Nicholas J. Sacco Foundation Will Fund New Performances of NBHS Drama Sensation ‘Alien’

The Nicholas J. Sacco Foundation, a non-profit founded by Mayor Nick Sacco, will fund additional performances of North Bergen High School’s production of ‘Alien.’ The show became an unexpected sensation in recent days, and the funding will allow students to perform the play again at a later date to be announced.

“All of North Bergen is proud of the incredibly creative and inventive play our students created, and it’s only right that they have the opportunity to perform it one more time now that it has gained such notoriety,” said Mayor Sacco. “I’m excited that our Foundation can play a role in making this happen and I can’t wait to watch ‘Alien’ and see our students shine.”

‘Alien’ premiered last week at NBHS and immediately became an online hit, with social media posts showing the elaborate sets and costumes created by students going viral and attracting attention from celebrities and journalists. The play has been written about in local and entertainment focused news outlets, who praised the students for the offbeat production. Mayor Sacco contacted Superintendent of Schools Dr. George Solter over the weekend and offered to cover the costs of new shows.

“We have all been absolutely floored by the positive attention this play has brought to our school and our students, and it is wonderful to see Mayor Sacco step up and provide funding so that our incredible cast will once again be able to showcase their months of hard work,” said NBHS Drama Teacher Perfecto Cuervo, who directed the play. “On behalf of our students I want to thank Mayor Sacco and invite everyone to come out and see the show.”

#ArtsEntertainment

NBHS Drama Club Goes Viral with ‘Alien: The Play’

It was supposed to be just two performances for a few hundred parents and friends, and done. Instead the North Bergen High School Drama Club’s performance of “Alien: The Play” has become an overnight internet sensation, lavished with praise from the likes of Entertainment Weekly, Time Magazine, and The New York Times, with national media outlets rushing to the school to interview the makers, and millions of viewers worldwide watching and commenting on the snippets posted by amazed audience members, along with the no-budget trailer filmed by the cast and crew.

To put this in context, the high school does not have an established theater program. They don’t have a designated budget to put on a slick stage production like some other schools. What they have instead is imagination, audacity, driven students, dedicated teachers, and supportive staff and administration.

Three teachers led the production: English Teacher Perfecto Cuervo, who wrote and directed; Art Teacher Steven Defendini, who oversaw the creation of sets and costumes; and Music Teacher Brian Bonacci, who co-produced and handled lighting and sound. Together with a small crew of kids who worked tirelessly for about seven months behind the scenes, and a cast of nine student actors, they took a 40-year-old cult science fiction / horror movie about a monster stalking and killing the crew on a spaceship, and reimagined it into something that clearly resonates today on a massive scale.

NBHS has been quietly putting on phenomenal art shows for years, with Defendini and his students building meticulous life-size (or larger) tributes to cultural icons like The Avengers or Power Rangers, wowing attendees with incredibly detailed characters and action scenes, complete with atmospheric lighting and environments. The Drama Club has, under film geek Cuervo, eschewed traditional fare like “Rent” or even “Little Shop of Horrors” to feature self-written productions like last year’s “Night of the Living Dead,” based on the cult horror classic. Bonacci has for years helmed the township’s transformation of the pool complex into a virtual theme park for the annual end-of-season pool party, welcoming residents to a Winter Wonderland in the heat of summer, or sprawling Las Vegas complete with performing Elvis.

What the cast and crew accomplished together in “Alien: The Play” is itself a perfect Hollywood story: with nothing but ingenuity and resourcefulness – and about $3,500 raised by fundraisers like cookie sales – they built stunning sets and a fully articulated alien out of recycled and discarded materials. A close look at the astronaut helmets built to faithfully resemble the much-admired ambiance of the original film reveals the finely detailed surface is actually covered with bottle caps, water bottles, and toy soldiers glued on and spray painted. The iconic “chest-burster” and “face-hugger” scenes from the original film were recreated with puppets and a crew member hunkered down inside a prop.

The play was written in loving tribute to the classic film, with as many scenes as possible designed to match the original screenplay, including a few outtakes that were restored years later for the director’s cut. A few new scenes were added, mostly light relief to keep the audience entertained while behind the curtain the crew rushed to change the elaborate staging.

At the first performance on March 19, cast members had to improvise to fill time when set changes took longer than necessary. By the second performance on March 22, they had it down, and things went smoothly. And that was it. They began disassembling the components and tossing them in the trash. The show was over.

Or so they thought. A couple of online posts with photos and shaky video footage by parents led to an unexpected rave by noted special effects designer Adam Savage, co-host of the TV show “MythBusters.” And the internet exploded. By Saturday, reposts had led to international coverage and praise from film celebrities and even the owners of the original film franchise.

Based on the overwhelming response, Mayor Nicholas Sacco has pledged that the nonprofit Sacco Foundation will fund additional performances of the play. Tickets will be required, but be sure to get them early – everyone from Hollywood bigwigs to devoted overseas fans are already lining up to catch the encore performances.

North Bergen native, 070 Shake, releases new EP Glitter on G.O.O.D. Music/Def Jam Recordings

Growing up in North Bergen, 070 Shake began turning heads when she started sharing soulful, melodic, sung-rapped tracks on her SoundCloud. She broke through in 2016 with her single “Trust Nobody.” Her smokey voice and honest lyricism garnered the attention of Grammy award winning Kanye West and in 2017 she signed to G.O.O.D. Music/Def Jam.

In her most recent effort, Glitter, Shake “flawlessly blends genres to deliver a moody and genuine account of what it’s like to deal with depression, addiction and sexuality.”

Is it spelled Tonnelle, Tonnele, or Tonelle?

Ramy Walks the Beat E1.S1

Is it spelled Tonnelle, Tonnele, or Tonelle?

The road is named after John Tonnele (1807 – November 26, 1852). He was an American farmer and politician who was the first Roman Catholic member of the New Jersey Legislature. Tonnele was born in New York City to John Tonnele (d. 1846), senior partner at New York wool merchant Tonnele & Hall, and his wife Rebecca (née Waterbury), daughter of General David How Waterbury, Jr. of Stamford, Connecticut. He relocated to New Jersey in 1835 and purchased a large tract of land near Hudson City. He served three terms on the Hudson County Board of Chosen Freeholders in 1844, 1846 and 1847. Tonnele represented Hudson County in the New Jersey Senate for one term from 1848 to 1849. Tonnele died on November 26, 1852.

He is recalled in the namesake Tonnelle Avenue and Tonnele Circle.

North Bergen High cancels 070 Shake’s performance citing ‘bad influence’

On December 16th, North Bergen artist, 070 Shake, tweeted about her North Bergen High School performance being canceled by the staff, Vice Principal Ms. Patricia Brando, and North Bergen Chief of Police Robert Dowd.

(250 retweet, 600 likes)

“Factually incorrect. I had no conversations whatsoever with anyone about her or any performance. She is mistaken that I was involved,” explains North Bergen Chief of Police Robert Dowd. “We work as a resource for the school system. And any decisions they make…we would stand by and support as they always have the entire school populations best interest as their main concern.”

HudPost spoke with Shake’s manager, Julz Goddard, better known as “YesJulz”, and she says, “The whole situation is truly unfortunate. Shake was really looking forward to performing at her high school pep rally.”

“Proud was the first song she ever wrote and it was inspired by the doubt that the adults in her life, mainly teachers, always expressed in her and her abilities as an artist. She told me she had a vision when she made the song, of her singing it at the school once it got big, as a way to inspire the students who may feel that they too, will never make anyone proud.”

“The next morning, an hour before the performance was to take place, she got notified that a few people at the school viewed her as a ‘bad influence’ and decided to not have her perform. We were all really bummed.”

‘”The North Bergen Board of Education was never approached or consulted about a concert by 070 Shake. The concert could not occur because it was not an event approved by the Board,” says Dr. George Solter, Superintendent of Schools. “As always the entire North Bergen School District along with the Board of Education have the best interests of our children in mind and will continue to work to provide them with the best education possible,”

Shake has since taken down the tweet but left others of the incident.

#ArtsEntertainment

North Bergen makes a cameo on SNL

North Bergen Target makes a cameo on Saturday Night Live in a “Thanksgiving Commercial” skit.

“Target’s got everything you need this Thanksgiving, including a big, empty parking lot you can just come sit in for a sec,” SNL jokes.

The big box department store opened it’s doors in 2004.

Sacco said that he was pleased to see an area that was once a vacant and deserted factory, a total eyesore, transformed into a viable shopping area. It’s all part of the plan to revitalize that portion of Tonnelle Avenue, an area that was designated in dire need of redevelopment in 1999.

Comedian Alonzo Bodden to give free performance in North Bergen

Comedian Alonzo Bodden will be appearing at the North Bergen Public Library main branch on Saturday, Feb. 6 at 5 p.m.

Admission is free.

A winner on NBC’s “Last Comic Standing,” Bodden has also appeared on The Tonight Show and Comedy Central.

The library is at 8411 Bergenline Ave. For more information call (201) 869-4715 or visit nbpl.org