Showing posts with label Molly Karrasch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Molly Karrasch. Show all posts

Monday, January 6, 2014

Venus in Fur by David Ives, Austin Playhouse, January 3 - 25, 2014 (Review No.1)



Venus in Fur David Ives Austin Playhouse




CTX live theatre review


 







by Dr. David Glen Robinson

 Venus in Fur by David Ives is a new, highly regarded American play making the rounds of theatres in Texas and across the nation. It's currently playing at Austin Playhouse, Austin’s singular shopping mall theatre, through January 25th. Austin Playhouse is calling it an off-season play and discounting its ticket price for its initial run. Theatre-goers won’t want to miss this one.

The setting is a rented rehearsal studio in Manhattan, where a young playwright named Thomas (Gray G. Haddock) is holding auditions for a self-production of his new play. It's based on Leopold Sacher-Masoch’s 1870 novel Venus in Furs, the Bible and Sears Catalog of fetish masochism. Auditions have not gone well. Every scheduled actor has come and gone, and none were any good.

Then the door opens and for a few seconds nobody enters. A woman steps in with a duffel bag of costumes and says she is there to audition. Her name is Vanda (Molly Karrasch); what a coincidence, so is that of the female character in Thomas’ play. Impossible, Thomas says; he would have noticed if that same name were on the audition list . Vanda says her agent failed to call him; she’s ready to read. She pulls out the full script from her duffel instead of the few sections of text called audition sides normally made available to auditioners. Thomas asks how she got the entire script; it hasn’t been released yet. She says she doesn’t know. She says she glanced through the script on the subway coming over, but when she starts reading, she doesn’t bother to look at the script. She recites the lines of the play perfectly, in character.

In these first minutes of the play, playwright Ives is more than telegraphing the audience that absolutely nothing in this rehearsal studio is as it seems. We’ve been warned. Thomas mistrusts Vanda. Vanda mistrusts Thomas. The audience mistrusts Ives. Ives mistrusts Sacher-Masoch. And a great night of theatre is had by all.

Venus in Fur David Ives Austin Playhouse TX
Gray G. Haddock, Molly Karrasch (photo: Christopher Loveless)


The action of the play addresses, plainly and directly, the shifts in dominance between men and women. Layers of plot and nuance are added on from the very beginning like diaphanous veils floating down to drape the set and actors. The script addresses the contest between actors and directors, men and women, upper and lower classes, masters and slaves. Bondage fetishism is explored only as a high-stakes game born of all these contests and mined for its metaphoric value in illuminating them. This is Ives’ tribute to the excess and art of Sacher-Masoch. Never forget the exquisite pain.


The alternation of the polarity of dominance accelerates throughout the play, reversing subtly or boldly but always satisfyingly and with plausibility. The characters step back and forth between the rehearsal hall and the play within the play. Eventually these changes describe a very clear vector that brings us to understand why Thomas the playwright had to write the play and accept the seismic changes wrought in him by it, with assistance -- control -- by Vanda. 

Read more at Central Texas Live Theatre

Friday, January 3, 2014

Wayne Alan Brenner's Favorites in 2013, Austin Chronicle


Brenner's portmanteau of 13 items includes 6 from locally produced Austin theatre:


Austin Chronicle


 

Top 10 Creative Things I Lucked Into in 2013


Remembering the year thick with superlative works of art onstage and in galleries


By Wayne Alan Brenner, Fri., Jan. 3, 2014

There Is A Happiness That Morning Is Mickle Maher Capital T Theatre
Katherine Catmull (photo: Capital T Theatre)
1) Joked with my editor that the first nine slots of this list would repeat 'THERE IS A HAPPINESS THAT MORNING IS' (Capital T Theatre). That brilliant Mickle Maher comedy, about the consequences of two William Blake-enamored professors engaging in glorious copulation on the campus lawn in view of their students, was by far the best thing I experienced in a year thick with superlative works of art. Directed by Mark Pickell, the script was embodied by three actors – Jason Phelps, Katherine Catmull, and Ken Webster, already among the best in town – working at the height of their knock-you-over abilities.
. . . .

4) FRONTERAFEST is another multipartite perennial that keeps on giving, and one of the best Short Fringe things it gave was Kyle John Schmidt's "The Blissful Orphans," featuring Curtis Luciani, Bob Jones, and friends in a fractured fairy tale that surpassed anything Rocky & Bullwinkle ever attempted.
. . .


6) Using Jason Liebrecht as a hinge to open a door between two theatre productions: Martin McDonagh's 'THE LIEUTENANT OF INISHMORE' (Capital T Theatre), brought to Grand Guignol life with Liebrecht chewing the scenery as an Irish terrorist who's out to slaughter whoever killed his beloved pet cat Wee Thomas; and 'FIXING KING JOHN' (Rude Mechanicals), Kirk Lynn's Deadwood-esque upgrade of Shakespeare, in which that same Liebrecht played the brave, hotheaded, sometimes near-colicky, and relentlessly besieged monarch contending with a cast of (mostly doomed) characters equal to his fierce talents.


7) Speaking of stagework, can somebody raid a sports paradigm and confer MVP status on actor MOLLY KARRASCH? I mean, Jesus, Slowgirl, Gruesome Playground Injuries, Tragedy: a tragedy, Dulcey and Roxy at City Hall – the woman's got range and a half.


8) Steve Moore and 'ADAM SULTAN' (Physical Plant) gave the Austin theatre scene an intimate view of itself with this heartfelt hall of mirrors, casting community stalwart Adam Sultan in the title role as a man who spends the increasingly lonely decades of his life commemorating all his creative friends who die as the years go by.


9) 'THE HEAD' (Trouble Puppet Theatre) was the semi-autobiographical apotheosis of everything that Connor Hopkins' strange and splendid company has done before, with so many disparate parts effectively orchestrated to show how ineffectively orchestrated a human can be when desire confounds sense and recreational drugs complicate the situation we call being alive.

Friday, December 27, 2013

VENUS IN FUR by David Ives, Austin Playhouse, January 3 - 25, 2013



Venus in Fur David Ives Austin Playhouse TX
Gray G. Haddock, Molly Karrasch (photo: Christopher Loveless)

Austin Playhouse presents
Venus in Fur by David Ives, directed by Lara Toner
January 3rd – 25th, 2014

Thursdays–Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 5 p.m.

Venus in Fur is rated R. Strictly adults only.
Austin Playhouse at Highland Mall, 6001 Airport Blvd., Austin, TX 78752 (click for map)
Tickets $24 Thursdays/Fridays, $26 Saturdays/Sundays
at 512.476.0084 or online at: www.austinplayhouse.com
All student tickets are half-price. $3 discount for Seniors 65 and up.
Limited Pick-Your-Price Rush tickets will be available at the box office one hour prior to showtime for each Thursday performance.


Dubbed “90 minutes of good, kinky fun” by The New York Times, the smash Broadway hit makes its Austin debut in a delicious new production.

All he needs is the perfect leading lady-a goddess of desire-to bring his vision to life. Thomas, a talented but demanding young writer, has meticulously adapted Leopold von Sacher-Masoch’s 19th century erotic novel, Venus in Fur, into a brilliant new play, but he can’t find the right woman for the role. When Vanda, a scattered young actress, arrives several hours late to her audition, Thomas is unimpressed. However, Vanda soon wins over the unwitting director with her strange mastery of the material and her alarming insights into his deepest desires. Suddenly the simple audition becomes a titillating game of cat and mouse. Who leads in the dance between fantasy and reality, love and lust, seduction and submission? Venus in Fur is a sharp, hysterical romp through the treacherous politics of sex and power.

Venus in Fur stars Austin Playhouse Acting Company members Molly Karrasch as Vanda and Gray G. Haddock as Thomas. The play is directed by Lara Toner, with set design by Patrick Crowley, lighting design by Don Day, and sound design by Joel Mercado-See.

Venus in Fur opened on Broadway at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre on November 8, 2011 and received Tony Award nominations for Best Play and Best Actress in a Play. The play is the first of two David Ives plays being produced in Austin Playhouse’s 2013-2014 Season. The second is Ives’ adaptation of Pierre Corneille’s 17th century farce The Liar running February 7 – March 9, 2014.


Venus in Fur David Ives Austin Playhouse TX
Gray G. Haddock, Molly Karrasch (photo: Christopher Loveless)

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Tragedy: A Tragedy by Will Eno, Hyde Park Theatre, September 12 - October 12, 2013


ALT review Austin TX



by Jess Helmke
Tragedy A Tragedy by Will Eno Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX
Much To Say About Nothing

The sun has set. The theatre is quiet. And a play begins. Just another normal Thursday night in the Austin Hyde Park neighborhood.

But maybe it’s more than that, suggests playwright Will Eno. His play Tragedy: a Tragedy is now running at Hyde Park Theatre, engaging audiences with ironic perceptions of mundane, everyday life. Eno’s repetitious cyclone of humor entertains the audience with threads of thematic action, roccoco rythmic storytelling, glimmers of conflict, lyric poetics, and the occasional element of surprise.

The mere fact that Will Eno uses television as his theatrical setting is unexpected. The play of gives us four main characters: Frank the anchor, John the weatherman, Constance the elated and naive reporter, and Michael the global reporter . Tragedy begins as a straightforward newscast, typical in speech pattern and line delivery, butr a little disappointing since there seems to be a lack of events to report. Characters speak directly to the audience as if we were sitting in the comfort of own homes, and their stage business is humorously appropriate with index fingers to the eapieces and sips of coffee by the anchor. I totally bought it.

The power and versatiity of the tool of theatre is exploited in most of Will Eno’s work, and the comedy Tragedy: a Tragedy is no different. Its discussions about darkness remind us of a bare stage. Its painful nostalgic childhood stories almost make us nervous all over again. And the play’s still, quiet moments lie glimmering like the stars. Begging observers to think. To try. To understand. To comment. To DO SOMETHING, ANYTHING in this existential awareness report from Action 7 News.


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

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Video: Tragedy: A Tragedy by Will Eno, Hyde Park Theatre, September 12 - October 12, 2013


Video by Eric Graham for the
Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX


        presentation of
Tragedy A Tragedy Will Eno Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX

September 12 - October 12, 2013
Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m.
Hyde Park Theatre 511 W. 43rd Street at Guadalupe - click for map
Will the sun rise again? It's looking unlikely, but no worries: our crack news team is on the story.  Featuring Nathan Brockett, Michael Ferstenfeld, Molly Karrasch, Benjamin Summers, and Ken Webster. Directed by Ken Webster.


Click to buy tickets via BuyPlayTix ($20 general admission, students/seniors/Austin Creative Alliance $18)


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Saturday, August 17, 2013

TRAGEDY: A TRAGEDY by Will Eno, Hyde Park Theatre, September 12 - October 12





Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX






[511 W. 43rd Street at Guadalupe - click for map ]



presents



Tragedy: A Tragedy by Will Eno Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX


Will the sun rise again? It's looking unlikely, but no worries: our crack news team is on the story.

"A charming display of witty satire in the face of Armageddon. . . . this 75-minute play serves as a big ol' poke in the eye to media in an age of geopolitical uncertainty, pending disaster, and a preoccupation with ratings." - Theatermania.

Starring Nathan Brockett, Michael Ferstenfeld, Molly Karrasch, Benjamin Summers, and Ken Webster. Directed by Ken Webster.

Click to buy tickets via BuyPlayTix ($20 general admission, students/seniors/Austin Creative Alliance $18)

Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX













(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Thursday, April 25, 2013

GRUESOME PLAYGROUND INJURIES by Rajiv Joseph, Street Corner Arts at the Museum of Human Achievement, May 16 - June 1, 2013



Street Corner Arts Austin TX













Street Corner Arts

presents

Gruesome Playground Injuries Rajiv Joseph Street Corner Arts Austin TX
Gruesome Playground Injuries

by Rajiv Joseph

directed by A. Skola Summers and Rommel Sulit

featuring Molly Karrasch and Benjamin Summers

May 16 - June 1 at 7:30 p.m.

at The Museum of Human Achievement, Springdale Rd. and Lyons -- click for map

TICKETS: Ticket pricing: Fridays and Saturdays - sliding scale $15-$25; Thursdays – sliding scale $10-$25.
Students & Educators: $10 Tickets are available at www.streetcornerarts.org or by phone at (512) 298-9776

Maybe if I could climb to the top of this telephone pole in the rain at night, like the mast of a ship lost at sea, maybe I’ll see the shine of you, bringing me home again. 


Street Corner Arts is delighted to announce their upcoming production, GRUESOME PLAYGROUND INJURIES by Rajiv Joseph. This stunningly beautiful script will be brought to life by two of Austin’s most talented actors – Benjamin Summers & Molly Karrasch. Featuring choreography by A. Skola Summers, costume design by Glenda Barnes, and video/audio design by Jim Hickcox.. Set and musical elements have been contributed by Austin’s own creative community.


Over the course of 30 years, the lives of Kayleen and Doug intersect at the most bizarre intervals, leading the two childhood friends to compare scars and the physical calamities that keep drawing them together. Gruesome Playground Injuries tells a different kind of love story through sharp humor and even sharper insights into the human condition. They say love hurts, and that’s what makes it worthwhile. Of course, they’ve never met Doug and Kayleen - some love stories are written in the scars...


Molly Karrasch, Benjamin Summers (photo: Street Corner Arts)


About STREET CORNER ARTS Street Corner Arts exists to facilitate enjoyable, collaborative, and engaging stuff with our friends. Poetry or politics; trash or treasure. Open your guitar case or climb that soap box. This corner offers a collection of creative adventures.


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Video by Eric Graham: Slowgirl by Greg Pierce at Hyde Park Theatre, March 21 - April 27, 2013

Eric Graham's two-minute video promo for the production atHyde Park Theatre Austin TX



[511 W. 43rd Street at Guadalupe - click for map ]

of
 Slowgirl Greg Pierce Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX


Slowgirl


by Greg Pierce
directed by Ken Webster

March 21 - April 27, 2012


Purchase tickets online or call 479-PLAY (7529).


NOTE! Some strong language in video dialogue. . . . 




Click for Austin Live Theatre review, March 25

ALT review

Review by Lola and Zoe at blogspot.com, March 18
  Review by Spike Gillespie at her blog Spike Speaks, March 25

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

SLOWGIRL by Greg Pierce, Hyde Park Theatre, March 22 - April 27, 2013



Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX










[511 W. 43rd Street at Guadalupe - click for map ]

presents

Slowgirl Greg Pierce Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX
'Night Window' by Rich Evenhouse (via Flickr)

Slowgirl
by Greg Pierce
directed by Ken Webster

March 21 - April 27, 2012
Purchase tickets online or call 479-PLAY (7529).

A hilariously chatty teenage girl visits her withdrawn, soft-spoken uncle in the Costa Rican jungle where he retreated nine years before. As the week unfolds, the true reason behind her visit, as well as the reasons for his long self-exile, begin to emerge. An exquisitely written and extraordinary play.

"Engrossing and impressive. A beautifully crafted play" (Theatermania).
"Superb . . . Excellent and subtle new play" (New York Observer).

The HPT production is directed by Ken Webster and stars Molly Karrasch (Tigers Be Still, Exit Pursued by a Bear) and Ken Webster (Vigil, St. Nicholas, A Behanding in Spokane.)

The show runs at 8:00 PM on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, March 21 - April 27, 2013. Every Thursday is Pay What You Can Night. For the first four weeks (March 21 - April 13) Friday and Saturday tickets are $20 ($18 for students, seniors, military, and Austin Creative Alliance members). For the final two weekends (April 18 - 27) tickets are $22 ($20 for students, seniors, military, and Austin Creative Alliance members). Purchase tickets online or call 479-PLAY (7529).

Hyde Park Theatre is located at 511 W. 43rd Street. Covered off-street parking for the patrons of HPT is available during performances in the lot at 4315 Guadalupe Street, just north of The Parlor. You can drive through The Parlor's parking lot to reach it. Evening HPT parking also available at Kenneth's Hair Salon, just south of HPT, and at the Hyde Park Church of Christ on the northeast corner of 43rd & Avenue B. We are grateful to them all for their generosity.

Follow us on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

 
Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX













(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Monday, February 11, 2013

The Third New Russian Drama Festival and Two One-Acts by Yury Klavdiev, Breaking String Theatre Company, February 6 - 16


New Russian Drama Festival Breaking String Theatre Austin TX


ALT review

by Dr. David Glen Robinson


The third annual New Russian Drama Festival in Austin, organized and hosted by Breaking String Theatre Company and its artistic director, Graham Schmidt, offered a full weekend of theatre to Austin, with impressive guests, panel discussions, staged readings, a musical program and full stage presentations of two world-class one-act plays by the preeminent contemporary playwright Yury Klavdiev. My first and 
last impressions are that Austin is fortunate indeed simply to have access to such theatrical and artistic enrichment in the course a single weekend.


Strike Yury Klavdiev Breaking String Theatre Austin TX


The core of the festival is the full staging of the Klavdiev works I Am the Machine Gunner and Martial Arts. They are well-matched and exemplary of new Russian drama. At one of the talkback sessions, an audience member asked translator John Freedman what characterized contemporary Russian drama. Freedman’s an intellectual, an observer, and a practitioner who could have offered a long-winded literary exposition, but his initial response was terse and to the point: “Violence.” Since the fall of the U.S.S.R. Russian playwrights have focused not on politics but on the dark side of capitalism and its new avenues for crime. Panel discussants detailed diametrically opposed political views of producing playwrights, usually by categorizing them as pro or con on President Putin’s policies.

I am the Machine Gunner led the evening’s program. Actor Joey Hood performed it as a solo, although the later panel discussion informed us that elsewhere it had been staged for two actors and even nine actors. In Austin it was Hood alone, shifting throughout the forty-minute performance between two characters: a contemporary street criminal and his grandfather, a combat veteran of World War II. I Am the Machine Gunner was more than just overwhelming.

Translator Freedman told us that among contemporary Russian playwrights, Klavdiev is foremost for taking an “in your face” approach. Blood, death and the f-word filled the air, nowhere more climactically than when Hood stood far downstage center and opened the mind of the machine gunner in a delirium of killing the leaves on the trees, shooting down the moon, filling the blue sky with black bullet holes and finally, finally ending the pain by destroying the earth.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Monday, January 28, 2013

Video by Robert Moncrief for Strike, a double bill by Yury Klavdiev, Breaking String Theatre Company at the Salvage Vanguard Theatre, February 7 - 16, 2013

Robert Moncrief's video of Joey Hood, Molly Karrasch and Kaci Beeler of

Breaking String Theatre Company Austin TX







talking about 


STRIKE:
MARTIAL ARTS and I AM THE MACHINE GUNNER
by Yury Klavdiev

presented February 7 - 16, 2013 at the Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd. (click for map) in conjunction with the third New Russian Drama Festival.

 

Click for additional information at AustinLiveTheatre.com

Friday, December 7, 2012

Austin Playhouse Holiday Card for The Game's Afoot by Ken Ludwig, December 13 - January 13, 2013




Austin Playhouse Game's Afoot Ken Ludwig TX Christmas Card

December 13 - January 13

Our 2012-2013 Season opens with a brand new comic murder-mystery by Ken Ludwig! It is December 1936 and Broadway star William Gillette, admired the world over for his leading role in the play Sherlock Holmes, has invited his fellow cast-members to his Connecticut castle for a weekend of revelry. But when one of the guests is stabbed to death, the festivities in this isolated house of tricks and mirrors quickly turn dangerous. Then it’s up to Gillette himself, as he assumes the persona of his beloved Holmes, to track down the killer before the next victim appears. The danger and hilarity are non-stop in this glittering whodunit set during the Christmas holidays. 
 

Starring Joey Banks, Mary Agen Cox, Boni Hester, Huck Huckaby, Molly Karrasch, Jason Newman, Lara Toner, and Cyndi Williams.


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Upcoming: The Game's Afoot by Ken Ludwig, Austin Playhouse at Highland Mall, December 13 - January 13



Austin Playhouse TX










December 13, 2012 - January 13, 2013
Our 2012-2013 Season opens with a brand new comic murder-mystery by Ken Ludwig! It is December 1936 and Broadway star William Gillette, admired the world over for his leading role in the play Sherlock Holmes, has invited his fellow cast-members to his Connecticut castle for a weekend of revelry. But when one of the guests is stabbed to death, the festivities in this isolated house of tricks and mirrors quickly turn dangerous. Then it’s up to Gillette himself, as he assumes the persona of his beloved Holmes, to track down the killer before the next victim appears. The danger and hilarity are non-stop in this glittering whodunit set during the Christmas holidays.
Starring Joey Banks, Mary Agen Cox, Boni Hester, Huck Huckaby, Molly Karrasch,
Jason Newman, Lara Toner, and Cyndi Williams.
Directed by Don Toner with costumes by Diana Huckaby, sound design by the Gunn Brothers, and lighting design by Don Day.
Austin Playhouse Season Ticket holders may make reservations now.
Single tickets go on sale Monday, November 27th.
What: The Game's Afoot by Ken Ludwig
When: December 13, 2012 - January 13, 2013
Times: Thursday - Saturday at 8pm, Sunday at 5pm
Where: Austin Playhouse at Highland Mall
6001 Airport Blvd., Austin, TX 78752
How Much: $28 Thurs/Fri, $30 Friday/Saturday
$35 Opening Night with post-show reception, Friday December 14th
All student tickets are half-price!
Info/Tickets: (512) 476-0084
Website: www.austinplayhouse.com
(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Friday, July 27, 2012

Tigers Be Still by Kim Rosenstock, Hyde Park Theatre, July 12 - August 11

Tigers Be Still Kim Rosenstock Hyde Park Theatre Austin Tx
(image: www.hydeparktheatre.com)





by Catherine Dribb

Kim Rosenstock’s play Tigers Be Still is a well-woven, touching narrative about family triumph (thread that needle!), tragedy (Bette Midler karaoke is never okay) and of course, tigers. And it will have you falling out of those new comfy chairs at the Hyde Park Theater.

It’s that good.

With a sick mother upstairs and two sisters trying to get their sh*t together, Tigers Be Still seemed an unusual pick for Hyde Park Theatre after Marion Bridge (a play about a sick mother residing upstairs and three screwed up sisters figuring out life down below) earlier this season. But Tigers Be Still is hilarious and poignant and will literally take your breath away (I need a price check on a box of extra-large, deodorized…)

Wow. Raunchy and redemptive.

Director Ken Webster delivers another masterpiece especially considering during the 95-minute show, the characters move from one house to another to a school to the lake in addition to both Walgreens and CVS. How did he and set designer Paul Davis do it? Very carefully. But it worked, and I’m not sure I’ve ever seen the Hyde Park stage look so… spacious.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Video Promo for Upcoming: Tigers Be Still by Kim Rosenstock, Hyde Park Theatre, July 12 - August 11

"Tigers Be Still" at Hyde Park Theatre from Eric Graham on Vimeo.

The San Francisco Chronicle called Tigers Be Still "an uproar of laughs." The New York Times called Kim Rosenstock's off-Broadway hit "an endearing new play . . a heartfelt comedy" in which a big cat on the loose from a local zoo fits right in with the anxiety and depression of modern life.

The HPT production is directed by Ken Webster and stars Molly Karrasch, Jon Cook, Jay Fraley, and Kelsey Kling.

The show runs at 8:00 PM on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, July 12 - August 11, 2011. Every Thursday is Pay What You Can Night; Friday, and Saturday tickets are $19 ($17 for students, seniors, and ACOT members), except for the final weekend (April 19-21), when ticket are $21 ($19 for students, seniors, and ACOT members). For reservations, call 479-PLAY or purchase tickets online.

Hyde Park Theatre is located at 511 W. 43rd Street. Covered off-street parking for the patrons of HPT is available in the lot at 4315 Guadalupe Street, just north of The Parlor. You can drive through The Parlor's parking lot to reach it. Evening HPT parking also available at Kenneth's Hair Salon, just south of HPT, and at the Hyde Park Church of Christ on the northeast corner of 43rd & Avenue B. We are grateful to them all for their generosity.

Upcoming: Exit, Pursued by Bear by Laren Gunderson, Capital T at Hyde Park Theatre, August 16 - September 8


Capital T Theatre Austin TX




 

presents
Exit Pursued by Bear Lauren Gunderson Capital T Theatre Austin TX
(image: www.capitalt.org)


Directed by Mark Pickell

Costume Design by Cheryl Painter
August 16 – September 8
Thursday-Saturday at 8pm

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

Nan decides its finally time to leave her abusive husband Kyle and make a run for it but not until she’s tied him up, covered him in honey and invited the neighborhood bear in for a snack. Lauren Gunderson’s gut-busting, outrageous revenge comedy about dreams, healing, and the simple joy of tying a dickhead to the living room chair.

“If the Coen Brothers decided to set a feminist revenge tale in Atlanta and sprinkle it with Dixie Chicks pixie dust, it might look something like Exit, Pursued by a Bear, a raucous comedy of friendship, domestic abuse and performance-as-catharsis.” - ArtsCritic Atlanta


“BEAR is RAW and HILIRIOUS” - American Theatre Magazine”


Cast
Kyle – Joey Hood; Simon - Stephen Mercantel; Nan – Molly Karrasch; Sweetheart – TBA

Click to read about playwright Lauren Gunderson at AustinLiveTheatre.com. . . .

Monday, April 23, 2012

Upcoming: Tigers Be Still by Kim Rosenstock, Hyde Park Theatre, July 12 - August 11


Hyde Park Theatre, Austin




 presentsTigers Be Still Kim Rosenstock Hyde Park Theatre Austin

Tigers Be Still

by Kim Rosenstock

directed by Ken Webster

July 12 - August 11

Hyde Park Theatre, 511 W. 43rd St. at Guadalupe (click for map)
Buy tickets online ($20 including fee for general admission, $18 including fee for students/seniors/Austin Creative Alliance members) or call 479-PLAY (7529).

The San Francisco Chronicle called Tigers Be Still "an uproar of laughs." The New York Times called Kim Rosenstock's off-Broadway hit "an endearing new play . . a heartfelt comedy" in which a big cat on the loose from a local zoo fits right in with the anxiety and depression of modern life.

The HPT production is directed by Ken Webster and stars Molly Karrasch, Jon Cook, and Kelsey Kling.

The show runs at 8 p.m. on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, July 12 - August 11, 2011. Every Thursday is Pay What You Can Night; Friday, and Saturday tickets are $19 ($17 for students, seniors, and ACOT members), except for the final weekend (April 19-21), when ticket are $21 ($19 for students, seniors, and ACOT members). For reservations, call 479-PLAY or purchase tickets online.
Covered off-street parking for the patrons of HPT is available in the lot at 4315 Guadalupe Street, just north of The Parlor. You can drive through The Parlor's parking lot to reach it. Evening HPT parking also available at Kenneth's Hair Salon, just south of HPT, and at the Hyde Park Church of Christ on the northeast corner of 43rd & Avenue B. We are grateful to them all for their generosity. http://austinlivetheatre.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3295:upcoming-tigers-be-still-by-kim-rosenstock-hyde-park-theatre&catid=75:hyde-park-theatre&Itemid=128

Monday, May 16, 2011

Love's Labor's Lost, Austin Shakespeare at Hillside Theatre, Zilker Park, May 5 - 29


Love's Labor's Lost, Austin Shakespeare


Robert Faires' imaginative staging of Love's Labor's Lost takes place at the Sheffield Hillside Theatre in Zilker Park, literally a stone's throw away from Barton Springs pool. Spectators spread out blankets or set up lawn chairs in the sloped meadow above the playing area and settle in for the pleasures of free entertainment for a Texas evening in May.

Love's Labor's Lost is one of Shakespeare's earliest comedies and not one of the world's favorites. The language is rich and strange, certainly to a contemporary ear, with lots of quibbles, puns, and references that might have knocked 'em over back in the late 1500's but today come across as dense and obscure.

The concept seemed to be a stretch. How were director Faires and that energetic young cast going to fit the King of Navarre, the Princess of France, fantastical Spaniard Don Adriano de Armado and sundry counselors and ladies in waiting into an Annette Funicello-Frankie Avalon 1963 beach blanket bingo world?

Having made his reputation with the histories of Henry VI and Richard III, Shakespeare was drawing on events of recent history for this lighthearted comedy. He was parodying Henri of Navarre, a contemporary and an English ally in the religious wars until Henri abruptly converted to Catholicism in 1593, shortly before Shakespeare wrote this piece. Henri was reported to be of an intellectual turn of mind and he had received visits from a French princess and the French queen, celebrated with festivities and entertainments. References to other current topics and events are frequent. Shakespeare's characters both noble and common obsess with words and elaborate wordplay.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Upcoming: Proof, Austin Playhouse Larry L. King Stage, January 28 - February 20

Found on-line:


Austin Playhouse

presentsProof Molly Karrasch Austin Playhouse

Proof

by David Auburn

January 28 - February 20

Austin Playhouse Larry L. King Theatre at Penn Field (click for map)

Thursdays-Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 5 p.m.


Austin Playhouse explores the link between genius and madness in David Auburn's Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning drama Proof. The drama-mystery runs four weeks - from January 28th through February 20th - in the Larry L. King Theatre. Written in 2001, the drama scored the Pulitzer Prize, Tony Award, Joseph Kesselring Prize and Drama Desk Award. The story was produced for the big screen in a 2005 feature film starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Anthony Hopkins and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Proof explores complex relationships - similar to a mathematical equation - between a father and daughter, rival sisters, and two young lovers. Catherine, a young woman with unmistakable symptoms of clinical depression, takes care of her former genius of a mathematician father through a long struggle with mental illness. While celebrating her 25th birthday, she begins to wonder how much of her father's genius - and madness - she's inherited.

Directed by Lara Toner and Cyndi Williams, the Austin production features Molly Karrasch (Educating Rita), Tom Parker (The Trip to Bountiful, Picasso at the Lapin Agile), Lara Toner (The 39 Steps), and David Meissner.

Performances run Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., and Sunday at 5 p.m. Tickets are $20, with half-price tickets for students.
Austin Playhouse is located at 3601 S. Congress, Bldg. C, in the Penn Field Center. For reservations and more information, call (512) 476-0084 or visit www.AustinPlayhouse.com.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Upcoming: Proof by David Auburn, Austin Playhouse, January 28 - February 20


Found on-line:


Austin Playhouse

presents


Proof

by David Auburn

January 28 - February 20

Austin Playhouse Larry L. King Theatre at Penn Field (click for map)

Thursdays-Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 5 p.m.


Austin Playhouse explores the link between genius and madness in David Auburn's Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning drama Proof. The drama-mystery runs four weeks - from January 28th through February 20th - in the Larry L. King Theatre. Written in 2001, the drama scored the Pulitzer Prize, Tony Award, Joseph Kesselring Prize and Drama Desk Award. The story was produced for the big screen in a 2005 feature film starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Anthony Hopkins and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Proof explores complex relationships - similar to a mathematical equation - between a father and daughter, rival sisters, and two young lovers. Catherine, a young woman with unmistakable symptoms of clinical depression, takes care of her former genius of a mathematician father through a long struggle with mental illness. While celebrating her 25th birthday, she begins to wonder how much of her father's genius - and madness - she's inherited.

Directed by Lara Toner and Cyndi Williams, the Austin production features Molly Karrasch (Educating Rita), Tom Parker (The Trip to Bountiful, Picasso at the Lapin Agile), Lara Toner (The 39 Steps), and David Meissner.

Performances run Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., and Sunday at 5 p.m. Tickets are $20, with half-price tickets for students.

Austin Playhouse is located at 3601 S. Congress, Bldg. C, in the Penn Field Center. For reservations and more information, call (512) 476-0084 or visit www.AustinPlayhouse.com.