Showing posts with label Julia Lorenz-Olsen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Julia Lorenz-Olsen. 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 . . . .

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Upcoming: The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, Soubrette Productions at the Boyd Vance Theatre, September 23 - October 9

Received directly:25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee Soubrette Productions

Soubrette Productions
is proud to present the Tony-Award-winning musical


The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

by William Finn with book by Rachel Sheinkin

directed by Philip Olson with musical direction by David Blackburn

September 23 - October 9
Friday, Saturday, & Sunday evenings at 7:30 p.m. with additional Sunday matinees at 2 p.m.
at the Boyd Vance Theater, George Washington Carver Center, 1161 Angelina Street (click for map)
Tickets $15, discounts available for students and seniors -- purchase via www.austincreativealliance.org


The cast includes Derek Jones, Kylie Baker, Mitch Mahoney, Brian Lasoya, Oliva Frierson, Audrey Johnson, Amy Chang, Aaron Glover, and Julia Lorenz-Olson.

25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (image from Soubrette Productions)S
25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (Soubrette Productions)oubrette Productions and its artistic director Philip Olson believe that Austin deserves excellent, affordable, and accessible theater. Soubrette also believes Austin's community of theater artists needs more opportunities to shine, flourish, and expand. Soubrette aims to accomplish these goals, while supporting local community arts programs and students through benefit performances. A portion of the proceeds from this production will benefit Tapestry Dance Studios.


Saturday, October 23, 2010

Images by Kimberley Mead: Hamlet at Boggy Creek Cemetery, October 21 - November 6

Images by Kimberley Mead:

Justin Scalise, Julia Lorenz-Olsen (image: Kimberley Mead)

Black Swan Events presents
William Shakespeare’s


Hamlet


by torch light in Boggy Creek Cemetery
Oct. 21 – Nov. 6, Thursdays - Saturdays at 7:30 PM
Boggy Creek Cemetery, Circle S Rd. & Dittmar Rd. (Click for Google map)
TICKETS at www.NowPlayingAustin.com
$15 - $35 sliding scale admission; $12 for seniors, students, teachers, APD, AFD and military.
$10 each for groups of 15 or more. www.AusTix.com or 512-474-8497
*Tickets purchased at the event are cash only.

Click for additional information.

Click for the AustinLiveTheatre review of September 25

Hamlet Black Swan (image: Kimberley Mead)











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


Sunday, September 26, 2010

Hamlet, Scottish Rite Theatre, September 16 - October 3




Those lustrous eyes, that bony frame, that complexion sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought -- many of us believe that Justin Scalise was born to play Hamlet.

He has certainly trained for Shakespeare and for this role, in New Orleans, in England, and for the past three years in Austin. We have seen him as Bottom, Feste, Adam & Silvius, Don John, Mercutio and Lucio. And even Hamlet, freeze-dried, for Austin Shakespeare's 2008 and 2009 World's Fastest Hamlet.

This Hamlet drected by Andrew Matthews for the Scottish Rite Theatre is a keen, intelligent, entertaining and gripping production. Scalise has the principal role but this evening offers much more than just an outing for his fan club.

This cast knows how to speak the speech. Babs George as Gertrude, Harvey Guion as Claudius, Robert Deike as a whole suite of ordinaries, Brock England as Horatio, Chuck Ney as Polonius. . . the verse comes trippingly on those tongues. It's a thrill to hear it delivered articulately, with convincing scansion and appropriate targeting and emotion. The action is swift but unerringly certain. There are moments when one would like to see a bubble of silence as a character reflects or absorbs the meaning of something just said. But anyone who has studied the play, read it or seen any other version of Hamlet will follow the players all the way and will be on the edge of his seat.

Harvey Guion, Justin Scalise, Babs George in Hamlet, Scottish Rite TheatreMatthews has put them into contemporary costume but does not burden the play with unnecessary concept or gimmickry. No telephoning in performances, no AK-47s, no roller skates or cowboy hats. The familiar, haunting action develops immediately before us in the intimacy of the Scottish Rite Theatre, using a minimum of portable furniture placed as needed before various of its intricate trompe-l'oeuil 19th century painted backdrops. The striking, appropriate music before the play is recorded.

In this version, the play's the thing.

Read more and view images at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .