Showing posts with label Shannon McCormick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shannon McCormick. Show all posts

Thursday, March 21, 2013

GOLD DUST - THE PLAY by Monique Daviau, Gnap! Theatre Projects at the Salvage Vanguard, March 29 and 30, 2013



Gnap Theatre Projects Austin TX










presents

Gold Dust the play Fleetwood Mack Gnap Theatre Austin TX
Gold Dust: the Play

by Monique Daviau

a staged reading on March 29 and March 30, 2013, 8 p.m.
at Salvage Vanguard Theatre, 2803 Manor Rd.

Order tickets via Eventbrite: http://golddustreading-efbevent.eventbrite.com/
Back when the Gnap! team was writing 69 Love Scenes, our very loose adaptation of the Magnetic Fields' album, we discovered that we playwrights all had huge musical crushes on Fleetwood Mac. We joked that our next play should be a very loose adaptation of Rumours. Well, 69 LS writer Monique Daviau went off to grad school and went and wrote that very play. Gold Dust is an extremely fictionalized view of the making of Rumours, an album unparalleled in rock history for the number of songs on it written about or for or sharply aimed at the very bandmates playing the tunes.


Gold Dust is an ambitious play about love, infidelity, competition, success and failure, the power of being in a band, and the ravages of time. Oh, and in its final form will feature a Chorus of Stevies and a full band playing original, Fleetwoodesqe music.

We want to make this play as good as we can before we mount a full production. So, we're asking you, our friends and fans and audience, to come be a part of our process. On March 29 and 30 at 8 pm at Salvage Vanguard Theater, we'll be presenting a work-in-progress staged reading of the script. Playwright Mo Daviau will be there, and after the readings we'd love to hear your thoughts and feedback as we eye revisions for a true debut sometime in 2014. We'd love it if you could attend.

Featuring, as Gold Dust:

Liz Beckham
Jen Brown
Courtney Hopkin
Michael Joplin

with:

Kayla Lane Freeman
Shannon McCormick
Mark Stewart
Jericho Thorp
Brett Tribe


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre.com front page)


Thursday, January 29, 2009

Review: Best of FronteraFest Short Fringe, Week 2, Hyde Park Theatre, January 24


Clayton Maxwell's account in the January 29 Austin Chronicle of the previous Saturday's compendium "Best of the Week" show for the FronteraFest Short Fringe.

Appearing on January 24:

Saul Paul (see ALT comments about his original presentation, January 20)
T.A.G.
Christopher Lee and Christopher Michael
The Adventurers (improv) by Shannon McCormick and Shana Merlin
Big Poppa E

These five pieces were among twenty presented at the theatre from Tuesday, January 20 to Friday, January 23; they were selected by audience ballots and FronterFest staff. Of them, two will be chosen to go forward to the 10 "Best of Fest" pieces (plus an evening of 5 "wild card" pieces) to be presented during the week of February 10 - 14.

Click for full text of Maxwell's review.

Friday, October 31, 2008

Unbeaten, Salvage Vanguard Theatre, October 24 - November 8


American football is already highly stylized theatre.

The fact that the sport has not spread beyond our country, unlike those other great American pastimes baseball and basketball, suggests that the Saturday and Sunday gridiron kabuki says something unique about the American mentality.


A writer in The Economist once called it “the quintessential sport of the United States – a combination of committee work and violence.”


Writer/actor/self-director Shannon McCormick has a keen eye for the characters and the conventions of this national sport, and he shows both understanding and great affection for them. Plus he is energetic and well-toned enough to make the audience believe that he is, in turns, a crotchety coach ready for retirement, a quarterback with a zen imagination, a star self-loving black pass receiver, and a 350-pound Christian defensive lineman. And more.

McCormick’s astounding mimetism is well reinforced by some very spiffy video, graphics and the original music by Graham Reynolds.

McCormick’s promotions for this event, on KUT FM, in the printed press, and on line, stress that no two shows are alike. There is a shuffling of texts and outcomes, appropriately enough, via audible cues, and he adapts in order to move the story ahead. Maybe so; but that random walk was not obvious in last night’s performance, which was smooth, continuous and convincing, even to the detail of the appropriate surge of crowd noises reverberating in the theatre.


You enter the theatre to find video projected onto a chalkboard, with a series of nifty “Did You Know That. . . “ Qs and As, providing spectators with trivia and factoids about the mythical Professional Football League (PFL). The 20 or so items, some of them patently absurd, cycle a couple of times, interrupted by video ads.

If one doesn’t simply tune them out as so much visual noise, they give us the setting: the Omaha Oxen professional football team are playing in the Ultima Bowl. The Van Pie brothers are the quarterbacks, one on either team. There’s a receiver with the Oxen, Coleco Baggins, who styles himself as “the fastest mammal alive, except maybe for a cheetah.” The Oxen are unbeaten.


The intro video (available on the Salvage Vanguard site) plays, the music thunders, and McCormick appears, in the persona of the Oxen’s coach, a vulgar, foul-mouthed football zealot whose obscenity was so strong that it brought yelps of laughter from the Free Night of Theatre crowd.

The coach sets the stage for us with his vindictive, small-minded insistence on redemption through victory. And then McCormick cycles through his other characters, bringing us a very different set of views.



McCormick is an astonishingly versatile actor, particularly in his use of language and accent. Van Pie the quarterback is your vanilla All-American; Coleco Baggins the receiver is a hopped-up, gregarious, flirtatious African American; the team’s kicker is a fatalist from the wilds of Wisconsin with a spot-on “for sure” accent; the football commissioner is the bureaucrat blinding you with bullshit; the gay pass receiver glories in his receptions and mocks testosterone with moves worthy of a cheerleader; the Oxen’s Fan #1 is an exuberant idiot celebrant with no life of his own.

McCormick charms the crowd, interacts with them, responds to them. In one chilling moment, he stops front and center in a spotlight to deliver “the unheard voice between the coach’s ears” with the message that we all lose, eventually, and eventually we all lose everything.


The hypothesis of the show is so happily outrageous. McCormick gives us the Ultima Bowl, quarter by quarter, including a video mess for halftime.



















The score rises stratospherically – on Thursday night, in the third quarter it was Oxen 84, opponents 74, and then the opponents pulled ahead. The Oxen got the ball back with a scant minute left to play. . . .

The absurdity of the imaginary world pulls us one way – after all, the football commissioner confesses that cheating brought about many of the outcomes, and the opponents stage the stunt of putting a bear on the field for kickoff defense.

And yet, McCormick pegs these characters so well, with such insight and authenticity that they dominate and overcome the satire.


The Wisconsin kicker tells us dolefully, “After all, when they bring me on, it’s because they failed, they didn’t make the first down or the touchdown. . . .” The offensive lineman speaks with painful sincerity about his Christian faith and his “mandicrafts,” which include needlepoint gifts. The star receiver pumps us up and flatters us and tells about his ambitions for his career after football. And the quarterback, faced with victory over his brother or defeat, remembers Mom, who is watching from the stands.

So that instead of just laughing and sneering at the artificial theatre of the great, uniquely American game, we gain a piercing view into the motivations and vulnerabilities of those who play it.

Review in the Austin Chronicle of November 6 by Wayne Allen Brenner

KUT audio: John Aielli's "Aielli Unleashed" interview with composer Graham Reynolds, October 28

KUT video w. audio: Arts Eclectic, from YouTube


YouTube video promo

Jeanne Claire van Ryzin's interview with one-man performer Shannon McCormick, Stateman's XL supplement of October 24

Audio: Selections from Graham Reynolds' 'Unbeaten' score, from Statesman's Austin 360 website