What brings a community together? Over pizza and beers, the dedicated crew behind Whoop Dee Doo—artist Matt Roche & Jaimie Warren's traveling kids variety show—discuss the artistic and emotional pull of their uniquely collaborative community art project. Modelled on the punchy humor and DIY aesthetic of classic kids television shows like Pee-wee's Playhouse, Whoop Dee Doo relies on local youth groups, friends, and word of mouth to supply the ever-evolving network of artists who create the project's elaborate costumes, sets, and props. For artist Michael O'Malley—an arts educator who has worked on over a dozen shows all over the country since 2011—the project provides a necessary release. "If you're an artist or a creator, there's a lot of time spent thinking and talking how we should talk about art. And finally to go into a space where it was like, all of those things matter, but we're not gonna focus on that, we're gonna focus on what we make, is refreshing." Artist Monika Uchiyama describes what she thinks drives the intense, all-nighter production pace.
↧