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Featured on January 19th , 2008 performing "Hard
As A Diamond, Soft As The Dirt"
Featured on June 21, 2003 performing "Writing My Way Out Of Adolescence"
Featured on September 20, 2003 performing "Went To Lunch, Never Returned"
Featured on August 21, 2004 performing "Making Every Mistake Twice"
The majority of the 240 writers presented by the Nye Beach Writers' Series
have stood behind a lectern and read a little and talked a little, with
the emphasis on the writing itself. We've been blessed with good readers
and excellent readers and so-so readers; but only with a smattering of
actual PERFORMERS, most notably the Dolly Ranchers, Three Guys From Albany,
Jeff Meyers, Vaudevillinous Poets, Bill Joe Shaver and Zoa Smith. We are
pleased then, to have with us tonight a writer and performer who has been
a surprise and delight to audiences all over the country.
A man of many experiences and occupations, from factory-worker to cab-driver,
substitute English teacher to ad-salesman for the San Francisco Giants
and now working in the development department of public radio affiliate
KHSU at Humboldt State University, Jeff DeMark transforms personal history
into solo performance. He draws from various stages of his life in his
four acclaimed pieces: "Writing My Way Out of Adolescence," "Went To Lunch,
Never Returned," "Making Every Mistake Twice," and most recently, "Hard
As A Diamond, Soft As The Dirt.
Viewers who watched the opening episodes of Carnivale on HBO would likely
remember the gritty close-up of one of the main characters who happens
to be a dwarf with a large, extraordinarily shaped head, who looked directly
into the camera and delivered a pro forma, mock-profound monologue in
Biblical tones assuring and reminding us that yes, Virginia, there is
a great struggle between good and evil that rocks our world on a regular
basis. And here I thought everything could be taken care of if we all
just did our patriotic bit and went shopping. It's really somewhat of
a disappointment. My own personal experience on the planet has taught
me that most folks have very little time to struggle with the forces of
good and evil. 99.99 percent of the time we're concerned with working,
paying the bills and figuring out how to satisfy our emotional needs.
We don't have a big-headed dwarf to set us straight with the good and
evil thing, but we do have Jeff DeMark to present the highlights of his
struggle with work and love.
Please welcome Jeff DeMark...
Introduction by Marianne Klekacz
Photo by Carla Perry |