Archive | January, 2008

Family Guy Fans Unite for Writers

Posted on 29 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

family guy pix

Okay it is a little embarrassing but ever since I figured out that I could get TBS on my television (I don’t have cable but I plug the cable into the back of my TV and somehow get a few of the basic stations) I have been completely addicted to The Family Guy. I know its been on forever but I never seemed to be home when it was on.  But now, between TBS and The CW it is almost always on one channel or another and I, for one, can’t get enough.

Well, this Thursday at Carnegie Hall you can check out An Evening with Alex Borstein and Seth MacFarlane  (creator of family guy and “voice of lois” respectively)- with special guests Janeane Garofalo and Patti Lupone. And I’ll betcha a few more people show up. Just my hunch. Tickets are kind of pricey bu, hey, its a benefit for the Writer’s Guild.

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weekend wrap-up

Posted on 28 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

As we head into another action-packed week I thought I’d take a minute to bring you up-to-date on the shows we saw this weekend.

Wednesday night we went to the opening of WakkaWakka ProductionsFabrik: The Legend of M. Rabinowitz at Urban Stages. Rabinowitz was a Polish Jew who fled to, of all places, Norway, where he became a very successful clothier. He was the only Jew in his town of Haugesund and an outspoken representative of Norway’s very small Jewish population. When the Nazis came to Norway he and his family were deported to concentration camps and killed. Wakka Wakka tells Rabinowitz’s story – a variation on a familiar theme – through the blend of puppetry, song and masks that characterized their last show, The Death of Little Ibsen. The show is very imaginative with some wonderful puppetry and inventive staging – the dream sequences are beautiful and moving. My avant-garde or experimental impulses found me wanting the company to push the abstract elements further, to explore some of the more unexpected, troubling or complicated possibilities of the story and the staging. With that being said, Fabrik is a very enjoyable, well-made and well-performed show. It is sophisticated for adults but still family-friendly. Wakka Wakka has grown a lot since Culturebot first saw them perform at Schoolhouse Roxx at PS122 several years ago. They get more sophisticated with each project and are definitely a company to support and keep track of.

Thursday night we went to see Richard Foreman’s new spectacle Deep Trance Behavior in Potatoland at The Ontological which is his latest variation on the themes and obsessions he has explored for the past forty years. I know that I should wax eloquent about Foreman’s aesthetics and the psychological landscapes, etc. etc., but as I watched the actresses go through their robotic motions I kept picturing Foreman saying that line Matthew McConaughey’s character says in Dazed and Confuzed: “That’s what I love about these high school girls, man. I get older, they stay the same age.” I know, I know, there’s WAY more going on than that but still …. working at the OHT has become a rite of passage for forty years worth of downtown artists and I wondered what a family tree of Adult Children of the Ontological would look like.

Friday night was a study in contrasts as we saw two very different solo shows, The Flying Machine’s Journey To The End Of The Night at The Gene Frankel Theater and Michael Yates Crowley’s The Ted Haggard Monologues at Collective:Unconscious.

Journey To The End Of The Night is based on the novel and life of Louis-Ferdinand Celine. Directed by Joshua Carlebach, adapted by Jason Lindner and starring Richard Crawford, in an extraordinary performance, this show was one of the best I’ve seen in quite a while. I hadn’t really heard that much about it and I kind of fluked into seeing it at the invitation of a friend. I knew that Flying Machine was LeCoq-based and so I was expecting to see an ensemble cast doing physical-based theater. What I got was a moody, atmospheric, masterful solo show that conveyed Celine’s nihilistic humor and pathos while providing historical and biographical context for his work.

I discovered Celine in college as I traversed the literary landscape of Charles Bukowski, Henry Miller, Knut Hamsun and John Fante. I remembered Journey as a complicated, darkly funny picaresque novel, very literary, told in effusive bursts of language and over-the-top flights of fancy. It has been a long time since I read it, but I couldn’t imagine how it could possibly be staged as anything other than a sprawling epic.

Flying Machine’s adaptation was a revelation. Lindner’s script was tight, clean and efficient. It kept the spirit and sensibility of the novel while moving the story forward quickly and inevitably. Interwoven with excerpts from the novel were biographical insights into Celine – the anti-Semitism that ultimately led to him being delegitimized as an author, his perceived collaboration with the Nazis, his sense of paranoia, anger and resentment. Director Carlebach and his designers created a claustrophobic world that felt like a doctor’s study in the anteroom of Purgatory. And Richard Crawford, as Celine and all the other characters – was just delightful. His performance was absolutely riveting – funny, dark, engaging and accessible. With a few simple gestures, a hat, some changes in lighting and a few different accents, he conveyed an entire world. He never left his seat behind the desk but it was obvious that his character work was based in physicality. Wow!

I sat there in this dingy 74-seat theater in a basement wondering what the hell this show was doing here. It really deserved to be in a much bigger, better, cleaner, more legit venue. Someone should pick it up and bring it to Off-Broadway. All the more mystifying is why this show seemed to come and go with so little press. I mean, I guess it got okay press. I found a review on Theatermania, Helen Shaw’s review in Time Out, this review by someone called The Dresser, this review by Claudia Carlson and this review by George Hunka – but I just thought I would have been hearing about this show everywhere.

After Journey I went down to Collective:Unconscious for an entirely different type of solo show, Michael Yates Crowley’s The Ted Haggard Monologues. Crowley is a talented writer and a deft performer. He portrays a series of characters based on real people involved in the Ted Haggard scandal. Alternately serious and funny, the monologues often veer from the mundane to the surreal. It would be easy to simply lampoon the hypocrisy of an Evangelical preacher caught in a sex scandal with a crystal-meth-addicted gay prostitute, but Crowley manages to avoid that pitfall. He creates characters that, each in their own way, deal with their conflicted desires, their yearning for love, their need for control and/or understanding of the world around them. Even the gay hooker, here named Rick, is focused less on vengeance and more on love. It makes the show more gentle than hysterical, more quizzical than strident. Director Michael Rau has done a nice job of creating simple but effective staging, the transitions are also effective and the presence of a 5-person church choir is a nice touch.

The night I saw the show the box office person had, apparently, spaced out and forgotten to show up, so everyone got to see the show for free (donations gladly accepted) and also got free beer. The audience hung out before the show and schmoozed and even once the show started, it felt very collegial and intimate. That kind of summed up the overall vibe of the show: low-key, laid-back, bare-bones and enjoyable.

The Ted Haggard Monologues is a very promising debut from a very gifted group of young artists.

Saturday night I went to see a preview performance of Hunting and Gathering at 59E59 and Sunday I finally saw Between the Devil and The Deep Blue Sea at P.S.122 which was enjoyable.

I’m not sure what I’m seeing this week, but I will keep you posted! Send me your recommendations!

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oh yeah, martian entertainment invented piggybacking

Posted on 28 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

Um. Yeah, right. This article in the Times about how “shows survive by sharing a stage” talks about a “new model” for producing called “piggybacking”.

The article says:

“The reason New World Stages seems to have more arrival times than Grand Central Terminal is that it has become the epicenter of Off Broadway’s latest survival strategy. It’s called piggybacking, and it involves two shows saving production costs by sharing a stage, often lighting and sound equipment and even a crew member of two. Not everyone can claim all the prime slots of course, so showtimes are divided up and staggered.”

and continues

“Carl White, a producer of “Naked Boys Singing” and a general manager whose company, Martian Entertainment, runs “Altar Boyz,” claims to have devised the model, though he doesn’t take credit for the name. “Kevin McCollum called it that,” he said, referring to the Broadway producer best known for “Rent” and “The Drowsy Chaperone.” “We were in a meeting and Kevin turned to me and said, ‘Tell me about the Martian Piggybacking Model.’ And it stuck.” “

WTF??? And Al Gore invented the friggin’ internet. COME ON! Piling shows on top of each other has been going on since, like, the beginning of time. Certainly anyone who has ever been in – or programmed – a festival has done it. And so has every artist/producer below 14th St. who has put on a show at one of the Horse Trade Theaters, or Collective:Unconscious or, back in the old days, Todo Con Nada, Surf Reality, etc. etc. etc.

So now that “Off-Broadway” is forced to save money the way everyone else has for years they’re claiming to have invented it???? I don’t know why that cheeses me off so much but it really does. As they say: Dude, whatever.

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rocky mountain high

Posted on 28 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

sparky productions presents

TELLURIDE PLAYWRIGHT’S FESTIVAL

June 9 – 16 2008

Located in the beautiful, historic town of Telluride, Colorado.   The

Telluride Playwright’s Festival offers a unique opportunity for the

playwright, to work on his or her play with professional actors and

directors, in a small intimate setting, far from a critical glare of a large

city.   This is a week long, intensive Festival, culminating in a staged

reading open to the public; where the playwright can receive objective

feedback.   Participants must be available for the entire length of the

Festival and are expected to fully participate, rewrite and work in a

communal, supportive atmosphere.   The goal is to be able to take your play

to the next level. Maximum number of playwrights will be four.    We are

looking for full length plays that say something meaningful and that pertain

to the times we live in. Either drama or comedy.   You must be flexible and

open to working with actors and directors in an informal atmosphere.   Since

we are 9000 feet above sea level in the Rocky Mountains, you must also be

able to accommodate the high altitude.

Airfare, lodging & a communal nightly meal will be included for participants.

TO APPLY

Please send:

- A brief synopsis of the play

- Character Breakdown

- Cover Letter with Playwright Statement

- Draft of play

- Resume/Bio – with phone number, address and e-mail address

- $20 non-refundable application processing fee payable by check made out to

SPARKY PRODUCTIONS

- stamped addressed envelope (for response back)

You must send complete applications through the mail

SEND MATERIALS TO

Telluride Playwright’s Festival

c/o Sparky Productions

P.O. Box 903

Telluride, CO 81435

DEADLINE

The postmark deadline for all submissions is January 30, 2008. Applicants  will be notified through the mail on or before March 30, 2008.

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digital matrix commmissions

Posted on 25 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

This Just In:

WE INVITE YOU TO APPLY TO DIGITAL MATRIX COMMISSIONS 2009!

CALL FOR ARTISTS: SURVIVAL, RESISTANCE, GENTRIFICATION

The Digital Matrix Commissions Program invites artists to create work in digital and new-media forms. Chosen artists will receive an honorarium of $5,000 and a nine-month commission. The commissioned project will be featured on LongwoodCyber.org. Applicants can be located in any part of the world as the program is predominately internet based. The next commission period runs from January 1, 2009 to September 30, 2009.

This year, we request proposals that explore “mapping” as it relates to survival, resistance, and gentrification. How do artists respond to it? How do these issues affect community? How can the internet or web-based technology be used to address these concerns?

We encourage projects that present a South Bronx context. All projects must feature internet-based interactivity.

DEADLINE

Monday, February 4, 2008

More info after the jump

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Artaud at The Ohio

Posted on 25 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

John Jahnke’s HOTEL SAVANT is staging the first American Translation of Antonin Artaud’s The Cenci at the Ohio Theater beginning February 5th.

If you’ve seen any of Jahnke’s other work, you know it is very artful and elegant, like painting.  This should be an intriguing project…

complete info after the jump…

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frigidfest 2008

Posted on 25 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

Mark your calendars now for the 2nd Annual Frigid Festival, brought to you by Horse Trade (the folks who run The Kraine, the Red Room and Under St. Mark’s) and EXIT Theatre (founders of the SF Fringe Festival). It runs from February 27-March 9, 2008.

What makes Frigid different from other festivals is that the artists take home 100% of their box office and the festival producers do not receive royalties from future performances. It is also non-juried which is a good thing in principle, but from an audience perspective: caveat emptor!

Still, since Culturebot can sometimes be an Old Leftist Crank and since he participated in the first Seattle Fringe Festival (in 1991!!), which we think was the first Fringe in the States, we stand with our fellow indie theater artists in forging opportunities for everyone to show their stuff, regardless of funding, etc. etc.

I don’t really know anything about any of the shows but I like robots, so I’m hoping that Giant Invisible Robot is good. I’m also curious about the nonsense company‘s show Great Hymn of Thanksgiving/Conversation Storm, which seems to be some kind of avant-garde collaboration between theater artists and new music composers.

Brrrr!

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Best. Actress. Ever.

Posted on 25 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

Its so weird, last night as I lay in bed I was thinking about this MP3 I got sent a few years back of this delusional actress who was trying to get an audition. Then I checked my stats and saw that people had been looking at that post. Weird. Anyway, since I moved servers the original MP3 wasn’t available. I’ve re-uploaded it and you can listen to it here. Funny! (and kind of sad)

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hotINK Festival

Posted on 24 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

Just got an e-mail about the hotINK festival which looks really good. Heres’ what the website says:

“Now in its seventh year, hotINK is an annual, international festival of play readings that brings together playwrights from around the world with distinguished actors and directors from the New York theatre, as well as students, alumni and faculty from the Tisch School of the Arts. The readings are curated by representatives of each of the TSOA Drama Department studios and studio affiliates, and in this way, students have the opportunity to work with participating guests artists-and those artists become part of the extended Tisch School of the Arts community. ”

Complete line-up after the jump. For more info visit www.hotink.org.

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Dublin Calling

Posted on 24 January 2008 by Andy Horwitz

Culturebot just got this call for entries from the Dublin Fringe Festival. We’ve never been able to go, but we’ve met tons o’ people who work(ed) there and they’re a fantastic bunch. It is a great opportunity to show your work and meet other artists and just generally have a great time. Here’s the info:

Calling all: Artists, Anarchists, Poets, Punks, Romantics, Activists, Philosophers, Fashionistas, Visionaries, Anoraks, Idealists, Zealots, Creatives, Ninjas, Geniuses, Clowns.

Got something to say?

We invite you to: Push the boat out, Shake things up, Reach for the stars, Shout from the rafters, Make a name for yourself, Make your ma proud, Inspire a generation, Burn up the stage, Thrill your audience… And Stick It To The Man, man.

Dublin Fringe Festival is now accepting submissions for the 2008 Festival, running from the 6th to the 21st September.

Deadline for all applications is Thursday 20th March.

See www.fringefest.com for more information.

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