Showing posts with label Jaston Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jaston Williams. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Tru by Jay Presson Allen with Jaston Williams, Zach Theatre, January 10 - March 10, 2013

Austin Live Theatre review




by Michael Meigs
Tru by Jay Presson Allen with Jaston Williams, Zach Theatre, Austin TX

Jaston Williams and director Larry Randolph take us to another place and time with Tru, now on an extended run at the Zach's intimate theatre-in-the-round Whisenhunt stage. Michael Raiford's clever low-level set is Truman Capote's UN Plaza apartment in New York City in 1975. It's a long long way from Greater Tuna, where Williams and Joe Sears romped, mugged and portrayed a whole looney town -- or, for that matter from Thornton Wilder's Our Town in which Williams played the somber stage manager for the Zach Theatre's production almost three years ago.


Truman Capote was a tiny man, only 5' 3", but he was larger than life in the monotones of the middle of the twentieth century in the United States. He was self-made, for one thing, riding the power of his pen out of a dreary childhood of neglect in south Alabama. Sensitive short stories such as the classic A Christmas Memory and Breakfast at Tiffany's opened doors, and a dreamy come-hither photograph on the dust jacket of one collection scandalized some and intrigued others. In mid-career he spent four years researching In Cold Blood, a novelized true-crime account serialized in the New Yorker magazine and a best-seller when published in 1966 by Random House.


Capote was flagrantly, unapologetically homosexual at a time when most gay men were hiding desperately in the closet. His persona as a coy, sarcastic and extravagant queen astonished middle America, and he became a celebrity on television talk shows. He hung out with the jet set, including Lee Radziwell, sister of Jackie Kennedy, and CBS president William Paley and his wife Babe. Capote wrote almost nothing of note after the huge success of In Cold Blood. He became a professional celebrity socialite and sank deeper into alcoholism and drug addiction. He kept notes on his rich friends, with the idea of writing a Proustian account one day that would be titled Answered Prayers. In 1975 he agreed to allow Esquire magazine to publish four chapters of the long-delayed work. The rich friends who had found him some amusing were shocked to see their lives, peccadillos and anxieties etched in acid. Some were named and others were only thinly disguised. Virtually all of them immediately shunned Capote.


Playwright Jay Presson Allen chose to set this portrait of Capote in that specific moment and place -- Capote's desperately lonely Christmas Eve in 1975. It's a one-man show, two acts drawn virtually entirely from Capote's own published words and broadcast comments. It's a huge and colorful catalog, and Allen has shaped it cleverly into two acts. This script is an invitation to tour de force, and Jaston Williams is simply breathtaking in it.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Opening This Week in Central Texas, January 6 - 11, 2013




Austin Live Theatre
Opening This Week
in the Austin - (*) San Antonio region
January 6 - 11, 2013
Click images for additional information

Opening in Austin . . .
 
Elizabeth Heart of a King Lorella Loftus Austin TX


Dearly Beloved Jones Hope Wooten Georgetown Palace Theatre TX
Georgetown Palace Theatre, January 11 - February 3
Let's Talk Lucky Chaos Theatre Project Austin TX
Invisible Inc Paul Menzer Hidden Room Theatre Austin TX
(poster design: JennyMarie Jemison)
Meanwhile Back on the Couch Jack Sharkey Way Off Broadway Community Players Leander TX
Way Off Broadway Community Players, Leander, January 11 -February 2

Tru Zach Theatre Austin TX


============================================
(Nothing announced in SAN ANTONIO)
=============================================

Monday, December 17, 2012

Upcoming: Tru by Jay Presson Allen with Jaston Williams, Zach Theatre, January 10 - March 10, 2013


By JAY PRESSON ALLEN

January 10, 2013 - March 10, 2013
Zach Theatre Weisenhut Stage (off Toomey Rd.)

Please arrive early for parking. Bar opens 1 hour before showtime. Drinks welcome inside the theatre.

Greater Tuna star Jaston Williams inhabits Truman Capote in a virtuoso performance of the charming, acerbic, fragile and enigmatic writer. In this one-man tour de force, Williams' astonishing portrayal of the In Cold Blood and Breakfast at Tiffany's author is by turns hilarious, vulnerable and confessional. The audience becomes confidants to Tru's trademark wit and honesty. Packed houses, standing ovations and waves of laughter characterized this show in its initial run 12 years ago when it became the hottest ticket in town. This production promises to be even more fun!


Make it Dinner and a Show: Click here for Dining Discounts.

"A man who doesn't dream is like a man who doesn't sweat: he stores up a lot of poison."
— Truman Capote

Please Note: Ticket price is not refundable. Late-comers are seated at the discretion of the House Manager. Unclaimed seats at curtain time are subject to release to patrons on standby. 

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Kirk R. Tuck on Capturing An Epic Moment in Zach's Laramie Project, Visual Science Lab blog, May 12


Jaston Williams in the Laramie Project, Zach Theatre, Austin Texas, 2012 (image: Kirk R. Tuck)


Austin-based photographer Kirk R. Tuck writes and illustrates an article at his blog The Visual Science Lab about capturing an epic moment in the Zach Theatre's March-May 2012 production of The Laramie Project by Moisés and the Tectonic Theatre Project:

An interesting job with mixed light sources. On the stage.

I had several assignments during the course of the day this past Friday but this set of images for Zachary Scott Theatre was the most interesting to photograph. There's a scene at the end of the play, The Laramie Project, where one of the actors (Jaston Williams, of Greater Tuna and Tuna Texas fame) stands on a square riser covered in grass and is pelted by rain as he stretches his hands out from his side.  In the context of the play it's a very powerful moment.

I saw the scene the first time ten years ago during a dress rehearsal shoot and we captured it on film.  The shot was okay but not quite what we wanted.  Then, ten years later, I shot the scene again, during a recent dress rehearsal.  Technical issues kept me from getting the shot the marketing director and I both wanted.  The spot light on the actor was too contrasty (for the camera...just right for the audience) and the letters across the back were not bright enough.  The slow shutter speed we needed in order to dig into the darkness meant that we didn't get any sort of frozen motion on the rain drops.  We knew we'd have to light the shot to get the image that we both could visualize in our heads.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

The Laramie Project, Ten Years Later, Zach Theatre, April 18 - May 13


Laramie Project Ten Years Later Zach Austin Texas


by Michael Meigs


You know these people; you're comfortable with them.  Most likely because you attended their portrayal in March and April of The Laramie Project, but possibly also because you recognize them as the Zach regulars who have appeared before you so many times.  The Laramie Project 10 Years Later has the reassuring buzz of a class reunion, which is something like the way it must have been for the Tectonic Theatre Project as they undertook the visits and research in 2008 that led to this text.

The Laramie Project featured the looming absence of gentle Matthew Shepard, the boy-man who was enticed by two men from a bar into a pickup and then driven out to be beaten almost to death, left tied to a fence in a remote and desolate location.  It was crafted to tell the horrific, inexorable story of that spectacular event, the investigation and the actions in response both of the justice system and the townspeople of Laramie, a town of fewer than 30,000 persons on I-80 just north of the Colorado border. The work had a necessary beginning in outrage, a middle of reflection and discussion and an end featuring retribution and mercy.

10 Years Later has Jaston Williams Laramie Project Zach Theatreno such clean plot line, although Moisés Kaufman and the credited collaborators of the Tectonic Theatre Project worked assiduously to give it one.  They discovered that the vivid accounts at the trial and in the newspapers were no longer a daily reality in Laramie but instead the story of Matthew Shepard had undergone transformation, partly due to the collective process of healing via forgetfulness and partly due to disinformation from a national investigative television program that claimed drug use and drug dealing lay behind the murder.  The theatre troupe's interviews and re-enactments battle those claims, trying to re-establish for their wider audience the picture of a despicable hate crime.  They also chart the successful emergence from the closet of a woman who won a seat in the legislature and the ideological combat there over a proposed amendment to the Wyoming constitution to define marriage as consisting solely of the union between a man and a woman.

[images by Kirk R. Tuck]

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Upcoming: The Laramie Project (March 22 - May 12) and The Laramie Project Ten Years Later (April 22 - May 13)


Zach Theatre Austin TX


Jaston Williams Laramie Project Zach Theatre


presents

THE LARAMIE PROJECT in two parts
Written by Moisés Kaufman, Leigh Fondakowski, Greg Pierotti, Andy Paris and Stephen Belber
Directed by Dave Steakley
Starring the original ZACH cast: Jaston Williams, Janelle Buchanan, Martin Burke, Meredith McCall, Robert Newell, Sarah Richardson and Jenny Larson, with Harvey Guion

A deeply moving story from the American heartland.


PART I: THE LARAMIE PROJECT
March 20 - May 12, 2012
An inspiring theatrical experience based on the events surrounding the Matthew Shepard story as seen through the eyes of the Wyoming townspeople who were both witnesses and participants.

PLUS A MAJOR NEW EVENT…

PART II: THE LARAMIE PROJECT 10 YEARS LATER
April 22 - May 13, 2012
A decade passed and we return to Laramie to see what has changed — and what hasn’t. The results are surprising, life-altering and unforgettable!

Click to view video of Meredith McCall and Martin Burke discussing The Laramie Project at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Monday, January 16, 2012

Upcoming: The Laramie Project 10 Years Later in repertory with Part 1, Zach Theatre, April 22 - May 13


Found on-line:


Zach logo

Laramie Project 10 Years Later Jaston Williams Zach Theatre





presents

April 22, 2012 - May 13, 2012

Written by MOISÉS KAUFMAN, LEIGH FONDAKOWSKI, GREG PIEROTTI, ANDY PARIS and STEPHEN BELBER

Directed by DAVE STEAKLEY | Starring the original ZACH cast: JASTON WILLIAMS,JANELLE BUCHANAN, MARTIN BURKE, MEREDITH MCCALL, ROBERT NEWELL, SARAH RICHARDSON and JENNY LARSON, with HARVEY GUION
Please arrive early for parking.

Student Tickets: $18 One Hour Before Showtime (with Valid ID)
Bar opens 1 hour before showtime. Drinks welcome inside the theatre.

Please note: THE LARAMIE PROJECT plays in repertory with THE LARAMIE PROJECT 10 YEARS LATER.
Part 1 will play in repertory with Part 2 on Saturdays April 18 – May 13. It will be possible to see both parts on the same day with a dinner break between. See our calendar for individual show times.

A decade passed and we return to Laramie to see what has changed — and what hasn’t. The results are surprising, life-altering and unforgettable!

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Discount Code: A Tuna Christmas at the Paramount Theatre, November 24, 26 - 28

Received directly from Anthony:

"Just thought you'd like to maybe spread this info to your readers (since someone passed it onto me), but there is a $10 off code for all TUNA CHRISTMAS shows this week- just use the code VERA at checkout- I was happy to get it and happy to pass it on!"

A Tuna Christmas with Joe Sears and Jaston Williams plays through Sunday, November 28, with posted ticket prices ranging from $27 to $50. Evening show on Wednesday; no show on Thanksgiving Day; evenings and matinees on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

You can click on the image above to go to the Paramount's on-line ticket sales for A Tuna Christmas. Choose your date; the site will display a map of the orchestra with seats available (you can click on the drop-down menu in the second line Location: Paramount to access maps of less expensive seats in the mezzanine or the balcony).

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Images by Kirk Tuck: Our Town, Zach Theatre, April 15 - May 23

Received directly:

Images by Kirk R. Tuck, courtesy of Zach Theatre, for Our Town by Thornton Wilder, directed by Dave Steakley and featuring Jaston Williams, Michael Amendola, Janelle Buchanan, Barbara Chisholm, Harvey Guion, Billy Harden,Gabriel Luna, Jordan McRae, Marco Perella, and others.

[Right: Jaston Williams: "So, people a thousand years from now: this is how we were."]

Our Town plays Wednesdays through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Sundays at 2:30 p.m. Tickets available by phone at 476-0541, ext. 1 or visit the Zach website to purchase on-line.

[Below: The choir, directed by troubled choirmaster Simon Stimson (Billy Hardin)]

Click to view additional images at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Upcoming: Our Town, Zach Theatre, April 15 - May 23


UPDATE: Review by Jeanne Claire van Ryzin at Statesman's Austin360 "Seeing Things" blog, April 19

Received directly:



presents

OUR TOWN

by Thornton Wilder

April 15 - May 23, Wednesdays - Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. , Sundays at 2:30 p.m.

Kleberg Stage , 1421 W. Riverside Dr. (corner of Riverside and South Lamar.)
Tickets range from $20 to $50, with $15 tickets available to students starting 1 hour prior to curtain time. Charge tickets by phone at 476-0541, ext. 1 or visit the Zach website to purchase on-line

Zach Theatre Re-Envisions “Our Town” in Our Town with all-star, all-Austin cast starring “Greater Tuna’s” Jaston Williams as the Stage Manager

Austin’s finest actors join together to tell the intimate, heartfelt story of America’s best loved play. Zach’s contemporary interpretation transports the audience to a chapel of love that will linger in your memory. Our Town audiences will watch the story unfold in several settings, including the wedding scene, which will be fully realized in its setting, costumes, environment with music by Austin area choral choirs. Directed by Dave Steakley, ZACH’s production is more than a play: it’s an experience as unique as Austin!

Jaston Williams, star of ZACH’s The Laramie Project and Austin‘s Greater Tuna will star as the iconic Stage Manager in Grover’s Corners. ZACH’s production also stars well-known, Austin favorites Michael Amendola, Michael Bryce, Janelle Bucahanan, Barbara Chisholm, Lana Dieterich, Christian Guerra, Harvey Guion, Billy Harden, Jordan McRae, Michael Mendoza, Crystal Odom, Don Own, Marco Perella, Scotty Robertson, Donelvan Thigpen, and Evan Underbrink,

ZACH Theatre is sponsored in part by Applied Materials, Austin American-Statesman, Time Warner Cable, Austin News TV 36, The Dell Foundation, Vollmer Public Relations, SOL Marketing Concepts, IKEA, The Shubert Foundation, The City of Austinunder the auspices of the Austin Arts Commission, The Texas Commission on the Arts, and The National Endowment for the Arts.


[Click for information on $5 discount offer]