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    Selkie, a sea tale

    On the record: Inside Misha Penton's new chamber music work — and her tryst with film

    Joel Luks
    Mar 29, 2013 | 9:30 am

    Soprano Misha Penton, the enterprising Houston-based theatrical diva with a reputation of skipping along to her own tune, was faced with a difficult decision after she fulfilled her dream of opening her own performance hall at Spring Street Studios — a "to be or not to be" dilemma of sorts.

    "If your dreams don't scare you, they are not big enough," Penton quips.

    When the daily operations required to manage a venue fringed on her creative time, it was time to refocus and bid adieu to Divergence Music & Arts, the space, and welcome back Divergence Vocal Theater, the company.

    That decision turned out to be a good one.

    Stepping out of her comfort zone, Penton's acquired freedom sailed away from the physical concert hall to reel into fantasy film. She's going on the record, literally and visually.

    Having both my first recording and my first music video — different manifestation of the same creative output — brings a sense of completeness to this journey

    A CD release concert for Penton's collaboration with composer Elliot Cole that resulted in Selkie, a sea tale, set for 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at 4411 Montrose Blvd., will also debut Penton's inaugural tryst with music video, a genre she plans to explore further alongside more commissions and cross-disciplinary, multimedia productions.

    "Championing young composers is at the forefront of my practice," Penton says. "One of the ways to do that is not only to perform, but to record their work in different formats. Having both my first recording and my first music video — different manifestations of the same creative output — brings a sense of completeness to this journey."

    Selkie, a sea tale was her company's first original work. Cole set Penton's poetry such that the score dialogued synergistically with her imagistic, colorful text to sketch a series of Neo Romantic, seaside tableaux. The story is rooted in Faroese, Icelandic, Irish and Scottish lore, the origins of the mermaid-like selkie, a half-human, half-seal living being who can shed its skin to reveal a humanized form — but only for a short period of time. These anthropomorphs belong amid the frigid ocean waters.

    The premiere of the gesamtkunstwerk in 2010 was sold out, standing room only. Costumes by Sarah Mosher and Serret Jensen; set, media and lighting design by Megan M. Reilly and David A. Brown; and choreography by Meg Brooker transformed a black box theater into an evocative environment fitting for themes of sensuality, eroticism, desire and love found and lost.

    But Cole's compositional style stands on its own. Indulgent French sonorities, thick textures and pliable phrases breathe poignancy to the lustful peaks, squeezing emotional substance from abstract and concrete allusions to ominous oceans, strong winds and the anxiety from restless, loveless nights.

    Laying down tracks

    The music's narrative quality and the original production's visual impact rendered Selkie, a sea tale a flexible oeuvre to test the waters with audio recording in addition to a separate video component.

    "Theatrical elements create an environment that wraps around everyone who's sharing in the experience so that we can all be inside art rather than watching art from afar."

    Beginning in January of 2011, the audio recording project took roughly one year. Working alongside recording engineer Todd Hulslander of KUHF, cellist Patrick Moore, pianist Kyle Evans and violist Meredith Harris, Penton's hope was to produce an album that retained the energy of a performance while at the same time capturing the finesse of a mastered studio recording.

    "Recording is fun because you don't have the pressure of performance, but it's a different art and science," she says.

    Other than a few small tweaks, the music hasn't change much since its premiere. There's a bonus track that reprises a portion of the original score. As "Softly over sounding waves" was the first aria Cole penned for Selkie, it became the foundation from which the whole piece expanded. This new version is in a different key with slightly altered instrumentation.

    Listen to "Softly over sounding waves" here:

    Adobe Flash Required for flash player.

    Divergence on film

    It was critical that the video was shot during winter in the Pacific Northwest, particularly as the work's subject was mused from a trip to Vancouver Island. Penton sought to seize the natural, raw intensity of the ocean's tumultuous waters — and no other setting would do.

    "There's something about the region that's super charged with elemental energy that permeates your whole being," she says. "The ebullience draws me in and makes me think that being swept into it to become one with it wouldn't be such a bad idea — as fatal as it may be."

    She found that tone in the Oregon coast. The only respite from the intense, three-day production schedule with her cameraman husband Dave Nickerson and director of photography Raul Casares were restful nights in a cabin near Cannon Beach.

    "Video allows me to have the immersive environment of performance," Penton explains. "These theatrical elements aren't icing on the cake.

    "They create an environment that wraps around everyone who's sharing in the experience so that we can all be inside art rather than watching art from afar."

    Listen to "When you came ashore" below:

    Adobe Flash Required for flash player.

    ___

    Divergence Vocal Theater presents a CD Release Concert: Selkie, a sea tale on Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m., at 4411 Montrose Blvd. Tickets are $15 in advance, $20 at the door, and can be purchased online. The video will be available on CultureMap next week.

    A CD release concert for Misha Penton's collaboration with composer Elliot Cole that resulted in Selkie, a sea tale is set for 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at 4411 Montrose Blvd.

    Divergence Vocal Theater Selkie CD release, March 2013, Misha-Selkie
    Photo by Raul Cesares Dave Nickerson
    A CD release concert for Misha Penton's collaboration with composer Elliot Cole that resulted in Selkie, a sea tale is set for 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at 4411 Montrose Blvd.
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    Movie Review

    Knives Out series takes a more serious turn in Wake Up Dead Man

    Alex Bentley
    Nov 28, 2025 | 4:00 pm
    Josh O'Connor and Josh Brolin in Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
    Photo by John Wilson/Netflix
    Josh O'Connor and Josh Brolin in Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery.

    Since 2019, writer/director Rian Johnson has essentially turned over his career to murder mysteries, including 2019’s Knives Out, 2022’s sequel Glass Onion, and the just-canceled Peacock series Poker Face. He’s back for another bite of the apple with Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery.

    While private detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) returns to help investigate a seemingly impossible murder, the majority of the focus of this film is on the employees and parishioners at a small Catholic church in upstate New York. Father Jud Duplenticy (Josh O’Connor) has been assigned to the parish to work under Monsignor Jefferson Wicks (Josh Brolin). Wicks is a fiery orator who relies on intimidation, as well as the help of church aide Martha Delacroix (Glenn Close), to maintain control over his flock.

    That group includes lawyer Vera Draven (Kerry Washington), her politically ambitious brother Cy (Daryl McCormack), Dr. Nat Sharp (Jeremy Renner), writer Lee Ross (Andrew Scott), cellist Simone Vivane (Cailee Spaeny), and groundskeeper Samson Holt (Thomas Haden Church). The tenets of Catholicism, and religion in general, are put to the test as Father Jud challenges Monsignor Jefferson for leadership, and a death changes things even further.

    The free-wheeling and fun nature of the first two Knives Out films gives way to a more methodical and introspective approach in Wake Up Dead Man. While Johnson is interested in presenting a murder mystery, it’s the lives of the various characters that take precedence, especially that of Father Jud. He is shown from the start as someone who wrestles with his faith, which is tested on multiple occasions as he encounters people who challenge him more than expected.

    The arrival of Blanc on the scene turns the film into a type of buddy movie, with Father Jud serving as both investigator and suspect. Neither man embodies the type of behavior one might expect out of their respective professions, and what limited comedy the film has comes from their interactions. They’re reined in by Police Chief Geraldine Scott (Mila Kunis), although her desire to get to the bottom of the murder is somewhat stymied by Blanc and Father Jud’s diversions.

    The lessons learned from two very different types of sources — mystery novels and Catholicism — collide over the course of the film. A book club that very coincidentally includes multiple mystery novels, including John Dickson Carr’s The Hollow Man, plays a key role, as does the devoutness of the various people at the church. Ultimately, as was the case in the first two films, the nature of the whodunit comes in second place to how the characters react to the multiple reveals along the way.

    Craig seems to tone down the over-the-top way he usually plays Blanc in this film, and his performance fits in well with the story being told. O’Connor, a star on the rise after Challengers and more, is asked to carry the film and he does so ably. The strong actors in the supporting cast are not used as well as they could have been, with only Close and Brolin truly making an impact. Geoffrey Wright shows up in a couple of small scenes and makes his presence known quickly.

    Wake Up Dead Man is the least entertaining Knives Out film so far, but that’s not to say that it’s uninteresting. Johnson explores topics that result in more talking than action, but those conversations — especially between Blanc and Father Jud — are consistently engaging and revelatory about the characters and the crime they are investigating.

    ---

    Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery is now playing in select theaters; it debuts on Netflix on December 12.

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