Showing posts with label Acadiana Center for the Arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Acadiana Center for the Arts. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Theatre--Performance


Hub City Theatre and Storytelling Festival 


Acadiana Center for the Arts:
     Wednesday, December 7:  
      7:00 pm  OPENING RECEPTION
      8:00  Evening Show $5
         • 8:00  Portrait of An Artist as Santa Claus- Ken Waldman
         • 8:30  Willie & Me, A Reading - Kimberly Nagle
     Saturday, December 10:

     7:45 Evening Show $10
         • 7:45  From Lafayette To The Northern Lights - Ken Waldman
         • 9:15  Match, A Production -Wanderlust Theater, New Orleans




Cite Des Arts:
Thursday, December 8:  
     7:00 pm Evening Show $10
         • 7:00  Silk Flowers, A One Woman Show - Jack Sorensen
         • 7:45  The American Way, A Reading - John Fiero
         • 8:15  Street Corner Medley, A Reading – Austin Sonnier
Friday, December 9:  
     7:00 pm Evening Show $10
         • 7:00 pm Match, A Production - Wanderlust Theater, New Orleans
         • 8:00  The American Way, A Reading -John Fiero
         • 9:00  Portrait of An Artist as Santa Claus - Ken Waldman
Saturday, December 10:  
     2:45 Afternoon Show $10
         • 2:45  Silk Flowers, A One Woman Show - Jack Sorensen
         • 3:30  Night Fears, A Reading - Keith Dorwick
         • 4:00  Willie & Me, A Reading - Kimberly Nagle

Theatre--Review (Wanderlust Theatre at Burke)


A good number of high schools assigned William Faulkner’s masterpiece The Sound and the Fury, a dense tome that somehow my school forgot to assign. The tale is told on four different days spanning almost twenty years and from four different points of view, frequently jumping from one to another. Its non-linear style requires particular focus on the part of the reader, and my friend John Maraist lent me his copy that had wonderful notes detailing which day was which. Unfortunately I never got very far before I was lost and gave up on the affair.

Marc Chun’s one act play Match employs a similar narrative style to The Sound and the Fury. Five unnamed characters are sitting on the stage in dissimilar chairs and deliver small sentences, sometimes longer monologues, frequently switching from one character to another. At first, they are all mumbling “I’m sorry” interspersed with other nonsense, but eventually they stop to begin explaining their lives. It’s obvious these five souls are connected somehow, and in the course of the swift fifty minutes, it’s clear who they are and how they are tragically related to one another. Just enough clues are given to start matching up the characters and how these people, who normally might not know each other and never meet, cross each other paths. The revelations are also nicely paced, leaving the audience with curiosity as to why character one is even part of this production, but the tantalizing hints pay off in the end. Chun’s play requires focus on the audience, rather than just being passive receptacles of information. It was a thought-provoking evening that left the audience dwelling on the randomness of life.

To reveal the plot would rob the play of its significance, especially if it is possible for the reader to attend the play. Match, a Wanderlust production, will perform for the Hub City Theatre & Storytelling Festival at Cite Des Arts on December 9th, 2011 at 7:00 pm as well as at the Acadiana Center for the Arts on December 10th, 2011 at 9:15 pm. Suffice it to say that the play revolves around character number three, who is in need of a blood marrow donor—a match as implied by the title—and the other four characters are tied to his struggle. There’s a girlfriend to character number three, a Hollywood star, her press agent, and an apparently random fifth character whose connection is not explained until nearly the last fifteen minutes of the play. Each character has a rich background to share, and the audience appreciates their quirks, their hopes, and their disappointments. There are two very dramatic moments in the play, and one action in particular by character five is quite unexpected but utterly believable. I can’t say things work out in the end; most things in life don’t, but it adds an authentic quality to the play.

Director Elsa Dimitriadis has assembled five actors well-suited to their roles, and to save time I will subsequently refer to the five characters by the actors playing their parts. As character three, M. Brady McKellar gave a sympathetic portrayal of a man waiting for that all perfect match, not only for the blood marrow, but also in his soul-mate, character four. With his thumbs punching through the ragged holes of his sweatshirt, McKellar’s appealing believable as a man who dreams impossible dreams but has the courage to chase them. Jarin Schexnider played character four, Brady’s geeky intelligent girlfriend, and gave the most compelling physical performance. From her hunched shoulders to the position of her feet in those impossibly bright sneakers, one believes she’s a researcher who has doubts about her relationship with Brady. Character two is the Hollywood star who’s a potential match for Brady, and Elizabeth Satterly has the looks to carry off the part and yet look like an actress who can’t get a positive review. David Huynh is character five, the Hollywood star’s press agent, who manages to be both repugnant for his constant manipulation of his star’s career and yet sympathetic because he obviously cares for her, more than she will ever know. It’s his sudden reversal that strikes you most, and yet you understand why he did it, and why humans are perhaps the most complicated creatures on earth. The character who seemed out of place for the longest time was character one, played by Bobby Bender. (I still remember performing with Bobby in Lafayette Community Theatre’s production of Our Town over twenty years ago.) At first, I felt annoyed with Bobby’s portrayal until I understood how well his character is somebody we probably all know and go out of our way to avoid. This unlikable person who intersects the other four lives represents a true person, and not the stereotypes we often see in both movies and plays. It was a fine display of acting.

Plays like this one constructed as they are make it difficult to assess the effectiveness of the director. There is precious little blocking or movement, except subtle shifts in chairs, and I find it hard to differentiate the line between the author’s intent and the director Elsa Dimitriadis’ imput. Every character is talking to either a single person, or in Satterly’s case, a talk show audience, which depending on where you’re sitting robs the audience of some facial expressions; only veteran Bobby Bender used his expressions for the fullest effect. Dimitriadis needs to slow some actors down, particularly Jarin Schexnider, whose verbal responses to her counselor near the end are too quick to have allowed someone to say anything to her. And as much as the gold watch fits David Huynh’s press agent, I would find something not so reflective to the stage lights. At various moments, I thought a white moth has fluttered onto the stage. I would also suggest changing his chair to fit the circumstances of his situation, and while I won’t reveal what situation that was, he would never be sitting on a stool to do what he was doing. There were a couple of moments when the interchanging dialogue suddenly stopped, and it was obvious someone had not jumped on their cue, but those were blessedly few.

Still, those are minor faults in an overall well-constructed play. I look forward to seeing what Dimitriadis does with a more conventional play for tonight she orchestrated a good evening with Marc Chun’s Match. I might even attempt to re-tackle Faulkner’s masterpiece.
--Vincent P. Barras

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Theatre--Performance


Someone saw it. Someone didn't go. Someone sat in her car. And someone did the unexplainable. In interlocking monologues, four young people attempt to find sense in a senseless act of violence in Certain Unexplainable Events, a new one-act play by local playwright Cody Daigle.

AUI/AURA is proud to have the opportunity to present this new work at a June 11th ArtWalk event hosted by the Acadiana Center for the Arts. The show will be run twice with a different cast each time. Start times for the shows will be announced as soon as possible.

The casts are Kelly Griffin/Megan Conner as The One In Her Car, Martha Diaz/Morgan James as The One Who Saw It, Joseph Diaz/Michael Mouton as The One Who Didn't Go and Phillip Spear/Mychael Zulauf as Michael.

The starting times are 6:15 pm and 7:15 pm at the James Moncus Theatre in the AcA.

Theatre--Performance

Someone saw it. Someone didn't go. Someone sat in her car. And someone did the unexplainable. In interlocking monologues, four young people attempt to find sense in a senseless act of violence in Certain Unexplainable Events, a new one-act play by local playwright Cody Daigle.

AUI/AURA is proud to have the opportunity to present this new work at a June 11th ArtWalk event hosted by the Acadiana Center for the Arts. The show will be run twice with a different cast each time. The first show will begin at 6:15 and the second will begin at 7:15.

The casts are Kelly Griffin/Megan Conner as The One In Her Car, Martha Diaz/Morgan James as The One Who Saw It, Joseph Diaz/Michael Mouton as The One Who Didn't Go and Phillip Spear/Mychael Zulauf as Michael.


Thursday, February 10, 2011

Theatre--Auditions

The Acadiana Center For The Arts (ACA) and the Evangeline Players announce open auditions for a co-production of Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie and a future production to be named (TBN). Both experienced and novice actors are encouraged to audition.

Lafayette auditions will be held at the ACA Moncus Theatre Tuesday, March 1st and Wednesday, March 2nd from 5-8 pm. No reservations are necessary.  Additional auditions will be held at 200 S. Main St. at the historic Duchamp Opera House in St. Martinville on Saturday and Sunday, March 5th and 6th from 2-5 pm.

The Glass Menagerie will be performed at the ACA Moncus Theatre May 26th through the 29th. Additional dates and venues will be scheduled and will be announced at a future date.

Monologues are not required. Auditions will be cold reading from the script of The Glass Menagerie and the script of the TBN production. For actors with a prepared monologue, it should be a contemporary modern piece no longer than 3 minutes in length.

For The Glass Menagerie, the producers are seeking the following roles:

TOM: Male to play 22-30 years
LAURA: Female to play 22-30 years
JIM: Male to play 22-30 years
AMANDA: Female to play 40-60 years

For the TBN production:

Several male roles to play 30-45 years
Several female roles to play 30-45 years
Male to play 55-70 years

Callbacks will be scheduled as necessary.

Send all inquiries to danielpovinelli@gmail.com

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Dance--Performance

The Acadiana Center for the Arts is bringing the Houston Metropolitan Dance Company to offer two nights of performances that include works from the company's extensive and diverse repertoire. 


On Thursday, February 10th at 7:30 pm, Houston Metropolitan Dance will present  Zoom, a full-throttle work that embraces its title, written by renowned jazz choreographer Pattie Obey.


On Friday, February 11th at 7:30 pm, NYC based choreographer Kate Skarpetowska introduces Consumed, an intense, frenetic, powerful and athletic piece that touches on the human need for different elements to control. 


Admission is $13 for members ($10 in advance) and $15 for non-members ($12 in advance).  Tickets are available at the AcA box office, located in the AcA at 101 W. Vermilion Street. 






Dance--MasterClass

AcA is presenting an opportunity to experience the passion and focus it will take to be in a professional dance company. Take classes with the incredible teachers and dancers of the Houston Metropolitan Dance Company and learn the repertory of the Houston Metropolitan Dance Company along side the Met’s own company members. Experience the diversity and excellence in training that is the signature of the Company.

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011 form 4 to 5:30 pm - Master class in Contemporary Jazz with Houston Met Dance Company’s resident choreographer, Kiki Lucas. This class will be on the Intermediate/Advanced level.

Saturday, February 12th, 2011 9:30 to 11 am – Master class in Modern with Houston Met Dance Company. This class will be on the Intermediate/Advanced level.

The cost is $10 for AcA members or students and $15 for non-­members. 

To register, or for more information,  call or email Paige Krause at 337.233.7060 or e-mail Paige@AcadianaCenterforthe
Arts.org. 

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Theatre--Performance

As We Grow?! highlights student actors from Acting Up (in Acadiana) ages 7-17 in their 2011 showcase.  Students wrote 95% of the material in this original work that ponders creativity, play, technology, and social networking.  Performances take place at the Acadiana Center for the Arts on January 28th at 7:30 pm and January 29th at 2 pm and 7:30 pm.

Tickets are available by visiting AcadianaCenerfortheArts.org or at our box office.  Tickets are $12 for adults and $7 for children K-12. Remaining tickets will also be available at the door prior to performances.  For more information, call (337) 739-4273 or (337) 233-7060.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Theatre--Presentation

Join members of AcA in their new café at the Acadiana Center for the Arts for their first discussion as participants examine collaboration. Connect with Artistic Director of L’Enfant Terrible, Justin Zsebe, Artistic Director of Acting Up (in Acadiana), Amy Waguespack and Anna Marquardt, educator at Carencro High. The panel will discuss collaboration with theatre in the classroom and the discovery of contemporary themes in the works of Shakespeare.

Coffee + is a series of discussion with artists, educators and community members in opening the dialogue and taking a more in-depth look into the arts. Through conversation, we reach to push beyond art as product and take a closer look into process. 

For more information or to secure a spot, please call 337.233.7060 or email paige@acadianacenterforthe
arts.org. 

This event is free and open to the public thanks to a generous grant from the Dana Foundation.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Theatre--Performance/Workshop


Acting Up (in Acadiana) hosts its first open class on Monday November 1st 
from 6:15-7:45 at the Acadiana Center for the Arts 101 W. Vermilion Street in 
downtown Lafayette. Observe professional and junior company members along 
with associate members train and participate in a brief discussion about the 
technique and the vision of the company. They invite input and ideas from the community. 

Monday, February 22, 2010

Theatre--Performance


Acting Up (in Acadiana) will present Unbearably Lo_ely: A Tennessee Williams’ Mash-Up, a highly theatrical experience with guest director, Justin Zsebe, who structured the mash-up with excerpts from Williams’ works.

Zsebe explains, “The driving force behind this piece is simple. Explore the work and mind of Tennessee Williams, one of the key players in American theater, while honoring his artistic meaning. It is necessary to liberate his words from the past and allow them to breathe in the theater of today, the theater of now. To approach such an immense body of work the mash-up technique was used, made popular by rogue music artists, sampling years of various material to create a new statement. Acting Up (in Acadiana) is removing past shackles and judgment to welcome all of Williams' words (plays, essays, letters and poems). Creating a piece that reflects not only his artistic spirit but breaches deeply into his thoughts and feelings concerning community, art, education, war, fear, love and loneliness all framed in a theatrical manner suited for 2010. The driving force is simple. The journey is one that challenges heart and head."  The actors in Unbearably Lo_ely include Lian Cheramie, Brian Crutchfield, DavidGuarisco, Kara Guarisco, Erica Hebert, and George Saucier. The design team is composed of Hector LaSala (sets),Chad Trahan (costumes), Brian C. Miller Richard, (lights), and AlexNunez (sound).

All performances will take place at the Acadiana Outreach Center Brick Warehouse (125 S.Buchanan St. Lafayette, LA). Shows begin at 8 PM--please allow time for parking and dress for the weather. For directions, please visit the Acting Up website. All shows will be followed by panel discussions and/or music performances, including performances by the Givers: Acoustic, The Viatones, Rex Moroux, and Machete (details on website). The performance dates are February 25th through 27th, March 4th through 6th, and 11th through 13th. Tickets are available at the door or at the Acadiana Center for the Arts (101 W. Vermilion, Lafayette,LA) on Tuesdays through Saturdays from 10 am to 5 pm (cash and
checks made to Acting Up only, no credit cards). 

For more information, call (337) 309-4964 or sign up for web updates at the website.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Theatre--Performance

The Summer Youth Shakespeare Ensemble—an Acting Up (in Acadiana) program—presents the second weekend of William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night's Dream. Over 30 children ages ten through high school take on the roles of fools & fairies in a strange wood filled with magic, mischief, and mayhem.

Performances take place Friday, July 24th & Saturday, July 25th at 7:30 pm and Sunday, July 26th at 2 pm at the Acadiana Center for the Arts. For tickets, call (337) 233-7060; for more information, call (337) 739-4273.

Staff for the program and the production include: Hector LaSala, set design and instructor; Paige Krause, choreographer and dance instructor; Danny Devillier, composer and music instructor; Chad Trahan, costume design and instructor, and Amy Waguespack, director. Other instructors and interns include: Marla Kristicevich, Cissy Whipp, George Saucier, Laura Sellers, Lian Cheramie, Hannah Briggs, Ricky Briggs, Megan LeBleu, Harmony Decker, Kara Guarisco, and Katie Lahey.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Theatre--Summer Camp

Registration for the Summer Youth Shakespeare Ensemble 2009 has begun. Now in its seventh year, the camp will run from July 5th-19th and 23rd-26th, 2009 at the Acadiana Center for the Arts, 101 W. Vermilion Lafayette, LA. Students ages 10-senior in high school will study all aspects of the performing arts: acting, music, dance, design, etc., and apply their studies to the lab production MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM.

For more information, or to register, call (337) 739-4273.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Theatre--Performance

Acting Up (in Acadiana) is proud to present Play. Music. Heal., an original workshop production. With stylized staging and psychological rawness, Louisiana-inspired characters live life with all of its complexities: poverty and wealth, love and marriage, illness and death, a new generation challenging and questioning family obligation and tradition, and music’s ability to lift them up as individuals and as a community. Performances will be held at the Acadiana Center for the Arts March 19th through the 21st (Thursday through Saturday) and 26th through the 28th (Thursday through Saturday)t 8 pm. All tickets are $10 and are available at the door. Box office opens at 6:45 pm on Thursdays and 7:15 pm for all other shows. Material may not be suitable for young children.

On Thursday, March 19th and Thursday, March 26th, Acting Up (in Acadiana) will host a champagne pre-show discussion at 7 pm with members of the collaborative production team. All other shows will be followed by a wine post-show discussion with members of the team.

Play. Music. Heal., directed by Amy Waguespack, features performances by Hannah Briggs, Ricky Briggs, Ryan Broussard, Brian Cruthfield, Lian Cheramie, Kara Guarisco, Katie Lahey, Megan LeBleu, George Saucier and Cissy Whipp. Clare Martin serves as lead writer. Music contributors include Chris Courville, Carol Fran, Henry Gray, Bernard Pearce, and Chris Stafford with Andy Cornett as lead musician. Johanna Divine is videographer. The show was assisted by collaborators from The Actor’s Gang--Kaili Hollister and Justin Zsebe. Marla Kristicevich designs.

For more information, please contact Paige Krause at (337) 309-4964.>

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Theatre--Performance



Acting Up (in Acadiana) will present Play. Music. Heal.at the Acadiana Center for the Arts for 2 weekends--Thursday, March 19th through Saturday, March 21st and Thursday, March 26th through Saturday, March 28th--at 8 pm.

The show features Louisiana-inspired characters lwho ive life with all of its complexities: poverty and wealth, love and marriage, illness and death, a new generation challenging and questioning family obligation and tradition, and music's ability to lift them up as individuals and as a community. It is presented in "The Style", a technique evolved from a collaboration with The Actors' Gang.

Tickets are $10. For directions or more information, please contact Paige Krause at 337-309-4964 or Amy Waguespack at 337-739-4273 or by e-mail at actingupinacadiana@gmail.com.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Dance--Performance

The Acadiana Center for the Arts is pleased to present an evening of dance in a performance by the L. J. Alleman Dancers on Wednesday, February 11 from 6:30-7:30pm at the Acadiana Center for the Arts, 101 W. Vermilion Street in downtown Lafayette.

Come see these talented dancers unfold a variety of innovative, colorful props and everyday things that have been known to blow away in the wind: kites, umbrellas, and more! This musical and visual fantasy is based in the rich, poetic imagery described by Doris Herald Lund in her poem “Attic of the Wind”.

This performance is presented by the Fugro Chance Family Performance Series of the Acadiana Center for the Arts and sponsored by Fugro Chance and Cox. Tickets for the performance are $3 for children 12 and under and $5 for adults. For tickets or more information, call the Acadiana Center for the Arts at 337.233.7060, email info@AcadianaArtsCouncil.org or visit www.acadianacenterforthearts.org

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Theatre--Performance/Workshop

Acting Up in Acadiana and the Dana Foundation presents The One Woman/Girl/Lady/Beotch Show featuring Lian Cheramie. With audience interaction and video skits, these characters will be under one roof on the same night for the first time. In coordination with this performance and the Dana Foundation, Cheramie will conduct a workshop for teachers called “Characters Alive”. In this workshop designed for teachers, Cheramie will share how she creates and develops a character and how students can do the same when working with poetry.

The One Woman/Girl/Lady/Beotch Show will take place at the Acadiana Center for the Arts on Friday, December 5th and Saturday, December 6th at 8pm; a talk back will follow the performance on both nights. Tickets are $10 and available at the door. For more information call (337) 309- 4964 or (337) 739-4273.

“Characters Alive” is an Arts in Education workshop is geared toward 6th-12th grade educators. It will take place on Thursday, January 15th from 4:30-6:00pm at the Acadiana Center for the Arts. For more information or to register, call (337) 233-7060.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Theatre--Master Class

On Wednesday, October 29, PASA and Acting Up!, the professional theater company at the Acadiana Center for the Arts (ACA), will host a master class with members of Aquila Theatre. The class will be held at the ACA from 4:30-6:30 p.m.

" This master class is a theatrical training opportunity for actors in our community to connect professionally with and learn from Aquila Theatre Company, a highly respected acting troupe known for staging original and innovative performances," says PASA Executive Director Jacqueline Lyle.

Company members from Aquila Theatre will teach an advanced physical theater master class that gives participant a chance to experience the requirements and discipline of working and performing in a physical theatre company. It focuses on ensemble acting and participants will explore the imaginative and physical resources that the company uses in order to create its own unique theatrical style.

The master class fee is $10 and, due to space limitations, registration in advance is required by calling (337) 233-7060.

For more information about all upcoming performance of Performing Arts Society of Acadiana, visit www.pasaonline.org or call the PASA office at (337) 237-2787

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Theatre--Classes

Company class auditions for Acting Up (in Acadiana)take place on Aug. 25th or by appointment (feel free to contact Amy Waguespack for details). Classes are available for students ages 7-adult. All students, regardless of future work, can build confidence in public speaking, practice collaborative and group working skills, nurture the imagination and creativity, and just have fun!

All classes meet at the Acadiana Center for the Arts. Classes begin the week of September 8th and run through the first week of June (holidays are taken according to Lafayette Parish School Calendar). Students perform a public showcase in mid-January and host a classroom invitational in May. Waguespack and former students have worked in theatre, film, television, and commercials in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, New Orleans, and more.


Elementary School Class (Wednesdays 4:30-5:30 PM)
This class develops the young actors focus and concentration skills as well as collaboration and ensemble building. Improvisation is used as a tool to discover character.

Jr. High and Beginner High School Classes (Mondays 4:30-6 PM)
This class begins more complex character development through the theories and practices of Stanislavski and Stanislavski inspired techniques.

Intermediate High School and Beginner Adults (Tuesdays 6-7:30 PM)
This class explores multiple acting theories and practices, helping the growing actor to discover a method or combination of methods that works best for him/her.

Company Class (Mondays 6:15-7:45)
Participation by audition or invitation. The professional company continues training in voice, movement, dance, theory and practice.

If you are unsure which class is best for you or your child, feel free to contact me (Amy Waguespack of Acting Up (in Acadiana)) at (337) 739-4273.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Theatre--Performance

The Summer Youth Shakespeare Ensemble—-an Acting Up (in Acadiana) program--presents William Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Over thirty children ranging in age from ten through senior in high school take on the roles of monsters, nymphs, and humans stranded on an island filled with magic, mischief, and mayhem. In the end the children, through the characters they play, learn about surviving adversity, loyalty, and forgiveness.

The Tempest is the culmination of the Ensemble’s 15day intensive performing arts camp, where students study all aspects of the performing arts: music, dance, design, acting, and more. The camp is equivalent to a language immersion program, allowing the young actors to perform a full Shakespearean play just eleven days after they are cast.

Staff for the program and the production include Hector LaSala (set design and instructor), Cissy Whipp (choreographer and dance instructor), Danny Devillier (composer and music instructor), Laura Sellers (costume design and instructor), and
Amy Waguespack (director). Other instructors and interns include Marla Kristicevich, Paige Krause, Mary Pierce, Lian Cheramie, Hannah Briggs, Ricky Briggs, Megan LeBleu, Brooke LeBleu, Harmony Decker, Kara Guarisco and Sam Dooley.

Performances of The Tempest take place at the Acadiana Center for the Arts on July 18, 19, 25, & 26 at 7:30 PM and July 20 & 27 at 2 PM. Tickets are available beginning Tuesday July 8th at the Acadiana Center for the Arts. Advance tickets are $10 and $5 for students through high school. All tickets at the door are $10. For ticket information call (337) 233-7060. For information call (337) 380-4021 or (337) 739-4273.