Showing posts with label Jason Newman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Newman. Show all posts

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Lady Windermere's Fan by Oscar Wilde, Austin Playhouse, March 15 - April 7, 2013

Austin Live Theatre reviewLady Winderemere's Fan Oscar Wilde Austin Playhouse TX


 
by Michael Meigs

Oscar Wilde wrote and proclaimed almost to tedious extent about aestheticism in his early career as writer, lecturer and journalist, and he was so well known for his extravagance and opinions that Gilbert & Sullivan had caricatured him in their 1881 operetta Patience. Wilde wrote a couple of dramatic tragedies in the 1880s that came to nothing, and in 1891 he wrote Salomé, in French. The Lord Chamberlain put a stop to Sara Bernhardt's plan to stage in London on the grounds that Biblical characters should not be depicted onstage.


In summer of 1891 on holiday in the north country Wilde sat down and produced the first of four society plays that were produced in London in the first half of the 1890's. Lady Windermere's Fan was the first of these, and it was a huge success, almost certainly because he endowed his characters with the wit, epigrams and repartee for which he himself was famous. These are scenes and domestic dilemmas of the idle rich, most of whom produce nothing but words. Wilde gleefully undermines the very society that lionized him. His stereotypes as are vivid as those who later populated P.G. Wodehouse's novels and they're equally, mindlessly devoted to their status quo as the 1%, but any one of them would serve as a charming dinner companion for a whole evening.


Lady Windermere's Fan Austin Playhouse Oscar Wilde

The structure of Lady Windermere's Fan is that of the "well-made play" typical of 19th century drama, in which a a dramatic plot is driven by secrets that are described and gradually brought to light, often through the device of a letter or object that reveals hidden information. This is a plot turn as old as the theatre itself, of course, and no doubt those London audiences in evening clothes were agreeably pleased when the sweet young Lady Windermere's fan, a present from her husband of two years, turns up in the private quarters of the sleekly caddish Lord Darlington. 


 Wilde artfully turns the discovery into an opportunity for the outsider, Mrs. Erling of dubious past, to intervene and cover for the ingĂ©nue. His clever turn is that the play does not end in the expected revelation; instead, there are two mirrored secrets that are successfully covered up and an identity that is revealed to the audience but not to the character most closely concerned by it.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Gruesome Playground Injuries by Rajiv Joseph, Capital T Theatre at FronteraFest 2013, January 25 - February 6


Austin Live Theatre reviewGruesome Playground Injuries Rajiv Joseph Capital T Theatre Austin TX


by Michael Meigs



Rajiv Joseph's collection of two-character scenettes for Gruesome Playground Injuries appeals to the young and restless.  Students at Texas State did it last semester, and Capital T confided it to Kelsey Kling via their New Directors Program for presentation at the FronteraFest Long Fringe.

Many audience members at both venues can identify strongly with this pair of awkward losers.  They're searching for something, but they don't know what it is.  Doug and Kayleen first become aware of each other in primary school.  For some inexplicable reason, over the course of perhaps 15 years they never really find one another, perhaps because they're too much alike; the subtly resonating theme in the piece is one of precisely self-guided defeat.  If you care about each other, why aren't you able to take care of one another?


Gruesome Playground Injuries Rajiv Joseph Capital T Theatre Austin TX

Director Kling provides a dressing area for each actor, situated on either side of a central playing space.  We experience the satisfaction of voyeurs and theatre fans as we glimpse Jason Newman and Laura Artesi, each in a personal space, changing costume, props and makeup between scenes.  The transformations are entertaining in themselves. Newman's assorted bandages, patches and bloody shirts establish his maladroit character with a certain affectionate humor.  The isolations of staging reinforce the theme of the piece.

The actors open the action by entering the central area and perching on a couple of institutional examining tables.  We quickly understand that they're in the nurse's office at school, probably waiting to be picked up by concerned parents.  Doug has smashed his face in a playground accident; Kayleen is ill.  Much of the comedy in this initial scene comes from body language -- splayed limbs, spontaneous moves, sudden jerks, all the awkwardness and coltishness of young persons who haven't yet mastered the functioning of their own bodies.  Doug's a goofus; Kayleen's a worried, distracted dreamer.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .
 

Friday, February 1, 2013

Video: Gruesome Playground Injuries by Rajiv Joseph, Capital T Theatre, January 25 - February 6, 2013

Capital T's short video picks the best of the 196 words of Jillian's Owen's comments in the Austin Chronicle, January 31. Gruesome Playground Injuries is a sweet, moody piece about a couple of friends who never made it together but were always there for one another. It gives Jason Newman the opportunity to demonstrate intensity and range and introduces the sometimes gawky and sometimes beautiful Laura Artesi. An Austin Live Theatre review is forthcoming.

Capital T Theatre Austin TX




presents


Gruesome Playground Injuries Capital T Theatre Austin TX
Gruesome Playground Injuries

by Rajiv Joseph
directed by Kelsey King

Capital T at FronteraFest 2013, Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd.

Remaining performances: Saturday Feb 2nd 12pm; Monday Feb 4th 8pm; Tuesday Feb 5th 8pm; Wednesday Feb 6th 8pm


In a very different kind of love story an accident prone dare devil and a corrosive masochist navigate friendship, love and the squishy parts that lie in between. As they mature from accident-prone kids to self-destructive adults, their broken hearts and broken bones draw them ever closer.


Cap T is proud to present this quirky love story of self inflicted wounds and the healing we need from others starring Jason Newman and Laura Artesi and directed by Kelsey Kling.





Tuesday, January 15, 2013

GRUESOME PLAYGROUND INJURIES by Rajiv Joseph, Capital T Theatre at FronteraFest, Salvage Vanguard Theatre, January 25 - February 6, 2013







Capital T Theatre Austin TX






presents
Gruesome Playground Injuries Capital T Theatre Austin TX


Gruesome Playground Injuries
by Rajiv Joseph
directed by Kelsey King

Capital T at FronteraFest 2013, Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd.


ONLY 7 PERFORMANCES
Friday Jan 25th 8:15pm
Saturday Jan 26th 9:30pm
Wednesday Jan 30th 9pm
Saturday Feb 2nd 12pm
Monday Feb 4th 8pm
Tuesday Feb 5th 8pm
Wednesday Feb 6th 8pm

In a very different kind of love story an accident prone dare devil and a corrosive masochist navigate friendship, love and the squishy parts that lie in between. As they mature from accident-prone kids to self-destructive adults, their broken hearts and broken bones draw them ever closer.

Cap T is proud to present this quirky love story of self inflicted wounds and the healing we need from others starring Jason Newman and Laura Artesi and directed by Kelsey Kling. 

(Click to return to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Friday, December 7, 2012

Austin Playhouse Holiday Card for The Game's Afoot by Ken Ludwig, December 13 - January 13, 2013




Austin Playhouse Game's Afoot Ken Ludwig TX Christmas Card

December 13 - January 13

Our 2012-2013 Season opens with a brand new comic murder-mystery by Ken Ludwig! It is December 1936 and Broadway star William Gillette, admired the world over for his leading role in the play Sherlock Holmes, has invited his fellow cast-members to his Connecticut castle for a weekend of revelry. But when one of the guests is stabbed to death, the festivities in this isolated house of tricks and mirrors quickly turn dangerous. Then it’s up to Gillette himself, as he assumes the persona of his beloved Holmes, to track down the killer before the next victim appears. The danger and hilarity are non-stop in this glittering whodunit set during the Christmas holidays. 
 

Starring Joey Banks, Mary Agen Cox, Boni Hester, Huck Huckaby, Molly Karrasch, Jason Newman, Lara Toner, and Cyndi Williams.


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Upcoming: The Game's Afoot by Ken Ludwig, Austin Playhouse at Highland Mall, December 13 - January 13



Austin Playhouse TX










December 13, 2012 - January 13, 2013
Our 2012-2013 Season opens with a brand new comic murder-mystery by Ken Ludwig! It is December 1936 and Broadway star William Gillette, admired the world over for his leading role in the play Sherlock Holmes, has invited his fellow cast-members to his Connecticut castle for a weekend of revelry. But when one of the guests is stabbed to death, the festivities in this isolated house of tricks and mirrors quickly turn dangerous. Then it’s up to Gillette himself, as he assumes the persona of his beloved Holmes, to track down the killer before the next victim appears. The danger and hilarity are non-stop in this glittering whodunit set during the Christmas holidays.
Starring Joey Banks, Mary Agen Cox, Boni Hester, Huck Huckaby, Molly Karrasch,
Jason Newman, Lara Toner, and Cyndi Williams.
Directed by Don Toner with costumes by Diana Huckaby, sound design by the Gunn Brothers, and lighting design by Don Day.
Austin Playhouse Season Ticket holders may make reservations now.
Single tickets go on sale Monday, November 27th.
What: The Game's Afoot by Ken Ludwig
When: December 13, 2012 - January 13, 2013
Times: Thursday - Saturday at 8pm, Sunday at 5pm
Where: Austin Playhouse at Highland Mall
6001 Airport Blvd., Austin, TX 78752
How Much: $28 Thurs/Fri, $30 Friday/Saturday
$35 Opening Night with post-show reception, Friday December 14th
All student tickets are half-price!
Info/Tickets: (512) 476-0084
Website: www.austinplayhouse.com
(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Monday, September 17, 2012

spacestation 1985 by Natalie George, Jeff Mills and Friends, September 14 - 28



spacestation1985 Natalie George








ALT review


by Dr. David Glen Robinson


The Off-Center is the homeland of the Rude Mechanicals theatre company, where that storied group has ridden their great performances to theatrical glory. So it is a little intimidating to walk in there with performance on one’s mind. Natalie George and Jeffrey Mills showed no sign of intimidation whatsoever when they rented the space from the Rudes and installed Spacestation 1985 in it. The piece is a laugh riot at its core, and it is a send-up of 1980s TV sci-fi, a send-up of the 1980s as a whole and a demonstration piece of alternative performance forms.


spacestation 1985

The story is light, but it is a surprisingly flexible vehicle for comedy. Two NASA rejects are hired by the private corporation, Dedalus, Inc, to pilot a private spaceship to Halley’s Comet to mine minerals from the tail of the comet—a typically flimsy, improbable 1980spremise, but who cares when the laughs start and seem not to end? The neatest trick of the play is that the producers fly past us a story that contains 1980s sci-fi futuristic technology and the story takes place in the 1980s. Now wait a second…hmm…


Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, April 6, 2012

A Room with a View, Austin Playhouse, March 23 - April 22


A Room with a View Austin Playhouse

by Michael Meigs


A Room with a View at Austin Playhouse in Lara Toner's graceful adaptation of Forster's novel is serene fun. An ungracious critic -- say, someone who regularly posted grumbling letters to the Times of London -- might ask why the Playhouse bothered to concoct a presentation of the style regularly served up by the BBC on PBS's Masterpiece Theatre, but that imaginary critic would miss the point entirely. Another curmudgeonly observation might be that Mssrs Merchant and Ivory did the definitive cinema version back in 1985, certainly still available from video sources. One might even be able to stream it from Netflix.


Cyndi Williams, Claire Ludwig Room with A View Austin PlayhouseThe story itself is not the issue, for Forster's witty and sympathetic if somewhat patronizing portrayal of Lucy Honeychurch and those around her features amusing characters caught up in the most basic dramatic dilemma of all: who best deserves to make our sweet heroine happy? Most of us know exactly how it's going to turn out, and we willingly participate in the re-creation and recreation of that make-believe.


No, the response to that hypothetical critic is simple. It's symbolized by the contrast between your comfortable sofa or desk chair at home and the seat in the theatre. At home you may choose to sit alone or even in company to witness A Room with a View, passively absorbing a crafted vision identical in all respects for everyone who sees it. Or you may go to the theatre instead, where each comfortable seat with a view offers a subtly different experience and features actors who live and breathe and share the space with you. Last week I wrote of Zach's Laramie Project and the power of familiar faces. In Toner's staging of A Room with a View, actors well known to theatre-goers quite transform themselves from citizens of 2012 Austin to self-aware representatives of the educated English middle class of 1908, experiencing the threatening joys of Florence and then returning to bourgeois life in London.


That's the advantage of working with a repertory company, however loose. David Stahl is a jovial, good-hearted Anglican clergyman; Tom Parker is an abrupt, truth-speaking businessman; Rebecca Robinson serves as the spinster cousin charged with chaperoning young Lucy; Cyndi Williams is a colorful busybody woman novelist in the first act and the heroine's strait-laced mother in the second.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Photos by Gray G. Haddock for A Room with A View, Austin Playhouse March 23 - April 22


A portfolio by Gray G. Haddock for

Austin Playhouse logo






A Room with A View, Austin Playhouse (image: Gray G. Haddock)


Austin Playhouse presents a world premiere production of

A Room with a View

by E.M. Forster, adapted for the stage by Lara Toner
March 23 - April 22

Room with a View adapted Lara Toner Austin PlayhouseAustin Playhouse temporary facility, 1800 1/2 Simond Avenue, Mueller Development (click for map)

Tickets $26 Thursdays and Fridays, $28 Saturdays and Sundays, $35 for opening night

student tickets are half-price

tickets available via box office (512) 476-0084 or on-line at www.austinplayhouse.com


It's 1908. England is leaving the Victorian era behind and hurtling into the modern age: telephones, electricity, and even cars are becoming common. During a trip to Italy to "broaden her mind," young Lucy Honeychurch finds her heart awakened, but she must rail against the still-rigid social structures of Edwardian England to find lasting happiness.


[image above: Jason Newman, Claire Ludwig (image: Gray G. Haddock)


Click to view additional images by Gray G. Haddock at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . .

Sunday, December 4, 2011

The Lion in Winter by James Goldman, Austin Playhouse at Mueller Development, November 18 - December 18


The Lion in Winter Austin Playhouse Huck Huckaby


Your medieval experience for Austin Playhouse's The Lion in Winter is unexpectedly complete, for in that almost unheated temporary tent structure on the windy plains of the Mueller Development you might just wish you were wearing castle-appropriate fur and wool like those of the period costumes put together for the actors by Diana Huckaby. Although I suspect that they might have been wearing high tech underwear for the long evening during which we sat motionless watching them.


The talkative lady from Chicago who settled next to us at the Sunday performance confided that she was there because high winds had prompted Austin Playhouse to cancel the Saturday staging. She went over to greet Artistic Director Don Toner as he was wrangling a space heater. The temperature fell during the first half of this two-act work, and she and her husband disappeared at the intermission, as did a number of other attendees.


Kimberly Barrow, Huck Huckaby (image: Gray G. Haddock)

That's the down side, but be of good cheer, for perhaps the cold will abate and you can come prepared. My wife and I were relatively comfortable because we put on hats and pulled out gloves stowed in coat pockets since last February.


The Lion in Winter, staged originally in New York in 1966, is a familiar title thanks largely to the 1968 film of the same name with Peter O'Toole and Katherine Hepburn, which won Goldman an Academy Award for screenwriting. It's the year 1168, as the Queen reminds us in a memorably acerbic line, "and of course everyone is carrying knives." Vaguely based in English history, this piece has few of the complexities of Shakespeare's histories and none of the pageantry. King Henry married well, taking Eleanor and her Aquitaine, consolidating a reign of extent unmatched since the days of Charlemagne almost four centuries earlier. The royal pair had four sons but the first, Henry's namesake, died as a child. Now at the ripe old age of 50 -- ancient for the epoch -- Henry is canoodling with his 16-year-old female ward, he has kept his queen under house arrest in another palace for ten years, and he acknowledges the need to prepare for his succession.


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

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Images by Gray G. Haddock for The Lion in Winter, Austin Playhouse, November 18 - December 18

Images by Gray G. Haddock for the production by

Austin Playhouse Austin TX


Kimberley Barrow, Huck Huckaby (image: Gray G. Haddock) Lion in Winter AUstin Playhouse



of


The Lion in Winter

by James Goldman

November 18 - December 18

Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 5 p.m.
No performance on November 24th (Thanksgiving)
Tickets: $35 opening night, $26 Thursday and Friday, $28 Saturday and Sunday
All student tickets are half-price. $5 discount for subscriber guests

Temporary Facility Location: 1800 1/2 Simond Avenue, Austin, Texas 78722
The temporary facility will be on the corner of Aldrich Street and Simond Avenue in the Mueller Austin Redevelopment. (Click for directions and map)
Austin Playhouse box office: (512) 476-0084 -- E-mail: austinplayhouse@aol.com
-- Website: www.austinplayhouse.com
Blog: www.austinplayhouse.blogspot.com

Huck Huckaby Lion in Winter Austin Playhouse (image: Gray G. Haddock)









Click 'Read more' to view additional images by Gray G. Haddock at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Upcoming: Laughter on the 23rd Floor, Austin Playhouse, February 25 - March 27

Received directly:


Laurghter on the 23rd Floor Neil Simon Austin Playhouse

Laughter on the 23rd Floor


by Neil Simon

directed by Don Toner

Feb. 25 - March 27

Austin Playhouse Main Stage, Penn Field, 3601 S. Congress (click for map)

Tickets are $26 Thursday and Friday and $28 Saturday and Sunday.

All student tickets are half price!

For Tickets, Call (512) 476-0084 or click here to order tickets online.


Hot on the heels of our most successful show ever, we're thrilled to bring theatrical legend Neil Simon's nostalgic comedy Laughter on the 23rd Floor to the stage! Set in 1953, Laughter recalls Simon's days as a young writer on Sid Caesar's Your Show of Shows. The play is a fast-paced and very fun comic romp through the behind-the-scenes antics in the writers' room.


Laughter features an all star cast including Kimberly Barrow, Brian Coughlin,Huck Huckaby, Jenny Larson, Jason Newman, Steve Shearer, Blake Adam Smith, David Stahl, and David Stokey!


For more information, visit our website!


Monday, February 7, 2011

The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde, Austin Playhouse, January 14 - February 13



This
"Trivial Comedy for Serious People" opened in 1895 and it was the last shining moment for Wilde's career as writer and dramatist. Soon afterwards he found himself in court, accused of immoral behavior and then sentenced to gaol. Because of that scandal the original production closed after only 86 performances. Since then it has become one of the most dependable and regularly revived comic satires on the boards.

Wilde's earnest young men show themselves of strenuously conventional Victorian morality in society but entirely subversive in their private lives.


Both Algernon Moncrieff (Jason Newman) and Jack Worthing (Benjamin Summers) have secret identities. Algernon goes "Bunberrying," using the excuse of a mythical ailing relative to escape from unappealing social engagements and to sail off on devil-may-care exploits.

Jack uses the excuse of his mythical brother "Earnest" to get away from the tedium of the country and the responsibilities of his guardianship for the fetching but bubble-headed Cecily, his ward and the daughter of his deceased benefactor. Masquerading as "Earnest" while in London, Jack is courting Algy's cousin Gwendolen.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Friday, March 12, 2010

Upcoming: Picasso at the Lapin Agile by Steve Martin, Austin Playhouse, March 26 - May 2


Click for ALT review, April 22



UPDATE: Review by Olin Meadows for AustinOnStage.com, April 12

UPDATE: Review by Ryan E. Johnson at examiner.com, April 8

Received directly:


Austin Playhouse presents

Picasso at the Lapin Agile
by Steve Martin

March 26 - May 2, 2010
Austin Playhouse, 3601 S. Congress, Bldg. C
Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 5 p.m .
Prices: $26 Thursdays, Fridays, $28 Saturdays, Sundays
$35 Opening Night, March 26, 2010
All student tickets are half-price
Tickets/Information at (512) 476-0084

It’s 1904 in Paris and a young Albert Einstein is working on a very famous theory. At the same time, a young Pablo Picasso is almost ready to “leave Blue behind.” At the Lapin Agile, a cabaret bar in Montmartre, Paris,frequented by artists, anarchists, and dreamers, these two young visionaries meet and engage in a lively debate on the creative process and the true nature of genius.

Picasso at the Lapin Agile was written in 1993 by famed comedian and actor Steve Martin. It is set on October 8, 1904, a time when Einstein and Picasso were both on the verge of executing a tremendous act of genius. Einstein will publish his theory of relativity in 1905 and Picasso will paint 'Les Demoiselles d’Avignon' in 1907.

Martin has written, "Focusing on Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity and Picasso’s master painting 'Les Demoiselles d’Avignon,' the play attempts to explain, in a light-hearted way, the similarity of the creative process involved in great leaps of imagination in art and science."

Picasso at the Lapin Agile is a playful, witty, incredibly funny look at how artists, scientists, and other inventors bound past society’s norms to enhance and advance humanity’s understanding of itself. Bringing the play to life is an incredible ensemble including Ben Wolfe as Picasso, Robert Matney as Einstein, Huck Huckaby as Freddy, Cyndi Williams as Germaine, Tom Parker as Gaston, David Stahl as Sagot, Kimberly Barrow as Suzanne and The Countess, Barry Miller as Schmendiman, and Jason Newman as The Singer.

The play is directed by Austin Playhouse Associate Artistic Director Lara Toner (Age of Arousal, The Turn of the Screw), with set design by Jessica Colley-Mitchell (Misalliance, A Flea in Her Ear), costume design by Buffy Manners (Misalliance, Les Liaisons Dangereuses) and lighting design by Don Day (Misalliance, Frost/Nixon).

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Images: Misalliance by George Bernard Shaw, Austin Playhouse, January 22 - February 21


Click for ALT review, February 3





Images by Christopher Loveless, received directly from Austin Playhouse,

for

Misalliance

by George Bernard Shaw
January 22 - February 21
Austin Playhouse

"
The action unfolds in the garden room of John Tarleton’s Surrey estate. Tarleton is an underwear magnate and one of the newly wealthy merchant class. As the play opens, Tarleton’s daughter Hypatia is engaged to Bentley Summerhays, the intellectual son of Lord Summerhays, who once asked Hypatia to marry him. Tarleton’s son Johnny runs the family business, while his father indulges his own wild ideas and establishes free libraries around England.

"The domestic tranquility is interrupted by a plane crash in the backyard, delighting Hypatia, who has always longed for “adventure to drop out of the sky.” The plane carries a dashing young aviator who catches Hypatia’s eye [pictured: Lara Toner and Jason Newman], as well as Lina Szczepanowska, a Polish acrobat whose family tradition demands that she risk her life at least once a day. Lina catches the eye of almost every man. Adding to the mix is another unexpected guest, a gun-wielding clerk who is bent on revenge for Tarleton’s careless treatment of his mother. During the course of the play no fewer than eight romantic proposals are revealed, but which ones will last and which will prove to be misalliances?"

See additional images at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .