Showing posts with label Rommel Sulit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rommel Sulit. Show all posts

Friday, December 13, 2013

The North Plan by Jason Wells, Street Corner Arts at Hyde Park Theatre, December 5 - 21, 2013


Highly recommended
north plan poster opt250GunnGraphicsRommel Sulit, Indigo Rael (poster: streetcornerarts.org)

1  CTXLT review 225




by Michael Meigs
Howls of delight met the finale and curtain call of The North Plan at the Hyde Park Theatre last night, an ovation more ecstatic and spontaneous than any I’ve heard in my six years of theatre going in Central Texas.

Jason Wells’ black comedy about the chaotic breakdown of the United States sometime in the near future is a near perfect dramatic satire set in the jail and sheriff’s office in the mythical backwater town of Lodus, Missouri, deep in the Ozarks.

Street Corner Arts hit the crests two years ago their first time out, with The Men of Tortuga, another work by Wells, a Chicago-based actor awarded the 2010 Osborn award for an emerging playwright by the American Theatre Critics Association.

Rommel Sulit, Gary Peters and Joe Penrod from the Tortuga cast are back again for this production. Both Wells plays set up scenarios of conspiracy and mock them mercilessly: Tortuga depicts an intervention in Caribbean politics by a collection of suits with manicures and shiny shoes, and North Plan shows the downhome effects of a U.S. government breakdown and a fascist putsch attempt.

This wildly funny evening is manna for the crowd of cheerfully skeptical youngish theatre-lovers who constitute the primary audience at the Hyde Park Theatre, the sorts who enjoy over-the-edge programming by HPT’s Ken Webster, Mark Pickell’s Capital T Theatre, and the eponymous A Chick and a Dude Productions of Shanon Weaver and Melissa Livingston-Weaver. Street Corner Arts is right up there with them in Austin savvy and gleeful insouciance.


NPTanya opt

Indigo Rael (photo: Street Corner Arts)

The North Plan opens in the jail behind a sheriff’s office in the remote Ozarks, where Tanya, a bedraggled, loud and angry trailer-trash woman is trying to talk her way out of detention. Her rant directed toward Shona the studious female warden (Kristen Bennett) is lengthy, disconnected and extremely funny. Indigo Rael with her lean, slinky athletic body and controlled fury has played similar characters before, and she burns like an unsecured live wire throughout this show.

A noisy offstage argument erupts behind the audience during Tanya's energetic pleas and imprecations, and then the impertrubable Chief of Police Swenson (Gary Peters) marches in a rumpled mid-level former government official Carlton Berg (Rommel Sulit). Rapid fire dialogue from the urgently pleading Berg, interrupted by Tanya’s acid commentary, reveals that Berg has absconded with the enemies list of the repressive would-be government far away in the black hole of Washington, where the Army and Marine contingents are dug in at opposite ends of Pennsylvania Avenue, getting ready for a clash.


Click to read more at Central Texas Live Theatre. . . .


Thursday, October 10, 2013

THE BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE by William Saroyan at The Museum of Human Achievement, October 18 - 26, 2013


The Beautiful People
The Beautiful People William Saroyan 
by William Saroyan
directed by Steven Wilson
October 18 - 26, 2013

Museum of Human Achievement, via parking lot north of Lyons just west of Springdale Rd. (click for map)

A forgotten classic by American playwright William Saroyan, is living another life in a new Austin production.

A runner-up for the 1941 New York Drama Awards, The Beautiful People centers on Jonah Webster, an eccentric father navigating the difficulties of parenting Owen, his son who writes one-word novels, and Agnes, his daughter who has a personal relationship with the mice that occupy the house. Jonah is trying to pass his optimistic philosophies of life onto his children, even as these philosophies are being tested by the fact that his third and oldest son, Harold, has gone missing.

This brand new revival of The Beautiful People features favorite Austin actors Janelle Buchanan, Rommel Sulit and David Jarrott, in addition to talented performers from the University of Texas Department of Theatre and Dance. The gifted production team of UT students, both graduate and undergraduate, will transform the Museum of Human Achievement into a site-specific performance space. Directed by Steven Wilson, a third year Directing MFA, the company re-imagines William Saroyan's play, and breathes new life into his forgotten work.

Performance dates and times are:

Friday, October 18th at 8pm
Saturday, October 19th at 8pmSunday, October 20th at 2pm
Thursday, October 24th at 8pm
Friday, October 25th at 8pmSaturday, October 26th at 8pm

Performances are FREE to the public, and donations are welcome. To make a reservation or for any other inquiry, please e-mail: thebeautifulpeople2013@gmail.com

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

The Motherfucker with the Hat by Stephen Adly Guirgis, Capital T Theatre, August 8 - 31, 2013 (Review No. 2)


Austin Live Theatre review
The Motherfucker with the Hat Stephen Adly Guirgis Capital T Theatre Austin TX
Indigo Rael (poster: Capital T Theatre)




by Michael Meigs

Let's get right down to that title. The expletive noun is one of the most offensive combinations in the English language, and many of us get a sharp visceral twinge seeing it used in the title of Guirgis's play. The noun and variants of its subsidiary combinant verb are also among the most common oral expressions in the English language, especially in American parlance.

Words are powerful, especially when they evoke taboos. Publications and individuals may try to exorcise personal responsibility for using them -- or even knowing them -- by altering them into recognizable euphemisms. MoFo, used in a recent Tweet by an admired young Austin director, probably percolated up from American ghettos of poverty. Fug was foisted upon Norman Mailer's 1949 The Naked and the Dead by editors at Andre Deutsch's Allen Wingate press. The doughty men and women of the television series Battlestar Galactica were allowed to say frack. One happy chant of a star marching band of a high school in coastal Virginia has long been "We don't drink! Nor smoke! Norfolk! Norfolk!"


Playwright Guirgis, a successful screenwriter, probably intended to provoke with that title, one that still can't be mentioned in broadcasts without a beep or printed in most general-circulation publications without a couple of asterisks applied like pasties on a pole dancer's most prominent delights.

The Motherfucker with the Hat Stephen Adly Guirgis Capital T Theatre Austin TX
Indigo Rael, J. Ben Wolfe (photo: Capital T. Theatre)
But this story takes place entirely within the hard pressed underclass of an outlying borough of New York City. The characters struggle with alcoholism, drugs, crime and one another, and the expletives and taboo speech authenticate the milieu for us. If you're bothered by the title on the poster, give this one a miss, because that's the language used throughout the play by the protagonist and others. Their coarse speech assumes a music and rhythm of its own; one becomes inured to the literal meaning of the obscenities. Guirgis conveys intensely complex meanings and feelings in that impoverished speech.


People talk like that. Not just those in the underclass, of course -- those words are probably applied with a shade more imagination in many a locker room across the country, and I recall the slight uneasiness I experienced when I heard one of my grown children regularly using the "f-word" (yet another euphemism) without a trace of self-consciousness.


Mark Pickell's Capital T company and their sponsor, Ken Webster's Hyde Park Theatre, have a sharply defined taste for the type of theatre commonly termed edgy or dark. For lack of a better classification, many a reviewer would probably say they're dealing in black humor. These are stories with cynical twists, peopled with characters that are sharply drawn and often obsessive. We thank God that we don't have their flaws.


Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . . 

The Motherfucker with the Hat by Stephen Adly Guirgis, Capital T Theatre, August 8 - 31, 2013 (Review No. 1)


Austin Live Theatre review
The Motherfucker with the Hat Stephen Adly Guirgis Capital T Theatre Austin TX



by Dr. David Glen Robinson

Capital T Theatre’s production of The Motherfucker with the Hat (TMFWTH) by Stephen Adly Guirgis fairly screamed “exploitation!” in its promise,-- or rather, warning -- of foul language and nudity. As usual , the reality escaped the hype in unpredictable ways. TMFWTH was a far more serious play than its unfortunate title suggested.

The story of TMFWTH was fairly direct. Jackie (W. Ben Wolfe) comes home to the apartment he shared with his love, Veronica (Indigo Rael), after having found a job, difficult to do as a recent parolee from prison upstate. Before Jackie and Veronica begin their weekend-long celebration, Jackie finds another man’s hat in the apartment, and it hadn't been there that morning when he left. The recriminations are lengthy and end with Jackie leaving.

The Motherfucker with the Hat Stephen Adly Guirgis Capital T Theatre Austin TX
J. Ben Wolfe, Indigo Rael (photo: Capital T Theatre)

The story looked like a tale of revenge at that point, but in fact it changed quickly into a larger tale of the struggle for life in the worst of circumstances , amidst a shifting mosaic of sobriety and addiction. It could have become a sex farce, but the sexual situations were anything but farcical. The other on-stage characters were Ralph (Aaron Alexander), Victoria (Antoinette Robinson) and Cousin Julio (Rommel Sulit).


As is often the case in Austin theatre, the nudity in the show was all male. Bulky, covering underwear on women does not count. But contrary to expectation, the brief showe of bare skin was anything but gratuitous; instead, the revelation (ha!) sharply pivoted the plot.


The foul language in the play merely reflected the street patois of Latino and other ethnic sections of New York City, and playwright Stephen Adly Giurgis revealed a keen ear for spoken language. The script, however, taught no lessons beyond this one. The semantic potential of cursing in literary forms can go much further than this, however. The uses of billingsgate in drama were explored and workshopped in editions of Breaking String Theatre's New Russian Drama Festival last year and earlier this year. There, it was made clear that cursing can open deeper levels in the minds and personalities of characters. Not so here.

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

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Photoshoot: The Motherfucker with the Hat by Stephen Adly Guirgis, Capital T Theatre, August 8 - 31, 2013




Photo shoot for posters for the
Capital T Theatre Austin TX






presentation of
The Motherfucker with the Hat Stephen Adly Guirgis, Capital T Theatre, Austin TX
Indigo Rael, J. Ben Wolfe (photo: Capital T)

The Motherfucker with the Hat

by Stephen Adly Guirgis
Directed by Carrie Klypchak
August 8 – 31, 2013
Thursday-Saturday at 8pm
Hyde Park Theatre 511 W 43rd St at Guadalupe - click for map


Things are looking up for recovering alcoholic Jackie and his girlfriend Veronica—until Jackie spots another man’s hat in their apartment and embarks on a sublimely incompetent quest for vengeance. Fast-paced and uproarious, Motherfucker is a gleefully foul-mouthed look at modern love and other addictions.
Capital T Theatre is proud to present the regional premiere of Stephen Adly Guirgis’ outrageously funny and touching comedy directed by Cap T company member Carrie Klypchak starring Austin favorites Ben Wolfe (The Pain and the Itch), Indigo Rael (Exit, Pursued by a Bear), Antoinette Robinson (Mr. Marmalade), Rommel Sulit (Men of Tortuga) and Aaron Alexander (Behanding in Spokane).
The Motherfucker with the Hat Stephen Adly Guirgis, Capital T Theatre, Austin TX
Antoinette Robinson (photo: Capital T)
The Motherfucker with the Hat Stephen Adly Guirgis, Capital T Theatre, Austin TX
Aaron Alexander (photo: Capital T)
Click to view additional photos at AustinLiveTheatre.com

Friday, June 28, 2013

THE MOTHERFUCKER WITH THE HAT by Steven Adly Guirgis, Capital T Theatre at Hyde Park Theatre, August 8 - 31, 2013




Capital T Theatre Austin TX







[performing at the Hyde Park Theatre, 511 W. 43rd St. at Guadalupe -- click for map ]

presentsMotherfucker with the Hat Steven Adly Guirgis Capital T Theatre Austin TX

The Motherfucker with the Hat

by Stephen Adly Guirgis
Directed by Carrie Klypchak
August 8th – 31st
Thursday-Saturday at 8pm
Hyde Park Theatre 511 W 43rd St at Guadalupe - click for map




Things are looking up for recovering alcoholic Jackie and his girlfriend Veronica—until Jackie spots another man’s hat in their apartment and embarks on a sublimely incompetent quest for vengeance. Fast-paced and uproarious, Motherfucker is a gleefully foul-mouthed look at modern love and other addictions.

Capital T Theatre is proud to present the regional premiere of Stephen Adly Guirgis’ outrageously funny and touching comedy directed by Cap T company member Carrie Klypchak starring Austin favorites Ben Wolfe (The Pain and the Itch), Indigo Rael (Exit, Pursued by a Bear), Antoinette Robinson (Mr. Marmalade), Rommel Sulit (Men of Tortuga) and Aaron Alexander (Behanding in Spokane).

Cast

Jackie - Ben Wolfe
Ralph D - Aaron Alexander
Veronica- Indigo Rael
Cousin Julio - Rommel Sulit
Victoria - Antoinette Robinson
Lighting Design by Patrick Anthony
Costume Design by Cheryl Painter

About the Playwright


Stephen Adly Guirgis- Playwright
Co-artistic director and proud member of LAByrinth Theater Company. His plays have been performed on five continents and throughout the United States. Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train, Our Lady of 121st Street, In Arabia We’d All Be Kings, The Last Days of Judas Iscariot and The Little Flower of East Orange were all produced by LAByrinth and directed by Philip Seymour Hoffman. Judas and Little Flower were co-productions with the Public Theater. Other plays include Den of Thieves, Race Religion Politics, Dominica: The Fat Ugly Ho and the upcoming Untitled/St. Paul play. UK and regional premieres at the Donmar Warehouse (Olivier nom.), the Almeida (dir. Rupert Goold), the Arts, the Hampstead, Edinburgh (Fringe First Award) and two Midwest premieres at Steppenwolf. New Dramatists alumnus, MCC Playwrights and Ojai Playwrights member. TV writing credits include NBC’s “UC: Undercover,” David Milch’s CBS drama “Big Apple,” “NYPD Blue” and “The Sopranos.”
(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Video by Dannie Snyder: Rehearsing Once There Were Six Seasons, Glass Half Full Theatre workshop running February 21 - March 3, 2013

A video by Dannie Snyder and LIV Creations for
Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX





and its upcoming workshop production of environmental puppetry


Once There Were Six Seasons Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX

 

 

Once There Were Six Seasons 

Feb. 21st – March 3rd. Thursdays-Saturdays @ 8 PM, Sundays @ 6 PM.

 

Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 E. Manor Road, Austin, TX, 78722 - click for map  

Tickets: Sliding scale $12-$20. 
Pay-what-you-can: Sunday February 24th
Some ASL interpreted performances (see ticketing site for details). 
The two-weekend workshop performance will include opportunities for audience feedback and interaction, including talkbacks hosted by Rudy Ramirez and In.gredients.



Once There Were Six Seasons from LIV creations on Vimeo.



brown paper tickets








Glass Half Full Theatre presents a workshop production of Once There Were Six Seasons, an original work of environmental puppetry. Puppeteers manipulate vast miniature landscapes to address the impact of climate change on subsistence societies around the world. From the Arctic to the Philippines to the high plains of Texas, this work highlights how the accelerating pace of human-caused climate change has outstripped the ability of traditional cultures to adapt their lifestyles. From B. Iden Payne award-winning director and writer Caroline Reck, with an award winning cast of puppeteer/performers: Connor Hopkins, Rommel Sulit, Noel Gaulin, Gricelda Silva, and Parker Dority, and award-wining designers Eliot Haynes and Stephen Pruitt.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

ONCE THERE WERE SIX SEASONS, environmental puppetry by Glass Half Full Theatre, February 21 - March, 2013

Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX





(performing at the Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd. - click for map)

presents

Once There Were Six Seasons

opening February 21, 2013

We’ve leaped into full pre-production mode for Once There Were Six Seasons, a new work focusing on the effects of climate change on traditional societies which will open on February 21st, 2013. The title comes from a true story Caroline heard in Orissa, India, from a story passed down to a man from his grandmother:
In earlier times, in this grandmother’s lifetime, there used to be six seasons in that part of the world. The farmers still used an ancient method of observing animal behavior to determine when and what to plant. Now, that region only has two seasons (Summer, and Rains), and the animal behaviors that farmers counted on to grow their crops have been distorted by the rapidly changing planet. Farmers can no longer rely on their traditional methods, and communities are slowly collapsing as people move on to settle in the city slums.
Stories like this are happening all over the world, and we’d like to invite you to learn more of them with us in February.

The performance will make use of very small puppets existing in vast landscapes on the SVT Mainstage, with visible puppeteers affecting changes in the landscapes and on the puppets themselves. This is a genre of puppetry we have been gradually crafting, which we are calling “Environmental Puppetry.” In this style, the focus is on the changing landscapes rather than the articulations of the puppet’s body. If you are familiar with our piece, “Bob's Hardware” performed in the 2010 Winter Austin Puppet Incident, it’s in that genre.


Donate


Glass Half Full has received a very small amount of City of Austin funding for this project, which will have a workshop performance for two weeks only in February 2013. If you are interested in donating to this project, or learning more about our process of creation, please get in touch at info@glasshalffulltheatre.com or click on our donate button below:



Otherwise, we hope to see you when we present Part One in February.

Thank you from myself and on the behalf of the collaborating team on this show:
Parker Dority, Gricelda Silva, Noel Gaulin, Rommel Sulit, Connor Hopkins,
Kyle Zamcheck, Ia Ensterä, Stephen Pruitt, Zac Crofford,
and Eliot Haynes.



Caroline Reck
Producing Artistic Director
Glass Half Full Theatre
caroline@glasshalffulltheatre.com
 
(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

The Man Who Planted Trees, adapted by Katherine Craft from a story by Jean Giono, The Exchange Artists at Sparky Pocket Park, October 4 - 20

AustinLiveTheatre reviewThe Man Who Planted Trees Jean Giono Exchange Artists Austin TX



by Dr. David Glen Robinson


The story of how Sparky Pocket Park on Grooms St. in central Austin came to exist is a drama all by itself, involving City departments and neighborhood voters. But that story is for another time; I went there on this chilly October evening to see the site-specific work by the Exchange Artists, The Man Who Planted Trees, based on a story by the French writer Jean Giono. I certainly was not disappointed in my expectations.

The performers seemed to use every square inch of the park as well as the inside of the maintenance building in the park’s center. Riding on the impressive talents and skill of actor Rommel Sulit, the production turned the tiny half-block pocket park into an Alpine département of France, complete with forests, rocks, waters and wastelands.

Man Who Planted Trees Exchange Artists Austin
Gene Menger (photo: Erica Nix)

The play is plain and simple. A traveler in the Alps encounters an old peasant who does nothing in life but plant trees, oaks specifically. Working through the setbacks and limitations of two world wars, the planter at the end of his life leaves a forest legacy comparable perhaps to the creative accomplishments of God, but far surpassing the achievement of almost every other human being.

The work is current in its theme and emblematic of the 21st century’s Green movement, and it gains greater currency by depicting the threats and effects of war. In so doing, the play points to our time’s continual teetering on the brink of total war. We seem incapable of learning what last century’s peasants, innocent of education, knew instinctively.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

2012-2013 Season of Puppetry and Performance, Glass Half Full Theatre

Glass Half Full Theatre Austin TX









celebrates its 13 B. Iden Payne Award nominations this year, with double nods in Comedy and Drama to both FupDuck and The Orchid Flotilla for Production, Acting, Script, Score, and Puppetry, as well as Direction for FupDuck and Sound & Scenic Design for Orchid

and announces its 2013 season:


Once There Were Six Seasons

February 2013 @ Salvage Vanguard

This new work uses puppetry and physical theatre to addresses the impact of climate change on traditional farming societies around the world. This project will show, through puppetry, narrative and imagery, how farming systems used for hundreds of years across the globe have been drastically affected by the rapidly changing global climate, and how communities and families are undone when their cultures are irrevocably altered by these external environmental changes. Tiny puppet figures exist in vast spaces onstage, and visible puppeteers move the figures through a changing environmental landscape. Emphasis is placed on the shifting landscapes around the puppets, and on the puppeteers’ role as the “cause” of those changes. There will be lots of sand and water. Featuring the performance and design work of Ia Instera, Eliot Haynes, Connor Hopkins, Rommel Sulit, Gricelda Silva, Parker Dority, Noel Gaulin and Caroline Reck.



The fourth Austin Puppet Incident

an evening of short works of puppetry from a variety of local and visiting artists
June 2013 @ Salvage Vanguard 

The Austin Puppet Incident is a joint creation of Glass Half Full Theatre and Trouble Puppet Theater Company, with the goal of highlighting short works of puppetry for adults, we encourage artists to participate in our reciprocal model, in which artists work with and for each other in a variety of pieces. 



The Boston/Austin Project

December 2013 at the Salvage Vanguard (Austin) and at the Charlestown Working Theater (Boston) 
 
A physical theatre performance crafted and devised by Caroline Reck and guest artist Bonnie Duncan, whose Poste Restante won the Austin Critics' Table award for Outstanding Touring Show. Bonnie and Caroline met in 2008 at the National Puppetry Conference, and are crafting their performance via Pintrest*, phone calls, and residencies. They got tired of their cohorts saying, "You two have a similar vision. You should work together." So now they are. Find it on Pintrest as "The Show We Will one Day Make Together."

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Upcoming: The Man Who Planted Trees by Jean Giono, Exchange Artists at Sparky Pocket Park, October 4 - 20







Exchange Artists Austin TX






present

THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES
based on the story by Jean Giono
The Man Who Planted Trees Exchange Artists AUstin TX


October 4 – 20, 2012
Thursdays through Sundays, evenings at 7 p.m. at Sparky Pocket Park, 3701 Grooms Street, Austin, TX, 78705 (click for map)
Tickets are a suggested $15 - $25 donation. Reservations can be made by emailing exchangeartists@gmail.com, over the phone at (979) 255-8292, or will be available online at www.brownpapertickets.com.

The Exchange Artists are pleased to present THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES, a site-specific theatrical adaptation of Jean Giono’s allegorical tale, running October 4 – 20, Thursday through Sunday evenings at 7 p.m. The performance will take place both indoors and outdoors at Sparky Pocket Park with actors guiding the traveling audience throughout the space to witness the story unfold. Sparky Park is located at 3701 Grooms Street, Austin, TX 78705 just south of 38 ½ Street, two blocks west of Duval Street in the North University Neighborhood. Tickets are a suggested $15-$25 donation and can be reserved by emailing exchangeartists@gmail.com, calling (979) 255-8292, or online at brownpapertickets.com.

THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES, an internationally beloved short story by French author Jean Giono, is a beautiful reminder of each individual’s responsibility and opportunity to be a steward of our natural resources. Set in Provence between 1913 and 1947, the story follows Elzeard Bouffier, a man who singlehandedly plants one hundred acorns every day for over thirty years. His perseverance and constancy in creation offer a meaningful contrast to the immense destruction that Jean, a young traveler to Provence, experiences during two world wars. Elzeard’s work is not only successful in restoring a desolate landscape through his labor, but in restoring hope to a people. The tale is a gentle reminder that our lives and our livelihoods are in direct connection with the earth.

This adaptation by The Exchange Artists brings Giono’s simple tale to life with an immersive play that utilizes both French and English languages, dance, an original score by Rohan Joseph, projected media by Katie Rose Pipkin, and the natural beauty of Sparky Park.

THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES features Hildreth England, Alexander Hilary, Gene Menger, Vanessa Marie O’Brien, and Rommel Sulit. The story is adapted by Katherine Craft and directed by Rachel Wiese. Technical coordination is by Zac Crofford; costumes and production oversight are by Jamie Urban.

About The Exchange Artists: As Exchange Artists we create theatre inspired by cultural exchange at home in Austin, TX and abroad. Through international collaboration and community engagement we empower our artists and audiences with fresh perspectives, new experiences and a strengthened sense of connection.

THE MAN WHO PLANTED TREES will run Thursday through Sunday evenings at 7 pm at Sparky Pocket Park, 3701 Grooms Street, Austin, TX, 78705. Tickets are a suggested $15 - $25 donation. Reservations can be made by emailing exchangeartists@gmail.com, over the phone at (979) 255-8292, or online at brownpapertickets.org.

For more information, visit www.exchangeartists.org.

(Click to return to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

The Dragon Play by Jenny Connell, Shrewd Productions at the Blue Theatre, March 22 - April 14


by Michael Meigs

The Dragon Play, Jenny Connell, Shrewd Productions Austin TX


The Dragon Play confused me as I sat in the front row of the sparsely populated Blue Theatre on opening weekend. That was deliberate on the part of playwright Jenny Connell, abetted by Shrewds director Shannon Grounds.


The Dragon Play Jenny Conell Shrewd Productions Austin TXThe director has given away enough of the story in a second video interview just released by the company, so I'm releasing no 'spoiler' by telling you the company is presenting two dragon plays, starkly different in style, alternating scenes with one another.

One is a whimsical creature story of a boy who discovers a magic dragon in the attic and adopts it. The two live in their own little magic world sheltered from the outside and from any intrusion by adults.

The other play is a grim tale of a deeply dysfunctional marriage visited by a stiff-faced former suitor who appears to have every intention of carrying away the wife.

I found it remarkably uncomfortable to be obliged to shift the gears in my suspension of disbelief. That uneasiness pushed me to an annoyed sensitivity. Childhood's droll whimsey failed to please because it was overridden by the dark drama and sharp edges of the other story. Dialogue that I'd normally have happily swallowed sounded false because of the contrast of styles -- particularly the leaden nothings assigned much of the time to Rommel Sulit as he portrayed the working class husband aware that something was going wrong.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Second Video: Director and Crew Discuss The Dragon Play by Jenny Connell


Another video from Lydia Nelson featuring director Shannon Grounds and the cast discussing the

Shrewd Productions Austin TX


presentation of

The Dragon Play

by Jenny Connell, directed by Shannon Grounds
March 22 through April 14, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 pm
at The Blue Theatre, 916 Springdale (click for map)
Tickets $16.52 including service fee via

Brown Paper Tickets



(Click to go to previous video about The Dragon Play)

Monday, March 19, 2012

Video: Director and Cast Discuss The Dragon Play by Jenny Conell, Shrewd Productions, March 22 - April 14


Shrewd Productions Austin TX



presents

The Dragon Play

by Jenny Connell
directed by Shannon Grounds
March 22 through April 14
Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 pm
at The Blue Theatre, 916 Springdale (click for map)
Tickets $16.52 including service fee via

Brown Paper Tickets



Shrewd Productions is proud to present the first-ever production of Jenny Connell‘s The Dragon Play. On a lonely farm in northern Minnesota, a husband and wife's peaceful existence is shattered by the appearance of an unexpected visitor. On a hot stretch of highway in central Texas, a boy befriends a wounded dragon. Spanning two moments in time and space and blurring the lines between each, The Dragon Play explores what happens when reality and fantasy converge, when desire and duty conflict, and when our deepest secrets show up breathing fire.

About the Playwright Jenny Connell is a Brooklyn-based playwright and teacher, a member of Austin Script Works, Ars Nova's Play Group, The Dramatists Guild, The Playwrights Center of Minneapolis, and a graduate of UT's MFA Theater program. Her plays have been produced in New York, Chicago, and Austin, and have been finalists for BAPF, the Heideman, Seven Devils, and the O'Neill conference.

About the Cast & Crew Directed by Shrewd Artistic Director, Shannon Grounds, The Dragon Play stars Liz Fisher (Uncle Vanya), Rommel Sulit (Big Love), Joseph Garlock (Servant of Two Masters), Amelia Turner (LEAR) and Xander Slay-Tamkin (The Physicists), with set design by Shrewd company member and Trouble Puppet Artistic Director, Connor Hopkins (Civilization), lights by Patrick Anthony (Big Love) and original compositions by founding Shrewd T. Lynn Mikeska (The Long Now).


The Dragon Play is presented with the assistance of Script Works through their Finer Point Fund for New Play Production. Shrewd Productions is a sponsored project of VORTEX repertory and a member of the Austin Creative Alliance and the Austin New Works community. This project funded and supported in part by the City of Austin through the Cultural Arts Division.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Upcoming: The Dragon Play by Jenny Connell, Shrewd Productions at the Blue Theatre, March 22 - April 14


Shrewd Productions Austin TX




presentsThe Dragon Play Jenny Connell Shrewd Productions Austin TX

The Dragon Play

by Jenny Connell

directed by Shannon Grounds

March 22 through April 14
Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 pm

at The Blue Theatre, 916 Springdale (click for map)

Tickets $16.52 including service fee via

Brown Paper Tickets


On a lonely farm in northern Minnesota, a husband and wife's peaceful existence is shattered by the appearance of an unexpected visitor. On a hot stretch of highway in central Texas, a boy befriends a wounded dragon. Spanning two moments in time and space and blurring the lines between each, The Dragon Play explores what happens when reality and fantasy converge, when desire and duty conflict, and when our deepest secrets show up breathing fire.

Shrewd Productions is proud to present the first-ever production of Jenny Connell‘s The Dragon Play.

About the Playwright Jenny Connell is a Brooklyn-based playwright and teacher, a member of Austin Script Works, Ars Nova's Play Group, The Dramatists Guild, The Playwrights Center of Minneapolis, and a graduate of UT's MFA Theater program. Her plays have been produced in New York, Chicago, and Austin, and have been finalists for BAPF, the Heideman, Seven Devils, and the O'Neill conference.

About the Cast & Crew Directed by Shrewd Artistic Director, Shannon Grounds, The Dragon Play stars Liz Fisher (Uncle Vanya), Rommel Sulit (Big Love), Joseph Garlock (Servant of Two Masters), Amelia Turner (LEAR) and Xander Slay-Tamkin (The Physicists), with set design by Shrewd company member and Trouble Puppet Artistic Director, Connor Hopkins (Civilization), lights by Patrick Anthony (Big Love) and original compositions by founding Shrewd T. Lynn Mikeska (The Long Now).

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Opinion: Robert Faires and Austin Chronicle Colleagues on the Craft of Reviewing


A reflection and colloquium of practitioners on what constitutes a theatre review:

Austin Chronicle logo


Austin Chronicle Arts Section


All Over Creation: Re: Views

What makes a review a review?

by Robert Faires

Critic illustration from Austin Chronicle



What's in a name? That which we call "review" by any other name would smell as ....




Well, let's not go there.


But let's do circle around the question of what makes a review a review, because it's been on my mind ever since the Chronicle ran a review for the play Men of Tortuga back in December. In it, writer Adam Roberts heaped accolades on Street Corner Arts, which staged the show, for the polished quality of what was its first production. Playwright, director, and actors were all name-checked and their respective skills praised – the program got a shout-out even – but no characters were mentioned, no plot was detailed, and no onstage action described.



Which prompted this remark in our online comments section: "And the play? These 494 words tell us almost nothing about Men of Tortuga other than the fact that Adam Roberts liked it." For commenter Michael Meigs, who runs the invaluable Austin Live Theatre website, the absence of any commentary on the production itself – the narrative, the characters, their portrayal by the actors, the flow of the action, or the drama, which is, after all, what people came to the theatre to see – made it less than satisfying as a review and perhaps less than useful, too. It clearly wasn't the review that Meigs wanted, but does that mean that it wasn't a review?


I'd argue that it was in that the writer offered a personal response to the show he'd seen. Re-viewing his experience (how easy it is to let slip that the act of looking back is the core of this process), what made the biggest impression on Adam was not really the story or how it was told but the way all the diverse elements of the show came together so beautifully for a first-time production. Given the number of new theatre companies that crop up locally every year (usually a dozen), most of them somewhat rough around the edges, a deft debut is newsworthy. So he wrote about that.



That sort of focus on the architecture of the production isn't what most of us are accustomed in a review. We've been weaned on consumer directives – Go!/Don't go! – and shorthand evaluations – thumbs up or down, letter grades, stars (I'm lookin' at you, Chronicle film reviews!) – with judgments rendered on a standard series of production components (script, direction, performances, design, et al.), so that's largely what we've come to expect from reviews. But such re-views provide only a limited view of the artwork that was seen. With, say, a play, they ignore the inspiration for the script, its intent, the reason it was chosen for production, the histories of the producing company and the artists involved, what they're trying to say with the play, and what meaning it may have for our community at this moment in time. All those aspects contribute to why a show is what it is and are worth talking about. Bringing any of them into a discussion of a production in a review expands the reader's sense of that artistic endeavor.


As Elizabeth Cobbe wrote when I invited Chronicle Arts writers to weigh in on the topic: "Certainly there is a consumer-reporting aspect to what we do, but at their best, reviews should themselves be enjoyable to read and worthwhile contributions to a publication. One could write a book report or assign a letter grade, but is that really participating in the larger conversation about arts in the community? What does it take to get a review to that level?"

Jonelle Seitz believes that it takes a lot of work: "A critic has to constantly make decisions about which of his or her experiences might have value to the reader – for example, by providing a context – that warrants taking space away from describing the work itself."

But describing the work isn't necessarily the most important function of the review, Arts Listings Editor Wayne Alan Brenner argues, because it isn't always what the reader wants: "Sometimes, y'know ... a reader – myself, frequently – prefers a general impression. Because he or she doesn't want to be told what the play is about, specifically, or what goes on in it, specifically; because spoilers aren't just spoilers of Weird Plot Twists like in Sixth Sense or The Crying Game; because spoilers are sometimes just having Too Much Goddamned Basic Information That One Would Rather Have Experienced Afresh For Oneself. Of course, if a reviewer is to avoid such a sort of spoiler, if a reviewer is going to give a worthwhile impression, that reviewer had better well do a decent and somehow informative job of it."

The thing is, there are probably as many different ideas of what readers want from reviews as there are readers. So why not make room for them all? The book report and the superlative-laden rave, the subtextual analysis and the historical/political perspective, and the review about the background of the production company. Let's have them all (well, except for the ones with spoilers) in order to place works of art in the largest context possible. That's when our re-views give us full views.

[ALT note: Comments that provided the quotes above appear on-line below Roberts' review as does a response from cast member Rommel Sulit:

I would just like to say, as a member of the cast and production team, that I speak for all of us in saying thank you to both Adam and Michael for taking time to come see the show (and you too, Robert), writing your respective reviews and supporting us. We all long for that moment when a jewel of a production comes one's way and all involved see its potential to be a great experience for everyone, on both sides of the stage. MoT has been such a show, and regardless of manner and form, the responses we've gotten from critics and audience-at-large have left us ecstatic, pushing us to raise the bar with each performance. Two more shows left at this writing, and we're grateful that the house continues to rock, in no small part to the kind words you've all bestowed on us. Such a joy when theatre happens this way, eh? ]


Click to view Robert Faires' article at www.austinchronicle.com . . . .


Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Images for Upcoming: Men of Tortuga, Street Corner Arts at Hyde Park Theatre, December 1 - 18


Images and information found on-line:

Street Corner Arts presentsMen of Tortuga Street Corner Arts Austin TX

Men of Tortuga

by Jason Wells

December 1 - 17, Thursdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m.

Hyde Park Theatre, 511 W. 43rd Street at Guadalupe (click for map)

Tickets are $15; Thursdays are 'pay what you can' nights. For reservations please contact Hyde Park Theatre at 479-PLAY.

A group of powerful men formulate plans to assassinate a member of the opposition (cannonballs or missiles?). They could be corporate titans, intelligence agents or perhaps even politicians. As the scheme spins wildly into complication, the plotters descend into suspicion, bloodlust and raucous infighting. This pitch dark & provocative, gut-check comedy by Jason Wells demands: Do the ends justify the means?

The Men of Tortuga cast includes Kenneth Wayne Bradley, Garry Peters, Joe Penrod, Rommel Sulit and Benjamin Summers.


Men of Tortuga Street Corner Arts Austin TX

Word on the street:


"If ever a play demonstrated that most men conduct business the way they once plotted schoolyard warfare, it’s Men of Tortuga...once the laughter has died away one recognizes with chilling clarity how close our culture has really come to such madness."
– Leigh Kennicott, StageHappenings.com



Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Video: Cast and Director Discuss Big Love by Charles Mee, Shrewd Productions, November 10 - 27


Video by Lydia Nelson via link provided by Shrewd Productions:


Shrewd Productions

presents

Big Love Charles Mee Shrewd Productions Austin Texas


Big Love

a comedy by Charles Mee

directed by Robert Faires

November 10 - 27, Thursdays - Sundays at 8 p.m.
Rollins Studio Theatre at the Long Center for the Performing Arts, Riverside at S. First (click for map)

Buy Tickets through The Long Center -- Thursdays & Sundays: $20; Fridays & Saturdays: $25
Students: $15; Special industry night peformance: Wednesday, November 16 - $17

50 runaway brides seek refuge in a villa on the Italian coast in this hilarious and heartbreaking comedy by Charles Mee. When 50 determined grooms drop out of the sky, the villa erupts in a clash of wills, song and dance, romantic reverie, violent fits, satin ribbon, and one final, unforgettable showdown.

[Apple users: can't see the video? Click to go to YouTube]


Robert Faires directs this tulle covered, rice throwing, dangerous confection of a play. Big Love features some of Austin's finest theatrical talent, including Aaron Alexander, Lana Dieterich, Shannon Grounds, Anne Hulsman, Rob Matney, Nathan Osburn, Michael Slefinger, Andrea Smith, Rommel Sulit and Julianna Elizabeth Wright with lighting design by Patrick Anthony, set by Ia Enstara, costumes by Pam Friday, choreography by Toby Minor and sound by Buzz Moran.

Sharing the Love...
Shrewd Productions has set aside a small number of discounted tickets offered via Austix.


[11 left as of 2:45 p.m., Wednesday, November 9]

Click the heart below to purchase from Austix

hearts

Buy Tickets through Austix