Showing posts with label Andrea Skola. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrea Skola. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Men of Tortuga, Steet Corner Arts at the Hyde Park Theatre, December 1 - 17

Men of Tortuga Jason Wells Street Corner Arts



Where is Tortuga and whom are these conspirators targeting?

Tortuga is Spanish for "turtle" and there are Tortugas all over the place. Lots of islands, for example -- a former pirates' haven off the northern coast of Haiti, an island off Venezuela, others off Costa Rica, in the Gallapagos and down in the Florida Keys. There's an unincorporated community in California close to the border with Mexico. My brother, in town for a visit, misremembered the title as Men of Tortuga Street, since the ancient reptile is honored in many another California community.

I had no difficulty imagining that these conservative suits and their hired expert in kinetic kills might be studying someone like charismatic ideologue Hugo Chávez, elected president of Venezuela in 1998. Chávez is still in office today despite economic mismanagement, audacious grandstanding and the hammering that he has given the wealthy elites and middle class. In another life I was the State Department officer waiting at the bottom of the ramp to welcome him upon his first visit to Washington.

The timing corresponds, as well. This script was one of about a thousand unsolicited manuscripts mailed to the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago in 2004. They produced it as part of their new plays series in the converted space in the parking garage. Cast member in this production Rommel Sulit saw it during that first run.

Click to read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Thursday, January 22, 2009

The Drowned World, directed by Ken Webster, FronteraFest at Blue Theatre, January 21, 25, 31, February 1

Ken Webster's austere staging of this vision of a nightmare world uses the vocal and emotional projection of these four actors with the formal eloquence and depth of a string quartet. The music here is their inflection, counterpart, and conviction in a narrative that raises the hairs on the back of your neck.

Ben Wolfe appears first, in solo, as Darren, citizen in a world drowned in gray totalitarianism and decay. Motionless, from the depth of the stage he recounts a simple train journey, the pain of attraction, and his effort to find an "angel." The range and intensity of his telling, like a lengthy, complex solo cello sonata, is all the more striking because he scarcely moves a muscle. The color and depth of the text overrides our lazy spectator demands for visual excitement.

The rest of the quartet joins him. They stand virtually motionless in the depth of the stage, dressed in featureless dark clothing. They unfold the story, each speaking in first person when solo and reverting to dialogue when interacting with one another. At intervals of ten to fifteen minutes in this 90-minute piece the words stop, the lights fall away to black briefly and then re-illuminate the stage, where the four artists stand in the same positions and attitudes as before.


Instead of a Singspiel, this is a Hörspiel. The German term is used for radio plays, and in fact you could appreciate the depth, violence and images with your eyes closed. The presence of the actors before you adds a corporality to the story that heightens your sense of the vulnerability of characters, actors and humanity itself.

Tara (Xochitl Romero) and Julian (Benjamin Summers) are lovers, in hiding from police who have been carrying out systematic raids and mandated "quarantines" of individuals guilty of possessing "radiance," a sort of vitality and charisma not conforming with the duties of citizens of an authoritarian state. Diligent citizen Kelly (Andrea Skola), with quarantine order in hand, takes thugs to apprehend, torture and murder the uncomplying lovers. Her glimpse of Julian at the window saps her will.

The lovers escape, attempt mutual suicide and intrude into the apartment of hapless Darren, who takes them in. He sees Tara as the angel of his yearnings. In clumsy efforts to sustain the triangle by selling on the black market hair and then teeth imbued with their radiance, Darren stumbles into Kelly, defrocked as a police officer and sent undercover to find the lovers.

Gary Owen's vision of that gray world is complete and convincing. His text is blank verse, especially in the mouths of these players. He meticulously describes desires, betrayals, exploitations and killings with a power of language and image evoking an Aristotelian level of pity and fear.

Owens is writing much more than an Orwellian meditation. In addition to oppression, these characters are exploring for us themes of intimacy, attraction and allegiance, decay and death, hope and the human condition. The finale finds us with two couples, of unexpected composition, the first imprisoned in that drowned world and the second in inscrutable apotheosis. His final image is cryptic: a silver moon seen through a burned, torn hand, delighting a girl child.

Ken Webster told us that this piece has to date been performed in the United Kingdom and in Chicago. Wolfe, Romero, Skola and Summers take the stage only three more times during Austin's FronteraFest.

See them. Be preprared to concentrate. Don't expect any laughs. Prepare to be haunted and rewarded.

Comments by Brian Losoya of Daily Texan, in article on FronteraFest, January 23

Review by Avimaan Syam in Austin Chronicle of January 30

Review by Ryan E. Johnson on Austin.com, January 30



Thursday, January 15, 2009

Upcoming, FronteraFest: The Drowned World, January 21 - February 1

UPDATE: ALT review, January 22

Received January 15:

Ken Webster presents the Southwest Premiere of Gary Owen's hauntingly powerful THE DROWNED WORLD.

THE DROWNED WORLD is a poetic and futuristic vision of a world where the beautiful and intelligent are hunted down and destroyed.

The play will be directed by HPT Artistic Director and member of The Austin Arts Hall of Fame, Ken Webster, and features HPT Company Members Ben Wolfe (FEATURING LORETTA), Benjamin Summers (DOG SEES GOD, THE LONESOME WEST), Andrea Skola (HAM), and Xochitl Romero (BLACKBIRD, DOG SEES GOD).

WHERE: The Blue Theater, 916 Springdale Road

WHEN: Wednesday, January 21, at 7:00 PM
Sunday, January 25, at 4:15 PM
Saturday, January 31, at 6:30 PM
Sunday, Febraury 1, at 2:15 PM

TICKETS: $12 order online at www.hydeparktheatre.org or call 479-PLAY