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Whitworth Spotlights - Theatre

Monday, June 4, 2007

Broadway-Atlanta Connection by Manning Harris

You might wonder what Broadway and Atlanta have in common; for starters, how about the 2007 Tony Award for outstanding regional theatre to the Alliance Theatre? So here's a big shout out and congratulations to the Alliance for this signal honor. May it spur them on to produce more must-see, exciting plays, especially on their 800 seat mainstage. It's well known that their smaller stage, the Hertz, has far outpaced its larger sister (brother?) for for vital, visceral theatre: Savvy local theatregoers know it; even The New York Times knows it and reported as much in an article on Sunday, June 3. But for now let us bask in the reflected glory of our hometown theatre—and especially next Sunday night (June 10) when the Tony Awards are given out live from Radio City Music Hall on CBS. (The regional theatre award is the only award revealed in advance.)

More on the Broadway-Atlanta connection: theatre lovers in Atlanta are constantly zipping up to New York to see plays. Just last week I ran into Rick and Lynne Brice, an Atlanta couple, at “Spring Awakening,” the exciting odds-on favorite for best musical this year. And what did yours truly think of this show and the others I saw? Why, so glad you asked! Here are capsule reviews of the plays I saw: “Spring Awakening” is a terrific, provocative, melodic version of an old German play about teenagers discovering themselves and their sexuality in the absence of any parental discussion of such a “forbidden” topic. With a book and lyrics by Steven Sater and music by Duncan Sheik and a dream cast of attractive, super-talented young people (especially Jonathan Groff and John Gallager, nominated for best actor and best featured actor respectively—Gallager will win), this is a breakthrough musical.

Moving along—Joan Didion's superb memoir of surviving the deaths of her husband and daughter (“The Year of Magical Thinking") is now a one-woman play starring the luminous Vanessa Redgrave. It is worth the price of a ticket simply to watch this peerless artist walk on stage, sit in a chair and proceed to mesmerize the audience. This is not, however, a cheery piece; but is ultimately uplifting.

Another tour de force performance is provided by Liev Schreiber as the late night radio shock jock in Eric Bogosian's "Talk Radio." The call-in listeners and Schreiber's abrasive "advice" become a corrosive commentary on the state of American culture and prejudice; this is stimulating theatre, as bracing as a plunge into ice-cold water.

Everyone should go to the Metropolitan Opera House at least once; it fairly drips opulence. I saw an outstanding performance of the ballet "Othello" by the American Ballet Theatre starring guest artist Rasta Thomas (who was last in Atlanta two years ago starring in Billy Joel's "Movin' Out"). Rasta Thomas was described at that time by the AJC as a mixture of James Dean and Baryshnikov; I would not disagree. At 25, he is probably the greatest American dancer. It was quite an evening.

The revival of "A Chorus Line" was quite riveting, but that landmark show has lost some of its magic for me, probably because I'm too familiar with it. "In the Heights" is an off-Broadway musical with an Hispanic hip-hop beat that has success written all over it. Finally, the hottest ticket in town is "Jersey Boys," the musical inspired by Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. It's an absolute knockout. Thus ends my Manhattan theatre orgy. Get thee to the Apple, gentle reader. The feast is waiting.

The Weekly IST List

MONDAY [4]

film • "The Big Sleep" at The Paramount

film • Eddie Muller Noir Night: "The Window" at Alamo Downtown

film • Music Monday: "La Brune Et Moi" at Alamo Downtown

food • Central Market Cooking Class: Knife Skills 101 with Chef Cindy Haenel at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($60, 6:30-9:30pm)

music • Lifesavas, Strange Fruit Project, DJ Marc Sense, Who M.I.?, Prawphit at Emo's

music • Strange Fruit Project, Lifesavas at Waterloo Records

music • Goldenboy, Chris MacFarland, Monument to No One at Scoot Inn

TUESDAY [5]

books • The Utter Reading Series with Jake Silverstein and Sam Witt at BookPeople (7:00pm)

comedy • Mitch Fatel with Gary Cannon at Cap City Comedy Club

film • "Gunga Din" at The Paramount

film • "The Man Who Would Be King" at The Paramount

film • AFS Essential Series screens "Fantastic Planet" at Alamo Downtown

food • Whole Foods Culinary Center Cooking Class: Juicing and Raw Food with Keith Wahrer, Owner, Daily Juice at Whole Foods Culinary Center, 525 N Lamar ($45, 6:30-8:30pm)

food • Central Market Cooking School: Celebrate with Satay, with Dr. Foo Swasdee at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($50, 6:30-9:30pm)

happyhour • Austin Music Foundation's Music Mixer at Shoal Creek Saloon (6:30-9pm)

music • DMBQ, Those Peabodys, Gorch Fock at Emo's

music • Electralane, Tender Forever at The Parish Room

music • Mohawk Residency with Low Line Caller at The Mohawk

music • Moses and the Burning Bush at Beauty Bar

WEDNESDAY [6]

art • Mike's World Exhibition Workshop at Blanton Museum of Art, MLK at Congress ($28 members, $35 non-members, 10am-2pm)

books • Charla Hathaway presents Erotic Massage at BookPeople (7:00pm)

film • "Gunga Din" at The Paramount

film • "The Man Who Would Be King" at The Paramount

film • "5-25-77" at Alamo Downtown

film • "Welcome Home, Brother Charles" with Jamaa Fanaka at Alamo Downtown

film • Weird Wednesday: "Penitentiary" at Alamo Downtown

film • Austin Film Festival screens "I'm Reed Fish" at Regal Arbor

food • Central Market Cooking Class: Rosa Mexicano with Roberto Santibañez at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($70, 6:30-9pm)

food • Whole Foods Culinary Center Cooking Class: Eat Your Way To A Healthy Life: Sunsational Summer Dinner with authors Elisa and Ed McClure at Whole Foods Culinary Center, 525 N Lamar ($50, 6:30-8:30pm)

food • Market Days at the Farm at Boggy Creek Farm, 3414 Lyons Road (8:30am-1pm)

food • Austin Farmers Market at Triangle Park, 4600 Guadalupe (4pm-8pm)

gameshows • The Gong Show at The Tap Room at SIX Lounge

music • Chris Garneau, The Places, All in the Golden Afternoon at Emo's

music • Jabarvy, J Wail at Stubb's

music • Ozma, Eastern Conference Champs, The Actual, The Laughing at The Parish Room

music • Spain Coloured Orange, Gentlemen Auction House, The Hunnies, Finally Punk at The Mohawk

theatre • Mother of Invention Productions presents Portraits at The City Theatre (8pm)

wine • Unwine Wednesday at The Belmont, 305 W 6th St ($25, 6-8pm)

THURSDAY [7]

art • West End Gallery Night at Participating Downtown Galleries Until 8pm

art • Public Tour: Master Drawings from the Yale University Art Gallery at Blanton Museum of Art, MLK at Congress (Included with Museum Admission, 6-7pm)

art • Art Fix: Drawing - Master Drawings from the Yale University Art Gallery at Blanton Museum of Art, MLK at Congress (Included with Museum Admission, 6-7pm)

books • Mr. Darcy Appreciation Day with Linda Berdoll at BookPeople (7:00pm)

books • Silent Silver Screen Series: Orphans of the Storm at The Ransom Center (7:00pm, Free)

books • Melissa Gaskill presents Best Hikes with Dogs: Texas Hill Country and Coast at REI Gateway (7:00pm)

fashion • First Thursday Fashion Show at Austin School of Fashion Design

film • "Trapped in the Closet" R Kelly Singalong at Alamo Downtown

film • "Love Bites: The 80s Power Ballad Singalong" at Alamo Downtown

film • Terror Thursday: "The Hidden" at Alamo Downtown

film • "TILT: The Battle to Save Pinball" at Alamo Lake Creek

film • Gary Primich and the First Thursday All-Stars at Jo's Coffee

food • Whole Foods Culinary Center Cooking Class: A Greek Picnic with Jackie Gulledge at Whole Foods Culinary Center, 525 N Lamar ($45, 6:30-8:30pm)

food • Central Market Cooking Class: Magical Mango Tour with Chef and Cookbook Author Allen Susser at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($70, 6:30-9pm)

music • The Dollyrots, Alright Tonight, The Sweethearts, Abby Birds at Emo's

music • Vietnam and Greg Ashley, The Strange Attractors, The Golden Boys at Emo's

music • Scott Miller, The Commonwealth, The Gougers at Stubb's

music • An Evening with Old Crow Medicine Show at The Parish Room

music • Locals @ La Zona Showcase Three with Rory and the Artificial Heart, Visitors, Tammany Hall Machine at La Zona Rosa

music • The Everyday People, Derrick Davis, James Speer, Live Oak Decline at Antone's

music • Graham Weber at The Mohawk

music • Go Motion! at Beauty Bar

music • The Dog's a Lion, DJ Kon Karne & Lee Roi, Ben Craven & Co at Whisky Bar

theatre Jesus Christ Superstar at Zach Scott Theatre (8pm)

theatre The Full Monty at Arts on Real (8pm)

theatre • The Gilbert & Sullivan Society of Austin presents Ruddigore: The Witch's Curse at Texas School for the Deaf Auditorium (8pm)

theatre Mud at Salvage Vanguard Theater (8pm)

theatre The Pillowman at Hyde Park Theatre (8pm)

theatre • Mother of Invention Productions presents Portraits at The City Theatre (8pm)

theatre • Gobotrick Theatre Company presents Intermission at Dougherty Arts Center (8pm)

FRIDAY [8]

books • Dominic Smith presents The Beautiful Miscellaneous at BookPeople (7:00pm)

comedy Punchline, open mic stand up comedy at ColdTowne Theater (10pm)

film • "The Secret Mirror" at The Paramount

film • Master Pancake Theatre: "The Breakfast Club" at Alamo Downtown

film • "Severance" at Dobie Theatre

food • Central Market Cooking Class: Manicotti Workshop with Foodie Barbara Sampson at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($65, 6:30-9:30pm)

music • The Hold Steady, Illinois, Blitzen Trapper at Emo's

music • "Alien Barbeque II" with Visitors, Silverback Jonz, Adrian Croom, Project Dead & Quinn C, Silverado, Jonathan McMahan, Corto Maltese at Emo's

music • The Dirty Hearts, Passed Out Fliers, The Noise Revival Orchestra Experience at Emo's

music • The Firekills, Morningside Drive, Thee Armada, Cobreti at Stubb's

music • An Evening with Old Crow Medicine Show at The Parish Room

music • Seventh Day Slumber, Everyday Sunday, Nevertheless, Stephen Speaks at La Zona Rosa

music • "Rock N Roll Tribute Band Night" with Sticks N Stones (Rolling Stones), Stone Free (Jimi Hendrix), The Costellophones (Elvis Costello) at Ruta Maya

music • Ume, The Dolly Partners, The Scripts at The Mohawk

music • DJ Krames, Prince Klassen at Beauty Bar

theatre • The Getalong Gang presents We Have Separation at The Blue Theater (8pm)

theatre • Rob Nash in College Freshman Year Sucks at The Vortex (8pm)

theatre Jesus Christ Superstar at Zach Scott Theatre (8pm)

theatre The Full Monty at Arts on Real (8pm)

theatre The Threepenny Opera at Austin Playhouse (8pm)

theatre • The Gilbert & Sullivan Society of Austin presents Ruddigore: The Witch's Curse at Texas School for the Deaf Auditorium (8pm)

theatre Mud at Salvage Vanguard Theater (8pm)

theatre The Pillowman at Hyde Park Theatre (8pm)

theatre • Mother of Invention Productions presents Portraits at The City Theatre (8pm)

theatre • Gobotrick Theatre Company presents Intermission at Dougherty Arts Center (8pm)

SATURDAY [9]

art • Second Saturday Family Day at Austin Museum of Art Downtown, 823 Congress Ave ($5-$7, Noon-4pm)

art • Opening Reception, Rob Harrell: New Work at Wally Workman Gallery, 1202 W 6th St (6-8pm)

books • Sarah Deming presents Iris, Messenger at BookPeople (1:00pm)

books • Rob Wassenich presents Keep Austin Weird at BookPeople (3:00pm)

books • Literacy Austin's BookFest 2007 at 9333 Research Blvd

festival • 3rd Annual Blanco Lavender Festival at Blanco, Texas

film • "The Secret Mirror" at The Paramount

film • The Austin Underground Film Festival at Alamo Downtown

film • "Raiders: The Adaptation" with live cast! at Alamo Downtown

food • Central Market Cooking Class: Cast Iron Cooking with Chef Vance Ely at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($50, 10am-12:30pm)

food • Austin Farmers Market at 4th and Guadalupe (9am-1pm)

food • Whole Foods Culinary Center Cooking Class: Freezing Point—Frozen Treats with Chef Deborah Boyer at Whole Foods Culinary Center, 525 N Lamar ($45, 10am-Noon)

food • Central Market Cooking Class: Food and Wine - Argentina with Food Experts Seth Pollard and Paul Schunder at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($65, 6:30-9pm)

food • Peach Fest at Whole Foods Market, 525 N Lamar (11am-3pm)

food • Market Days at the Farm at Boggy Creek Farm, 3414 Lyons Road (9am-2pm)

food • Sunset Valley Farmer's Market at 3200 Jones Rd (9:30am-1pm)

health • Free Intro to Nia Workshop at JoyMoves

music • Sage Francis, Buck 65, Vehicular at Emo's

music • Calvin Johnson, Julie Doiron, The Carrots at Emo's

music • Patty Griffin at Stubb's

music • Rivers and the Roughcuts, You Make Engine at The Parish Room

music • When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth, Oh Beast!, Red X Red M, Daniel Francis Doyle at Beerland

music • McPullish, My Empty Phantom, DJ Chicken George at Ruta Maya

music • KAOS Radio presents Shoot for the Stars and Kill 'Em, Hot as Shits, Elvis on Speed at Trophy's

music • The Lovely Sparrows, Cavedwellers, Ryan Anderson, Sharon Van Etten at The Mohawk

music • KidIndie's Ho Down with Holy Ghost, The Hunnies at Beauty Bar

party • Official Space Launch Celebration at Salvage Vanguard Theater (9:30pm)

theatre • The Getalong Gang presents We Have Separation at The Blue Theater (8pm)

theatre • Rob Nash in College Freshman Year Sucks at The Vortex (8pm)

theatre Jesus Christ Superstar at Zach Scott Theatre (8pm)

theatre The Full Monty at Arts on Real (8pm)

theatre The Threepenny Opera at Austin Playhouse (8pm)

theatre • The Gilbert & Sullivan Society of Austin presents Ruddigore: The Witch's Curse at Texas School for the Deaf Auditorium (8pm)

theatre Mud at Salvage Vanguard Theater (8pm)

theatre The Pillowman at Hyde Park Theatre (8pm)

theatre • Mother of Invention Productions presents Portraits at The City Theatre (8pm)

theatre • Gobotrick Theatre Company presents Intermission at Dougherty Arts Center (8pm)

wine • Wine 101 at the Whole Foods Beer Kiosk at Whole Foods Market, 525 N Lamar (Noon-1pm)

SUNDAY [10]

art • Free Public Lecture: Master Drawings from the Yale University Art Gallery at Blanton Museum of Art, MLK at Congress (Free, 2-3pm)

beer • Beer 101 at the Whole Foods Beer Kiosk at Whole Foods Market, 525 N Lamar (Noon-1pm)

books • Literacy Austin's BookFest 2007 at 9333 Research Blvd

comedy • Janeane Garofalo, Patton Oswalt at Emo's

film • "The Fantasticks" at The Paramount (Two Showings)

film • "Hair" at The Paramount (Two Showings)

film • Master Pancake Theatre does "The Day After Tomorrow" at Alamo Downtown

food • Central Market Cooking Class: Amuse Bouche Picnic Foods with Chef Quincy Adams Erickson at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($55, 6:30-9pm)

food and books • Central Market Cooking Class: Eat This Book - Mimi Sheraton's "Eating My Words" with Kelly Ann Hargrove at Central Market Cooking School, 4001 N Lamar ($20, 11am-1pm)

lecture • Mayor Will Wynn presents a Global Warming Presentation at Alamo Downtown

music • Mandi Perkins, Backslider, Empty Crush at Stubb's

music • Dan Zanes and Friends at Hogg Auditorium

music • Blood on the Tracks, The Politics at Trophy's

music • DJ Orion at Beauty Bar

reading • The HBMG Foundation presents The Love Sonatas: Kuka at Salvage Vanguard Theater (7pm)

theatre • The Getalong Gang presents We Have Separation at The Blue Theater (8pm)

theatre • Rob Nash in College Freshman Year Sucks at The Vortex (8pm)

theatre Jesus Christ Superstar at Zach Scott Theatre (2:30pm)

theatre The Threepenny Opera at Austin Playhouse (5pm)

theatre • The Gilbert & Sullivan Society of Austin presents Ruddigore: The Witch's Curse at Texas School for the Deaf Auditorium (3pm)

theatre • Mother of Invention Productions presents Portraits at The City Theatre (2:30pm)

Luminato showcases plays designed by York theatre prof

Luminato has turned out to be a showcase for set and costume designs by Shawn Kerwin, Chair of York’s Theatre Department.

Toronto’s inaugural arts festival June 1-10 includes Factory Theatre productions of George F. Walker’s Better Living and Escape from Happiness, which share a set designed by Kerwin.

Not part of Luminato but also running this week is a third Kerwin-designed play, Thornton Wilder’s Our Town, presented by Soulpepper Theatre at the Young Centre for the Performing Arts.

Kerwin juggles the demands of department Chair and teaching with a steady stream of freelance projects. But, she says, she could not have designed three sets for three plays if they had all opened at the same time. As it happens, two plays are remounts – Escape from Happiness and Our Town – and one – Better Living – is a new production, which only required set dressing changes because it uses the same set as Escape.

Shawn Kerwin's set for George F. Walker's east end plays

Richard Ouzounian, Toronto Star theatre critic, liked the set. He wrote in his May 7 review: "We’re in a superbly dilapidated house (bravo to designer Shawn Kerwin!) where a family of misfit women and the odd loser male huddle together in a state of shell shock."

Kerwin is an old hand at designing sets and costumes for the gritty plays by Toronto playwright George F. Walker. Better Living and Escape from Happiness are part of Walker’s east end series and are about the same family at different episodes in their lives. "All the plays are very physical," says Kerwin. People in his plays are explosive and bang about a lot.. "Everything has to be strong and sturdy," she says. For Escape, where someone gets tied to a kitchen chair and dragged around, Kerwin made sure to have a replacement chair ready in the wings. "The wear and tear on that chair is incredibly hard. You can’t assume the chair is going to stand up throughout the whole run."

Both Walker plays take place inside the family’s shabby, cramped row house. Only the set dressing changes. For instance, in the earlier play, the mother has an envelope stuffing business, so there is plenty of evidence of that, and the daughter has a boyfriend. In the sequel, the daughter and her boyfriend have a baby, so there are toys scattered around, diapers and baby bottles in the sink.

Kerwin designed the set based her knowledge of row houses typical of the Queen and Logan area in Toronto’s east end 20 or 30 years ago. Inside the front door, stairs rise to one side, a hall runs to the kitchen at the back, a living room is off to the side.

The set for Our Town is, by contrast, stark. There’s no cluttered room, only a bare stage furnished with a couple of tables and about 14 pressed-back chairs. Modern pressed-back chairs are much bigger than those made in the early half of the 20th century when the play takes place. Kerwin and the head of props scoured antique stores in Kitchener, Waterloo and Cambridge searching for smaller originals. "Every one of those chairs has been chosen," says Kerwin. "Because the play is so simple, every choice was important."

Right now, Kerwin is scrambling to finish a set design for the Blyth Festival’s World Without Shadows. The play is about an illiterate, desperately poor Nova Scotia folk artist who lived in a one-room shack with no plumbing. She has painted many surfaces – stove, bread box, flower pots – and her paintings were "joyous and light filled and delightful," says Kerwin, who is trying to replicate this for the stage.

And there’s another contract in the works. The deadlines may be looming, the e-mails mounting in her inbox, but Kerwin loves the challenge.

"I like collaborating with directors and actors and all the craftspeople I get to work with," she says. I like being able to take written language and try to imagine how to interpret the physical space actors will have to inhabit and bring out the intention of the playwright."

"I’m never doing the same thing twice. I’m working from scratch," she says. It’s like figuring out a puzzle. And often what you’ve chosen not to put in is just as important as what you have put in."

Review of Blithe Spirit by Noel Coward. Palace Theatre, Watford until June 16

Review of Blithe Spirit by Noel Coward. Palace Theatre, Watford. May 24 to June 16, directed by Matthew Lloyd. It’s a theatrical pleasure to see any play well done, and particularly a Noel Coward classic. So do get to the Palace Theatre if you can. “Private Lives” has been around recently, “Hay Fever” was in London and at Windsor. Now there’s a chance to see “Blithe Spirit.”

This play came ready-made out of Coward’s head in six days – rather as Mozart wrote some of his great works.

A reminder of this well-crafted plot: Charles Condamine, an author, suggests to his second wife Ruth that they ask the local medium, Madame Arcati, round to dinner with two friends, Dr and Mrs Bradman. His reason for the séance is to learn some of a medium’s ‘tricks of the trade’ to help him with his new book. No one in the group believes in spiritualism – at first…

To read the review in full by Frances Chidell visit www.mychilterns.co.uk the local website for the Chiltern region with video clips of the local area.

41 HONORED WITH BEST NARRATIVE DOCUMENTARY AWARD

well, at least the monsoon won’t stop us from preparing for some of the most exciting summer entertainment coming down the proverbial Perishable pike. Here’s an encapsulated look at what we have got going at 95 Empire Street!
*Sunday June 10: Acoustic Concert series LIVE/WHIRLED at 3pm
*Supported Artists presentations June 9-24
*Cool Resident Artist event-SNAPPY DANCE
*Help us rack up the pennies with GOODSEARCH
Recently, I asked mandolinist extraordinaire Marilynn Mair to create a concert series that was out of the box. What she came back to me with is LIVE/WHIRLED, an acoustic concert series that pairs two disparate musicians or groups each playing a set of their own music, followed by an OPEN JAM with whoever brings instruments. The second concert in the series is this Sunday June 10 at 3pm. One set will feature Fishel Bresler and Shelley Katsh playing klezmer and original music and the second set features percussionist Bob Moses doing what he does best- make a beat! Tickets are $8 and can be reserved by calling 401-331-2695 ext. 101 For the press release of the event, go to http://perishable.org
SUPPORTED ARTISTS are those artists or companies in the community who are dedicated to the creation of new performance, but who don’t have space. Perishable opens up its doors and rents the space at a way below-market rate so that the artists and you, the audience, get to meet in the best way possible. There are two great events happening in June:
June 8, 9 Theatre Expansion’s Dancestravaganza. Dancestravaganza is a concert featuring contemporary dance, movement theatre and performance art from local and regional artists of unique talent. The event provides vital performance and networking opportunities to its participants, while uniting up and coming artists with veteran companies and performers. For more information or tickets- email info@theatreexpansion.org
and June 14-24, the premiere of Midnight Mass, the 2007 Rhode Island State Council on the Arts Playwriting Merit Award winning script by Nancy Hoffman, directed by Resident Artist Peter Deffet. To quote its press release, “MIDNIGHT MASS is a comedy that celebrates the power of faith, dreams, dueling religions, and plenty of pints.”
Read the whole release and find out how to get tickets at http://www.myspace.com/midnightmasstheplay
COOL RESIDENT ARTIST ALERT-
First off, all of our Resident Artists are Super Cool (soon Perishable will announce the additions to the 07-08 roster!), but sometimes, Resident Artists have such a wonderful event going on, that I have to pass it along. I highly recommend going to see Perishable Theatre Resident Artists Bonnie Duncan and Tim Gallagher in the SNAPPY Dance Theater 10th Anniversary Dance concert at the Virginia Calderwood Pavilion, Boston Center for the Arts in Boston. Not only is it wonderful to see SNAPPY dancers remounting some of the highpoints of the last 10 years of their innovative, funny choreography, but the premiere of String Beings is one of the best integrations of live performance with multi-media I have yet to see. There’s puppetry, acrobatics, live feed video, and Tim doing a shoulder stand with the first violin of the Boston Symphony Orchestra sitting on his feet, PLAYING!!! tickets are available through http://www.snappydance.com
GOODSEARCH.COM is a search engine that makes us money. Please use it. As our fiscal year winds to a close on June 30, we have a lot to be proud of-help us get just a few pennies prouder. http://www.goodsearch.com Use it and help your favorite research & development theatre.
That’s all for now. Mark your calendars for some great summer fun at Perishable Theatre. And don’t forget to use goodsearch.com to find out all sorts of things about our schedule, our artists, or anything that you search on the internet.

Shock news: theatre critics are normal people

I don't want to spend my entire life responding to Nick Hytner, but something he wrote in the Observer yesterday made me chuckle. We theatre critics, he suggested, are stuck in our little boxes and don't know what's happening in other arts. I laughed because, after a particularly heavy week for plays, I'd just been to see Darcy Bussell's farewell appearance in Song of the Earth at Covent Garden. And, on Sunday, I drove down to the beautiful Grange Park Opera House in Hampshire to see David Fielding's new production of Prokofiev's The Gambler. So we critics don't get out enough? A night in would be a refreshing change.

I can't pretend every weekend is like this. Sometimes I just laze around, see friends or watch cricket on telly. But, although I'm a naive spectator, I love dance and had booked for the Royal Ballet's triple-bill months ago, not even knowing it was going to be Darcy Bussell's goodbye. What drew me was a combination of works by Ashton, de Valois and MacMillan. I'm especially fascinated by MacMillan because of his powerful sense of the dramatic and his unorthodox choreography: at one point in Song of the Earth Bussell is required to entwine herself horizontally around the bodies of her lover and the messenger of death (Carlos Acosta) and touch her toes with her fingertips. Even "physical theatre" rarely makes such demands on its performers.

As for opera, I've been going regularly since the 1980s. It was the famous "powerhouse" seasons at the Coliseum - when David Pountney, Mark Elder and Peter Jonas were in charge - that demonstrated something was happening on the opera stage that wasn't taking place in straight theatre: an adoption of the techniques of European expressionism. And, over the years, I've often seen theatre people doing their most exciting work in opera. I've seen nothing better by Robert Lepage than his double-bill of Bluebeard's Castle and Erwartung for Canadian Opera. And only recently Improbable's Phelim McDermott and Julian Crouch did a production of Philip Glass's Satyagraha at the Coliseum that was quite breathtaking in its inventive use of space.

Of course, one can't see everything; and I concede there are huge gaps in my knowledge. Although I was once a film critic - or perhaps because I was once a film critic - I don't get to the movies as often as I might. I now crave something special from the cinema on the lines of The Lives of Others: a truly great film by which everyone I know has been affected. As a gallery-goer, I'm also deterred by the massive crowds that you now find at big London exhibitions: what I love are quiet provincial galleries on wet Tuesday afternoons. And I admit that pop isn't something I easily appreciate.

But I would still challenge Hytner's argument that theatre critics are culturally isolated. Two things in particular changed my own life. One was having the luck to present a lot of radio arts programmes in my salad days, which meant that I was exposed to everything on offer. The other was a lecture by the late John Drummond when he was director of the Edinburgh Festival. He told me, far more brusquely than Hytner, that theatre critics were incapable of pronouncing on the Festival because we stuck to our own discipline. John told me to go to the press office and order as many tickets for dance, opera and music as I could. I've always been grateful for his instruction, which opened new doors.

And, to bring the argument full circle, I remember first meeting Nick Hytner when I interviewed him about his production of Wagner's Rienzi for ENO. So maybe, just maybe, we drama critics aren't quite such one-trick ponies as he makes out.

USF Theatre Professor to Participate in International Theatre & Literacy Project in Tanzania

Kerry Glamsch, a theatre professor in the University of South Florida’s College of Visual and Performing Arts, will travel to Tanzania this summer to teach in the International Theatre & Literacy Project. The New York-based ITLP conducts playwriting workshops for children in developing countries. Glamsch is one of 10 theatre artists who will work in pairs with 100 teens during the program, being held June 28-July 12 at schools in various small villages near the city of Arusha in the northeastern corner of Tanzania.

Each pair of teachers will work with 20 students, 16-year-old boys and girls who will participate in workshops in improvisation, playwriting and performance. Each student group will participate in the theatre workshops five hours a day, five days a week for two weeks. The groups will present plays for their respective schools at the end of the first week. For the conclusion of the program, all of the plays will be presented to Tanzanians from throughout the region.

Glamsch, who has taught acting, scene study, playwriting, improvisation and other classes at the USF School of Theatre and Dance since 2003, had already made plans to travel to South Sudan this summer to help build a school when he met Marianna Houston, founder and executive director of ITLP, in New York through a mutual friend. Glamsch wound up replacing a teacher who dropped out of this year’s program.

Glamsch was attracted by the opportunity to use his teaching skills to make a positive impact on young learners from the other side of the globe.

“Theatre helps engage the imagination,” Glamsch said. “It can help them to think abstractly rather than memorizing facts by rote. It helps them explore social issues in which they haven’t had a voice so far. We’re using theatre to assist in their learning experience, in building bridges between our community and theirs. This is a chance to do what I feel I do best in order to make the world a better place.”

Last year’s plays were focused on empowerment, as related to women’s rights and social issues. The emphasis of this year’s plays will be determined, in part, by the students’ interests.

“Marianna Houston is a strong proponent of women’s rights and human rights,” Glamsch said. “The idea of women’s rights in the Tanzanian culture came up consistently last summer, in workshops during which they would recreate their relationships in their families and in their villages.”

“And it’s also necessary that we pay attention to what’s on their minds and what’s in their hearts. What do they want to communicate? Theatre is always addressing what’s going on right now in one’s life, and in the life of the community.”

This summer is the fourth time that the ITLP has traveled to Tanzania. Iain Hunter, chairman of the ITLP board, promises the teaching team an experience marked by challenges as well as rewards.

“It’s not all going to be fame and glory – there will be long hard days of work, possibly in environments or circumstances unfamiliar to many,” Hunter wrote in a recent letter to the participants. “But what we can promise you will be the extraordinary reward of seeing the fruits of your teaching efforts shining through in the eyes of the students under your tutelage.”

The language barrier and cultural differences are among the challenges facing the team, which includes university professors, public school teachers and professional actors mostly drawn from New York and Los Angeles. Each two-person teaching team will be provided will an interpreter.

“Their first language is Swahili, but hopefully through the various exercises we’ll learn a common language,”

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