Showing posts with label Joseph Garlock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joseph Garlock. Show all posts

Monday, January 14, 2013

Invisible, Inc. by Paul Menzer, Hidden Room Theatre at Rolllins Theatre, Long Center, January 11 - 20, 2013

Invisible, Inc. Paul Menzer Hidden Room Theatre Austin TX


Austin Live Theatre review

by Dr. David Glen Robinson and Michael Meigs

Outside the Austin skyline was bright and magical as ever while enthusiastic crowds gathered for last Thursday’s preview and Saturday’s performance of Invisible, Inc. The Hidden Room Theatre created a delicious, dark and intriguing world in the Rollins black box theatre at the Long Center, emerging from the secret shadows of the historic York Rite Masonic Temple on W. 7th Street and going big time. It's too bad that the company and its director and proprietary matriarch Beth Burns can't occupy that venue for a longer term, because Invisible, Inc. is an elegant and witty entertainment. It’s their first theatre outing since last year’s multiple-award-winning Rose Rage.


One special appeal is that its leads are Robert Matney and Liz Fisher, a young husband and wife pair who enjoy the sort of respect and affection in Austin that Alfred Lunt and Margot Fontanne had on Broadway from the 1930's through the 1960's. Noël Coward wrote his 1933 Design for Living for that famous couple; coincidentally, Austin Shakespeare will be doing that work in this same venue in just a few weeks. Now, there's a thought experiment: substituting Matney and Fisher for Miller and Merino.


Burns presents a gorgeously designed package. Ia Ensterä's set makes the black box into a Manhattan highrise living room with a broad window at deep center stage, decorated in Art Deco via Bela Lugosi. At the audience's far left stands an upright piano that's part of the same playing space; at the far right there's a tumble of furniture representing a garret somewhere far downtown. With furniture shifts the central playing space can belong to either of these. With a shift in lighting, the flare of a spotlight and a change in the image at deep center stage, the space becomes a theatre complete with proscenium.


Invisible Inc., Paul Menzer, Hidden Room Theatre, Austin TXPatrons desiring premium seating can pay a bit extra to settle at one of the four-person nightclub tables on the floor with the performing space, where they'll be handsomely welcomed and entertained by an amiable professional magician who does up-close illusions and prestidigitation. On Saturday evening the company's Master of Magic (coach) J.D. Stewart was resplendent, gregarious and astonishing. He left us dumbfounded with his skills. We have no idea how those playing cards flew invisibly through the air or those coins appeared impossibly at his bidding.


Invisible, Inc. is soaked with atmosphere and its spookiness is boosted when the lights first go down and that upright piano erupts into lengthy evocative passes of the keys by the invisible Graham Reynolds. His score for MIDI-assisted player piano punctuates the action with the same dexterity as the big Wurlitzer organs at the cinema palaces of the 1930's.


Menzer’s play offers us the world of vaudeville magic acts and magicians in the 1930’s. The potential for a peek behind the magician’s cabinet is immense, and the playwright gives us several such peeks on our way through the story. The characters present magic turns in every scene, their very gestures accented with flash paper. Handcuffs fall off wrists; cards appear and disappear; straitjackets and cabinets cannot contain them. The disappearance of objects, people and reality raises the tension and the ante, and the onslaught of illusions challenges the audience’s perceptions and certitudes.


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

Thursday, December 13, 2012

INVISIBLE INC. by Paul Menzer, Hidden Room Theatre at Rolllins Theatre, Long Center, January 11 - 20, 2013






Hidden Room Theatre Austin TX







The Hidden Room

presents


Invisible Inc Paul Menzer Hidden Room Theatre Austin TX 


January 11 - 20, 2013
January 11-20 at the Long Center, every night except on Tuesday 15th.
Mondays - Saturdays 8 pm, Sundays 5pm

Click to purchase TICKETS

The Hidden Room is proud to present the world premiere of this stylish and crackling noir mystery by Paul Menzer (author of The Brats of Clarence). This fantastical event swirls around feuding magicians in New York: one in the ritzy theatres of Manhattan, the other in back alley speakeasies, both knee-deep in danger.

Starring Robert Matney, Liz Fisher, Joseph Garlock, Laurence Pears, Todd Kassens, and Julia Lorenz-Olson.

Original music by Graham Reynolds, set by Ia Enstera, lights by Megan Reilly, props by Justin Cox, and magic consultation by JD Stewart.


Purchase a general admission ticket, or enjoy the magic close up at table seating!

SPECIAL TALK BACK WITH PLAYWRIGHT MENZER post-show Friday the 11th and Saturday 12th.

There will be no extensions! 10 performances only!

Running time 90 mins.

Proudly supported by the Redd Carpet Fund
Presented at the Joe R. and Teresa Long Center for the Performing Arts

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)




Friday, October 12, 2012

Upcoming: Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare, Present Company Theatre at Rain Lily Farm, October 19 - November 4





Present Company Theatre Austin TX












Ladies and Gentlemen!

Present Company
is thrilled to present our fourth Shakespeare On the Farm, 


 Julius Caesar Present Company Austin TX
Julius Caesar
at the lovely Rain Lily Farm at 914 Shady Lane in East Austin (click for map)

Join us October 19th-November 4th, Fridays - Sundays at 7 p.m., for our journey into Shakespeare's darker side, with his classic tale of ambition and power. The Revolution begins at 7pm on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights with the Shakespeare Field Guide pre-show. Bring a picnic and come spread your blanket under the stars for Austin's favorite new tradition! Rain Lily Farm isa magical, organic working farm located at 914 Shady Lane, in Austin, Texas. 


Promoting the philosophy of accessible and sustainable art, Shakespeare On the Farm is FREE, but a suggested donation of $10 helps support the event.
Generously sponsored by Rain Lily Design and Landscaping, Dripping Springs Vodka, and Farmhouse Delivery.

Courageously led by Director Joseph Garlock,
Julius Caesar features the talents of Sergio Alvarado, Laura Artesi, Mateo Barrera, Aaron Black, Stephanie Carll, Robert Deike, Renee Fulton, Shannon Grounds, Omid Ghorashi, Kelly Sardinas, Feliz Dia McDonald, Toby Minor, and Ian Ramos.


Visit www.presentcompanytheatre.com or email presentcompanyaustin@gmail.com for more information.

Hail Caesar! And see you on the Farm!



(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)





Monday, March 19, 2012

Video: Director and Cast Discuss The Dragon Play by Jenny Conell, Shrewd Productions, March 22 - April 14


Shrewd Productions Austin TX



presents

The Dragon Play

by Jenny Connell
directed by Shannon Grounds
March 22 through April 14
Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 pm
at The Blue Theatre, 916 Springdale (click for map)
Tickets $16.52 including service fee via

Brown Paper Tickets



Shrewd Productions is proud to present the first-ever production of Jenny Connell‘s The Dragon Play. On a lonely farm in northern Minnesota, a husband and wife's peaceful existence is shattered by the appearance of an unexpected visitor. On a hot stretch of highway in central Texas, a boy befriends a wounded dragon. Spanning two moments in time and space and blurring the lines between each, The Dragon Play explores what happens when reality and fantasy converge, when desire and duty conflict, and when our deepest secrets show up breathing fire.

About the Playwright Jenny Connell is a Brooklyn-based playwright and teacher, a member of Austin Script Works, Ars Nova's Play Group, The Dramatists Guild, The Playwrights Center of Minneapolis, and a graduate of UT's MFA Theater program. Her plays have been produced in New York, Chicago, and Austin, and have been finalists for BAPF, the Heideman, Seven Devils, and the O'Neill conference.

About the Cast & Crew Directed by Shrewd Artistic Director, Shannon Grounds, The Dragon Play stars Liz Fisher (Uncle Vanya), Rommel Sulit (Big Love), Joseph Garlock (Servant of Two Masters), Amelia Turner (LEAR) and Xander Slay-Tamkin (The Physicists), with set design by Shrewd company member and Trouble Puppet Artistic Director, Connor Hopkins (Civilization), lights by Patrick Anthony (Big Love) and original compositions by founding Shrewd T. Lynn Mikeska (The Long Now).


The Dragon Play is presented with the assistance of Script Works through their Finer Point Fund for New Play Production. Shrewd Productions is a sponsored project of VORTEX repertory and a member of the Austin Creative Alliance and the Austin New Works community. This project funded and supported in part by the City of Austin through the Cultural Arts Division.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Upcoming: A Servant of Two Masters by Goldoni, Penfold Theatre , Round Rock Amphitheatre, August 4-21 & EmilyAnn Amphitheatre, Wimberley, August 26-27

Received directly:

Penfold Theatre




presentsRyan Crowder (www.penfoldtheatre.org)

Servant of Two Masters
By Carlo Goldoni
Adapted and directed by Beth Burns
Featuring Katie Blacksmith, Ryan Crowder, Robert Deike, Joseph Garlock, Nathan Jerkins, Alex McDonald-Villareal, Toby Minor, Gricelda Silva and Andrea Smith
Comedy, "Penfold in the Park" series
Running time: About 1 hour 40 minutes, with one intermission.
Content advisory: For all ages.

August 4-21, 2011
Round Rock Amphitheater, 301 W. Bagdad Ave, Round Rock TX 78664 (Map it)
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00pm
Special encore performance Sunday, August 21, at 8:00pm
Free admission (donations accepted)

August 26-27, 2011
EmilyAnn Theatre & Gardens, 1101 Ranch Road 2325, Wimberley TX 78676 (Map it)
Friday and Saturday at 8:15pm
Regular $15, Students $10
To make reservations, visit the EmilyAnn website or call (512) 847-6969 .

Mistaken identities, reunited lovers, and over-the-top hilarity! When a man thought dead shows up at the house of his former fiancee, all sorts of madcap mayhem breaks loose! Filled with disguises, plot twists and Marx brothers-style slapstick, Servant of Two Masters is a laugh-out-loud comedy for all ages based on the beloved characters of commedia dell’arte. With nightly pre-shows by other performing arts groups around Austin, this free outdoor performance at the Round Rock Amphitheater is pure summer fun.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Lost Land by Jennifer A. Kokai, Wogglebug Theatre, FronteraFest 2011 at Blue Theatre, January 19 - 29


Lost Land by Wogglebug Theatre




Jenny Kokai's Lost Land is engaging and entertaining but unfocussed, a multifold parable in which a sunken fiberglass whale is the narrator. Four stories are anchored at one place: "Lost Land," a lake at the center of a Disney-style theme park. The stories are widely separated in time.

The unseen leviathan narrator speaks either from outside time or from some date far in the future. Fred Bothwell is the voice of "Moby," a resigned, lightly humorous chorus slowly disintegrating in the depths of the waters. Three other stories are developed seriatum over the course of the evening:

-- In the 1950's with the Lost Land park in operation, two young women take jobs as wharf rat characters. They emerge periodically to hug visitors and to sign autographs. In the park's employee changing room, one impulsively kisses the other. Their mutual attraction confuses them. They lose their jobs when the theme park goes bust. One woman plans breathlessly for a little home and family in the suburbs; the other can't imagine such an existence but can't articulate an alternative, either.

-- At some other time, possibly contemporary with us, a young career woman is planning a real estate development around the lake. The theme park buildings have decayed and mostly disappeared. Having learned she's pregant, the woman sheds an unwanted boyfriend and elects to become a single mother. The baby girl's congenital defects require lengthy neonatal hospital treatment and surgery. Nurses intervene coolly, keeping the mother at a spirit-killing distance from the child.

-- At some future date after global catastrophe, a young man named Brown Bear lives in primitive conditions next to the lake. Minder, a wandering young woman, shows up. The two distrust one another at first but gradually come to an accommodation. We learn through their exchanges that the world has been devastated by plague. Eventually the young woman begins to show signs of the disease.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .