Showing posts with label Jeffrey Hatcher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeffrey Hatcher. Show all posts

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Three Viewings by Jeffrey Hatcher, Trinity Street Players, October 22 - November 6


by Michael Meigs

David Harper, Mary Jane Smith, Linda Miller Raff (photo: Rod Machen)

Those who attend Trinity Street Players' Three Viewings by Jeffrey Hatcher will be spending some time in the dark with these faces. Each will feature in a solo act, navigating the fragile thread of human emotion like a tightrope walker. Or, to use the German expression for it, like a 'rope dancer,' because these narratives are not as predicable as a taut line. These characters inhabit the same world and speak to us from the same space -- a barren smoking lounge in a funeral home in the northeastern United States -- but they don't appear together until the curtain call

That black box theatre up on the fourth floor of the First Baptist Church puts them within arm's reach of the audience. Director Bob Beare builds that up-close-and-personal feeling by having two of his talented actors enter through the audience ("excuse me; excuse me; coming through, here") and the other one emerge from the audience.

Jeffrey Hatcher has written three monologues as intimately eerie as pieces by Edgar Alan Poe and as surprising as short stories by O. Henry. The narratives are not in the least morbid, despite the setting and even though they speak frankly of funerals and of the recently deceased. These are the living, bereaved but not bereft.

Trinity Street Players stages three plays a year and they often fill up this space with characters and actors. That's what happened in their productions of Steel Magnolias, You Can't Take It with You and Arthur Miller's Incident at Vichy. Shadowlands was really a two-character play but those characters were well surrounded.

The three solo one-acts of this piece by Hatcher require different strengths. Each actor must establish rapport, create the character and tell the story as if delivering it to the ear of an old and trusted friend. Their success here reinforces the impression that Trinity Street Players are by far the most accomplished community ensemble in the greater Austin area.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Monday, October 10, 2011

Upcoming: Engaging Adaptation, A Conversation with Jeffrey Hatcher, University of Texas, November 3


Found on-line:

UT Theatre and Dance




Jeffrey Hatcher (image via www.mmstageco.com)Engaging Adaptation: A Conversation with Jeffrey Hatcher

Thursday, November 3 after the performance of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Jeffrey Hatcher
B. Iden Payne Theatre, Winship Drama Building, near 23rd and San Jacinto (click for map)

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde University of TexasPatrons of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are invited to attend a post-performance talk-back with playwright Jeffrey Hatcher and the production’s director Daria Davis. Attendees will learn about the process of adapting Stevenson’s novel for the stage and bringing this modern retelling to today’s audience.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Video: Three Viewings, Trinity Street Players, October 22 - November 6


Received directly, a video by David McCullars for

Three Viewings

by Jeffrey Hatcher

directed by Bob Beare
October 22 - November 6; Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m.

Opening night is Saturday, October 22nd at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are free to the public, but reservations must be made by calling 512-402-3086. Donations are appreciated.

4th floor black box theatre, First Baptist Church, 901 Trinity Street (click for map)



[Apple users: can't see the video? Click to go to YouTube]

Friday, July 22, 2011

Auditions for Three Viewings by Jeffrey Hatcher, Trinity Street Players, August 13

Found at www.AustinActors.net:


Trinity Street Players logoTrinity Street Players is presenting a unique theatre experience for the Halloween season. Jeffrey Hatcher's Three Viewings is fast-paced, and consists of three touching and darkly funny monologues set in a funeral parlor.
Tell Tale is the story of a quirky mortician with an unspoken passion. The Thief of Tears is about an attractive corpse robber with a shocking and painful secret. And in Thirteen Things about Ed Carpolotti, we meet an adorable and recently widowed matron whose horrific situation is rescued from beyond the grave.

The monologues are loosely related, but each role is a separate showcase opportunity for three committed actors:

Emil (30-55) – A mortician with a secret passion for a real estate broker who markets to the bereaved. He is a bit repressed and buttoned-down, and the passion threatens to undo him.

Mac (30-late 40’s) – The attractive, wise-cracking daughter of an upper-class family who steals jewelry from corpses as an occupation. We find out that a terrible secret is behind the obsession.

Virginia (Late 50’s or older) – A straight talking woman of character who has been left with a giant burden of corruption by her deceased husband. We see her innocence crumble as the story unfolds but her dignity and good-nature remain to the touching final moment.

The show runs Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, October 21-November 6

Auditions:
Trinity Street Players Blackbox Theatre, 4th floor, 901 Trinity Street (click for map)
Saturday, August 13, 10 a.m.
Callbacks Monday, August 15, 7pm
Actors are asked to bring a resume, headshot, and to prepare a 1-2 minute comic and/or dramatic monologue.

For additional information email director Bob Beare: rkbeare@hotmail.com

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Ongoing: Three Viewings by Jeffrey Hatcher, Austin Playhouse Larry L. King Theatre, October 15 - 30

UPDATE: Review by Cate Blouke for the Statesman's Austin360 "Seeing Things" blog, October 21

Received directly:

Three Viewings Jeffrey Hatcher Austin Playhouse

Austin Playhouse logo

presents

Three Viewings

by Jeffrey Hatcher

directed by Ben Wolfe

October 15 - 30 at the Larry L. King Theatre
Penn Field Building C, 3601 South Congress
Tickets: $20, $15 for main stage subscribers and guests, $10 for students
Box office: (512) 476-0084
Call 476-0084 or visit https://austin-playhouse.ticketleap.net/ for tickets!

Austin Playhouse continues its 11thThree Viewings in its alternative space, the Larry L. King Theater, for this year’s Halloween season. Rich characters, surprising twists, and a darkly comic tone connect three tales set in a small town funeral parlor.

Austin Playhouse has been drawn to Hatcher’s work since its production of the classic ghost story The Turn of the Screw last October. This season Austin Playhouse delves back into Hatcher presenting Three Viewings.

Three Viewings is told through a trio of monologues, in which characters engage directly with the audience. Set at three different funerals, the play brings together the stories of three characters and reveals the intricacies of their lives. Although the characters have no real interactions with each other, their stories are woven seamlessly together, combining three short-plays into one complete production.

When produced by Connecticut’s “Theater Works,” the New York Times described the play as a “gripping production” of an “exceedingly successful notion to play upon three unrelated deaths as a means of unmasking three separate lives.”

During the play you will meet Emil, a mild-mannered undertaker secretly in love with a real estate agent who attends all his funerals. His unspoken passion for her leads him to commit crimes while planning a way to confess his true feelings. Next introduced is Mac, a drifter who makers her living stealing jewelry from corpses returns home after her wealthy grandmother dies and leaves her nothing, in an attempt to regain her inheritance. Finally we hear the story of Virginia, the widow of a wheeler-dealer contractor who discovers that her husband’s shady business deals have left her in debt to the banks, her family and the mob.

Hatcher was nominated for the Edgar Award for his adaptation of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He has written many other plays including an adaptation of Miss Nelson is Missing! and darker plays such as Murderers, and Murder by Poe.

THE THREE VIEWINGS CAST

Hans Venable as “Emil”

Cyndi Williams as “Virginia”

Jenny Gravenstein as “Mac”

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Images by Christopher Loveless: Three Viewings, Austin Playhouse Larry L. King Theatre, October 15 - 31

Images by Christopher Loveless of solo performers Hans Venable, Jenny Gravenstein and Cyndi Williams in Three Viewings:Jenny Gravenstein (image: Christopher Loveless for Austin Playhouse)

Austin Playhouse logo

presents

Three Viewings

by Jeffrey Hatcher

directed by Ben Wolfe

October 15 - 30 at the Larry L. King Theatre
Penn Field Building C, 3601 South Congress
Tickets: $20, $15 for main stage subscribers and guests, $10 for students
Box office: (512) 476-0084 or visit https://austin-playhouse.ticketleap.net/ for tickets!

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Upcoming: A Servant of Two Masters by Goldoni, Texas State University, San Marcos,

Found on-line:





presents

A Servant of Two Masters

by Carlo Goldoni
Translated and Adapted by Jeffrey Hatcher and Paolo Emilio Landi
Directed by Michael Costello
Main Stage — Theatre Center
April 20 - 24

Carlo Goldoni’s 18th century comic masterpiece The Servant of Two Masters reinvigorated commedia dell'arte and has influenced the great comic actors to the present day. It tells the story of a clever and mischievous servant, Arlecchino, who decides that two paydays are better than one and hires himself out to two different masters at the same time. As he attempts to juggle the demands of two high-strung lovers who have lost each other and are looking for each other in an unfamiliar city (the woman happens to be disguised in men’s clothing), absolute chaos ensues. You’ll find rich characters, broad comedy, and a love story in this classic commedia tale.
[NOTE: Trinity University in San Antonio is also staging Harlequin: The Servant of Two Masters, in a new translation directed by Roberto Prestigiacomo, April 16-18 and 21-24. Click for more information about the Trinity University staging.]

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Upcoming: Murder by Poe, adapted by Jeffrey Hatcher, Bastrop Opera House, October 16 - November 7


Found on-line:

Bastop Opera House
presents


MURDER BY POE

by Jeffrey Hatcher
Directed by Chester Eitze
Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30 p.m.
October 16 - November 7, 2009
(no show October 31)

A dark and dreadful night. A woman in white lost within a wood. And the only shelter is a house full of murderers.

Mixing funhouse tricks, Grand Guignol and a deadly game of cat and mouse, Murder By Poe is a theatrical reimagining of some of Edgar Allan Poe's most famous tales of terror--"The Black Cat," "The Tell-tale Heart," "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," "William Wilson," "The Purloined Letter," and "The Fall of the House of Usher."

As each haunted figure tells a story of crime and mayhem, the woman must solve the puzzle of the house and the riddle of the
man who ushers her into its mysteries."

Performed without intermission; approximately 90 minutes in length. Not recommended for very young children.
Concessions are available, but no dinner service.

Show tickets: Adults $10, Seniors sixty and over, $8, Students $7, Children fourteen and younger, $5
[illustration by Joanna Boyle, Art Institute of Philadelphia, from National Park Service site commemorating the 2009 bicentennial of Edgar Allen Poe]

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .