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

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Theatre--Performance




ACTING UNLIMITED, INC and WANDERLUST THEATRE CO.
With the University of Louisiana at Lafayette Performing Arts Program
Present
NEIL GAIMAN’S
WOLVES IN THE WALLS
Based on the book by Neil Gaiman
Adapted for the stage by Cody Daigle
July 26 – August 5
Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday at 3 p.m.
Burke-Hawthorne Hall (on the UL Campus)
For more information, call 484-0172.

Lucy is hearing strange noises in the walls – noises she believes to be wolves. No one believes her… except her puppet, Pig. Then one night, Lucy discovers that the wolves in the walls are real. And they’re coming out to play…

Adapted for the stage by local playwright Cody Daigle, WOLVES IN THE WALL will feature a
spectacular puppetry design by Brady McKellar and Elsa Dimitriadis, artistic directors of Wanderlust Theatre Co., incorporating a host of puppetry techniques. The show will be a visual theatrical event filled with puppetry, pandemonium and the dark fantasy world of Neil Gaiman.

The production will also receive support from the area’s vibrant visual arts community. Rob Guillory, local artist and an Eisner-award winning creator of the comic book series Chew, will supply the poster art for the production.

Gaiman and McKean’s The Wolves in the Walls was first published in 2003, and it won awards for the New York Times Best Illustrated Children's Book (2003), the IRA/CBC Children's Choice (2004) award and the British Science Fiction Association award for Short Fiction (2003).  This production has the blessing of Gaiman and his team, and it will be the only time this version of the show will performed anywhere.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Theatre--Auditions

Acting Unlimited, Inc. and Wanderlust Theatre Co. are holding open auditions for WOLVES IN THE WALLS, the original adaptation of Neil Gaiman's award winning children's book that will be produced this summer on Saturday, May 5th from 1-4 pm and Monday, May 7th from 7 to 8:30 pm at Theatre 810 .

The cast will consist of 5 "humans" and as many as 28 puppeteers, who will learn various forms of puppetry, ranging from shadow puppetry to a modified form of Japanese bunraku puppetry.

The auditions will consist of cold readings from the script, and physical exercises.

For more information, check the announcement of the show here or email actingunlimitedinc@gmail.com.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Theatre--Announcement


ACTING UNLIMITED and WANDERLUST THEATRE CO.
With University of Louisiana at Lafayette Performing Arts Department
Presents

NEIL GAIMAN’S
WOLVES IN THE WALLS

Based on the book by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean (c 2003)
Adapted for the stage by Cody Daigle

July 26 – August 5
Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday at 3 p.m.
Burke-Hawthorne Hall (on the UL Campus)



Acting Unlimited (AUI) and Wanderlust Theatre Co. are teaming up with the UL-Lafayette Performing Arts Department to present an exciting addition to the summer theatre calendar: WOLVES IN THE WALLS, a world premiere adaptation of Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean’s award-winning children’s book “The Wolves in the Walls.”

Lucy is hearing strange noises in the walls  – noises she believes to be wolves. No one believes her… except her puppet, Pig. Then one night, Lucy discovers that the wolves in the walls are real. And they’re coming out to play…


Adapted for the stage by local playwright Cody Daigle, WOLVES IN THE WALLS will feature  a spectacular puppetry design by Brady McKellar and Elsa Dimitriadis, artistic directors of Wanderlust Theatre, incorporating a host of puppetry techniques. The show will be a visual theatrical event filled with puppetry, pandemonium and the dark fantasy world of Neil Gaiman.

“The show’s designed to be something local audiences have never seen,” said Daigle, the production’s playwright. “We want to dazzle audiences with puppetry and theatre magic they’ve never seen before, but we also want them to be emotionally swept away by the story. It’ll be a really unforgettable evening.”

Gaiman and McKean’s “The Wolves in the Walls” was first published in 2003, and it won awards for the New York Times Best Illustrated Children's Book (2003), the IRA/CBC Children's Choice (2004) award and the British Science Fiction Association award for Short Fiction (2003).

This production has the blessing of Gaiman and his team, and it will be the only time this version of the show will performed anywhere.

The production also marks the first collaboration between the two lead producing companies. AUI has recently produced David Ives’ Lives of the Saints and the first post-controversy production of Mike Daisey’s The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs in the country. Wanderlust Theatre Co. has delighted audiences with their production of Match and Shylock, which receives a production in the DC Fringe Festival this summer.

AUI and Wanderlust Theatre Co. both have reputations for delivering exciting theatre work,” Marie Diaz, lead producer, said. “This collaboration is a natural fit. We look forward to bringing Gaiman’s world to life for local audiences.”

WOLVES IN THE WALLS will run July 26 – August 5 at Burke-Hawthorne Hall on the UL Campus. Curtain on Thursday, Friday and Saturday is 7:30 p.m. Curtain on Sunday is 3 p.m. For more information, call 484-0712.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Theatre--Performance





Wanderlust Theatre Co. presents Shylock, an award-winning one-man play about a Jewish actor who finds himself condemned by his own community for his portrayal of Shakespeare's notorious Jew.  Mark Folse, of NOLA Defender, says "McKellar's powerful performance...succeeds compellingly...brilliant acting."  Following the 2011 New Orleans Fringe Festival in November, this production was performed for the Shakespeare Behind Bars program in Louisville, Kentucky and has been selected to be performed this July in the 2012 Capital Fringe in Washington, D.C.

For two performances only, Shylock is being remounted at Theatre 810 - Saturday, March 10 at 8 pm and Sunday, March 11 at 3 pm!  Tickets are $10.  Call (337) 484-0172 for ticket reservations.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Theatre--Audition

Wanderlust Theatre Co. is looking for an early 20s to late 30s female actor for its upcoming May production of You've Got Hate Mail!  The lady we need is comfortable with raunchy comedy, so if that's you, email us!  A prepared monologue is great, but not a deal-breaker.  We'll provide sides.  Auditions will be held by appointment February 27 - March 2.  To schedule a slot, please email Elsa Dimitriadis at elsa@wanderlusttheatre.com.

You've Got Hate Mail! is Van Zandt and Milmore's comic answer to A.R. Gurney's Love Letters.  An adult comedy of errors, it's a hilarious tale of love gone digital!  This production will be the third in Wanderlust's 2011-2012 season.  Please visit www.wanderlusttheatre.com for more information about Wanderlust projects.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

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

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Theatre--Performance

Wanderlust Theatre Company presents the REGIONAL PREMIERE of MATCH, by Marc Chun

Fri/Sat, Dec 2 & 3 at 7:30 pm at BURKE HAWTHORNE HALL THEATRE, ULL campus. $5 admission at door

MATCH then moves to the Hub City Theatre and Storytelling Festival:
Fri, Dec 9 at 7 pm at CITE DES ARTS
Sat, Dec 10 at 9:15 pm at ACADIANA CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Hosted by the Hub City Theatre & Storytelling Festival
(tickets and weekend passes available at door and at the Cite and ACA websites)


Match, by Marc Chun, tells the stories of five ordinary people, that by extraordinary chance, are woven together to tell one tale of life, death, love, deceit and coincidence.

"...gently but profoundly querying..." NY Times
"Innovative and gripping!" Backstage
"...achingly honest and profound work...must-see theatre!" nytheatre.com

FEATURING:
Bobby Bender
David Huynh
M. Brady McKellar
Elizabeth Satterly
Jarin Schexnider

DIRECTED by:
Elsa Dimitriadis

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Theatre--Auditions

Wanderlust Theatre Company is announcing auditions for Match by Marc Chun
Thursday, September 29, 7-9  pm
(Email info@wanderlusttheatre.com for specific 15 minute slot, if you prefer)
Fletcher Hall, #134
ULL Campus
Looking for:  Men and women, aged 18-35.
Diversity is encouraged.  All welcome.

Sides will be made available at audition.   Prepared piece and resume encouraged, but not mandatory.

Match tells the stories of five ordinary people, that by extraordinary chance, are woven together to tell one tale of life, death, love, deceit and coincidence.  Performances will be in early December.  Rehearsals will be sporadic until closer to opening, and casting/scheduling is being held early to allow for cast members’ other obligations and to offer an extended opportunity for development and memorization.  This piece is non-traditional in style and as the story is told non-linearly, will require a strong commitment to memorization.

“Indeed, there's something gently but profoundly querying about 'Match'" – New York Times

“It’s an achingly honest and profound work of theatre…must-see theatre.” – nytheatre.com

“Innovative and gripping!” – Backstage

“A thing of beauty.” – offoffoff.com


If you are interested, but not able to attend this audition, please email info@wanderlusttheatre.com to set up an alternate time.  We would be more than happy to hear from you!

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Theatre--Performance




Shylock, a one-man show
by Mark Leiren-Young, featuring M. Brady McKellar

Lafayette, Louisiana - Thursday, September 15, 2011 - 7:30 PM
Burke Theatre, University of Louisiana at Lafayette campus
Admission is $5




Shylock is an award winning one-man play about a Jewish actor who finds himself condemned by the community for his portrayal of the world’s most controversial villain.  The piece addresses and incites discussion about censorship, historical revisionism, and whether certain plays should be produced for contemporary audiences.  The Merchant of Venice is often chief amongst those hotly debated.  This performance is one in a series of performances in the southeast, and will additionally be performed in November at the New Orleans Fringe Festival and will be hosted in the spring by the Shakespeare Behind Bars program in Louisville, Kentucky.




M. Brady McKellar is currently on faculty in the Department of Performing Arts at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.   Previously, Brady served as a theatre professor at Dillard University, as an instructor at Tulane University, as well as concurrently serving as a Teaching Artist with the Young Audience/Arts for Learning program. He has been a guest artist throughout the southeast, such as at Roanoke Island’s The Lost Colony, an invited panelist with Creative Time’s Democracy in America, and as a recurrent lecturer at the Southeastern Theatre Conference. Brady is a regular respondent for the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival as well as an adjudicator for the SETC’s annual Young Scholar Award.  Brady is a member of the Costume Society of America, Puppeteers of America, UNIMA-USA and has studied with former Muppeteer Michael Earl.  Brady was recently featured as a performer at the 2008 and 2009 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festivals. He received his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Theatre Performance and his Master of Fine Arts degree in Theatre Technology from the University of Southern Mississippi.

This show is a Wanderlust Theatre Co. production.