Reprint from the Baltimore Sun 'Art & Society' section May 19, 2002 page 3
Subversive
combination of art and music
Performing pair makes wicked humor together
By Glenn McNatt
Sun Art Critic
photo by Elizabeth Malby
Joyce Scott and Lorraine Whittlesey could hardly be more
different on the outside - one large, one skinny, one black, one
white, one from B'more, one from Oyster Bay and Manhattan. Yet
when they're together on stage, something clicks.
Sparks fly. Eyebrows rise. Smiles of recognition materialize.
Teeth occasionally gnash.
Scott and Whittlesey are visual artist and musician,
respectively, each of whom has a highly successful independent
career. Whittlesey's the slinky, blond, piano- and
synthesizer-playing composer. Scott, whose fabric-and-bead
artworks are nationally acclaimed, is the one with the mouth. On
stage, one minute she's belting out jazz hits, the next she's
using political-scatological-unprintable humor to make a point.
Put Scott and Whittlesey together and you get far more than the
sum of the parts: wickedly funny, wildly subversive performers
whose evening-length acts are part theater happening, part pure
stand-up comedy. Take their songs about Bill Clinton in Harlem
catting around with girls young enough to be his daughter ... or
the way poor people's taxes keep going up, up, up, while rich
people's taxes go down, down, down.
They've been performing together for more than a decade now, and
they know each other so well that either can instantly pick up on
the other's riffs. When Scott (who recently won a Governor's Arts
Award from the Maryland Citizens for the Arts Foundation and the
Maryland State Arts Council) breaks into song, Whittlesey knows
just the chords to back her up. During an interview, they
practically finish each other's sentences.
We caught up with Scott and Whittlesey last week to talk about
where their art is going and what they're trying to accomplish:
What exactly is a performance artist?
Joyce: It's obviously a person who is talented, gifted and
creative who performs. Music, theater, drama - the whole gambit.
Is that the same as a musician or a singer or an actor?
Lorraine: All of the above.
Joyce: Lorraine has a background as a classical pianist, working
with musicians from Tin Pan Alley to the classics, plus a strong
basis in improvisation. So if I'm out there, Lorraine is right in
sync. Ours is like the variety show way of working where you know
each other well enough to take liberties with each other. I could
say something and she'll play it right back to me.
I'm not saying these aren't scripted shows. We spend lots of time
rehearsing and figuring out what we're going to sing. That
structure gives us the ability to improvise. Folks watch what I
do and they think, "Oh, Joyce is just out there." But
actually you have to be very disciplined to be able to do that -
lest you really tempt failure big time.
Lorraine: To have that ability to really be there and connect
with the audience takes a lot of work; it doesn't just happen.
You two seem so different from each other, how did you get
together?
Joyce: I'm very much a Baltimore girl that's on the cusp of the
South, Southern parents, African-American, someone who was raised
in the Pentecostal church, and who sees things visually. I've
sung since I was a child, but even so a lot of my stuff, even the
music I perform, comes out of a visual approach. That's different
from Lorraine, who is approaching it as a musical person.
Lorraine: I've been very involved in performances most of my
life. I was in a lot of different bands and was on TV a lot as a
child. I was a member of the Howdy Doody "peanut
gallery." When they had the NBC 75th anniversary, they
showed one of the episodes I was in.
Really?
Joyce: Ever think you'd meet a person who was in the Howdy Doody
peanut gallery? It's like being on the Mickey Mouse Club, it's
like, "Were those really real kids?"
Lorraine: Yeah, definitely, it was a lot of fun. We were paid in
bags of candy because our sponsor was Mars. So when you're like 5
or 6 years old and you get this big bag of candy when you finish
your show, you think this is the best thing that can possibly
happen.
How long did you do it?
Lorraine: Three years, about. They'd rotate different groups of
kids, so it wasn't every day. I grew up in New York City so I
went to a lot of performances ...
Joyce: Tell him what your dad did.
Lorraine: My dad was a director at Rockefeller Center, and so I
was in an environment of theater and shows and all kinds of
things. I was very lucky to grow up involved in all those things.
I ended up going to a lot of Saturday live shows when I wasn't
gigging. My parents really liked musicals and clubs that were big
in the 1940s and 1950s in New York. I was classically trained
because my parents were always hoping something would stick.
Did you go to a conservatory?
Lorraine: No. I studied TV and film scoring at UCLA. Before then,
I lived in a convent. 'Cause when I found out how much fun
everything was when I was 13, my parents sent me to a convent, a
boarding school where all my female relatives had gone. Strange,
but true.
Joyce: Doesn't it make a difference, though, when you hear that
and then you think about what's happening on stage? I mean, mine
is a very different background and how we can still make a real
comfortable blend?
Well, what's the main point of your performances?
Joyce: Making money! [laughs]
Lorraine: Show me the money!
No, really - is it political, feminist, what?
Lorraine: The point is, because we can. We do it because we can.
Joyce: Exactly. It's an opportunity for me to sing and ...
Lorraine: I get to work with Joyce. And when you first work with
someone, you never know how it's going to work out. You've got to
get a sense of the person after you talk with them for a while. I
knew that, years ago, she had been with the Thunder Thigh Review
[a skit in which Scott mocked America's cult of thinness], I knew
she was involved with performance art, and after we worked
together once or twice, we just decided this is good, it works,
we cover all the bases ...
Joyce: I don't even know that we ever decided, we just kept
moving, 'cause why not? For me, I need to sing - singing is
breathing to me, it's an actualized way of living in a fuller way
- so I love doing it and I want to be out there. The great thing
about singing is that when you're doing it well, others get that
breath, they get a secondary hit. It's fabulous.
With all the things you're both doing, where do you find time
to keep all these balls in the air?
Joyce: They keep falling and hitting me on the head, I'll tell
ya.
Lorraine: They hit me in other places. [laughs]
Joyce: She said that, I didn't. [laughs]
Copyright © 2002, The Baltimore Sun