Showing posts with label Katherine Catmull. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katherine Catmull. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

There Is A Happiness That Morning Is by Mickle Maher, Capital Theatre at Hyde Park Theatre, October 24 - November 23, 2013


ALT reviewHappiness That Morning Is Mickle Maher Capital T Austin TX

by Dr. David Glen Robinson

This production of Mickle Maher’s There is a Happiness That Morning Is generated considerable marketing material on its fictional premise: two teachers of William Blake’s poetry at a crumbling east coast liberal arts college became so overwhelmed by it all that they had throwdown carnal knowledge of each other on the leafy day-lit campus. Their students witnessed their intimacy, as did the president of the college, and everyone else. The president and trustees want them to apologize and resign.

Well, playwright Maher knows well that the past is prologue, and as the play starts, one of the participants, Bernard (Jason Phelps), explains that that was all yesterday, and this is the happiness of the next morning. Thus the play is essentially aftermath. 

Yes, Bernard is clearly demented from teaching Blake for fifteen years (the only class the college ever allowed him to teach), and all he wants is to apologize, resign, and go on living his life of joy with his beloved and gorgeous Ellen (Katherine Catmull), who has been his mate for about twenty years. 

Ellen is made of sterner stuff. She refers to the college president in gutter language, and does the same with all others who humiliated her in the very triumph of her love. These two characters speak in verse, delivering Maher’s poetry about Blake’s poetry and their issues with the college. The contrasts in their affective states create the comedy in the play and heighten the consequences of their deeds.

Plays written almost entirely in verse glamorize almost any subject and thematic material. When that material is love, loss, and hope, the play takes on a rare, sustaining beauty uncommon in modern plays. This play has that beauty in abundance, and the exquisite abilities of Jason Phelps and Catherine Catmull in speaking and acting in verse ensure its success. It is true that casting in modern plays is the single strongest variable in a play’s success, and it is true for There is a Happiness That Morning Is.

There Is A Happiness That Morning Is, Mikal Maher, Capital T Theatre Austin TX
Jason Phelps, Katherine Catmull (photo: Bret Brookshire)

The design fields hold up their end of the bargain. The set design by Mark Pickell, who also directed, uses the unusual shape and size of the Hyde Park audience space to realize the concept of a lecture hall in a down-at-heel liberal arts college. Simple and good; the audience becomes the students in the classes of the two shamed professors.

Nothing is perfect, and There is a Happiness That Morning Is has a major lulu. The third character in the play is entirely uncredited. This is a deliberate omission to create a thoroughly unnecessary surprise (there are other surprises and plot twists in abundance in this play). The device of the surprise character is acceptable for cameo roles or walk-on actions, but not for substantial work, significant time on stage, and contributions to the story, as in this case. A union state probably would not allow the practice.

The above is not particularly a spoiler, nor is it intended to be. The Capitol T Theatre production of There Is a Happiness That Morning Is comes highly recommended for all adult audiences. The play treats the themes of love, desperation, and uncertainty so poetically well that when the modestly attired professors first cross the stage to each other and quietly embrace, one senses how something enormous this play is.

Others have sensed this enormity and the Hyde Park Theatre in central Austin has held the play over until November 23rd. Reservations are strongly recommended.


CTXLT review








EXTRA


There Is A Happiness That Morning Is Mikle Maher Capital T Austin TX




Friday, November 8, 2013

There Is A Happiness That Morning Is by Mickle Maher, Capital Theatre at Hyde Park Theatre, October 24 - November 16, 2013


ALT reviewHappiness That Morning Is Mickle Maher Capital T Austin TX

by Michael Meigs

There is a space that theatre is,

unknown except to the hip and cognoscenti --

where verse and blood, ironic plenty,

dearth, death, desire and wit

conjured forth from air, direct

our eyes to great and lesser things

unseen, unknown, unspoken in our media.


Hyde Park, Cap T, Mick' Maher, Blake,

knife-sharp, wit-full, astounding, take

our souls in dance and squeeze our hearts,

unglaze our eyes. Innocence? Experience?

Groves of academe, Pierian springs, our lives, our parts,

our desperate loves, impending ends and dreams:

theatre, pure, unbounded, sings in Hyde Park's

flickering space as Ellen and Bernard

Resist the rush of time. Deliverance!
Verse, and to a lesser extent poetry, have distinctly faded from our Western culture since the valiant days. Now they're studied mostly by the diminishing number of undergraduate English majors and scribbled mostly by the constant supply of self-absorbed teenagers. This is a long-term cultural fading out, accelerating since the late twentieth century because of technologies, the shortening of attention spans, passivity and the increasing dominance of the visual and the sound bite.

Several decades back in the last century the enthusiastic professor who lectured on Don Quijote to us undergraduates commented that our modern eyes tend to skip past the verse with which that particular epic is so lovingly filled. We've lost the delight -- that lovin' feeling -- for the music of language unadorned with instruments. The modern mind wants prose, wants narrative, wants closure, and is impatient with the lift and rhythm of meter.

Case in point: before beginning to read the narrative, did you listen with your mind's ear to the italicized opening lines above?

There Is A Happiness That Morning Is Mickle Maher Capital T Austin TX
Katherine Catmull (photo: Capital T Theatre)
Katherine Catmull, who plays Prof. Ellen in Maher's tasty script, is a natural here, a snug fit in a character who's so devoted to the verse of William Blake that she has taught in an obscure little college for decades, just to be near her loves: Blake and Bernard, her fellow enthusiast.

As a writer, actor, publicist and Austin personality, Catmull is one essential element of the Hyde Park Theatre, the cramped former post office at 43rd Street and Guadalupe where this magic takes place. In fact, it turns out that Mickle Maher's innovation of returning to dramatic verse may be due at least in part to the HPT. It's said that Maher was in the audience in this same space for an evening of the FronteraFest Short Fringe some years ago, and for one of the evening's five 25-minute performances an Austin group performed its own original piece in rhyming verse.

Chicago-based Maher liked the approach. He wrote There Is A Happiness That Morning Is for his home company, Theatre Oobleck, and they premiered it at the City of Chicago's DCA Theatre space (think of Austin's Dougherty Arts Center, but in the Loop). Catastrophic Theatre in Houston presented it in September of this year. Capital T's artistic director Mark Pickell, who'd already nabbed Maher's Spirits to Enforce in 2011, had also signed up for the Blake play.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Robert Faires Profiles Mark Pickell and Capital T Theatre's 'There Is A Happiness That Morning Is' by Mickle Maher, October 31, 2013


Excerpt from Robert Faires' feature:

Austin Chronicle






He Happy Is
For Mark Pickell, Capital T Theatre is a source of joy
 

By Robert Faires, October 31, 2013

Mark Pickell (photo: Bret Brookshire)
Mark Pickell (photo:  Bret Brookshire)
[ . . . . ] "This is going to sound weird," offers [Katherine] Catmull, [lead in Capital T Theatre's current production There Is A Happiness That Morning Is by Mickle Maher,] "but I think what characterizes Cap T shows is an odd but sort of luscious combination of 1) humor, often quite black humor; 2) sex!; and 3) a real interest in and thoughtfulness about big ideas – ideas about life, death, love, families, society, etc."

Pickell himself breaks it down even more simply: "One constant throughout all the plays that I produce is that they're smart, that they challenge the audience to use their brains a little bit. And they're entertaining. If you had to nail me down for the two things that I really enjoy, it's being smart and entertaining at the same time." That's led him most often to works that can't be labeled with either a frowning or a smiling mask, "plays that don't say, 'I'm just a comedy,' or 'I'm just a drama.' That in-between ground of dark comedies is one I really appreciate. And so far, I think our audiences have appreciated that mix."

Webster, who's helped Pickell's company create its artistic home at Hyde Park Theatre, will testify to that, as he's had to squeeze more and more patrons – including many of his regulars – into Cap T's shows. "Capital T has been a good fit at HPT for several reasons," he writes. "Number one is probably that Mark's taste in plays and my taste in plays are very similar. Similar but not identical. The shows he produces appeal to HPT audiences, and the number of our regular audience members who have become Capital T regulars has grown steadily over the past six years. Capital T and Mark have also been great for HPT. HPT audiences have come to expect smart scripts, excellent direction, and strong performances from Mark and Capital T. And HPT productions have gotten new audience members from Mark's regular patrons."

Pickell recognizes that his company's success likely wouldn't have come as quickly or steadily as it did without Webster's support and the symbiosis between Cap T and HPT. "I owe tons of gratitude and mentorship to Ken," he says. "Hyde Park, which is, in all actuality, this terrible little space, is amazing and great, and people love to see theatre there. They associate it with quality work and newer plays, newer playwrights, newer thoughts and ideas. Ken comes across as this gruff guy, but he's been a very loving mentor to my company and me."

Monday, October 21, 2013

Video Promo: THERE IS A HAPPINESS THAT MORNING IS, Mickle Maher, Capital T at Hyde Park Theatre, October 24 - November 16, 2013




Promo video for the

Happiness That Morning Is Mickle Maher Capital T Austin TX
Capital T Theatre Austin TX







production of


There is a Happiness that Morning Is


by Mickle Maher


directed by Mark Pickell
October 24th – November 16th, 2013



Thursdays-Saturday sat 8 p.m.



Hyde Park Theatre 511 W 43rd St at Guadalupe - click for map






Two college professors, overcome by the poetry of William Blake, have sex on the lawn of their campus in front of their students. Now they owe everyone an apology. 




Capital T Theatre is proud to present Mickle Maher’s (Spirits to Enforce) outrageously funny and thought povoking ode to love, sex, and the poetry of William Blake. Two-time Austin Critics Table Award winning director Mark Pickell (Lieutenant of Inishmore, Killer Joe) directs Austin favorites Katherine Catmull (Boom, Happy Days) and Jason Phelps (Intergalactic Nemesis)




Running Time: 1 hours15 minutes with no intermission





Wednesday, September 11, 2013

THERE IS A HAPPINESS THAT MORNING IS by Mickle Maher, Capital T Theatre at Hyde Park Theatre, October 24 - November 16, 2013



Capital T Theatre Austin TX


 

presents


Happiness That Morning Is Mickle Maher Capital T Austin TX

There is a Happiness that Morning is 

by Mickle Maher


Directed by Mark Pickell

October 24th – November 16th


Thursday-Saturday at 8pm


Hyde Park Theatre 511 W 43rd St at Guadalupe - click for map






Two college professors, overcome by the poetry of William Blake, have sex on the lawn of their campus in front of their students. Now they owe everyone an apology. 


Capital T Theatre is proud to present Mickle Maher’s (Spirits to Enforce) outrageously funny and thought provoking ode to love, sex, and the poetry of William Blake.

Two-time Austin Critics Table Award winning director Mark Pickell (Lieutenant of Inishmore, Killer Joe) directs Austin favorites Katherine Catmull (Boom, Happy Days) and Jason Phelps (Intergalactic Nemesis)


Running Time: 1 hours15 minutes with no intermission

Cast     Bernard - Jason Phelps  

            Ellen - Katherine Catmull

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)


 


Sunday, July 7, 2013

Profile: Ken Webster and His House of Letters, Austin Statesman, July 6, 2013

Austin 360 Statesman TX

Ken Webster and his house of letters

A story about theater, freedom, language … and the beauty of smallness

By Brad Buchholz, American-Statesman Staff


Ken Webster at Hyde Park Theatre (photo, Jay Janner, Austin Statesman)
Ken Webster (photo: Jay Janner, Austin Statesman)

Ken Webster spends most of his days in a Hyde Park playhouse — theater space, daydream space, a creative hideaway, where he immerses himself in the beauty of language, the genius of playwright Harold Pinter, an ocean of baseball trivia, the art of a well-placed comma. It is a serious place. It is a silly place. And for Webster: It is a place of independence.


“This is my second home,” says Webster, the 55-year-old executive director of Austin’s literary-minded Hyde Park Theatre and one of the most well-known actors and directors in the city. “It’s not just a place I work; it’s a place where I hang out, where I see friends. I met my wife (the actress and author Katherine Catmull) here. It’s been a big part of my life for 30 years.”



Monday, February 13, 2012

Upcoming: Boom by Peter Sinn Nachtrieb, Capital T Theatre, May 31 - June 23



Capital T Theatre Austin TX




presents

boom

by Peter Sinn Nachtrieb

Directed by Mark Pickell

Costume Design by Cheryl Painter

May 31st-June 23rd

Thursdays-Saturdays at 8pm

Hyde Park Theatre 511 W 43rd St (click for map)


A marine biologist hosts a journalism student in his subterranean biology lab for an erotic “casual encounter.” As disaster looms upon the planet, the fate of their “date” takes on monumental importance. BOOM is an epic and intimate comedy of evolution, loneliness, and how to survive.

Costume Design by Cheryl Painter

Cast

Jo – TBA

Jules – TBA

Barbara – Katherine Catmull


Peter Sinn Nachtrieb from Capital T Theatre, AustinPeter Sinn Nachtrieb – Playwright is a San Francisco-based playwright whose works include boom (TCG’s most-produced play 2009-10), T.I.C. (Trenchcoat In Common), Hunter Gatherers (2007 ATCA/Steinberg New Play Award, 2007 Will Glickman Prize), Colorado,and Multiplex. His work has been seen Off-Broadway and at theaters across the country including at Ars Nova, SPF, Woolly Mammoth Theatre, Seattle Repertory, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Cleveland Public Theatre, Brown/Trinity Playwrights Rep, Wellfleet Harbor Actor’s Theatre, Dad’s Garage, and in the Bay Area at Encore Theatre, Killing My Lobster, Marin Theatre Company, Impact Theatre, and The Bay Area Playwrights Festival. He is under commission from South Coast Repertory and American Conservatory Theater, and is a Resident Playwright at the Playwrights Foundation, San Francisco. He holds a degree in Theater and Biology from Brown and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from San Francisco State University. He likes to promote himself online at www.peternachtrieb.com.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

The Uses of Joy: Conspire Theatre, by Katherine Catmull, Austin Chronicle


Found in this week's edition of

Austin Chronicle logo




Michelle Dahlenberg, Kat Craft Conspire Theatre (photo: Jana Birchum via Austin Chronicle)

The Uses of Joy


When Conspire Theatre helps incarcerated women, it's all in the game

by Katherine Catmull

"In a very serious world, we must not forget the importance of play." – Conspire Theatre's mission statement


I used to work in an office with a rule about when we could take lunch, which was a constant source of annoyance to me. What if I get busy and don't notice the time till 2 p.m.? Get your laws off my ham sandwich, oppressor!

I would not do so well in prison. In the women's minimum security unit of the Travis County Correctional Complex in Del Valle, razor wire loops-the-loop along chain-link fences, keeping you in, keeping everything you love out. When prisoners walk between buildings, they must keep their hands behind their backs and stay just outside of one of the long red stripes painted on the sidewalk. And of course, that's the least of the structures and strictures of life for incarcerated women.

That's what makes what Conspire Theatre brings to the prison so odd.

It looks like a classroom, any classroom: cinder block walls, fluorescent lights, a whiteboard. (As we suspected in junior high: Classrooms and prisons have a lot in common.) Ten women enter, some in their 30s or 40s, most younger, all wearing prison uniforms of wide gray and khaki stripes. Prisoners still wear stripes – who knew.


Read full text by Katherine Catmull at the Austin Chronicle . . .


Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Circle Mirror Transformation, Hyde Park Theatre, July 8 - August 7






The Village Voice gave this Annie Baker comedy its Obie (off-broadway) award this year for best new American play and gave another Obie to the cast for their ensemble work. So you can expect an amusing evening when you stop by the Hyde Park Theatre to see them do their second play this year by the 29-year-old Annie B. They delivered her Body Awareness just this past April.

Annie Baker(image  from www.culturemob.com)

Director Ken Webster and the gang like to play hardball, but this one's a change-up. The familiar and welcome crew of HPT regulars, plus returning company member Rebecca Robinson, are pitching slow softballs and having as much fun with it as kids at a 4th of July picnic.

The set-up is simple. James, the manager of the community center, encourages his wife Marty in her notion of offering a six-week class in creative drama. Three individuals respond. We a watch a succession of short scenes depicting the evolution of Marty’s well-intentioned efforts to help these strangers liberate their creativity.

Circle Mirror Transformation is not, strictly speaking, a comedy. It’s a quiet little drama about needing to make connections and the potential costs of reaching out. Marty is not teaching acting or drama at all; she is dabbling in some very powerful juju. Back in the 1960s and 1970s many folks were attracted to the highs of encounter groups, an approach to group dynamics defined by Gestalt psychologist Kurt Lewin and pioneered in the United States by the National Training Laboratories. During a lost time in graduate school I participated in three full weekends of assisted but undirected “T-Group sensitivity training,” an experience from which I have probably not yet fully recovered.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Body Awareness by Annie Baker , Hyde Park Theatre, April 8 - May 8






Annie Baker's Body Awareness is a well crafted, attractive little comedy with lots of heart. I hadn't really expected that, for the Hyde Park style is more often sardonic, grimly humorous or menacing. After all, director Ken Webster had been using a publicity shot of the cast in which they looked as if they'd been arrested by the Austin Police Department at a wild party.

Body  Awareness by Annie Baker at Hyde Park Theatre

Because of a trip out of town, my first chance to attend was a Thursday night. That's usually a quiet night at any theatre here, but Body Awareness boarded like an airliner, accommodating wait-listed passengers. Word had gotten around.

The theatre's promo video sets the characters vividly, so I knew that Stephen Mercantel as Jared was an in-your-face young man frustrated with the world, not in small part because everyone insists that he has Asperger's syndrome -- an inability to empathize or adapt to social conventions, so that he's always asking difficult questions and making observations that come across as unfeeling or cruel. The video captures some of Baker's cleverest turns exploiting that social inability, when Jared is trying to get information about sex and sexuality from adults who are acutely uncomfortable with his questions.

But Baker's play doesn get stuck there, as a TV situation comedy might get stuck exploiting a single character trait or situation. Instead, she succeeds in giving Jared an unlikely appeal and depth. He's enchanted with words and their etymologies; he is reading the Oxford English Dictionary line by line in hopes that someday, despite his lack of formal education, he might become a lexicographer. His unkind, probing questions about human relations and sex arise not from indifferent observation but because he has a deep need to be liked and appreciated.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Time Steps, Austin Scriptworks at the Blue Theatre, March 26 - April 4







The gathering for Time Steps at the Blue Theatre last Thursday felt like skit night at the close of summer camp. Friendly excitement, lots of young adults, and a program based on games, brainstorming and collaborative action, intended to amuse and astound us over the course of a short evening. The Blue Theatre itself, tucked away behind the Goodwill warehouses in East Austin, is a found venue of sorts, redolent of much earnest make believe.

Austin Scriptworks stirred the pot and furnished the ingredients. At its annual Weekend Fling earlier this season, participating writers were given two days and three "ingredients" with which to build a ten-minute play:

- - The play must move backward, from end to beginning;
- - The play must include a dance break which causes a shift in the action;
and
- - The play must include three things your mother told you not to do.

The harvest was eight winning scripts, presented by Austin directors and actors in six performances. By my subjective taxonomy, these included two relationship dramas, two stories of misfortunes or crimes, one fantasy drama, and three nutsy pieces. Dialogue was strong in all of them. Available actors were parceled out so that almost every face showed up in two roles during the event.

Read More at AustinLiveTheatre.com. . . .