Showing posts with label Kirk Lynn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kirk Lynn. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Fixing King John by Kirk Lynn, Rude Mechanicals at the Off-Shoot, November 7 - 24, 2013

Fixing King John Kirk Lynn Rude Mechs Austin TX
Cast of Fixing King John (photo: Bret Brookshire)


CTX theatre review





by Michael Meigs

Kirk Lynn's script isn't Shakespeare. Fixing King John is a tight, fast story with dialogue full of fucking obscenities, one suited not for PBS but maybe to HBO.

E. Jason Liebrecht creates King John as an edgy, angry, powerful capo with the force of Jimmy Cagney and the morals of Tony Soprano.

Director Madge Darlington puts the Rude Mechs' staging into the confined space of their Off-Shoot rehearsal studio behind the Off-Center at 2211A Hidalgo Street in Austin. Audience members -- no, make that spectators, practically participants -- arrive to find the big room already milling with cast members in casual contemporary dress. 

The seating is equally casual around the central space, which has the feel of a gym or a space for a cage fight. Risers on two sides of it feature a couple of high-placed rows of chairs for conventional seating with wide platforms below them, and across the playing space are wooden towers with plywood platforms to accommodate watchers. It's a makeshift settle-where-you-wish assemblage directly reminiscent of the Mechs' re-staging of Dionysus in 69 here in 2009 and 2012.

Lynn's reworking of the little-read (and less-acted) Shakespeare hjistory play, written about 1590 but not mentioned in contemporary accounts or published until the 1623 Folio, is a drastic but coherent restructuring. He reduces a cast of 24 characters to one of 10, and he so reworks relations and plot elements that even if you'd actually read this neglected work you might not recognize it.

And the language! Though Lynn's first draft methodically rendered the original verse into pungent contemporary speech, his revisions and remakings fixed it so parallelisms all but disappeared. Take this example, from the opening scene:

King John
by William Shakespeare
Fixing King John
by Kirk Lynn
Act I, Scene I, lines 1-25

CHATILLON
Philip of France, in right and true behalf

Of thy deceased brother Geffrey’s son,

Arthur Plantagenet, lays most lawful claim

To this fair island and the territories,

To Ireland, Poictiers, Anjou, Touraine, Maine,

Desiring thee to lay aside the sword

Which sways usurpingly these several titles,

And put the same into young Arthur’s hand,

Thy nephew and right royal sovereign.


KING JOHN.
What follows if we disallow of this?


CHAT.
The proud control of fierce and bloody war,

To enforce these rights so forcibly withheld.


K. JOHN.
Here have we war for war and blood for blood,

Controlment for controlment: so answer France.


CHAT.
Then take my King’s defiance from my mouth,

The farthest limit of my embassy.


K. JOHN.
Bear mine to him, and so depart in peace.

Be thou as lightning in the eyes of France;

For ere thou canst report, I will be there;

The thunder of my cannon shall be heard.

So hence! Be thou the trumpet of our wrath,

And sullen presage of your own decay.

An honorable conduct let him have.

Pembroke, look to’t. Farewell, Chatillion.


Exeunt Chatillion and Pembroke.





Act I, Scene I

Everything you see is KING JOHN'S castle. And lookit,KING JOHN is on his throne. He looks gooood. He's thehome team along with his mom, QUEEN ELINOR, and PEMBROKE, and anyone else you see. Anyone except that slick DAUPHIN, who's on a visit from France.


[. . . skipping to pg 2, from line 5]

DAUPHIN

[. . .] my father sent me here to tell you this:Step aside! Stop pretending to be the great King of England, because really—truly it’s your nephew, Arfur, who has the most reason to pretend that game. Whoop! We're telling you to step aside and let Arfur be the next King - of England, Ireland, Poitiers, Anjou, Touraine, Maine and all that. All that. And now forget I was the King of France, pretending - and now pretend I’m every single one of the citizens who live in every single one of those shitholes in your kingdom I just listed, paying taxes, sleeping, making love on one another, dying and all that and listen as we say to you: Take off your hat. Take off your hat and put it on Arfur’s head. We’ll all be happier when you do.


KING JOHN
If Arfur wants my crown he’s gonna hafta come back from the grave and chop off my head to get it, ‘cause I’ll kill a motherfucker today just for scheduling a thought like that tomorrow. Fuck Arfur. Tell Philip that. Then what?


DAUPHIN
Total fucking all-out war. Whoop, whoop! And it’s not just gonna be people dressed in high fashion from France coming at you with army swords. No. Cuz we’re not trying to take the throne from England. We’re just trying to give it to the best English guy for the job. So you’re gonna have people attacking you that dress like you, and talk like you, and look like you, and cousins, and nephews, and sisters, and anybody who ever disagreed with a tax, or a law, or a decree they didn’t like coming after you. So you can see, that’s a hard fucking war to win.


KING JOHN
All right. You tell France I just said, ‘All right.’ What’s that in French? Just to say, ‘Great. Let’s do it. Fuck you. No big deal.’ I ain’t afraid to kill French people. I ain’t afraid to kill ANYBODY that comes after me. Say that to Philip. Like, no big deal. All right. What’s that in French? Like, ‘No biggie.’ You gotta a phrase for that?


DAUPHIN
Look in my mouth. You imagine you’re a great King? You got a good imagination. Look in my mouth and see my king’s response pouring out at you like a sewer. The nastiest shit you can imagine just pumping from my heart, up outta my mouth all over your stupid costume and your fake throne and filling up this fucking wayside inn you call a castle till you drown in our bile. Fuck you, too.


KING JOHN

I want you outta my country quick like lightning, and by the time you get home to your little fucking poodle farm you’re gonna hear the thunder of my cannons blowing up your home, your mom, your dad, your brothers and sisters, your dog. BOOM. You’re like the tip of the sword I’m gonna put in King Philip's mouth and keep pushing ‘til he feels the hilt of it on his chin.


Pembroke?


PEMBROKE
Well said.


KING JOHN
Shut up, Pembroke. I'm gonna trust you with this snake.Make sure he gets aimed straight back to France, as quick as can be. And Dauphin? Remember what I said. 'Let’s do it. Fuck you. No big deal.'


See you later, DAUPHIN. See you later, PEMBROKE.


























Lynn describes his composition process in a thoughtful note in the program, and on their website the Mechs in their characteristic irreverent, ironic style state, "In some ways, we're offering you a more authentic experience of what a new Shakespeare play might be like than an actual Shakespeare play. In other ways, not so much." After all, Elizabethan playwrights borrowed liberally from one another and freely reworked earlier works; G.B. Harrison identifies Shakespeare's source as a two-part anonymous work printed in 1591 titled The Troublesome Raigne of John King of England and reprinted in 1611 with the addition of the words 'Written by W. Sh.' -- "a dishonest attempt to pass it off as Shakespeare's work." (Maybe much of it was Shakespeare's work, considering that Harrison writes at length about the uneven quality of the accepted text of King John.)

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Arts&Culture Texas Feature on Fixing King John by Kirk Lynn, Rude Mechs, November 7 - 24, 2013


Excerpts from a feature published November 5, 2013:

artsandculturetax





Rude Mechs Launch Fixin’ Shakespeare with King John

by Lauren Smart November 5, 2013


Rude Mechanicals Fixing King John Austin TX
Robert S. Fisher, Lowell Batholomee, Tom Green, Jay Byrd, E. Jason Liebrecht, Florinda Bryant, Jeffrey Mills (image: Bret Brookshire)

Leave it to Austin’s maverick troupe, the Rude Mechs, to tackle Shakespeare’s “problem plays.” Even the Bard’s esteemed canon contains a few duds, and in the new bi-annual series, Fixin’ Shakespeare, the Rude Mechs attempt to slice and dice these plays into more contemporary, and perhaps more palatable, shows. The series debuts with Fixin’ King John, Nov. 7-24, adapted by Kirk Lynn and directed by Madge Darlington.

“There are some Shakespeare plays that are really difficult to produce well, and this is one of them,” Darlington says. “For one thing, King John is too long and many of the plot points are convoluted.” [. . . .]

King John carries the company’s stamp in its collage-like synthesis of music, movement and text, but it deviates in one notable way. A month before rehearsals began, Darlington had a script in hand. “Kirk’s version has all the wonderful things of the original script, but through the lens of contemporary vernacular,” Darlington says. “He’s also added wonderful moments of connection with the audience that give this play more relevance.” [. . . .]

By bringing a new perspective to his work, the Rude Mechs hope to crack these plays open in a new way. “It’s similar to the relationship a cover band has with the original performer,” Darlington says. “Fixing it was a fun way to think about it, and of course there’s a little bit of hubris to that.”

Read full article by Lauren Smart at Arts&CultureTexas. . . .

Monday, November 4, 2013

Austin Statesman feature on Fixing King John, Kirk Lynn's Adapation for the Rude Mechs, November 7 - 24, 2013


For the record: the Austin Statesman publishes a feature on the Rude Mech's Fixing King John by Kirk Lynn (November 7 - 24 at the Off Center, 2211-A Hidalgo Street), available only behind its subscriber pay wall. One-day on-line access is 99 cents.

Kirk Lynn Rude Mechs via Statesman 2013 11
Kirk Lynn (via Austin Statesman)
Van Ryzin: Fix Shakespeare? Kirk Lynn and the Rude Mechanicals give it a try
By Jeanne Claire van Ryzin American-Statesman Staff November 2, 2013


William Shakespeare wrote 37 plays.

Or 39 if you’re the Folger Shakespeare Library, which includes one play that scholars maintain was lost to history. Then again, some scholars claim there are two lost Shakespeare plays. (Counting Shakespeare’s plays is a veritable academic cottage industry and the source of much intellectual tussle.)

This story continues on our new premium website for subscribers, MyStatesman.com. 


Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Tent Revival fundraiser for Robert Matney at the Off Center, July 17, 2013



Matney vs Cancer Hidden Room Theatre Austin






 
Tent Revival
Performance Benefit for Robert Matney

Robert Matney
Robert Matney


 Weds July 17th,
doors open at 8 p.m., kick-off at 8:30 p.m.
The Off Center, 2211 Hidalgo, Austin TX 78702 - click for map
Join us at the Off Center for a healing crusade by the power of awesomeness in honor of Robert Matney. Stand beside this linchpin of the Austin theatre community, this excellent human, and help him he-yal from the evils of a malignant melanoma.

Scheduled guests currently include:

Steven Tomlinson
 
Steven Tomlinson
Manateeman
Cami Alys
Shoulders
Graham Reynolds via Hidden Room Theatre
 
special guest deejays Graham Reynolds, Michael Joplin, and Peter Stopschinski
a prayer by Kirk Lynn
hosted by the Rev Lowell Bartholomee
more to come...

And be ready to bid on the best silent auction items you've ever seen!

Sponsored by Tequila 512, Pluckers, Ruby's BBQ, Don't Panic Hispanic, Real Ale, Live Oak, Tito's Vodka

Hosted by the Rude Mechs
Co-produced by the Hidden Room Theatre, Street Corner Arts, A Chick and A Dude, Palindrome

Want to join our host committee? Starting at just $250 write or raise, you can support the Fishneys and join us for a private pre-show champagne party. Comment below or PM for more information. Can I get an AMEN?



DONATE HERE:
www.youcaring.com/matneyvscancer

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Tent Revival fundraiser for Robert Matney at the Off Center, July 17, 2013




tent revival for Robert Matney Austin TX

Join us at the Off Center for a healing crusade by the power of awesomeness in honor of Robert Matney.
Weds July 17th, 8PM - 11PM
The Off Center
2211 Hidalgo, Austin TX 78702

Scheduled guests currently include:
Steven Tomlinson
Manateeman
Cami Alys
special guest deejays Graham Reynolds, Michael Joplin, and Peter Stopschinski
a prayer by Kirk Lynn
hosted by the Rev Lowell Bartholomee
more to come...

And be ready to bid on the best silent auction items you've ever seen!

Sponsored by Tequila 512, Pluckers, Ruby's BBQ, Don't Panic Hispanic, Real Ale

Hosted by the Rude Mechs
Co-produced by the Hidden Room Theatre, Street Corner Arts, A Chick and A Dude, Palindrome

Want to join our host committee? Starting at just $250 write or raise, you can support the Fishneys and join us for a private pre-show champagne party. Comment below or PM for more information. Can I get an AMEN?

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Dramatis Personae workshop with Kirk Lynn, Scriptworks, May 7, 2013



Scriptworks










DRAMATIS PERSONAE WORKSHOP COMING UP!

Kirk Lynn of the Rude Mechs

place and time TBA

Contact Christi@scriptworks.org to sign up!

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Thursday, February 21, 2013

STOP HITTING YOURSELF, Rude Mechanicals at the Off Center, April 4 - 21, 2013



Rude Mechs will present the first work-in-progress showing of

 
Stop Hitting Yourself Rude Mechanicals Austin TX



Stop Hitting Yourself
The show runs April 4 - April 21, 2013, Thursday - Sunday at 8:00 pm., at The Off Center, 2211 A Hidalgo, Austin, TX. 

Tickets: Thursday and Sunday - Pay What You Can; Friday and Saturday - $12 - 25 Sliding Scale. 

Tickets go on sale March 4th at www.rudemechs.com. 

The final weekend tickets will also be available through Fusebox Festival. 

Purchase with credit card in advance. Cash only at the door.


"At tonight's party you were observed and those observations are currently being compiled into a list of the things you need to be taught. We have one month to perfect you. In one month, we're going to have another party. The difference is at this next party, the Queen will be in attendance. Improvement. Succor. Fate. Queso. Wardrobe. Charity. Belief."

Once a year at the Charity Ball a single worthy cause is selected to benefit from the Queen's annual good deed. Families of note compete to find the citizens most in need and deserving of assistance. This year, a socialite has discovered a wildman in the forest and brings him home to improve him. The wildman's desire to save the natural world and to bring about an era of love and harmony is a sure-winner. Now she must teach him how to eat and dance, how to bow and flatter, how to behave in society so that his cause can be victorious.

Rude Mechs is currently embracing the fundamental beliefs underlying late-stage capitalism and indulging in some 1930's Hollywood glamour. Part Pygmalion, Busby Berkley, part self-help lexicon -- all while tap-dancing around a queso fountain. STOP HITTING YOURSELF borrows from the plots of 1930's musicals to dig into the contemporary conservative dilemma: how to honor the steely individualism of Ayn Rand without disavowing the ministry of Jesus Christ. Tap dancing, fine dining, and the missionary position will all be employed in order to help all Americans stop hitting yourself.

Some of the Many People Involved: Hope Bennett, Thomas Graves, Heather Hanna, Matt Hislope, Hannah Kenah, Lisa Laratta, Lana Lesley, Jason Liebrecht, Kirk Lynn, Graham Reynolds, Brian Scott, Shawn Sides, Paul Soileau, Dallas Tate, plus awesome technicians, crew, and Rude Mechs company members keeping it awesome.


STOP HITTING YOURSELF is a commission of LCT3/Lincoln Center Theater. LCT3 produces shows by new playwrights, directors and designers - new ideas in a new space. Additional creation support comes from National Endowment for the Arts and MAP Fund. Rude Mechs is supported by the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the City of Austin through the Cultural Arts Division.

Rude Mechs is an ensemble-based theatre company that has created a genre-defying cocktail of over 25 original plays that we produce in Austin, TX, and tour nationally and internationally. Our most recent productions include "The Method Gun", "Get Your War On" and "I've Never Been So Happy" which have all toured to such far-flung destinations as New York City, Los Angeles, New Haven, Columbus, Boston, Portland, Philadelphia, Helsinki (Finland), Edinburgh (Scotland), and Brisbane (Australia). Since our inception in 1995, we've received over 180 awards and nominations for artistic excellence and, most recently, the company's production "The Method Gun" was recognized by both Time Out New York and New York Magazine as one of the Top 10 theatrical events of 2011.

For more information about this production and all things rude, visit www.rudemechs.com.


Read more about Rude Mechs to Present Work-in-Progress Showing of STOP HITTING YOURSELF, 4/4-21 by austin.broadwayworld.com

Rude Mechs will present the first work-in-progress showing of "STOP HITTING YOURSELF."
"At tonight's party you were observed and those observations are currently being compiled into a list of the things you need to be taught. We have one month to perfect you. In one month, we're going to have another party. The difference is at this next party, the Queen will be in attendance. Improvement. Succor. Fate. Queso. Wardrobe. Charity. Belief."
Once a year at the Charity Ball a single worthy cause is selected to benefit from the Queen's annual good deed. Families of note compete to find the citizens most in need and deserving of assistance. This year, a socialite has discovered a wildman in the forest and brings him home to improve him. The wildman's desire to save the natural world and to bring about an era of love and harmony is a sure-winner. Now she must teach him how to eat and dance, how to bow and flatter, how to behave in society so that his cause can be victorious.
Rude Mechs is currently embracing the fundamental beliefs underlying late-stage capitalism and indulging in some 1930's Hollywood glamour. Part Pygmalion, Busby Berkley, part self-help lexicon -- all while tap-dancing around a queso fountain. STOP HITTING YOURSELF borrows from the plots of 1930's musicals to dig into the contemporary conservative dilemma: how to honor the steely individualism of Ayn Rand without disavowing the ministry of Jesus Christ. Tap dancing, fine dining, and the missionary position will all be employed in order to help all Americans stop hitting yourself.
Some of the Many People Involved: Hope Bennett, Thomas Graves, Heather Hanna, Matt Hislope, Hannah Kenah, Lisa Laratta, Lana Lesley, Jason Liebrecht, Kirk Lynn, Graham Reynolds, Brian Scott, Shawn Sides, Paul Soileau, Dallas Tate, plus awesome technicians, crew, and Rude Mechs company members keeping it awesome.
The show runs April 4 - April 21, 2013, Thursday - Sunday at 8:00 pm., at The Off Center, 2211 A Hidalgo, Austin, TX. Tickets: Thursday and Sunday - Pay What You Can; Friday and Saturday - $12 - 25 Sliding Scale. Tickets go on sale March 4th at www.rudemechs.com. The final weekend tickets will also be available through Fusebox Festival. Purchase with credit card in advance. Cash only at the door.
STOP HITTING YOURSELF is a commission of LCT3/Lincoln Center Theater. LCT3 produces shows by new playwrights, directors and designers - new ideas in a new space. Additional creation support comes from National Endowment for the Arts and MAP Fund. Rude Mechs is supported by the Texas Commission on the Arts, and the City of Austin through the Cultural Arts Division.
Rude Mechs is an ensemble-based theatre company that has created a genre-defying cocktail of over 25 original plays that we produce in Austin, TX, and tour nationally and internationally. Our most recent productions include "The Method Gun", "Get Your War On" and "I've Never Been So Happy" which have all toured to such far-flung destinations as New York City, Los Angeles, New Haven, Columbus, Boston, Portland, Philadelphia, Helsinki (Finland), Edinburgh (Scotland), and Brisbane (Australia). Since our inception in 1995, we've received over 180 awards and nominations for artistic excellence and, most recently, the company's production "The Method Gun" was recognized by both Time Out New York and New York Magazine as one of the Top 10 theatrical events of 2011.
For more information about this production and all things rude, visit www.rudemechs.com.


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Friday, December 7, 2012

Upcoming: Filaments Play-Reading Series at Cohen New Works Festival, University of Texas, March 25 - 29, 2013


Anouncing The Filaments: Sparked by Suzan Zeder


December 07, 2012
by Isaac Gomez, PR and Marketing Chair, 2013 Festival, and Cassidy Browning, Engaging Research


Cohen New Works Festival University of Texas
The Cohen New Works Festival
presented by the University Co-Op March 25 - 29 at the University of Texas in Austin is proud to announce the creation of a new series within the Festival: The Filaments: Sparked by Suzan Zeder. The Filaments is an expansion on the Reading Room from the 2011 Festival – which offered a space for three project submissions to hold staged readings.


Our Committee-at-Large recommended projects for this series during Festival selection and then voted to select six projects for the 2013 Filament series.

The exciting lineup includes:

Cancun
Project Lead: Raymundo Delgadillo
Cancun is a multimedia performance addressing American stereotypes of Mexico and the lack of knowledge about American involvement in the Mexican drug war.

Creative Skin
Project Lead: Courtney Mazeika
Creative Skin provides an inside look at creative processes that choreographers navigate while focusing on the blazing flashes of inspiration, the struggles of insecurity, and the willingness to expose one’s vulnerabilities. Using dance, text, media, and music this project guides the audience through an accumulative performance that exposes a choreographer’s journey.

Danseur Drama
Project Lead: Mark-Anthony Zuniga
Danseur Drama is the story about 28 year-old Kavin who is convinced by friends to try ballet to help him get over his ex-boyfriend. Unexpectedly, ballet will ultimately test friendships, define family, and promote healing. The format is a play, but each scene will demonstrate a ballet term, which also represents the underlying theme.

Believe You Me: Interpreting Media
Project Lead: Daniel Berkowitz
How do you see yourself? Believe You Me is an interactive installation which explores the relationship between humans and media through the use of video, live performance and an alien invasion. We invite you to log off, cancel your subscriptions and come as you are.

Safe
Project Lead: Kenny Chilton
What does safety really mean? The actors explore safety versus security through the citizens of the Safehouse.

War Games
Project Leads: Meg Greene and Lindsay Hearn
War Games is a play for family audiences that explores the story of Jonah, a young boy whose father is deployed in Afghanistan. Jonah and his family work to navigate the harsh emotional realities of war and discover a language that they can all understand.


ABOUT SUZAN ZEDAR
by Kirk Lynn, Producer

Suzan Zeder is the wild heart and true spirit behind every Cohen New Works Festival to date at the University of Texas. Suzan has carried the Festival through several growing pains toward the mature beast it is today. [ . . .] Zeder is one of the nation’s leading playwrights of plays for young and family audiences. Her work has been seen in all fifty states and has been produced and published in Great Britain, Germany, Australia, Japan, Israel, and Switzerland. Step On A Crack, Wiley And The Hairy Man, In A Room Somewhere, and The Death And Life Of Sherlock Holmes are regularly performed by professional and university theatres throughout the country. Doors and Mother Hicks were produced at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., which also co-commissioned Do Not Go Gentle.

Suzan Zeder is a four-time winner of the Distinguished Play Award given by the American Alliance of Theatre and Education. She is also a member of the Academy of Distinguished Teachers at The University of Texas and The College of Fellows of the American Theatre in Washington, D.C. Suzan Zeder is the first holder of an endowed chair in Theatre For Youth/Playwriting at the University of Texas.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Arts Reporting: Kirk Lynn of Rude Mechs Receives $50,000 Fellowship through USA Artists


Following up a note published by Jeanne Claire van Ryzin in the Statesman's Austin360 Seeing Things blog, December 5:


Kirk Lynn (image: Rino Pizzi)USA Fellows logoPlaywright Kirk Lynn of Austin's Rude Mechanicals is one of fifty U.S. artists selected as USA Fellows, receiving a $50,000 fellowship funded by Jeanne and Michael Klein of Austin, Texas, through the non-profit organization United States Artists. Among other grantees this year are playwright Annie Baker, musician Donald Byrd and playwright Octavio Solis.

Lynn's bio posted at the USA Fellows website reads:

Kirk Lynn is a playwright and Co-Producing Artistic Director of the Austin-based, experimental theater collective Rude Mechanicals (or Rude Mechs). Lynn co-founded the Rude Mechs in 1995 and, with them, he has written and adapted over a dozen plays, which have been performed around the world. His works have been honored with several awards, including the Total Theatre Award from the Edinburgh Fringe Festival for Get Your War On (2007) and an NEA New Play Development grant for I’ve Never Been So Happy (2009). He teaches at the University of Texas, Austin.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Reviews from Elsewhere: NYT Feature on Rude Mechs' Method Gun, February 27

Found on-line:







New York Times

Rude Mechanicals Method Gun (photo: Alan Simmons)








Many Methods to Collaborative Madness


IT began, as actors’ stories often do, with a guru. Her name was Stella Burden, a k a “the other Stella.” Ms. Burden created a risky suite of training exercises called the Approach, attracted a fervent band of followers and abandoned them nine years into rehearsals for a high-concept production of “A Streetcar Named Desire,” to be performed without Stanley, Blanche, Stella or Mitch.


What in the name of madcap Method acting is a company member to do?


That’s the absurdly literal and keenly figurative question at the heart of “The Method Gun,” a play about the creative process by the Austin, Tex., ensemble Rude Mechs, which since it was founded in 1995 has become one of the nation’s leading proponents of devised theater: works developed collaboratively by a company rather than an individual playwright.


Rude Mechanicals Method Gun Jason Liebrecht (image: Alan Simmons)“The Method Gun,” which comes to Dance Theater Workshop from March 2 to 11, is the most autobiographical of the company’s pieces. It’s satirical and celebratory in roughly equal parts, exploring ideas of togetherness and loss, the dynamics of being part of a tight-knit group and what it means to take care of one another.


While the show’s premise nods to celebrated acting teachers like Stella Adler and to extreme, emotion-based techniques like the Method, specifics are left aside in favor of merciless riffs on codified approaches to art. But the Rude Mechs’ wicked sense of humor tempers a sincere streak that the company wears like a badge of honor.



Read more at the New York Times on-line . . . .

Upcoming: I've Never Been So Happy (full version), Rude Mechanicals at the Off Center, April 21 - May 7

Found on-line at AustinOnStage.com:


The Rude Mechanicals

presentRude Mechanicals I Can't Believe I'm So Happy (image: Bret Brookshire)


I've Never Been So Happy (full version)

April 21 - May 7, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m.

Matinee performance on Sunday, May 1

at the Off Center, 2211-A Hidalgo Street (click for map)

Tickets are $15 to $25, and the Saturday, May 7th, special closing night performance will feature a post-show concert by entertainment group CHABLIS - voted "Best Local Show 2010" in the Austin Chronicle Critics Poll.

For tickets and more information, visit www.RudeMechs.com.

After two workshop productions at The Off Center in 2008 and 2009 - plus residencies with The Orchard Project and The Musical Theatre Initiative at The University of Texas - The Rude Mechanicals will stage the world premiere of their fulllength western operetta I've Never Been So Happy April 21st through May 7th at The Off Center.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Reviews from Elsewhere: The Rude Mechs' Method Gun at Yale, February 25

Thanks to a Tweet from the Rude Mechs:

Excerpts:

New Haven Advocate logo

The Rude Mechs' The Method Gun - review

By Christopher Arnott
Friday, February 25, 2011 11:35pm


[. . . .] The Rude Mechs' touring production of The Method Gun has one final performance at the Yale Repertory Theatre, 8 p.m. Saturday Feb. 26. If you miss it here, you can still catch it next week in New York City.

It’s nice to finally see (thanks to Yale’s undergraduate Theater Studies department’s World Performance Project series and the graduate Yale School of Drama) a company from Texas that I’ve been hearing and reading about for years, and to find that they’re as good as the advance word suggested. The Rude Mechs come off as a genuine ensemble, a tightly-knit collective with a unified vision. The Method Gun is funny, bleak, satirical and serious in equal parts, so well-balanced and timed that you trust it implicitly and just follow along without questioning its intentions.

[. . . .] But The Method Gun’s brilliance is that, in questioning how far you can take artistic theory, it humanizes the process rather than turning it into a cartoon. Streetcar is a real play, but the situation Rude Mechs has invented concerns a mysterious directorial theorist whose own method, dubbed “The Approach,” out-methods any method heretofore known. It opens up an exploration of control, security and danger in how theater is created and performed. Creative staging effects and play-within-play-within-play mindfucks take those very elements a few stages further. Yet there’s enough of a plot structure, character development and comedy for the intermissionless evening to be thoroughly entertaining on top of all that metatheatrical mysticism.

[. . . .] Self-referential ensemble projects about the meaning of theater aren’t that uncommon, and I’d be hard pressed to call The Method Gun original. I’m not even sure it wants to be. Swinging lights, male nudity and animal costumes are part of the arsenal of any small regional theater company. What matters is that these effects are perfectly utilized, carefully chosen, craftily implemented to refresh, amuse or confound at just the right moments. While there is a groupthink at work here, it’s important to note that The Method Gun began with a script by company co-founder Kirk Lynn and benefits from exquisite technical design (particularly for a touring piece—fitting any outside work onto the oddly wide, curtainless Yale Rep stage is a trick in itself, yet this piece looks like it could have been created there.)

Click to view full review at the New Haven Advocate . . . .

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Reviews from Elsewhere: The Method Gun in Boston reviewed by John Beers of Time Out Chicago, October 25

via @travisbedard:

Time Out Chicago logo




The Method Gun The Method Gun, Rude Mechanicals

at ArtsEmerson (Boston)
Posted in Theater by John Beer on October 25th


Austin playwright Kirk Lynn’s scored a couple of recent successes in Chicago: Pavement Group staged his Greil Marcus adaptation Lipstick Traces in 2008, and this summer Mary-Arrchie and David Cromer put on a memorably large production of his Cherrywood. Lynn’s company the Rude Mechanicals are on the road this year with a newer work, 2008’s The Method Gun; I caught up to it at ArtsEmerson’s cozy black box theater in Boston on October 16. It goes on to dates in Columbus, New Haven and New York; no Chicago appearance is planned, but I’ll bet it’d find a warm reception here.

Like Cherrywood, The Method Gun portrays, almost anthropologically, an unusual collective; this time, though, it’s not bohemian Texans at a house party, but method actors. To be precise, the play presents itself as a re-enactment of the rehearsal process and opening for a singular ‘70s staging of A Streetcar Named Desire by an ensemble founded by legendary (and fictional) acting guru Stella Burden. With Burden decamped for South America, her group, occupying the unsteady territory between fanatical artists and full-fledged cult, carries on with her vision: producing Williams’s classic sans Stella, Stanley, Blanche or even Mitch.

Featuring such delicious, and weirdly resonant, sendups of the rehearsal process as “Crying Practice,” in which the piece’s five performers slowly wring out sobs, The Method Gun traces a loopy, relentlessly inventive trajectory en route to a Streetcar dominated by “Red hots!” and flores para los muertos.

Read more at Time Out Chicago . . . .

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Arts Reporting: Rude Mechs' Successful Application to NEA for I Can't Believe I'm So Happy

Found on-line:

Several successful grant applications have just been published at the the New Plays blog maintained by the Arena Stage in Washington DC on behalf of the "American Voices" program of the National Endowment for the Arts. Included is the 2008 application by the Rude Mechanicals for support in developing their Western mythic epic I've Never Been So Happy. Applicants granted permission for the publication, intended in part as a guide and inspiration for companies currently preparing applications.

Click on the image to view the three-page application. (.pdf, 1.42MB)

Monday, November 16, 2009

Arts News: Rudes' Method Gun Scheduled for Humana Festival, March 2010


Found on-line:

The Rude Mechanicals' Method Gun, written by Kirk Lynn, will be featured at the month-long 34th annual Humana Festival of New American Plays at the Actors' Theatre in Louisville. Performances run from March 16 - 28; Saturday performances during the run have already sold out.

The festival is sponsored by a generous grant from the Humana Foundation. Further information is available at the Humana Festival website.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Arts Reporting: A New Space, A New Play for the Rude Mechs



At the Rude Mechs' blog, Kirk Lynn has just posted about the preparation of a new playing space at the Off Center (called the "Center Center") and the participants' exploration of Dionysus in 69, a recreation that they will open on December 3:

". . . The beautiful thing about the Center Center is that when you pass through the door, you not only enter another building, you enter another time. The Center Center is going to be exposed to the public when we share our recreation of Dionysus in 69. Dionysus in 69 is the first performance in what we imagine will be a series of performances over the next few years as a part of our Contemporary Classics Series. We are going to recreate classic performances from the 60s, 70s and 80s that we feel are essential part of the American Theatre. These will be shows which we have heard about, read about, watched on DVD, and longed to see live for many years. We are starting with Dionysus in 69 because it is so near and dear to our own experience. A group of artists trying to make work collectively and enduring all the emotional and societal difficulties that come along with that, as well as reaping the benefits of having a close-knit group of friends with whom you can practice your craft."

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

[photo as posted by the the Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing, University of Pennsylvania.]

Monday, October 5, 2009

Arts Reporting: Cherrywood by Kirk Lynn & Rude Mechs Scheduled for Chicago, June 2010


Kirk Lynn's Cherrywood, done in Austin by the Rude Mechs in 2004, will have its Midwest premiere next June, directed by David Cromer at Chicago's Mary-Arrchie Theatre, according to an announcement forwarded by Chicago theatre blogger Rob Koslawski.

On November 7, 2008, New York Times writer Charles Isherwood began a profile of long-time Chicago resident Cromer with the question, "Is David Cromer the most talented director Americans have never heard of?"

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Thursday, September 17, 2009

I've Never Been So Happy, Rude Mechanicals at the Off Center, September 10 - 20





It's clever. It's mythic. It's melodic. It's multimedia.


It's the Rude Mechanicals still-in-workshop production of I've Never Been So Happy with book and lyrics by Kirk Lynn and music by Peter Stopchinsky, who also sings the part of the mountain lion.

But it's short and it's incomplete. By design, it will leave you wanting more.

The Rude Mechanicals have made for themselves an enviable place in the bubbling world of Austin's young non-Equity original-works theatres.

The Rudes are highly creative. They've done 22 original productions since inventing themselves in 1995, building a reputation, a following and support. They are not a high-volume theatre company, despite their six co-producing artistic directors, 28 company members, 88 business partners and an impressive array of individual supporters.

They've survived and triumphed by learning networking and grantsmanship. The Rudes succeeded in getting grant funding for this Western operetta fable from the National Endowment for the Arts, both directly and as part of the subsequent anti-recession stimulus package. The show is part of the NEA's new play development project, coordinated by the Arena Stage in Washington DC. Last December they did a workshop production in Austin of the early scenes of the play. They've worked parts of it further at the Orchard Project in the Catskills and last June with the UT Department of Theatre and Dance.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Saturday, August 22, 2009

Upcoming: I've Never Been So Happy, Rude Mechanicals at the Off Center, September 10 - 20


Update: Click for ALT review, September 16


UPDATE: Pre-opening piece by Javier Sanchez at the Daily Texan, September 10

Found on-line:


I've Never Been So Happy

a work in progress production
by the Rude Mechanicals
book and lyrics by Kirk Lynn
music and lyrics by Peter Stopschinski
curated and directed by Thomas Graves and Lana Lesley
September 10 - 20, at the Off Center

Tickets on sale now!

Rude Mechs is proud to present this work-in-progress presentation of our new western operetta performance experiment. We're making musical theatre for a new breed of Texan, and offering up a western adventure that will ply you with soothing adult elixirs, teach you how to use a lasso to capture your love, and then join you on their authentic Texas dance floor as you boot scoot to the greatest music in the West.

I've Never Been So Happy, with music and lyrics by Austin Experimental Punk Grand Wizard Peter Stopschinski (Brown Whornet, Golden Hornet Project), and book and lyrics by Austin Experimental Theatre Mascot Kirk Lynn, fluctuates freely between high art and Hee-Haw, treating both with respect.

The music pits a Grand Ole Opry style West against an El Topo style West. The writing butts lyric poetry up against bar jokes with finesse. The evening challenges what it means to "go to the theater" in 2009.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Upcoming: Works Progress Austin:Swanson, Lynn, Kenah, Larson at Salvage Vanguard, May 23

UPDATE: Plot summaries posted May 20 by Jeanne Claire van Ryzin in the Statesman's "Seeing Things" blog


From the SVT list server:

Works Progress Austin features a sneak peek at new works in progress

[ Saturday May 23 @ 8pm ]

Works Progress Austin is an annual development project that gives artists a playground to develop new works. Over the course of two weeks actors, writers, directors, filmmakers, dramaturgs, comedians, and musicians are given an opportunity to incubate and experiment. The two weeks culminate in a one-night-only performance of the works in progress featuring elements of three new plays. Inspired by Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration, WPA aims to put artists to work.

This year's public performances will include: "A Brief Narrative on the Extraordinary Birth of Rabbits" by C Denby Swanson; "The Collapse" by Kirk Lynn; "Guest by Courtesy" by Hannah Kenah and Jenny Larson; and "Guilds of Steel" from Gnap! Theater Projects. Tickets are $10 at the door.