Amphitheater, performers, audience—in a Silver

Transcription

Amphitheater, performers, audience—in a Silver
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
This is Google's cache of http://www.latimes.com/la­et­roger­wolfson­20130610­dto­htmlstory.html. It is a
snapshot of the page as it appeared on May 9, 2014 09:15:11 GMT. The current page could have changed in the
meantime. Learn more
Tip: To quickly find your search term on this page, press Ctrl+F or ⌘­F (Mac) and use the find bar.
Text­only version
Column One
Amphitheater, performers,
audience—in a Silver Lake
backyard
A production of "The Taming of the Shrew" in TV writer-producer ("Fairly Legal," "The Closer") Roger Wolfson's homemade Romanstyle amphitheater features Keri Safran, left, as Kate, and Jennica Hill as Bianca. More photos
Roger Wolfson brings performers to his home and invites the public
— for free. 'There's probably more talent per square foot in L.A.'
than anywhere, he says.
By Deborah Vankin
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 1/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
Photography and video by Jay L. Clendenin
JUNE 10, 2013
R
oger Wolfson's backyard is not unlike the others that dot this rugged
Silver Lake hillside — a narrow slip of grass, on a steep incline, with a
distant view of the reservoir.
But Wolfson's yard, unlike the others, also has a Roman-style amphitheater. And
tonight, the recycled-concrete seats are filling up quickly.
"Welcome, come in, welcome," the TV writer and producer says as he greets the 80
or so guests trekking from their cars and lugging lawn chairs, picnic baskets and
bottles of chilled wine as if they were headed for the Hollywood Bowl.
Slim and collegiate-looking, with soft brown eyes and dark hair — a matchmaker's
nice Jewish boy — Wolfson clasps newcomers' hands and squeezes the shoulders
of regulars arriving at his backyard bowl, where he stages free concerts, lectures
and Shakespeare plays.
The amphitheater's benches, curved around a glass fire pit, are now almost full, and
the grass behind it is patched with blankets and bodies. A shaggy, twentysomething
couple lounge on a tattered quilt; a silver-haired woman in a floppy hat sits with a
small dog running in tight, jerky circles; a child with frizzy pigtails balls herself up,
transfixed by the audio friction coming from the amp adjustments.
Wolfson's neighbors are part of the audience too. Up and down his street many are
camped out on their porches or lawns, dinner on their laps.
Wearing faded jeans and a loose, untucked T-shirt, Wolfson, 43, takes the stage to
introduce tonight's entertainment but first asks for a moment of silence, "in
appreciation," he says, "for this bounty of talent and this community we have."
He shuts his eyes and inhales deeply, holding the mic to his chest. Then he faces the
audience, an expectant smile on his face, as he were a kid doing a living-room
magic show, and says, "Please welcome Nadine Risha, everyone, a great talent."
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 2/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
Wolfson cheers during a musical performance in his transformed backyard. More photos
The singer, wearing a flowing print dress and performing with a guitar-keyboard
duo, has opened for Sheryl Crow and Dwight Yoakam, and performed at the
Kennedy Center. But here, as the sky fades from orange to deep purple, most
guests sit a whisper's distance from her clear, haunting voice wafting through the
hills.
Los Angeles is home to all sorts of entertainment salons, from the splashy
nightclub events hosted by Mindshare Los Angeles to readings and intimate music
performances held at art galleries and private homes.
"Avengers" director Joss Whedon, who filmed his latest movie, "Much Ado About
Nothing," at his Santa Monica home, has hosted Shakespeare readings for friends
in his own backyard amphitheater since the late 1990s. The monthly FRED Talks at
the Santa Monica residence of LivingHomes Chief Executive Steve Glenn grew out
of a yoga potluck and was inspired by the do-it-yourself TEDx initiative from TED
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 3/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
Talks.
Wolfson's events are equally ambitious and homegrown, very much in the spirit of
the DIY, digital movement reshaping entertainment distribution.
It's about community
coming together — it's
what humans should be
doing."
— Roger Wolfson
"There's probably more talent per square
foot in Los Angeles than maybe any other
city in the world," says Wolfson, who draws
on his Hollywood contacts and extensive
political network from his past life as chief
education counsel to the U.S. Senate Labor
Committee to book his home stage,
informally known as the Silver Lake Bowl.
"Anyone walking down the street is
welcome to come in — and they do," says Wolfson, who makes no money from the
events. He says he doesn't even take a cut from the tip jar that's divided evenly
among unpaid performers.
The events — even with 160 attendees — don't cost Wolfson much to produce. He
offers no food or refreshments. And no special permits are necessary, says a
spokesman for the city Department of Building and Safety, because Wolfson isn't
selling anything. People sign up on his website for a free e-ticket that offers
directions to his front door.
Documentary filmmaker Mark Goffman showed his "Dumbstruck," about the world
of professional ventriloquists, on Wolfson's inflatable outdoor movie screen.
Former Dist. Atty. Gil Garcetti and "Glee's" Stephen Tobolowsky performed
monologues there for KCRW's "Strangers" podcast. Wolfson's summer jazz-atsunset series has brought in acclaimed acts such as Duo del Sol, featuring
Uruguayan violinist Javier Orman and guitarist Tom Farrell.
Tyler Spencer, an Oregon-based musician who plays the didgeridoo, created so
much buzz during his performance that "Dexter" composer Daniel Licht got wind of
it and gave him work.
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 4/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
"I ended up playing on the soundtrack of season six and on an episode of season
seven," Spencer says."I'm a total fan of the show."
An overhead view of the Roman-style amphitheater in Wolfson's backyard. More photos
On a recent Saturday, Colonials: An American Shakespeare Company was staging
"The Taming of the Shrew." Italian filmmaker Antony Sestito, who was in the
audience, happened to be in the middle of casting an independent thriller called
"The Curse" and was captivated by the performance of 21-year-old Blake Sheldon,
playing a small part as servant Biondello.
After the show, Sestito told Sheldon, "Young man, you have a quality. I see a career.
Would you come in for an audition?"
Wolfson says he's happy when that happens for the performers. But shepherding
unknowns into Hollywood is not his aim.
"I don't want to put pressure on the events or have the audience think they're being
used for exposure," he says. "My personal goal is to give performers a home and an
audience. And give people who live in other parts of the city, who may not be able
to afford a ticket to the Hollywood Bowl, access to great entertainment. It's about
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 5/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
community coming together — it's what humans should be doing."
Wolfson grew up in a relatively quiet New Haven, Conn., household with parents
he describes as "loving but workaholics."
"I was a lonely kid," he says. "My sister was an introvert, I was an extrovert, and
back then we didn't speak each other's language."
Some of his proclivity for hosting, he says, might have come from this early search
for connection.
Wolfson's desire to give back might also be traced to his childhood. His late
mother, an attorney, was active in women's-rights issues; his father is a cardiologist
who still volunteers weekly at a free clinic.
"They taught me the benefits of looking out for other people," says Wolfson, who
describes himself as "a vegetarian working towards veganism."
"I'm not a doctor or a lawyer, but I want to be a pillar of my community too."
Early in his career, politics was Wolfson's path toward public service.
After college he went to work for now-former Sen. Joe Lieberman, a family friend,
and soon became a legislative assistant for then-Sen. John Kerry.
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 6/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
"It was the ideal job for me," Wolfson says. "Healthcare, education, housing,
women's issues, all the stuff I care about."
Drafting speeches for Kerry, Wolfson fell in love with writing in someone else's
voice. Poems, then short stories, started coming to him. When he became a joint
staff member to the late Sens. Ted Kennedy and Paul Wellstone, he took part-time
classes toward a master's in creative writing.
In 2002, Wellstone's death in a plane crash led Wolfson to question his career
path.
"I could have been on that plane," he says. "People would have been able to say,
'Roger loved what he was doing but wasn't doing what he loved.' That's when I
decided I had to try writing."
Wolfson spent two years sailing up and down the East Coast on his 42-foot
catamaran, writing spec scripts and working as a political consultant (Arianna
Huffington and Al Sharpton were clients). In spring 2003, Wolfson moved to L.A.
so he could pursue his Hollywood dream. Three months later, a "West Wing" spec
script landed him a job on CBS' "Century City." Work on "Law & Order: SVU," "The
Closer" and "Fairly Legal" followed.
Living on his boat in the marina, Wolfson felt that L.A. needed more community.
He started hosting free lectures and concerts at Marina del Rey's Burton Chace
Park. He's rarely gone two months without hosting an event since, he says.
Still, Wolfson felt something was missing. "I wanted to get married and have kids,
and I couldn't find a woman who wanted to do that on a sailboat."
When he headed for land and bought his Silver Lake home, his newly acquired yard
was mostly barren. His uncle, an engineer, pointed out that it had the natural shape
of an amphitheater. Wolfson broke ground on it the next day and relaunched the
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 7/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
event series last June.
Noise complaints, surprisingly, haven't been much of a problem.
"Only one of my neighbors has raised issues, and I'm working to accommodate that
person," Wolfson says. He's started capping shows at 110 people and aims to hold
no more than three events a month. He's also focusing on quieter, acoustic
concerts.
The audience in Roger Wolfson's backyard listens to singer Nadine Risha. More photos
Attorney Rene Kern lives next door to Wolfson and loves the events. "My wife and
son and I have a sneaky advantage. When it gets crowded, we can sit in our yard
and listen to the music from there," he says. "Also, my son's a bit of an
entrepreneur. Sometimes he'll jump out and sell lemonade or cookies at
intermission."
Wolfson's long-term vision is to create a citywide circuit of backyard bowls with
free events run by volunteer hosts. His working title is the Community
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 8/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
Amphitheater Association — "the other CAA," he jokes.
He may be on the way: Novelist-film-TV writer Gregg Hurwitz says he's thinking of
breaking ground on his own amphitheater, which looks over Mulholland Drive.
"I went to Roger's and was just blown away," says Hurwitz, who also writes
"Batman: The Dark Knight" for DC Comics. "It's never anything I would have
thought of before, but we're considering it."
Expanding into low-income communities would be key, Wolfson says.
"When someone good comes to my house," he says, "I want them to go to
everybody's."
Contact the reporter
Follow Deborah Vankin (@DebVankin) on Twitter
MORE GREAT READS
Salvation of Echo Park's lotus bed is rooted in a bit of thievery
If you ever read the Bible, the fish and the bread
growing like crazy, I'm that kind of guy when it
comes to plants."
Skid row's storage bins tell gritty tales
You're dying. Are you ready?"
Univision's Jorge Ramos a powerful voice on immigration
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct… 9/10
5/12/2014
Amphitheater, performers, audience-- all in a Silver Lake backyard - Los Angeles Times
Once you are an immigrant, you never forget that
you are one."
Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RtKqApthZewJ:www.latimes.com/la-et-roger-wolfson-20130610-dto-htmlstory.html+&cd=1&hl=en&…
10/10