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David M. Fehr
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11/2/08

Good news!  I was cast in a film, Slobodsky by Tao22 films (tao22films.com).  I will be playing Brayton Janikowski, the main character's younger brother.  Filming is set to begin in December.

 Also, I have added s number of pictures from this weekend's trip to Powell Gardens, just out side of Kansas City.   There was an exhibit there for a group of stone sculpture artists from Zimbabwe called Chapungu.  Chapungu is the mythical bird god of that area of Africa and many of the sculpture had to do with African mythology.  There is also a really cool looking chapel there, with stunning architecture.  You can find the photos under the media menu, then Travel photos, then Powell Gardens.

Lastly, I would still like to get more entries about what I should call my character with the Sai.  Those phots can be found under media menu, then Travel photos, then Kansas City/ UMKC.

 

Best,

David

 

 

 

 

10/24/08

What? I know you're thinking -- "Two updates in a week? I must be hallucinating!" Don't worry, your not. Not yet anyway. But I have decided to run my first contest. I have posted a number of pictures from a photo shoot I did (with my MFA class ) back in May. After finally getting around to posting them, I have decided that this guy needs a name. You mission, should you choose to accept it, is to name the character.

You can find the photos under the media menu, then Travel photos, then Kansas City/ UMKC. (as soon as I figure out how to post a link or one of the photos on the front page I will).

Remember he is supposed to be from a 70's cop show or film.

The winner will be picked for it's awesomeness and will receive the adoration of millions and something special that I haven't decided on yet.

Send all ideas to my E-mail here This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or to my Facebook page where I'll start a thread.

 

Have fun!

 

DMF

 

 

10/20/08

The world must be ending, because I joined Facebook the other day. Yes, the event that everyone has been waiting for has finally happened. I guess the only thing left is to wait for is Elijah. Expect him to grab a seat at your table sometime in April. Apparently, people have been waiting for me to join for so long that I was a bit overwhelmed. Ah, it's Big Brothers world, I just live in it.

DMF

 

 

10/2/08

 

Today I posted three or four pictures from my trip to San Antonio. They are listed under the travel photos section in Media.

 

Enjoy!

DMF

 

 

 
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Reviews

Review: Committed, quirky performances in 'Parade'

By ROBERT TRUSSELL

The Kansas City Star

A low-budget independent production of John Murrell's "Waiting for the Parade" provides an engaging evening of theater enlivened by committed, sometimes quirky performances.

Murrell's two-act dramatic comedy focuses on the intersecting lives of five civilian women in Calgary while the men in their lives are either overseas fighting Hitler or — in the case of a German Canadian — confined to an internment camp for allegedly subversive activities.

Director David M Fehr, working with a minimal budget in tiny Studio 116 at the UMKC Performing Arts Center, captures clearly delineated performances from his talented cast. The episodic script cuts back and forth between locales like a screenplay and at times viewers might not be sure just when and where certain scenes are taking place. But for the most part Fehr frames the story with admirable clarity.

The five women constitute an amusing, always interesting collection of odd ducks.

Catherine (Lauren Lubo, one of the show's producers) is a passionate young woman working at a defense plant who feels guilty about her attraction to other men when the man she loves is away fighting. Janet (Kira Mayo) is a taskmaster who runs USO rehearsals and emergency drills like a martinet.

Margaret (Anna Brungardt) seems older than her years thanks to her prudish, disapproving ways. Eve (Rachel Nelson) is so obsessed with film star Leslie Howard that she goes into mourning when Howard's plane is shot down in the war.

And Marta (Stephanie Sommer) is a naturalized Canadian whose German immigrant father's eccentric ways have landed him in a camp for suspected spies and subversives.

The performances may lack polish but they're highly effective. As we follow these women from 1939 to the European war's end in 1945, we get a sense of real lives unfolding before our eyes. We feel the strain, the heartache, the disillusionment, the resignation — and the slow, agonizing passing of time.

Murrell's play performs a neat trick by conveying the brutal realities of a war on the opposite side of the Atlantic through the reactions of those left behind on the home front. It also prompts reflection on our own country, which is now fighting two wars that affect relatively few of us personally. Murrell's depiction of Canada in the '40s shows us a culture in which every man, woman and child led lives shaped by that country's commitment to what we think of as a just war.

So it does what a play is supposed to do: It makes us think about where we've been and where we're going.

"Waiting For the Parade" runs through July 20 in Studio 116 of the UMKC Performing Arts Center. Performances are at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday. Seating is limited. To reserve tickets e-mail Kathryn Bartholomew at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . A $10 donation is suggested.