Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Looking at the audience for once

It has been a long time indeed since I have been on the part of the stage that looks out at the audience, but that will change briefly on Friday night. I volunteered to be one of the readers for a staged reading of the play "8" at Theatre Alliance in Winston-Salem. It transmuted into TWO readings, back to back, with a discussion after each one. It's a very timely subject, given that North Carolina is voting on Amendment One, seeking to deny rights to anyone other than a man and woman combo in legal marriage. Tsk. Unconstitutional, as the courts are slowly determining.

Anyway, I'm "playing" the lead defense attorney, who starts the play seemingly in control and ends it way short of a convincing argument. It's a fine cast and a worthy cause. I'm enjoying my short time on the stage and using my voice in pursuit of a good cause.

But that won't be the end of it -- Theatre Alliance has chosen to do a series of one or two night readings in its upcoming season (yay!). I've been cast in one in January -- and for the first time ever, Kathy and I will be on stage together in another in April, 2013. Truly looking forward to that!

Thursday, April 12, 2012

A little DC play going!

Since the last missive, we ran off to Washington, D.C. to visit with son Andy and daughter-in-law Sarah -- and, of course, see a couple of plays.

Last Friday night, we were able to see Arena Stage's production of Eugene O'Neill's sole comedy (and even at that, there were a few down moments), "Ah, Wilderness." While the three of us who attended generally agreed that it won't be on our list of top 25 favorite plays, for me, it was still a fine evening. Many of the plays I read and admired in my youth have not been frequently presented in productions I could see. But now "Long Day's Journey into Night," "Wilderness," "Touch of the Poet" and, most memorably, "The Iceman Cometh" have been checked off my must-see list. (I've seen several very good "Moon for the Misbegotten" productions now.) I thought they did a fine job with this particular play, and it was a pleasure to sit through even if not the greatest script ever written.

Then, on Saturday afternoon, we went to see some of Andy's work - he was lighting designer for the Adventure Theatre's production of "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day."

When I see we got to see "some" of Andy's work, that would be accurate. We were unaware that we were going to be attending a special-needs performance, which is a fine idea indeed to allow those children to experience theater. No problem there. But if you're going to see the full scope of a lighting design, as we had planned to do, it's not the best plan. For very good reasons, special effects such as strobe lights are left out, and house lights are left on throughout. We had a good time, but not really the full experience.

There was also this one actress who either didn't know where her special light was, or didn't care, and some less-than-enthusiastic performances in general, and well, it could have been better. But we got there!

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Trying something new-ish

And now, for a slightly different angle on "playing with plays": I'm going to be in one. Well, sort of. It's not really a play production, it's a one-night staged reading, so I'll have a script in front of me and be surrounded by a lot of talented people I really like. But still ....

Anyway, on Friday night, April 27, at Theatre Alliance over in Winston-Salem, a good-sized cast will be reading the play "8," which uses interviews and trial transcripts to illuminate the trial over California's Proposition 8. It's a good and timely subject, given North Carolina's May 8th voting situation over trying to make a definition of marriage part and parcel of the state's constitution. As for me, with a few historical exceptions (most of them overturned), constitutions are meant to protect peoples' rights, not deny them. So I'm a strong "no" vote person. Kathy has stepped into an ASM role on the KLT musical, which leaves me time to do other things - and this is one that I chose.

It's not that I've never been on stage before -- just not much. "Music Man" as a member of the quartet in high school. "Trial by Jury" as a member of the jury in college. And a bartender in a one-act after graduation. My problem is, and has always been, memorizing lines. I'm just no good at it. It's a shame that the woman in black in "The Woman in Black" is a woman. I'd be good at that role! NO lines!

At any rate, it's a reading. A lot of people I know or know of are part of the cast, too, so looking forward to spending a little time on-stage. I guess I took Carson Kreitzer's advice to heart - if you're going to write for theater, it's good to be part of theater in different fashions as much as possible, both behind and on the stage. I tend to agree.

Now I just have to make time to do some more of the writing part!

Anyway, on Saturday night, we saw George Bernard Shaw's "Man and Superman" at UNCG. It was a master's degree project for the lead female, who was excellent, and included our young friend Mike Shapiro as the one American in an otherwise British cast (and one Irish-American). As was the way in its time, it's not a short show. But very enjoyable!