Showing posts with label Andrew Matthews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Matthews. Show all posts

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Hamlet at Boggy Creek Cemetery, Black Swan Events, October 22 - November 6





Justin Scalise as Hamlet is intent and impressive. AustinLiveTheatre had that to say and more in the September 25 ALT review of essentially this same production as presented downtown at the Scottish Rite Theatre -- in all too short a run and with a curtailed final week.

This staging is by Black Swan Events. The swan is new hatched and because of the surprisingly poorly attendance at the Scottish Rite staging, it's new fledged, as well. Perhaps to their surprise, and certainly to mine, Hamlet turned out not to be an automatic break-down-the-doors success downtown, despite the impressive acting triple play Scalise-to-Babs George-to-Harvey Guion, supported by that canny and adept cast. Perhaps some folks see Hamlet was one of those "difficult" Shakespeare plays, unpleasantly full of brooding and plotting.


Andrew Matthews as Claudius (image: Kimberley Mead)The swans have been working to counter that. Mike Lee at KUT-FM gave them his occasional two-minute slot at Arts Eclectic last week and Lisa Sheps at KOOP-FM had them on for twelve minutes on her weekly Off Stage and On the Air (see below for those embedded audio bits).


Ashley Edwards, Justin Scalise (image: Kimberley Mead)Director Andrew Matthews replaces Guion as the usurping Claudius, giving a slightly different flavor to that triple play. Matthews is visibly closer in age to Scalise's Hamlet, which is entirely plausible -- making him a much younger brother to the murdered king, with plenty of manly energy and lots of interesting possibilities for the back story. Ashley Edwards is an ageless Gertrude, sharp of profile and sharp of presence, highly aware of her own precarious position. Both Matthews and Edwards are confident and convincing in their roles.

Read more and listen to audio at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, October 15, 2010

Upcoming: Hamlet at Boggy Creek Cemetery, Black Swan Events, October 21 - November 6



Received directly:



by torch light in Boggy Creek Cemetery
Oct. 21 – Nov. 6, Thursdays - Saturdays at 7:30 PM
Boggy Creek Cemetery, Circle S Rd. & Dittmar Rd. (Click for Google map)
TICKETS at www.NowPlayingAustin.com
$15 - $35 sliding scale admission; $12 for seniors, students, teachers, APD, AFD and military.
$10 each for groups of 15 or more. www.AusTix.com or 512-474-8497
*Ticket purchased at the event are cash only.


Black Swan Events brings Shakespeare’s most popular drama to the green space of Boggy Creek Cemetery. (Click for further information at AustinLiveTheatre.com.)

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Hamlet, Scottish Rite Theatre, September 16 - October 3




Those lustrous eyes, that bony frame, that complexion sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought -- many of us believe that Justin Scalise was born to play Hamlet.

He has certainly trained for Shakespeare and for this role, in New Orleans, in England, and for the past three years in Austin. We have seen him as Bottom, Feste, Adam & Silvius, Don John, Mercutio and Lucio. And even Hamlet, freeze-dried, for Austin Shakespeare's 2008 and 2009 World's Fastest Hamlet.

This Hamlet drected by Andrew Matthews for the Scottish Rite Theatre is a keen, intelligent, entertaining and gripping production. Scalise has the principal role but this evening offers much more than just an outing for his fan club.

This cast knows how to speak the speech. Babs George as Gertrude, Harvey Guion as Claudius, Robert Deike as a whole suite of ordinaries, Brock England as Horatio, Chuck Ney as Polonius. . . the verse comes trippingly on those tongues. It's a thrill to hear it delivered articulately, with convincing scansion and appropriate targeting and emotion. The action is swift but unerringly certain. There are moments when one would like to see a bubble of silence as a character reflects or absorbs the meaning of something just said. But anyone who has studied the play, read it or seen any other version of Hamlet will follow the players all the way and will be on the edge of his seat.

Harvey Guion, Justin Scalise, Babs George in Hamlet, Scottish Rite TheatreMatthews has put them into contemporary costume but does not burden the play with unnecessary concept or gimmickry. No telephoning in performances, no AK-47s, no roller skates or cowboy hats. The familiar, haunting action develops immediately before us in the intimacy of the Scottish Rite Theatre, using a minimum of portable furniture placed as needed before various of its intricate trompe-l'oeuil 19th century painted backdrops. The striking, appropriate music before the play is recorded.

In this version, the play's the thing.

Read more and view images at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Saturday, September 11, 2010

Upcoming: Hamlet, with Justin Scalise and Babs George, Scottish Rite Theatre, October 16 - November 3


Found on-line:

Scottish Rite Theatre presents

the greatest play of the English language:

William Shakespeare's

HAMLET

18th and LaVaca

September 16 - October 4

Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30, Sundays at 6 p.m.

Something is rotten in the state of Denmark... The King has died, and Prince Hamlet abruptly leaves his studies at university to return home. Upon arriving, he is horrified to discover that his uncle has married his mother and taken the throne for himself. Thoughts of grief turn bloody when a midnight encounter with the ghost of the old king saddles Hamlet with a heavy task: revenge his father's murder. Not knowing what is true or whom to trust, Hamlet must fight for his soul, as he questions revenge, love, faith and mortality in this most modern of classical plays.

Also named "the greatest poem of the millennium," Shakespeare's most popular drama will finally be seen in the beautiful atmosphere of Austin's oldest and most majestic theatre! Starring Austin Shakespeare favorites Justin Scalise as Hamlet and Babs George as Gertrude, and featuring an ensemble of the city's finest talent, this production under the direction of Austin newcomer Andrew Matthews promises to be an unforgettable experience.

$15 ($7.50 Tickets are for the September 16 opening night performance only.)

$12 Tickets are available for Groups of 10 or more.


Click to view larger image at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, November 20, 2009

New Images for Ongoing: The Skin of Our Teeth, Different Stages at the Vortex Repertory, November 13 - December 5



Images by Brett Brookshire, received directly.

AustinLiveTheatre recommends The Skin of Our Teeth by Thornton Wilder, playing Thursdays - Sundays at the Vortex until December 5.

Shown: Andrew Matthews, Chloe Edmonson and Bobbie Oliver as the Antrobus family.

Click for ALT review.


View more images at
AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

The Skin of Our Teeth by Thornton Wilder, Different Stages at the Vortex, November 13 - December 5







Thornton Wilder's The Skin of Our Teeth is 67 years old but it plays as if it had been written and workshopped last week by one of those Austin indie arts groups of which we are so proud.

It's wild stuff --a history of humankind as embodied by the Antrobus family, with a mad mix-up of times, epic figures, surreal settings and primal myths. Refract that story through the lens of a dramatic structure that the author and actors keep yanking out from under you, dress it up with Lowell Bartholomee's videos, and live with the fact that you never know what's going to happen next.


Wilder wasn't shy about announcing the epic proportions of this tragicomedy. The family's last name is "Antrobus" -- a label that shouts "human being" or "humankind," derived from the Greek άνθρωπος ("anthropos" -- as in, for example, "anthropology").

Your first act is located in an apparently modern New Jersey, except that it's not modern -- the Ice Age is encroaching.


Read more and view images at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .