Showing posts with label Bernadette Nason. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bernadette Nason. Show all posts

Monday, December 9, 2013

And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie, Austin Playhouse, November 22 - December 22, 2013



Then There were None Poster opt250
(www.austinplayhouse.com)

1  CTXLT review 225




by Michael Meigs

 
You've arrived at an estate on an otherwise uninhabited island somewhere off the English coast along with nine strangers. Your host hasn't shown up. The weather has been steadily deteriorating. You spend the first hours tentatively making the acquaintance of this odd collection of mostly upper middle class individuals. The polite tedium is shattered when a voice from the next room sternly names each of you and accuses each of homicide.

Ten lines of doggerel are framed above the fireplace, jovial descriptions of death. Ten little Indian figures sit on the mantlepiece. Unnerving, what?

Then the storm closes in over the wild seascape, isolating you for real. There's no telephone. And an unseen homicidal maniac begins killing. A poisoned drink; a hypodermic; an bloodied ax; a fall over a precipice into the sea. Who's next? And who's doing this?
Dame Agatha Christie built a huge following in the first half of the twentieth century for her murder mysteries -- not only those featuring Miss Marple or Hercule Poirot, but also a series of cleverly plotted murder puzzles. She didn't invent the oh-so-British detective story, but she came close to perfecting that peculiar form.

You don't see many of her novels in the United States any more but she remains popular in Europe. I assume that the Brits are still devotees; I know that the paperback racks in Germany are full of translations of her books.

The typical Christie murder puzzle is a contest with the reader, a bit like a crossword puzzle -- of the sort that the New York Times used to feature and perhaps the Times of London still does. You curl up in your comfortable armchair by the fire with your text and your clues (oops, 'clews') and pick your favorite suspect. Or you get a ticket to the Austin Playhouse production playing at Highland Mall until December 22 and live Christie's menacing world through six scenes in three acts over one accelerating, menacing weekend.

Christie teases with threats of murder but she's really enticing you with comfort food. The cast is a familiar gallery of types and rogues: a careless playboy (Stephen Mercantel), a stern moralistic spinster (Bernadette Nason), a vigorous military officer with derring-do (Brian Coughlin) and a doddering old general (Dirk van Allen), a Harley Street physician (Craig Kanne), a stuffy judge (Steve Shearer), a working-class policeman (Michael Stuart), a secretary (Hildreth England) and a pair of serio-comic servants (Laura Walberg and Christopher Loveless). Familiar characters and familiar Austin Playhouse faces accompany you through the highly stylized plot.

NONE opt 550
Craig Kanne, Bernadette Nason, Steve Shearer, Brian Coughlin, Hildreth England, Michael Stuart, Stephen Mercantel, Christopher Loveless, Dirk van Allen, Laura Walberg (photo: Austin Playhouse) 
Director Laura Toner does a pretty good job of differentiating them and moving them around, even though with a cast of that size the relatively bare single set does feel a bit like the waiting room at Victoria station. Suddenly a voice of doom thunders from the next room, rapidly delivering a list of names and accusations. The characters freeze in place about the stage. This occurs before we've quite sorted out this menagerie, so we're initially confused by the charges that turn out to have been delivered by a platter on the grammophone.

How did they all get here in the first place? Exposition is ample and talky. Each was misled or enticed into accepting the invitation although the identity of the host (or employer) wasn't entirely clear. If we weren't willing to suspend belief and accept this variation of the old locked-room puzzle, we'd think them a flock of silly geese. And we happily swallow the convention that shortly before receiving the fatal dose/blow/shot/chop/push, each character is going to deliver a revelation, perhaps a confession, that elucidates the motivation of the invisible justicer.

Read more at Central Texas Live Theatre. . . .

Monday, November 25, 2013

Bernadette Nason's 2013 Performances of A Christmas Carol by Dickens, December 4 in Spicewood, December 18 in Austin



Two Shows Only! One in Spicewood, One in Austin!


A Christmas Carol Bernadette Nason Austin TX
Bernadette Nason (via Facebook)

Charles Dickens'


A CHRISTMAS CAROL
presented by Bernadette Nason


Wednesday, December 4, 2013 at 7 p.m. at Spicewood Vineyards, 1419 Burnet County Road 409, Spicewood (spicewoodvineyard.com)
Wednesday, December 18, 2013 at 7 p.m. (further details to be announced)

Award-winning actress/storyteller Bernadette Nason reprises her role as EVERYONE in this critically-acclaimed one-woman version of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, bringing vivid life to more than 30 characters.

A Christmas Carol has retained its place as a Christmas classic for over 150 years. Charles Dickens streamlined A Christmas Carol to make it appropriate for his own readings. This version uses the text (almost entirely) from Charles Dickens' own abridged version of his tale.


 
"Now this is a one-woman show. And Nason does portray all the characters. But stating these facts doesn't fully connect to the statement that Nason is A Christmas Carol,: narrator, characters, beginning, middle, drama, humor, end, and all..." Austin Chronicle, December 2009

"We kid you not. This is the Carol to see." Austin Chronicle, December 2010

"This one-woman-show version of the Dickens classic, brought to you by Bernadette Nason at the City Theatre, will send shivers of goodness down your spine while it warms the cockles of your solstice heart. Recommended." Austin Chronicle, December 2011

"Bernadette (Nason) delivers Dickens' quick-moving vivid text with crisp assurance and deft, economical mime. No exaggerations or mugging here; a shift of the shoulders, a roughening of the voice, a glint in the eye and she creates Ebenezer Scrooge in our minds, not in pantomime on the stage. Hers is the opposite of a bravado performance. She invites us into the fable, sketches the characters, and articulates the text with precision and relish... They're all here -- skinflint Scrooge, meek Bob Cratchit, Scrooge's bounding nephew Fred, the two quite distinct old gentlemen soliciting charity, each of the Crachit children, three spirits of Christmas and a goodly crowd of others..." Austin Live Theatre, December 2010

"Bernadette Nason's one-woman show sees her take up the role of a master storyteller whose narration is very close to the soul of the original work...A Christmas Carol, has a number of characters with diverse personalities making it very difficult subject for a monologue. On the contrary, Nason actually manages to bring life to over 30 characters, and goes on to give each character a unique voice and facial expression..." Austin Post, December 2010


Friday, February 15, 2013

Other Desert Cities by Jon Robert Baitz, Austin Playhouse, January 25 - February 24, 2013

Austin Live Theatre reviewOther Desert Cities Austin Playhouse TX



by Michael Meigs

In an age when 'dysfunctional' all too often is appended to 'American family' in the U.S. theatre, Jon Robin Baitz's Other Desert Cities spends much of its two acts appearing to explore yet another meltdown.


Lyman and Polly Wyeth are prosperous California retirees with backgrounds in Hollywood and Republican politics. Their children are several sorts of messes. The older son got into drugs and then into political violence, getting implicated in a deadly firebombing before disappearing forever from a ferry in the waters outside Seattle. The daughter, Brooke, a promising writer, wound up in a psychiatric institution and is only now crawling back to reality. The younger son's a cynical survivor who produces a television show where small claims are decided by a retired judge and a jury of freaks.

Other Desert Cities Jon Robin Baitz Austin Playhouse
Rick Roemer, Lara Toner (photo: C. Loveless)
Just your average California family, so to speak. And to add some zip, it's Christmas, and the recovering daughter has written a tell-all autobiography that she wants her parents to embrace.


Baitz's script is carefully crafted, loading us up with exposition over the first twenty minutes or so and only slightly stretching our creduility. We're helped by Toner's casting, for Babs George and Rick Roemer give their characters good solid Republican self-assurance. She comfortably inhabits the sharp-tongued, steadily bibulous mother, and Roemer radiates warmth and charisma, no doubt much like that of Ronald Reagan. 

Brooke the wayward daughter is annoying. She suffers from cognitive dissonance, determined to publish the exposé and yet wanting the victims of the revelations, her family, to approve the exercise. Lara Toner does the best she can with the character's whining intensity.


This is a spiritually amorphous California-American family, not anchored anywhere except in bourgeois comfort. Polly is from a Jewish family, but she's not in the least engaged in faith; Lyman's a man of bonhomie and appearances. That is, at least in part, what the play's about: what is really important to these characters, deep down, as Polly threatens to punish their daughter by refusing to speak to her ever again?

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

OTHER DESERT CITIES by Jon Robin Baitz, Austin Playhouse at Highland Mall, January 25 - February 24, 2013


Austin Playhouse TX











(performing in 2013 at Highland Malll -- click for instructions and map)

presents




Other Desert Cities

by Jon Robin Baitz Other Desert Cities Jon Robin Baitz Austin Playhouse TX
directed by Don Toner

January 25 – February 24, 2013
Thursdays–Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 5 p.m.
Austin Playhouse at Highland Mall, 6001 Airport Blvd., Austin, TX 78752
TICKETS: $28 Thursday/Friday, $30 Saturday/Sunday
$37 Opening Night with champagne reception: Friday, January 25
Box office 512.476.0084 or online at: www.austinplayhouse.com
DISCOUNTS: All student tickets are half-price.
Austin Playhouse is proud to bring Austin audiences Baitz’ powerful family drama. In the award-winning Other Desert Cities, Baitz brings us an emotionally charged play about a family coming to terms with long-held secrets. “Baitz’ latest familial drama manages to be funny, cutting, and illuminating. Secrets, lies, and betrayals play out against a backdrop of Californian affluence and restraint. This is rich dysfunction – zingers are delivered with a whiskey chaser.” –The Huffington Post

Brooke Wyeth (Lara Toner) returns home to Palm Springs after a six-year absence and a mental breakdown to celebrate Christmas with her parents (Babs George and Rick Roemer), her brother (Jacob Trussell), and her aunt (Bernadette Nason). Brooke announces that she is about to publish a memoir dredging up a pivotal and tragic event in the family's history—a wound they don't want reopened. In effect, she draws a line in the sand and dares them all to cross it.


The play premiered Off-Broadway in January 2011 to critical acclaim and transferred to Broadway in November 2011, marking the Broadway debut of a Baitz play. The play was named Outstanding New Off-Broadway Play by the Outer Critics Circle and won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Play. It was a finalist for the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. (Click to view Wikipedia article)


Jon Robin Baitz’s plays include My Beautiful Goddamn City, Ten Unknowns, The Paris Letter, Mizlansky/Zilinsky or Schmucks, A Fair Country, The Substance of Fire, and an adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler. His television credits include The West Wing, Alias, and Brothers and Sisters, which he created.

Production Team Don Toner is the director. Buffy Manners is the costume designer. Don Day is the lighting designer. Set Design is by Don Toner and Patrick Crowley.

Critical Praise "The most richly enjoyable new play for grown-ups that New York has known in many seasons…In his most fully realized play to date, Mr. Baitz makes sure our sympathies keep shifting among the members of the wounded family portrayed here. Every one of them emerges as selfish, loving, cruel, compassionate, irritating, charming and just possibly heroic…leaves you feeling both moved and gratifyingly sated." —NY Times. "Astutely drawn…juicy and surprising." —NY Daily News. "Spending time with these messed-up, complicated people is a genuine pleasure." —NY Post. "Power, passion, and superbly crafted palaver stippled with blowdarts of wit—this is what Baitz does best." —New York Magazine.

Austin Playhouse at Highland Mall

Austin Playhouse is currently performing at Highland Mall. The mall’s South entrance is the most convenient to Austin Playhouse. Take the escalator down to the lower level and turn right. Austin Playhouse is on your right, across from the Express.

Austin Playhouse
is a professional theatre currently performing its 13th season. Under the leadership of Producing Artistic Director Don Toner and Associate Artistic Director Lara Toner, Austin Playhouse has grown from a three-play season on the campus of Concordia University, to a year-round operation producing an average of eight plays a year. Austin Playhouse is currently building its own two-performance venue space in the heart of the new Mueller Redevelopment Town Center, adjacent to the new Austin Children’s Museum.


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Upcoming: A Christmas Carol performed by Bernadette Nason, Bastrop Opera House, December 14 - 16



Bastrop Opera House






presents

A Christmas Carol

a one-woman production by Bernadette NasonA Christmas Carol Bernadette Nason
December 14 - 16
Acclaimed guest production composed by the artist
December 14, 15 at 7:30 pm
December 15, 16 at 2:00 pm















(Click to return to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Dinner in Dubai by Bernadette Nason, City Theatre, July 5 - 15





by Michael Meigs

Dinner in Dubai Bernadette Nason Austin TX
Bernadette Nason
Bernadette Nason is one of those unexpected treasures who makes Austin theatre such a pleasure to explore. I first saw her at the Austin Playhouse in Blithe Spirit by Noël Coward shortly after we arrived in Austin almost five years ago -- before, in fact, the notion of writing about Austin theatre even occurred to me.

 Bernadette played Madame Arcati, the loony medium who unleashes the spirit world upon the wealthy but hapless author Charles Condamine. She was funny, eccentric and quite undisturbed by the cantankerous ghosts; her performance brought her the 2007-2008 B. Iden Payne award as outstanding featured actress in a comedy.

Bernie's persona -- and her personae onstage -- bring to my mind a jaunty little ballad by Rodgers and Hart for the forgotten stage comedy I Married An Angel (1938). It's titled A Twinkle in Your Eye and the opening bars are, "You can do any little thing that you've a mind to/But you must do it with a twinkle in your eye." No, I never saw the show; I discovered this mischievous little ditty on Dawn Upshaw's compilation of R&H tunes:

(© 1996, Nonesuch Records )

So where did this very English charmer come from? She decided to give us some of her personal history, working with colleague Michael Stewart first on a one-woman performance entitled Tea in Tripoli describing her life as a tender young ex-pat in Libya and now with the sequel Dinner in Dubai. Nason is a gifted story teller and earns some of her daily bread from that art; this narrative of just over ninety minutes has the comfortable confiding intimacy of a good heart-to-heart over a couple of bottles of wine. Or perhaps over the bottle of gin that plays a key role in the wild dinner of the title.

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

Monday, June 11, 2012

Upcoming: Dinner in Dubai by Bernadette Nason, City Acts! Festival, July 4 - 14


Dinner in Dubai
Dinner in Dubai Bernadette Nason
Dubai Party girl (Bernadette Nason)

written and performed by Bernadette Nason
directed by Michael Stuart
Part of the City Theatre 2012 Summer Acts Festival
3823 Airport Blvd., Austin, TX 78722 (click for map)
Only 6 performances:
Thursday, July 5 at 7:00 pm
Sunday, July 8 at 8:00 pm
Tuesday, July 10 at 7:00 pm
Thursday, July 12 at 9:00 pm
Saturday, July 14 at 12:00 noon
Saturday, July 14 at 8:00 pm

Ticket price $15 - for reservations:


Call: 512.454.4925
Email: bnason@austin.rr.com


Hot on the heels of Tea in Tripoli, award-winning actress, writer and storyteller, Bernadette Nason presents Dinner in Dubai. Travel with our intrepid heroine from North Africa to the Persian Gulf (aka from the frying pan into the fire) as she shares life in Dubai c. 1990 in an unusual blend of storytelling and stand-up. From Middle East hotel to green golf courses in the sand; from demented shipping magnate to "Desert Storm."

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Upcoming: Tales from Merrie England by Bernadette Nason, Scottish Rite Theatre, June 9 - 10


Scottish Rite Theatre
presents

Bernadette Nason
Tales from Merrie England

by storyteller Bernadette Nason
Saturday, June 9 at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday, June 10 at 2 p.m.
W. 18th Street at Lavaca (click for map)
Tickets $8.75 including fees via
brown paper tickets

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Upcoming: Tea in Tripol by and with Bernadette Nason, Scottish Rite Theatre, June 9




ONE NIGHT ONLY!
  (reinstated; scheduling conflict resolved)

Tea in Tripoli

 
Tea in Tripoli Bernadette Nason Austin TX




by and with
Actress/Storyteller Bernadette Nason
The Scottish Rite Theatre, 18th and LaVaca (click for map)

June 9, 8 p.m.

Folks who missed it (and many who saw it) asked if I'd do another run. Since I'm writing and preparing to rehearse the sequel, DINNER IN DUBAI, this is a one-off performance to "catch you up."

Your last chance to see actress/storyteller Bernadette Nason's award-nominated one-woman show TEA IN TRIPOLI before she brings you the sequel!

Once upon a time, between the Mediterranean Sea and the Sahara Desert, in a land of sundrenched beaches, swaying palms and crumbling Italian villas, lived a naive Englishwoman...

In an unusual blend of storytelling and stand-up, actress/storyteller Bernadette Nason shares life in Libya c. 1984, from home-made hooch and crazy expatriates to confrontations with the Morality Police.

  • "What a delightful evening! Bernadette Nason is one of Austin's best story tellers and this evening is witty, tender and so informative. Try not to miss this lovely event. You will be amazed at what her experiences in Libya reveal." (5 stars)  Road Warrior, Reviewer, NowPlayingAustin.com

  • "In TEA IN TRIPOLI, Austinites get to see for themselves why Nason is heralded as one of the best storytellers in the city, as she gives us a story that is at turns gripping, shocking, and laugh-out-loud funny, but one that never feels unbalanced. It was hands-down the stand out production at this year's Summer Acts Festival, and with any luck, it will take stages again soon."  Ryan Johnson, Austin Examiner

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Boeing Boeing by Marc Camoletti, Austin Playhouse, January 27 - February 26


Boeing Boeing Austin Playhouse

by Catherine Dribb


Prepare For Takeoff! Austin Playhouse Is Flying Farce Class!


Boeing Boeing, or boing boing as the case may be, with actors bouncing all over the stage and in and out of doors, is a modern farce written by Marc Camoletti in the classic French style. Directed by Don Toner, it is running now until February 26 in the tent at Mueller that is Austin Playhouse’s temporary home.


Boeing Boeing is an uplifting tale of love, but not just because it features three airline stewardesses. Camoletti and British translator Beverly Cross were careful to balance the chauvinistic egoism that rules leading man Bernard’s carefully calculated love life with the Parisian mantra of love. There’s no Prufrock in Paris with Bernard who is played by David Stokey. His abundant confidence is communicated in the first scene as he records in his timetables when fiancée number one (the American) will leave (in just a few minutes) and return (on Monday).

Janet, is from the So-uth (yes, that’s two syllables) and Lara Toner does the character with her suitably Southern drawl and hair-do. Janet wants only the best of the best in life: a millionaire husband. Unbeknownst to Bernard, Janet matches him in her frivolous attitude toward marriage. She prefers practising kissing on the couch with Bernard’s old school pal Robert, just arrived in Paris, to monogamy or marriage.

Robert, played by Zach Thompson has accepted Bernard’s invitation to stay with him until he finds his own place. He quickly learns of his old school chum’s unique lifestyle. Juggling three airline stewardesses who will never run into each other thanks to that handy dandy airline log, sets Bernard, and now Robert who’s in on the secret, up for a big… well… farce.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, November 4, 2011

Upcoming: A Christmas Carol performed solo by Bernadette Nason, City Theatre, December 1 - 18

Received directly:


Bernadette Nason in A Christmas Carol by Dickens


Bernadette Nason presents her one-actor performance of

A Christmas Carol

by Charles Dickens

December 1 - 18, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m.

City Theatre, 3823 Airport Blvd (behind the Shell station) (click for map)

Tickets $20; for students and seniors, $15. Thursdays all seats are $15.

Reservations: (512) 454-4925 or by e-mail request to bnason@austin.rr.com


Award-winning actress and storyteller Bernadette Nason reprises her roles as EVERYONE in this critically-acclaimed one-woman version of Charles Dickens' of A CHRISTMAS CAROL, bringing vivid life to more than 30 characters.

A Christmas Carol has retained its place as a Christmas classic for over 150 years. Charles Dickens abridged A Christmas Carol to streamline the story and make it appropriate for his own readings. This version uses the text (almost entirely) from Charles Dickens' own abridged version of his tale.


Bernadette Nason last appeared in her own one-woman show, Tea in Tripoli (nominated for three B. Iden Payne awards) and before that in The Importance of Being Earnest at the Austin Playhouse. REGIONAL CREDITS include: Austin Playhouse -- Sylvia, Blithe Spirit, Steel Magnolias, The Underpants. Austin Shakespeare -- The Rivals, Richard III, The Winter’s Tale, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Twelfth Night. ONSTAGE Theatre -- Shirley Valentine, Harvey, The Mousetrap, Educating Rita. She has worked with numerous other theatre groups and received many awards including the 2007 Austin Critics’ Table Special Citation, “The John Bustin Award for Conspicuous Versatility.” She's appearing at St. Edward's University in the Mary Moody Northen Theatre's production of A Lie of the Mind.

AFFILIATIONS: Austin Playhouse acting company, Actors' Equity, SAG.


By day, she is professional touring storyteller, acclaimed both for her spirited re-telling of multicultural folktales and for her personal stories pulled from the contrasting lifestyles of places she’s lived: England, Africa (Libya), the Persian Gulf (Dubai) and the US. Her extraordinary tales present an Englishwoman’s take on being a foreigner abroad with the more profound theme of seeking out new cultures in the search for self. With humorous self-observation, she draws from her cultural experiences to highlight universal truths and life lessons learned through her travels.


"If Monty Python went looking for a female cast member, Bernadette Nason would be an obvious choice. She's innovative, polished, and funny -- a most proper 'pepperpot' of a storyteller."
Barbara McBride Smith, Storyteller (National Storytelling Festival)

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Upcoming: A Lie of the Mind by Sam Shepard, Mary Moody Northen Theatre, St. Edward's University, November 10 - 20


Received directly:


Mary Moody Northen Theatre



presentsA Lie of the Mind Sam Shepard Mary Moody Northen Theatre St. Edward's University

A Lie of the Mind

by Sam Shepard

directed by Jared J. Stein

November 10 – 20

Thursday – Saturday evenings at 7:30 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m.

Added performance on Wednesday, November 16at 7:30 PM

Mary Moody Northen Theatre

St Edward’s University, 3001 South Congress Avenue (click for map)

$18 Advance ($15 Students, Seniors, SEU Community), $20 at the door

Available through the MMNT Box Office, (512) 448-8484

Box Office Hours are M -F 1- 5 p.m.

Special student discount night on Friday, November 11. Student tickets $7 with ID.

A Lie of the Mind is recommended from mature audiences. The play contains strong language and adult situations.

“[A] savage love ballad...of black anomie and blacker humor.” — New York Theatre

From Pulitzer Prize-winner Sam Shepard (Buried Child) comes a searing examination of family relationships and the illusory nature of redemptive love. Two families united by the marriage of their children are ripped apart when a man violently beats his wife and leaves her for dead. The long road to healing serves as a vehicle for a deep, haunting and darkly humorous exploration of love and loss in the American landscape. Winner of the 1986 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Play and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, A Lie of the Mind features Equity guests Sheila Gordon, Bernadette Nason and Rod Porter (The West Wing).

About Mary Moody Northen Theatre Through the Mary Moody Northen Theatre, students work alongside professional actors, directors and designers to explore all facets of theatrical production, create vibrant productions and earn points towards membership in Actor’s Equity Association, the union of professional actors and stage managers in the United States. This program is one of only three in the country that offer Equity member candidacy within an undergraduate-only curriculum. MMNT operates under an AEA U/RTA contract and is a member of Theatre Communications Group. For more information, contact the theatre program at 512-448-8487 or visit us online at www.stedwards.edu/theatre.

About St. Edward's University Founded by the Congregation of Holy Cross, St. Edward's University is named among the top five "Up-and-Coming Universities" in the Western Region by its academic peers in a 2011 U.S. News & World Report survey. For eight consecutive years St. Edward's has been recognized as one of "America's Best Colleges" by U.S. News & World Report. St. Edwards' has also been named one of "America's Best Colleges" by Forbes and the Center for College Affordability. St. Edward's is a private, Catholic, liberal arts university of more than 5,400 students located in Austin, Texas. For more information on St. Edward's University, visit www.stedwards.edu.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Upcoming: Tea in Tripoli, Bernadette Nason at Summer Acts! Festival, City Theatre, July 7 - 12,

Found on-line:

for the City Theatre 2011 Summer Acts! festivalBernadette Nason

Tea in Tripoli

TH7@7, SU10@8, TU12@7
TH14@9, SA16@8, SU17@12


Austin Phoenix Productions/Bernadette Nason

City Theatre, 3823 Airport Blvd (behind the Shell station) (cick for map)


Between the Mediterranean and the Sahara, in a land of sun-drenched beaches, swaying palms and crumbling Italian villas, lived a naïve Englishwoman. In an unusual blend of storytelling and stand up, actress/storyteller Bernadette Nason, shares life in Libya, c. 1984: from home-made booze and crazy expatriates to confrontations with the Morality Police.

Reservations:
512-454-4925/bnason@austin.rr.com bernadettenason.com

Monday, February 7, 2011

The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, Austin Playhouse, January 14 - February 13



This
"Trivial Comedy for Serious People" opened in 1895 and it was the last shining moment for Wilde's career as writer and dramatist. Soon afterwards he found himself in court, accused of immoral behavior and then sentenced to gaol. Because of that scandal the original production closed after only 86 performances. Since then it has become one of the most dependable and regularly revived comic satires on the boards.

Wilde's earnest young men show themselves of strenuously conventional Victorian morality in society but entirely subversive in their private lives.


Both Algernon Moncrieff (Jason Newman) and Jack Worthing (Benjamin Summers) have secret identities. Algernon goes "Bunberrying," using the excuse of a mythical ailing relative to escape from unappealing social engagements and to sail off on devil-may-care exploits.

Jack uses the excuse of his mythical brother "Earnest" to get away from the tedium of the country and the responsibilities of his guardianship for the fetching but bubble-headed Cecily, his ward and the daughter of his deceased benefactor. Masquerading as "Earnest" while in London, Jack is courting Algy's cousin Gwendolen.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, January 21, 2011

Images from The Importance of Being Earnest, Austin Playhouse, January 14 - February 20

Austin Playhouse posts images by an uncredited photographer, January 20, for

Oscar Wilde’sImportance of Being Earnest Austin Playhouse

The Importance of Being Earnest:

A Trivial Comedy for Serious People

Directed by Don Toner

Featuring Rick Roemer as Lady Bracknell and Bernadette Nason as Miss Prism

January 14 – February 13; Thursday–Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 5 p.m.

Austin Playhouse, 3601 S. Congress, Bldg. C

www.austinplayhouse.com and on Facebook and Twitter

Bernadette Nason Importance of Being Earnest Austin Playhouse

Tickets: $26 Thursday and Friday, $28 Saturday and Sunday, $35 Opening Night

Can be purchased at the box office 512.476.0084 or online at: www.austinplayhouse.com

To become a subscriber: call 512.476.0084

Click to view larger versions and additional images at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Click to view full album on Facebook. . . .

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Upcoming: The Importance of Being Earnest, Austin Playhouse, January 14 - February 13


Received directly:Importance of Being Earnest, Austin Playhouse

Austin Playhouse logo

presents Oscar Wilde’s

The Importance of Being Earnest:

A Trivial Comedy for Serious People

Directed by Don Toner

Featuring Rick Roemer as Lady Bracknell and Bernadette Nason as Miss Prism

January 14 – February 13; Thursday–Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 5 p.m.

Austin Playhouse, 3601 S. Congress, Bldg. C

www.austinplayhouse.com and on Facebook and Twitter

TIX: $26 Thursday and Friday, $28 Saturday and Sunday, $35 Opening Night

Can be purchased at the box office 512.476.0084 or online at: www.austinplayhouse.com

To become a subscriber: call 512.476.0084


Austin Playhouse produces Oscar Wilde’s light effervescent comedy The Importance of Being Earnest. Written in 1884 and first produced the following year, The Importance of Being Earnest is directly influenced by Great Britain’s late Victorian era. Wilde continuously makes light of the era’s mores, social customs, marriage, and particularly the pursuit of love.

The play features Jack, who is a seemingly responsible and respectable young man; but Jack leads a double life. At his country estate, Jack is known as Jack, but in the city, he is known as Ernest. Even Jack’s best friend Algernon who has known him for years, thinks he is Earnest. As Jack begins to fall in love with a woman who believes his name is Earnest, he finds himself in peculiar and amusing situations.

The Importance of Being Earnest has been considered Wilde’s artistic breakthrough—combining self-parody and a humorous commentary on the melodramatic genre in which he had already had so much success.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Thursday, December 16, 2010

A Christmas Carol, told by Bernadette Nason at the Larry L. King stage, Austin Playhouse, December 9 - 21

Bernadette Nason (photo: Austin Playhouse)





Austin Playhouse provides an atmospheric little set for Bernadette Nason's telling of A Christmas Carol, and she's in costume when she enters primly from the single door at upstage right. Nason smiles an acknowledgment of us as she hangs up coat and scarf, then turns to address us.


From that point the story takes over, for Bernadette delivers Dickens' quick-moving, vivid text with crisp assurance and deft, economical mime. No exaggerations or mugging here; a shift of the shoulders, a roughening of the voice, a glint in the eye and she creates Ebenezer Scrooge in our minds, not in pantomime on the stage. Hers is the opposite of a bravado performance. She invites us into the fable, sketches the characters, and articulates the text with such precision and relish that we realize for the first time that Dickens has created a prose poem.

Yes, it's a morality play, and a powerful one. One may question the enthusiasm of those who propose that this short creation, which runs barely an hour in Nason's re-telling, gave shape to the English and eventually to the American celebration of the holiday, with gifts and roast meats and hearty family gathering. After all, the bleak mid-winter has been since pagan times a period for huddling together and sharing, and early church fathers had good reason to set the Christmas story at that season of the year.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Upcoming: Reading of New Text for Hedda Gabler, Palindrome Theatre at Hyde Park Theatre, December 6

Received directly fromHedda Gabler (image from www.wfu.edu)

Palindrome Theatre




ONE NIGHT ONLY- PUBLIC READING of

HENRIK IBSEN’S HEDDA GABLER

New adaptation by Palindrome Theatre’s Resident Playwright Nigel O’Hearn

Monday Dec. 6, 8 p.m., Hyde Park Theatr, Guadalupe & 43rd St.

Free. Donations accepted

www.palindrometheatre.com

Please join us for a preview of the first play of our second season- Henrik Ibsen's Hedda Gabler with a new adaptation by Palindrome's resident playwright, Nigel O'Hearn- world premiere opening February 2011 at The Blue Theater.

The reading will be of the first two acts of the new material which has never before been seen in public.

Reading features Robin Grace Thompson, Chase Crossno, Bernadette Nason, Nathan Osburn, Gabe Luna, Kim Adams, and Harvey Guion (with playwright reading stage directions and scowling).

Drinks to be served, discussion to be had. Approx 2 hrs.

[image adapted from image at www.wfu.edu]

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Upcoming: A Christmas Carol told by Bernadette Nason, Austin Playhouse Larry L. King Theatre, December 9 - 21


Found on-line:

Bernadette Nason (photo from Austin Playhouse)




Austin Playhouse presents

at its Larry L. King Theatre


Bernadette Nason telling



A Christmas Carol

by Charles Dickens

December 9-December 21

Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m, Sundays at 5 p.m.

Austin Playhouse Larry L. King Theatre, Penn Field, 3601 South Congress (click for map)

Tickets $10 and $20 available from the boxoffice at (512) 476-0084 or on-line

Austin Playhouse is thrilled to bring the wildly popular classic A Christmas Carol back to the stage. A Christmas Carol has been adapted countless ways, but Austin Playhouse presents the play with a new twist for Austinites to enjoy this holiday season.


Austin Playhouse’s presentation of A Christmas Carol features award-winning actress and storyteller Bernadette Nason as the lone actress in the play. Nason will steal the show, capturing over 30 characters to narrate the story to the audience.


Nason dazzled audiences with her performance last year. The Austin Chronicle said “Bernadette Nason's one-woman telling of the tale doesn't feel like a version of 'A Christmas Carol' at all. It feels pure and from the heart, closer to Dickens' novel itself… "


A Christmas Carol, a favorite for all ages, is open to families, but is not geared toward young children and children under 5 are not permitted to this show.


Friday, March 12, 2010

Upcoming: An All-Female Staged Reading of The Taming of The Shrew, Austin Shakespeare at the Curtain Theatre, March 25 - 27


Click for ALT review, March 26


Received directly:

Austin Shakespeare presents an all female cast in

The Taming of the Shrew


A Slapstick Comedy for the Lighthearted

written by William Shakespeare, directed by Ann Ciccolella

Friday, March 25 – Sunday, March 27 at 8 p.m.
at Richard Garriott’s Curtain Theater on the shores of Lake Austin, 7400 Coldwater Canyon Dr. (click to view Google map)

Tickets $24, available at www.nowplayingaustin.com or at the door.
Discount tickets available.

or follow Austin Shakespeare on Twitter: @austinshakes


After the success of packed houses during the run of Mary Stuart, Austin Shakespeare continues its 25th anniversary season with an all-female cast in a staged reading of the classic Shakespeare comedy. The Taming of the Shrew will play at Richard Garriott’s own Curtain Theater, a scaled replica of an Elizabethan outdoor theater nestled along the banks of Lake Austin, March 25 through 27 at 8 p.m.

“In Shakespeare’s time, only men were allowed on stage, even to play the female roles,” said Ann Ciccolella, artistic director of Austin Shakespeare. “We wanted to turn the tables and see a full cast of charismatic women to bring this comedy to life on a stage that resembles one of Shakespeare’s own.”

The story is based on the beautiful merchant’s daughter Bianca, and her admirers Lucentio, Gremio and Hortensio. Her father insists that she will not marry until her after her older, shrewish sister, Kate does, so Bianca's suitors persuade fortune-seeker Petruchio to court her. Bianca's suitors pay for any costs involved, even Kate's dowry, but Kate shows in no uncertain terms how opposed she is to marrying anyone.


The Taming of the Shrew
is among one of Shakespeare’s earlier comedies and it shares characteristics with his other romantic comedies such as Much Ado About Nothing and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The play is lighthearted, with slapstick humor, disguises and deception, replete with a happy ending.


The Curtain Theater is located in the heart of Garriott’s Castleton Village that is tucked away in a pecan grove along Lake Austin and features a fort, ship, lighthouse and jail. The Curtain Theatre is off City Park Rd., near Rts. 2222 and 360. (click for Google map)

THE CAST for TAMING OF THE SHREW

Jill Swanson as Petruchio, Gwen Kelso as Kate; with Babs George, Jill Blackwood, Linda Nenno, Karen Jambon, Kara Bliss Galbraith, Bernadette Nason, Jenny Larson, and Mary Alice Carnes
.

ABOUT AUSTIN SHAKESPEARE


Now in its 25th anniversary season, Austin Shakespeare (formerly Austin Shakespeare Festival) presents professional theater of the highest quality with an emphasis on the plays of William Shakespeare to Central Texas. Bringing to the public performances that are fresh, bold, imaginative, thought- provoking, and eminently accessible, Austin Shakespeare connects the truths of the past with the challenges and possibilities of today. Founded in 1984, Austin Shakespeare offers fall and spring sessions of "Shakespeare Studio," the organization’s professional actor training courses. In addition, actors, teachers, parents and students are welcome at the "Shakespeare Aloud" year-round weekly reading group. Austin Shakespeare also offers summer camps for high school students at St. Edward's University, and camps for children at Scottish Rite Children's Theatre, downtown.
Austin Shakespeare is a member of the Austin Circle of Theatres, and is funded in part by the City of Austin through The Cultural Arts Division and by a grant from the Texas Commission on the Arts.