Showing posts with label Abingdon Theatre Company. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abingdon Theatre Company. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2022

Downstate

Last night, I saw Bruce Norris's new play Downstate, which is running at Playwrights Horizons with an absolutely amazing cast.

I went primarily to see Susanna Guzman, who I met when she was in my play Foggy Bottom at the Abingdon Theatre Company. Since then, her career has taken off, including a recurring role on Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.

In Downstate, she plays a parole officer named Ivy who manages among her other "clients" four convicted sex offenders living in a group home in downstate Illinois. Fred, played by Francis Guinan, is the oldest of the four, and cannot get around without the aid of a wheelchair. At the beginning of the play, he is confronted by one of his former victims, though nothing in that interview goes the way anyone involved expects it to.

That's one of the great things about the play. No matter what our pre-conceived notions about sexual abuse might be, the characters upend them. That's particularly true for Dee, Fred's housemate and caregiver, played by K. Todd Freeman (an accomplished stage actor, though I know him best as Mr. Trick from Buffy the Vampire Slayer). Both Fred and Dee formerly abused boys, which makes their housemate Gio (played by Glenn Davis) look down on them, since he "made a mistake" with a teenage girl, which in his mind puts him in a completely different category.

The fourth housemate, Felix, is generally played by Eddie Torres, but last night the understudy, Matthew J. Harris, had to step into the role. Harris was excellent (as understudies usually are) and his tense scene with Guzman in the first act had the audience on the edge of our seats.

I don't want to give away too much of the plot, so go see it for yourself. Trust me, you won't be sorry.

Sunday, March 27, 2022

Act III

I first moved into New York City in 2002. I had a great apartment in Hell's Kitchen. It was there that I wrote Foggy Bottom, which later premiered at the Abingdon Theatre Company, as well as my adaptation of A Christmas Carol done in Saratoga Springs.

Later, when I got married, my beloved didn't want to move into my beautiful Hell's Kitchen apartment. She needed luxury amenities, such as hot AND cold running water. (I always had at least one or the other.) That meant I had to move into her apartment in Harlem at the end of 2012.

Well, during that second act in New York City I wrote Meucci's Message, which premiered on Staten Island. I was also fortunate enough to have my adaptation of Moby-Dick done on Cape Cod and for Detroit Rep to produce my original play Capital. As the years went on, our friends who lived in Harlem moved away and it became time for a new change.

So now I'm beginning Act Three in New York, this time in a co-op apartment in the Bronx. While I can't tell what the future will hold, theatre does seem to be coming back as the pandemic recedes. My play Kew Gardens couldn't be performed live earlier this year, but you can watch it on YouTube.

Kew Gardens begins about an hour and 12 minutes into the video, but it's well worth watching to see Sienna Thorgusen play Kitty. Enjoy!

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

The Disciple

I just got back from seeing The Disciple, Rachel Carey's bold new play about novelist and philosophical provocateur Ayn Rand and her follower and much younger lover, Nathaniel Branden.

Maja Wampuszyc is chillingly perfect as the domineering Rand. I first got to know Wampuszyc's work when she appeared in my play Foggy Bottom at the Abingdon Theatre Company, but she went on to premiere on Broadway in Irena's Vow and more recently was in James Gray's film The Immigrant.

Cameron Darwin Bossert plays Branden, the devoted acolyte of Rand who went on to make a name for himself as a psychologist and self-help guru. We see him in 1979, leading a self-esteem retreat, and in flashback as a young man manipulated and used by Rand for her own purposes.

The show is playing at the Wild Project until July 25th, and if you join theatre company Thirdwing for a monthly fee, it's ridiculously cheap. Check it out!

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Housekeeping

My short play Housekeeping is now officially out in the journal Rip Rap, a publication of California State University Long Beach's creative writing program.

Housekeeping tells the story of a businessman who gets more than he bargained for after he admits a woman into his hotel room for housekeeping. It was originally written for a fundraiser for the Abingdon Theatre Company, and received its premiere by Aching Dogs Theatre in 2011.

Rip Rap is available in a print edition, but you can read the journal digitally here. In addition to Housekeeping, the journal also has the short plays Adrift by Andrew G. Cooper, Silver Linings by Mark Sherstinsky, Dear Crossing by Lisa Kimball, and Sam's Lament by Robert Wray.

Thanks to Adam Largaespada and Leticia Valente for editing the collection, and Julia Edith Rios for serving as the play editor.

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Remembering Doug Rossi

New York City has lost one of the best friends to new play development the theatre had. After a difficult battle with cancer, actor Doug Rossi has passed away in his childhood home in Cleveland, Ohio.

I got to know Doug working on new plays at the Abingdon Theatre Company, but he actually trained as a classical actor, getting his MFA in acting working with the Alabama Shakespeare Festival. Over the years, he played the title role in Hamlet, Caliban in The Tempest, Orlando in As You Like It, Friar Lawrence in Romeo and Juliet, Orsino in Twelfth Night, Antonio in Much Ado About Nothing, and a host of other Shakespearean roles.

As an actor, Doug was always game for anything, which is what made him such an important figure in the development of new work. The number of new plays he worked on, in readings, workshops, and world premiere productions, helping authors to hone characters and originating new roles, is too numerous to name. Just a few of the plays Doug helped bring to light include Aliens with Extraordinary Skills by Saviana Stanescu, Carlett's Just Carlett by Kat Mustatea, Nell Dash by Doug DeVita, A Brandy Before Dying by Jim Farmer, and Evensong by Christina Quintana.

I had the pleasure of working with Doug in numerous incarnations of I Hate You! A Love Story, in which he acted in a two-hander opposite Sandra Maren Schneider. He also played numerous characters in the early readings of my adaptation of Moby-Dick. He played Tom in THE STATE OF COLORADO v. TENNESSEE WILLIAMS, my send up of The Glass Menagerie, which was fitting, since he had also played that role back in Ohio, winning a Best Actor Chanticleer Award for his performance. More recently, he appeared in a reading of Burns Night at Urban Stages, hilariously appearing on stage in a kilt.

For years, Doug came to monthly meetings of playwrights, first at the Abingdon, and then later with the 36th Street Writers Block. He volunteered his time doing cold reads of new work, and always gave valuable feedback. He took part in the very first table read that Joshua H. Cohen and I did of our musical Burned, and he was a familiar face to anyone who regularly attended readings of new plays. He also gave generously of his time to writers trying to produce their work at small festivals, including the Midtown International Theatre Festival, the Samuel French One-Act Festival, and the NYC Fringe. In 2011, he was named Best Featured Actor for his role in Duncan Pflaster's Sweeter Dreams at Planet Connections.

Doug also appeared on screen, most memorably with Maggie Gyllenhaal in The Deuce on HBO. It is for his stage work that I remember him, though, and as the loving husband of fellow actor Dianne Diep. It seems almost unbelievable that he isn't with us anymore. New York theatre has lost one of its most giving, hardest working, most insightful, brightest stars.


Sunday, July 7, 2019

BURNS NIGHT Opens This Week

My short play Burns Night opens this Friday, July 12th, as part of the Long Island City One-Act Festival at the Secret Theatre.

The first show is at 7:30 pm. We're second on a bill of shorts that includes plays by Seth Freeman, Jeremy Kehoe, Brianna Singer, and others. Tickets are $18 in advance and $20 at the door.

Performances continue the following week at 5:00 on Saturday, July 20th, the next Saturday at 8:00 on July 27th, then at 5:00 on Sunday, August 4th, and finally at 8:00 on the following Sunday, August 11th.

Burns Night is a comedy that tells the story of two friends hiding out in a kitchen while a celebration of Robert Burns and all things Scottish starts to go overboard. Ilanna Saltzman is directing the play, following her directing a reading of the piece at Urban Stages.

Maria de Vries is reprising her role of Keira from the reading. Her other New York theatre credits include the Abingdon Theatre Company, Red Monkey, ATA, and Oxford Shakespeare. Most recently she appeared in Squirrel Screams and Other Dating Sounds by Lindsay Timmington. Her MFA is from UNC-Greensboro.

The role of Steph is being played by Alice Hale, who I originally met through Urban Stages as well. Alice's New York theatre credits include Golden Vanilla at New York Summerfest and A Hand Across the Bridge at the Planet Connections Theatre Festivity. She's appeared on television in ID's Hometown Homicide and in the Web series Northbound, The Uncanny Upshurs, and Public History. Her BFA is from NYU Tisch, and she has studied at Stella Adler Studio of Acting and Stonestreet Screen Acting Conservatory.

It's my first time working with Alice, and only my second time working with Maria and Ilanna, But they're all great. Rounding out the cast as Steph's boyfriend Malcom is Zach McCoy, with whom I've worked on multiple occasions. He appeared in my short play The State of Colorado v. Tennessee Williams, as well as readings of The Love Songs of Brooklynites. (Keep a look out for an announcement about that play soon.)

Zach's favorite stage credits include David in Love and Human Remains (Peter Jay Sharp Theatre at Playwrights Horizons - NYC), Bernard in Boeing, Boeing (Millbrook Playhouse - Pennsylvania), and Colin in The Birthday Boys (co-producer; Access Theatre - NYC). He is hysterical in Burns Night, so you don't want to miss him!

The Secret Theatre is located at 44-02 23rd Street in Long Island City in Queens. It is set back a bit from the street, so don't miss it when you walk by... and make it live up to its name! This is going to be a good show, so I hope to see you there.

Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Chatter


Last night I saw Sam Kahn's new play Chatter at The Tank. The Tank now resides in the space that formerly housed the Abingdon Theatre Company, an institution whose fall has been a major blow to the New York theatre scene.

Of course, a shell of a company still calls itself the Abingdon and occasionally performs around the city in other spaces, but it's only a shadow of what it used to be. The Tank, with its grey walls, is not a theatre company per se, but a space in which artists can come together and present their own work. The heart that once beat in that space is gone, which is why it's fitting that Chatter deals so much with the struggle to find something authentic in our hyper-mediated world.

Once upon a time, off-off-Broadway was filled with tiny theatre companies that inhabited holes in the walls. These were dank caverns you entered through metal doors covered with fliers before climbing several flights of stairs until you found the obscure, un-air-conditioned black box where you sat on uncomfortable seats and watched shows performed on shoe-string budgets that still managed to somehow change your life. The doors to The Tank are polished glass now, without a cheap flier to be seen, and visitors are politely asked not to take the stairs, but rather ride in a comfy elevator. With all this convenience of modern-day New York, have we lost something?

Chatter seems to say, yes, we have! The play agonizes over an authenticity that its characters are never able to find. In the first scene, the main character, Claire (played by Roxanna Kadyrova), stares down a shaft in an apartment building she's thinking of moving into. She can see people passing by, and a smoker's corner and a tattoo parlor. This is real-life New York City. The view is magical to her, but while she spends the rest of the play chasing down that ideal of authentic New York life, she's never able to quite reach it. Her life remains mediated though cell phones and dating apps and the opinions of people who don't genuinely care about her.

If there is a chance for human connection, it's with her roommate, Mary Ellen, played wonderfully by Stacey Weckstein. Mary Ellen is fascinated with Claire because she's beautiful and exotic. (She's actually just from Quebec, but to Mary Ellen that might as well be Narnia.) Unfortunately, Mary Ellen can't get out from under the shadow of the more confident and successful Deborah (played by Whitney Harris) who has apparently been bullying her since middle school. Deborah urges Claire to join the dating scene rather than just sitting at home binge-watching T.V. with Mary Ellen.

As the years fly by, Claire eventually relents and begins a relationship with the wealthy and dashing Blake (played by Derek Stratton), who immediately starts displaying red flags. He brags about the long hours he works and the money he makes, and he makes sexist blanket statements about women. Chatter gets the audience to revisit Blake's character, though, by repeating sections of the play, showing Blake first as a stereotypical jerk, but then as a sensitive, self-aware human being, saying the same lines, but with an emotional authenticity that connects with Claire. Is he really authentic, though, or just a sham, pretending to be sensitive when he actually is that jerk-ball stereotype?

The play never really lets us know. It gives us various alternatives, but continually makes us aware of the fact that we're watching a play. In the second half, the play's director (Alexandra Dashevskaya) and the playwright both appear in video footage, commenting on the action as the actors continue their scenes. In the world of Chatter it isn't just the characters who are searching for an authentic New York experience. We see the director and playwright similarly wandering through New York streets, occasionally with iconic landmarks in the background, telling us they don't know what to do or how to tell the story.

While Chatter could have turned into a self-indulgent piece of millennial navel-gazing, the second half of the play does more than just complain about how hard it is to be young in the 2010s. The play projects forward into the future lives of the characters in the coming decade, as well as the future life of New York City. Claire is now married to David (played by Michael Tyler), whom she met on a meditation retreat, and the two of them attend a dinner party at the home of Blake and Deborah, who are now married. The couple have gutted the old apartment Claire once shared with Mary Ellen, and now have lots of space, but nothing to put inside it.

Even when discussing the loss of authenticity, however, the characters can only talk about it in terms of fictional versions of New York, rather than the city as it actually was. Mary Ellen views her old apartment through the lens of Sex and the City rather than her actual memories of it. When she fanaticizes about an ideal life, it isn't actually living life, but watching it on Netflix. The characters in the play watch each other, watch themselves, and watch the city deteriorate into an empty box of nothing, but they seem unable to experience life directly for themselves.

Chatter diagnoses the ailments of our current society, but it never figures out how we can break from our present path and find a way back to authentic human experience. Maybe we need to find that special view of the shaft outside our apartments. Or maybe we just need to be allowed to skip the elevator and take the stairs for a change.

Unfortunately, Chatter is only playing until July 8th, so if you want to see it, get your tickets soon!