Showing posts with label Nathan Jerkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nathan Jerkins. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Red by John Logan, Penfold Theatre at Trinity Street, September 12 - 29, 2013


ALT review
Red by John Logan Penfold Theatre Austin TX


by Dr. David Glen Robinson


Red is a tragedy, make no mistake, but it is one in love with life, and most especially with the color red. As with the very best plays, Red tells everything plainly to the audience. The promotional material for the play is full of piquant quotations from the script, by way of Mark Rothko, the central character. My favorite, not in any of the cut-lines is: “There is tragedy in every brushstroke.”

Red John Logan Penfold Theatre Austin TX
Ryan Crowder, Steven Pounder (photo: Kimberley Mead)
And so the tragedy played itself out, revolving around the modernist abstract expressionist painter Mark Rothko and set in his warehouse-y lower Manhattan studio. The time of the play was the peak of Rothko’s career, when he was painting his commission for murals for the Four Seasons restaurant in the Seagram building in Manhattan. 

 At the time, it was the most valuable art commission ever, paying $35,000. The commissioner was the architect Philip Johnson through his patron, international modernist architect Mies van der Rohe, perhaps the reigning art god of the twentieth century, who changed history more profoundly even than Picasso. 

 These were heady times, indeed, a few years past Jackson Pollock’s death (which Rothko insisted was suicide) at a point at which a few thinkers like Rothko saw Pop Art coming to replace all the abstract expressionists and knew it would be a painful death.

Penfold Theatre’s production of Red is a major score; they have captured the Austin premiere of this John Logan play, a Tony award winner, first staged in London in 2009. Penfold treats the play very well, staging it on the thrust stage of the Trinity Street Theatre, on the fourth floor of the First Baptist Church, 901 Trinity St., downtown. Steven Pounders plays Rothko, and Ryan Crowder, producing artistic director of Penfold, plays Ken, Rothko’s newly hired studio assistant. Rothko was known for his acerbic statements about the art world, and many of those comments have found their way into Logan’s script. Rothko was no Oscar Wilde for biting irony and sarcasm, but in his rage he came close.

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

Monday, August 12, 2013

RED by John Logan, Penfold Theatre at Trinity Street, September 12 - 29, 2013




Penfold Theatre Round Rock Austin TX









presents

Red John Logan Steven Pounders Penfold Theatre Austin TX
(www.penfoldtheatre.com)

RED


By John Logan
Directed by Nathan Jerkins
Featuring Steven Pounders and Ryan Crowder

September 12-29, 2013
At the Trinity Street Theater, 4th floor of First Baptist Church (901 Trinity Street, Austin, TX 78701) - click for map
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm. Sundays at 5pm.
$25 Opening night, $20 Regular, $18 Students, $18 Seniors (age 60+)
More information available at www.penfoldtheatre.org





Based on a true story. Mark Rothko, the revolutionary twentieth century abstract expressionist, receives the art world’s largest commission: to create a series of murals for The Four Seasons restaurant in the new Seagram building on Park Avenue. Under the watchful gaze of a threatening new generation of artists, Rothko labors to create an iconic work that will stand as a monument to his illustrious career, while doubts and fears of his own relevancy threaten to tear him apart.


RED won the 2010 Drama League, Drama Desk and Tony Awards for best play. After critically hailed runs in both London and New York, the play was lauded by the New York Times as “intense and exciting.” Variety called it “an electrifying play of ideas”, and The Guardian named RED “a totally convincing portrait of the artist as a working visionary.” Since then, the play has swept through the theaters across the country and now finally receives its Austin premiere.


RED, which opens Penfold Theatre Company’s sixth season, cracks open questions about purpose, relevancy, integrity and art by examining with unflinching intimacy the life and work of one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century.



ABOUT PENFOLD THEATRE COMPANY Penfold Theatre Company cultivates a love for live theatre in northern Travis and Williamson Counties by offering first-class, professional theatre performances and education programs. 2013-14 is the company’s sixth season and features a variety of work from cherished classics to regional premieres: RED (September 2013), It’s a Wonderful Life: a live radio show (December 2013), Ordinary Days (March 2014) and Romeo & Juliet (June 2014).


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)


Monday, July 22, 2013

RED by John Logan, Penfold Theatre at Trinity Street Theatre, September 12 - 29, 2013



Penfold Theatre Round Rock Austin TX









presents
Red
By John Logan
Directed by Nathan Jerkins
Featuring Steven Pounders* and Ryan Crowder

  Red John Logan Penfold Theatre Austin TX

At Trinity Street Theatre- 4th floor black box theatre, First Baptist Church, 901 Trinity Street
September 12-29, 2013

Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00pm. Sundays at 5:00pm.
Opening night party following the show on Thursday, September 12th.
$25 Opening night, $20 Regular, $18 Students, $18 Seniors (age 60+).



Buy tickets
 

For more information, email us at info@penfoldtheatre.org or dial (512) 850-4849. Box office hours are 8am to 5pm Monday through Friday. On performance days, we are also available by phone from 1pm to 5pm on Saturdays and Sundays and the hour before each performance.

How will they remember you? Mark Rothko, the revolutionary twentieth century abstract expressionist, receives the art world’s largest commission: to create a series of murals for The Four Seasons restaurant in the new Seagram building on Park Avenue. Under the watchful gaze of a threatening new generation of artists, Rothko labors to create an iconic work that will stand as a monument to his illustrious career, while doubts and fears of his own relevancy threaten to tear him apart. Red won the 2010 Drama League, Drama Desk and Tony Awards for best play and now receives its Austin premiere.

In the news

"Intense and exciting... a portrait of an angry and brilliant mind that asks you to feel the shape and texture of thoughts... Red captures the dynamic relationship between an artist and his creations."
-New York Times
"John Logan sends American abstract expressionist painter Mark Rothko into battle with his demons in this electrifying play of ideas, and the artist's howls are pure music... Rothko is one old lion that will keep roaring until he draws his last breath."
-Variety
"A totally convincing portrait of the artist as a working visionary."       -Guardian (UK)

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Video: Penfold Theatre's 'Shipwrecked' by Donald Margulies, free at Round Rock Amphitheatre, June 6 - 29, 2013


In a video (6 min.)  by YourLocalColorMovies Ryan Crowder and Nathan Jerkins talk about the production by
Penfold Theatre Round Rock Austin TX






of its free outdoor show
Shipwrecked by Donald Margulies Penfold Theatre Round Rock TX
Robert Berry, Julie Linnard (photo: Kimberley Mead)


Shipwrecked!

An entertainment: the amazing adventures of Louis de Rougemont (as told by himself)

by Donald Margulies
directed by Ryan Crowder
featuring Robert Berry, Nathan Jerkins and Julie Linnard
June 6 - 29, 2013
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.

at the Round Rock Amphitheater (301 W. Bagdad Ave, Round Rock TX 78664) (click for map)
Free admission, donations appreciated
More information available at www.penfoldtheatre.org




Written by the Pulitzer-winning playwright Donald Margulies and based on actual events, Shipwrecked! takes audience members of all ages on a high seas adventure populated by exotic islanders, giant sea turtles and a monstrous man-eating octopus. Louis’ hair-raising tale – told by three actors and an explorer-sized helping of theatrical magic – challenges us to wonder how far we are willing to blur the line between fact and fiction in order to leave our mark on the world.




Shipwrecked! is the third production in the “Penfold in the Park” series, an annual offering of free, outdoor summer theatre, made possible by a partnership with the City of Round Rock Parks & Recreation Department. Previous productions included The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Abridged (2010) and Servant of Two Masters (2011).



No reservations are required. Donations are appreciated. Penfold Theatre Company is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Shipwrecked! concludes Penfold’s fifth anniversary season.
.

Monday, May 6, 2013

SHIPWRECKED! by Donald Margulies, Penfold Theatre at Round Rock Amphitheatre, June 6 - 29, 2013



Penfold Theatre Round Rock Austin TX







presents

Shipwrecked by Donald Margulies Penfold Theatre Round Rock TX
Robert Berry, Julie Linnard (image: Kimberley Mead)
Shipwrecked!
An entertainment:
the amazing adventures of Louis de Rougemont
(as told by himself)

by Donald Margulies
directed by Ryan Crowder
featuring Robert Berry, Nathan Jerkins and Julie Linnard

June 6 - 29, 2013
At the Round Rock Amphitheater (301 W. Bagdad Ave, Round Rock TX 78664) (click for map)
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
Free admission, donations appreciated
More information available at www.penfoldtheatre.org


Gather around! The intrepid Louis de Rougemont invites you to hear his amazing story of bravery, survival and celebrity that left the nineteenth-century world spellbound.



Written by the Pulitzer-winning playwright Donald Margulies and based on actual events, Shipwrecked! takes audience members of all ages on a high seas adventure populated by exotic islanders, giant sea turtles and a monstrous man-eating octopus. Louis’ hair-raising tale – told by three actors and an explorer-sized helping of theatrical magic – challenges us to wonder how far we are willing to blur the line between fact and fiction in order to leave our mark on the world.


Shipwrecked! is the third production in the “Penfold in the Park” series, an annual offering of free, outdoor summer theatre, made possible by a partnership with the City of Round Rock Parks & Recreation Department. Previous productions included The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Abridged (2010) and Servant of Two Masters (2011).



Last summer the series was put on pause while the city renovated the amphitheater and surrounding area into the beautiful new Centennial Plaza. The plaza officially opened April 27th of this year in conjunction with the City’s Centennial Celebration, which commemorated the 100th anniversary of Round Rock’s founding.



Each performance will feature a different special guest who will kick off the evening with a 7:30pm pre-show. Guest artists from past years include the Round Rock Symphony, Ballet Folklorico, Central Texas All-Star Drum Line and many others. Audiences are welcome to arrive early with their own food and drink, or to purchase it from the concessions tent. A list of pre-show artists and food offerings will be posted online later in May.


No reservations are required. Donations are appreciated. Penfold Theatre Company is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Shipwrecked! concludes Penfold’s fifth anniversary season.
.


Shipwrecked by Donald Margulies Penfold Theatre Round Rock TX
Julie Linnard, Robert Berry (image: Kimberley Mead)


ABOUT PENFOLD THEATRE COMPANY Penfold Theatre Company cultivates a love for live theatre in northern Travis and Williamson Counties by offering first-class, professional theatre performances and education programs. 2012-13 is the company’s fifth anniversary season and features a variety of work, from old favorites to regional premieres: Moonlight and Magnolias (October 2012), It’s a Wonderful Life: a live radio show (December 2012), A Minister’s Wife (March 2013) and Shipwrecked! (June 2013).



(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

SHIPWRECKED! by Donald Margulies, Penfold Theatre at Round Rock Amphitheatre, June 6 - 29, 2013



Penfold Theatre Round Rock Austin TX


 presents

Shipwrecked by Donald Margulies Penfold Theatre Round Rock TX
Robert Berry, Julie Linnard (image: Kimberley Mead)

Shipwrecked!
An entertainment:
the amazing adventures of Louis de Rougemont
(as told by himself)

by Donald Margulies
directed by Ryan Crowder
featuring Robert Berry, Nathan Jerkins and Julie Linnard

March 28 - April 14, 2013
At the Round Rock Amphitheater (301 W. Bagdad Ave, Round Rock TX 78664) (click for map)
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
Free admission, donations appreciated
More information available at www.penfoldtheatre.org

Gather around! The intrepid Louis de Rougemont invites you to hear his amazing story of bravery, survival and celebrity that left the nineteenth-century world spellbound.



Written by the Pulitzer-winning playwright Donald Margulies and based on actual events, Shipwrecked! takes audience members of all ages on a high seas adventure populated by exotic islanders, giant sea turtles and a monstrous man-eating octopus. Louis’ hair-raising tale – told by three actors and an explorer-sized helping of theatrical magic – challenges us to wonder how far we are willing to blur the line between fact and fiction in order to leave our mark on the world.


Shipwrecked! is the third production in the “Penfold in the Park” series, an annual offering of free, outdoor summer theatre, made possible by a partnership with the City of Round Rock Parks & Recreation Department. Previous productions included The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Abridged (2010) and Servant of Two Masters (2011).



Last summer the series was put on pause while the city renovated the amphitheater and surrounding area into the beautiful new Centennial Plaza. The plaza officially opened April 27th of this year in conjunction with the City’s Centennial Celebration, which commemorated the 100th anniversary of Round Rock’s founding.



Each performance will feature a different special guest who will kick off the evening with a 7:30pm pre-show. Guest artists from past years include the Round Rock Symphony, Ballet Folklorico, Central Texas All-Star Drum Line and many others. Audiences are welcome to arrive early with their own food and drink, or to purchase it from the concessions tent. A list of pre-show artists and food offerings will be posted online later in May.


No reservations are required. Donations are appreciated. Penfold Theatre Company is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Shipwrecked! concludes Penfold’s fifth anniversary season.
.


Shipwrecked by Donald Margulies Penfold Theatre Round Rock TX
Julie Linnard, Robert Berry (image: Kimberley Mead)

ABOUT PENFOLD THEATRE COMPANY Penfold Theatre Company cultivates a love for live theatre in northern Travis and Williamson Counties by offering first-class, professional theatre performances and education programs. 2012-13 is the company’s fifth anniversary season and features a variety of work, from old favorites to regional premieres: Moonlight and Magnolias (October 2012), It’s a Wonderful Life: a live radio show (December 2012), A Minister’s Wife (March 2013) and Shipwrecked! (June 2013).



(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Friday, April 19, 2013

A MARVELOUS PARTY fundraiser, Penfold Theatre, May 19, 2013

Penfold throws A Marvelous Party! in the heart of the Hill Country
Third annual fundraising gala features scenic background, gourmet dining and
live music by local favorites
Penfold Theatre Company throws its third annual fundraising gala, A Marvelous Party! on May 19th.

The grounds of the Kindred Oaks estate provide a beautiful, central Texas backdrop for guests to enjoy an elegant meal while singers from Austin’s vibrant theatre community delight with cabaret-style songs and stories from the musical theatre canon. The evening will also offer a sneak peak at Penfold’s 2013-14 Season with a season announcement and selections from next year’s Texas premiere chamber musical.

The night's crooners include artists familiar to Penfold audiences, such as Andrew Cannata (A Minister's Wife, I Love You Because), Sarah Marie Curry (I Love You Because), Stephanie Delk (Singer/songwriter), Robert Faires (Austin Chronicle; Director, Moonlight & Magnolias) Greg Holt (A Minister's Wife), Tyler Jones (I Love You Because), Andrewa Smith (Servant of Two Masters) and Haley Smith (I Love You Because).

Proceeds from ticket sales, a silent auction and special “wine pull” will support the nonprofit’s efforts to bring professional theatre performances and education programs to north Travis and Williamson counties.
.
FAST FACTS
A Marvelous Party!
Compiled and directed by Susan Finnigan & Nathan Jerkins
Kindred Oaks, 2100 C.R. 176, Georgetown TX 78628
Sunday, May 19th, doors open at 6:30pm and dinner begins at 7:00pm
$75 per person or $500 for a table of eight
Dinner is catered by Bowties 2 Blue Jeans
Reservations may be made at (512) 850-4849 or online at www.penfoldtheatre.org
ON THE MENU
For dinner. Stuffed parmigiano lemon chicken, potato gnocchi, asparagus w/ red peppers, arugula salad, rosemary corn scones. For dessert. Assorted chocolate brownie bites (peanut butter, raspberry, chipotle), key lime tartlets, lemon tiramisu, orange pound cake, strawberry bruschetta, cream puffs w/ chocolate ganache. To drink. Orange and unsweet iced tea, cash bar.

ABOUT PENFOLD THEATRE COMPANY
Penfold Theatre Company cultivates a love for live theatre in northern Travis and Williamson Counties by offering first-class, professional theatre performances and education programs. 2012-13 is the company’s fifth anniversary season and features a variety of work, from old favorites to regional premieres: Moonlight and Magnolias (October 2012), It’s a Wonderful Life: a live radio show (December 2012), A Minister’s Wife (March 2013) and Shipwrecked! (June 2013).

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

A MINISTER'S WIFE, Penfold Theatre at Trinity Street Theatre, March 28 - April 14, 2013,






Penfold Theatre Round Rock Austin TX









presents

A Minister's Wife
A Mnister's Wife Penfold Theatre Austin TX
Music by Joshua Schmidt, lyrics by Jan Levy Tranen, and book by Austin Pendleton
Directed by Michael McKelvey
Featuring Jill Blackwood, Andrew Cannata, Amy Downing, Greg Holt and Nathan Jerkins


March 28 - April 14, 2013
Playing at Trinity Street Theatre, 4th floor of First Baptist Church, 901 Trinity Street, Austin

Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00pm. Sundays at 5:00pm.
Opening night party following the show on Thursday, March 28th.
$25 Opening night, $20 Regular, $18 Students, $18 Seniors (age 60+).

Buy tickets

For more information, email us at info@penfoldtheatre.org or dial (512) 850-4849. On performance days, we are available by phone from 1pm to the start of the performance.


In this regional premiere of a new American musical, George Bernard Shaw's riveting drama, Candida, is given an innovative and emotive score by the award-winning composers of Adding Machine. The piece whisks us away to 1890's London to experience the love triangle between the charismatic Reverend James Morell, his strong-willed and beautiful wife Candida, and the idealistic young poet, Eugene Marchbanks, who aims to win Candida's love.

In this regional premiere of a new American musical, George Bernard Shaw's riveting drama, Candida, is given an innovative and emotive score by the award-winning composers of Adding Machine. The piece whisks us away to 1890's London to experience the love triangle between the charismatic Reverend James Morell, his strong-willed and beautiful wife Candida, and the idealistic young poet, Eugene Marchbanks, who aims to win Candida's love.

Running time: About 1 hour 35 minutes, without intermission.

Recommended for ages high school and up.

In the news

"The most important new musical since The Light in the Piazza. To say that you mustn't miss it is to grossly understate the case." -The Wall Street Journal

Sponsors This production would not be possible without support from the City of Austin, the Creative Fund and Dramatists.

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)




Wednesday, December 5, 2012

AustinLiveTheatre Review: It's A Wonderful Life, a live radio play by Joe Landry, Penfold Theatre, November 29 - December 15


AustinLiveTheatre reviewIt's A Wonderful Life Joe Landry Penfold Theatre Round Rock TX

by Michael Meigs


Frank Capra's film It's A Wonderful Life with Jimmy Stewart captured the yearning, optimism and nostalgia for small-town U.S.A. in 1946, a time when millions of American men were returning from the war. The film made an unpromising start and was considered something of a failure in its first release, but yearly television showings of this black-and-white tale of redemption and grace set it deeply into our collective consciousness. 

 Jimmy Stewart, Donna Reed as his sweetheart, Lionel Barrymore as the wicked, grasping Old Man Potter -- in effect, reprising his role as Scrooge -- well, you've almost certainly seen the film, and if you haven't, then you should.


Stewart had debuted as a naive and gangling youngster in 1930's films but during the War he'd enlisted and eventually flown B-24 missions over Germany; and here he was, in his unassuming way, pretending to be an earnest small town savings-and-loan manager, 4-F because of a deaf ear.


Republic Pictures failed to renew the copyright on the film in the 1970's and had to struggle to re-establish control over the piece. It's not clear to me whether Joe Landry had to pay royalties when he put together this piece in 1996. If not, that clerical error cost Capra's estate and others dear, for this simple staging of the story has become an adored staple of the holiday season.


Penfold Theatre did it last year at Friar Tuck's cafe in downtown Round Rock, and this year they've secured the charming but faux Rice's Crossing Country Store at the Old Settler's Association, a perfectly appropriate setting for this time trip. The Gaslight Baker Theatre also did it for the 2011 holidays, the Bastrop Opera House performed it in 2009 and Austin Playhouse did it in their Larry L. King Theatre in 2008. San Antonio's Classic Theatre performed the show four times last month, and KSTX Texas Public Radio in San Antonio will play a recording of the Classic Theatre version at 8 p.m. this coming Christmas eve.


I brought a friend from Arizona to Penfold's November 29 opening night, and upon his return he discovered that the show was also playing in Tucson.


Joe Landry's website lists 151 productions playing this year, ten of them -- including this one -- in Texas. He must be a very happy man.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com

Friday, November 2, 2012

Upcoming: It's A Wonderful Life, a live radio show, Penfold Theatre in Round Rock, November 29 - December 23



Penfold Theatre Round Rock TX






It's a Wonderful Life
a live radio show

by Joe Landry
directed by Nathan Jerkins
featuring Ryan Crowder, Jenni Finley, Chris Gibson, David R. Jarrott, Claire Ludwig

November 29 – December 23
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00pm. Sundays at 6:00pm.
Opening night party following the show on Thursday, November 29
$25 Opening night, $20 Regular, $18 Student/senior

Rice’s Crossing Store (3300 Palm Valley Blvd, Round Rock, TX 78665) (click for map)
More information available at www.penfoldtheatre.org

Penfold Theatre Company presents It's a Wonderful Life: a live radio show at Rice’s Crossing Store in Round Rock from November 29 to December 23. 

It's Christmas Eve 1946, and members of the KPNF radio station are coming together for a live radio performance of It’s a Wonderful Life. As the live studio audience, guests step back in time while five actors bring the entire story to life with dozens of characterizations and live foley sound effects. In this imaginative re-incarnation of a cherished holiday tradition, audiences of all ages will fall in love with George Bailey and his timeless tale of despair, redemption and hope all over again.

The show takes place at Rice’s Crossing Store, named for Texas war hero James O. Rice and one of the oldest structures in Williamson County. Fully restored and relocated to the historic village at the Old Settlers’ Association, the store is the perfect yesteryear backdrop for a story that spans the first half of the twentieth century.


Guests can enjoy holiday treats as they watch the show, which features mock radio commercials of local businesses and a nightly cameo role for a selected member of the audience. The show returns after a completely sold out run last holiday season, so guests are encouraged to make their reservations early.


ABOUT PENFOLD THEATRE COMPANY Penfold Theatre Company cultivates a love for live theatre in northern Travis and Williamson Counties by offering first-class theatre performances and education programs. 2012-13 is the company’s fifth anniversary season and features a variety of work, from old favorites to regional premieres: Moonlight and Magnolias (October 2012), It’s a Wonderful Life: a live radio show (December 2012), A Minister’s Wife (March 2013) and Shipwrecked! (June 2013).

(Click to return to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Upcoming: A Marvelous Party fundraiser, Penfold Theatre at Kindred Oaks, Georgetown, June 3


Penfold Theatre










throws its second annual fundraising gala

A Marvelous Party 

in the heart of the Texas Hill Country
scenic background, fine dining and live music by local favorites
June 3rd at the beautiful Kindred Oaks estate in Hill Country

Guests will enjoy an elegant meal while live performers serve up melodic treats from the golden age of musical theatre. Music-lovers familiar with classics like "It's Only a Paper Moon," "Luck be a Lady," and "Love Walked In" will be delighted by this sampling of songs from composers like Irving Berlin, Frank Loesser and the Gershwins. The evening will also include a live and silent auction to support Penfold's efforts to bring professional theatre performances and education programs to north Travis and Williamson counties.

The night's crooners include Robert Faires of the Austin Chronicle, as well as artists from recent Penfold productions including Andrew Cannata, Amy Downing, Jill Leberknight, Michael McKelvey and many more. At the helm will be director Adam Roberts, who was recently named Artistic Director of Theatre at the J.

A Marvelous Party! compiled and directed by Adam Roberts.
Featuring Katie Blacksmith, Andrew Cannata, Ryan Crowder, Sarah Marie Curry, Amy Downing, Robert Faires, Stephen Jack, Nathan Jerkins, Jill Leberknight, Michael McKelvey, Andrea Smith and Haley Smith.
 
Held at Kindred Oaks, 2100 C.R. 176, Georgetown TX 78628.
Sunday, June 3rd, doors open at 6:30pm and dinner begins at 7:00pm.
Dinner is catered by Bowties 2 Blue Jeans.
Reservations may be made at (512) 850-4849 or online at www.penfoldtheatre.org.

ABOUT PENFOLD THEATRE COMPANY   Penfold Theatre Company is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to opening and operating a professional theatre for north Travis and Williamson counties. Following three years of award-winning programming that has made a pioneering impact on arts in the north, 2011-12 has been Penfold’s most ambitious season to date. The line-up includes a mix of classic and modern favorites: Servant of Two Masters (August 2011), Ghosts (October 2011), It's a Wonderful Life: a live radio show (December 2011) and The Pavilion (April 2012).

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Upcoming: Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, a rock musical, Doctuh Mistuh Productions, June 7 - July




Doctuh Mistuh Productions

presents



Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson Doctuh Mistuh Productions Austin TX
(image via Michael McKelvey)


 Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson (a rock musical)

June 7 - July 1, Thursdays - Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Sundays at 5 p.m.
special performances on Wed., June 27 at 7:30 pm & Friday, June 29 at 11 pm
at the Blue Theatre, 916 Springdale (click for map)
Tickets $15-22.  $10 Price Student Rush 30 minutes prior to curtain

Tickets available online via

brown paper tickets






or by calling (800) 838-3006


From the people who brought you Evil Dead, The Musical -- DM Productions is proud to present the Texas premiere of one of the most talked about musicals in years, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson. An exhilarating and white-knuckled look at one of our nation's founding rock stars, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson recreates and reinvents the life of "Old Hickory," from his humble beginnings on the Tennessee frontier to his days as our seventh Commander-in-Chief. It also asks the question, is wanting to have a beer with someone reason enough to elect him? What if he's really, really hot? 


The show portrays Andrew Jackson as an Emo Rock Star and scrutinizes the American politic machine with wit and cynicism.   The theatricality of BBAJ ranges from hard-edge Green Day-like concert to PBS historical recreation to vaudevillian buffoonery.  Nothing is sacred, especially not the rise and fall of the man whom many consider America’s most popular president.  “Populish Yea Yea.” 

The cast features David Gallagher, Haley Smith Montgomery, Jose Villareal, Libby Dees Detling, Aaron Alexander, Rebecca Robinson, Scott Swanson, Sarah Marie Curry, Joey Banks, Eve Sampaga, Stephen Jack, Joel Mercado-See, Nathan Jerkins, David Ponton, Alan Marequiota and Trevor Detling.  

The production staff includes Michael McKelvey (stage & musical director), Ben Wolfe (Assistant Director), Glenda Barnes (costume designer), Joe Carpenter (set designer), Rocker Verastique and Danny Herman (Choreographers) and Erin  Fleming (lighting designer).



About Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson:   Book by Alex Timbers; Music & Lyrics by Michael Friedman. Developed by New York-based experimental company Les Freres Corbusier, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson had workshop productions in August 2006 at the Williamstown Theatre Festival and in May 2007 at the New 42nd Street Studios, New York. It premiered in January 2008 in Los Angeles at the Kirk Douglas Theatre, produced by Center Theatre Group. Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson made its New York premiere in May 2009 at The Public Theater in New York in a concert version, and returned to run from March through June, 2010.  The show premiered on Broadway at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre on October 13, 2010 and ran until January 2, 2011.

Friday, August 19, 2011

The Servant of Two Masters, Penfold Theatre outdoors in amphitheatres, Round Rock 8/04-21, Wimberley, 8/26-27


A Servant of Two Masters, Penfold Theatre

by Michael Meigs

I always enjoy watching the handsome and talented Penfold Theatre folk. Not only onstage in their accomplished presentations, of which The Servant of Two Masters directed by Beth Burns is only the latest shining example, but also as with considerable skill they build their presence and reputation.

Austin attracts graduates of theatre programs the way that Nashville attracts banjo pickers, and with not much effort I could name you half a dozen groups of friends who are putting their work up in dusty rented venues throughout this town. Talent is not lacking, and there's plenty of courage and ingenuity.

Ryan Crowder (image: Kimberley Mead)Nathan Jerkins (image: Kimberley Mead)The Penfold team is grouped around funnyface Ryan Crowder, playing the leading rascal in this show, and Nathan Jerkins, who gives his self-assured ironic humor to the stock role of Brighella the innkeeper. In 2007 they founded the company with their Abilene Christian University classmate Sean Martin, at about the same time I arrived in Austin.

Penfold formed an early alliance with St. Ed's musical jack of all trades Dr. Michael McKelvey (director of their sparkling chamber musical theatre pieces The Last Five Years, John and Jen and I Love You Because). Company members' work with Austin Shakespeare and with recent arrival from California Beth Burns helped build networks including many of the liveliest and most dedicated theatre folk in Austin. They won B. Iden Payne awards.

And unlike most other young devotees of the theatre, they looked around for a promising home in the greater Austin area. Penfold made friends in Round Rock, the rapidly growing community just north of Austin, and has secured support from businesses, the municipality and potential arts patrons for their vision of a resident theatre company in that town.

Their summer shows at the Round Rock amphitheatre, open to all without charge, are splendid marketing devices, making Round Rock residents aware both of their talents and of their intentions to put down roots in that town. Last summer they put on the frantic crowd-pleaser The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) and through most of this month they've been performing this late classic of the Italian commedia dall'arte by Carlo Goldoni. In addition to the Penfold founders the cast of The Servant of Two Masters features lively character actors familiar to Austin audiences from many venues (for example, Robert Deike, Alejandro McDonald-Villarreal, Griçelda Silva, Andréa Smith and the recently arrived Toby Minor).

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Saturday, June 11, 2011

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

Received directly:

Penfold Theatre




presentsRyan Crowder (www.penfoldtheatre.org)

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

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

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

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

Thursday, September 23, 2010

The Tempest, Austin Shakespeare at the Rollins Theatre, Long Center, September 9 - 26


The Tempest, Austin Shakespeare









Prospero's kingdom is an enchanted isle, suggested by the wide circle marked out on the floor of the Rollins Theatre. As did Shakespeare, Ann Ciccolella invites the audience to create that world by participating with their imaginations. The scenery is minimal -- little more than towering dark blue flats at the back of the playing area, an unassuming balcony or elevation at stage right, rear, and a couple of rickety bushes on platforms pushed onstage as needed.


Lindsley Howad, Steve Shearer (image: Kimberley Mead)One needs little more than that, augmented by the rich suggestiveness of Jason Amato's lighting. The dense artificial haze generated as the play begins is superfluous and somewhat distracting.


The waves of the opening tempest are evoked by the stage hands holding long, wide muslim bands across the playing area downstage and deepstage, raising and agitating them so that their billows suggest the increasing fury of the storm. The crew despairs of salvation, the members of the noble retinue returning to Naples from Carthage are aghast. Above them on the island's lookout, gentle Miranda and her father Prospero look on.


The Tempest was probably Shakespeare's last work, and it's easy to interpret it as his farewell to the stage. A studious magician in a magic isle is wrapping up loose ends -- preparing to renounce his magic and to drown his books, righting wrongs done against himself and his daughter, rebuking the guilty and preparing to leave and to reassume his dukedom. Prospero's a man of wisdom, a master of the isle and the spirits upon it, endowed with powers sufficient to command the elements. Many an actor plays him with sweep and rhetoric and high authority, like Charleston Heston doing Moses in the Ten Commandments.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Profile: Austin Shakespeare Prepares The Tempest


Austin Live Theatre ProfileLighting Director Jason Amato and crew in Rollins Theatre





This week Austin Shakespeare opens
The Tempest at the Rollins Theatre, Long Center.


Theatre is a collaborative art, coordinated in the best stagings by a precise schedule, time consuming preparation, and an accelerating rhythm as performance day comes near. The actors will fix our attention but the piece depends also upon decisions and actions of those we never see. For The Tempest the company and artistic director Ann Ciccolella are supported -- some might even say carried -- by the work of the stage manager, the dramaturg, designers, dressers, props handlers and stage hands.


Lindsley Howard as Miranda, Steve Shearer as Prospero

A theatre buff finds it fascinating to watch those contributions coming together in final rehearsals. Last Friday after an escorted trip through the labyrinthine basement of the Long Center, ALT got to sit in the Rollins Theatre for the first melding of those arts. Lighting designer Jason Amato worked his light plot and plan through a full rehearsal.


The cast hardly missed a syllable, even as colors changed, pools of light materialized and then disappeared, and sometimes the action went forward in a penumbra. Shakespeare's intelligence and wit were embodied by the cast, many of them dressed as yet in temporary costume; Prospero's magic isle was defined by a simple wide circle with provisional backdrops. Much of the music was ready, either recorded or played live, but projected video effects for the fairy isle would not be included until the weekend.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Penfold Theatre Profile by Abilene Christian University,

From the website of

Abilene Christian University logo www.acu.edu

Sean Martin ('03), Ryan Crowder ('04), Nathan Jerkins ('05) (acu.edu)



The Penfold Theatre Company | Austin, Texas


ACU alumni trio Nathan Jerkins, Sean Martin and Ryan Crowder have made a big splash in the Austin arts scene this year. As the Penfold Theatre Company, they've sold out shows, piqued the interest of the rapidly growing Austin suburb of Round Rock and swept the Austin Critics Circle Awards. This year they received awards for Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor and their show, Jon and Jen, captured the award for Best Musical.


In every title that we choose, in every choice that we make, we're trying to connect to an audience and not just put on a play. Yes, we have quality standards, but it's about telling stories that inspire and impact people. - Sean Martin


The timing of Penfold Theatre could not have been better. The year before they began this company, an arts council was formed and a professional symphony came to the Round Rock area. So by the time they got there, a foundation for the arts had already been created.

Perfect timing

"It was great because there's already a stream going that way, and we've stepped into that stream," said Sean. "Round Rock is really well positioned, because it's a city in its own right, but it's also at the intersection of several other growing suburbs." The population of Round Rock combined with surrounding suburbs is nearing 400,000 people.

The city council of Round Rock came to see Penfold's second show, The Last Five Years. "Then they called us up, took us to lunch and basically sat us down and said, 'What can we do to make you in our town?' " said Ryan.

Read more at www.acu.edu . . . .

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Three Days of Rain, Penfold Theatre Company at the Hideout Theatre, September 17 - October 3






This play by Penfold Theatre is a gem. Coming after their play The Last Five Years in January of this year, it confirms that the Penfold company has a vision and a talent for choosing and staging pieces that fit it.

Richard Greenberg's Three Days of Rain might just as well have been titled Two Generations or Hopes and Enigmas, because those three days are mentioned only in a scribbled note in a diary. They become emblematic after the death of the man who wrote them, a famous and successful New York architect, when his children realize that those were the same three days of a family catastrophe from which they have never recovered.

Through the grace of theatre we discover this story in displaced time -- somewhat as was the case in The Last Five Years. Here, the voyage is in only two steps. The first act occurs in a disused apartment in 1995. Walker and Nan, a brother and sister in their early 30s, meet there before the reading of their father's will. They encounter their childhood friend Pip, the son of their father's partner. The second act gives us their parents at the same age -- two aspiring male architects Ned and Theo, and Lila, the woman who became the mother of Walker and Nan.

Greenberg's text is rich in image and imagination. He creates a small world of gifted but vulnerable and uncertain characters in both generations. The younger ones are backward looking, seeking explanations; the older generation, in act two, strives with anxiety and apprehension toward the future. Greenberg gives us the elements of a solution, but in such a way as to remind us that there is really no single simple story or solution for the thirty-five years of events separating these scenes. Causes are inchoate; personal history arises amidst unexpected events; we are left to formulate our own explanations and myths.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .