Showing posts with label Ryan Hamilton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ryan Hamilton. Show all posts

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Fat Pig by Neil LaBute, Theatre en Bloc at the Off Center, October 3 - 20, 2013


ALT reviewFat Pig Neil LaBute Theatre en Bloc Austin TX



by Dr. David Glen Robinson
and Michael Meigs

Theatre en Bloc produced this Neil Labute play, directed by Derek Kolluri, at the Off Center in east Austin. The two-word title, Fat Pig, is one of the most succinct and apt descriptions of the premise and theme of a play ever.

The play is about bodies and human beings’ reactions to difference. In exposition, Charles P. Stites in the secondary role of Carter spoke the insightful passages, about how we don’t trust differences of any kind, including especially those of overweight. He offered this to enlighen and comfort the profound discomfort of his friend Tom (Ryan Hamilton) at being in love with an overweight woman (Helen, played by Zena Marie Vaughn).

When one exposes a shred of difference, one stands out from the herd, and the herd turns on one with a vengeance. This play could serve as an archival index of advanced derogatory terms for overweight people, starting with “whale” and “tank” and growing worse from there. Mild terms like “fat” and “plump” were not included. Helen, as one so exposed, sought protective coloration in her job as a librarian, or “printed word technician.”

Playwright Labute, having explored this premise colorfully, seemingly wrote himself into a corner when it came to resolving some of its issues and ending the play. Carter’s recommendation to the discomfited Tom was this: you’re only young once, go out and live like it. Like what? Carter’s point seems to be don’t waste your youth dating fat girls.

Those who know and appreciate Stites particularly enjoyed the irony of his characteristically assertive performance. In real life -- or at least in the Facebook semblance of it -- he's a great admirer of Rubens beauties, euphemistically referred to as 'plus sizes.'

Labute doesn’t elaborate much on life goals. Carter drinks in bars and seeks one-nighters with more appropriately shaped women, a behavior pattern that's hardly a road map for people trying to navigate their youth. His self-satisfied arrogance is contradicted forcefully in the play by Jeannie (Jenny Lavery). Jeannie, at the age of 28, laments the youth lout pattern and wonders angrily if all men are like that --by which she means lying, drinking, triflers. Jeannie’s sad, frustrating experiences with men are a source of anger for her, and that rage erupts into the one scene of stage violence in the play, well executed, on which everything pivots. We take Jeannie’s point clearly. But with that Labute is finished offering us kernels of insight.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

FAT PIG by Neil LaBute, Theatre en Bloc, October 3 - 20, 2013





Theatre en Bloc, Austin TX



is proud to present


Fat Pig Neil LaBute Theatre en Bloc AUstin TX

A Really Heavy Comedy
by Neil LaBute

directed by Derek Kolluri
October 3-20, 2013
Thursdays - Sundays @ 8 PM
at The Off-Center, 2211-A Hidalgo Street, near E. 7th Street and Robert Martinez (behind Joe's Bakery) - click for map

Neil LaBute's razor-sharp and poignant comedy FAT PIG takes a comical and politically incorrect look at our obsession with appearance. When Tom falls in love with plus-sized Helen he is ecstatic, yet there's no way he can tell his fat-phobic colleagues about their romance.
“Emotionally engaging and unsettling” -New York Times
Winner of the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Off-Broadway Play

CAST: Zena Marie Vaughn, Ryan Hamilton, Charles P. Stites. Jenny Lavery

DESIGN TEAM: Blake Addyson, Jenny Hanna-Chambers, Patrick & Holly Crowley

“LaBute balances black humor and social commentary in a beautifully written, hilarious dissection of how societal pressures affect relationships.” -Wall Street Journal

This project is supported and funded in part by the City of Austin through the Economic Growth and Redevelopment Services Office/Cultural Arts Division, believing an investment in the Arts is an investment in Austin’s future.

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)


Tuesday, March 19, 2013

THE CANTERVILLE GHOST, musical by Joshua Williams and Ryan Hamilton, Wimberley Players, April 12 - May 5, 2013





The Wimberley Players present


ghost graphic
APRIL 12 - MAY 5
A dramatic musical comedy
Music & Libretto by JOSHUA WILLIAMS
Book by JOSHUA WILLIAMS &RYAN HAMILTON
Directed by Laura T. Garza

Wimberley Players,450 Old Kyle Road,Wimberley, Texas 78676 -- click for map
Fridays/Saturdays 7:30 pm
Sunday Matinees 2:30 pm

Reserved seats $18. Opening night, with sweets at intermission, $20.
Students $9 with ID, except opening night. Groups of 8 or more, $16 each. 



Fun for the Whole Family!


Set in the 1920s, this charming comedy follows a young American family who move into a medieval English manor haunted by a fine and respectable ghost. Since Americans are mostly skeptical of ghosts, the plot is a witty send up of all the stereotypes associated with tradition on both sides of the pond. Funny! With lots of singing and dancing.

Friday, February 15, 2013

THE GIRL WITH TIME IN HER EYES, Hidden Room Theatre at SXSW, March 10, 2013



The Hidden Room Theatre is proud to present
Robin Jones’ and Beth Burns' mind-bending interactive time-travel pulp play
Girl with Time in her Eyes Hidden Room Theatre Austin TX
THE GIRL WITH TIME IN HER EYES

March 10 at SXSW

Become a volunteer test subject for an emerging technology that allows you to witness and document a mystery that happened sixty years ago. Change the fabric of history as you untangle clues and avoid deceptions. Running time 40 minutes, Next Stage Austin Convention Center, SXSW Interactive. Come back with us as we travel through crime!


Starring Judd Farris, Julia Lorenz-Olson, Toby Minor, Ryan Hamilton, and Robert Matney. Directed by Beth Burns. Story by Robin Jones and Beth Burns.

(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Upcoming: You Wouldn't Know Him/Her, He/She Lives in Austin/Edinburgh, Hidden Room Theatre & others, August 6 - 28

received directly:

Hidden Room et al







present

You Wouldn't Know Him/Her  Hidden Room Theatre

BY BETH BURNS

STARRING UK IMPROVISATIONAL ACTORS Rachel Watkinson, Sally Hodgkiss in Edinburgh

& US IMPROVISATIONAL ACTORS Judd Farris, Ryan Hamilton in Austin

Fringe First winners Look Left Look Right connect live across an ocean from the Edinburgh Fringe Festival to make live long distance theatre love to US partners, the award-winning Hidden Room Theatre in Austin, Texas for the world premiere of You Wouldn’t Know Her, She Lives in Edinburgh.

This fully immersive, interactive Skype theatre experience casts audience (both online and in person) as the friends and family of the play’s long-distance lovers Ryan and Elizabeth. Audiences are then invited to meet and play together live from the UK and the US in this delightful romantic comedy that tests the common definition of what makes a relationship “real.”

Saturdays and Sundays in August

August 6 - 28
Two Shows a Day
12 noon and 2 p.m. Texas time

in a hidden room somewhere within
the East Village Apartments, 1211 E. 7th Street,
Austin, Texas

or streaming at

www.youwouldntknow.com
please contact the Matriarch to acquire your complimentary in-person reservations: (310) 243-6426

hiddenroomtheatre@yahoo.com

Friday, May 7, 2010

The Taming of the Shrew, original practices, Hidden Room Theatre, April 29 - May 23





The excitement and cameraderie were palpable on the opening night of the Hidden Room Theatre's "original practices" staging of The Taming of the Shrew. This was a gathering of Austin's acting fellowship, in the audience as well as among the company. Director Beth Burns and assistant director Stephanie Delk greeted familiar faces; storyteller-actress Bernadette Nason served the refreshments; musician Jennifer Fielding of the Baron's Men offered masks for sale at the concession stand. After the house was opened, the animation and anticipation were so great that one of the town's most appreciated Shakespearian actors managed to spill his white wine in front of the seats on the south side. Director Beth Burns took the mishap in good humor and went down on her knees with a towel, scrubbing to make sure the playing space was dry and safe.

One fellowship was assembled within the meeting hall of another, for Burns had obtained the gracious permission of a masonic order to use its space to create a court theatre like that of Shakespeare's royals.

A consort of ten musicians led by Jennifer Davis provided enchanting period music with voice, recorder, stringed instruments and percussion, both before the play and at intervals throughout.

The Taming of the Shrew opens with an Induction or prologue, often abandoned today. An aristocrat returning from the hunt discovers the drunkard Christopher Sly passed out in the street. The lord and his serving men bring Sly into comfortable quarters. They fool him into believing that he himself is a great lord and they offer him the company of a wench, impersonated by Bartholomew, a male page. Sly wants to go to bed with his new lady but agrees to the diversion of a pleasant comedy -- the story of Katerina Minola and Petrucio.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Jack and Jill, Sustainable Theatre Project at the Hyde Park Theatre, March 18 - 27





Jack and Jill is "a romance," according to playwright Jane Martin, the mysterious alter ego of Jon Jory, retired artistic director of the Theatre of Louisville. The Mother Goose reference implies a jaunty comedy approach, but Jack and Jill is anything but that.

Martin's two-character play is energetic and witty, but it's a portrait of two individuals incapable of merging two I's into a We. Jack is a big, bashful stumbling guy, all thumbs and vulnerability -- the anti-macho -- and Jill is bright, together, to-the-point, competitive and irredeemably selfish -- the antithesis of traditional femininity. Act I presents their courtship, marriage and frustrations; Act II presents their lives and successive encounters after divorce. They remain linked in the syzygy of mutual attraction, closer and then farther apart, unable to live together and yet unable to live apart.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .