Showing posts with label Clay Avery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clay Avery. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE by Tennessee Williams, City Theatre, July 25 - August 18, 2013




City Theatre Austin TX











(3823 Airport Rd. at 38 1/2 St., behind the Shell station)

presents

Streetcar Named Desire Tennessee Williams City Theatre Austin TX

A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE
July 25 – August 18. Thursday – Saturday 8:00 p.m. Sunday 5:30 p.m.
The City Theatre. 3823 Airport Blvd. 78722 – east corner of Airport Blvd. and 38 ½ Street.
General Seating $15. Guaranteed Front/2nd Row Reserved $25.
Students $12. Thursday all seats $10. Group discounts are available.
Reservations 512-524-2870 or info@citytheatreaustin.org
www.citytheatreaustin.org

The City Theatre continues its summer season with the Tennessee Williams's American classic, A Streetcar Named Desire, which revolutionized modern drama and is still an undisputed masterpiece from one of the great voices of the American theatre. Directed by Jeff Hinkle and starring Rachel McGinnis Meissner and Tim Brown, the production runs July 25 – August 18, 2013.

“I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” – Blanche du Bois, A Streetcar Named Desire

Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Streetcar is not only a landmark in American theatre, but a ground-breaking theatrical event! Immerse yourself in the steamy French Quarter of New Orleans as we discover the torrid and fragile life of Blanche Du Bois, southern school teacher and socialite who has come to the end of the line, and is forced to move in with her pregnant sister Stella and explosive husband Stanley. In the sultry decadent jungle of half-light, honky-tonks and fleeting sanity, Blanche desperately seeks refuge in a quiet world of memory and illusion. But Stanley is there to cut off her only escape and her fragile world slowly crumbles as she quickly learns brutal lessons of passion and deceit. Embodying the turmoil of a changing nation, Streetcar strips Williams’ tortured characters of their illusions, leaving a wake of destruction in their path. Poetic and provocative, lyrical and lusty, the play is a haunting and uncompromising master work from one of the greatest writers in modern drama.


“If I got rid of my demons, I’d lose my angels.” ― Tennessee Williams

Thomas Lanier Williams was born in Mississippi, 1911, and into a family life full of tension. He decided to become a playwright after he was admitted to the University of Missouri and saw a production of Ibsen's Ghosts. He moved to New Orleans and changed his name from "Tom" to "Tennessee.” In 1939, the young writer received a $1,000 Rockefeller Grant and, what many consider to be his best play, The Glass Menagerie was written and burst its way onto Broadway. With his dominating mother and fragile sister, Rose, many critics believed that Tennessee used his own relationships as inspiration for the play. Elia Kazan, who directed many of his greatest successes, said of Tennessee: "Everything in his life is in his plays, and everything in his plays is in his life." Williams followed up his first major critical success with several other hits including A Streetcar Named Desire, Summer and Smoke, A Rose Tattoo, and Camino Real. He received his first Pulitzer Prize in 1948 for Streetcar, and reached an even larger world-wide audience when The Glass Menagerie and A Streetcar Named Desire were made into major motion pictures. Later plays which were also made into movies include Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Orpheus Descending, and Night of the Iguana. Yet, with the powerful impact he had, Williams struggled with depression throughout most of his life and lived with the constant fear of insanity. On February 24, 1983, Tennessee Williams choked to death on a bottle cap at his New York City residence. In addition to twenty-five full length plays, Williams produced dozens of short plays and screenplays, two novels, sixty short stories, over one-hundred poems and an autobiography. Among his many awards, he won two Pulitzer Prizes and four New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards.



The City Theatre has assembled an exciting cast for the show including the dynamic and talented Rachel McGinnis Meissner and Tim Brown who starred in CTC’s 2010 Iden Payne nominated production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. The cast also includes Laura Artesi, Clay Avery, Samantha Brewer, Matt Biery, Kate Trammell, Evan Shaw, and Austen Simien. The play is directed by guest director Jeff Hinkle, whose other productions with CTC include Othello, Hair, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and Romeo and Juliet. The costume designer is Lindsay McKenna with set design by Kevin George. The City Theatre Company is an Austin-based not for profit arts organization and is sponsored in part by the Austin Creative Alliance and the Austin Cultural Arts Division. Founded in 2006, the company has been recognized by the Austin Critics Table Awards, the B. Iden Payne Awards and is twice voted “Best Theatre Company” by Austin-American Statesman’s Austin 360. CTC is dedicated in providing quality theatre experience and entertainment for Austin artist’s and its community.


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Thursday, January 3, 2013

OTHELLO featuring Trevor Bissell, City Theatre, February 21 - March 17, 2013




City Theatre Austin TX




City Theatre Austin Masks






(3823 Airport Rd. at 38 1/2 St., behind the Shell station)


presents
Othello Shakespeare City Theatre Austin TX
(image: www.citytheatreaustin.org)


by William Shakespeare

The timeless tale of love, deceit, jealousy and murder.
February 21 - March 17, 2013
Thursday – Saturday 8:00 p.m. Sunday 5:30 p.m.
General Seating $15. Guaranteed Front/2nd Row Reserved $25.
Students $12. Thursday all seats $10. Group discounts are available.
Reservations 512-524-2870 or info@citytheatreaustin.org


One of literature’s most tragic heroes squares off against Shakespeare’s
greatest villain in a compelling story of suspicion, betrayal and vengeance. Iago
leads Othello to the edge of madness by sowing seeds of doubt about his wife’s
fidelity culminating in one of most powerfully dramatic scenes ever written.
Its message is not soon forgotten.


Othello-Trevor Bissell
Iago-Andrew Bosworth
Desdemona- Laura Kathleen Artesi
Emila- Lindsay Mckenna
Cassio- Clay Avery
Rodrigo-Mario Silva
Bianca-Rachel Collier
Barbantio-Mike Dellens
The Duchess-Shannon Francis
Montano-Zach Braver
Lodovico-Dewayne Mangan
Gratiano-Dave Yakubik
Clown-Allegra Fox

Click to go to the front page at www.AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Saturday, March 24, 2012

Wit by Margaret Edson, City Theatre, March 18 - April 8



Wit Margaret Edson City Theatre Austin


It helps to have someone holding your hand when you look over the edge of the precipice. Even if you've always lived alone, felt self sufficient and devoted yourself to the life of the mind.

Margaret Edson's Wit is the portrait of literature professor Vivian Bearing, a devotee of 17th century English literature renowned for her publications on the metaphysical poetry of John Donne. At the age of 50 this scholar has been discovered to be the victim of Stage IV ovarian cancer. Our time with her is spent in the cancer ward, except for brief flashbacks to happy moments - as a child, learning to read; as a graduate student discovering the woman professor who became her mentor; standing authoritatively in front of a class of undergraduates, challenging them to grapple with the conceits of Donne's poetry.

Bearing's thoughts spin as she confronts the unimaginative protocol realities of medicine. She works to remain objective and in intellectual control, occasionally sharing with us a fugue state, sometimes even over the unnerving revelations being delivered by her physicians.

This piece demands a virtuoso performance every night, by a virtuoso performer, and Judith Laird is exactly that. Wit is essentially a monologue with regular lapses into conventional stage representation. The frail, earnest protagonist speaks directly to us as audience, acknowledges our presence and even comments in passing, "I have only two hours here before I die." That ironic confiding in the spectators has a touch of the metaphysical to it, a shadowed reflection of Donne's perspective in the Holy Sonnets written late in his life.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Upcoming: The Eight: Reindeer Monologues, City Theatre, December 2 - 18


Found on-line:

City Theatre, Austin




presentsReindeer Monologues Jeff Goode City Theatre Austin

The Eight: Reindeer Monologues

by Jeff Goode

directed by Stacey Glazer

December 1 - 18

**AFTER HOURS SHOWS** Fridays and Saturdays at 10 p.m., Sundays 8:00 p.m. (no show Dec. 11.)

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

For reservations, call 512-524-2870 or e-mail info@citytheatreaustin.org. General seating $10.
www.citytheatreaustin.org

A wickedly funny alternative to traditional candy-cane cheer. Scandal erupts at the North Pole when one of Santa's eight tiny reindeer accuses him of sexual harassment. As the mass media descends upon the event, the other members of the sleigh team demand to share their perspectives, and a horrific tale of corruption and perversion emerges - which seems to implicate everyone from the teeniest elf to the tainted Saint himself. With each deer's stunning confession, the truth behind the shocking allegations becomes clearer...and murkier... Don't miss this hilarious holiday spectacle.

Featuring the cast of Clay Avery – Dasher, Matthew Burnett - Cupid, Toby Minor – Hollywood, Mindy Rast-Keenan – Blitzen, Mario Silva – Comet, Megan Ortiz – Dancer, Andy Brown – Donner and Lesley O’Neal – Vixen. Directed by Stacey Glazer.


Monday, August 8, 2011

Upcoming: Hair, City Theatre, August 18 - September 11


Found on-line:


City Theatre





City Theatre
presents the musicalHair poster

Hair


Directed by Jeff Hinkle
Music Direction by David Blackburn
Stage Managed by Kati Pike
August 18 - September 11
Thursdays- Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 5:30 p.m.
City Theatre, 3823 Airport Rd (behind the Shell station)

The year is 1968. It's the age of psychotropic drugs, the age of free love, the age of rock and roll.

It is the age of the Vietnam War.

See our tribe endure the good, the bad, and the worst this tumultuous decade had to offer in City Theatre's production of the immortal rock musical extravaganza Hair. It's an Austin version of Hair, what more could you ask for?

The show runs August 18th-September 11th on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays (8:30 PM) and Sundays (5:30 PM)

Tickets are available at the door. Reservations may be made by e-mailing Info@citytheatreaustin.org​ or by calling 512-524-2870. Cash and credit cards are both accepted. Non reserved seating is limited and first come first served

IMPORTANT: This show is NOT family friendly. It contains mature content not limited to: Strong language, violence, implied drug use, explicit drug use, strong sexual imagery, thinly veiled sexual imagery, and Richard Nixon. DON'T BRING YOUR CHILDREN


See cast list at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .