Showing posts with label Robert Frazier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Frazier. Show all posts

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Images by Andy Berkovsky for The Imaginary Invalid, July 21 - August 4

Images provided by Andy Berkovsky, Artistic Director of the City Theatre forRichard Craig as Dargan the imaginary invalid (image: City Theatre)

The Imaginary Invalid

by Molière

directed by Karen Sneed

July 21 - August 14

Thursday – Saturday 8:00 p.m. Sunday 5:30 p.m.
Robert Frazier as Polichinelle, Kate Clark as Zerbinetta (image: City Theatre)The City Theatre. 3823 Airport Blvd, behind the Shell station (click for map)
Tickets $15 - $20. Guaranteed Front/2nd Row Reserved $25.
Students $12. Thursday all seats $10. Group discounts are available.
Reservations 512-524-2870 or info@citytheatreaustin.org

Richard Craig as Argan, Suzanne Balling as Toinette (image: City Theatre)Directed by Karen Sneed and featuring Richard Craig,Suzanne Balling, Alexandra Russo, Mick D’Arcy, Laura Cannon, Scot Friedman, Kirk Kelso, Cason Longley, Mario Silva, Kate Clark, Robert Frazier, Brian Brown, Ariel Atlas, Danielle Ruth, Elena Weinberg and Jessica Smith.


Click to view additional images at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . .

Thursday, July 28, 2011

The Imaginary Invalid by Molière, City Theatre, July 21 - August 14




The 85-seat house at the City Theatre was agreeably full on the opening Friday of Karen Sneed's staging of Molière's The Imaginary Invalid. A full house of attentive spectators is always a boost to the cast. Amusement is amplified and reactions build. The natural curiosity of the audience becomes rapport with actors and characters. Comedy, by provoking shared laughter, binds the members of each evening's audience indefinably, in a fashion that differs from night to nigh



That positive crowd effect may have been linked to the fact that 16 actors inhabit this farce, portraying 31 characters. The City Theatre deserves to enjoy a setting similar to that initial "family and friends" effect for the upcoming three weekends of its run.


Richard Craig as Argan Effective stage comedies snare us with quirks and jokes, then elaborate and build the fun with absurdities and unexpected turns of plot. That's Molière's method here. Grumpy, stingy hypochondriac Argan bemoans his miseries and the pile of bills from physicians and pharmacists for hair-raising and trouser-dropping treatments, directed mostly via the opening of his lower colon. (During our years abroad we discovered to our discomfort that contemporary French medicine retains an affection for just that therapeutic channel.)


Argan initially rails out loud to himself and at his irreverent serving girl Toinette. We then see him exercise his arbitrary petty tyrannies over his marriageble daughter Angélique, at the same time that he's a witless dupe of his gold-digging young wife and a procession of quacks. Just about everyone onstage is intriguing against everyone else, and we the audience have the cheerful feelling that we're at least two steps ahead of each of them.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .