Showing posts with label Carl Galante. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carl Galante. Show all posts

Thursday, January 10, 2013

THE ELEPHANT MAN by Bernard Pomerance, EmilyAnn Theatre, February 1 - 24, 2013


EmilyAnn Theatre and Gardens Wimberley TX











[EmilyAnn Theatre and gardens, 1101 FM 2325, Wimberley - click for map]


presents in its Burdine Johnson indoor studio

The Elephant Man EmilyAnn Theatre Wimberley TX
The Elephant Man

by Bernard Pomerance
directed by James Brownlee
February 1 - 24, Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m.

The EmilyAnn Theatre  and Gardens presents THE ELEPHANT MAN, by Bernard Pomerance, in our new Burdine Johnson Studio Theatre, February 1-24 (Fridays and Saturdays 7:30pm, Sundays 2pm). Directed by James Brownlee and featuring Carl Galante, Ian Ramos, Deanna Lalich, Darren Scharf, Carter Holland, Jym Evans, Kathy Brewer, and Meret Slover.

This beautiful and enthralling story of rejection, acceptance, and humanity is sure to enchant and engage audiences of all ages. Buy tickets online NOW at www.emilyann.org. Seating is limited.

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Sunday, August 29, 2010

The Fantasticks, Trinity Street Players at First Baptist Church, August 12 - 22




The Trinity Street Players call the third-floor theatre space at the First Baptist Church "the black box theatre." Now that I've attended three performances in that space, it seems to me that the appellation is a bit too generic.


"Black box" suggests a void, perhaps one that's wrapped in mystery. A better reference for this long-running Theatre Ministry might be "jewel box."


When we were living in Geneva, Switzerland, in the opening years of this 21st century, I took my adolescent daughter N with me for some special Christmas shopping. We went to Gobelins, the discreet high-priced dealer in jewelry and horlogerie at the Rue de Rive. In addition to their displays of the newest and most sparkling, Gobelins maintains a binder describing "heritage jewelry" for sale. With an appointment and a few days of advance notice, one can view a chosen assortment of previously-owned pieces. In that seance in early December, with my daughter's approval, in a heart-stopping moment I picked out a beautiful, classic Christmas present for my wife K.


That, approximately, is what the Trinity Street Players are about. In their third-floor space at the First Baptist Church on Trinity Street, they have been preparing and performing with discernment, discretion and style a selection of some of the best, most solid, traditional, high-value items of English language theatre. Assistant director David McCullars enticed me to their Steel Magnolias last year; I reveled in their You Can't Take It With You earlier this year; they are holding auditions on August 28 for the November production of Shadowlands, the play by William Nicholson based on the marriage of C.S. Lewis and Joy Gresham. McCullars will direct.


The Fantasticks fits solidly into that tradition. The show written by UT alumni celebrates its 50th anniversary this year and it is the longest-running musical in New York. In fact, UT is holding a two-day conference on October 15-16 to celebrate the anniversary, as well as staging its own production of The Fantasticks from October 15 - 24. From an earlier conversation with Trinity Street player the Rev. Ann Pittman, I had the impression that the players hadn't been aware that UT was planning the bash.


Director Cathy Jones rose to the occasion in her pre-curtain remarks, marking the 50th anniversary. That was diplomatic but unnecessary, because Trinity Street's attractive, gripping and musically sophisticated production of the show will stand up to any other that may come along.


The Fantasticks David Hammond Joe Penrod Carl GalantePart of the appeal of The Fantasticks is the simplicity of its concept. Boy and girl fall in love; their fathers pretend to oppose the match and hire "El Gallo," a bandit and merchant of dreams to give the boy his chance to be a hero. Romance triumphs but gives way to unease. In the second act the boy ventures forth to explore the cruel world while the girl dallies with the mendacious El Gallo. An eventual happy ending is tinged with the melancholy feel that life is more earnest and more difficult that the dreams of romance. This action is wrapped in tunes that have become key in the musical theatre canon: Try to Remember, Soon It's Gonna Rain, and I Can See It, to name only the most evident.

Cathy Jones recruited experienced, charismatic players for this show. Joe Penrod, playing the cynical El Gallo, is one of my favorites on the Austin musical stage. Justin Langford, playing the earnest, naive young man, appeared with Penrod in Man of La Mancha at the Georgetown Palace, capturing our attention with his pure tenor.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The Elephant Man, EmilyAnn Theatre, Wimberley, January 22 - February 14






Director Bridget Farias and the EmilyAnn Theatre crew in Wimberley are running
The Elephant Man Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays for four weekends in January and February, an intrepid undertaking for a community-based arts group in a town with a population of only about 4,000.

More impressive than their raw courage in taking on a tough script and slow-motion tragedy is the fact that they carry it out with grace and depth. The company creates a protected time and space in which we can muse about arbitrary fate, human connection and our responsibility for one another.

Audiences may be familiar with the story, based on historical fact as recorded by Dr. Frederick Treves, the physician who took in the disfigured young Joseph Carey Merrick. Writing many years after the events, Treves recalled his patient as "John Merrick," the name used by Bernard Pomerance for the Tony-nominated play in 1979. David Lynch made the movie in 1980 with Anthony Hopkins as Treves, John Hurt as Merrick, John Gielgud as chief physician Carr Gomm and Ann Bancroft as the actress Madge Kendal.

I haven't seen that version, though, and I encourage you simply to ignore it. Farias has assembled a capable and convincing cast for this quiet morality play, and they make the story their own.

Carl Galante as Treves and Patrick Byers as Merrick establish the key link and relationship in the story. Galante, playing the physician and man of science, is a protector and ultimately a father figure of conflicted emotions. Byers as the patiently suffering, attentive and sweet-tempered Merrick becomes a mirror to his visitors, once they learn to look past his disfigurement.

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

Friday, January 8, 2010

Upcoming: The Elephant Man, EmilyAnn Theatre, Wimberley, January 22 - February 14

Found on-line:








The EmilyAnn Theatre presents


Elephant Man

by Bernard Pomerance
Directed by Bridget Farias
January 22-February 14
Friday and Saturday nights, Sunday Matinees
Tickets - $15.00 - Click here for purchase tickets online!
1101 FM 2325, Wimberley, Texas 78676 Map

Limited to no more than 35 seats per performance! Buy your tickets now online or by calling the EmilyAnn Theatre at 512-847-6969! Don't miss this wonderful production featuring an amazing cast!

"I am not an elephant! I am not an animal! I am a human being! I am a man!"

A timeless, moving, and utterly astounding play that won a Tony award and every other major achievement for Best Play of 1979, later starring John Hurt, Anthony Hopkins, Anne Bancroft and John Gielgud in the 1980 film version that received eight Oscar nominations. The Elephant Man is the true story of a remarkable man whose body, though hideously deformed, contains a remarkably sensitive, funny and intelligent being. 'Discovered' by a brilliant young doctor, Frederick Treves, John Merrick becomes the toast of society, patronized by lords, ladies, clergymen and celebrities who admired his gentleness, intelligence and deep faith. But Treves' and Merrick's belief that Merrick can become a man like any other is a dream never to be realized. Stunningly theatrical, this modern classic, laced with humor and pathos, explores the nature of courage, heroism, morality, and inner beauty.

The Elephant Man Cast

* Frederick Treves- Carl Galante
* John Merrick- Patrick Byers
* Carr Gomm- Ed Boyle
* Mrs. Kendal- Dana Naughton
* Ross- Heath Thompson
* Bishop How- Alex Deleon
* First Pin/ Lady Ellen- Laura Ray
* Second Pin/ Duchess/ London Policeman- Jessica Sharpe
* Third Pin/ Princess Alexandra/ Nurse Sandwich- Ariana Kahn
* Belgian Policeman/ Lord John- Derek Vandi
* Man/Snork- Matt Ludwig
* Conductor/ Porter- Cyrus Mallison

Thursday, December 10, 2009

The Trial of Ebenezer Scrooge, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, December 4 - 19







Ebenezer Scrooge is everywhere around Austin this Christmastide.


At his fictional debut in London in 1843 the fictional old curmudgeon endured a long, long Christmas Eve but came through transformed and redeemed, much to the reading public early in Victoria's reign. Dickens intended the novella as an uplifting scold and a humanitarian lesson --and a money-maker. He didn't make much from it, particularly once unscrupulous publishers started churning out unauthorized editions. Within a year there were eight theatrical versions of the Christmas Carol in London, only one of them authorized, with another two in New York.

Dickens did establish an enduring set of characters and he was influential in shaping Anglo-Saxon celebration of the holiday. Some assert that the greeting "Merry Christmas" stems from the mouth of Scrooge's nephew Fred and others maintain that our celebratory, family-oriented rituals of the holiday are urbanized versions of 18th-century manorial customs admired by Dickens and emulated in this story.

Scrooge lives again for us this year in Austin and nearby, with -- count 'em -- seven straightforward versions (two conventional theatre pieces, two one-actor presentations, a version for children and a version by children, and a musical) and five spoofs (including Inspecting Carol, now underway both in Wimberley and in San Antonio). Pretty good for a 166-year-old.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Tuesday, December 1, 2009

New Images for Upcoming: The Trial of Ebenezer Scrooge, Gaslight Baker Theatre, Lockhart, December 4 - 19


UPDATE: Click for ALT review, December 10


Director Stephen Reynolds has shared images of the production, made by Eric Marsh and by Reynolds himself. The Trial of Ebenezer Scrooge is set a year after the miraculous events described by Dickens in A Christmas Carol. The comedy examines whether Scrooge kept his promises from that fateful Christmas Eve.

Right: Derek Smootz, Jay Young getting strangled, with Carl Galante as the judge, looking on.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Upcoming: My Fair Lady at EmilyAnn Theatre in Wimberley, last weekend June 19-21

Belatedly advised to The Statesman:

LAST CHANCE:

MY FAIR LADY

IN WIMBERLEY


This is the last week the EmilyAnn Theatre. in Wimberley is performing the classic My Fair Lady.

The
show, which features a 34-member cast, continues Friday through Sunday with Juli Dearrington as Eliza, the Cockney flowergirl turned lady with the help of the supercilious instructor Henry Higgins,played by Carl Galante.

Shows begin at 8 p.m. Tickets available online at www.emilyann.org or at the door.
Admission: adults $15, students $10, children younger than 5 free. Group discounts. The outdoor theater is at 1101 RM2325 in Wimberley. Chairs provided or bring a blanket for up-front seating. Hot dogs, popcorn, candy, water and soft drinks available beginning at 7 p.m. Handicap accessible seating available. 512-847-6969 www.emilyann.org.

Alfred Doolittle (Ian Green) sings 'Get Me to the Church on Time' during My Fair Lady. Photo by Scot Brinkley

Phone & Email
512-847-6969
info@emilyann.org



Mailing Address

The EmilyAnn Theatre

P.O. Box 801

Wimberley, Texas 78676


Physical Address

The EmilyAnn Theatre

1101 FM 2325

Wimberley, Texas 78676


Click for Yahoo map!

Friday, April 24, 2009

Leading Ladies, Wimberley Players, April 17 - May 10





Leading Ladies by Ken Ludwig has all the big-footed clowning of a British pantomime, that venerable, wheezy holiday art form in which the British public hoots and chortles at manly men dressing up as women. Dame Edna is the royalty of that genre, but every middle- and lower-class family wants to attend the local "panto" in December, and British TV comedy sketches will inevitably get around to putting a male comedian into something frilly, and preferably topping him with a hat.

The show is set in 1958. I was surprised when a little research turned up the fact that Ludwig's piece premiered at the Alley Theatre in Houston only five years ago. It has fallen into the warm embrace of community theatres since then. I missed the recent staging in Leander by the Way Off Broadway Community Players, but made up for it this past weekend with the Wimberley Players, at their handsome, intimate playhouse on Old Kyle Road.

Leading Ladies is a goofy masquerade. Two down-on-their-luck British actors of mediocre talent, on a whistle-stop tour of small town Moose Lodges and Elks Clubs, discover in a newspaper left on a train that a $3 million inheritance will soon be available to a young lady and two long-lost cousins, absent for many years in England. Aha! What better scheme for our wayward Brit showmen than to imitate those inheritors? Problem: a closer reading reveals that the lost are women, not men!

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