Showing posts with label Freedom Fighter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freedom Fighter. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Profile: Philip Kreyche and Freedom Fighter


Austin Live Theatre Profile









by Michael Meigs
Philip Kreyche in Freedom Fighter

Philip Kreyche is the first person to appear for the curtain call of Freedom Fighter, playing at the Dougherty Arts Center Thursdays through Saturdays until September 8. Not because he wrote the play and directed it and produced it -- but because he plays several minor roles, each of them sharply contrasted to those of the two leading actors Samson Pleasant and Austen Simien. Kreyche plays a Florida overseer; he's a jovially unscrupulous army recruiter; he's a sergeant unsympathetic to the two hard-working privates; and he's an Army captain who first gets chewed out by President William McKinley and then gets captured by the Philippine troops commanded by the deserter/renegade/freedom fighter David Fagen.

Kreyche's Freedom Fighter is an ingenious script, powerfully Brechtian, occasionally anachronistic, an articulate drama leavened with occasional farce as it examines the United States thrust onto the world stage in the Spanish-American War of 1898 and the subsequent War of the Philippines of 1898 to 1902.

Freedom Fighter by Philip KreycheMark Twain is a prominent character, narrator and commentator -- Michael Sisemore in that role is the voice of caustic reason, opposed to the suppression of the Philippines. Sisemore is distantly related to Twain professionalist Hal Holbrook, and he is granted unusual latitude in his intermission speech to choose his own Twainian zingers.

Ryan Manning plays an eager but not too bright Teddy Roosevelt, and Ethan Taylor has the courage to do a musical-hall Jim Crow number, though thank God he is spared from doing it in blackface. The words are powerful enough; in fact, words are powerful throughout this piece, and Kreyche's dialogue is quick, vivid and character-building. His word choices and expressions are vintage to the period, and his scenes often take unexpected turns.

Kreyche looks closely at America's racial attitudes, both against African-Americans and against Asians. Protagonist David Fagen was a black soldier from Tampa Bay, Florida, who defected to the Philippine forces and used his experience from combat in Cuba to wage guerrilla war against the occupying U.S. forces for more than two years. Samson Pleasant as Fagen is intelligent, resolute and eventually driven by the U.S. tactics of violent suppression to question his loyalties . Austen Simien as his friend Ezekiel breaks down -- post traumatic stress syndrome before anyone thought to name it -- and intensifies his own desperate loyalties, serving as a foil to Fagen throughout. Language and attitude are those of the late 19th century, and you'll hear that "n-word" wielded powerfully by both races as the audience identifies strongly with the two African-American soldiers.

The production is supported by the John L. Warfield Center for African and African-American studies at the University of Texas.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Upcoming: Freedom Fighter by Philip Kreyche, No'Az Productions at Dougherty Arts Center, August 23 - September 8


No'Az Productions

presents
Freedom Fighter Philip Kreyche No'Az Productions Austin TX
(image: No'Az Productions)

Freedom Fighter

written and directed by Philip Kreyche

August 23rd-25th, 30th, 31st, September 1st, and September 6th-8th
Dougherty Arts Center Theater, 1110 Barton Springs Rd, Austin TX, 78704 (click for map)
Run time will be roughly 2 hours 15 minutes, with a 10 minute intermission.

General admission is $15, student tickets are $10. Tickets will be available at the box office, or you may reserve tickets by calling 512-422-5705.
For the first time on the Austin stage comes the true story of David Fagen, a young African-American soldier who found himself fighting on the wrong side of a war for independence. Feeling abandoned by a racist society and questioning the morality of the war, David abandoned his country, joined the rebellion, and became a legend in his own time. Freedom Fighter is a post-modern exploration of racism, war, imperialism, patriotism, censorship, and morality. Featuring live music, video, and dance, the play illuminates not only a forgotten part of American history, but an extraordinary, controversial story of courage and personal convictions.

Click to read more and view images at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .