Showing posts with label Charles P. Stites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles P. Stites. Show all posts

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Fat Pig by Neil LaBute, Theatre en Bloc at the Off Center, October 3 - 20, 2013


ALT reviewFat Pig Neil LaBute Theatre en Bloc Austin TX



by Dr. David Glen Robinson
and Michael Meigs

Theatre en Bloc produced this Neil Labute play, directed by Derek Kolluri, at the Off Center in east Austin. The two-word title, Fat Pig, is one of the most succinct and apt descriptions of the premise and theme of a play ever.

The play is about bodies and human beings’ reactions to difference. In exposition, Charles P. Stites in the secondary role of Carter spoke the insightful passages, about how we don’t trust differences of any kind, including especially those of overweight. He offered this to enlighen and comfort the profound discomfort of his friend Tom (Ryan Hamilton) at being in love with an overweight woman (Helen, played by Zena Marie Vaughn).

When one exposes a shred of difference, one stands out from the herd, and the herd turns on one with a vengeance. This play could serve as an archival index of advanced derogatory terms for overweight people, starting with “whale” and “tank” and growing worse from there. Mild terms like “fat” and “plump” were not included. Helen, as one so exposed, sought protective coloration in her job as a librarian, or “printed word technician.”

Playwright Labute, having explored this premise colorfully, seemingly wrote himself into a corner when it came to resolving some of its issues and ending the play. Carter’s recommendation to the discomfited Tom was this: you’re only young once, go out and live like it. Like what? Carter’s point seems to be don’t waste your youth dating fat girls.

Those who know and appreciate Stites particularly enjoyed the irony of his characteristically assertive performance. In real life -- or at least in the Facebook semblance of it -- he's a great admirer of Rubens beauties, euphemistically referred to as 'plus sizes.'

Labute doesn’t elaborate much on life goals. Carter drinks in bars and seeks one-nighters with more appropriately shaped women, a behavior pattern that's hardly a road map for people trying to navigate their youth. His self-satisfied arrogance is contradicted forcefully in the play by Jeannie (Jenny Lavery). Jeannie, at the age of 28, laments the youth lout pattern and wonders angrily if all men are like that --by which she means lying, drinking, triflers. Jeannie’s sad, frustrating experiences with men are a source of anger for her, and that rage erupts into the one scene of stage violence in the play, well executed, on which everything pivots. We take Jeannie’s point clearly. But with that Labute is finished offering us kernels of insight.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, November 16, 2012

Coriolanus by William Shakespeare, Trinity Street Players, November 2 - 18


AustinLiveTheatre reviewCoriolanus Trinity Street Players Kevin Gates Austin TX


by Michael Meigs


In his March 2010 profile of Austin theatre for World Theatre Day, Austin Chronicle arts editor and theatre artist Robert Faires noted that certain works, including Shakespeare's 'Scottish play' and A Midsummer Night's Dream, "circle round again and again like pop songs in heavy rotation. In fact, Austin theatre companies have a curious tendency to remount all kinds of plays that were staged in the area within the past 10 or so years, as if it were part of the city’s recycling effort."

That hasn't changed, as least as far as those Shakespeare stalwarts are concerned. Since that time Austin Live Theatre has noted stagings of Macbeth and Macbeth take-offs by Philip Kreyche, the Sam Bass Youth Guild, a 20-minute version by Robert Deike for the 2012 FronteraFest, the Proxy Theatre in San Antonio, a 1930's gangster style version at the EmilyAnn Theatre in Wimberley and -- now entering its final weekend -- Trouble Puppet Theatre company's Toil and Trouble in which Zac Crofford speaks for the Macbeth puppet as he animates the bloody thane.

In like wise, there's been a surfeit of cavorting of the original rude mechanicals on their midsummer nights: following those of the Baron's Men at the Curtain Theatre in September, 2010, in 2011 there came Shakespeare in Winedale, Playhouse Smithville, the Weird Sisters Theatre Collective, and Actors from the London Stage. This year has seen the rudes riffed in Will Hollis Snider's Messenger #4 and a wheeled outdoor production by the Austin Bike Zoo; San Antonio's Woodlawn Theatre will do it next year. High school productions were offered in Dripping Springs and Cedar Park, and Austin High School's Red Dragon Players are doing A Midsummer Night's Dream this week.

The Trinity Street Players have moved beyond the comfortable confines of the twentieth century with Coriolanus, and they've crafted an impressive and exciting production. There's much food for thought here, as well as the pleasure of witnessing a strong story well told. 

But now we're seeing a more adventurous exploration of the Shakespeare canon, thanks to Kevin Gates and a determined band of relatively young Austin Shakespearians. Gates has the lead as Caius Marcus Coriolanus in a vigorous modern dress production about to wind up a three-weekend run at the black box theatre at the First Baptist Church used by the Trinity Street Players. 

And auditions have just been held for the equally infrequently performed Richard II, to be staged at the Elizabethan-style outdoor Curtain Theatre in February-March, 2013. Gates and Aaron Black will both play protagonist Richard and antagonist Bolingbroke, with each night's assignment of roles to be determined by a coin toss. The ad hoc company calls itself The Poor Shadows of Elysium -- from the epithet used in Act V of Cymbeline by Jupiter as he descends from the heavens, seated on an eagle and throwing a thunderbolt.

Does this all sound a bit too obscure and brainy for the Austin public? Perhaps -- but given the evidence provided with Coriolanus, directed by Bridget Farias, the Gates/Black head-to-head promises to be thrilling, both for the plebes seeking entertainment and the patricians enamored of Shakespeare's language and vast inventiveness. 

Directing Richard II will be Christina Gutierrez, Ph.D candidate at UT who has done dramaturgy for Austin Shakespeare and others, including this production, and who directed the late Elizabethan revenge tragedy 'Tis Pity She's A Whore by John Ford, staged last year at the Cathedral of Junk. Gates, seeing the writing on his personal wall, has begun a Ph.D. program at Texas State University, commuting for classes but working in Austin, where he just directed Marlowe's Doctor Faustus for the Last Act Theatre Company. These are serious and capable folks, people who know how to interpret and deliver classic drama.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Upcoming: Coriolanus by William Shakespeare, November 3 - 18



Trinity Street Players AUstin TX















William Shakespeare’s Coriolanus Trinity Street Players Austin TX

Coriolanus
William Shakespeare’s Coriolanus - Opens November 2nd at Black Box Theatre!

War is hell, but politics may be worse. And when one becomes the other, no one walks away unscathed.

In this season of political warfare and warring politics, experience Trinity Street Players’ production of William Shakespeare’s Coriolanus starting November 2nd at Blackbox Theatre at Ninth and Trinity in downtown Austin. 

Believed to be written by Shakespeare between 1605 and 1610, the play’s themes of class privileges and general unhappiness with government remains relevant today in our own sound-bite society as they were in the riotous streets of the Roman Republic.

The play begins with Coriolanus, a respected and feared general who is at odds with his City and his people. Pushed by his highly determined and calculating mother to seek the prestigious position of Consul, Coriolanus gives into his mother’s wishes but ultimately finds himself banished and raging with vengeance.

Coriolanus is directed by Bridget Farias, an award-winning actress and director, who is currently the full-time Artistic Director at the EmilyAnn Theatre in Wimberley, Texas. Farias holds Bachelor of Fine Arts degrees in both Acting and Directing and has recently played Catherine in Proof with Trinity Street Players and Lady Macbeth in Macbeth at the EmilyAnn Theatre.

The brilliant cast features Kevin Gates as “Coriolanus.” Gates is a Master of Fine Arts theatre student at Texas State University. He recently played Giovanni in Tis Pity She's a Whore and is directing Dr. Faustus for Last Act Theatre. Sam Mercer will play “Aufidius.” Mercer was recently nominated for two B.Iden Payne Awards, having played in Austin Shakespeare and Two Towers. Austin favorite Charles Stites will play “Menenius.” Stites is a past B.Iden Payne Award Nominee and a well-known and respected local actor and director.

A show with important societal themes, Coriolanus will leave you asking, “Who is worthy to lead? What role do we all have in the success or failure of our government? What is the price of power? And how far, really, are we willing to go to get what we want?”

Opening night is Friday, November 2nd at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are free to the public, but reservations may be made at http://trinitystreetplayers.com/reservations or by calling 512-402-3086. Donations are appreciated.


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)



Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Upcoming: The Island of Dr. Moreau, by Charles P. Stites after H.G. Wells, July 26 - August 18


Paladin Theatre Company
presentsThe Island of Dr. Moreau adapted by Charles P. Stites
The Island of Dr. Moreau
by Charles P. Stites after H.G. Wells
Unconfirmed; date uncertain
Venue, dates and times to be announced
From the theatre company that brought you "Sexual Perversity in Chicago", "Early Girl", and "Chesapeake", the Paladin Theatre Company is proud to present..."THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU" - a one-man stage play, written, directed, and performed by Charles P. Stites - which will open four months from today and run at the Off Center from July 26th to August 18th. A castaway finds himself trapped on an island with a madman and the race of monsters he has created. It is a morality tale steeped in dread and blood.

"His is the hand that hurts!"
"His is the house of pain!"
"I am the Sayer of the Law...are we not men?"

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Chesapeake by Lee Blessing with Charles Stites, Paladin Theatre, April 7 - 23

Chesapeake by Lee Blessing, Paladin Theatre, Austin



Sometimes the miracle happens.

Theatre is a collusion between actors and the audiences: You pretend to be somebody and I'll pretend to believe you. In the subtitle to his 2010 book-length essay The Necessity of Theatre, UT philosophy professor Paul Woodroof calls it "the art of watching and being watching." Writing for a rationalist public in 1817 Coleridge defended the use of the fantastical in poetry by invoking "that willing suspension of disbelief for the moment, which constitutes poetic faith.

"
I love the collusion. My suspension is just about as elastic as they come, and I'll watch just about any offering of narrative theatre.

In his few short sentences on the back of the program card for
Chespeake Charles P. Stites, solo player in this piece and director of himself, precisely captures that feeling: "My will to suspend my disbelief is on a hair trigger. As soon as the lights go down in a theatre, I will immediately go anywhere the actors and playwright want to take me."

And sometimes, so very rarely, a text and a performance so transcend that common transaction that you find yourself living from word to word, from gesture to gesture, in a trance of belief that's almost an out-of-body experience. You see through the actor into a succession of images, shaped by language and unexpected turns of plot and character, to a point that when the experience ends, when the lights fade out and you've finished with your convulsion of applause for this suddenly unfamiliar individual in front of you, you linger in that world of imagination for long minutes. As you make your way out of the theatre, navigate downtown streets, locate your car and drive home, you're still out there, somewhere.

Stites' delivery of Lee Blessing's
Chesapeake was the most gripping act of theatre imagination I've ever seen in Austin. Take that with as many grains of salt as you like. I've been assiduously attending narrative theatre events here since mid-2008 when I instituted Austin Live Theatre as a blog, and I've written more than 400 reviews in that time.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Upcoming: Chesapeake by Lee Blessing, Charles P. Stites and Paladin Theatre Company at the Hideout Theatre, April 7 -23

Received directly:


The Paladin Theatre Company proudly presents
the Austin, Texas Premiere ofChesapeake Bay Retriever (www.stonebrakerart.com)


CHESAPEAKE


a one-character comedy by Pulitzer prize finalist Lee Blessing

directed and performed by B. Iden Payne award winner Charles P. Stites


“It’s a dog’s life...and the next one is, too.”


Thursday,April 7 - 23, Thursdays-Sundays
8 p.m. on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, and 5:30 p.m. on Sundays.
TICKETS: $10.00 on Thursdays, $12.00 on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays

Performances will be held at The Hideout Theatre, 617 Congress Avenue (click for map)

For tickets and information: Call AusTIX at (512) 474 - TIXS or order online at: http://www.NowPlayingAustin.com/Austix .

Tickets purchased at the door are cash only.
Email: info@paladintheatrecompany.com


When Kerr, a gay performance artist in New York, is publicly attacked by an ultra-conservative southern senate candidate named Therm Pooley, Kerr seeks revenge on both the politician and his political mascot, a Chesapeake Bay retriever named Lucky. When the plan goes haywire, Kerr is doomed to spend the next life as his worst enemy’s dog. Chesapeake is an uproarious, rousing comedy about passion, art, vengeance, forgiveness, and eternity.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Early Girl by Carolyn Kava, Paladin Theatre at Salvage Vanguard Theatre, July 29 - August 22





Charlie Stites is a big guy with a big heart whose most recent stage outings have been as braggarts and sexual boasters. He counters that image somewhat with his intent to right the acting balance between the sexes by staging this drama by actress Carolyn Kava, done to respectful New York reviews in the mid-1980s.


Stites writes in the program that he was struck "by the dearth of interesting parts available for [women]," making "the ladies of Austin theatre. . . an underused resource."


Without judging that declaration, I can confirm that he and his Paladin Theatre did recruit a houseful of sensitive and impressive female actors for Early Girl. Some I had seen before -- Wendy Zavaleta in striking roles in musical theatre, Molly Karrasch at the Austin Playhouse in several roles, including a superb turn as Rita in Educating Rita, and Karen Alvarado in well defined, deft portrayals with Teatro Vivo. Lindsley Howard is new to me but will become much more familiar to our Austin audiences next month when she plays Miranda, the romantic lead in Austin Shakespeare's The Tempest. Keylee Paige Koop, Ashley Rae Spillers (with that striking red flower in her hair) and Rose Fredson also absorbed their characters and interpreted them decisively. Maybe Charlie has a point; with wealth of femininity such as this, we may be missing something on the feminine side in Austin theatre.


Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Images by Kimberley Mead: Early Girl, Paladin Theatre at Salvage Vanguard, July 29 - August 22

Images by Kimberley Mead for

Wendy Zavaleta, Early Girl

Early Girl

A drama by Caroline Kava

Paladin Theatre Company

directed by Charles P. Stites

July 29 to August 22, Thursdays through Sundays
8:00 p.m. on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, and 5:30 p.m. on Sundays
Tickets: $15.00 on Thursdays and $20.00 on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays
Performances will be held at
Salvage Vanguard Theater, 2803 Manor Rd.

Early Girl photo by Kimberley Mead














E-mail: info@paladintheatrecompany.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Website: www.paladintheatrecompany.com

For Tickets and Information: AusTIX at 474-TIXS (8497) or online at www.NowPlayingAustin.com/Austix


Early Girl Paladin TheatreEarly Girl features the talents of WENDY ZAVALETA and KEYLEE PAIGE KOOP, as well as KAREN ALVARADO, ROSE FREDSON, ASHLEY SPILLERS, LINDSLEY HOWARD, with special guest MOLLY KARRASCH as "SALLY."


"Early Girl is a fascinating look behind the scenes at a brothel - the passions, the rivalries, the jealousies, and the frustrated ambitions. Each woman has a unique story to tell: one is looking for her future; one is burying her past; one woman is looking for love; another is seeking a home; one is searching for a revelation; and Lana, the madam and master manipulator, pulls the strings for each of the ladies in the house. Early Girl allows the audience to see how the prostitutes in Lana’s house interact with each other, and how each woman deals with the toll the profession takes on them. It’s a funny, sexy, honest, and powerful play."

(CAUTION: This play contains nudity.)

Click to view additional images by Kimberley Mead.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Sexual Perversity in Chicago, Paladin Theatre at the Off Center, May 6 - 30





Charles Stites fits so entirely and comfortably into the horrible male characters of David Mamet that one has to wonder if the man is, in fact, acting.

Mind you, he is an actor of great presence and élan vital, as anyone could see when he was onstage in City Theatre's Glengarry, Glen Ross by Mamet and in the title role of its Tartuffe by Molière. It's just that for this new theatre grouping Stites chose Mamet's 1974 one-act, he directed it, and he portrays the central character Bernie Litko, an assertive, energetic total asshole who entirely dominates this series of blackout sketches.


The press photo captures pretty precisely the relationships among these four characters. Bernie expostulates; the self-effacing Danny listens to Bernie as if he were Moses coming down from the Sears Tower with a long list of commandments on sexual relations; Deborah the illustrator is sweet and uncertain; and Joan the kindergarten teacher, with no male in her life, is the outsider, Deborah's coach and her neglected roommate.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, April 30, 2010

Upcoming: Sexual Perversity in Chicago, Paladin Theatre at the Off Center, May 6 -

Click for ALT review, May 20



UPDATE: Comments by webmaster, TheatreAustin, Yahoo Groups, May 14

Received directly:

Sexual Perversity in Chicago

a comedy by David Mamet
will be performed by the Paladin Theatre Company
at the Off Center, 2211 Hidalgo St.

May 6 - 30

Thursdays-Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 5:30
Tickets : $10.00 on Thursdays and $15.00 on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays
E-mail: info@paladintheatrecompany.com
Website: www.paladintheatrecompany.com
For Tickets and Information: AusTIX at 474-TIXS (8497) Or online at www.NowPlayingAustin.com/Austix


Sexual Perversity in Chicago will feature the talents of B. Iden Payne winners and Austin theatre favorites...
Breanna Stogner (Psycho Beach Party) Briana McKeague (Crimes of the Heart)
Charles P. Stites (Glengarry Glen Ross) Mason Stewart (I Heart Wal-Mart)


“In an era of easy sex, a beautiful young couple learns that the hardest thing to find is true love.”

“How do you ask a girl out on a first date after you’ve already had sex with her? Can new love survive the meddling of nosy friends and the era of bed-hopping?" These are some of the questions that arise when a hot young couple finds each other in this racy comedy set in Chicago, 1976. A play that is equal parts raucous comedy and tender love story, David Mamet’s first masterpiece Sexual Perversity in Chicago depicts a story of intimacy’s elusive nature that is both timeless and universal.”


Monday, July 27, 2009

Tartuffe, City Theatre, July 23 - August 16








Molière
was appalled and distressed when he learned that although Louis XIV had enjoyed the court performance of Tartuffe on May 12, 1664 the "Sun King" had listened to pious advisers and had forbidden any further presentations of the play.

This great comic tale of religious hypocrisy was in trouble from the start. The dramatist had produced a farce in elegant verse featuring a "holy man" intent on seduction, theft and exploitation, an adroit manipulator of religious concepts and of religious language. The court advisers were probably scandalized at the playwright's witty undermining of religiosity and some of them may have felt directly targeted.

Molière's
eloquent protests went unheeded and the revised version he presented publicly three years later was immediately shut down. Not until 1669, after a delay of five years, was Tartuffe performed, apparently with the King's permission. It became the most successful and most profitable of Molière's plays.

Charles P. Stites serves as something of a Molière
for the City Theatre's production of Tartuffe. He drafted this text, directed it and stars as Tartuffe.

And
what better setting for religious hypocrisy (via tele-evangelism) than modern Central Texas?

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


Monday, June 29, 2009

Upcoming: Tartuffe, City Theatre, July 23 - August 16

UPDATE: Click for ALT review, July 27



PDATE: Sean Fuentes interviews director Charles P. Stites at Austin Theatre Review.com

Received directly:


Hypocrisy. Seduction. Greed. Betrayal.

The best of Moliere’s comedy with


Tartuffe


at City Theatre this summer
July 23 – August 16


If it's hypocrisy, greed, and seduction you’re looking for this summer, look no further than
Molière’s most famous farce, Tartuffe.

Under the cloak of
religious piety, the lecherous, menacing, arch-hypocrite title character schemes to marry his benefactor’s daughter, seduce his wife, then defraud him of all he possesses. Does the scoundrel succeed? Take your seat and find out in this new and exciting adaptation of one of the world’s greatest comedies.

The production runs July 23 – August 16 at The City Theatre. It is directed by Charles P. Stites and features City Theatre company members Wray Crawford, Fiona Rene, D. Heath Thompson, and MacArthur Moore.


Molière’s masterpiece was written over three hundred years ago, but the classic has found a fresh reinvention at City Theatre with a modern staging that is even more immediate, identifiable, and hilarious. Rather than a classic that can be translated to a modern setting, Molière's play seems more of a contemporary play that just happens to have been written a few centuries ago.

Tartuffe and Texas were made for each other.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Auditions: Tartuffe, City Theatre, May 18-20, Charles P. Stites, Directing

Received from City Theatre:

Auditions for Tartuffe, City Theatre

Open auditions for the modern version of Moliere's classic play Tartuffe will be held by appointment at the Dougherty Arts Center.

Dates: May 18, 19, and 20 from 7:00 to 9:10.

Moliere’s wit takes center stage in one of the theater’s most enduring tales about a
conman who discovers that the unattainable is always the most desirable. Intrigue, greed, lechery, betrayal, and hypocrisy lay thefoundation for great comedy in this hilarious play. Showdates: July 23rd to August 16th. Needing five men and five women, ages 18 to 80, and actors of all races and ages are strongly encouraged to try out. Please bring head shot and one prepared monologue.

For appointments, e-mail Charles P. Stites at: tartuffe09@yahoo.com.

Read More at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .