Showing posts with label The Pillowman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Pillowman. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The Pillowman by Martin McDonagh, 7 Towers Theatre Company at Dougherty Arts Center, July 12 - 28, 2013


ALT review 2013The Pillowman Martin McDonaugh, 7 Towers Theatre Company, Austin TX

by Michael Meigs

The Pillowman takes place in a dark, eerie world that Martin McDonagh created back in 2003 when he moved away from his dark Irish ethnic plays The Beauty Queen of Leenan and The Lieutenant of Inishmore. The Hyde Park Theatre staged this piece in 2007, winning Ken Webster a B. Iden Payne for direction and critics' table awards for actors Jude Hickey and Kenneth Wayne Bradley. Both Southwestern University and the UT University Theatre Guild staged The Pillowman in 2011, and the Woodlawn Theatre in San Antonio did it last year.

But I hadn't seen it. Had no idea about it, in fact. so I was a tender and willing victim for the twists and ironies of McDonagh's brothers caught in a grim fairy tale.

The Anglo-Irish playwright combined two epic horror traditions: folk tales, such as those recorded by the Brothers Grimm, that elaborated upon basic primal fears of violence and death, and twentieth-century totalitarian practices that accorded state authorities absolute discretion in use of violence and summary execution. The Pillowman portrays the interrogation and investigation of the oddly named Katurian K. Katurian (the middle initial stands for Katurian), a baffled and accommodating writer obsessed with creating modern-day equivalents of those folk tales. They're vivid, thought-provoking and -- with one exception -- they all end with the deaths of the protagonists.

Pillowman Martin McDonagh 7 Towers  Austin TX
Travid Bedard, Aaron Black (photo: 7 Towers Theatre)
Crimes have been committed, and they mirror Katurian's black whimseys.

The piece could be interpreted as a fable about the suppression of creativity and imagination, but the macabre nature of Katurian's imaginings and other details revealed during harrowing confrontations in this nameless prison lead in a different direction. McDonagh's horror story is really about the lasting damage inflicted upon children by callous, exploitative adults. Standing in the middle of the story and the dilemma is Katurian's mentally and emotionally handicapped brother Michael, also arrested, a childlike man incapable of understanding any of these nuances.

This action is intense, brimming with suspense, and Director Christina Gutierrez chose some of Austin's most muscularly intellectual actors to create the piece. Travis Bedard's Katurian is earnest, eloquent and sly; Aaron Black endows brother Michael with vulnerability, effusive reactions and innocence. The emotional links between the two resonate, and we understand Katurian's determination to protect Michael. The cops are just as vividly drawn -- David Boss as Detective Tupolski, the senior of the two, dapper and bloody minded, and Stephen Price as Detective Ariel, all fire and scarcely contained violence.

The country is unnamed and the time is undefined -- this is the blank landscape of nightmare. Names are vaguely eastern European, but this cast speaks in varieties of Irish accent. Tupolski's is the more sophisticated, perhaps suggesting higher education somewhere privileged, while Price's rhythm and vowels seem rural and perhaps underclass. It seems odd initially that Bedard as Katurian uses only the lightest lilt, while the speech of his brother, played by Black, is much more markedly Irish.

Pillowman Martin McDonagh 7 Towers Theatre Company Austin TXThe company illustrates Katurian's fables with shadow puppetry by Katie Rose Pipkin and Lindsay McKenna. Simple, relatively rigid figures appear in rectangles of light projected from behind the walls of the box set, symbolizing the fugue states of Katurian's imagination without suggesting any possibility of escape from misery or menace. This is an adroit touch, and it relieves somewhat the claustrophobic appearance of the stark setting.

The Dougherty Arts Center seemed an awkward space for this piece, for it has a wide apron and a ten- or twelve-foot expanse of flooring in front of the first row of seats. Given the intensity of the piece, I would have preferred to bring the whole set forward and perhaps even to locate much of the action on the floor in front of the stage. These are ex-post reflections, however, for as the story unfolded I was transfixed by the language, the several myths being spun before us, the inevitable but unpredicable climax that was coming, and the transformed appearances and characters of actors I'd seen a number of times.

Pillowman Martin McDonagh 7 Towers Theatre Austin TX
Travis Bedard, puppetry by Katie Rose Pipkin (photo: 7 Towers Theatre)

The cast took The Pillowman out to Winedale on Monday evening and performed before the 17-member UT troupe currently running three Shakespeare plays in repertory. The old barn's relatively shallow stage and close seating almost certainly provided an even more intensely satisfying experience that the one offered at the Dougherty over the last two weekends . But I admit that I'm a propiniquity junkie, almost always to be found in the front row, and the audience was scattered all about the Dougherty seating space.

7 Towers performs The Pillowman three more times, Friday through Sunday at 8 p.m. Go, experience it. It won't make much difference where your seat is located; you'll be holding onto it tight.

Review by Bob Kinney at his Wordpress blog, July 13 - with images

Review by Adam Roberts for the Austin Chronicle, July 19

Review by Jeff Davis at www.austin.broadwayworld.com, July 24 


EXTRA
Click to view program for The Pillowman

Monday, July 1, 2013

Video Promo: The Pillowman by Martin McDonagh, 7 Towers Theatre Company, July 12 - 28, 2013

Travis Bedard prepares you for the

Pillowman Martin McDonaugh 7 Towers Theatre Austin TX





7 Towers Theatre Company Austin TX


production of




The Pillowman

by Martin McDonaugh

Directed by Christina Gutierrez
Puppetry Design by Katie Rose Pipkin

Featuring Travis Bedard, David Boss, Stephen Price, and Aaron Black


July 12-28, 2013
Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, 8:00 p.m.
Dougherty Arts Center, 1110 Barton Springs Rd. - click for map

Tickets available at https://www.wepay.com/events/the-pillowman
or visit www.7TowersTheatre.com for more info



The 7 Towers Theatre Company continues its second season with Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman, the story of a writer who is suspected of a series of murders that seem to be based on his dark fairy tales. As the play unfolds, the writer tells a number of his stories as he is interrogated by two increasingly brutal and violent police officers. The Pillowman, set in an unidentified totalitarian police state, asks difficult questions about freedom of speech and expression, and about the use of torture and force in police interrogations. Despite its violence, however, the play is darkly beautiful, ultimately arguing for the redemptive nature of the human spirit. 


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Sunday, June 23, 2013

THE PILLOWMAN by Martin McDonaugh, 7 Towers Theatre at Dougherty Arts Center, July 12 - 28, 2013



7 Towers Theatre Company Austin TXPillowman Martin McDonaugh 7 Towers Theatre Austin TX








presents

The Pillowman
by Martin McDonaugh
July 12-28, 2013
Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, 8:00 p.m.
Dougherty Arts Center, 1110 Barton Springs Rd. - click for map

Tickets available at https://www.wepay.com/events/the-pillowman
or visit www.7TowersTheatre.com for more info!


The 7 Towers Theatre Company continues its second season with Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman, the story of a writer who is suspected of a series of murders that seem to be based on his dark fairy tales. As the play unfolds, the writer tells a number of his stories as he is interrogated by two increasingly brutal and violent police officers. The Pillowman, set in an unidentified totalitarian police state, asks difficult questions about freedom of speech and expression, and about the use of torture and force in police interrogations. Despite its violence, however, the play is darkly beautiful, ultimately arguing for the redemptive nature of the human spirit.


7 Towers is thrilled to partner with Austin-based visual artist Katie Rose Pipkin to bring the writer’s stories to life on stage. Katie Rose has created stunning characters and landscapes which transform the interrogation room in which the play takes place into a canvas for the writer’s imagination.


Puppetry Design by Katie Rose Pipkin

Starring Travis Bedard, David Boss, Stephen Price, and Aaron Black


(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)


Monday, June 3, 2013

Fundraiser: The Pillowman by Martin McDonaugh, 7 Towers Theatre Company at the Dougherty Arts Center, July 12 - 28, 2013


Christina Gutierrez and Aaron Black ask for contributions through
 
IndieGoGo




to assist in raising $1500 for the










production of  
The Pillowman  
by Martin McDonaugh
featuring Travis Bedard
July 12 - 28, 2013
at the Dougherty Arts Center
1110 Barton Springs Rd. - click for map




The 7 Towers Theatre Company continues its second season with Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman, the story of a writer who is suspected of a series of murders that seem to be based on his dark fairy tales. As the play unfolds, the writer tells a number of his stories as he is interrogated by two increasingly brutal and violent police officers. The Pillowman, set in an unidentified totalitarian police state, asks difficult questions about freedom of speech and expression, about the use of torture and force in police interrogations, and, perhaps most importantly, about the power of storytelling. 


Despite its violence, the play is darkly beautiful, ultimately arguing for the redemptive nature of the human spirit. We are beyond thrilled to partner with Austin-based visual artist Katie Rose Pipkin to bring the writer’s stories to life on stage. Katie Rose has created stunning characters and landscapes which transform the interrogation room in which the play takes place into a canvas for the writer’s imagination. 7 Towers’ collaboration with Katie Rose marks a new investment in visual storytelling and spectacle for the theatre company, and an opportunity to work within the vibrant visual arts community in Austin. 

Click here to go to the IndieGoGo page for further information and to contribute.


Your donations go directly toward paying for our space and paying our stunningly talented team. The Pillowman marks a shift from 7 Towers' previous focus on found and site-specific spaces, and we need your help to offset the cost of space rental. In addition, we've assembled a team of professional actors and designers whom we'd like to compensate for their commitment, artistry, and passion. 

That team includes Katy Billik (producer, costume design) of Chick and a Dude Productions, Derek Kollouri (set design) of Theatre en Bloc, Amy Lewis (lighting design) of The Loaded Gun Theory, and Amanda Gass (stage management) of Cambiare Productions, as well as well-known Austin actors Aaron Black, Travis Bedard, David J. Boss, and Stephen Price.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Upcoming: The Pillow Man by Martin McDonaugh, Woodlawn Theatre, San Antonio, June 14 - July 7

Woodlawn Theatre
The Pillowman Martin McDonaugh, Woodlawn Theatre, San Antonio








presents

The Pillow Man
by Martin McDonaugh
June 14 - July 7
Thursdays at 7:30 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
Woodlawn Theatre, 1920 Fredericksburg Rd., San Antonio, 78201 (click for map)
"One electric shock of a moment in the first act jolts comfort-food-fed Broadway audiences the way the shower scene in "Psycho" must have slapped moviegoers four decades ago."

Winner of the 2004 Olivier Award (Best New Play), the 2004 New York Drama Critics' Circle Award (Best New Foreign Play) and two Tony Awards, this dark adult fairytale is sure to delight those with a taste for the macabre!

Katurian, a writer of grisly short stories, has been arrested by two detectives, Ariel and Tupolski, because some of his stories resemble recent child murders happening in town. Katurian denies any knowledge of the murders, but the detectives claim that Katurian's mentally challenged brother sitting in the next cell, Michal, has just confessed to committing the murders together...

Two-time Academy Award winning playwright Martin McDonagh has weaved an unforgettable tale that "speaks to fears people mistakenly think they leave behind when they outgrow night lights."

"Overall, those who enjoy tough, smart theatre...will find this production thought-provoking and funny."

This production contains strong language, adult themes and graphic descriptions of violence. Not suitable for children or those who may be easily offended.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Upcoming: The Pillowman, University Theatre Guild, UT, March 4 - 6

UPDATE: See note below on buying tickets!

Received directly:

The Pillowman University Theatre Guild (image: Philip Villareal)

University Theatre Guild
presents

THE PILLOWMAN
by Martin McDonagh

directed by Sierra Lawrence
assistant Director: Orla O'Callaghan

Black Box Theater, room 2.304

in the new UT Student Activities Center (click for map)
March 4 & 5 @ 7pm, March 6 @ 2pm

TICKETS $7 at the door, $5 with a UT student ID

RSVP on Facebook - Follow @TexasUTG on Twitter

With echoes of Stoppard, Kafka, and the Brothers Grimm, The Pillowman centers on a writer in an unnamed totalitarian state who is being interrogated about the gruesome content of his short stories and their similarities to a series of child murders. The result is an urgent work of theatrical bravura and an unflinching examination of the very nature and purpose of art.


THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT INFORMATION REGARDING TICKETS FOR THE PILLOWMAN.

Tickets are available on ly immediately before each show, HOWEVER, they will NOT BE AVAILABLE ANYWHERE IN THE SAC BUILDING. We will be selling them at a table outside of GREGORY GYM, immediately neighboring the SAC. So, on your way in to the Black Box Theater, stop by the plaza in front of Gregory Gym to purchase your ticket!!

Here is a map to illustrate where to buy tickets in relation to the Black Box Theater.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Upcoming: The Pillowman, University Theatre Group, University of Texas, March 4 - 6



Received directly:

University Theatre Guild
presents

THE PILLOWMAN
by Martin McDonagh

directed by Sierra Lawrence
assistant Director: Orla O'Callaghan

Black Box Theater, room 2.304

in the new UT Student Activities Center (click for map)
March 4 & 5 @ 7pm, March 6 @ 2pm

TICKETS $7 at the door, $5 with a UT student ID

RSVP on Facebook - Follow @TexasUTG on Twitter

With echoes of Stoppard, Kafka, and the Brothers Grimm, The Pillowman centers on a writer in an unnamed totalitarian state who is being interrogated about the gruesome content of his short stories and their similarities to a series of child murders. The result is an urgent work of theatrical bravura and an unflinching examination of the very nature and purpose of art.


Click to view cast list at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .