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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Oct. 4, 2006) – What do you get when you take
a brutally honest folksinger and songwriter, then team her up with a hard-hitting
political satirist?
You get a likely-not-soon-forgotten, for-adults-only fundraising event
for Tennessee Tech University’s Backdoor Playhouse at 8 p.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 12.
The show is set to open with a performance by folk singer Addie Brownlee,
whose lyrics on her highly anticipated compact disc, titled Back When
We Were Christians, features lyrics that are imbued with both political
and personal insights.
TTU is just one of her stops on a two-month national tour. Also an actress,
Brownlee continues to perform to off-Broadway sell-out crowds. She was
raised in Kansas and Tennessee before moving to New York City.
“Addie is warm, funny and enthralling on stage,” said Mark
Creter, Backdoor Playhouse director. “She’s fearless. She’ll
play you a song about social injustice or love gone blisteringly wrong.
She’ll open old wounds if you let her, but then she’ll sing
you something so soothing you’ll forget the pain.”
The show culminates with an appearance by Lee Papa, a writer, professor
and performer commonly known as the Rude Pundit.
His “One Rude-Man Show” is a work-in-progress preview of his
coming play The Road to Rude, which is based on his three-year-old
political blog that receives tens of thousands of readers from all over
the world each week.
Margo Jefferson of The New York Times describes Papa as “a
tornado of a writer and a child of Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor and Hunter
S. Thompson.”
His monologues and autobiographical stories, which are at turns uproarious,
vicious, disturbing and obscene, are scathing political attacks on the
conservative right wing of United States government that ignore no current
political topic — including George W. Bush, the war in Iraq, the
response to Hurricane Katrina, fundamentalist Christians and more.
Admission to the show is $5 for students, $10 for everyone else, and
all proceeds will benefit the Tech Players and future Backdoor Playhouse
presentations.
For more information, call the Backdoor Playhouse box office at 931/372-6595.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 6 October 2006
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