Showing posts with label Theater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theater. Show all posts

Monday, March 1, 2010

I'm Performing Tonight At The Groundlings! (Mon March 1st, 2010)

After two years of classes at The Groundlings, I'm finally performing on their main stage. I had my first performance last month, which went incredibly well. Now, based on a history of past success, I feel it's time to invite folks to come see me work.

It's a 90min all-improv show with hilarious upper level Groundlings students. I normally cringe at the prospect of attending a friend's improv show, but I assure you that the folks I'm working with are incredibly talented and funny.

Tickets are $6.50 and come with a free bottomless glass of wine.

Please come!

Show Information:
This month's show features performances by an all new cast of current upper-level Groundlingsstudents and directed by Kevin Kirkpatrick.

Student Showcases always bring in a massive crowd, so make sure you buy your tickets in advance!

Contact the Box Office at 323-934-4747 x37, or online at www.groundlings.com

Monday, March 1st at 8pm

Cast:

Andy Bray

Nate Clark

Phillip Daniel

Allison Dunbar

Christopher Eckert

Anderson Edwards

Conor Fetting-Smith

Samantha Roy

Adam Harrington

Donovan Keith

Mike Primiano

Sarah Wolter

Tickets are $6.50 and available NOW at the Box Office, or online at www.groundlings.com.

Friday, September 11, 2009

"And God Created Great Whales" by Rinde Eckert

This evening I got an email from Prince inviting me to see a free theater production hosted by the USC theater department. When I read the word "free" I found myself extremely interested, but when I discovered that the piece was written by and starring Rinde Eckert my attendance was guaranteed.

I first discovered Eckert's work when he was an artist in residence at UC Davis. I was absolutely gob smacked by his performances of "Orpheus X" and "Fate & Spinoza".

An Introduction

Tonight's show, "And God Created Great Whales" dealt with many of the themes present in his other pieces: obsession, the muse, and great art as an escape from death. In “Whales,” Eckert wrestles with Herman Melville’s Moby Dick. It’s a dense and unforgiving tome and many films and operas have drowned themselves in its murky depths. I read Moby Dick for kicks in high school and hated it. In my book report, I described it as a 19th-century whaling instruction manual with a lot of homoerotic undertones. So I was curious to know what Eckert could possibly do with such a foundation.

Wisely, Eckert puts Moby Dick at the center of his story but ensures it isn’t what the story is about. It serves as a foil against which to place his protagonist: a piano tuner desperately trying to finish composing his operatic adaptation of “Moby Dick” before he loses the last shred of his memory to a brain-wasting disease.

“...You will forget many things. Eventually you will forget how to breathe. In effect, you will be drowning in your ignorance.”


An Inauspicious Beginning

The play starts with Eckert at the piano, head down, with a tape recorder hanging on thick rope from his neck. Frozen and barely conscious he taps out a delicate refrain on the piano, and then he plays it again, and again, and again.

Oh no. This is going to be one of those pieces. Eckert’s body is frozen except for the same few fingers caressing the keys. Wow, we’re going to be staring at his head for a long time. Then a shout from off-stage. Oh thank goodness, we can move on from these same 3 notes. Then a person wearing all black runs down the aisle. Is that a character? Lights flicker above. Mumbling and shouts from off-stage. The person in all black, making no effort to conceal their presence runs back through the house. Okay, so this show is going to be really Meta, all of life is a stage and we are but players, I get it.

Eckert is still frozen in time, bald head gleaming in the spotlight, the same notes are repeated. God this is repetitive. Couldn’t the director have directed? Then, a voice comes through the speakers “Excuse me folks, but we’re encountering some technical difficulties. We need 3 minutes to run a new light board up to the booth.” Eckert stops playing the piano, stands, and walks off stage. 10 minutes pass as stage hands frantically run-about trying to make the necessary technical fixes. The voice comes back on the PA “Okay, we’re ready to start. Please take your seats. Sorry about that.”

The lights come down and Eckert makes his way to the stage. The lights come up, he begins again. The first three notes are followed by a light cue, a spotlight, then a black out. The music changes. The lights come back up, we see a woman on stage, dressed in Red – The Muse. She says “Press Play.” Eckert’s character, as if discovering it for the first time sees the tape recorder on his neck and timidly presses play. Nothing happens. He presses again. Nothing happens. He takes out the tape, returns it, and presses play. Nothing happens. Still exploring, as a child might, he presses play and stop, and play. Nothing. Oh God, it really is one of those plays, the audience sighs collectively. At this moment, Eckert looks up and drops the character. “Alright, we’re going to stop here. There seems to be some sort of technical gremlin at work, and they invariably come in bunches.” Crazed theater techs run into the house, and bumble about like a bad Marx Brothers routine.


A Consummate Professional

Eckert, a consummate professional, spent the next 15 minutes entertaining the audience. He was funny, warm, and seemed largely unaffected by the technical shitstorm that was raining on his performance. He told stories of past technical foibles so painful to watch that at one performance, a member of the band Cream ran up to Eckert at intermission to hug him and say that he was doing “A really good job considering the circumstances.” When his war stories were exhausted and techs were balancing precariously on a ladder just to his left, he joked “Well, I suppose we could do the talk back before the show.” Instead, he staged an impromptu classical recital – the repairs took so long he eventually took requests. “Mozart!” shouted the college kid with the AC/DC t-shirt. Finally, when the technical issues were resolved, he settled back into character: head down at the piano, fingers on the keys.


The Show

The performance was stunning and definitely not one of those shows. The singing by both actors was both powerful and nuanced. There were moments of genuine theatrical magic between Eckert and his Muse. Using nothing more than a piece of dowel and body movement they created an entire ship on a vast ocean doing battle with a monstrous whale. The piano tuner’s descent into infancy was tragic, made doubly so by the passion with which he fought to complete his masterpiece before his disease robbed him of his capacity to do so.

The Talk Back & Origin Story

After the show, Rinde took questions from the audience. His answers were eloquent and roaming, flitting from topic to topic, inspiration to inspiration. Eckert is brilliant man; a polymath with a palpable love of ideas and great desire to share that amorous curiosity with the world. When asked, he shared the origin of the story:

Eckert’s grandmother, an incredibly talented pianist and organist was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease and slowly slipped away from the world. He saw the abject terror she experienced when she didn’t recognize her family who were looking to her with such great expectation. It was here that he started to think of memory as something precious. Memory is something powerful; it frees us to create amazing works. It is also something we use constantly and take for granted. It is both mythic and mundane.

For those living in the 1800s, the whale was similarly impressive yet common. It was an astounding creature, revered in bourgeois society, something which most would never see. At the same time, whale oil was used in lamps, baleen in combs, and the rest of the creature in sundry banal endeavors. The whale is both mythic and mundane.

Eckert’s view is that Moby Dick is a story about more than obsession; otherwise it would be a historical footnote. Instead, he says, it is about our search for the divine borne of our understanding that we are not whole. Ahab must chase the whale, and the piano tuner must write his opera, and even though the end for both is nigh, through their bold pursuit they might both achieve some modicum of grace.


Performance Information

"And God Created Great Whales" is playing TONIGHT:
Thursday, September 10, 2009; Friday, September 11, 2009 : 7:00pm

24th Street Theatre
1117 W. 24th Street, Los Angeles


Admission is free.

If you are in Los Angeles: go see this show.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

EBA Presents: The Drunkard's Border Town Dilemma

I just finished designing the Promotional Materials for East Bay Arts High School's production of "The Drunkard's Border Town Dilemmas". It's a melodrama set on the Texas / Mexico border in 1850. I'm really excited to see the show. Break a leg guys!

Sunday, March 15, 2009

“A Skull in Connemara” @ Theatre Tribe in NoHo

Since my return to the States, I've been desperately trying to regain my excitement for acting. Uncertain economic times, and 5 months of filming in sometimes adverse conditions drained me of my desire to seek out acting gigs. Seeking to remedy this, I devised a plan. I would see some stage plays so that I might recreate the environment in which I first fell in love with it all. I saw a number of plays; none of them particularly good. I was starting to suspect that acting was a wholly selfish act and the audience members were but hapless victims paying to be kidnapped and held in silence for as long as the actors and director deem a show should drag on.


I was losing hope. Then I got an email from GoldStar offering discount tickets to "A Skull in Connemara" by Martin McDonagh. McDonagh is one of my favorite playwrights (the next play you buy should be "The Pillow Man"). So I bought myself a ticket. I'm glad I did.


From the opening moment with Mick Dowd standing alone in his house searching for the last drops of booze at the bottom of his glass to the closing scene with the same Mick Dowd speaking a heartfelt promise to his dead wife – it was absolutely enthralling. Morlan Higgins, John K. Linton, Jeff Kerr McGivney, and Jayne Taini all give great performances. The set design by Jeff McLaughlin was ingenius in it's use of space; the opening of the second act managed to instill the same sense of awe I felt when I saw the giant-robot transformers-style set of Le Miserables when I was 7. I left the theater in an altered state, once again believing that while there are few things more torurous than bad theater – there are even fewer things better than a truly great live performance.


Also, Stuart Rogers, the director this production apparently teaches acting, directing, and pedagogy at the Stuart Rogers Studios. One must first go through an interview process before joining his class, but I'm definitely interested.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

The Laramie Project

I got an email earlier this week from my friend Prince Gomovillas asking if I wanted to see a high school production of The Laramie Project with him. Apparently some students at the school had put on a production of Prince's play "The Theory of Everything" and invited him to see their latest undertaking. Not one to turn down a comp ticket, I said yes.

I'm glad I did. I was absolutely gob smacked by the production. The direction was extremely tight and effective, but more impressive was just how committed and heart-felt the performances were. I found myself weeping at various points throughout the show. Many of these young actresses were working at a professional caliber - Prince explained that he felt is was a stronger production than when it played at Berkeley Rep. It was most definitely not like any high school play I'd ever seen.

Kudos to all involved.