Showing posts with label Patti Neff-Tiven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patti Neff-Tiven. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Grotesque and Arabesque: Poe Retold, Weird City Theatre at the Blue Theatre, October 18 - November 3


Grotesque and Arabesque Poe Retold Weird City Theatre Company Austin TX


AustinLiveTheatre review
by Dr. David Glen Robinson

I keep hearing the BLUE Theatre is closed or closing, but I keep going there to shows, despite the construction and demolition all around it. Now Weird City Theatre has installed in it Grotesque and Arabesque: Poe Retold, a bold collection of five one-acts abstracted from five of Poe’s horror stories. The story treatments were written by Weird City Theatre company members or associates, and they arrive on stage as one-act plays just in time for weird Austin’s favorite holiday.

Full disclosure: Poe is my favorite author, and I admit as much in my Facebook profile. So my expectations were sky-high when I entered the theatre. The adaptations are of well-known horror stories that I have read many times. I knew Weird City Theatre had the guns to deal with their self-appointed tasks; they specialize in plays dealing in pop culture genres, such as goth, vampire and zombie themes. They offered two particularly memorable stage versions of Night of the Living Dead in 2008 and in 2011 and also William Gillette’s Sherlock Holmes in 2009.

Grotesque and Arabesque Poe Retold Weird City Theatre Austin TX
Chris Romani (image: Weird City Theatre)


Carl G. Jung's definition of archetypes assists in enjoying good art. He talked about archetypes as forms, probably arising from the unconscious, that continue through time and offer unbounded opportunity for creative play. Multiple times and diverse cultures rediscover them as their own and play with them in different modes, making them the vehicles for their perpetuation. Edgar Allan Poe clearly and intuitively tapped into archetypes; that’s why he can give us the ever-famous frisson of horror when we read his stories. Does the same hair-raising, shivering, why-did-I-come-here reaction take place when the story medium transmutes to the medium of the stage? That might be the standard of evaluation for Weird City Theatre’s production.

And, oh my! The experiment succeeded, the subject survived—now it lives among us. Thee short pieces ranged from clever to brilliant in their imagining and writing, while the staging and realizations varied a little more widely in their successes. One of the cleverest concepts in the show was a series of vignettes and considerations of the true-life story of the Poe Toaster, the mysterious figure, never identified, who from the 1930s to the late 1990s placed roses and a bottle of cognac at Poe’s grave monument in Baltimore. He or she was said by observers to visit the cemetery every year on Poe’s birthdate in the wee hours and perform small personal rituals and raise a toast in cognac to the gravestone. He or she then departed from the cemetery, leaving behind the cognac and roses. Weird City uses this story as a connecting thread between the pieces, showing us four different treatments of it, with dialogue considerations of the Poe and his Toaster all the while. I especially appreciated the last piece in this miniseries, featuring Kevin Gouldthorpe’s soliloquy on Poe as “beautiful but never pretty” and a man holding up a mirror to us in our most private moments. The stage artists showed profound respect for the literary artist, expressed in the best way they knew how to express it—on stage. At that moment I knew I could trust Weird City with my Poe.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Upcoming: A Teenager's Guide to Love, musical by Weird City Theatre Company at Dougherty Arts Center, May 54 - 21


Received directly:


Teenager's Guide, Weird City Theatre Company,

Weird City Theatre Company

announces the world premiere of

A Teenagers Guide to Love

A 50's Musical Parody

May 5 - 21, 2011 at the Dougherty Arts Center, 1110 Barton Springs Road (click for map)

Performances are Thursday through Saturday nights at 8 p.m.

Thursday Nights are “Pay What You Wish” at the door. For all other performances, tickets are $15.00 for adults and $12.00 for children, seniors and students (with ID), and group rates are available. Advanced tickets can be purchased at our website, www.weirdcitytheatre.com.

Weird City Theatre Company announces the world premiere of A Teenagers Guide to Love, written & directed by WCT Managing Director, Patti Neff-Tiven. A Teenagers Guide is a musical parody of 50's – 60's educational films- How Do You Choose a Date? How Much Affection? Who Wrote the Book of Love?


Sarah Griffin-Covey and Justin Hampton, Weird City Theatre CompanyThese questions and more will be explored in an evening of kitschy, song-filled fun Our trusty narrator John F. Carroll guides us through the romantic pitfalls of our teen couple played by Sarah Griffin-Covey and Justin Hampton. With WCT company members Kevin Gouldthorpe, Jenni Bauer, Bethany Harbaugh & Robert Berry. The band includes Seth Tiven (guitarist- Dumptruck, Promise Breakers), Justin Bankston (bassist- Promise Breakers, The Paper South) and Donnie Poston (drummer- Dumptruck, Dunebuggy)

Weird City Theatre's mission is to encourage the growth of the artist and represent the uniqueness and vitality of Austin through re-envisioned classics and original works. Keeping a child-like sense of play, we focus on the process of the actor and we are playing our part to keep Austin weird!

Weird City Theatre is a sponsored project of the Greater Austin Creative Alliance, a nonprofit performing arts service organization.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Alvida and the Airship Pirates, Weird City Theatre Company

Patti Neff-Tiven as Alvida (www.weirdcitytheatre.com)

I was on the last airship with Alvida out of Weird City on March 12 and as sometimeshappens with scribes errant, I got too busy and distracted to send her, author John Carroll and their band of adventures a proper bread-and-butter note.

Your mother may have admonished you about good manners, as does the mother of my children. It’s never too late, although sometimes it’s too late to do much good. I prefer the warm glow of virtue associated with writing the first review to hit the electronic doorstep, for there’s the cyberghost of a chance that it’ll attract another spectator. Or, to use the Britishism entirely appropriate to this steampunk adventure, it’ll put an additional bum on the seat.

Patti Neff-Tiven and Bridget Farias (image: Weird City Theatre Company)The Weird citizens like to play with their plays. With this script John gave colleague Patti Teff-Niven as the eponymous Alvida a hand into chick adventure with the warm and vivacious Bridget Farias as her best buddy. The Alvida stage at the familiar imagination station of the Dougherty Arts Center featured a fine crew of female troopers on both sides as well as Weird regulars Kevin Gouldthorpe and Robert Berry.

I confess that I don’t know much about steampunk, a curious genre that seems half Victorian and half sci-fi, but I’ve noticed that it’s capturing a lot of imagination these days. Earlier this week, while I was checking background for the steampunk Tempest that Frank Benge is putting together for the Sam Bass Community Theatre in Round Rock, I found that there’s even a steampunk Shakespeare website encouraging submissions of bard-derived steampunk adventures. That invitational tournament is open until the end of May.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com. . . .

Monday, November 1, 2010

Upcoming: Fan-Produced webseries 'Dark Shadows,' beginning in January 2011


Received directly:

Members of Austin's Weird City Theatre Company are producing






a weekly web series tribute to ABC's camp classic daytime serial "Dark Shadows" (1967-1971). Episodes will be available from January, 2011.

SCTC artistic director John Carroll will be appearing as vampire Barnabas Collins (image, above, by Russell Minton). The cast is drawn largely from actors who have appeared in previous WCTC productions in Austin, including Russell Minton, Patti Neff-Tiven, Kevin Gouldthorpe, and John W. Smith.

Full information about their non-commercial fan tribute series is available at their website Dark Shadows: The Web Series. Participants invite financial contributions via the indigogo website.





Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Upcoming: Servant Girl Annihilator, A True Tale, Weird City Theatre Company at Dougherty Arts Center, October 28-26

Received directly:

Servant Girl Annihilator by John Carroll Weird City Theatre CompanyWeird City Theatre Company

Announces the World Premiere of

The Servant Girl Annihilator

The true tale of the Austin Ripper

by John Carroll


October 28—November 6 at the Dougherty Arts Center, 1110 Barton Springs Road, Austin, TX.

Performances Oct. 28 – Oct. 30 are Thursday through Saturday night at 8 PM and 10PM.

Performances Nov. 4 – Nov. 6 are Thursday through Saturday night at 8PM.

Thursday Nights are “Pay What You Wish” at the door. For all other performances, tickets are $15.00 for adults and $12.00 for children, seniors and students (with ID), and group rates are available. Tickets can be purchased at our website, www.weirdcitytheatre.com, or by calling 512.745.2636.


Moon tower Servant Girl Annihilator Weird City Theatre CompanyWeird City Theatre Company opens their 2010-2011 season with a production of true haunted history with THE SERVANT GIRL ANNIHILATOR- the true tale of the Austin Ripper. This twist on a haunted house experience takes the audience on a journey into the lives of the victims of Austin's first serial killer. The ghosts of the past tell their tales to the living, and an eerie chapter of Austin's history comes to life as the audience walks from room to room exploring this decades old mystery. The cast includes WCT Managing Director Patti Neff-Tiven, Company Members Michael and Sarah Covey and LeRoy Beck and Terri Lynne Hudson, both seen last in WCT's Giants in Those Days.

This production is not handicapped accessible.

Weird City Theatre's mission is to encourage the growth of the artist and represent the uniqueness and vitality of Austin through re-envisioned classics and original works. Keeping a child-like sense of play, we focus on the process of the actor and we are playing our part to keep Austin weird!

Weird City Theatre is a sponsored project of the Greater Austin Creative Alliance, a nonprofit performing arts service organization. This projected is funded and supported in part by the City of Austin through the Cultural Arts Division.