  | Portland | Oregon | United States

LIFEBOAT

A True Story of Two Teenagers Who Did Not Give Up

A co-production with Northwest Children’s Theater

 

WHO:                   Co-produced by Corrib Theatre & Northwest Children’s Theater
WHAT:                
Lifeboat

By Nicola McCartney

Directed by Avital Shira
WHEN:                
January 12 – February 4, 2018
Opening Night/Press Night:  Friday, January 12

                                Regular Run: Thursdays-Saturdays@ 7:30pm; Sundays @ 2pm
WHERE:              
Northwest Children’s Theater, 1819 NW Everett St., Portland

TICKETS:               $25 regular price; $20 student/group; $15/youth under 18

Brown Paper Tickets: 800-838-3006 or https://corriblifeboat.brownpapertickets.com/

SPECIAL EVENTS

Sunday, Jan 14: Post-show Talkback, guest TBD

Sunday, Jan 21: Post-show Talkback, guest TBD

Sunday, Jan 28: Post-show Talkback with Charlotte Headrick (Dramaturg)

PRODUCTION PHOTOS AVAILABLE: Jan 12, 2018
SHOW IMAGE ATTACHED: 
Sketch by Jan Baross

 

PORTLAND, OREGON – December 21, 2017. With a bracing true story of determination and hope, Corrib Theatre and Northwest Children’s Theater present Nicola McCartney’s Lifeboat. Directed by Avital Shira and starring Kayla Lian and Britt Harris, this riveting play by an award-winning Irish playwright runs for four weeks, Jan. 12 through Feb. 4, at Northwest Children’s Theater.

Lifeboat is the extraordinary true story of Bess Walder and Beth Cummings. Set during World War II, it is a story of courage, a story of survival and a story of enduring friendship.

On Friday the thirteenth of September 1940, a ship, The City of Benares, set sail from Liverpool bound for Canada. On board were 90 child evacuees escaping the relentless bombing and dangers of war torn Britain. Four days into the crossing, the ship was torpedoed and sank. Only 11 children aboard survived. Of those few, two young girls, Bess Walder (15) and Beth Cummings (14), clung to life as they spent 19 terrifying hours in the water on an upturned lifeboat. With the hopes and dreams upon which they’d set sail, they buoyed one another’s spirits with stories of home, family and adventure. Bess and Beth inspired each other to survive. Lifeboat tells their story.

“At its core, Lifeboat is a play about resilience,” said play Director Avital Shira, daughter of Portland Rabbis Laurie Rutenberg and Gary Schoenberg. “These two young women defy the odds through connection, story and the will to save the other to ultimately survive longer than humans should be able in the middle of the Atlantic.  The world is dark at the moment, and it’s especially important now to harness the power of human resilience and remind ourselves that if we find our common humanity, we have the ability to keep each other afloat.”

Lifeboat packs a wallop because it is fundamentally about life, death and the human spirit. Oh, and it’s a highly entertaining history lesson too: informing the young and reminding the old.”
Theatre Review, New Zealand

 

RESEARCH

This is a true story centered around two teenage girls during the evacuation of British children during World War II. Know as “Operation Pied Piper,” the British evacuation of children began on Friday, September 1, 1939. The ship the young girls in this story were sailing on was the City of Benares. It was carrying 191 passengers (90 of them children) and 216 shipmates, 407 souls all told — 260 perished (79 children) and 147 survived (11 children). Details about this ship and its demise are here.

Jan
14
Sun
2018 JCC Maccabi Games® and ArtsFest® Information Meeting @ Mittleman Jewish Community Center
Jan 14 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm

The Jewish Community Center Association of North America (JCCA) has invited the MJCC to send a delegation of athletes and artists to the JCC Maccabi Games® and ArtsFest®!

This year, both the Games and ArtsFest will take place from August 5 – 10, 2018. The Games will be held in Orange County, CA, while ArtsFest will take place down the road in Long Beach, CA.

Sports include: basketball, baseball, flag football, Iice hockey, lacrosse, softball, girls volleyball, dance, star reporter (sports journalism), swimming, table tennis, tennis, and track and field.

Arts include: acting/improv, culinary arts, dance, musical theatre, rock band, visual arts, and vocal music.

We plan on expanding our delegation this coming year when we head down to California to represent our community. If you or someone you know is interested in joining our delegation for this summer, whether as an athlete or artist, please contact Len Steinberg at lsteinberg@oregonjcc.org or 503.535.3555. Commitments must be made by February 23, 2018.

Jan
15
Mon
From Age-ing to Sage-ing @ Temple Beth Sholom
Jan 15 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

This class is based on the work of Rabbi Zalman-Schachter Shalomi z”l of the same title. We will be using his book as well as Conscious Aging: Cultivate Wisdom, Connect with Others, Celebrate Life – a curriculum published by the Institute of Noetic Sciences – as guides to stepping into the role of Elder and Sage. This is not just for the “hoary heads” among us but all those who wish to be conscious about moving into our advanced years with grace and wisdom.
And, baruch Hashem, Dr. Victoria Howard, who taught at Naropa University WITH Reb Zalman z”l and specializes in conscious aging will be enriching the class with her expertise. Please see her bio below:

Victoria Howard, PhD, LPC:  Dr. Howard has a doctorate in Clinical Psychology specializing in issues of aging. Her dissertation was titled Suffering and Insight: Life Review with Older Adults. She was a co-founder of the MA Gerontology Program at Naropa University and helped to create the Masters in Divinity Program at Naropa where she taught the Pastoral Care Track. Dr. Howard is an authorized Meditation Instructor in the Shambhala Buddhist Tradition and a teacher of Buddhist Psychology.

She has helped to found two homecare agencies in Boulder, Colorado and provided consultation and staff training for small group homes for frail elders. She also trained volunteers at Hospice Care of Boulder & Broomfield Counties. Dr. Howard is a published author and a Licensed Professional Counselor in private practice working with older people and their families. Last but certainly not least, she is a grandmother of three and a great grandmother of a wonderful four year old and a brand new baby.

This class will be a minimum of eight sessions. Free for TBS members and their families; non-members can check out one class for free, after which the course is $90.

 

Jan
16
Tue
Mah Jongg for Beginners @ Mittleman Jewish Community Center
Jan 16 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Learn to play this ancient game. It will give your mind a workout!

 

Register: oregonjcc.org/registration

Registration Code: CG200

Mah Jongg for Intermediate Players @ Mittleman Jewish Community Center
Jan 16 @ 1:30 pm – 3:30 pm

Take your game to the next level. It will give your mind a workout!

 

Register: oregonjcc.org/registration

Registration code: CG201

Learn the Art of Jewish Storytelling @ Congregation Neveh Shalom
Jan 16 @ 6:15 pm – 8:15 pm

Learn the art of Jewish storytelling with professional storyteller Brian Rohr. In this nine class course, Brian will teach the art and skill of performative storytelling, exploring the ancient stories, personal narrative and techniques on how to discover your own unique storytelling voice. Tuition for the three month course is: $150 CNS members / $200 Non-members.

Reading: The Making of a Matriot @ Broadway Books
Jan 16 @ 7:00 pm
Reading: The Making of a Matriot @ Broadway Books | Portland | Oregon | United States
Reading with Frances Payne Adler, author of Making of a Matriot
In The Making of a Matriot, author Frances Payne Adler demonstrates—through poetry and prose—the need for a new conception of national defense through peaceful means, and provides a glimpse of the possibilities.
Definition: Matriot, noun. 1. One who loves his or her country. 2. One who loves and protects the people of his or her country. 3. One who perceives national defense as health, education, and shelter for all the people in his or her country, and the world.
“If national defense is the issue, why not, as poet-activist Frances Payne Adler suggests, a ‘national defense’ budget that defends the people through affordable health, education, and shelter for everyone?”
—Adrienne Rich, in Arts of the Possible
“These poems touch and explore the core of human existence—the wars, the illnesses, but also the love, the courage, the defiance, of which her own writing is an example. Her definition of ‘matriot’ alone makes it worthwhile opening the book.”
—Howard Zinn, author, People’s History of the United States
 
Poet Frances Payne Adler is the author of five books: two poetry collections, Making of a Matriot and Raising The Tents, and three collaborative poetry-photography books and social action art exhibitions with photographer Kira Carrillo Corser, which have shown in galleries, universities, and state capitol buildings across the country, as well as in the U.S. Senate in Washington, D.C. Adler, along with Diana Garcia and Debra Busman, co-edited Fire and Ink: An Anthology of Social Action Writing, winner of the 2009 ForeWord Book of the Year Award for Anthologies. Her current exhibition, Dare I Call You Cousin, is about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and is a collaboration with Israeli artists, photographer Michal Fattal and videographer Yossi Yacov. Adler has been awarded a National Endowment for the Arts Regional Award, a California State Senate Award for Artistic and Social Collaboration, and the New Millennium Obama Award. Adler, Professor Emerita and founder of the Creative Writing & Social Action Program at California State University Monterey Bay, lives in Portland, Oregon.
Jan
17
Wed
OJMCHE Exhibit Tours @ Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education
Jan 17 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
OJMCHE Exhibit Tours @ Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education | Portland | Oregon | United States
OJMCHE has exhibition tours every Wednesday at 1 pm.
Tours are free with admission and members, of course, can always visit for free. Come early or stay after and enjoy lunch in the museum’s Lefty’s Cafe!
Please join OJMCHE for weekly public tours of the newly reopened museum galleries. Tours last one hour and are lead by museum staff.

Exhibits Feb. 16- May 27

Vedem: The Underground Magazine of the Terezin Ghetto

Vedem Underground examines the literary magazine written by Jewish teens imprisoned at Terezin, a Nazi camp in Czechoslovakia during the Second World War. Using pop-art graphics, drawings and paintings, and the prose and poetry, these brave adolescents secretly wrote and illustrated the longest-running underground magazine in a Nazi camp. Vedem (Czech for “In the Lead”) documented their voices with defiance, humor and heartbreak. The exhibition breaks down their 800 original pages and reconstructs them in the form of a contemporary magazine. Curated by Rina Taraseiskey and Danny King.

To Tell The Story: The Wolloch Holocaust Haggadah

On view in the East Gallery: Commissioned by Helene and Zygfryd B. Wolloch, The Holocaust Haggadah is richly illustrated with lithographic prints by David Wander and calligraphy by Yonah Weinreb that link the story of liberation from ancient Egypt to the Holocaust.

Live Stream Author Talk with Nicole Krauss @ Congregation Neveh Shalom
Jan 17 @ 4:15 pm – 6:00 pm

Watch a live stream of New York Times bestselling author Nicole Krauss in conversation about her newest novel, Forest Dark, at the Jewish Theological Society. In Forest Dark, Krauss entwines disparate narratives chronicling two characters who find themselves at a crossroads in life. Retired New York attorney Jules and Brooklyn writer Nicole each take an unexpected journey, seeking answers in the Israeli desert and coming to terms with the legacy of the ancient land and the modern nation forged from it.

Sponsored by the CNS Sisterhood and the Feldstein Library.

For more info, contact Kaiya Goldhammer, Librarian of the Feldstein Library at Neveh Shalom: kgoldhammer@nevehshalom.org.

Engage, Enrich, Enliven, Enjoy! with Ruth Tenzer Feldman @ Congregation Neveh Shalom
Jan 17 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

This is child’s play-and more-for adults interested in exploring ways to cultivate creativity, broaden their perspective, foster mental flexibility, and reduce stress. Each session offers tools based on a variety of sources from Einstein to Abraham Joshua Heschel, including current research in neuroplasticity. No particular talent needed. Just bring yourself and prepare to stretch your brain.

CNS members $36 for all sessions, non-members, $54 for all sessions

To reserve your spot, please RSVP by 1/12/18 to Marina Vidrio, mvidrio@nevehshalom.org.