Showing posts with label Patrick Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrick Lee. Show all posts

A Poem for Patrick Lee

Thursday, June 10, 2010 4 comments

Readers of this blog know in what deep esteem I held Patrick Lee, the reviewer behind the vital Just Shows To Go You. Hearing of his untimely death yesterday, I could not quite wrap my mind around what we've lost.

After loving his reviews for years, I asked him to write the introduction to the published version of The Lesser Seductions of History, but that request was not in time, and I am left still wanting (as we all are now) one more brush with that singular vision of clarity and generosity.

I wrote this sonnet in an effort to better say how much that vision meant to me.


Patrick Lee
Is a review a mirror or window?
Do its words reflect their author or reveal
The thing itself? On Just Shows To Go You,
You did both, seeing what was most real
In the play by seeing through yourself.
That kind of double-sight made for honesty,
Generosity, not filling a shelf
With heaving cleverness, but the brevity
You need to pierce the waking dream in flight.
We met three times, I think, and every time
You asked, "what should I see?", with the delight
That knows to seek is better than to find.
Not a mirror or window, death's a door;
We're left now looking through your words for more.

Rest in peace. Read the full story

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Interview with Patrick Lee at Just Shows To Go You

Tuesday, November 17, 2009 0 comments

My interview with Patrick Lee at Just Shows To Go You is up! This was an exciting interview for me - each question seemed to open up more questions, and because it wasn't a written interview, I didn't have time to craft my thoughts (though Patrick's done a great job of editing here). As a result, there's much less of a polished filter in this interview, which I suppose is a good thing, though Lord I was born a ramblin' man. Give it a read, and be sure to check out other installments of his interview series (including interviews with amazing actors like Adam Driver, Amy Lynn Stewart and Rebecca Comtois.) Read the full story

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Lesser Seductions review: Patrick Lee, Just Shows To Go You

Tuesday, November 10, 2009 1 comments

(Photo by Tyler G. Hicks-Wright. pictured: Tiffany Clementi, Michael Davis, Jake Alexander, Isaiah Tanenbaum)
It was because of Patrick Lee (and fellow Fluxer Kelly O'Donnell) that I decided to see David Cromer's Our Town. His review and recommendation in passing convinced me to make time for a play I thought I wouldn't like. At a particularly uncertain time in the play's life, Cromer's production reaffirmed its basic impulses and challenged its excesses.

So I'm especially thrilled by this review. Readers of this blog already know my esteem for Just Shows To Go You, so we'll cut right to my favorite quote:
The ambitious, intellectually provocative and beautifully realized play does what theatre too rarely does – it leaves you thinking about your life, your times, your choices.
So, read the whole review, and then get your tickets, and after you've seen the show, please share your thoughts here. Read the full story

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Interview At Visible Soul

Tuesday, September 8, 2009 0 comments

Zack Calhoon interviewed me for the interview series, "People You Should Know..." on his blog, Visible Soul. I was honored to be asked to participate in this series, as Zack has already interviewed impressive folks like Leonard Jacobs, Jennifer Conley Darling, Matthew Freeman, and Jessi Hill.

Speaking of Leonard Jacobs, he has a GREAT interview with Jesse Alick, the Artistic Director of Subjective Theatre Company. Jesse talks about faith, political theatre, and Subjective's radical practice of providing free theatre.

If you're still hungry for more interview goodness, Patrick Lee has a great interview with the lauded leading ladies of Viral, Amy Lynn Stewart and Rebecca Comtois. (Have you bought your tix yet for the extension?)

Meanwhile, the mighty mighty Szymkowicz has reached 50 playwright interviews...and Crystal Skillman is on the beat for the 50/50 in 2020. Read the full story

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Just Shows To Go You's Patrick Lee on Pretty Theft

Thursday, April 30, 2009 0 comments


(Photo: Isaiah Tanenbaum. Pictured: Candice Holdorf, Todd d'Amour)

A good review from Patrick Lee over at Just Shows To Go You appreciates both the collage structure and underlying sadness and danger of the play, as well as a call to action that all the movie producers reading this blog should heed.

Read it here, and then get your tickets here! Read the full story

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Check Out The New Clyde Fitch Report!

Saturday, March 28, 2009 0 comments

Leonard Jacob's The Clyde Fitch Report has a brand new, very fancy-shiny-sleek-impressive home here.

Check it out!

Also, we've at last updated our Blog Roll to reflect Patrick Lee's less new, but also fancy-shiny new home here.

Gradually, our humble blog emerges from last year's links... Read the full story

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Congrats to Vince Nappo and Other Bodies!

Sunday, December 21, 2008 0 comments

Patrick Lee at Just Shows To Go You named Vince Nappo's performance in our Other Bodies as one of the Twelve Freshest Faces on 2008! It is very exciting to see Vince's excellent work in that extremely demanding role being recognized.

You can read the whole thing here.

And while you're at it, why not check out Patrick's full Best of 2008 list? It is an inspiring list that finds excellence everywhere from crowd pleasing big budget musicals to challenging Indie theatre plays. Read the full story

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Other Bodies Post Mortem

Tuesday, September 23, 2008 0 comments

So busy have we been with our retreat and prepping for our trilogy, that we never had a chance to properly blog about the process of Other Bodies. Here is a brief round-up:

The most exciting news we've already mentioned: director Heather Cohn's FringeNYC Award!

But there was much else to be proud of and excited by:

1.) The unanimous praise for Vince Nappo's performance as Terry - even when people didn't connect with the play, they always connected with Vince's human and charismatic reading of this very difficult part. Not to mention he's a cribbage lover, and I owe him a game upon his return from Glengarry in Denver.
2.) Leonard Jacobs over at Clyde Fitch not only wrestling with the difficult last third of the play, but actually posting some text from it! I was moved by our post show conversation, and so grateful for this post.
3.) Cat Alder-Josem, our intrepid Stage Manager. A cooler head on a cooler person would be hard to find, and she is going to do great things when she moves to NYC.
4.) A review from Nathaniel Kressen at nytheatre.com that explored the structure of the play in a fascinating way, with my favorite quote being: Time and time again, she (Christina Shipp) shatters and rebuilds the world around us. Nappo is the mirror, and Shipp is the hammer that breaks it.
5.) Christina Shipp's 'Season of Dudes' continued successfully - and just how many actresses could play Bottom, Jeff Matthews and Father Benny? Not too fricking many. Jeff in the airplane, for whatever reason, was my favorite scene in this production...I miss her as him.
6.) NYTR publisher Brook Stowe making my day with this post in his guest stint at Playgoer. When he saw the show, he was kindly enigmatic afterwards, and being one of those rare and good people you never want to disappoint, I spiraled into self-flagellation for failing him as a playwright. Luckily, I am saving some of that torment for the next play...
7.) Michael "Miracle" Davis - when moving from our rehearsal space to the performance venue, we thought we could wheel the set over, only the wheels decided to disagree. Designer Jason Paradine and I then attempted to lift the not-so-light set ourselves, and just as my arms were about to quit, mighty Michael emerged and helped us bring the sucker safely home to CSV. A photographer took a picture of us, and I can only imagine it's posted somewhere in this web of ours with a snappy caption underneath.
8.) Patrick Lee's continued insightful reviewing - he is right about that troublesome second act, but I appreciate him accepting its direction while acknowledging the distance its current manifestation has to go before it is all the way right (if such a destination exists). Patrick is one of my favorite reviewers, and his Just Shows To Go You a daily read.
9.) Well, there's so much more to say - Asa's extraordinary sound design, Jason being Jason, Tiffany and Hannah's tag team on the costumes, Kelly stepping up as an ASM, so many things to be grateful for and learn from that I'll just say THANKS, and caps means I'm serious.
10.) But the biggest thing I (the playwright) have to be grateful for is the chance to fail a little without falling completely. Ultimately, the challenges we faced were of my own creation - too busy with directing Midsummer to properly finish rewriting Other Bodies - and while the designers and actors were remarkable at rolling with the kicks, and I believe it was a good production that mattered to those who wanted to go on its unique journey; I know I could've done better. This play has troubled me more than any play I've written. How lucky am I to be a part of an Ensemble that runs with it anyway, part of a theatre community that is willing to wrestle with a challenging play, part of a country where I can write strange things and have strangers sit with me in the dark and listen.

Thank you to everyone who saw the show, and everyone who made working on it such a joy. Read the full story