Howl Redux
Herbst Theatre, 401 Van Ness (at Grove), S.F.
Starts at 8 p.m. Oct. 7
Admission is $20-100
Unbelievably, all my conflicted reactions -- and I'm far from alone with them, I think -- find outlet at "Howl Redux," the inaugural event at the massive litfest known far and wide as Litquake. Here we have a ridiculously talented group of writers, come together to praise Ginsberg, not to bury him. Inspired by the Beats and including at least one (Michael McClure), the event finds modern writers reading from the work of their antecedents, all more or less Bay Area products. Daniel Handler takes an obscure passage of Gertrude Stein's; Armistead Maupin reads Mark Twain; together, Sean San José and Randy Shilts menace AIDS; and causing me to urinate in anticipation is Cintra Wilson and a man she and only she has the right to read, Ambrose Bierce. Another treat: the batshit-crazy genius always in Ginz's shadow, Bob Kaufman, channeled by devorah major.
It's been a cool 50 years since he first read it, and Friday night, he does it again, whether I want him to or not: Allen Ginsberg performs his own poem, in a six-minute film excerpt from "Howl"'s Part 1, shot in 1992. And who am I kidding? I can't wait.
