Showing posts with label Chaotic Theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chaotic Theatre. Show all posts

Saturday, January 19, 2013

BETRAYAL by Harold Pinter, Chaotic Theatre at the Off Center, February 8 - March 2, 2013



Chaotic Theatre Austin TS






 presents

 Betrayal by Harold Pinter Chaotic Theatre Austin TX
 Betrayal

by Harold Pinter
drected by Andrew Black
February 8th – March 2nd, 2013
All shows will be at 8 p.m., Thursdays-Sundays

@ The Off Center, 2211 Hidalgo, near E. 7th Street and Robert Martinez (behind Joe's Bakery)
Austin, TX 78702

Join us February 14th for our Anti-Valentines Day event with champagne and chocolate strawberries.

(Click to return to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)





Sunday, May 6, 2012

Friday, September 16, 2011

The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged), Chaotic Theatre Company at the Off Center, September 9 - 29

Complete Works of William Shakespeare Abridged Chaotic Theatre Austin TX

by Brian Paul Scipione


Though This

Be Madness . . .

When accused of madness by Rosencrantz, Hamlet replies, “I am but mad north-north-west: when the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw.”

The players of Chaotic Theater Company’s The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) are similarly feigning madness half the time. The rest of the time they really are mad.

Complete Works Shakespeare Abriged Chaotic Theatre Austin

With more costume changes than a Lady Gaga show, more pop cultural references than a prime time Fox TV show, and about as mush slapstick as a Three Stooges marathon, Andy Black, Craig Kanne, and Dave Stone-Robb tackle 37 of the Bard’s best works in under two hours. It is a feat that requires boundless energy and concentration as well as a shameless amount of ribald humor that is both tongue in and out of cheek.

They race around the stage and into the audience, they duel, prance, grapple, cook, chortle, and grouse. They employ every possible theatrical device to cover the gamut of emotions and magical moments in the canon, but most of all they make fun of everything in sight: the audience, each other, the classic characters, and the author himself.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Thursday, July 7, 2011

No Exit by Jean-Paul Sartre, Chaotic Theatre, July 1 - 17


ALT reviewNo Exit Chaotic Theatre Company Austin Texas

by Brian Paul Scipione


Death without End

Inès slips behind Estelle and coos comfortingly in her ear, gives her promises of faith, sisterhood and protection, and then suddenly she pinches her and shoves her away. . . Estelle cozies up to Garcin and whispers of an endless devotion in the only place that, endless, really has any meaning, then she turns away, haughtily dismissing him. . . Garcin shrugs aside his social predators and affirms his own solitude and determination, only to fall prostrate moments later before the prey turned predator. . . and so the eternal chess match of Sartre’s No Exit has begun.


Chaotic Theatre’s production at the Blue Theatre makes no bones about the fact that most audience members know they are walking into a glimpse of damnation. They even quote the play’s most memorable line on the back of the program, “Hell is other people.”


The set is perfect: an unmistakeable dead end. A white abyss, where imagination would be an intruder. The sound design is that of a punchy, eerie, nearly silent abyss. The set pieces are befitting of an eternal way station, because who really is comfortable waiting? But it is the pacing of this production that really seals the deal. When there is a pause, it is convincingly thoughtful for all involved. When there is a sudden burst of dialogue, it is somehow both spontaneous and expected.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, July 1, 2011

Profile by Brian Paul Scipione: Chaotic Theatre's No Exit by Jean-Paul Sartre, July 1 - 17



ALT profile

by Brian Paul Scipione

No Exit Chaotic Theatre


À huis ouvert: A Conversation with Director Andrew Black


If you wander over to the Blue Theater on any of the first three weekends of July you will happen upon the Chaotic Theater Company’s newest production: Jean-Paul Sartre’s No Exit. An existential literary classic and a definitive forerunner of the movement of the theater of the absurd, No Exit has been captivating and frightening audiences since its debut in German-occupied Paris in May, 1944. This is no obscure and rambling philosophical work. It’s a tightly woven drama that delights and mocks the viewer at the same time.

Three strangers are trapped in a room that can be nowhere else but hell itself. To quote Gassner and Quinn, “Each of the characters needs the other two to create some illusion about himself. Since existence, for Sartre, is the ability to create one’s future, the opposite of existence is hell, where man has no power to create his future” (1969).

Director Andrew Black took some time from hectic last minute preparations to answer questions about this new production.

What can we expect?

“I don’t want to say too much. We intend to give the audience the full experience of a night in hell. It’s very entertaining but it’s not a comedy.”

The cast?

“I’ve never worked with them before. In fact, I’ve never seen or heard of any of them before the audition. ( . . .) They were exactly what I was looking for. I’ve never been so happy with a cast in my whole life. They were very open with trying new things. They were open with allowing vulnerability and emotion to come out on stage and that’s intricate to acting, whether it be, comedy, Shakespeare, a tragedy, a philosophical play or a farce. You have to bring the words to life. (. . . ) It comes from the energy of the emotion. This is a high energy play. It’s intense, intense, intense.”

Why ‘No Exit’?

“I saw it for the first time ten years ago and it’s always stuck in my head as a very intriguing concept: that at the end of our lives that this is it. This is all there is. The characters are in hell and there is no hope but there’s always something. There may be pain and suffering and struggling but there’s still something else. There is no God but there are others. God may be dead but there’s still plenty of humanity. (. . .) The reason I like this show so much is because it takes everyone’s preconception of hell and turns it on its head. It’s horrifying and a breath of fresh air at the same time.”

Why now?

“We’ve modernized it slightly but the whole point of the play is that it’s anytime. It’s not three hundred years from now. It’s not three hundred years ago. It’s anytime. It’s about humans trying to cope with themselves, trying to deal with their humanity.”

Final thoughts?

“It’s a great show to see if you’ve ever considered your death, your sins and how you are going to deal with them. At some point you have to come to grips with your life, with your soul. Everyone has to ask themselves are you going to be able to deal with your life when it’s said and done?”

No Exit plays at the Blue Theater at 916 Springdale Rd., behind the Goodwill warehouse (click for map). No Exit runs Thursdays through Sundays, July 1 to July 17. Sunday shows begin at 5 pm. All other shows are at 8 pm. For more information and tickets check out http://chaotictheatre.org/