Results tagged “intheaeroplaneoverthesea”

The Needle That Sings in Her Heart: A Heart-Needling Experience

A few weeks ago, we talked to Amanda Palmer about "The Needle That Sings in Her Heart," a play inspired by Neutral Milk Hotel's classic album In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. Yesterday, we had the good fortune to see the show for ourselves. We hadn't been inside a high school auditorium for some time, but this experience was worth the trouble.

Interview with Amanda Palmer about Her Neutral Milk Hotel Play at Lexington High School

We recently had the good fortunate to chat with Amanda Palmer about her role in creating and putting on "The Needle That Sings in Her Heart" (tentative title), a play ("a play that uses music... not a musical," according to Palmer) based on Neutral Milk Hotel's In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. Palmer created the show with her former drama teacher Steven Bogart as well as a cast of students at Lexington High School.

Amanda Palmer to Star in High School Musical

Pitchfork reports that Lexington High School is putting on a new play based on Neutral Milk Hotel's seminal (reeeally seminal) 1998 album In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. Lexington native and Dresden Doll Amanda Palmer will star in the play, slated to run from May 7 to 9. As the album was inspired in part by Anne Frank's diary, the play will be "about music and the Holocaust" according to Palmer, who also told Pitchfork, "My high school theater director, Steven Bogart, is one of my biggest artistic mentors and I've been trying to get back there since I left... I'm not sure what kind of life [the play will] have after the spring. We might try to take it elsewhere." Holland, perhaps? Or back in time? Some sources question whether the NMH album is appropriate material for high schoolers, but we're pretty sure these kids deal with the two-faced all the time, so why not the two-headed? Palmer is currently rehearsing at LHS and may follow up the play with a concept album about her hometown. No word on whether the play will include a version of "April 1st."

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