Thursday, August 4, 2011

Arts Reporting: Robert Faires on the Lehrman Seminar on Crisis and Opportunity, July 28

An account of the Matt Lehrman seminar jointly sponsored by the Austin Creative Alliance and publicists Wyatt-Brand at the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican-American Cultural Center, July 28, published in the Austin Chronicle, August 4:


Crisis and Opportunity:


Do you know your audience?

by Robert Faires


Matt Lehman (image: Austin Creative Alliance)For the second session in its ongoing series Crisis & Opportunity, the Austin Creative Alliance made the shift from a wide-ranging community conversation (see "Crisis & Opportunity: An Open, Structured Dialogue," June 17) to what might have seemed to some to be just a standard workshop on marketing. But while the July 28 presentation by Matt Lehrman, executive director of Arizona's Alliance for Audience and ShowUp.com (an Arizona equivalent to the Austin Creative Alliance's NowPlayingAustin.com listings site), may indeed have had the most value for folks in the performing arts scoping out new strategies to build their audiences, it turned out to be valuable for anyone who cares about the state of creativity in our culture now and how people interact with it. Lehrman developed his seminar and soon-to-be book Audiences Everywhere! in response to Danny Newman's Subscribe Now!, the tome that sold most of the country's arts nonprofits on the idea that subscriptions were the key to their financial security and stability. That book was rightfully influential and still contains much information that's useful, Lehrman maintains, but it also came out the year that the Apple II computer and the space shuttle debuted. He asks whether our culture changed at all since then. If so, it's worth re-examining the way that audiences relate to cultural organizations.


His thesis rests on a division of audiences along x and y axes of interest in a specific organization's work (or the arts in general) and capacity to experience that work (based on time, money, physical ability, etc.). Those with the most interest and capacity – i.e., those who are already patrons and likely faithful ones, too – are the "devoted." Those with interest but less capacity are "oriented;" those with high capacity but little interest are "uninspired;" and those with low interest and low capacity are "asleep." Identifying and understanding the specifics of what engages people and what keeps them from being engaged with the arts will do more to help an artist or arts organization build an audience than catchall strategies like subscription drives or massive ad campaigns.

[photo: Austin Creative Alliance)

Read more at the Austin Chornicle on-line . . . .

Upcoming: Scriptworks Annual Meet & Greet, August 28

Received directly from

Scriptworks logo



(formerly Austin Script Works)

ScriptWorks Annual Meet & Greet


Sunday, August 28th 5:30-7:30pm
at The Vortex, 2307 Manor Rd. (click for map)
No admission charge!
Further info at 512.454.9727 or info@scriptworks.org

On SUNDAY, AUGUST 28th from 5:30-7:30pm ScriptWorks members and their families, as well as area playwrights, actors, directors, designers, technicians, and those interested in finding out more about ScriptWorks are invited to the 14th Annual Meet & Greet at the Vortex, 2307 Manor Rd. This is ScriptWorks’ annual party to kick off the new year, welcome new members, swap summer triumphs and tribulations, and get informed on how ScriptWorks can help you in the coming year. The event is FREE and open to all. ScriptWorks will provide libations and attendees are invited to bring their favorite finger food to the potluck. This party has no narrative through-line and no inciting incident, so drop by anytime and rub elbows and egos with the local bards.

ABOUT SCRIPTWORKS ScriptWorks is a playwright driven organization that seeks to promote the craft of dramatic writing and to protect the playwright's integrity by encouraging playwright initiative and harnessing collective potential. ScriptWorks is funded in part by the City of Austin through the Cultural Arts Division and by a grant from the Texas Commission on the Arts, and by individual donors.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Open Auditions for Men, ages 20 - 40, for 1940s Radio Program, Southwestern University, August 25

Received directly from Dr. Rick Roemer:


Sarofim Center Southwestern University



1940s Radio Program (www.sunnyvaleplayers.org)Auditions for MEN only for Walton Jones 1940s Radio Hour, directed by Rick Roemer. MEN, ages 20-40, please prepare one song from the 1940s era. This does not have to be a song from a musical, but rather from the top popular hits of the time. Accompanist provided.

Date: Tuesday, August 23, 7 p.m. – 9 p.m.

Jones Theater in the Sarofim School of Fine Arts on the campus of Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas

Callbacks will be on Wednesday, August 24 at 7pm.

For more information and to schedule an audition appointment, please contact Alexis Gette at gette2@southwestern.edu or 972-948-6766. A PDF of the script is also available.

Rehearsals begin October 3. There will be no rehearsals October 8-12. The production opens November 16 and runs through November 20.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Upcoming: For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow is Enuff by Ntozake Shange, August 25 - September 10

Received directly:


UpRise! Productions and VORTEX Repertory Company

presentFor Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf

For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf

by Ntozake Shange

directed by Zell Miller, III

August 25 – September 10, 2011 8 pm Thursdays-Saturdays, 3 Weeks only!



Advance Reservations Recommended. Limited seating.Friday nights after the show: Talkback sessions with Zell!

VORTEX Repertory, 2307 Manor Rd. Austin (click for map) Free Parking. Bus Route.

The Butterfly Bar @ The VORTEX – 5pm – Midnight (beer, wine, savory snacks, and desserts)

Tickets: $30 - $10: $30-$25 Priority Seating, $20-$15 General Admission, $10 Starving Artists and Students

Thursdays 2-for-1 admission with donation of 2 non-perishable food items for SafePlace Pantry.

Available at www.vortexrep.org or call 512-478-5282.



UpRise! Productions and VORTEX Repertory Company present a vibrant new production of Ntozake Shange’s award-winning play, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf , opening Thursday, August 25 at 8 pm. Talkback sessions with the director, Zell Miller, III, will be held on Friday nights after the show.

This salute to contemporary women warriors is a choreopoem that changed the face of American Theatre when it premiered in the 1970’s. It went onto inspire a new genre of theatre artist and later inspired a hit film (2010).

For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf
is directed by award-winning theatre artist Zell Miller, III. Choreography by Ananda Mayi Moss and Sadé Jones.

The stellar cast features Whitney Weathersby, Sadé Jones, Chelsea Manasseri, Patricia Robinson, Ebony Stewart, Minerva Villa, and Chandra Washington.

For tickets and more information www.vortexrep.org


Upcoming: Rapunzel, Scottish Rite Children's Theatre, August 27 - October 2

Received directly:

Scottish Rite Children's Theatre

presentsRapunzel Scottish Rite Children's Theatre Austin Texas

Rapunzel


adapted and written by D.H. Thompson

directed by Adriene Mishler

August 27-October 2
Saturdays: 10:00 AM and Sundays: 2:00 PM
Scottish Rite Theatre, 207 West 18th at Lavaca (click for map)

$8 Children (ages 1-12) • Adults • $4 Babies under 1 year
Purchase online: srct.org or by phone: 512-472-5436
Buy tickets at Box Office: 207 West 18th Street (Monday-Friday, Noon - 4:00 PM)

Princess Rapunzel flees into the woods to escape her over-zealous suitor, Prince Francis and stumbles upon an old witch’s garden filled with yummy vegetables. Hungry, Rapunzel devours the veggies and discovers they are magical–with age reversing powers! Furious, the witch demands Rapunzel long golden hair as payback and snips off a lock, only to find the tresses are now magical too! Meanwhile, back at the castle, Francis’s long-lost, identical twin – Prince Ronald – has returned from traveling the world in search of true love. See how the story unfurls in this interactive variation of the classic Grimm’s fairytale for ages 4-10.

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Auditions forA Midsummer Night's Dream, Playhouse Smithville, August 6

Received directly:

Playhouse Smithville






Auditions for A Midsummer Night's Dream are scheduled for August 6, 2011, 2pm at Playhouse Smithville. Rehearsals will run from August 8th to September 8th with performances September 9-24, 7:30pm. No prepared piece is necessary. Come ready to move and make noise, roll on the floor and shout to the ceiling! No previous experience necessary, all experiences appreciated. This show is about fantasy, love and fun. Auditions held at the Playhouse, 110 Main Street, Smithville, TX. Call 512-360-7397 or visit www.playhousesmithville.com for more info.

Playhouse Smithville
110 Main Street
Smithville, TX 78957
512-360-7397
www.playhousesmithville.com

Urinetown, the musical, SummerStock Austin at the Rollins Theatre, July 28 - August 7


by Brian Paul Scipione


You’re In It Now: Stepping Gingerly into Urinetown: The Musical


Two minutes into the opening number of Urinetown, I felt my heart give a quiet groan: was I really about to witness two straight hours of potty humor? There must have been at least twenty different sweetly sung references to micturition in the first two minutes alone and with "p" being such an easy letter to rhyme, it could go on as long as rest-stop after a four hour car ride.....

Fortunately, this was far from the case. Lyricists Mark Hollmann (who also wrote the music) and Greg Kotis seemed to void themselves on the subject promptly. The plot takes over, rapidly revealed by a narrator who steps out of the story to make sardonic remarks about the play’s aImagection and about the genre of musical theatre. One hardly has time to worry about the plot, for the musical numbers are at the forefront and they frolic and twist through various genres and moods with the playfulness of a child choosing records by the covers alone.

Urinetown is a Tony-award-winning musical that debuted on Broadway in 2001. Its odd title, subject matter, and blatant, yet tongue in check, anti-musical commentary caused the creators some trouble in finding it a home. They succeeded in placing it the New York International Fringe Festival.

[image: Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts]

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .