Showing posts with label Bobbie Oliver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bobbie Oliver. Show all posts

Saturday, January 18, 2014

True West by Sam Shepard, Weird Rodeo at the Off Center, January 9 - 25, 2014



Weird Rodeo Austin TX
(image: Weird Rodeo)
 


CTXLT review

 

by Dr. David Glen Robinson


The question one could ask is why a brand-new theatre company would challenge a play as complex and difficult as Sam Shepard’s True West for its premier production. And the question contains the answer—because it is a challenge, and all who see it can measure the company’s skill in their upward progress climbing the monument. That's the first reason to shout “Bravo!” at this show, one of the few.

Weird Rodeo wisely short-circuits some of the difficulties by assembling a highly talented cast and crew. The first stand-out is David Boss as Lee. He is superbly costumed and styled by Lindsay McKenna for his role, and he's an actor who has shown us he can easily learn and spout thousands of lines while physically stomping through any number of flaming sets. His role clearly drives the dialogues and action of the play, and Boss is easily capable of doing this in True West. But here is a note for director Jerry Fugit: Boss and all the actors need clear pause points for reactions and heightened intensity. Boss can fire daggers and poniards from his eyes, but he needs a few more opportunities in this play to do so. It’s not all machine-gun mouth and phone cords. The weaponry metaphors are apt.

Bob Jones as the movie producer Saul Kimmer matches his subtlety to Boss’s power. Lee addresses Saul with the predatory look of a coyote eyeing a rabbit. But Saul’s instincts are those of a rattlesnake, not a rabbit, and he correctly sees the brothers Austin (Chris Hejl) and Lee for who and what they are. Saul slithers through the story with complete control, a fact we notice only later. Bob Jones does excellent work, making his reactions and taking his silences as needed to flesh out his character.

The story of True West is well known: after years of separation family members come back together with the intensity of hypergolic solid rocket fuel, a trope perhaps invented by Sam Shepard. The biblical Prodigal Son parable it ain’t. The father is absent, said by Saul to be “destitute” which the entire audience takes to mean “insane.” Dad fled to the Desert, and here we see the first layerings of meaning on Shepard’s conception of Desert. The meanings Shepard gives it are largely chthonic, steeped in desolation and darkness. Mom (Bobbie Oliver) is in the Far North touring Alaska, a desert of another sort. The criminal but romantic seeker Lee sees the Desert as a refuge from authority and control, while Austin, educated and tame, fears it. Between scenes coyote voices on the soundtrack howl songs of death.

The Desert underlies the more surficial titular theme of the West. And here's where Weird Rodeo succeeds in the task it set for itself. We see clearly the distinction between brother Austin’s real West (freeways, palm trees and golf courses) and Lee’s unstated but described True West. All is made plain by Lee’s verbal homage to Kirk Douglas as the last cowboy on earth in the movie Lonely Are the Brave. Lee would have given his life to have worked in that film in any capacity, but Austin, the Ivy League screenwriter, has never seen the movie. The production ultimately accomplishes its theatrical and literary goals by making the West distinctions clear and dealing with their implications.

Read more at CTXLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Upcoming; Defiant by George Brand, Debutantes and Vagabonds, February 25 - March 13


Found on-line:

Debutantes and Vagabonds present

Defiant

by George Brant

directed by Amanda Garfield

February 25 - March 13, 2011

Thursdays-Saturdays at 8PM, Sundays at 5PM

added performances: Wednesdays, March 2 and 9

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

Reserve tickets on-line --

Starring: Dawn Erin, Craig Nigh, Emily Everidge, Jorge Sermini, Bobbie Oliver, Larry Oliver, and Brittany Flurry.

Music composed and performed by Ashleigh Stone.

Design by Jennifer Singletary, Eric Gazzillo, and Brigette Hutchison.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Upcoming: Defiant by George Brant, Debutantes and Vagabonds at Larry L. King Theatre, Austin Playhouse, February 24 - March 13

Found on-line:


Debutantes and Vagabonds present


Defiant by George Brant, Debutantes and Vagabonds, AustinDefiant

by George Brant

directed by Amanda Garfield

February 25 - March 13, 2011

Thursdays-Saturdays at 8PM, Sundays at 5PM

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

Reserve tickets on-line --

Starring: Dawn Erin, Craig Nigh, Emily Everidge, Jorge Sermini, Bobbie Oliver, Larry Oliver, and Brittany Flurry.

Music composed and performed by Ashleigh Stone.

Design by Jennifer Singletary, Eric Gazzillo, and Brigette Hutchison.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Images by Brett Brookshire: Morning's at Seven by Paul Osborne, Different Stages at the Vortex, November 19 - December 11

Images by Bret Brookshire found at the website for Different Stages:


Different Stages opens its 2010–2011 season with Paul Osborn’s comedyJennifer Underwood, Lana Dieterich, Sam Damon (image: Bret Brookshire)

Morning’s at Seven


November 19 - December 11
at the Vortex Repertory, 2307 Manor Road


This story is about the intertwined relationships and long standing sibling rivalries of the four aging Gibbs sisters. Three of them have lived next door to one another for fifty years and the eldest sister lives only a few blocks away. Living so close has taken its toll. The quiet lives these women share with their husbands start to come unhinged when some of them begin to question what to do with their remaining years. Tensions rise when Ida’s 40–year–old son brings his fiancé of 12 years to the house for the first time. A story about growing old, growing up, and letting go.


Directed by Karen Jambon (Eurydice), Morning’s at Seven features Jennifer Underwood (The Carpetbagger’s Children), Lana Dieterich (Vigil), Bobbie Oliver (Spider’s Web) and Kathleen Lawson (On Golden Pond) as the four Gibb sisters. Playing the three husbands are Michael Hankin (The Skin of Our Teeth), Richard Craig (Lettice and Lovage), and San Damon (Spider’s Web). Playing Ida’s son and his fiancé are Jonathan Urso (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof) and Anne Hulsman (The Carpetbagger’ss Children).

Performances are Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00 p.m. and Sundays at 7 p.m. There is no performance on Thanksgiving, Thursday November 25. Added performance on Wednesday December 8 at 8 p.m. Tickets are Pick your Price: $15, $20, $25, and $30. For tickets and information call 478-5282.


Bobbie Oliver, Jennifer Underwood (image: Bret Brookshire)









Click to view additional images by Bret Brookshire at AustinLiveTheatre.com. . . .

Monday, November 8, 2010

Upcoming: Morning's at Seven by Paul Osborne, Different Stages at the Vortex Repertory, November 19 - December 11

Received directly:


Morning's at Seven, Paul Osborne, Different Stages, Austin Texas

Different Stages opens its 2010–2011 season with Paul Osborn’s comedy

Morning’s at Seven


November 19 - December 11
at the Vortex Repertory, 2307 Manor Road


This story is about the intertwined relationships and long standing sibling rivalries of the four aging Gibbs sisters. Three of them have lived next door to one another for fifty years and the eldest sister lives only a few blocks away. Living so close has taken its toll. The quiet lives these women share with their husbands start to come unhinged when some of them begin to question what to do with their remaining years. Tensions rise when Ida’s 40–year–old son brings his fiancé of 12 years to the house for the first time. A story about growing old, growing up, and letting go.


Directed by Karen Jambon (Eurydice), Morning’s at Seven features Jennifer Underwood (The Carpetbagger’s Children), Lana Dieterich (Vigil), Bobbie Oliver (Spider’s Web) and Kathleen Lawson (On Golden Pond) as the four Gibb sisters. Playing the three husbands are Michael Hankin (The Skin of Our Teeth), Richard Craig (Lettice and Lovage), and San Damon (Spider’s Web). Playing Ida’s son and his fiancé are Jonathan Urso (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof) and Anne Hulsman (The Carpetbagger’ss Children).

Performances are Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00 p.m. and Sundays at 7 p.m. There is no performance on Thanksgiving, Thursday November 25. Added performance on Wednesday December 8 at 8 p.m. Tickets are Pick your Price: $15, $20, $25, and $30. For tickets and information call 478-5282.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Spider's Web, Different Stages at the Vortex Repertory, July 2 - 24







You don't see much of Agatha Christie in the United States any more, except perhaps in public libraries and the occasional revival of one of her many plays. Airport newstands will offer you thick paperbacks by Clive Custler or Sue Grafton or any of a number of other contemporary producers of blockbusters.

Different Stages does us a service by providing an accomplished and amusing production of her mid-twentieth-century curio, Spider's Web. Most of Dame Agatha's familiar elements are there: an isolated old manse in the countryside, a collection of proper, well brought up English folk, a murder and some earnest police officers trying to clear it up. There's a mystery to solve -- who assaulted the despicable Oliver Costello with a blunt object in the secret passage? Christie is very sporting with her puzzle, scattering clues along the way like Hansel and Gretel dropping breadcrumbs in the woods.

T.J. Jolley, Tyler Jones, Craig Kanne  (image: Brett Brookshire)Spider's Web is a comedy rather than a thriller. Clarissa, the vivacious young wife of a much older British diplomat, happily plays country hostess as husband Henry, all atwitter, rushes off to deal with Foreign Office business. She teases and charms the three men visiting from London -- her former guardian, who has been knighted; a half-deaf old country duffer; and a young man from London who courts her shamelessly. Mix in a couple of eccentric servants, the wicked dope dealer who gets bashed, and the plods from the local constabulary.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Monday, January 25, 2010

Upcoming: The Graveside Service by Tim Thomas, FronteraFest at Hyde Park Theatre, February 5


Received directly:



Announcing


The Graveside Service

by Timothy Thomas


as part of FronteraFest's Short Fringe. This is your first chance to get a glimpse at what will become a new musical from Loaded Gun Theory. This show will sell out!

Friday February 5, 2010, 8 p.m. at the Hyde Park Theatre
Buy Tickets Now!

Loaded Gun Theory will reveal everything about KOOP Radio's Mr. Spradling and Mr. Harris and their roles in the deaths of certain musicians.

Lights! Longing! Music! Carnage!

Directed by Amy Lewis with Craig Kanne as Mr. Harris,Gene Storie as Mr. Spradling, Nikki Zook as Lillian Price, Bobbie Oliver as Mrs. Roger T. Price

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 . . . .

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

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


Received directly:

Different Stages presents
Thornton Wilder’s


The Skin of Our Teeth

November 13 – December 5, 2009
The Vortex, 2307 Manor Road (map)

Thursdays – Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 7 p.m.
No Performance on Thanksgiving Day, November 26
Added performance Wednesday, December 2

Pick your Price: $15, $20, $25, $30

Different Stages opens its 2009–2010 season with Thornton Wilder’s comedy The Skin of Our Teeth. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, this is the satiric story of the extraordinary Antrobus family down through the ages from the time of the war – any war. They have survived flood, fire, pestilence, the seven year locusts, the ice age, the pox and the double feature, a dozen wars and as many depressions. Ultimately bewitched, befuddled and becalmed, they are the stuff of which heroes and buffoons are made. Their survival is a wacky testament of faith in humanity.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .