Showing posts with label oral tradition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oral tradition. Show all posts
Monday, September 24, 2012
Friday, September 21, 2012
Barbicide Q&A | Doug Sharf
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Doug Sharf portrays Ant Knee in Barbicide. |
Doug Sharf, who plays Ant Knee and Toby in Barbicide,
sat down with us for a brief Q&A:
What are your characters all about?
"One of my characters, Ant Knee, is plagued with the common problem of beginning a new life after the armed forces with pretty much nothing. The sailor boy just drifts along until he finds something worth living for: Jo. Once he meets her, she's what he's all about. He's not a people person and chasing a peaceful, domestic life with Jo becomes everything. My other character, Toby, is all about eating and figuring out what happened to his role model, Joey Fanta."
Without giving anything away, What is your favorite moment in Barbicide?
"When Toddesco competes in the Shave Off."
What is the biggest discovery you have made during this production?
"Never go full retard."
What has been one of your most memorable moments working on this piece?
"This dates back to when we started the reading series at the Moustache Tonsorial--the barber shop in the Village. The first reading packed the place. It was hot, there was alcohol and we had no idea how the play would be received. But it got a really strong response. As we read through the play that night, I remember beginning to trust the words more and more because of the connection they were forming with everyone."
What is your favorite drink?
"It was Tanq+Tonic but I'm starting to just drink whiskey on the rocks. And always Guinness."
What is your favorite food?
"Pizza. From the $1 slices to the places that won't even serve just slices."
What is your current obsession?
"Writing a good script."
If you could give up one of your vices, what would it be?
"Envy, definitely. It's ugly and indicative of inner turmoil."
What is one thing you waste too much money on?
"Food. I need to do more grocery shopping."
What is one activity you waste too much time doing?
"Fantasy Football research and watching football."
What in the world most thrills you?
"The world. Mostly travelling it. Seeing things that most other people don't get to see. Doing the more secretive stuff that the locals are into, not the tourist traps."
What is your personal motto?
"Well, my quote in my senior yearbook was from Ferris Bueller's Day Off, it was 'Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.' I think that still applies. It's either that or 'Never eat airport Chinese food before a flight to Puerto Rico.'"
Labels:
arts,
barbicide,
casting,
culture,
design,
interview,
new play,
new york city,
nyc,
oral tradition,
plays,
Q and A,
readings,
sean pomposello,
theatre,
theatre projected,
universal monsters,
west village
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Barbicide Q&A | Paulette Oliva
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Paulette Oliva portrays Ms. Lionetti in Barbicide |
Paulette Oliva, who plays Ms. Lionetti and the Beggar Woman in Barbicide,
sat down with us for a brief Q&A:
What is your character all about?
“Mrs. Lionetti, is teetering on the verge of being an "old maid" - or more appropriately in Italian -"zitella". From a very young age - she was either babysitting for her "slow" younger brother, or working alongside her parents at their restaurant. Never married, and plodding through her dull and hapless life, she survives by operating a pizza parlor - controlled primarily by the mob. She escapes from her troubles at the movies, or with soap operas. Her social life consists of driving distant aging relatives to the beauty salon. Alone in the world, and resigned to her lot in life - things begin to spice up a bit, when a mysterious stranger enters her pizza shop. Desparate for companionship, she concocts a storied version of past events to suit her situation. Things begin to unravel quickly....”
Without giving anything away, What is your favorite moment in Barbicide?
“The shave-off!”
What is the biggest discovery you have made during this production?
“With limited space, and functional props only - I am amazed how this play truly relies on the actors' ability to breathe life into every moment of this piece - to the point where an audience will not feel the least bit "under-served" in terms of production values - quite the opposite...the words seem richer, the moments are more profound, and the audience is more engaged. The magic of theatre - period.”
What has been one of your most memorable moments working on this piece?
“I have a feeling it is yet to come.... because every time I think a moment is memorable, it gets trumped by the NEXT memorable moment.... it's about the process for me, the journey....and the collection of many memorable moments.”
What is your favorite drink?
“Grey Goose Vodka...on the rocks, no fruit, olives, or other distractions.......”
What is your favorite food?
“Potato Chips (is that a food group?)”
What is your current obsession?
“Driving with the top down. Um, that would be my CAR top down.”
If you could give up one of your vices, what would it be?
“I don't smoke or gamble - and Vodka's not a vice, YET. Did I mention Potato Chips??”
What is one thing you waste too much money on?
“Coffee at Dunkin.”
What is one activity you waste too much time doing?
“I get lost in Tumblr and Pinterest.........”
What in the world most thrills you?
“Singing "Rose's Turn" to a sold out audience.”
What is your personal motto?
“Don't wait - do it now - life is too short.”
Labels:
arts,
barbicide,
culture,
design,
interview,
new play,
new york city,
oral tradition,
Paulette Oliva,
plays,
Q and A,
the theatre project,
theatre,
theatre projected,
west village
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Barbicide Q&A | Angie Atkinson
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Angie Atkinson portrays Jo in Barbicide |
Angie Atkinson, of Barbicide, sat down with The Theatre Project for a brief Q&A:
What’s your character all about?
"I love Jo. She's this sort of sad and tough girl who's disabled but doesn't really think about it, isolated but hopeful, sheltered but wise, and adorably boy crazy. And I love that her best friends are pigeons."
Without giving anything away, What is your favorite moment in Barbicide?
"It's hard to pick favorites, but I gotta say that I'm a huge fan of the opening scene. It sets the tone of the play so beautifully, and I love the imagery."
What is the biggest discovery you have made during this production?
"I used to act a lot more often, but I switched my focus to music about a year and a half ago. I'm loving the musician's life, but doing this piece has reminded me of how much I love acting and how much I miss doing it."
What has been one of your most memorable moments working on this piece?
"Christian giving Doug tips on how to be tender with women was pretty memorable."
What is your favorite drink?
"Ginger ale. It's true."
What is your favorite food?
"Oh, it's like asking me to pick my favorite child! I suppose I could probably eat tacos every day. But, like, the delicious & fresh kind in the soft corn tortillas with the cilantro and the onions and all that. Tacos al pastor are my favorite. Mmmmm."
What is your current obsession?
"I just got an Apple TV and have been streaming Magnum P.I. on NetFlix, and it is EVERYTHING. I also kind of hope that when I die I come back as one of Adam Levine's tattoos."
If you could give up one of your vices, what would it be?
"Eating my feelings. It happens."
What is one thing you waste too much money on?
"Definitely food. I'm a starving artist so I'm pretty frugal about most things, but I'm a sucker for delicious takeout."
What is one activity you waste too much time doing?
"Doubting myself, 'cause any time spent doing that is wasted."
What in the world most thrills you?
"Music. And meeting and connecting with other human beings, especially the ones of the cute boy variety."
What is your personal motto?
I often say to myself, 'One day at a time, sweet Jesus.' And then of course, there's 'Be a strong black woman,' which is the best advice I ever got.
Monday, September 10, 2012
Barbicide Q&A | Arthur Aulisi
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Arthur Aulisi portrays Toddesco in Barbicide |
Arthur Aulisi, of Barbicide, sat down with The Theatre Project for a brief Q&A:
What are your characters all about?
"Each character I play is obsessed with something. Todesco is blinded by his need for revenge. The Judge is obsessed with power (and his step daughter). Porello is obsessed with fame and success. and The Gooch...well, I imagine The Gooch is obsessed with food."
Without giving anything away, What is your favorite moment in Barbicide?
"There are many moments throughout, each vastly different, that I love for different reasons. But I think the hat latze at the World's Fair will be a lot of fun."
What is the biggest discovery you have made during this production?
"Of the process, I've learned that doing a two person scene by yourself is tricky. Of the play, that we don't always know what will make us happy."
What has been one of your most memorable moments working on this piece?
"Developmental readings at the Moustache Tonsorial were a blast, with passersby stopping and watching from outside the window. But pleasantly surprising was how the play worked on two levels in particular. Given how well know the source material is, it was fun to hear the listeners react to a character or a plot point they recognized. Even better was to hear the listeners taken by surprise by the play, despite familiarity with the source material."
What is your favorite drink?
"My favorite drink? Coffee is up there. It used to be bourbon. My dear friend and local bartender (independent of each other) once made up a vodka drink for me while I was rehearsing Uncle Vanya. She named it "the Astrov" and, as far as fancy cocktails go, it was pretty damn good."
What is your favorite food?
"Favorite food? Me and Garfield. Lasagna."
What is your current obsession?
"Current obsession? Love it or List it on HGTV."
What is one thing you waste too much money on?
"I spend way too much money on dining out. It does offer me fundamental nutrition as well so it's not a complete waste of money. But there's not a whole lot to show for it. Except maybe a fat ass."
What is one activity you waste too much time doing?
"I watch way too much television. See the above answer to the current obsession question."
What in the world most thrills you?
"This is going to sound corny and cliche but it really does thrill me to make people laugh or to move them or to make them think. We should all do more of that throughout our daily lives. Theater just happens to be a tool that I employ toward that end. Second to all of that, scuba diving."
What is your personal motto?
"I don't think I have a personal motto, certainly not one single one. There's a lot of good ones that friends share on Facebook. Take the 10 most contradictory ones of those, blend, and that will be my motto."
Monday, April 16, 2012
Simply Intricate: Oral Tradition in Theatre
Staged Readings
Simply Intricate: Oral Tradition in Theatre
4. 16. 2012, 2:30 PM
As you may or may not know, we have been spending
quite a bit of time developing our newest production, Barbicide by Sean Pomposello. We had originally work-shopped
an early portion of the script in the fall, as part of our reading series, Universal
Monsters. After an overwhelming
response from our audience members, I began to see a great potential in a
script that had otherwise been an intriguing concept, (See, The Playwright’s
Pad: The Origin of Barbicide.) Shortly
after, what was read at Universal Monsters ended up becoming the first three scenes of Sean
Pomposello’s newest play! After lengthy conversations about the play itself,
changes to dialogue and characters, as well as modifying concepts that would
maintain a cohesive quality to the piece as a whole, we finally reached a rest
stop. I wanted to give Barbicide the
opportunity to truly evolve, so as the script was completed, we decided to
present a developmental reading of the finished product. We began rehearsals
last week for our reading of Barbicide, equipped with a great cast and a fantastic script. With a reading,
there are a variety of options to present a piece of theatre. Beginning this
process made me wonder, is there a proper way to direct a reading?
One of the most attractive qualities of a
reading is the simplistic nature of the event as a whole. “Hey, here’s a
reading. It’s free. Come see it,” is the essential structure of advertising
your typical reading. When you are in a space, all it calls for are a few
chairs and music stands, then you are set. I have been to readings that play up and play down the
event. Some readings I have been to can seem uptight and others too lax. How do
you find the happy medium? Does the environment of the reading affect the piece
itself? I do not believe there is one specific way to curate a reading, and
granted, the mood and environment certainly will be compared to the play
itself. The point is that these “simple” readings are an opportunity for
like-minded people to gather, discuss and participate in a play in order to
contribute towards it’s growth.
While the event itself can be presented simply or
intricately, what about the direction of the piece? The ultimate goal is to
tell a story. At a reading, there is typically very little stage direction. If
you are operating under equity guidelines, actors cannot be using props or
costumes. When I direct a reading I rely on three factors:
-An Actor’s Instincts: In a
reading, the actors have to rely on each other. There are no light cues or staging for them to
involve in their existence in the moment. Ultimately the actors must be
storytellers.
-Vocal Attention: The most
crucial element in directing a reading is the unique and interesting ways you
can guide a story by playing with vocalizations. With the actors unable to fall
back on scenery and staging to add additional conflict or intent to a scene,
they must resort to vocal variation. This keeps the audience involved while
appropriately serving as a storyteller.
-Audience Involvement: While you
cannot rely on an audience to interact, you hope they do. If you have a good
theatre piece on your hands, the audience will typically participate. This
doesn’t mean inviting them to read, though you could if you like. An attentive
and vocal audience is always appreciated at a reading. You get a sense of how
people enjoy the piece as well as moments of the play that are simply not
landing where you expected.
Really, readings are a prime example of oral tradition.
Every culture throughout the ages has told stories to an audience. Novelist,
Edwards Price once wrote, “A need to tell and hear stories is essential to the
species.” Everybody tells stories. Everybody includes their own influence towards
a story. That is what gives a story life. As it travels from person-to-person
and mouth-to-mouth, it naturally undergoes changes that are essential in it’s
growth and complexity.
Like most art forms, it is subjective to consider one proper
way of holding a play reading. We should, however, be promoting and holding
many more readings. We are responsible for carrying on the oral tradition.
Through readings, we become a part of an age old custom.
With that said, you may join The Theatre Project as we
continue our commitment to the spoken word. Friday April 20th, I
invite you to attend our developmental reading of Barbicide. The reading will be held at Moustache Tonsorial on
55 Greenwich Avenue. I look forward to seeing you there.
-Christian
The director's notebook is a blog Christian Amato started through theatre projected in order to allow people to see how a younger director approaches his work.
The director's notebook is a blog Christian Amato started through theatre projected in order to allow people to see how a younger director approaches his work.
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