Saturday, October 25, 2008

Puppetry in Austin, Austin Statesman of October 25


from Austin Statesman of October 25:

THESE PUPPETS ARE NOT FOR KIDS, Y'ALL

Austin puppeteers are bringing the art form back to its original audience: adults

By Robyn Ross, SPECIAL TO THE AMERICAN-STATESMAN

Connor Hopkins, whose Trouble Puppet Theater Company opens an adaptation of "Frankenstein" on Thursday, is looking forward to a show with "video projection, live music, fire and lots of slime, blood and electricity."

This is the man whose first Austin project was a strip show starring transgender puppets that came back from the dead.
. . .

Over the summer Ricki "Geppetto" Vincent and his Geppetto Dreams Puppet Company performed a puppet burlesque starring a sexy pig named "Miss Mimi." Like many of Vincent's characters, Miss Mimi is a bunraku-style puppet manipulated with rods held by three on-stage puppeteers. Geppetto Dreams is now staging its Halloween show, "Tales from the Nauseous Fairy," a puppet show for adults with Sunday matinees for kids.

Vincent's company has its own theater, quite a feat for the puppeteer who's been in Austin less than two years. Hopkins has planned a full season of puppetry ("mostly about grim moments in history"), and the Austin Puppet Society, which he started, has 40 members who trade ideas online. And First Night Austin, the all-ages New Year's Eve arts event, has become a showcase for enormous puppets that enchant young and old alike.

. . .
for full article, Click here.

Friday, October 24, 2008

World of Horrorcraft, Scare For A Cure at Elks Lodge 201, October 24 - 26, 29-31




Last night I was in one of the first uninformed groups to pass through the haunted house set up by Scare for A Cure at the Elk’s Lodge near the downtown arts venues.

The premise is that the Dunstan Interactive Corporation, flush with its success in video games, has recruited you as a “beta tester.” Their new product is a step forward - - instead of sitting glassy eyed at a monitor with a keyboard or joystick, you put on a metal hood that scans your brain waves and inserts you directly into the game world, armed with the identity and weapons of choice.

Our mixed crew was invited for dress rehearsal evening, so in effect we were the beta testers for the “beta testers.”

We were impressed by the clever scenario and the imagination of the settings and costumes. More than once, we were spooked, surprised, ambushed, amused and haunted. Coordinators told us that the experience has 26 stages. There were costumed characters and zanies galore.

Audience members acting as “beta testers” sign formal releases of liability that are pretty scary in themselves (what’s this about “you may be subjected to flying insects”???). Organizers call them forward in groups of six at five-minute intervals. On the stairs at the south parking lot, the staff go over the rules before bringing participants to the Dunstan corporation front office, delivering them to their testing tasks.

[[The voice of conscience intervenes in the review at this point: Time out! Time out! What’s this about reviewing a Halloween haunted house? Isn’t this space called “Austin Live Theatre”?

- - Yes, exactly. Read the title block. It says, “This is a voyage to discover the underreported Austin theatre scene.”

But a haunted house? Give me a break. Next thing we know, you’ll be writing about the bats flying out of the South Congress Street bridge.

- - No, the bat flights are a spectacle. They’re not theatre. And besides, I think they’ve gone to Mexico for the winter.

But a Halloween scary house! You might as well drop your standards entirely and start hanging out on 6th Street or nosing up to arts sponsors, like the rest of the blogs!

- - Here’s what I do: I go looking for actors who are offering narrative and character to an audience. People who make believe. Most music acts in this town are not in that business, although the White Ghost Shivers come close. If a Central Texas actor or singer or company creates a world for an audience, I’ll go see the performance and write about it. That includes puppet presentations, children’s theatre, community theatre, and some special projects. Like this one – Scare for A Cure’s World of Horrorcraft.

One-man shows?

- - Depends on the show. Unbeaten by Shannon McCormick at the Salvage Vanguard sounds promising. Eddie Izzard back in May was fantastic. But for the most part, I don’t do improv. Oops, that’s poorly expressed. I mean, I don’t seek out improv acts to attend, unless the promise is that there’ll be narrative and character. That Trekkie thing at the Hideout sounds like a possible.

How about The Casket of Passing Fancy, where each member of an audience of thirty is granted an experience by the Duchess?

- - Sounds to me as if the evening begins well but ends badly. Read the reports (they’re not reviews) by Barry Pineo and SaraMarie. I’m not looking for an individualized experience, the equivalent of a lap dance. For me, the essence of theatre is the complicity between the actor and the group of spectators – the roar of the greasepaint and smell of the crowd, as Anthony Newley used to say.

And this World of Horrorcraft meets that standard?

- - Sure does. May I continue, now?

Proceed.

Conscience settles down in a corner, with crossed arms.]]

Each group of “beta testers” is accompanied by a “technical assistance representative” from the company. Our escort, a serious, courteous young man with long hair shepherded us through corridors, nooks, and crawl spaces into an increasingly unpredictable world. Weapons and identities failed to materialize; in our own identities and humble selves we were cast into a game world. We met a seven-foot hornéd beast, a vampire and victim, spooks and dementors. “Something has gone wrong with the main server,” our escort told us with a worried look.

I had just accepted, reluctantly, to be the one to sit in the torture chair when the ferocious palace guard broke character. “This way,” he said, “quickly, before they know you’re here. . . .”

In the hustle and shared apprehension, our group of six quickly formed bonds, both amongst us and with our escort. As the story evolved, we understood that malice was afoot; Dunstan himself contacted us to enlist our help and to warn us of pitfalls. Scenarios both comic and dramatic from other game worlds were torn apart by some hostile intelligence and we rushed onward, pausing only to count noses and to heed warnings from our escort. We progressed up stairs, around corners, through coded doors and down a twisting chute.

Dunstan himself received us in a penultimate scene that ended in chaos and catastrophe; we bore onward our McGuffin to Control Central for a confrontation with the mysterious Alice, played with brio and convincing threat by an uncredited Paige Roberts. Escape and exit were via a confined, bobbing capsule sent across space and time.

The World of Horrorcraft was vivid, coherent, sometimes scary, and fun. It was indeed theatre, with the interesting twist that only our escort and Dunstan provided the continuity. Other actors, all volunteers, met us only briefly to deliver their participation – imagine, then, how often they will play their short scenes between now and the Halloween finale. No wonder the organizers urged us to come back again to experience the further development of character and spectacle.

After emerging from that make-believe world, I was elated, and even a bit disappointed to be back in “normal” reality.

You can share some of that night’s trip, for the Statesman’s “A-List” photographer David Weaver (shown here) was in the same group. He was often trailing behind, caught up in the effort to capture his images. Click HERE for an 18-image slide show on the Stateman's website.


An added attraction that evening was the costumed corps of women dancers from the Austin Police Department. They were preparing Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” for presentation on Halloween night. I was greatly impressed, and I wouldn’t want to come across them in a dark alley.

Unless, of course, they were cleaned up a bit and in uniform!

Review by High Heeled Speaker on LiveJournal, October 26


Fox 7 video clip featuring the "blood and guts cannon" October 21

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Night of the Living Dead, Weird City T.C. at Hyde Park Theatre, October 22 - November 7


Why do we enjoy this stuff so much?


A brother and sister arrive at an isolated cemetery to leave a wreath on their father’s grave. He scoffs and complains. She reproaches his irreverence. He recalls the childhood fright he gave her, long ago, in this same place, and intones in sepulchral cadence, “They’re coming to get you, Barbara!”


And by gosh, they are. That figure, tottering across the grass and between the headstones, attacks them. Barbara flees. She takes refuge in an isolated house.

And suddenly the world has gone mad. Barbara goes into near catatonic shock. Others who took refuge in the house tell of other horrible, lurching attackers. Radio, television, and civil defense newscasts inform us that the recently dead are coming back to life, and “the mayors of Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Miami are calling out the National Guard.”

Uh, oh. We’ve got a bad feeling about this. . . .


George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead is a 95-minute black and white horror creepy produced in 1968. It cost only $114,000 to produce but made $12 million in the United States and $30 million overseas. It caused a sensation. Pauline Kael of the New York Times called it "one of the most gruesomely terrifying movies ever made — and when you leave the theatre you may wish you could forget the whole horrible experience . . . . The film's grainy, banal seriousness works for it — gives it a crude realism".


The film’s distributor failed to include the frames asserting copyright, and Night of the Living Dead lapsed into public domain. The advantage to you is that now you can watch the whole thing on-line from any of several sources, including Google Video. And the concept, script and characters are available to anyone who wants to – well – revive them.


John Carroll (left) and the Weird City Theatre Company have done just that. I haven’t seen the whole film, but judging from the first ten minutes, viewed on YouTube, much of the adaptation uses the movie lines verbatim.

Carroll applied his ingenuity to shaping the script so that except for the initial cemetery scene it fits mostly into the claustrophobic confines of that ramshackle, deserted frame house. He and the other 15 actors in the cast set up this absurd, unexplained situation, make us believe in it, and scare the crap out of us.


Okay, the script is weak. What do you expect? When the zombies are coming after you, who ya gonna call?


How are you going to keep up the interest of the audience for the one-hour duration of this impossible slide into hell? Phillip Taylor as Ben (left), the focused, organized, compassionate leader of the trapped humans, does everything he rationally can. Identify transportation. Nail boards across the windows and door. Fight ‘em off with weapons and fire – the undead don’t have much muscle tone. Argue with the rest of the trapped team, try to exert some leadership. Figure out where to find help.

But since when has rational behavior overcome the inexplicable forces of Evil?


Action in that house plays out in the semi-darkness that mirrors the state of the world. Weird City uses sound to impressive effect, scoring much of the action to spooky, surging music and winding in radio broadcasts as apocalyptic and threatening as those of Orson Welles in 1938. Zombie attacks are hair-raising, colorful and well choreographed. Ohmigosh, look, there’s one that used to be a nurse! There’s many a shot in the night, especially when John Smith as Chief McClellan leads his vigilantes against the bad ghouls (“Just shoot ‘em in the brain, that’s all you need to do. Then pile ‘em up and burn ‘em.”)

You just know it’s going to end badly. But on the way there, there are some fine moments. Sarah Griffin (right) and her portrayal of Barbara’s hysteria and then her shock; snarling face-offs between Ben (Phillips) and Harry Cooper (Kevin Gouldthorpe, right, above); and the appalling conversion of the delicate, injured young Kevin (Nick Orzech). And, particularly, John Smith’s all-business Chief McClellan as he’s interviewed by field news anchor Nicholas Kier. (Click here for Weird City’s video of that exchange, shot in the much less oppressive out-of-doors).

But back to that question: why do we enjoy this stuff so much?

Night of the Living Dead is a 20th century reprise of one of the oldest of Western dramatic art forms – the medieval mystery play.

These are stock characters. Cynical Johnny mocks Barbara as she prays at their father’s grave; he deserves his violent and horrible comeuppance, both in the opening minutes and again, at the very end. Ben the leader thinks that logic and preparation can overcome furies; his demise, in a vividly cinematic moment, belies that belief. Cold-bloodedly efficient Chief McClellan supposes that he has the Answer but finds out otherwise. And media representatives deliver the News and offer counsel about Security, but they cannot provide Salvation.


Sin begets punishment; ignorance brings death; and arrogance brings terrible retribution.


One could quote the central character of “Le Miracle de Théophile,” written by Rutebeuf in France in 1261:


"Filthy I am; I must go to filth beneath.

In filthiness I’ve lived; God must know –

He lives forever. My dying will be slow,

Poisoned by the bite of devils’ teeth.”


The difference, however, is that back in the thirteenth century Théophile could hope. His humble repentance on the boards attracted the attention of the Blessed Virgin, who vividly trampled the Devil underfoot, certainly to the delight of spectators.


We face, still today, the puzzle of Evil and the fears of Death. We try to exorcise them by entertainments and distractions. Halloween celebrations among them.


This production of Night of the Living Dead doesn’t have to carry such a theological load, of course. We can enjoy it for its own production values and for the healthy scare it gives us.


But at the last moment those zombies do turn around and start for us, don’t they?

Barry Pineo's review in the Austin Chronicle, October 30

Extras:

Weird City Theatre Company website -- with link to cast bios and link to audio of the scary radio broadcast script (open the "Tickets" page)

Hannah Kenah's pre-production piece with interview of director/producer John Carrol, Austin Chronicle of October 24

Weird City promo on YouTube for NOTLD

First ten minutes of NOTLD film, 1968

1968 trailer on YouTube (1:37)

3 Flickr sets for NOTLD rehearsals and prep, containing
31 images, 80 photos and 8 videos, and 115 photos and 8 videos

Video: NY Times Critics' Picks: A.O. Scott on 1968 NOTLD, published October 28 (2:31)

extensive article on NOTLD on Wikipedia

NOTLD on Internet Movie Database

full streaming video of NOTLD on Google Video, 95 min.


Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Upcoming: Christmas Belles, City Theatre, December 4 - 21


Received October 21:

City Theatre announces Christmas Belles
Dec 4 – 21

CHRISTMAS BELLES - YULETIDE JOY WITH HOLIDAY FAMILY FUN…TEXAS STYLE. STAGE COMEDY PREMIER IN AUSTIN

It’s an exciting honor to be premiering a playwright’s first words onstage in Austin. Christmas Belles will open The City Theatre’s Company’s holiday season running December 4 through December 21.

A soon to be classic southern comedy is authored by Texas residents Jessie Jones, Nicholas Hope, and Jamie Wooten, a trio of talented writers.


CTC welcomes the Futrelle sisters and it’s Christmas-time in Fayro, Texas. Frankie, Twink, and Honey Raye are not exactly in a festive mood.

Frankie is overdue with her second set of twins, Twink is bitter about a recent jilting which finds her behind bars, and Honey Raye is trying to keep the Tabernacle of the Lamb’s Christmas Pageant from spiraling out of control. Things are not looking promising: the former director is ruthless in her attempts to take over the show, the celebrity Santa is passing a kidney stone, the cast is dropping like flies to food poisoning from the recent pancake supper and a long-kept family secret is revealed.

And on top of everything, the pageant will be shown live on cable access television for the first time ever.

In true Futrelle fashion, the feuding sisters pull together in order to present a Christmas program the citizens of Fayro will never forget.

Christmas Belles will bring joy to your world!


Christmas Belles
playwrights have impressive backgrounds: Jessie Jones co-authored the play Dearly Departed, as well as its screen adaptation, Kingdom Come; Nicholas Hope won the Texas New Playwrights’ Festival for his first play, A Friend Of The Family and was Director of Casting for ABC Television; and Jamie Wooten has written and produced nearly four hundred episodes of network television, including four seasons of the classic series, The Golden Girls. All three were born and raised in the South and write about the South they know best.


Produced by The City Theatre Company, the comedy will be directed by Daniel Lefave featuring the cast of Sharon Elmore, Nicole Weber, Bobby DiPasquale, Louise Martin, Rae Peterson, Rosemary Holly, Terri Bennett, Jen Coy, Michael Schnick, Daniel Sawtelle, and Shane Cleveland.


TICKET AND PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

December 4 - 21, 2008 Thursday – Saturday at 8:00 p.m. Sunday 5:30 p.m.

The City Theatre, 3823 Airport Blvd. – east between Manor Road and 38 ½ St.

Reservations 512-524-2870 or info@citytheatreaustin.org.

General Seating Tickets $15-20, Guaranteed Reserved Seating $25, Students $12,
Thursdays pay what you can. Website: www.citytheatreaustin.org.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Upcoming: Ladies of La Cage, Spaghetti House, November 14 and 21

received by e-mail:

"Ladies of La Cage" is a Celebrity Female Impersonation Review. It will be presented in a Dinner Theatre Format at the Spaghetti Warehouse. It will take place initially for 2 Fridays November 14 & 21 at 8:00 pm. Tickets will be 40 dollars and will include a full 3 course Meal (Salad, Bread, Choice of Entree, Choice of Dessert, and Soft Drinks) and a Cabaret style Revue show lasting approximately 90 minutes, including Impersonation of Legendary Divas like Dolly Parton, Cher, Diana Ross, Tina Turner, Liza Minelli and more! From poster: Tickets available now. Telephone (512) 696 2371 or e-mail saffiretrinity@yahoo.com.

Website is www.myspace.com/lacageaustin



Monday, October 20, 2008

Two donors give $2 million for Zach Theatre project

Monday, October 20, 2008 - 2:54 PM CDT
Two donors give $2 million for Zach Theatre project
Austin Business Journal

Local arts philanthropists James Armstrong and Bill Dickson have donated $1 million each to Zach Theatre—money that will go toward the theater’s capital campaign.

The capital campaign will help realize a remodeled and expanded campus for the 75-year-old theater at Barton Springs Road and Lamar Boulevard, including a completely new theater space that will serve as the main stage beginning in 2011. The campus project is also being partially funded with money from the city’s November 2006 bond election.

Specially designed for live theater productions, the new 500-seat Armstrong Family Auditorium will feature state-of-the-art technology and design elements.

Dickson’s donation will fund Zach’s Binning-Dickson Education Center.

“Zach Theatre is thrilled to have received these generous gifts from two of the city’s committed arts patrons, especially in these uncertain economic times,” says Michael Guerra, the theater’s chief development officer. “The planned addition of the Armstrong Family Auditorium and the increased support of Zach’s recognized education programs will not only help us stand out from other programs in Austin but also put us into a league with other outstanding theater centers around the country.”

The Taming of the Shrew, Baron's Men at the Curtain Theatre, October 17 - 25


This show was a lot of fun.

First, for the setting - - a Sunday afternoon in mild fall weather in Texas, in the park-like setting near the sweep of the river. The Curtain Theatre is a Globe-type construction with an Elizabethan thrust stage and gallery seating. The host, unfortunately, was absent, because he was visiting the international space station. Thanks to Richard Garriott for his generosity to Shakespeare and to Shakespearians!

Producer Pam Martin said that the house had held its full capacity of 130 spectators on Friday’s free night of theatre. We on Sunday afternoon were pleasantly sun-dazzled, but the night productions must be memorable. In the evenings flaming torches posted by the playing space provide illumination, although with some subtle assistance from modern electricity. For example, here are photos by Josh Baker from the company’s production of The Comedy of Errors.


The Baron’s Men pride themselves on sticking close to the Elizabethan tradition, playing the characters in broad and with bawdy. Given that affinity for things Elizabethan and the assertive image on the show poster, I had assumed that this would be completely masculine company, with Kate the shrew acted by a man with football player shoulders.

In fact, the opposite was the case. Gender changes in this show move in the opposite direction, with some very capable women taking men’s parts. The standout of those transformations was musician/singer/actor Jennifer Davis, serving up the musical prologue and entr’acte, as well as delivering a canny performance as Petruccio’s rascally servant Grumio.

In our days, for some the litmus test for The Taming of the Shrew is the decision taken by director and cast for the portrayal of Katherine, “plain Kate,/ And bonny Kate, and sometimes Kate the curst.” How malevolent is she? Can we justify the breaking of her spirit, if indeed it is broken? Is Petruccio indeed her unquestioned master?

The Baron’s Men and women under the direction of Jamey Coolie play it for straight comedy, with not too many worries about political correctness.

In that, they have the bounty of the larger-than-life Brian Martin as Petruccio and Katrina O’Keefe as Kate.

Martin with his big voice, confidence and rollicking presence is a capital Petruccio. He is “live” every minute on stage, alert to the action and smiling a crocodile’s grin at the discomfits of the other suitors. Here, we sense, is the man who’ll show the others how it’s done.


From her first spat with sister Bianca, this Katherine, comes across as more put upon and neglected, hungry for attention, than really curs’d. Her father Baptista dismisses her rather than cringing from her.

O’Keefe has the physical presence for a real harpy and she thoroughly intimidates other suitors. Above, she rolls over Hortensio, played by Aaron Niemuth with good diction and flurries of nervous defensive gestures.

Petruccio’s blandishments awaken in her a wonder that the man should pay such attention to her. We readily imagine her falling in love with him.


Her early bonding to Petruccio makes some of his later stunts less comic for us. When he denies her dinner or denounces the tailor for delivering, rather than a dress, “A knack, a toy, a trick, a baby's cap,” Kate’s reaction has more disappointment than flaming anger. Accordingly, there is not much tension in the final “wager” scene. Our amusement there comes more from the contrast between the characters -- the serene, fulfilled Kate, admonishing both the precious, spoiled Bianca and Hortensio’s rich widow/wife, who is a real shrew.

I generally bristle and get dismissive when someone compares a live theatre production to a film adaptation of the play, so let me apologize in advance. My only excuse is that Franco Zeffirelli's 1967 version of this play with Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor is printed in my brain.

In that adaptation and in many others, Lucentio the as-yet penniless scholar venturing to Padua is played as the romantic hero, a serious young fellow who wins the heart of Baptista's non-curs'd daughter, Bianca. Zeffirelli cast the slim, serious, Oxford-posh Michael York in that role, providing a complete contrast to Burton.

The Baron's Men and women stick instead to their concept of jolly farce and cast Casey Weed as Lucentio and Athena Peters as Bianca -- as happily clownish a pair of lovers as you might ever come across. Just in case you didn't get the message, check out their attire! Hortensio discovers them in the garden making puppy love, with licks included.They play that delicious mad mime, appropriately enough, on the front steps of the thrust stage.

The costumes in this production are gorgeous, replete with ruffles, bows, pleats, colors and flourishes. Petruccio alone has at least three full outfits, and every actor is beautifully kitted out.

For example, here are Michael O'Keefe as Baptista Minola the father and Jess Downs as servant Tranio pretending to be Lucentio.

And one last ghost of the Zeffirelli version: Aaron Niemuth recalls for me the great Victor Spinetti in that film. He doesn't have the glassy motionless panic of Spinetti's Hortensio, but he is consistently foolish and self-fooling, right down to his farcical departure with his untamed widow/wife holding him by the ear.

The Baron's Men recently achieved recognition and affiliation with the Austin Circle of Theatres, which probably brings them additional resources. They may now echo Petruccio,

And I have thrust my selfe into this maze,
Happily to wive and thrive, as best I may:
Crownes in my purse I have, and goods at home,
And so may come abroad to see the world.

So, ye world of Central Texas, the Baron's Men (and women) invite you abroad to their Globe. On their website they include a meticulous map and directions to guide you the Curtain Theatre. It's a short trip and well worth the very modest price of admission.

YouTube: pirated reproduction of Hortensio (Spinetti) persuading Petruccio (Burton) to woo Katherina Minola