Poezthepoet
Chronology
December 6, 1969
Paul Mills performs as the Fourth Knight/Tempter in T.S. Eliot’s Murder in the Cathedral at Boston University. Boston After Dark reviews him as “brilliant in both his roles … with a fine sense of poetry.”
August-October 1973
Travel to India, contact with Dagar Brothers, classical Indian vocalists.
November 1973
While working at various jobs — taxi driver; philosophy book salesman; security guard; truck driver; rental car driver — Paul begins memorizing classic poetry by such as Poe, Coleridge, Frost, Keats, Lewis Carroll, Yeats, Dickinson, Whitman, Eliot, Blake, and developing dramatic performances for each of the poems.
Autumn 1975
Poez appears in real life for the first time on the campus of Boston College for one day, performs one poem from the Poetry Menu, for one person. Goes home elated.
May 1976
Poez begins appearing in Harvard Square and the Boston Public Garden, at street fairs and local cafes, and in radio broadcasts on WBUR and WNCN-FM
September 24, 1976
Poez performs Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner at the Stone Soup Gallery, Cambridge Street, Boston
October 8, 1976
Poez performs an original science fiction drama, a one-man show with improvised poetry, The Qandava at the Café Gallery, Dartmouth Street, Boston.
Summer, 1977
Poez moves to Greenwich Village, begins performing classic, original, and improvised poetry from the Poetry Menu on W. 4th Street near Christopher Square, at NYC street fairs, in Washington Square Park near the Holley Monument, and in a radio broadcast for WBAI-FM.
Summer 1977
Poez begins appearing in Washington Square Park and W. 4th Street, NYC, at street fairs, local cafés, open poetry readings, including St. Mark’s Poetry Project, and in a radio broadcast for WBAI-FM.
June 21, 1977
Poez appears at Greenwich Books, Greenwich Avenue, NYC, performing original poetry.
August, 1977
Poez begins appearing regularly at Kenny’s Castaways, on New York’s Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village.
August, 1977
Poez performs as entre’acte to Hair at the Biltmore Theater on Broadway.
September 2, 1977
Poez is featured on St. Mark’s Poetry Project cable television broadcast, performing original and improvised poetry.
October 26, 1977
Poez performs an improvisational one-man science fiction drama, The Qandava, at Kenny’s Castaways.
February 17, 1978
Poez performs at Soho Books, NYC.
Halloween, October 31, 1978
Poez performs Poe’s The Raven at Lady Jane’s, North Bergen, NJ.
June 4, 1979
Poez performs Confessions of a Performing Street Poet, a one-man show, weekly at Kenny’s Castaways and on the “Love and Logic Show”, Cable-TV channel C.
Autumn 1979
Poez appears regularly at Charles Ludlam’s Ridiculous Theater, One Sheridan Square, NYC, to perform improvised spoken word poetry as “The Man Who Can’t Stop Talking” in Ludlam’s The Elephant Woman.
1980
Poez continues appearing weekly at Kenny’s Castaways on Bleecker Street in New York’s Greenwich Village, as well as at Folk City.
Winter, 1981
Poez appears regularly at venues in Boston and on the West Coast, at Freight and Salvage, and Ashkenaz, in San Francisco’s Haight District.
1981
Poez continues performing at various New York venues, on the street and in clubs, including CBGB, The Bottom Line, The Other End, The Ginger Man, Folk City, and Kenny’s Castaways.
December 10, 1981
Poez performs Spontaneous Combustion in concert with Patrice Regnier’s RUSH DANCE COMPANY at the company’s theater on Broadway.
January 26, 1982
Poez at The Other End, Bleecker Street, NYC
March 21, 1982
Poez at Folk City, W. 3rd Street, NYC
April 18, 1982
Poez at The Other End, Bleecker Street, NYC, opening for Richard Hell.
July 2-9, 1982
Poez performs Spontaneous Combustion with Patrice Regnier’s RUSH DANCE COMPANY at the Theatre du Rond-Point on the Champs-Elysees in Paris. Le Figaro reviews him as “etonnant et imprevu”.
October, 1982
Poez performing Think and Do is recorded and released by the Coop Fast Folk Music Magazine.
Autumn 1982
Live FM radio broadcast with Suzanne Vega, upstate New York.
May 1, 1983
Poez performs Spontaneous Combustion with Patrice Regnier’s RUSH DANCE COMPANY at the Marymount Manhattan Theater in New York. The New York Times describes him as having “overwhelmed” the dancers, characterizes Spontaneous Combustion as “a sonic fantasia.”
1983
Spontaneous Combustion b/w The New Wave Pizzeria is recorded and released by Jasmine Records.
September, 1983
Fred Astaire Meets Dr. Seuss is recorded and released by Survivor Records, a guest track on Vincent T. Vok’s album, Survivor.
November 16, 1983
Poez appears at The Other End, Bleecker Street NYC.
December 14, 1983
September 21, 1984
Poez appears at The Bitter End, Bleecker Street NYC.
April 5-6, 1987
Poez appears in “POET BAZOOKAED ON W. 4TH ST.”,
a one-man show off-off Broadway at the Times Square West Bank Cafe, directed by Jeffrey Martin.
October 2, 2005
Paul Mills discovers a web page, Whatever Happened To Poez?, authored by two New York City poets, Jackie Sheeler and Bob Holman who regret his disappearance almost 20 years earlier. “Come back, Poez!”
October 5, 2005
Paul Mills gets back in touch with his ex-girlfriend, singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega (through her fan page website), who encourages him to return to New York and begin performing as Poez again.
December 15, 2005
Poez performs at the Cornelia Street Cafe, hosted by Jackie Sheeler.
December 16, 2005
Poez performs at the Bowery Poetry Club, hosted by Bob Holman
December 25, 2005
Paul Mills engaged to Suzanne Vega.
2007
Begins performing at various New York venues, Bowery Poetry Project, the Bitter End, St. Anne’s Warehouse, Theater for the New City, La MaMa ETC, the Cornelia Street Cafe, Le Poisson Rouge, Symphony Space, The Cutting Room, City Winery; in Prague and London; becomes video poetry performance artist; writing and performing as keyboard spoken word singer-songwriter, solo and with jazz accompanists, and with digital delay enhancement.
September 27-29, 2007
Poez appears in “POET BAZOOKAED ON W. 4TH ST.“,
a one-man show off-off Broadway at the Bowery Poetry Club, releases The Poetry Dollars, published by Bowery Poetry Books. The New York Times describes him as “a spoken-word pioneer.”
Returns to the remodeled Washington Square Park, performing regularly from The Poetry Menu for NYU students, teachers, and tourists there, goes home elated.
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