Aesthetically Speaking: C.S.E. Cooney

Today’s Aesthetically Speaking interviewee is a published author and writer of many things, from novels to poems, plays to blog posts. I especially appreciate the honesty of how tough it is to find good readers of your writing, who you can trust and whose advice you can take. Thanks for sharing, C.S.E.!

What is your name and city of residence?
C.S.E. Cooney, almost-formerly-of-Chicago. Soon to be “Somewhere, Rhode Island.” I’m moving in a few weeks, east. 

What medium do you work in?
Words! Stories, novels, poetry, plays, reviews, blogs, whatever!

Jack o the Hills book cover CSE Cooney

Jack o' the Hills

How often do you work on your art–is it a full-time endeavor or something you work on in your spare time?
It’s like a second job that wants to be my first job. Nights and weekends sort of thing. These days, writing is not so much an escape from the day-job, as it is that the day-job (and everything else) serves the writing. 

How does art fit into your life, in general? Is it something you think about and talk about every day, or every week, or only in certain situations, etc.?
It’s the sort of thing that creeps into almost every conversation. The sort of thing where you’re babbling at someone about whatever book you’re reading, story you’re writing, writing convention you’ve just gone to, this new writer you’re corresponding with, this play of yours that you’ve just seen produced, and thinking, “Is this all I ever talk about? Am I more boring than any bore that ever lived? Talk about something else. Talk about that Wampug you just saw on YouTube…” 

(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ey2L_ExKWuI)

But there’s this: whatever else I talk about — movies, science, that creep on the train, the etymology of the word “yawn” — there’s a voice in the back of my head that says, “Remember this. Use it in a story.”

When you start on a piece, what kind of end result do you have in mind? Does it get performed or published, put in a permanent form or is it more temporary?
I write short stories with the idea of submitting them as soon as possible. They have to accumulate a number of both drafts and rejection slips before they’re either trunked for good or finally accepted somewhere. 

Sometimes an idea starts out a poem, morphs into a play, and then it turns out it’d make a better story. I rarely know this starting out. Some ideas require many structures before its ultimate shape is refined.

Plays I either write for fun, or competitions, or festivals. I usually write them only if someone out there’s interested in something from me specifically. But there have been a few cases of me waking up in the morning and saying, “I’m gonna write a play today.” No one wants them necessarily, but at least I had fun pulling them out of the ether for their own sakes and no one else’s.

Poetry is usually a visceral reaction I have to something. Either that, or I stumbled onto a moment I want frozen in all its glorious hyperbole. Those times I’m feeling something strongly I may never feel again, something effervescent in its novelty, I’ll try and capture to examine more closely later. And also to show it off… My wild menagerie of past experiences.

With novels, I don’t know — I’ve not had one published yet. With the one I’m working on now, a fantasy called Shadowstalkers, the end in sight is, “Finish the danged thing, go on a Great Agent Quest, and then from there we’ll see.” I’m fewer than 100 pages away from writing The End on this present draft.

What goals do you set in relation to your art, both short- and long-term? Is it something you hope to make money doing, or is it something you want to keep uncommercialized? Does the term “sell-out” hold meaning for you or do you see the art/commerce relationship as a necessary one?
I certainly want to make money with my writing. The times I already have are kind of addictive. The trick is getting the production and quality up to a level where my earnings from the writing are at least as consistent at whatever day-job I’m working in order to eat and pay rent while writing. I may never get there. It’s a goal, anyway.

I hate the term “sell-out.” What does that even mean? Producing something you hate for loads of cash? If that’s what a “sell-out” does, then I couldn’t do it. Just judging from past day jobs: if I’m in a position I consider toxic, I quit — for my own health’s sake, which I value. I want to wake up and like myself. It’d be great to wake up, like myself, and make money too. I don’t mind compromise or flexibility. I often don’t even know my own boundaries until I come smack up against them. I try to keep an open mind until confronted with an ethical crisis, and make my decision then.

Also, just because I create something, recognize that it’s well-constructed, and even publish it — that doesn’t mean it’s good art.  I have failed at making the kind of art I want to make — failed spectacularly. Sometimes it’s not possible to recognize that something is a splattering huge mess when you’re right in the middle of it, looking out. Someone might come along and point out this huge, raw flaw you’d never intended, never in a million years, and you wish you could take it all back and put it down somewhere in the dark, but it’s out in the world now. You suck it up. Learn something about yourself and the world you live in. What it makes you. What you make of it.You just learn from it, try not to do it again, and hopefully do something better with the next project.

Every story I write seems to require something utterly different from me than the last.  I have to learn a whole new skill set with each thing I write. It’s completely fascinating, but I hardly ever feel like I know what I’m doing. I’m trying to become more conscious of my process, without stymying the process. That gets tricky. But it’s never boring.

The Big Bah-Ha by C.S.E. Cooney book cover

The Big Bah-Ha

What role does collaboration with others play in your art, if any?
Well, you can’t have theatre without collaboration. That’s a given. So, with a play — collaboration’s built in. Actors might give a script a read, directors will piece it apart, everybody’s input informs the next draft. The script often morphs during the rehearsal process. So far, that’s been my experience. My experience is pretty limited. 

But stories, at least in the initial stages, are more personal. For myself, I have a handful of friends, who are all writers or editors at varying levels of their career — from award-winning, published novelists to people like me who’ve only just traded their apprenticeship for journeyman’s rank — and I often send them early drafts of things for their critique.

There’s much trial and error involved in this. Trust must be built up over time. Few people come through the crucible of this process, but those who do I value highly. I have to be careful to whom I send a story, because a certain kind of criticism too early, or given tactlessly, can ruin my enthusiasm for months. Some friends I can take a pummeling from and bounce up grinning. Some friends, even at their gentlest, slay my desire to create. It’s not their fault, or mine. It’s simply a matter of personalities.

After a draft is done, of course, and a story is submitted, it takes a small army of slush readers, associate editors, editors, designers, and artists to put together a magazine. Without them, I’m just a writer with a few thousand words in a Microsoft Document.

How conscious are you of your artistic influences? Who are your artistic influences?
Pretty conscious, I’d say. Stephen Sondheim, Caryl Churchill, Shakespeare, Ogden Nash, Dorothy Dunnett, Gene Wolfe (probably him above all, as he’s been my mentor since I was 18 years old), Robin McKinley, Patricia McKillip, Victor Hugo, Flaubert, the Brontës, Jane Austen, Lois McMaster Bujold, Neil Gaiman, Stephanie Shaw, Alexandre Dumas, Lloyd Alexander, Tolkien and Lewis, Diana Wynne Jones, Georgette Heyer, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Elizabeth Peters, Ursula K. LeGuin, Octavia E. Butler, Shirley Jackson, James Enge, Pablo Neruda, Peter S. Beagle, Stephen King… Can you tell I’m mainly a Fantasy writer? 

Since this is a travel blog, how does travel relate to or affect your art? (Themes in what you produce, road trips to perform your music, thoughts on what happens to your painting when you ship it across the country to a customer, etc.)
Much of the traveling I’ve done in the last nine years has been to writing conventions. That’s where you meet folks in your field. That’s where you meet your influences, hear them read out loud and answer interview questions and shake their hands. It’s where they become human. And suddenly you think, “If they can do it, I can do it.” 

Road trips — especially with other writer friends — to these sorts of things are where character, plot and story are all born.

There’s something about movement, the freedom of the road, really late nights in highway darkness, that get all the good weird stuff of the soul stirred up. There’s also a great deal of history moving outside your window. The good, the bad, the pretty and the ugly all buried in that landscape with the bones. Horizons you’ve never seen. Roads you’ve never traveled. Music on your friend’s iPod you’d never listen to on your own. Really vulgar jokes. Weird roadside pranks. All of it full of story.

There’s a reason there’s a whole genre of novels called “picaresque.”

And finally, a right-brain question: If your art was a map, what would it be a map of?
You know those ragged, half-scorched parts of ancient maps that say “Here Be Monsters”? Everything beyond that. 

If you’d like, share your website/Facebook page and any upcoming gigs/plans you’d like readers to know about.
I keep a blog at csecooney.livejournal.com. On my profile page is everything I’ve done writing-wise and where to find it. 

If you want to buy my book “Jack o’ the Hills,” being two stories in one of a very twisted fairy tale, check out Papaveria Press.

New Centerstage Review Up

I know I encouraged you all to go see a panto, and that still stands, but if you have some spare cash or come into some as an early Christmas present, spend it on The Jackie Wilson Story at the Black Ensemble Theater Cultural Center. The show runs through the beginning of January, so you have plenty of time to go see the best replication of one of the most beautiful voices in American singing, Mr. Excitement. I swooned a bit in my play review:

Kelvin Roston Jr. is breathtaking as Jackie Wilson; he gets all the clear, smooth highs and earthy, sensual lows of Wilson’s voice, and his energetic dance moves are mesmerizing. For those of us who never got to see Jackie Wilson in concert, Roston’s dynamic performance is likely the closest we’ll ever get, and that is an opportunity you don’t want to pass up.

Read the rest of the review here.

Occupy Chicago Protest March — November 17 Day of Action

Yesterday, my friend Hannah and I joined in the Occupy Chicago march down Michigan Ave. after we left the office. We took over the northbound lane from Congress up to Randolph and then Randolph to the Thompson Center. (We were headed for Daley Plaza, but the Christkindlmarket was being set up.)

me at the Occupy Chicago Day of Action 11-17-11

"People, Not Profits!"

There was lots of chanting — “We are the 99%!” “People, Not Profits, Occupy Chicago!” “ONE, we are the people, TWO, we are united, THREE, the occupation is. not. leaving!” — and also some cries of “join us, join us!” to onlookers.

Protesters marching during Occupy Chicago Day of Action 11-17-11

Taking over Michigan Ave. was cool.

A helicopter followed our route, but I couldn’t tell if it was a police chopper anticipating a turn for the worse, or a news crew looking for an aerial view. The cops formed bicycle barricades to keep us from crossing to the southbound lane (although I must point out, which the newspapers do not, that there are several people in the Occupy group who wear reflective vests and direct the group to make sure we all stay pretty orderly, and that’s a service to our fellow citizens that goes unrecognized in the mainstream media).

Occupy Chicago Day of Action 11-17-11 signs

Hey, that's your beloved capitalism for ya. Better hand over that cash!

We saw a lot of great signs, the most simple being “I can’t believe we still have to protest this crap.” There was a mix of people, a lot of young students, yes, but quite a few middle-aged and older folks as well; and it was a racially diverse group of righteously angry people. Hannah and I stayed for the first couple speeches at the General Assembly and then gave in to the cold and our growling stomachs and headed home.

I got 99 problems but the rich ain't 1

Dig it.

I do love me a good protest march; there’s nothing quite like it for feeling part of something greater and more noble than your daily life, which is to say, the cause of making everyone’s daily lives better.

Images courtesy of Hannah.

New Centerstage Review Up — See this Play!

Dearest fellow travelers, in case you missed my exhortation last year, let me repeat it: go see a panto. If you’re in Chicago, you’re in luck, because an Evanston theater company puts on a panto every Christmas season. Forget the tired old Goodman A Christmas Carol, or even any of the we’re-taking-the-piss-out-of-earnest-Christmas productions; Piccolo Theatre is where it’s at. But what is a panto? Here’s an excerpt from my theater review:

‘Pantomime’ is a bit of a misnomer; the British panto involves no miming. Indeed, it’s a raucous production involving cross-dressing, musical numbers, sly pop culture references, and rowdy audience participation. A fairytale or well-known story is reworked for maximum comedic effect, with adjustments made to fit in standard panto characters like the dame, the villain’s henchman, and the slightly clueless hero.

Read the rest here.

What fun! I’ve been to a couple in England on family vacations, and I still remember screaming out warnings to the hero, “He’s right behind you!” as the villain crept up for an attack. It is no less fun to do this as an adult, I promise you. So get thee to a panto!

Aesthetically Speaking: Kristin Walker

This week’s artist is Kristin Walker. Kristin performs in burlesque shows around the city under the stage name as Trixie Sparx, combining her love of song, dance, and fantastic costumes. She has several shows coming up over the next couple months, so check ’em out. Thanks for sharing, Kristin!

What is your name and city of residence?
Kristin Walker, Chicago, IL

What medium do you work in?
Burlesque Theatre–stage name: Trixie Sparx

Trixie Sparx photo by Callie Lipkin

Trixie Sparx

How often do you work on your art–is it a full-time endeavor or something you work on in your spare time?
This is a part time endeavor–a little artistic something to feed my soul. While it does pay, it does not pay ALL of the bills… but it does provide enough to buy more sparkly things!  I am a member of Vaudezilla Productions, a burlesque troupe (Shameless plug–voted Best Burlesque Troupe in Chicago by the Chicago Reader 2011).  We have a group meeting and rehearse solo/group acts once a week and I perform anywhere from three to ten times a month- full blown shows and private gigs, alike.

How does art fit into your life, in general? Is it something you think about and talk about every day, or every week, or only in certain situations, etc.?
Being a part of this artistic community is exhilarating to say the least, and I am always thinking about how to improve my craft, come up with new and cleaver ideas for acts, or promoting my company and the art itself.  There are many misconceptions that shadows this art form and deters many people from experiencing it–including many of my friends.  Burlesque roots are in parody, which uses sensuality and ‘tease’ in each act while reveling what is underneath sparkly costumes.  We burlesque performers are NOT strippers, though we do remove our clothing.  It is the element of ‘tease’ which sets us apart from the ‘dead behind the eyes’ stripper types. The important thing to remember is that burlesque is about telling a story through music and movement–sometimes funny, sometimes sexy.  While everyone knows the end result (the final reveal) it is the journey that the performer takes you on where the art truly lies.

When you start on a piece, what kind of end result do you have in mind? Does it get performed or published, put in a permanent form or is it more temporary?
When starting a new act, I either get really jazzed by a song I hear, or a concept / character that I think of which leads to a burning urge deep inside me that says: THIS MUST BE DONE!  So, I start playing around.  I find costume bits and pieces that will work with the concept and character, and through experimenting with dance and movement, I slowly build the choreography to a final product.  The unique thing about live performance is that it is organic, and it changes every time you perform.  The foundation of the piece is there, but it grows and evolves the more you do it.  Moreover, I perform in many different spaces–from bar tops, to small stages, to large venues, to art galleries–and the dance must be modified to accommodate the space.

Trixie Sparx photo by Oomphotography

Dress envy!

What goals do you set in relation to your art, both short- and long-term? Is it something you hope to make money doing, or is it something you want to keep uncommercialized? Does the term “sell-out” hold meaning for you or do you see the art/commerce relationship as a necessary one?
As for goals–I would like to continue doing burlesque theatre for a very long time, as well as start to travel to festivals around the state, and do more private gigs.  I am improving every week that goes by as a performer and it feeds my confidence and drive in my everyday life as well. The more I perform, the more I practice, the more I take classes, the more chances I have at making more money to feed the fuel that drives my craft. I never see myself ‘making it big’, or even surviving off of the income from my art, but the benefits it gives me creatively are worth so much more to me.  No one in my business, in my humble opinion, has really ever ‘sold out.’  Promotion of burlesque can only lead to more acceptance and understanding of this theatrical art form and can benefit our pockets as well. Burlesque is still a rather underground movement that is surfacing on the social radar and any exposure or opportunity is greatly appreciated and used.

What role does collaboration with others play in your art, if any?
Collaboration happens all the time with burlesque theatre- quite often most shows are ‘Vaudeville-esque’ in nature, incorporating singers, magicians, acrobats, belly dancers, comedians, ect.  I have done many ‘group acts’ some character driven and silly, others sensual, that have gone over smashingly.  Currently, along with Vaudezilla Productions, I am working on collaborating with a local jazz ensemble for a live band show that will be held in November.

How conscious are you of your artistic influences? Who are your artistic influences?
As with any artist, I am susceptible and open to influence from everything from daily life, to music, still art, literature, culture, society, gender issues, politics and economics.  Finding subtle ways to incorporate these themes into your art is a fun challenge.  My artistic influences are my friends, whom for the most part, dabble in arts themselves.  They impact me greatly and I strive to be a better artist myself so we can continue this ‘artistic dialog’ that inspires and encourages me.  In addition, remarkable burlesque performers influence me–when you see it done right, it has a powerful effect on you.

Trixie Sparx photo by Kriss Abigail

aaaand fan envy

Since this is a travel blog, how does travel relate to or affect your art? (Themes in what you produce, road trips to perform your music, thoughts on what happens to your painting when you ship it across the country to a customer, etc.)
Travel is a very deep passion of mine, and to combine that with the love of my art is the ultimate goal.  I am ready and I want to take this act on the road!  The best part of burlesque is that this is encouraged, and you can very easily.  There are burlesque festivals all over the world, and I will be apply to a few festivals in 2012–some places I’ve never been, and really want to go such as Albuquerque, NM, Vancouver, Canada to name a few.  I might also visit New Orleans and Colorado to support friends performing as well.

And finally, a right-brain question: If your art was a map, what would it be a map of?
Fantasia–with heaps of feathers, sparkles and sass.

If you’d like, share your website/Facebook page and any upcoming gigs/plans you’d like readers to know about.
Upcoming shows:
Nov. 23rd at the Holiday Club
Dec. 3rd 10:30pm at the 773 Theatre; Trim!  A Christmas Craptacular
Dec. 9th at the Lincoln Tap Room
Jan 21st at the 773; The Guilty Pleasure show
Feb 18th at the 773; Live Band Burlesque show

For more information, please visit: www.vaudezilla.com

Photo 1 credit Callie Lipkin. Photo 2 credit Oomphotography. Photo 3 credit Kriss Abigail.