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Jane Austen Book Club of Greater Seattle
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Jane Austen's Birthday 

12/26/2013

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Every year for the past 5 years, our book club has come together in December to celebrate Jane Austen's birthday. We eat, we drink, we play games (with one heck of a white elephant game...I think they banned me from next year's game, though, as I got a wee bit overzealous). We have an amazing time saluting one of our most beloved authors. This year, mostly in part of my completion of my MA and the fact my thesis was on Jane Austen - I was asked to make the traditional toast. I didn't have much time to prepare (as it was insane at work), but I created what I hope was an ode to Jane that even she might have smirked at:

A Letter to Jane Austen on her 238th birthday:

Dear Miss Austen,

First off, let me congratulate you on looking remarkably well for hitting your 238th birthday. Rarely does anyone make it to this one so in tact. But you, you keep getting lovelier with age.

We, the Jane Austen Book Club of Puget Sound, are excited to be celebrating your day and plan to do the following in your honor:
* eat tasty treats
* drink fun beverages
* play wonderful games
* open, admire, steal, and steal back presents
   - I truly think you would love this game - though I feel it's poorly named.

You, our dear Jane Austen, continue to provide our club with joy, friendship, intellectual conversation and discussion. The feminists, the satirists, the traditionalists, the romantics - they all find reasons to read your stories. Articles, reviews, blogs, re-imaginings, full bodied research studies - they are nonstop.

And Hollywood can't get enough of you (your central themes continue to reverberate with audiences even if the directors take liberties with overtly romantic aspects). You have your critics, of course, whom we purposefully and successfully overthrow with our knowledge and intelligence - but that's what makes you so great. Even in the face of the haters, both past and present, you continue to outsmart us all.

We appreciate your advice:
On playing dumb: " A woman especially, if she have the misfortune of knowing anything, should conceal it as well as she can" (northanger abbey)
On the ideal guy: "All I want in a man is someone you rides bravely, dances beautifully, sings with vigor, reads passionately and whose taste agrees in every point with my own (Sense + Sensibility)

We appreciate your wit:
on prejudice: "Where there is a disposition to dislike, a motive will never be wanting" (Lady Susan)
"I do not want people to be very agreeable, as it saves me the trouble of liking them a great deal" (letter)

We love that so many people can relate to your stories and that your characters are still so relevant today. We wish we could invent a time machine to jump back a few hundred years and stop your sister from burning all the letters that would probably show a different side of you. But we understand, and even get to witness, your snarkier personality. Some of the quips you make aren't the nicest and no one wants to unintentionally embarrass someone else.

Intentionally, however....we'd love to know which characters are actual people in your life...but I digress.

So a toast, to you Miss Austen, and your continued success as an author and heroine in our time. May we continue enjoying your wit and humor, and find new ways to explore your writings and works.

Cheers!

To another 238 years of Jane Austen! May you have a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! and we hope you'll join us at the next meeting! Please use the "contact us" page above to receive mo

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The Jane Austen Drinking Game

5/21/2013

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As a lady who enjoys libations from time to time, I found this youtube video extremely hilarious. Not only do the creators make what has been rather popular over the last 20+ years of taking repeatable actions in the movies as an excuse to drink by using an Austen film...but they also show men getting really into Jane Austen and regency customs. Enjoy!
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Sense & Sensibility - The Musical?!?!

3/8/2013

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DENVER, CO  –  A stellar group of Broadway performers has been assembled to bring one of Jane Austen's beloved romances to life in the Denver Center Theatre Company’s (DCTC) world premiere production of SENSE & SENSIBILITY THE MUSICAL. The much-anticipated production, with book
and lyrics by Jeffrey Haddow and music by Neal Hampton, will be staged by
Director and Choreographer Marcia Milgrom Dodge, whose recent Broadway revival of Ragtime received seven Tony Award nominations. SENSE & SENSIBILITY THE MUSICAL will receive its world premiere production April 5 – May 26, 2013 in The Stage Theatre at the Denver Center for Performing Arts at 14th and Champa. 

In this grand musical adaptation of Jane Austen’s enthralling novel,
audiences are drawn into the tempestuous world of the Dashwood sisters. 
Starring in the pivotal sister roles will be Stephanie Rothenberg as Elinor and
Mary Michael Patterson as Marianne. Ms. Rothenberg made her Broadway debut last season as Rosemary opposite Nick Jonas in How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying and then starred as Princess Anne in the Guthrie Theater’s world premiere musical, Roman Holiday. Ms. Patterson had her Broadway debut in the Roundabout Theatre Company’s Tony-winning revival of Anything Goes.

The sisters’ romantic entanglements will be portrayed by three of Broadway’s most dashing leading men. Nick Verina, seen as Young Ben in the recent Broadway revival of Follies with Bernadette Peters, will take on the role of love-struck Edward; Jeremiah James, who starred as Billy Bigelow in the West End revival of Carousel and as Curly in the first national tour of Oklahoma!, will portray the cad Willoughby; and Robert Petkoff, Broadway’s recent Lord Evelyn Oakleigh opposite Sutton Foster in Anything Goes, will be the upstanding Colonel Brandon. Denver audiences might remember Petkoff from the Denver Center Theatre Company’s world premiere of Sir Peter Hall’s Tantalus (2000).

Additional Broadway talent joining the cast includes Ed Dixon (Anything Goes, Sunday in the Park with George, Mary Poppins, How the Grinch Stole Christmas) as Sir John; Ruth Gottschall (Mary Poppins, The Music Man, Funny Thing…Forum) as Mrs. Jennings, and Joanna Glushak (Sunday in the Park with George, Urinetown, Les Misérables) as Mrs. Dashwood/Mrs. Ferrars.

The ensemble will include Andrew Kober, Preston Dyar, Josh Walden, Stacie Bono, Liz Pearce, Kate Fisher, Jessica Hershberg, Steven Strafford, and Daniella Dalli.

The production boasts a formidable production team, including Set Designer Allen Moyer, Tony nominee for Grey Gardens; Costume Designer ESosa, 2012 Tony nominee for The Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess and “Project Runway” finalist; acclaimed Lighting Designer James F. Ingalls; Sound Design by Craig Breitenbach (world premiere of The Laramie Project); Music Supervisor David Loud, whose recent Broadway productions include The Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess and The Scottsboro Boys; Music Director and Conductor Paul Masse, whose Broadway credits include The Scottsboro Boys, as well as Curtains, Chicago, Avenue Q, 42nd Street, and Gypsy, and Orchestrations are by Kim Scharnberg and Neal Hampton.

Producing Artistic Director Kent Thompson selected SENSE & SENSIBILITY THE MUSICAL after it became a runaway hit at the 2012 Colorado New Play Summit.

SENSE & SENSIBILITY THE MUSICAL is based on the novel by Jane Austen. Book and lyrics by Jeffrey Haddow, Music by Neal Hampton. Directed and choreographed by Marcia Milgrom Dodge. 


Performance Schedule
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday performances at 6:30pm
Friday and Saturday evening performances at 7:30pm
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 1:30pm
No children under four admitted.

Tickets and Subscriptions
Tickets ($55 - $65) are available now by calling 303.893.4100 or 800.641.1222 (TTY 303.893.9582). Subscribers enjoy free ticket
exchanges, payment plans, priority offers to Broadway shows, discounted extra tickets, a dedicated VIP hotline, free events including talkbacks and
receptions, and the best seats at the best prices, guaranteed. 

SENSE & SENSIBILITY THE MUSICAL is presented by special arrangement with Betty Ann Besch Solinger and Alice Chebba Walsh. This production of SENSE & SENSIBILITY THE MUSICAL, generously sponsored by U.S. Bank and The Ritz-Carlton, is part of the Denver Center Theatre Company and Denver Center Attractions (DCA) 2012/13 seasons. SENSE & SENSIBILITY THE MUSICAL Producing Partners: The Anschutz Foundation, Joy S. Burns, Daniel L. Ritchie, June Travis. DCTC is generously supported by Larimer Square, The Steinberg Charitable Trust and Wells Fargo Advisors. DCA is generously supported by United Airlines and Vectra Bank.
Media sponsors are The Denver Post and CBS4.  The Denver Center for the
Performing Arts is supported in part by the Scientific and Cultural Facilities
District.  Please visit our website at www.denvercenter.org.

**Please be advised that The Denver Center for the Performing Arts – denvercenter.org – is the ONLY authorized online seller of tickets for Denver Center Attractions (the Broadway touring productions) and the Denver Center Theatre Company (the resident theatre company productions). Currently there are scalpers, also known as ‘second party vendors,’ selling tickets online at a rate more than double the standard price – and up. Tickets bought through these vendors MAY NOT BE VALID. You could not only be refused admission, but also lose your entire investment.



About the Denver Center Theatre Company
The Tony Award-winning Denver Center Theatre Company, helmed by Producing Artistic Director Kent Thompson, is currently in its 34th season of offering classic,
contemporary and new works to the American West.

The Denver Center for
the Performing Arts is a not-for-profit organization.

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Never to Early to Get Your Christmas Cards In Order

10/15/2012

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Austen Siting!!!

My cousin saw these really cute cards and thought of me :-)

Thanks Sarah!

She saw these in Barnes and Noble out near Frederick, MD. Hope they have them out in Seattle!



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Austen and Secondary Characters

9/28/2012

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I am currently in the mist of writing my thesis for my communication degree and somehow need to pull away from my core research (which was based in literary theory) and make it more communication theory. This merely means focusing on how we, the readers, interpret the stories (i.e. how we react) to the subplots Ms. Austen put before us. And, according to the narrative paradigm, we respond how she most likely expected us to - we don't like Charlotte so much, think Maria Bertram is a slag, detest Willoughby who is a major two-timing jerk, can't understand why Charles Musgrove would marry Mary after Anne rejected his suit, despise Mr. Elton (and Mrs. Elton, the wretch), and truly wish that Isabella Thorpe (and her brother) would jump off the London Bridge. Right? The purpose of my original paper was to actually examine the importance of these characters and their subplots and the motives they had for the choices they made. In addition, the affect in which their acts of settling (in most cases) had on our beloved heroes and heroines. Would Eliza ever have known Darcy loved her without Charlotte being at Hunsford. Would Tilney ever have admitted his affection for Catherine had not his father been completely duped by John Thorpe? Just things to explore...

I'd take any thoughts you have on this and hopefully plan on actually writing this once I finish my actual graded thesis.

~ Kendal

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Jane Austen is my Homegirl

6/20/2012

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Words can truly not describe how hilarious the lyrics are if you love 19th century British literature or BBC programming. Bravo!
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Jane Siting!

5/17/2012

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The Jane Austen Society has this thing where if you see or hear any mention of Jane Austen, you note it and bring it to the next meeting to share. Well, since I do not get the chance to go to the meetings that often, I thought I would share my Jane Siting with my book club. I saw this at the Rust and Ruffles Event in Monroe this past weekend...hope you can see it alright!


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An Interview with Mr. Knightley

4/2/2012

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A few months ago, the UW drama department put on a production of Emma (which minus a few bad accents here and there was quite good). Here is an interview with the actor who played Mr. Knightly (whom I personally had a tiny crush on...ok, a big crush). - Kendal


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2012 AGM Here We Come!

10/20/2011

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The JABC and JASNA of Puget Sound are already preparing for the 2012 Annual General Meeting being held in Brooklyn, NY next year! And their chapter just released a video for it!!!

http://jasna.org/agms/newyork/video/

Hope you can come!

Kendal
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Jane Sighting!

10/7/2011

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Every so often we may come across Jane in an interesting forum - maybe mentioned in the paper or on a random website. So imagine my surprise when she was quoted as number 10 in the "10 most famous last words" from bing.

http://www.bing.com/videos/watch/video/10-more-famous-last-words/uf71b68a


Enjoy!

Kendal
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