Rabu, 04 Juni 2014

Spotlight On...John C. Egan

Name: John Christopher Egan

Hometown: Eagan, MN

Education: Eagan High School, The Juilliard School

Select credits: Wandering Bark Co./Lunar Energy, Three Sticks, The Wild Plan, The Brechovians, The Pearl Theater

Why theater?: I’m continuing to ask this question every day, lately. It’s a good one. I find that theater feels natural to me. I think it is for everyone on some level. It makes me curious and I like to learn about different things and the theater affords me my best creative outlet to explore.

Tell us about Short Life of Trouble: It’s an adaptation of the story of Hamlet, using southern gothic prose by Faulkner and inspired original text, with bluegrass and hymnal music. It will be performed in a beautiful space at the Access Theater. There will be bourbon and lemonade! I hope it will be a memorable experience for those who come.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Most everyone I work with inspires me, I‘d say. Our director Eric tells us to decide that each person is a rock star. (A useful outlook on life!) Lately, I’m finding experimenting with theater is inspiring me most. I’ve worked with many unique artists here in the city and each one has their own outlook on what theater can be and how it should be used. There’s just a lot out there, at all levels, to be achieved.

Any role you’re dying to play?: Gabriel Syme

What’s your favorite show tune?: “Send in the Clowns” (though, I must admit, I don’t know many.)

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?:
Well, I’ve never been in a show with my girlfriend.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: This is a tough business, but I don’t even get to play myself??

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Anything that’s going on with Cloud City is going to be solid. I never hesitate to send folks that way. This question makes me feel like I should see more theater.

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?: I’ve been listening to Paper Bird and Bob Marley for about the last two years. I was recently introduced to Lake Street Dive (a local group, I believe) and they’re very good stuff. Janis Joplin?

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Fritos, staying up late, Patrick

What’s up next?: I’ve just begun a new kind of Actor/Theater practice in Long Island City that I think is very fascinating. Also I have been workshopping a piece dealing with Romeo and Juliet mixed with/via chatbots that had a fun showcase at Dixon Place last winter. And hopefully we’ll be doing Sunset Rooftops again, for a 3rd year, this summer! Right EPH?

Selasa, 03 Juni 2014

Spotlight On...Ian W. Hill

Name: Ian W. Hill

Hometown: Born in Philadelphia. Raised mostly in Cos Cob, Connecticut, but in NYC since 1986 and, happily, Brooklyn since '01.

Education: Northfield Mount Hermon School; NYU/Tisch School of the Arts (Film Production)

Favorite Credits: Even the Jungle (slight return) (collage play made mainly from "The Jungle Book" and "Apocalypse Now"); Ten Nights in a Bar-Room (19th-Century temperance play set in a post-apocalyptic future, with zombies); NECROPOLIS 1&2: World Gone Wrong/Worth Gun Willed (film noir political fantasia collaged from almost 200 films); ObJects (original two-act science-fiction play); Gone (original short play in experimental, poetic language). Plays are available at http://www.indietheaternow.com/Playwright/ian-w-hill

Why theater?: I spent over 20 years of my early life thinking that I was going to be a filmmaker, and film is still probably my first, greatest love.  But after film school, and making several short 16mm films and a featurette, I felt more and more that while I had interesting ideas for form in cinema, I didn't really have much to say in it.  At the same time, I was acting a great deal on stage, and discovered I was having better and more interesting ideas for theater -- things no one else seemed to be doing -- than I was having for any of the other artistic media I was working with.  I wound up living in and managing a theatre on the Lower East Side for almost 4 years, starting as an actor and designer but rapidly turning to writing, directing, and producing, and it's continued to excite me more than anything else (though I'm beginning to have the itch to get behind a camera again, now that I've lived a little bit more).

Tell us about Switch to Kill:
Dean's given you the basic plot logline -- all I can add is that it is wonderfully full of sudden twists and turns in both plot and emotional content that are constantly fun and surprising, and should keep any audience on their toes (or the edge of their seats).

What inspired you to direct Switch to Kill?: Jeff Lewonczyk sent it to me, thinking it would fit well with my noir tendencies and sensibilities, which it does, right down the line (even when I'm making theatre that isn't obviously or directly influenced by film noir, it still is).  Besides liking the script immediately, I was also glad to find something I wanted to direct that wasn't an original project of my own, which is what I've been mostly doing for the last few years.  I enjoy making my own work, but it can also get claustrophobic.  It's exciting to be an interpreter on someone else's vision again, it gives a different kind of freedom to my work.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I like so many many kinds of theatre, it's hard to say what speaks to me, except for "things that keep me energized and interested," which can be anything from the most abstract, unusual, experimental work (most often for me) to a very traditional production of an old chestnut, as long as it is filled and coming from a true place.  I don't generally like direct audience participation in theater, but I like works that make you internally feel like a participant.  My main theatrical inspirations are mostly from the avant-garde theater of the late-60s to the mid-80s, such as Robert Wilson, Liz LeCompte, and especially Richard Foreman, but the majority of influences on me come from other art forms, painting, music, and of course film.  David Lynch, David Cronenberg, Nicolas Roeg, Ken Russell, and Peter Greenaway probably have influenced and inspired me more than any theatre artists.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I've worked with so many talented people -- famous, not-famous, eventually famous, formerly famous -- that I'm mainly interested now in people completely new to me whose voices sound in unexpected ways and who are naturally great but I can make them be better while learning from them how to be better at what I do myself.

What show have you recommended to your friends?:
As regards the Comic Book Festival, besides the obvious Skillman/Van Lente (King Kirby) and Sikoryak (Masterpiece Comics) pieces -- from creators I love with great track records on both page and stage -- I'd recommend shows from some of The Brick's regulars, Matt Barbot and Charles Battersby's plays, and the bill of dance and movement pieces that Patrice Miller is putting together.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Oliver Platt in "The Most Unfortunate Lucky Bastard You Ever Knew, or: That's a Secret I'm Telling No One Never".

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Donuts, danishes, muffins... anything sweet and cakey.  Currently banished from me, as much as possible.  Torture.

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?:  On iTunes it's "Warm Rising Sun" by Radar Brothers, which my wife was listening to over and over, turned me onto, and wound up as part of one of our shows last year.  On my iPod it's "911" by David Lynch's group Blue Bob, which will be used in some form on Switch to Kill, so it's getting a lot of play.  It always tends to be whatever song is becoming crucial to the current show.txfac

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Taking photographs (on old-fashioned film) and writing poetry.  Somewhere in northwestern Massachusetts.

What’s up next?: Every year since 2007, my wife's and my company, Gemini CollisionWorks, presents 2 to 4 shows running in rep for about a month at The Brick, and we'll be doing that again this November.  Still deciding on what those shows will be -- STK has made me feel like directing someone else's play again, but I may also create some kind of collage or movement piece in either of my NECROPOLIS or Invisible Republic series.  Maybe the first episode in a serial-for-the-stage I'm working on, Serial Republic: A Chickie West Enigma, following a hard-bitten 1930s dame reporter on her adventures across the American 20th Century into lands of impossible mysteries, absurd fictions, and bizarre metaphysics.

Spotlight On...Jay William Thomas

Name: Jay William Thomas

Hometown: Winchester, KY

Education: BFA Western Kentucky Univeristy

Select Credits: TV: “GAYS: The Series”; Off-Broadway: DeathBed (Ripple Effect Artist Directed By Brent Buell); Einstein (Variations Theatre Group, Directed by Randolph Curtis Rand); Off-Off Broadway: Something Wicked (Everyday Inferno Theatre); Zombie Frat House Bash (EndTimes Productions); Regional: Romeo & Juliet (Romeo, Phoenix Theatre); Pillowman (Second Season, For Better Pioneer Playhouse)

Why theater?: Honestly, because I didn’t make the high school baseball team. I had the spring free and was convinced to audition for the school musical. In college my initial major was in Broadcast Journalism, dreaming of one day anchoring on SportsCenter, I thought acting wasn’t a feasible option. But I couldn’t get away.

Who do you play in A Map to Somewhere Else?: My Character’s name is Constantine, but once thrust back into our imagined fantasy I play two different (but related) characters; the dark king and the young prince.

Tell us about A Map to Somewhere Else: I’ve been describing this show as a cross between "Chronicles of Narnia" and "Pan’s Labyrinth" (I stole that from our director). It has the wonderfully created imagination of C.S. Lewis and traces of the dark, cruel world of Guillermo del Toro. We are young adults thrust back into a forgotten world we chose to leave, all the while haunted by our figments, who are trapped in-between.

What is it like being a part of A Map to Somewhere Else?: The thing I love most about the work Everyday Inferno Theatre chooses to produce is that it’s always imaginative and challenging. This play definitely lives up to the hype. Incorporating song, dance, and combat all in a quasi-unconventional round stage, this piece is a ton of fun. I love being a part of projects where you know you’ll have friends come and say, “How did you do that?” So in summary…it’s a blast.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I love true story telling pieces. I love the PigPen Theatre Company (their Cymbeline production was my favorite Shakespeare ever) because they find ways to change the ordinary to unordinary. I love theater that does that. That model of Guerilla Theater inspires me. Using what you have with no budget and creating an entire world from a piece of cloth.

Any roles you’re dying to play?: I would love to play Alan Strang in Equus. I also have an affinity for Neil Labute, Neil Simon, Eric Bogosian, Sarah Ruhl, Wendy Wasserstein, Tom Stoppard, and William Shakespeare, to name a few. But really I love creating new characters for new plays most of all.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Being from Kentucky it’s always been a goal of mine to work with the Actor’s Theater of Louisville. It’ll happen

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: People say Dave Franco looks a lot like me, or me like him.

What show have you recommended to your friends?:
The COSMOS. Watch it.

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?: I’ve been through so many reboots of my ITunes Library and truthfully I’m more of a Spotify guy, but I can proudly say that I looked it up and "Make the Money" by Mackelmore and Ryan Lewis is the most played.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: A six pack, pizza, and an all-night gaming session with my roommate.

What’s up next?: I the fall I’ve been asked to do a Checkov piece with MFA program at Columbia University. But everyday is different to keep up you can visit Jwilliamthomas.com

For more, visit http://www.everydayinferno.com/AMaptoSomewhereElse/

Senin, 02 Juni 2014

Spotlight On...Michael Markham

Name: Michael Markham

Hometown:
Montpelier, VT

Education: The Juilliard School

Select Credits: Mother Courage and Her Children (The Delacourt), The Spectacular Demise of Platonov (Shapiro Theater), Giants (HERE) Christopher Marlowe's Chloroform Dream (The Red Room)

Why theater?: It's the same size as life. You are watching real people the moment it is happening. You are present for the event.

Tell us about Short Life of Trouble: SLT is taking a familiar story and looking at it through a different lens. And instead of just taking a Shakespeare and setting in some time period, we are adapting it to that time period. Val has taken text from that culture and some of her own and spliced it into Hamlet. We are getting to see new sides of these characters, which Shakespeare didn't give voice to.

What is it like being a part of Short Life of Trouble?: It's exciting. It's the first fully produced play I have been a part of in just over 2 years. My wife and I had our first child this last year. She just turned 1 this May. So between those family obligations and a number of my own film projects I have not had the chance to dig into a play for quite sometime. I am enjoying this time immensely. It's a wonderful group of talented people and I am enjoying chewing on Shakespeare again.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I like theater that demands being on a stage. Where the theatrical event is necessary for the storytelling. I generally don't care for stories and scripts that could just as easily be on TV on in a Movie. If I'm going to a theater I want the fact that there is an audience to be dealt with, acknowledged, or simply necessary to the process. I don't think that requires audience participation or asides/direct address, but it needs to factor into the story telling and the story being told. With inexpensive cameras and the ubiquity of internet video, there are so many avenues for Film and Television type scripts. I don't want to go to the theater to see those stories. In the theater, I really love the work of Brian Mertes. I was lucky enough to work with him while at drama school and soaked up other opportunities I got to see his work. He has a way of making the events on the stage undeniably real and concrete.

Any roles you’re dying to play?: Henry V, Sweeny Todd, Brick. There are tons more.

What’s your favorite showtune?: “Make our Garden Grow” from Candide. It makes me weep nearly everytime I hear it. That's how you end a show.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?:
He's a filmmaker, so he's not in the theater but I would love to work with Jeff Nichols. He's very straight forward and tells interesting stories about real people. I also really want to work with Daniel Talbott. Now this is a bit of a stretch for this question as I worked with him on a one night, on book, short play presentation. I have yet to work with him on a full show. I feel like his work touches on that theatrical necessity that I mentioned earlier.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?:
I feel silly answering this. I guess the title would be "A Fools Errand" and hell I'd like Matt Damon to play me.

What show have you recommended to your friends?:
"The Wire". It's almost a cliche but it's ruined me for other television.

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?: I don't use iTunes, but it would likely be something by Pearl Jam or Radiohead.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream

What’s up next?: I have a short film I directed and starred in that is in post production. I am acting in a web series that is looking to shoot in the next month, and I'm looking to produce and act in a short film with current plans to shoot before the end of June.

Review: Essentially Perfection

The past always catches up to us. How you face it is the true challenge. In the Mad One’s exceptionally flawless The Essential Straight and Narrow, we watch as the personal history of a fading band arrives in the present forcing them to face it head on. Created by the ensemble, The Essential Straight and Narrow takes you on a voyeuristic journey through love and pain.
The play opens with stark fluorescents and a woman on the phone in a dingy motel room. She hangs up the phone and has the same call again. And suddenly she crosses over from motel room to the natural setting of the New Ohio. Is she rehearsing a movie of her past? Perhaps as the fluorescents are swapped out for theatrical lighting and a cast of characters from her past. We soon watch this woman, Jo, reconnect with her collaborating partners Paul and Graham, who also was a former love, as they are about to embark on a reunion tour of sorts. While rehearsing, rehashing the problems of the past, we meet the loveable Debbie, the transgender motel matron, who, through her hokey, sentimental stories and games, brings the trio together as they experience further heartbreak.
The entire ensemble is wonderful, but it’s the main quartet that rules the stage. Stephanie Wright Thompson as Jo offers an incredible and transformative performance. She has impeccable timing, both dramatic and comedic, and offers a heartbreaking portrayal of a woman trying to move forward. Marc Bovino is delightful as Debbie. His creation of this woman is beautiful, carrying a world of emotions throughout the performance. Joe Curnutte as heartthrob Graham embodies the time. Michael Dalto as the third member of the folk trio is often forgotten, playing up the strengths of the part.
Director Lila Neugebauer does a sensational job going from world to world, guiding her troupe through the story. Aided by a phenomenal overall design, Neugebauer and her team do nothing but wow us. From Laura Jellinek’s ingenious set to Mike Inwood’s striking lights to Asta Hostetter’s period-popping costumes to Stowe Nelson’s subtle sounds, everything is cohesive.
The Essential Straight and Narrow is never what it seems. Expect the unexpected and be ready to constantly be surprised. With a dynamic script that has the perfect blend of hilarity and emotion, The Essential Straight and Narrow is a production that raises the stakes for other companies to reach.

Spotlight On...Jason Wise

Name: Jason Wise

Hometown: Outer Space

Education: Here & unfortunately there.

Select Credits: Director/Choreographer: 50th Anniversary Concert of Fiddler on the Roof honoring Sheldon Harnick starring Linda Lavin, BD Wong, Tovah Feldshuh, Stephanie J Block (Choreographer), National Tour of 4 GIRLS 4 starring Andrea McArdle, Donna McKechnie, Leslie Uggams & Faith Prince (Associate Choreographer), Bayside: The Saved By The Bell Musical starring Dennis Haskins & Dustin Diamond currently running off-Broadway at Theater 80 (Choreographer & Associate Director), Michael John LaChiusa's See What I Wanna See at The Producers Club (Director/Choreographer), Showgirls: The Musical original East Village production and subsequent off-Broadway transfer (Choreographer & Associate Director). Resident Choreographer at Ellen's Stardust Diner, home of New York's famous singing wait staff. As a performer, over 800 performances in CATS in the US, Canada, Columbia, Costa Rica, Panama, & Venezuela (Tumblebrutus) and the National Tour of Disney's Beauty & The Beast (Carpet).

Why theater?: Why NOT theater? Good question though - and I never know the answer to this when I'm asked. It's not that I'm copping out on the question, I just don't remember the literal moment when I made a conscious decision to 'join the circus'. It's just always been this way. I guess that's how you know it's just part of the universe's big master plan for this lifetime, and you can't question that - you just have to forfeit yourself to it and trust that there's a reason you'll never know about.

Tell us about Night of a Thousand Judys: Night of a Thousand Judys hits a couple of birds with one stone. First off, it gives Judy fans a 'temple' of sorts for the evening. You're only going to hear Judy Garland songs. And not just the hits your Grandma knows, the more obscure ones too. You know, the ones you geeked out about at home in your underwear on YouTube while everyone else was at the Senior Prom. Secondly, it gives Broadway talent the chance to actually sing them on a New York platform for an audience who is not passing out in their wheelchairs. It's an audience that's going to be in the palm of the performer's hand, hanging on to every note and every facial gesticulation they make. Audibly letting you know they're having a religious nervous breakdown. But more importantly, it benefits an incredible organization and I'll tell you what they do before I tell you what they're called because it's an attention getter. They provide housing and support to Homeless LGBT youth. YOUTH. Think about that for a second. Youth. Kids who are kicked out of their homes because of who they choose to love, before they are old enough to legally get a job and support themselves. The organization is The Ali Forney Center, and they deserve a round of applause.

What is it like to be a part of Night of a Thousand Judys?:
I'm a big believer in a good cause, and an even bigger believer in a Judy Garland concert. I mean, my life is so hard. Having to listen to Julia Murney sing "The Man That Got Away". Come on! It's the greatest gig ever. THEN, when it's all said & done, and I'm stumbling home from the Opening Night party, and I know that we just helped a TON of kids who deserve it, and I'm sending every gay man who was in the audience skipping home with a Harold Arlen tune stuck in his head? I like making everyone happy.  And I will follow Justin Sayre (the host) anywhere. He's one of those delightfully fabulous New York creatures that maybe doesn't translate outside the Metropolitan area, and you can't look away from him. He's the kind of performer that puts the New York in New York. We didn't have people like him where I'm from and I'm a big fan.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Big, lavish, show bizzy, shticky, hypnotically glittering, SMART, old-Broadway, New York musical comedies. Showgirls in Bob Mackies. Drum licks. Smoke and Mirrors. Quick changes. False eyelashes. Brassy pits. Sequins, Bugle Beads. Dancer Boys in Top Hats. Red Show Curtains. Ball changes, panache & pizazz - all bottled up in a Martini glass full of CLASS and TACT.

What’s your favorite showtune?:
"Mame"

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Mitzi Gaynor. I feel like we'd just have.. a mutual understanding and it wouldn't have to be a conversation. But if we're not talking about the product and we're talking about the showmance - Alan Cumming. My explanation can be summed up in his last name.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?:
My assistant who is a former Rockette, Laura Henning. She was me for Halloween one year and got more dates at that party than I ever could have. It would be called "Laura Henning is (that's above the title) JASON WISE" -  with a Robert Risko drawing of me as a Sad Clown in tap shoes & an “I Love New York” t-shirt smoking a cigarette on top of the Chrysler Building with the poster lined in broken marquee bulbs. Rated R, select cinemas (they wouldn't all be able to sell it).


What show have you recommended to your friends?: La Soiree downtown. I'm not sure if it's still there? If anyone reading this saw it I feel like they just let out a big "YAAAS'".  Liza likes it too, and I know this because I sat across from her and she couldn't sit still. It was this twisted burlesque vaudeville circus, and they completely morphed the inside of a proscenium theater to feel like you were inside of a Spiegelworld tent. It was a variety show that featured naked men and women, a giant bunny, a contortionist, puppets, roller skating hula hoop girls, and sword swallowers. It was an only in New York kind of entertainment. And the acts changed night to night, so you could go back and not see the same show. And I did - when I like something I go back, and I go back, and I go back and I go back. At one show a performer grabbed the beer out of my hand and chugged it mid-show, and the bartender came over and put a brand new one in my hand, all while a black drag queen dressed in a lime green onesie was singing Charlie Chaplin's “Smile.” You don't get that on Broadway today. But is that what you meant? Broadway? Anything cheap.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?:
Well, the  legal one is a 12" Medium Handmade Pan Pizza with Pepperoni from Domino's.

What’s the most played song on your iPod?:
By numbers it says “Soul Bossa Nova” (the Austin Powers theme song) but I think that's because I fell asleep listening to it one night and it must have been mistakenly put on repeat. But by choice? It's a medley of “Theme from New York, New York /Give My Regards To Broadway” by Diahann Carroll. Perfect for those late night vodka lemonade-in-a-Dasani Bottle Manhattan walks.

What’s up next?: Good question. Actually, I'm heading over to London to meet my UK agent  for a string of meetings regarding a show that hopefully is going to end up on my calendar, and I'm also doing a lot of teaching - come take my class at Broadway Dance Center! Just know if you're late, you're standing in the front.

For more, visit http://www.aliforneycenter.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=cms.page&id=1127

Works in Progress: Searching for Sebald with Adam J. Thompson

Name: Adam J. Thompson

What is your role in Searching for Sebald?: I founded and am the director of The Deconstructive Theatre Project, and am the lead artist behind and director of Searching for Sebald.

Tell us a little bit about The Deconstructive Theatre Project: The Deconstructive Theatre Project is a seven-year-old Brooklyn-based not-for-profit ensemble performance laboratory that exists to devise and premiere new hybrid media work and that is currently creating a series of projects at the intersection of live performance, the neuroscience of creativity, and interactive technology. In addition to the creation and presentation of performance work, we also operate a collaborative devised performance education program for middle school students in Brooklyn, and a community social engagement program through which our audiences directly participate in the creation of the annual performance work.

How is the creation process going so far?: We create new work using a company-developed three stage creative process: Creation of Vocabulary, Development of Content, and Editing and Rehearsal. The first two stages are much more expressive in that company members are encouraged to try all manner of ideas without regard for feasibility or long-term viability. We’re currently wrapping up our three-month-long second stage of Searching for Sebald, and I’m pleased to say that it’s been an incredibly fruitful and orienting experience. We began this stage with a number of potential directions for the piece, and have spent the majority of our time exploring performance vocabularies and the relationships between those vocabularies as a means of trimming down the number of possible directions and moving toward a more fully realized dramaturgical structure. I’m looking forward to spending the summer working with my team to wade through the incredible amount of information that we’ve compiled, and to reassembling the rehearsal room in September with a firmer infrastructure in place. During stage three, we’ll spend more time editing and finalizing the performance toward its world premiere in early 2015.

What is the developmental process like for you as an artist?: I rely very heavily on the role of chance in my creative process. I often begin with a large and seemingly un-stageable idea, and trust that I’ll encounter the right resources and inspirational materials at the right time in order to realize the methods through which I can transform an abstract notion into a visual, visceral, and emotional performance experience. Collaboration is also a necessity for me, and I rely on my company members to pick up and run with my initial ideas, allowing me to respond to and edit their work toward a final product. I’ve spent the majority of this developmental stage of Searching for Sebald assigning small sections of the text to the company members, who subsequently use the vocabularies in our collective palette to construct small self-contained performance sequences. Each day, between one and three company members will mini-direct their own sequence, assigning roles and tasks, working with each of our designers in the rehearsal room, and presenting the piece for feedback and shaping. I will sometimes work directly with the creator of the piece on making alterations or exploring different facets of their idea, and I will sometimes make a mental note that the piece has uncovered a new theme or performance vocabulary that I’d like to explore later in the developmental process. I’m not the sort of artists who – like a more traditional playwright, I think – can work in a solitary space. I crave and in fact need a room full of people responding to my ideas and to whose own ideas I can also respond. I often say that we “write in space,” as our rehearsal room is always very active, with a lot of tasks happening simultaneously and a lot of energy zooming around. This chaos fuels my artistic sensibility, and I’m completely lost without it.

What is it like working with mixed media? What are some challenges, benefits, etc?: I feel very strongly that mixed media is an absolute requirement if we’re going to attempt to capture the fragmented experience of how we all exist in the world in the present. Working simultaneously with live performance, digital video, and analogue film, as well as with live soundscapes and manipulated audio, allows me and the other embers of the company to more accurately layer and integrate the simultaneous broad and deeply intimate or small experiences of our own lives into our performance work. The benefit of a live theatrical performance is of course the breadth of scope; to use a filmic vocabulary, every moment is a wide shot. Integrating digital video and analogue film into our work allows us to also explore close ups and more abstract and poetic methods of conveying narrative and emotion. I am also deeply interested in creative process as creative experience, and the mixing of theatrical and filmic worlds enables me to create two very different performance landscapes that feed into and off of one another in a single space. In my work, the cross-pollination of these vocabularies is an integral component of the structure of the project, so much so that no element can contextually exist without the interaction of the others. The challenges of mixed media, of course, are that computers, cameras, projectors and the like often pitch off the rails and we’ve on many occasions spent hours of rehearsal time attempting to figure out why a bit of programming won’t work, why a projection looks wrong, or how to flatten out a piece of analogue film that’s just been devoured by a 16mm projector. While these situations are always frustrating, the company members has become attuned to their inevitability, and are always patient and kind with their time.

Tell us a little about W.G. Sebald and "The Rings of Saturn": W.G. Sebald is a German expatriate writer who was born at the end of World War II and grew up in the Bavarian Alps before leaving Germany – first for Switzerland and then for England. He eventually settled in Norfolk, a county in the northern part of the country, just west of the North Sea. He trained as an academic (as opposed to a creative writer) and became a professor of European Literature and of Literature in Translation at the University of East Anglia before becoming something of an overnight sensation via the publication of four hybrid fiction/non-fiction prose books, Vertigo, The Emigrants, The Rings of Saturn, and Austerlitz. Each of these books are primarily concerned with themes of memory and loss of memory (both personal and collective) and decay (of civilizations, traditions, and physical objects). They are attempts to reconcile Sebald’s own identity as a German expatriate with the atrocities of the 20th and 21st centuries, particularly with the traumas of World War II and the resulting “conspiracy of silence” (as Sebald termed it) concerning the inability of the German people to discuss the happenings during and immediately following the War. "The Rings of Saturn", his third book, recounts - on the surface - a simple walk taken by a Sebald-like narrator along the North Sea coast through the English county of Suffolk, which is riddled with geographical and architectural remnants of the past. The true nature of the narrative is the mirrored meanderings of the narrator’s thoughts which extend to topics across time and place, including lonely eccentrics, Sir Thomas Browne’s skull, recession-hit seaside towns, Joseph Conrad, Rembrandt’s painting “The Anatomy Lesson,” Jewish exiles, and the massive war-time bombings of the 1940s. Sebald was widely rumored to be a top contender for the Noble Prize in Literature when he died tragically in a car crash in December 2001. His work continues to inspire contemporary artists working across all mediums all around the world.

What is the importance/relationship of memory and the wandering mind to you as an artist?: I have a terrible memory – most of my own personal history is a giant blank in my mind – so I’m very interested in an ongoing investigation of what memory is and how it functions. Memory, too, is so necessary for artistic encounters, as everything with which we interact is contextualized by our previous experiences. Searching for Sebald is in large part about this idea – how does who we are and the specifics of our own histories shape the way we experience and relate to art – here, a work of prose fiction. The wandering mind is such a large part of being alive, especially in this contemporary climate of mass information. I can recall being much younger and sitting and reading a book for hours, yet now I begin to lose interest or worry about other tasks I need to accomplish in a matter of pages. Such a small portion of our brains have been mapped, and I am excited by the relationship we are creating in Searching for Sebald between the narrator who is wandering the Suffolk landscape and discovering detritus of the collective past and my company members who are wandering the landscape of their own minds discovering remnants of their own personal past.

What is it like exploring neuroscience through creativity?: I stumbled into this interest in neuroaesthetics – the neuroscience of creativity – while we were in the early stages of creating our previous piece, The Orpheus Variations. I am interested in the relationship between content and form in my work, and the science provides me with a bit of a road map in thinking about and constructing those relationships – i.e. in creating a piece about memory, how do the different pieces of a memory coalesce in the brain?; in creating a piece about the relationship of an individual to a book, how does the brain go about transforming the symbols on a page into an internal emotional experience?

Why Searching for Sebald now?: Searching for Sebald is above all an attempt to create a performance that is about the people who are making it. Last June, as we wrapped up the reprise engagement of The Orpheus Variations at HERE, I began thinking about how I might make a new work that revealed the unique personalities of all of my company members; I had simultaneously just begun reading "The Rings of Saturn", and the book’s form of revealing the preoccupations of its narrator through his interactions with the landscape became the perfect model for and lens through which to execute this idea. I also wanted to continue to expand the forms of and ways in which performance vocabularies might interact with one another, and Sebald is a perfect collaborator for this exploration, as he is well-known for expanding the boundaries of narrative by seamlessly merging fiction and non-fiction and incorporating photographs into his texts.

What can we expect to see in Searching for Sebald?: You can expect to see the live creation of a documentary film that weaves together a trio of narratives that explore "The Rings of Saturn", my personal experience visiting the Suffolk landscape, and the relationship of the company members to the text. The performance is a visually and sonically immersive experience that collides live performance, digital video, analogue film, Foley soundscapes, and an original cinematic musical score. You can sneak peek at the process on Instagram using the hashtag #searchingforsebald, or join us for our upcoming work-in-progress sharing on June 4 and 5 at FiveMyles gallery in Brooklyn.


Minggu, 01 Juni 2014

Spotlight On...Brett Ackerman

Name: Brett Ackerman

Hometown: Merrick, NY - Boca Raton, FL - Alpharetta, GA

Education:
NYU - BA History/Cinema Studies

Favorite Credits:
One Last Box

Why theater?: We're all bowling alone these days. We live in a weird time where everyone can create something and just put it out there on the Internet. Even though it connects with more people, it also has this disconnecting effect as well. I think theater is one of the last bastions of community building that we have. Besides going to the movies, it's one of the few things people can have this incredible shared experience that you can't replicate watching something alone at home. The emotional reactions from the audience alone can be more lasting than the plays themselves. It's just one of the distinguishing features that gives theater a more indelible quality. I can still remember the first time I saw Les Miserables (8, original incarnation on Broadway, went with family). I really can't remember when I first saw Tiny Hamsters Eating Tiny Burritos (still cute, though).

Tell us about White Space: Part existential crisis, part prison escape, part Flash Gordon. White Space is set within three panels of this old space adventure comic. The first panel has a background character named Alex walking on a normal day in his futuristic city. The second has another background character named Samantha pointing and shouting at something. And the third is Alex dead. One day, a piece of Alex's panel drops off, which allows him to talk with Samantha. Together, they plot an escape from their panels.

What inspired you to write White Space?: Our director (and lead actress) Nicola McEldowney told me that the Comic Book Theater Festival was seeking play submissions. As a lifelong comic book fan, I immediately began thinking of writing something that would be a great way to represent a comic book in a show. I've always been interested in telling the story of the characters in margins, who are usually part of these fantastical stories but we never really get to know them. They're usually just canon fodder but they probably have families, friends, and other things going on besides just getting vaporized by a laser.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?:
Theater that doesn't take itself too seriously. I always preferred things that had a comedic bent to them, even if they weren't a flat out comedy. I like drama too but I find anything that takes itself too seriously could fall into unintentional comedy very quickly unless it has all the elements right. I'm usually inspired by great stories, especially ones made by my friends. I'm lucky to have a lot of creative friends. It constantly forces me to improve my writing so I can keep up with them. Otherwise, here's some famous people I'm inspired by: Jim Henson, Dan Harmon, the whole Pixar Brain Trust, Parker & Stone, Kevin Feige, Edgar Wright, Christopher Nolan, Bruce Timm, Paul Dini, Terry Gilliam, Charlie Kaufman, Bob Clampett, Chuck Jones, the Marx Brothers, the Coen Brothers, Paddy Chayefsky, Billy Wilder, Film Critic Hulk, and many more that I'm probably forgetting here.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Probably someone I have a mutual respect for but I don't idolize. I would never want to work with one of my heroes. I don't want to be disappointed with them.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: In terms of theater, I always recommend Avenue Q whenever I have the chance. It's probably the most accurate representation of living in the city in your 20s. Plus, I'm a huge Muppets fan so that kinda explains where the love comes from. In terms of everything else, I've been obsessed with Rick and Morty lately. I even included a couple of references to it in the show.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Michael Cera - "Awk: The Musical"

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Bad 80s/90s action movies. "Commando", "Night Hawks", "Tango & Cash", "Running Man", etc. are always a joy to watch. They make no sense. The characters are paper thin. But there's something about their ridiculous story lines that appeals to me. Having said this, I still despise "The Expendables" series.

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?: Either "This Must Be the Place" by the Talking Heads or "Two Face Part 1 - Harvey's Nightmare/Dent's Soap Box" by Shirley Walker.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Very, very sad.

What’s up next?:
I'm currently working on several projects. A sketch comedy showcase centered mainly on pop culture. Another meta-ish


For more, visit www.zeit-gest.com

Sabtu, 31 Mei 2014

Spotlight On...Wi-Moto Nyoka

Name: Wi-Moto Nyoka

Hometown: Cuernavaca, Morelos/ Portland, OR

Education: UArts, Tanzhaus NRW, Life

Favorite Credits: www.duskydiana.com

Why theater?: It's my first love.

Tell us about Hero How To: It is the live installment to the online graphic musical series The Last Days of Kartika. Hero How To is a graphic musical prequel to a webseries that uses Funk, Soul, and Hip Hop music to tell the stories of the citizen of Kartika. It serves as the origins story of the would-be hero Dusky Diana, newest recruit to the on-going rebellion in Kartika, and is told live in a concert reading at The Brick's Comic Book Theater Festival. Check us out.

What inspired you to write Hero How To?: Many things, but mainly a need to create and to see diversity of representation and storytelling, in theater and other media.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: What speaks to me is theater that works to tell new stories and create new archetypes. What inspires me is travel, collaboration, friendship, struggle, and at times, frustration. I also get inspired by laughing really hard and sunshine.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Janelle Monae, Cee-Lo Green, Bryan Cranston, Dael Orlandersmith, the entire cast of "American Horror Story: Coven", the creators of "Game of Thrones", my friend Ayo, I could go on. I like making work basically.

What show have you recommended to your friends?:
Whatever shows my friends and colleagues are doing/producing/writing. Yea..it's like that :)

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?:
I'd rather make a eight other movies and plays about something else, and cast artists who aren't always getting opportunities based on discriminatory guidelines.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?:
"Teen Wolf"

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?:
"Hit Me" by Mystikal

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Someone else

What’s up next?:
Finding/conjuring the funds to finish season one of "The Last Days of Kartika", writing a musical for young audiences, finding an adequate survival job, sunbathing.

Spotlight On...Brendan Spieth

Name: Brendan Spieth

Hometown: San Antonio, Texas

Education: The Juilliard School

Select Credits: Winter's Tale (Old Globe), American River (Lesser America), R + J: Star Cross'd Death Match (3 Day Hangover), Balm in Gilead (Brian Mertes, Beau Willimon, Alex Harvey), I choreographed some dances for The Humans are in Trouble (NYU Grad Acting Program), and I was a prep cook at Egg Restaurant in Brooklyn (Heard!)

Why theater?: Theatre has infinite possibility, it reflects our hidden desires and our childish terrors. 

Tell us about Short Life of Trouble: Short Life of Trouble is a wandering of sorts from different writers.  It's pulled text from William Shakespeare's Hamlet, selected William Faulkner, and music that dates from the 1930's and before.  The different mediums blend together to create this unique southern landscape that reverberates a familiar tale. 

What is it like being a part of Short Life of Trouble?: Being a native Texan... this world feels like home.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: New playwrights have always been the way.  I have so many heroes in this world among them are: Laura Ramadei, Nate Miller, Jared P. Nathan, Orlando Pabotoy, and the San Antonio Spurs.  But my biggest heroes have always been my Mother (Suzanne) and Father (Donald).

Any roles you’re dying to play?: Cyrano de Bergerac, Fool (Lear), Treplev.

What’s your favorite showtune?: "Telly" from Matilda

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I would love to be in a play directed by Christopher Bayes

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?:
I would have Cate Blanchett play me.  And it would be called "Two - One - Oh"

What show have you recommended to your friends?: An Octaroon (Soho Rep.), Casa Valentina (MTC), Carnival Kids (Lesser America), and "Looking" (HBO)

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?: "Sampson and the Warden" by Loudon Wainwright, "Take Me Back Babe" by: Mance Lipscomb, and "Ax to Grind" by: Damon Daunno.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: "Frasier."  I have watched every single episode of Frasier... three times. (judge away... its amazing)

What’s up next?: I've  been part of the writing team for a new musical about an indie band from 2001. It is called "Those Lost Boys". We are putting four performances  up at Ars Nova July 25th & 26th and August 1st & 2nd!  Check us out! www.thoselostboys.com

Jumat, 30 Mei 2014

Review: Exploring the Balance in Venice

The Merchant of Venice is one of those Shakespeare "comedies" that has the polarizing blend of comedy and drama. In Shakespeare Forum’s production of The Merchant of Venice, those polar ends are explored to the extreme in the classic play about love, faith, honor, and revenge.
For those needing a plot summary, The Merchant of Venice follows the intertwining stories of Bassanio, a suitor of the rich heiress Portia, who approaches his friend, the titular Antonio, to subsidize his pursuit. Bassanio and Antonio approach Shylock to be a lender, who in turn strikes a deal that if he cannot return the fee by the specified date, he may take a pound of Antonio’s flesh. Of course, like any Shakespeare play, there are an assortment of colorful characters to meet along the way. Like the divide of styles, the company was divided as well. The cast was lead by the wonderful performances of Bill Coyne, Dominic Comperatore, and Sarah Hankins. Bill Coyne effortlessly embodies Bassanio, bringing the right amount of charm and heart. Comperatore was a natural with the text. Both Coyne and Compertore found the way to bring contemporary to the classic text. Sarah Hankins as Nerissa was a natural when it came to the comedic timing, knowing exactly when to pander for laughs. Hanna Rose Goalstone and Imani Jade Powers took the understated route as Portia and Jessica, handing over their scenes to Sarah Hankins’ colorful Nerissa and Zach Libresco’s goofy Lorenzo. Though Goalstone’s performance did take off greatly in the second half, delivering Portia’s infamous monologue with passion. Joseph J. Menino as Shylock offered quite a unique performance. As possibly the most iconic character of the play, Menino put his stamp on the role, yet he seemed to play up the “woe is me” card, allowing the audience to potentially dislike his revenge and honor plot, seeing him as a villain.
As far as conceptualizing the play, it appeared to be a blend of modern with a classic throwback including an elegant set design by Marie Yokoyama. With the explanation from the Directors’ Note about the story being about class, facades, and preconceptions, Brittany Merola’s costume design was a bit confusing. There appeared to be very little difference in the way of class types. Perhaps the façade card was played up a little more than the class card.
Overall, Shakespeare Forum’s The Merchant of Venice was mediocre and underwhelming. Despite some wonderful performances, there was just something lacking.

Spotlight On...Nicola McEldowney

Name: Nicola McEldowney

Hometown: Riverdale, NY

Education: Columbia University (B.A., French) and the Universite Sorbonne-Nouvelle in Paris (M1 - French masters program - in theatre studies).

Favorite Credits: As an actress: Estelle in No Exit, Queen Marguerite in Exit the King, Melody Elbow in my own musical Aisle Six (produced last year at FringeNYC)  As a director: Seussical, featuring one of the best casts I've ever seen, every single actor under age 11.

Why theater?: Working the crowd.

Tell us about White Space: White Space is a play by my friend, playwright  Brett Ackerman. It's a funny but dark and tense play about comic book characters trapped in their panels.

What inspired you to direct White Space?:
I got asked. As a director, I find that to be excellent inspiration. :-)

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?:
Theater that's  character-centric, driven by strong emotions and ideally  also funny. Anything that has a sense of humor about itself speaks to me. Inspiration might be anything from a visit to the Cloisters to a good comic book (I'm thinking here of the works of Hergé and Tove Jansson) to a piece of music so good it punches you in the stomach, in the best possible sense. I recently wrote a screenplay inspired by the first movement of Poulenc's piano concerto. The final product has very little to do with the concerto. It was just the spark. 

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?:
Wes Anderson. I came late to his films, having fallen hard for "Moonrise Kingdom" two years ago.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I've been rehearsing for multiple shows these past months so haven't gotten to as much theatre as I would like. My current recommending energies are all channeled into getting people to come to the Planet Connections Theatre Festivity, where I'm in one play (Slam Team by Gina Inzunza) and directing another (Barber from Outer Space, which I co-authored with Rachel Gambiza).

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Audrey Tautou - I will accept no substitutes -   and the movie would be called "Heart of Snarkness" (French: "Coeur de Snarkness"), a nod to my blog, The Snark Ascending.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: I live in Riverdale, home of multiple excellent Jewish bakeries, so porn. Uh - I mean cookies.

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?: Apparently a Danish folksong arrangement by Percy Grainger.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Wealthier but disgruntled.

What’s up next?: A show I wrote is coming to a wonderful venue, The Tank, in the fall. More on that as it develops!


For more on Nicola, visit http://nicolatheatre.webs.com

Kamis, 29 Mei 2014

Review: Two Distant Hearts

One-night stands usually allow for a story the morning after. But what happens when a intimate encounter by two unlikely parties spirals out of control? In Shannon Murdoch’s Virus Attacks Heart, part of the 2014 Planet Connections Festival, we watch the aging Beatrice and youthful Jamie as they weave through a passionate night together. When the encounter leads to one in the hospital, lives are changed and hearts are shattered.
Murdoch’s play is filled with poetry. Her words are rich with imagery, allowing for some beautiful moments and monologues. In the world of the play that borders between natural and poetic, the majority of these monologues occur while Jamie or Beatrice is alone on stage, while the other is in another room. It’s an interesting concept to explore. Are the words you speak with a barrier between entirely truthful or does the fact that the other’s presence is missing alter what you say? In a play about intimacy, lacking a scene partner is a big challenge.  From an exploration standpoint, watching two strangers engage in this was fascinating to watch, however from an acting vantage, both actors seemed to struggle and get lost in making it work. With the monologues pretty much front-loaded in the script, the pacing started off gradual. Additionally, the play is told non-linearly. Attempting to figure out the timeline of the play was quite difficult which truly affected the arcs of the characters. These two strangers are “whiney” in their own respect, but caring about Beatrice’s story is hard to do, especially when her vulnerability comes out toward the end. Since the structure is set up the way it is, as we move toward the end, there are many false endings, or moments that would make for a beautiful ending. With that in mind, the additional scenes after these false endings truly don’t propel the characters forward any further.
As Beatrice and Jamie respectively, Gina LeMoine and Luke Wise ease into their parts. LeMoine’s Beatrice is sensible yet yearns for any connection, especially from Wise’s smart beyond his years Jamie. Jamie’s naivety shines through in his moments of pain. However, for a play about connection, or lack there of, their moments together were often erratic, partially due to the nature of the non-linear format. 
Director Brian Gillespie used simplicity to his advantage. In his staging, the multi-locational play was suggested by pieces, including the clever removable lampshade turned IV drip bringing us to bedroom to hospital room. One of the most beautiful moments of the play was Beatrice’s bus monologue. Combined with Murdoch’s gorgeous words and Gillespie’s ingenious staging, LeMoine recreated a bus and its passengers with liquor bottles, highlighting Murdoch’s imagery.
For a play that explores the connection of humans, Virus Attacks Heart is just another play, but what sets this script apart is Shannon Murdoch’s words. With a fine-tuning of the timeline, Virus Attacks Heart will be an even more beautiful piece.

Spotlight On...Dean Haspiel

Name: Dean Haspiel

Hometown: Manhattan, NY cum Brooklyn!

Education: Music & Art cum La Guardia High School. SUNY Purchase.

Favorite Credits: Billy Dogma, The Fox, The Quitter, American Splendor, The Alcoholic, Cuba: My Revolution, HBO's "Bored To Death"

Why theater?: This is my first foray into theater but I've always loved the stage. The raw immediacy of live action and reaction is unparalleled. I'm a fan of William Shakespeare, David Mamet, Harold Pinter, David Rabe, Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller, Edward Albee, and Tracy Letts.

Tell us about Switch to Kill: In a world where no one knows anyone’s true identity, professional hit men, Dallas Twilite and Buck Dangerzone, engage in a psychological duel that triggers cold–blooded acts of murder. Through a series of harried gun play and emotional tests, a trust is reinstated and ghosts are lifted from the psyche of grief-stricken killers.

What inspired you to write Switch to Kill?:
I wrote Switch to Kill approximately 25-years ago when I was attempting to write my first screenplay. I believe I'd just seen Mike Nichols' adaptation of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs" and the combination spooked me into writing a story about two hit men who engage in an emotionally arrested word game that triggers murder while confronting the power of a deep, dark secret. I was inspired to dust off Switch to Kill when I had a conversation with playwright Crystal Skillman who alerted me to the Comic Book Festival at The Brick. Skillman recommended me to organizer Jeff Lewonczyk who liked my play enough to secure director Ian W. Hill's interest in directing and producing it.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I love classic productions of betrayal and heartbreak, unrequited love made manifest and good old fashioned revenge, but nothing has yet to beat Rev Jen's Anti-slam. Rev Jen hosts a broken fun house mirror of humanity that skates the abstract equator of the the honest and the absurd. Wrong never felt so right.
If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I've always been a fan of actor Eric Roberts. I'd kill to write something for him that would get him performing like he did in "The Pope of Greenwich Village" and "Runaway Train." I'd also like to write a galactic Frankenstein story starring Michael Shannon.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I'm ashamed to admit that I haven't seen nearly as much theater as I would like to. The art table keeps me chained. The last show I recommended was a stage musical called Forever Dusty, starring Kirsten Holly Smith and co-written by Jonathan Vankin. It was amazing. I hope to see a bunch of shows at The Comic Book Festival.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Martin Lawrence would play me and the movie would be called "Post-Disaster Adventure Chronicles."

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Entenmann's Thick Fudge Iced Golden Cake

What’s the most played song on your iTunes?: "Backseat Freestyle" by Kendrick Lamar

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Making movies. I have a screenplay called "The Big Red Mess", which is an expanded version of Switch to Kill that also tells the story of "Luke Tuna," a character that is only spoken about in hushed yet revered tones in the Brick version of STK directed and designed by Ian W. Hill.

What’s up next?: Besides writing a novel and other plays, I'm currently drawing some of the interior art for Marvel Comics' The Fantastic Four, and writing/drawing a second The Fox mini-series for Archie/Red Circle Comics debuting around Xmas time. My graphic novel Fear My Dear: A Billy Dogma Experience (published by Z2) will be available mid-June, and I'm curating/hosting a monthly psychotronic salon at Union Hall called Enter to Win, starting June 21st: https://www.facebook.com/events/502980726490680/

For more on Dean, visit http://deanhaspiel.com/

Rabu, 28 Mei 2014

Blog Hijack: A Preview of Short Life of Trouble

In today's Blog Hijack, Valerie Redd (Creator, Writer/Adapter, Producer, Cast Member) and Eric Powell Holm (Director) talk about their upcoming production of Short Life of Trouble!

Eric Powell Holm, Valerie Redd, Brendan Spieth
    
How would you describe the development process of Short Life of Trouble?

Valerie Redd: How would we describe the development process?

Eric Powell Holm: It was… thoughtful.

VR: It was long!

EPH: It was long!

VR: A year of workshops with actors, after a year of literary research and dramaturgy.

EPH: It was considered. Developing this piece has been really interesting to watch.

VR: I do remember very clearly having a set list of hypotheses and then testing them out in the workshops. I mean, the very first one we were trying to find out if we could get away with doing Shakespeare with a Southern accent. We had to test that out. Every foundational piece had to be tested out. Those kinds of validations and discoveries, finding our footing every time and getting deeper and deeper into it…

EPH: Yeah, yeah what’s that phrase people use…”proof of concept.”

VR: Right, this thing has been tested, you know? Every time we met, another risk was being taken… First, it was the Southern dialect with the Shakespeare text, next it was the songs, “What’s it like to mix bluegrass with Shakespeare? Does that work? Can we get away with it?” and then the next time it was original text and Faulkner and the question of whether or not we could get away with adding that! “Will they blend together? Can we go seamlessly between these things?”

EPH: Right, or “What do the seams feel like?

VR: Yeah! “Is it bumpy? If it’s bumpy is that good?

EPH: Right, exactly.

VR: That’s what the development process was like…kind of baby steps along the way…but also, jumping off cliffs every time!

EPH: Baby cliff jumps.

VR: Baby cliff jumps. Every time.

EPH: I remember your wall, or sometimes floor, of notecards that you would move around. “What if this goes here?

VR: My “Beautiful Mind” notecards! They were color-coded – it was a whole language,  “Here’s a song, and here’s an original speech, and here’s Shakespeare” and I kept an eye on making sure it hadn’t been too long before we had another puzzle piece. After I’d set up that system, I found great comfort in this treasure trove of interview archives of Faulkner, where someone asked him about his process in writing As I Lay Dying—which is a huge influence on this piece because of its multiple narrators—and they asked him “How did you know when to switch to a different character’s perspective, how did you know how to order them?” and he likened it to arranging a shop window, thinking about what would look best next to each other.  So that’s what the cards were about!

What is it like to rehearse a play that is still a work in progress?

EPH: It’s freeing…it’s like “Oh, let’s make a proposal here…” But, I also feel that in my past work, by some playwrights’ standards, I’ve played faster and looser with the script than I have in this process, since the creator/ writer/ adapter is there in the room.

VR: I have certainly felt that moment where I was in the room and I thought “Shakespeare and Faulkner are dead…but I’m a live person….in the room...I  have a say.” I like being open to changes…this team has had proposals of “Let’s move this speech, let’s move this line, cut this line” and what I have found, so I don’t go crazy, is that I know I put it on the page the way it is for a reason, but I’m willing to be convinced otherwise. That’s my way of working. I’m willing to be convinced otherwise. I’m thrilled when I am…because they just made it better.

EPH: On the whole what makes it interesting has to do with collective ownership…communal creation.

VR: Yeah, people bringing what they do to the piece – actors living through the text, whether I wrote it or adapted it or spliced it or whatever. I tried to live through it as a playwright as much as I could just to check and make sure that I was making sense.

EPH: Of course.

VR: But, I can’t live through it the way each actor is, and I can’t bring to it who and what they are. Their approach to it and their reaction to it is changing it, and potentially rearranging it and editing or altering it in a very good way.

How does Short Life of Trouble differ from the source material?


VR: I’d say that the Southern Gothic inspired text, while keeping its natural tempo, can have a slightly stronger undercurrent when working in tandem with Shakespeare.  As for the Hamlet source, Short Life of Trouble turns it into a group experience.

EPH: Yes. Our play gives everyone in the story the permission to pause and think things through in a way that is very Hamlet-ish, but it invites everyone into that process.

VR: I think the original Hamlet relies on the fact that everybody’s going to identify with Hamlet. They have to, because he’s asking those universal questions that everybody asks—but in our play everybody gets to ponder in their own way.

EPH: And the point-of-view is different for each person, letting everyone have that secret power of turning to the audience and asking them a question. It’s not only the special brilliant princes that have these thoughts.

VR: It’s generous, giving everybody their chance.

EPH: I don’t know where I first fell in love with that phrase “spirit of generosity” but to me it’s a phrase that really speaks to what I want the theatre I make to have. Spirit is such an amazing word in the way that it speaks to ghosts but it also speaks to whiskey, it also speaks to breath and inspiration…

VR: The Holy Spirit…

EPH: Exactly… so the idea that the Holy Spirit of Generosity is flowing through our play…  well, it makes me happy to invite people to come into our circle.

Spotlight On...Lucas Kavner

Name: Lucas Kavner

Hometown:
Plano, TX

Education: Middlebury College

Favorite Credits: As an actor: The Blue Flower (A.R.T), Barnes & Noble: Frisco, TX (Ars Nova), Stephen King and John Mellencamp's Ghost Brothers of Darkland County. Writer: Fish Eye at HERE

Why theater?: You sound like my uncle. Because it pays so well, OK?! I often ask myself this question and struggle with the answer. On one hand: it's staggeringly overpriced, the developmental process is endlessly frustrating, TV is really entertaining right now, and you're constantly competing with plays about old, rich white people in summer homes. But on the other hand it's provided me with some of the most exhilarating live experiences of my life, and my participation in it over the years has influenced me hugely. The process of working on a good play is still the greatest feeling, and seeing something great onstage can be so much more affecting than anything else in the world. So I guess that's an important question to keep asking ourselves.

Tell us about Carnival Kids: The play's about a Southern guy, a former rock musician, who decides to upend his mostly broken life in Texas and move in with his adopted son in Manhattan to start anew. Early in his time there, he gets involved with a legally questionable money-making project with his son's weirdo roommate and shit gets craaaaazy. It's a New York play with none of the ingredients of a New York play I'd seen before. Also there's SEX in it.

What inspired you to write Carnival Kids?: It was mostly borne out of a single image: I was doing laundry in my building's basement one day, and a guy in his 20s was down there with his father, who had presumably moved in for a short while, and they were separating their clothes together. That really stuck with me. At the time I was working on another show with a lot of professional blues and country musicians and I found them to be some of the most interesting and honest people I'd ever met, even though their "personal lives" were usually kind of a mess by our standards. But they were so authentically and sincerely themselves. I wanted to write something with their energy in mind.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I love plays that don't go where you think they will. I hate things that are too clean or overwritten or plot-heavy. Any time I see the writer's writing onstage, when a character is too consciously well-spoken, I immediately tune out. Early on I tried really hard to always write to the left of what the characters' really wanted to say, so when they say exactly what they're thinking, it becomes startling, rather than some over-eloquent norm. I also tend to love things I'd never think to write myself, like most of the stuff at St. Ann's, which is always so exciting and big. I like seeing plays about underdogs, about people whose stories aren't getting told anywhere else.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?:
I think the Kneehigh Theatre people are all amazing. I love everything of theirs I see. John Tiffany. Annie Baker. Kenneth Lonergan. Chris Durang. Sarah Ruhl. Prince.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Tom Hanks and Glenn Close ARE... "The Lanky Guys In The Corner."

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: International House Hunters on HGTV.

What’s the most played song on your iPod?: "Garage Door Opening Sound Effect."

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: A travel writer. Or a conman. A conman/travel writer.

What’s up next?: Finishing up a play commission from E.S.T, doing another big tour of the Stephen King/Mellencamp show, and working on a bunch of TV/Film projects, currently in development with various places. I acted in this short film I really love called "Future Hero" that's currently playing film fests around the country. Hoping it gets a big online release soon. Also I still perform improv with hello at the Peoples Improv Theater every Friday at 9:30. It's one of my favorite things in the world to do.

Selasa, 27 Mei 2014

Works in Progress: Searching for Sebald with Arielle Lever

Name: Arielle Lever

What is your role in Searching for Sebald?: I am part of the performance ensemble.

Tell us a little about Deconstructive Theatre Project?: The Deconstructive Theatre Project is a company that creates devised, ensemble based, mixed media pieces.  It is made up of a community of artists, each will different but specific skill sets – we all come together to share those skills as we develop a highly visual piece of theater. We teach one another, learn from each other, and under the guidance of Adam Thompson and the inspiration of source material, create a piece, which includes live performance, film, Foley, and music. The Deconstructive Theatre Project also has a strong outreach leg. Through dtpE – The Deconstructive Theatre Project EXPERIENCE, we invite members of the community to engage in the process of making each piece, so that audience members may have a deeper engagement with the project upon seeing it. The integrated theatre in education program is also an exciting component of DTP’s community engagement work, as it allows us as company members to share some of the tools we are working with in rehearsal with middle school students in relationship to academic subjects they are studying. 

How is the creation process going so far?: The process is going great! This group (with the addition of a few new members), also worked together to create DTP’s last piece, The Orpheus Variations.  It is really fantastic to already be in the groove of working with the same people, but also to meet with a team of some newer faces and fresh perspectives.  Because we create pieces from close to scratch and build them over the course of a year (sometimes more), it is hard to think of how the process is going in relationship to the product itself (our piece goes up February 2015). But I think that is the beauty of working with DTP; we can freely explore without having that timeline pressure that one might typically have in a rehearsal process.  For the most part, Adam, has been giving us each assignments which we work on and then bring in to teach to the group.  It’s been really exciting because it forces all of us to think outside of the typical box of things that we might need to as actors. We have to think like directors and filmmakers, and at times may lead the group or follow one another’s direction.  

What is the developmental process like for you as an artist?: The developmental process is highly creative, which is why I find it so exciting and keep coming back for more project after project.  When prompted with new devising assignments we are given enough information to be inspired, but little enough direction that we can feel real ownership over what we are creating.  It is also a real lesson in collaboration, as there are many minds and voices in the room, all with different ideas, but also different strengths as artists.  I often find that I have to take a step back and just listen to the company members, because there is so much to learn from all of them. I think that’s what I like best about working with DTP: it’s a classroom as much as it’s a rehearsal room, and I find that I am gaining tools and skills as I continue to work with the company. Having a bigger picture perspective as an artist can also only help inform my work as an actor in other projects.

What is it like working with mixed media? What are some challenges, benefits, risks etc.?: It can sometimes be overwhelming because there are many components to it. For example, in our piece we have the following to work with: pre-recorded digital footage, analog footage, camerawork, software programming, props, text, Foley, and music.  When we receive devising assignments I sometimes don’t know where to start, especially because I am far from an expert in most (well, any) of these topics.  But I find it is helpful returning to the prompt we are given, because it always gets my creative juices flowing. I also remind myself that experts in each of these areas are only an email or phone call away. A lot of times we’ll have an idea of what we want to do, but then will come into the room and ask others to help us get there.  Working with many mediums and with many people really lends itself to true collaboration. The tricky thing is, all components must work together and at once, and technology can be finicky, so we sometimes don’t know what the technology gods may hand us that day, so we have to sometimes be flexible, always patient.

Tell us a little about W.G. Sebald and “The Rings of Saturn”: W.G. Sebald is a German, British author. I say both, because his writing, specifically The Rings of Saturn very much illuminates his identity struggle.  I often times think of Sebald as a collage artist or documentary film maker, as his writing is far from poetic, and also doesn’t follow a clear narrative. Instead he takes many different events, his own thoughts, and also images and strings them into pieces, which are part fiction, part non-fiction, part personal meditation.  At face value, The Rings of Saturn is a story about a man who takes a walk along the coast of England. The book is about his walk, and all of the things that he thinks about while walking.

How does W.G. Sebald and “The Rings of Saturn” inspire you as artist?: Mostly, it inspires me not to take things at face value.  If you read Sebald’s book quickly you can gather a lot of facts, almost like an encyclopedia.  If you read it carefully you can find his deep preoccupations about growing up as a German with little understanding of the history before him, and how history and the idea of those before us impact us all.  In Sebald’s work, you will simply notice pictures on some of the pages. If you take the time to research where those pictures came from, you may realize that picture in the book is really a blown up smaller image that is part of a greater one. 

What is the importance/relationship of memory and the wandering mind to you as an artist?: As an artist, it’s really important and also helpful to be keyed into your own wandering mind…it’s where ideas come from, however direct or tangential. This is something which we all inherently have but may not be tapped into or aware of.  This project has been really great for me, because I rarely formally record my thoughts, feelings, memories.  Once it was an assignment, I started doing this more, and since have recalled so many things I didn’t even know I remembered, which was both nostalgic, happy, and sad. It’s also exciting to think about how your thoughts on a given thing may be similar or different to another’s on the same thing. This really comes to light as we make this piece as it is essentially an exploration of what all of us thought and felt as we read the same text.

What is it like exploring neuroscience through creativity?: Well for one, it makes neuroscience, a topic I usually find far over my head, accessible. I think that people take science and art and typically put them at opposite ends of the spectrum.  However, here we do not. In fact, it is essential in the creation of our work for them to be explored side by side.  It makes me think that we really can access the things that we find out of our reach by putting them in terms we may understand. 

Why Searching for Sebald now?: Why not? While I feel like it doesn’t have the same social/political urgency that some pieces do (that is just not the focus here), I do think it is important to be seen now, in terms of the theater world. We live in a time where technology, specifically projection art, is really trendy and is used left and right. However, it’s rarely integrated well into the piece, and very seldom is essential to the piece.  Here, in Searching for Sebald, the piece can not live without the technology, and its integration is thoughtful and specific, as opposed to tacked on simply for the sake of having it.  

What can we expect to see in Searching for Sebald?: Searching for Sebald is a choose your own adventure kind of experience. There will be many things to take in – multiple screens, actors working together onstage, and also will be many sounds and music to listen to; the story that you receive will be very different than the person sitting next to you, because each person will inherently experience different things depending on what they choose to engage with at any given moment of the piece.  You can expect to see a blend of bits of the book brought to life, our personal thoughts, feelings, and experiences as we read the book, some information about Sebald himself, and also…a fish tank used in a really cool way! Curious? Come see us in February 2015.