Showing posts with label Flux Out and About. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flux Out and About. Show all posts
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Out and About, 2/10

Thursday, February 4, 2010 3 comments

(Photo: Jonathan Slaff. Pictured: The cast of Rue from 2006)
While we prepare for our next Food:Soul, Fluxers and friends are out and about in full force this February.

Candice Holdorf is playing principle role Terri Succi in the upcoming film, An Affirmative Act.

Michael Davis has founded his own company (thankfully, he's still in ours!) called Eurisko Performance Group. Learn more here, and then fan them there.

Ken Glickfeld is appearing in Demon Bitch Goddess (that's right!) at Workshop Theater Company.

Crystal Skillman has a reading of her play The Sleeping World (developed at Flux Sundays!) at the Woodshed Collective on Monday, February 22nd.

Mary Fengar Gael has a reading of her play Beggar At The Feast (also Fluxed!) at Reverie Productions on Sunday, February 28th.

Andrew Valins is reprising his performance as Rotpeter in his adaptation of Kafka's A Report to an Academy on February 10th and 11th.

And two of our Flux founding plays are being read - Rue (2006), pictured above, will be read at Direct Arts as part of their Take Two series on Tuesday, February 9th. Hopefully, we'll see you there for a nostalgic trip back to the island.

And for our Philly friends, Riding the Bull (2005 & 2007) will be read at the Walnut Street Theater Rehearsal Hall 4 tomorrow at 7:30PM. For those who can't be there, I give you the brilliant poster they've cooked up:

See you out and about in February! Fluxers and friends, what must see events did I miss? Read the full story

Out and About, Early December

Wednesday, December 9, 2009 0 comments

When your play closes
the job transposes
to seeing other folks showses
(everyone knows this)
So, here we goeses!*

-Ken Glickfeld's in Israel Horovitz's Scrooge and Marley at Barefoot Theatre Company.

-Conni's Avant Garde Restaurant returns to the Bushwick Starr December 18th, 19th and 20th (and have you read her must-read post about restaurants and theatre?)

-Sound Designer Asa Wember has a new project, 13P's production of Julia Jarcho's American Treasure, closing this weekend so get on it!

-The Production Company got a huge thumbs up from trusted theatre-goer Sean Williams for their production of Meg's New Friend by Blair Singer, now through December 20th.

-Heidi Handelsman directs Erin Mallon in Brilliant Traces (no doubt, brilliantly)

-Michael Swartz and Zack Calhoon star in the Christmas WWI play, In The Fields Where They Lay. I've heard rumor that Michael will be singing, which is not something you want to miss.

-The Flea's production of The Great Recession features The Bats AND those playwrights who sit at The Cool Table. They might just let you sit with them...but you'll have to see the show.

-The ever daring folks at Working Man's Clothes are staging Chisa Hutchinson's She Likes Girls

-And it wouldn't be an Out and About without something inventively playful festival at The Brick: Fight Fest looks fierce, and features pals from Piper McKenzie doing Craven Monkey and the Mountain of Fury. Now that's a mugful of eggnog for you.

So what did I miss? What are you excited to see in between shopping?
*Sorry for that
Read the full story

Out and About, Late October

Friday, October 23, 2009 0 comments

Blogging from rehearsal so I'm rushed and sure to miss many worthy shout-outs, but we must start with a reading featuring Flux Member Jake Alexander and a bunch of Flux friends:

PROMISED LAND
by Cynthia Kraman Genser
Directed by Heidi Handelsman
Produced by Ali Skye Bennet and Mark Sportiello
Featuring Jake Alexander, Ali Skye Bennet, David Carson*, Zonya Love Johnson*, Warren Katz, Toya Lillard, Megan McGowan, Celia Mei Rubin*, Jane Lincoln Taylor*, and Rob Yang*
Sunday, Oct. 25th and Monday Oct. 26th @ 7pm
The Algonquin Theater
123 E. 24th St between Park & Lex
Running time: 1 hour
Seating is extremely limited!!! RSVPs are required. Email Promised.Land.Reading@gmail.com to reserve seats.

And make SURE you have your tickets for The Blood Brothers Present...The New Guignol, featuring Flux Member Cotton Wright and loads of people Flux loves.

The dynamic duo of Amanda Feldman and Jennifer Conley Darling have united to produce Blackouts, and tomorrow night is the last to see it (sorry for the tardy SO).

Whose house? bauhaus the bauhaus. I'm really looking forward to catching Nerve Tank's new play that features Modernism! Utopia! Architecture! Sit-upons! You had me at Utopia.

Don't forget about Electric Pear's new joint, Balaton. I'd love to see the Pearl strut their stuff in their new space in The Playboy of the Western World.

Coming up in the near future, CollaborationTown made the savvy choice of asking Scott Ebersold to direct Children at Play, featuring Susan Louise O'Connor. Scott has done amazing work on everything I've seen him do, so I really hoping I'll be able to see this. And Flux friend Frederique Nahmani is doing my second favorite Tom Stoppard play, The Real Thing. (Can you guess my favorite? A Scrintle plush doll to the winning guess!)

BUT...my greatest personal stokitude is for the Women's Project production of Liz Duffy Adam's Or,. Liz's play Dog Act is one of my all time favorites, and her new play looks at the life of playwright Aphra Behn. And, to quote their website, "While war rages and Aphra and her friends celebrate free love, cross-dressing and pastoral lyricism, the 1660s start to look a lot like the 1960s." So it even fits with our The Lesser Seductions of History (and what's 300 years between friends?)

What did I miss? What would you recommend? Read the full story

Out and About, Early October

Thursday, October 1, 2009 3 comments

Flux is about to be slammed by rehearsals beginning for The Lesser Seductions of History, so now is the time for us to get in our shout-outs for all the other great shows happening in (holy smokes it's) October.

The Dark Heart Of Meteorology features the sound design of our own IT-Award winning Asa Wember, Martin Denton gave it a glowing review, and the plot sounds intriguing.

Mahida's Extra Key To Heaven continues it's run at Heather's Epic Theatre Ensemble after landing strong reviews from Leonard Jacobs and David Cote. Heather's got a sweet deal for friends of Flux - read about it here.

Our TLSOH lighting designer Lauren Parrish built the set and did lights (yipes) for the New York Neo-Futurists new joint at the Ontological, Laika Dog In Space. Fun to say, no doubt fun to see.

Phoenix Theatre Ensemble is doing a Tennessee Williams staged reading series, and the amazing Kelli Holsopple (remember how good she was in our Poetic Larceny?) is in Suddenly Last Summer, but only for 3 nights! Check it.

Electric Pear's production of Ashlin Halfnight's Artifacts of Consequence was great - now they're back with his latest play, Balaton. The only downside? No PL115 co-production, so no amazing Rebecca Lingafelter...

Rapidly replacing Law and Order as the thing all NYC theatre artists must inevitably do, Sticky is returning to the Bowery and Matthew Murumba is in it! 'Nuff said.

Hopefully we'll do one of these mid-October, but let me just also say congratulations to Nosedive and The Blood Brothers for being featured in the October issue of American Theatre magazine - one more reason to circle those dates on your calendar in advance (Cotton Wright! Ryan Andes! James Comtois! Mac Rogers! Pete Boisvert! All stars, people, all stars).

What did I miss? What else is going on worth seeing? Read the full story

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Out and About, September 09

Tuesday, September 1, 2009 2 comments


So much to see, and do!


How many Flux friendly playwrights can you fit into one event? How about ForePlay vets Andrea Thome, Mac Rogers, James Comtois, Jeff Lewonczyk, and Crystal Skillman; then throw in a Pretty Theft Adam Szymkowicz and stir in some Lesser Seductions me? That's just what you'll be getting at Shstrng Prodctns' upcoming One-Minute Play Festival at HERE Arts Center. We're all bringing some new shorties - mine is called Kisses And Other Natural Disasters.

Speaking of Mac, if you haven't already, please make time togo see Gideon's production of Mac Roger's Viral, which has now extended it's run as part of the Fringe Encore series. Isaiah and I saw this one together and were both blown away (as you may have already heard me say once or twenty-twice).

Speaking of Fringe extensions, I am super psyched that Piper McKenzie's Willy-Nilly has been extended, having missed it the first time round. It's a more unusual take at the madness of the late 60's that we'll be chronicling ourselves in November, so hurrah for extensions and I hope to see you there.

Director Pete Boisvert (who dazzled the Have Another crowd with his work on Opaline) has a new production going up called The Brokenhearteds, which is what I assume I'll be if I miss it.

Director Isaac Butler tackles the newest piece from The Management, MilkMilkLemonade. Read a good interview with playwright Josh Conkel at Adam's blog here.

What else is coming up that you would recommend? Did you see any of the shows from our last Out and About, and if so, what did you think? Post away... Read the full story

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Out and About, The Fringe Edition

Tuesday, August 18, 2009 4 comments

Just when I'm ready to post about the Fringe it feels like it's halfway finished! BUT my tardy post is no excuse for missing the following Flux-infused Fringe offerings:

Member Cotton Wright (Pretty Theft, Angel Eaters, Rue) is appearing in a musical called Gutter Star, The Paperback Musical. If you've never heard Cotton sing, remedy that now.

Member Isaiah Tanenbaum (Angel Eaters, Midsummer, Life Is A Dream) is appearing in The Secret Of Our Souls - A Kabalistic Love Story. It features some beautiful voices and a bear mauling two Cossacks. What more do you need?

Flux friend Amy Lynn Stewart (Rattlers) is teaming up with Exploding Moments (Infectious Opportunity) vet Rebecca Comtois in Mac Rogers' (Imagination Compact, Poetic Larceny) Viral, a play that I am SO EXCITED to see that I must egregiously use CAPS to describe my excitement. Trusted reviewer Patrick Lee has already given it a rave here, so this one feels like a must see.

Flux bud Todd d'Amour (Pretty Theft) is in the intriguing sounding Ether Steeds, which has already scored a sweet review from likewise trusted reviewer Aaron Riccio, so add this one to the list.

Flux vet Zack Robidas (8 Little Antichrists, Pretty Theft) is a producer for At Play's Al's Business Cards, running through August 22nd and recipient of a great review from the Times.

The playwright master of Flux ForePlays Jeff Lewonczyk (Imagination Compact, Poetic Larceny) turns director for Trav S.D.'s Willy Nilly, a musical exploitation of the cult murders of the psychedelic era. Yes, please.

Carissa "non-stop play machine" Cordes is in an all-female production of Jen Genet's Deathwatch in a translation by Obie Winner David Rudkin. It's killing me that my schedule is making me miss this one (sorry).

Did we mention that time is running out to see Lynn Kenny (Pretty Theft) play freakin' Medea in a modern adaptation called Maddy? I'll be seeing this Friday night - hope to see you there!

THE MAJORLEANS are playing: this Thursday at 9PM at the Sidewalk Cafe on 6th Street and Avenue A. Select Majorleaners rocked out our ITBA acceptance video and our last Food:Soul party, so show some reciprocal love to this great band.

Michael Swartz (Midsummer) is showing off more of his classical chops in the ATA's Iphigenia In Tauris at the end of August, if you're hungry for more Flux friends post-Fringe.

Speaking of, fellow NET company Hand2Mouth is traveling from Portland, OR to play at The Ontological-Hysteric Incubator from8/27 to 9/5. We met the creator of Undine Faith Helma at the NET Summit and she is awesome, so be sure to check it out.

Damn, I'm just tired writing all that. Imagine how exhausted and satisfied you'll be after you see all of it.

Anything I missed? Anything you'd recommend? Mauled by any bears? Read the full story

Out and About

Sunday, August 2, 2009 0 comments

Today at 8PM is your last chance to see Founding Member Candice Holdorf in the excellent Never/Cracked.

It's also your last chance to see Flux friend Carissa Cordes in Hamlet.

And then next week, Lynn Kenny from Pretty Theft plays Medea (yikes!) in a modern adaptation called Maddy - be sure to check it out.

Also next week, Flux friend Connie's Avant Garde Restaurant plays the Ice Factory - if you haven't been to this amazing (and delicious event) ((and even if you have)) - go now.

And also also next week, Rising Phoenix Rep opens Daniel Talbott's Slipping - Heather and I saw a recent preview and it was really lovely work (and includes an unsettling must-see performance by Adam Driver) - make sure you see it before it closes August 15th.

Then it's FRINGE TIME...but that's a big thing and really a whole different entry.

What did I miss? What would YOU recommend?

See you at the theatre! Read the full story

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Out and About, III

Saturday, July 11, 2009 0 comments

MONDAY, BUSY MONDAY:
This coming Monday, for those of you who aren't going to the opening of this, and aren't participating in the next workshop of this, you should check out Zack Robidas' company At Play Production's next installment of their 24 hour play festival. Zack was Jeremy in 8 Little Antichrists and Bobby in Pretty Theft, so if you saw those, you know anything he's working on is worth seeing.

Also, our friends in Bird House just got a crazy good review - check it here. And any plugging post would be remiss without a reminder of Nosedive's Infectious Opportunity extension.

Those looking for summer Shakespeare may went to check out Flux Sunday regular Drew Valins in Drilling Company's A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Carissa Cordes in Hudson Warehouse's Hamlet.

And have you bought your tickets for the New York Innovative Theatre Awards party yet? It's a great opportunity to support an organization that does so much for Indie theatre - hope to see you there!

Anything I missed that's worth seeing? Post in the comments, please!
Link Read the full story

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Out and About, II

Thursday, July 2, 2009 3 comments


FLUXERS, OUT AND ABOUT

Lots to see and do while you wait for our next Have Another, or recover from it!

This week, check out my short play America, or God Shed His Grace On Thee at the U.S-ification of America Conference at Center Stage - I'm on the Thursday/Saturday 'Stripes' program. This event also features plays by Flux friends John Hurley and Nick Monroy, and a host of buds from Impetuous Theater Group. I'll be there tonight - see you there?

Opening next week is the long awaited Bird House, press photo above featuring Flux Members Christina Shipp and Cotton Wright (photo by Marcus Woolen). The play is written and directed by Flux friends Kate Marks and Heidi Handelsman respectively, and also features Flux friend Anthony Wills Jr. It's a can't miss!

Opening the week after is NeverCracked, a double bill of plays featuring Flux Member Candice Holdorf, presented by our friends at The Intentional Theatre Group at MITF. Check it!

And opening and closing next week is She Of The Voice, a Thinking Person's Theatre production at The Underground Zero Festival at ps122, featuring the work of Flux collaborators Becky Kelly (Rattlers, Pretty Theft) and Rebecca Marzalek-Kelly (Rue, Riding the Bull). That's right, two Becky Kellys working on the same project - look out. (also,

Any other Flux friends doing stuff we should know about? Post below! Read the full story

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Fluxers Out and About

Friday, June 5, 2009 0 comments

(Photo: Justin Hoch. Pictured: Tiffany Clementi, Gregory Waller)

Just because Flux itself doesn't have anything cooking in June, doesn't mean our Members and friends aren't busy.

This Sunday the 7th and 7PM, check out Core Member Tiffany Clementi at the 48 hr Film Festival. There is a judges vote and an audience vote, and she needs your vote, as the 10 best films will be screened at the Cannes Festival. Click here to purchase your $10 tickets - her team's name is Goose & Bunny. And click here to learn more about the event.

That very same day, support Pretty Theft director and Member Angela Astle's next production by attending this cool event at 4PM.

Have you got your tix for the Brick Theatre's Anti-Depressant festival yet? We're excited for this, this, and this. Of course, your safest bet is to see them all. Read the full story

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Michael Davis--Thawed for Your Pleasure

Friday, April 11, 2008 0 comments

Michael Davis in Flux's Life is a Dream

I know Associate Member Michael Davis as a fine actor and a wonderful friend, but tonight I had the chance to see him as a director for the new musical comedy Chuck and Ginger Babcock are Thawed for Your Pleasure. The evening features a "famous" duet team (the aforementioned Chuck and Ginger) who were cryogenically frozen in the '60's as part of a sponsored publicity stunt experiment by "Lucky Stiff" Cigarettes. With the advent of cancer and the decline of the cigarette industry, the duet had to be unfrozen prematurely (due to lack of funding) and now, once again, they grace the stage to bring us the songs of the "Rat Pack" era.

This little gem of a musical is a lovely valentine to the gorgeous standards of yester-year---and yet these two performers (Michael Leedy and Melissa Cruz) bring an honest and immediate voice to these tunes. They proceed to tell us the history of their meeting, marriage and hardships, all through these wonderful songs. And the musical direction and composition of Aya Kato (who also plays Chie, the piano player) is something jazz fans don't want to miss--she is hilarious and wonderful!

As for Mike D, I had no idea he was a man of this many talents! The direction is almost effortless, as the singing duo move comically from one hit to the next--all while hitting every note. The pace is fun and fast and the timing is sharp and right on the spot. The show only runs two more nights: Saturday, April 12 at 10pm and Sunday, April 13 at 8pm at the Sage Theatre in Midtown, so hurry fast, before this little play goes back to the freezer! Read the full story

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Something You Did, Primary Stages

Tuesday, April 1, 2008 0 comments

On Friday the 21st I had the opportunity to see a preview Something You Did at Primary Stages, opening tonight. Without offering a review, there were several strong performances, and many good reasons to check out this play about the political wound of the 60's and our difficulty in solving or salving that wound even now.

I recently read that if McCain is not elected president, it is very likely that American will never have a Vietnam War veteran as president. Considering the number of World War II presidents (Kennedy, Bush I, Eisenhower, Ford, Nixon, even Johnson had a Silver Star) World War I presidents (Truman, Roosevelt didn't serve directly but was Asst Secretary of the Navy in WWI), Teddy from the Spanish-American War, the five Civil War vet-presidents (McKinley, Harrison, Garfield, Hayes, Grant) and so on (31 out of 42 I believe have served), I wonder at the reason we have yet to see a Vietnam vet as president; especially considering that the Vietnam War lasted longer than any other (close to 8 years).

Without attempting a social/historical analysis that I am woefully under informed to undertake; it seems that Vietnam remains an open wound for our country. The reality that so many Americans can have such passionately different views about the morality of that war and its execution; and that those opinions seem so often to divide down a very specific political-social outlook (conservative/liberal); and that in the 2004 election it often felt like we were debating Vietnam instead of Iraq; all of this leads me to believe that this war, and the activism and social change that surrounded it, make the 1960's more responsible for how we define our country and ourselves than any other decade in memory.

These were some of the thoughts I was wrestling with as I left the theatre from Something You Did, though its focus is primarily on 60's leftist radicalism, and to a lesser extent, the conservative backlash. And through that prism, the play explores questions of guilt, violent protest, forgiveness, and most successfully, small but vital acts of human kindness. But I thought of the passion of political protest in those years, and contrasted it with today; and thought about the value and cost of the kind of generational change so severe that the divide scars not only the participants but their children as well; and wanted to write about it; which is one of the best things I can ever feel, leaving a theatre. Read the full story

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Only two more weekends left to see Christina Shipp in "Winter's Tale"!!!

Friday, March 28, 2008 0 comments


I was lucky enough to catch my friend (and Associate Member of Flux) Christina Shipp as Perdita in The American Globe Theatre's The Winter's Tale a few weeks ago. This is one of Shakespeare's most beautifully written, yet enigmatic plays, shifting from desperate tragedy to pastoral comedy in the blink of a bear. As Perdita, Christina is ebullient, fresh and effervescent--you can see why everyone falls in love with her.

The show runs Thursdays-Saturdays at 8pm and Sundays at 2pm through April 5. Read the full story

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Racism in the United States: Seeing Things Not Just in Black and White











I am sorry to say that I am blogging about two shows that have already closed, but at least if you see a theatre presenting of one these, you'll know to check them out for yourself. A few weeks ago, I caught the LAByrinth Theater Company's production of Brett C. Leonard's Unconditional, which ran at the Public Theater through March 9, and The Barrow Group's production of John Ahlin's Gray Area, featuring the comedic talents of one of the stars of Flux's Riding the Bull, Will Ditterline.
The former focuses on the lives of 9 New Yorkers as they struggle with biracial couplings, loneliness, betrayal and revenge in contemporary New York City. The play starts with quite a bang, languishing in several agonizing minutes as we watch a lynching victim, standing on chair, noose around neck, bound and gagged, beg for his life as his torturer enjoys a smoke and a whiskey while circling his prey. Finally the proverbial chair is kicked from under the man and thus commences a patchwork of scenes, à la Crash which features the lives of various scumbags, lowlifes and gangsters interwoven with one or two characters of relative honesty--showing that racism and prejudice exist not only within the white culture, but within black and Hispanic cultures as well. Overall, I was drawn to the characters with some real vitality and complexity, especially Elizabeth Rodriguez's Jessica and Trevor Long's Daniel (the two have a somewhat absurd and touching scene where they connect late at night via telephone through an online dating service). While the rest of the cast does their best to bring to life these characters, many of them were not as fully fleshed out as I would have liked and a few were, I felt, somewhat miscast. On the plus side, I was completely drawn in by Mark Wing-Davey's direction and Mark Wendland's scenic design, with it's sliding doors and screens, offering us a murky view of who these people really were, as well as providing a sense of why we choose to stay within locked views of race, sex, marriage and loyalty. Mr. Leonard is a promising playwright and I look forward to what he and the LAByrinth have to offer next.
And now for something completely different, we have John Ahlin's Gray Area, which ran at the Barrow Group through March 16. This was a sharp and hilarious deconstruction of race relations as played through a game of Confederate vs. Union wits. A retiring NY theatre critic, known for his ruthless opinions and arrogance, makes a crack at the expense of Civil War reenactors. When a group of proudly Confederate reenactors read this in the paper, the leader of the group (playwright John Ahlin) decides that the best revenge is to kidnap the man from his comfortable Northeast home and bring him south of the Mason Dixon to teach him a lesson in war camp life. What ensues is a study of century old prejudices turned on their head (the first being that Southerners are stupid, backward, racist, trailer trash) and ends in intelligent battles, such as a vocabulary bee, Civil War trivia, debates and theoretical musings, such as what it would be like to be saved by the super heroine, Eve of All Battles. Will Ditterline is wonderfully on point in every moment as the sweet (but somewhat slow to catch the point) Horse. In fact, the entire cast creates a wonderful ensemble and the set, complete with forest and dirt, really captures the essence of backwoods Mississippi (or was it Alabama--or Georgia--gotta check out the play to know for sure!!!).
Both plays had some great ideas to offer and forced me to take a look at my role at perpetuating unfounded prejudices in my society. And that is why I believe in the necessity of theatre--so we can have a civil and peaceful forum to examine the ugliness within our culture and hopefully emerge having discovered a bit more beauty.

Read the full story

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The Lifeblood, Phoenix Theatre Ensemble

Thursday, March 13, 2008 0 comments

I was especially excited to see Phoenix Theatre Ensemble's production of The Lifeblood because:

A. They are a true Ensemble company, with several members having worked together over decades.
B. The play is written by Glyn Maxwell, a poet, in heightened language.
C. The play deals with the trial of Mary Stuart, in that endlessly interesting time of English history.

So off Ensemble-headed, verse-nerd, Elizabethan geek me went to see my first show at the Phoenix, accompanied by marvelous Midsummer dramaturg, Ingrid Nordstrom. Once there, we bumped into friendly actor types like Kelli Holsopple, Amy Fitts and Tony Moore; confirming that Phoenix attracts good people.

The show itself was fascinating, with Phoenix founder Elise Stone carrying the show through her quick witted and open hearted portrayal of Mary Stuart. Also strong were fellow founder Craig Smith as the eternally loathsome Walsingham and Jason O'Connell as Sir Thomas Gorge, his ambivalent ally in Mary's destruction. The play is at its strongest when Mary, through sheer force of will and sheen of wit is able to pry Gorge's allegiance away from Walsingham; though history is the stronger persuader and Gorge follows through with its dread command.

When Maxwell's nimble verse is batted back and forth by these able players, the play is at its strongest. When the story approaches the trial, however, Maxwell's play falters, perhaps because we already know the outcome; or perhaps because Maxwell so clearly makes Mary a pure-hearted martyr, and Walsingham, such an irredeemable villain. Moral and historical clarity (even if justified) here rob the drama of its texture and tension. The scenes that follow after, where those responsible for Mary's death grapple with their guilt, also lacks the fire of the earlier scenes.

But that is a small textual quibble for a very enjoyable evening of theatre. Throughout the play, the Ensemble performs with the passion and connection that I hope such long term collaborations can create. My verse-nerd self was well sated, my Eliabethan-geek left happily quibbling, but my Ensemble-headed self left the play happiest of all. Read the full story

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Liberty City, New York Theatre Workshop

Thursday, March 6, 2008 0 comments

Rattler's actor and friend Richard Watson and I took in Liberty City at New York Theatre Workshop on a Thursday or so ago, and I have been wanting to blog about it ever since. Thankfully, Aaron Riccio has said many of the wonderful things I'd like to say here. It is a lovely and hard play about the decay of a community through the prism of a fascinating family, and you should see it.

What I can add is my ongoing wonder at the mystery of possession: that rare moment in a theatre where you so accept the reality of the actor-in-character that there is no distance between them. This is something more than suspension of disbelief, something grander than just good or even great acting; and while a strong plot is often the engine for revealing this possession, something else is at work. It is as if, for a moment, the rule of one body per life are suspended, and you see the miracle of metamorphosis before your eyes. When April Yvette Thompson plays the character of her father, that shape-soul-shift happens, and it is made all the more shocking because she is a young woman, and her father, allegedly one character of many.

This was especially neat, because before we went into the theatre, Richard talked about wanting to put the role of Everett (his role in Johnna Adam's Rattlers) on like a suit and walk through the city wearing him. For those readers who were at the Flux Sunday where he read Everett for the first time, you will remember this itself was the beginning of a possession. I look forward to seeing it through. Read the full story

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The Authentic Within Inauthentic Authenticity

Wednesday, February 27, 2008 1 comments



Hypocrisy is a fashionable vice, and all fashionable vices pass for virtue --Molière

I know many of you who read this blog have been wondering, “Where are all the foxy females that are legendary to Flux?” I mean, we’ve all read entries from those irresistible studmuffins Jason, Joe, Gus and (sigh) Isaiah, but I think it’s time we had un peu de pouvoir aux femmes in this blog. Alors, voilá: Sassy-c! This past Friday, I experienced The National Theatre of the United States of America’s version of Molière’s Don Juan—“a production so authentic that it rivals in authenticity Molière’s own 1665 production at the Palais-Royal in Paris.” Right...perhaps it was the two-foot plastic swords, the 75-minute running time, or Mozart’s (née 1756) Requiem Mass that made me question that claim.

But no matter—this is exactly the point the NTUSA wants to make. In their curtain speech, they reference this claim of “authenticity” and justify it by saying that the costumes are made with “authentic fabric”, the lines are spoken by “actual actors” and they say the words “exactly as they are written on the page.” And it’s this sort of tongue-in-cheek “F-you” to theatrical convention that defines the artistic statement of the piece.

We begin the show with a rousing musical number introducing the cast, each brandishing a golden phallus as they circle around us, the audience, who must swivel on our centrally-placed stools in order to take in all the entertainment. We then meet Don Juan, played by NTUSA member, Yehuda Duenyas, and follow his lusty tale of hedonism and vice in devotedly Catholic Sicily. Don Juan has the unfortunate penchant for luring young girls from their paths of honest maidenhood with promises of marriage, only to leave them in the cold when he tires of them. His latest “conquest”, Doña Elvira (played by Aimee McCormick Ford), left the convent to follow Don Juan and is now chasing him, begging him to profess his love for her (or at the very least, be man enough to own up to the wrongs that he has done). He, of course, callously tosses her off and sets sail with his unwilling servant, Sganarelle (Jesse Hawley), in search of more escapades. Along the way, he proposes marriage to local peasant girls and continues to flee in disguise from jealous husbands and vengeful brothers. It’s at this point that we see what may be Don Juan’s only selfless act in the whole piece: he aids a man who is being attacked by three robbers. The man he helps turns out to be one of Doña Elvira’s brothers, and when he discovers Don Juan’s identity, he lets him go free as it is the “honorable” thing to do.

We then move on to a tomb, where Don Juan jestingly invites the statue of a dead commander (a man he has slain) to dinner, who forebodingly accepts. Despite the warnings of Sganarelle, Doña Elvira and even Don Juan’s father, our shallow protagonist continues to live his life only to satisfy his selfish needs. As the play progresses, we see more and more that if Don Juan does not turn from his chosen path, he will only come to know damnation and suffering. At one point, Don Juan seemingly converts to the life of a monastic and renounces his sins, but we soon discover he is using the church as a disguise to continue his wicked ways. In the end, the dead commander invites Don Juan back to his tomb for another meal, but is instead swallowed up in the great fiery maw of hell. The final moment features a lonely Sganarelle, eerily lit by a single candle, crying in fear, not of the sudden loss of his master, but of the sudden loss of his wages.

If this production succeeds in one thing, it is to highlight the topical theme of religious and social hypocrisy prevalent not only in our time, but throughout the ages. None are exempt from scrutiny, as the valets, the peasants, the bourgeois, even Don Juan’s “victims” all display characteristics of a distasteful nature…it is just that Don Juan has learned how to attractively construe his vice into a “fashionable virtue”. Molière was a keen satirist and the fact that this production maintains a faithfulness to Molière’s social criticism makes it more authentic than 17th century fabric and impeccable French pronunciation. And how authentic a piece was Molière intending to create? His play was produced in French 1665; a Castellano version was produced 30 years earlier in Spain and the original Don Juan is an Italian legend (Don Giovanni) based on a 14th Century fictional libertine. In the end, it’s not facsimile that creates “authentic” theatre—it’s the ability to move with the flux (ha-ha) of the times and still create art that speaks to someone.

As for this performance, director Jonathan Jacobs demands a lot from his audience as we are squeezed onto tiny (and sometimes painful) stools and are kept on our toes as the staging swirls around us. However, the high energy cast keeps the pace brisk, and the incredible sound design by Jody Elff (one of the highlights of the show), lighting by Katie Ruben and scene construction team took me to convents, forests, echoing tombs and lavish love pads, all with a simple 90 degree turn on my stool. Mr. Duenyas as Don Juan certainly has stage presence and looks as if he was ripped from orgies featured in Abercrombie ads. And Jesse Hawley as Sganarelle has her moments of comedic flair. In truth, I liked the idea of casting a somewhat androgynous Don Juan and a female Sganarelle, as this could have provided an opportunity to display how seductive a beast Don Juan can be, to men and women alike. However, this production did not really see this idea through. The moments that spoke most to me were when it seemed like Don Juan might almost be swayed to see how his hypocritical actions were hurting those around him. This was portrayed honestly by Ryan Bronz as Don Carlos, brother to Doña Elvira, who seeks out Don Juan to kill him, but will not break the code of honor when his enemy saves his life. Matt Kalman as Don Luis, Don Juan’s father, also gives a stirring performance as he begs his only son to change his ways, then violently rips away his patronage when he sees that he is not reaching his selfish boy.

There is much to offer in “shock value” in this piece, including the aforementioned golden phalli, bare-bottomed servants, a grotesquely real statue of Christ on the cross, and many acts of sexual simulation, often times played upon a mannequin’s leg and pelvis. But for me, it was the tangible moments of human connection, conflict and hubris elegantly played with the social commentary (along with the gorgeous sound design) that struck a chord within me. At these times, I found an authenticity within the NTUSA’s inauthentically authentic production.
Read the full story

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August: Schulenburg Osage County

Tuesday, February 26, 2008 0 comments

Man, I've been wanting to make that joke since I saw the show almost two weeks ago, but I haven't had a chance to sit down and write my thoughts.

I will not write an extended critique of the production, which has already received more than enough coverage from writers far better, and more qualified, than I. But I can't help reviewing it just a little:

Suffice it to say that the show is long but excellent, with no weak link in the large ensemble cast. The unfolded doll-house set alone is worth the (high) price of admission, as is Deanna Dunagan's memorable performance as the matriarch of the family slowly self-destructing over the course of the show. The entire second act takes place around a table, but your eyes never wander from the goings-on, and the credit for that rightly goes to both director Anna D. Shapiro and writer Tracy Letts, who has somehow found something new and brilliant to say about the dysfunctional American family. Only the sound design, which at one point unnecessarily intrudes with a loud gong sound, is not up to the superb standard set by the rest of the production, but thankfully the moment is gone quickly and we get back to the amazing work on display at the Imperial Theatre.

So that's out of the way. What I really wanted to write about, as a member of Flux, is Steppenwolf, the 30-plus-year old company to thank for creating, producing, directing, and performing this great new work (all but two of the actors in the Broadway version premiered the play in Chicago last summer). Here's the blurb they put in the playbill:

Steppenwolf Theatre Company is committed to the principle of ensemble performance through the collaboration of a company of actors, directors and playwrights. Our mission is to advance the vitality and diversity of American theatre by nurturing artists, encouraging repeatable creative relationships and contributing new works to the national canon. Steppenwolf has grown into an internationally renowned company of 41 ensemble members whose talents include acting, directing, playwriting, film-making and textual adaptation.
Nurturing artists. Repeatable creative relationships. A company of actors, directors, and playwrights committed to ensemble performance. As I read this I couldn't help but think: wouldn't it be great to be making theater like this in thirty years?

And then I thought: isn't it great to making theater like this right now?

Yes, it is. Stick around, folks. Flux '08 is gonna rock your socks. Read the full story

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Crimes of the Heart

Friday, February 8, 2008 0 comments

Isaiah here again. Hi!

So, if you're like me (and lord knows, why wouldn't you want to be?) you listen to NPR in the shower, and as a result you've been deluged with ads featuring Kathleen Turner's sultry contralto beckoning you to see Beth Henley's "Crimes of the Heart" at Roundabout's 6th Avenue space, the Laura Pels Theatre. This is a trick! The actress -- famous for a variety of roles, including the leads in Romancing the Stone, Peggy Sue Got Married, and on Broadway as Mrs. Robinson in the Broadway adaptation of The Graduate -- is NOT in the show. Instead, Roudabout's production is her directorial debut. So don't go if you're looking for autographs from Helena Handbasket.

There, that's out of the way. Now on to the show itself.

The play centers around three sisters living in Mississippi, and takes place in the home maintained by the eldest, Lenny. All have problems with men: Lenny is turning 30 and worried she'll never find a man; the middle, Meg, has run off to Hollywood to pursue a singing career and carefree sex; the youngest, Babe, is on trial for shooting her husband. Oh, and it's set (and was written, and premiered) in the mid-70's.

And therein lies the central challenge facing Roundabout, or anyone, in producing the play today: it's 30 years old, and it hasn't aged particularly well. Its one-set design means that characters must find contrived reasons to enter and exit (and in the case of Babe, be present at all -- by rights she should be in jail); its dialogue is stilted and over-expository; its secondary characters serve more as foils than as fully developed people. These are challenges that are mostly met by the cast, particularly Sarah Paulson, whose Meg is simultaneously world-weary and optimistic -- a lover of life, whose love has not been returned. Also worthy of praise is Lily Rabe, who brings a delightful youth and exuberance to Babe; she seems content to chatter in the kitchen until the whole shooting-her-husband thing blows over.

Any play that features three sisters mired in personal problems is liable to draw comparisons to that other play about three sisters mired in personal problems. This isn't helped by Lenny's imminent spinsterism, Meg's love of love affairs, or Babe's all-consuming innocence. And the entirely-too-abstract possibility of jail and a too-pat ending aren't enough to pull this play off of the path that Chekhov so expertly explored over a century ago.

Still, this play about three sisters is entirely engrossing and exciting in those all-too-brief scenes when those three sisters are on stage, together, and allowed to act as sisters do. There are fights about long-forgotten transgressions, secrets kept from one another suddenly thrown out into the open, and of course moments of familial love and devotion. The play positively sizzles when it backs off and lets Lenny, Meg, and Babe go at it. Other powerful moments: a card game dealt but not begun; a character so engrossed in a phone call that blatant signs of doom are ignored; a birthday wish furtively made on a cookie with a candle; an obnoxious interloper at last chased away with a broom. And there are some brilliant monologues and scenes here that many, if not all, theater students have had the pleasure of exploring in a class somewhere.

Finally, kudos to Kathleen Turner for taking on a role on the other side of the footlights. There are enough strong moments to showcase an excellent sense of both comedy and pathos; one hopes that the next play she directs has the material to consistently employ her considerable level of talent. Read the full story

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Live Theater Week; New Jerusalem

Wednesday, January 23, 2008 1 comments

Much like Jason, I am not Gus. Instead, I'm Isaiah. Yeah, that guy. This is my first blogpost. Wow. Also, hi!

Readers of FluxBlog, did you know that this week is Live Theater Week here in New York? It's true that every week could be called that, I suppose, but not with those Fancy Capital Letters. What makes this Week different from all those other quotidian, lower-case-w weeks? Well, if you clicked that link above you would discover that you can purchase 2-for-1 tickets to many excellent shows. Take your sweetheart! Take your boss! Take some random person off the street!


One show you should definitely check out is New Jerusalem at Classic Stage Company, a new play by David Ives. The action centers on the heresy trial of Baruch de Spinoza by the religious authorities of Amsterdam in 1656, but the emotional core of the play is the changing relationship between Spinoza (an enthusiastic Jeremy Strong; center in the above photo) and Chief Rabbi Mortera (Richard Easton, powerful and commanding; left), his careful mentor, loving father-figure, and, ultimately, the one who is bound with final judgment and choice of sentence. Spinoza is blessed and cursed by the inability to betray his own line of thought; given wings, he must fly, even if the flight is straight into a cage, and he'll take anyone who will fly with him. Mortera is bound by different chains, religious and civic, and knows that there are some things one cannot believe and remain a Jew or a citizen of Amsterdam; has Spinoza crossed that line? Can he be brought back? Mortera struggles with these even as he struggles with the brilliant, self-searching Spinoza; the play is by far at its strongest when it throws these two well-drawn, undeniably likable characters first with, and then against one another.

Also weighing in are the lay leader of the congregation, Gaspar Rodriguez Ben Israel (Yiddish theater veteran Fyvush Finkel, having a ball of a time), and Abraham van Valkenburgh (David Garrison), a regent of Amsterdam. It is Valkenburgh who was set the heresy trial in motion, a bit of creative fiction by Ives but a believable one, since after Spinoza was convicted by the religious court, he was also banished by the civil authorities. Valkenburgh and Ben Israel provide well-appreciated counterweight and exposition, balanced well with the heady ideas bandied about by the Talmud-educated, Maimonides-quoting Mortera and Spinoza. Clara Van den Enden (Natalia Payne), Spinoza's impossible love (she's Catholic), provides a much-needed emotional parallel to the proceedings; her final words are haunting and, ultimately, express the need for Spinoza's civil banishment as well as heresy conviction.

The play is not perfect. Ives overplays his hand with both Valkenburgh and Ben Israel, giving us brief cause to question the former's stated civic motives, and oversimplifying the latter's transition from avuncular, reflexive support ("These are not the words of an athiest!") to terrified condemnation. Rebekah de Spinoza (Jenn Harris), Spinoza's half-sister, seems to have wandered in from another, more broadly-drawn play, and there's no need for Ives to so blatantly manipulate Spinoza's friend Simon de Vries (Michael Izquierdo) to keep him in the action, then maneuver him out of it, then toss him in again. 90% of the play takes place in the congregation's hall, whose set (designed by John Lee Beatty) is pitch-perfect and dominated by a gigantic table; why, then, does Ives take us out of this claustrophobic, decidedly deliberative space for one expository scene at the pier? Why not just start at the real point of attack: the start of the trial?

These are all distractions, and it's a shame because, as I said, the heart of the play is rock solid, emotionally moving, and eloquent. And while they might keep this play from being brilliant, they are not nearly enough to keep it from being great. Moreover, the issues that are discussed here -- the purpose of government, freedom of religion and freedom from religion, how we treat outsiders with insidious ideas, the nature of "the most tolerant society on earth" -- are very much at the heart of our current cultural moment, here in New Amsterdam.

Bottom line: Go see this play! It closes on the 10th; as I said, tickets are 2-for-1 this week.

(And go see it on a Sunday for a free talk-back with Ives and leading Spinoza scholars, or on Tuesday, as I did, for a talk-back with the cast) Read the full story