Saturday, April 27, 2013

KREMLIN KOMEDY--REVIEW


“Kremlin Komedy”
Theatre 810
April 25-27 & May 2-3

Life is a brutal journey that ends in the hands of death. Hilarious, no?

That’s the whispered truth at the heart of “Kremlin Komedy,” a clever and very funny program of one-act plays by Russian absurdist writer Daniil Kharms and American playwright David Ives. As conceived by Nathan Gabriel, and directed by Gabriel, Andre Trahan, Alicia Chaisson and Travis Johnson, “Kremlin Komedy” delivers its quick and furiously funny bursts of savage comedy as a sort of dark vaudeville -- set against a simple but evocative curtain designed by Johnson -- that begins with a wait for an oncoming train and ends, as everything does, with a visit from Death.

The bill is almost entirely dedicated to the work of Kharms, and the pieces are real discoveries. The opening piece, “Mashkin Killed Koshkin,” a wordless interlude between two men waiting for a train that devolves into murder (delightfully played by Dustin Lafleur and Bryce Romero), plays like “The Zoo Story” for two Russian clowns. “Fedya Davidovich (Parts I and II)” takes an outrageous bit of physical comedy and turns it into a sharp comment on desperation in poverty. “Rehabilitation,” the blackest of the comedy on the bill, finds gruesome laughs in a most despicable character. And “Untitled,” performed by Rachel Chambers, needs only two sentences to do what Jonathan Swift did in “A Modest Proposal” and bring down the house while doing it.

Gabriel and Alicia Chaisson, who direct the lion’s share of the Kharms’ pieces, find great moments of physical comedy to balance the darkness of the scenes, and they work like gangbusters. They are supported by some very capable performers, particularly Aren Chaisson (whose mostly wordless opening for “What They Sell In Stores Nowadays” is priceless) and Cris Matochi (who gamely turns the audience against him in “Rehabilitation”). The show’s real standout is Bryce Romero, who displays a real knack for physical comedy and lands some of the evening’s best laughs. He shines brightly in “Mashkin Killed Koshkin” and finds some lovely grace notes in the final moments of “Pakin and Rakukin,” mostly without saying a word.

“Variations on the Death of Trotsky,” a one-act by American playwright David Ives, fits less comfortably into this bill. The one-act, which plays out a series of increasingly silly variations on the final day of Leon Trotsky (who lived almost twenty -four hours after having a mountain climber’s axe smashed into his skull), feels a little too long, too labored and too earnest next to the short ferocious bursts of Kharms’ work. Nancy Ramirez has a few bright moments as Trotsky’s long-suffering wife, but the show’s trio of actors never quite settle on a single tone, and the piece ends up feeling as though it belongs in a different show.

The best comedy comes from dark places, and “Kremlin Komedy” mines that darkness well. Gabriel and company never shy away from the dark, so their show about the hell of life is, seriously, funny as hell.
---Cody Daigle

KREMLIN COMEDY--REVIEW


Katie Slattery Lamson is a graduate of the UL-Lafayette Department of  Performing Arts and a teacher for talented theatre students in Iberia Parish.  This is her first review.

Kremlin Komedy is an incredible collaboration of artists. Four directors and seven actors put together a series of nine comedic short plays by and about Russians- the perfect theatrical event to start its run during Festival International de Louisiane.

Written by Russian absurdist Daniil Kharms and American comedic David Ives, these plays weave together a night of intense laughter.

Travis Johnson’s set quite literally explored the softer side of the Iron Curtain. A pile of furniture and other items are stacked and lit so beautifully; exposed by a delicate patchwork curtain. The contrast of light and shadow on this mound of debris is quite stunning.  Items from this pile are used to create the world of each play, bringing forth purpose and meaning to disheveled ruin.

Andre Trahan’s direction of MASHKIN KILLED HOSHKIN is impeccable. This play breaks down any and all social barriers we have while waiting for a train. I forgot I was watching live theatre and was transported into the world of silent film and slapstick. Dustin LaFleur (Mashkin) and Bryce Romero (Koshkin) had incredible chemistry on stage! (Something I can speak highly of for all the actors throughout this show!) This comedy was so well directed down to the slightest glance that the audience was sent into hysterics over and over again, and just when you think it couldn’t be funnier – BAM! It hits you again!

I’ve seen performances by Aren Chaisson in the past and he is adoringly shameless. He will do anything for a role and tonight was no exception! He held roles in several of tonight’s pieces. In WHAT THEY SELL IN STORES NOWADAYS, directed by Nathan Gabriel, Chaisson brought us into his world using nothing more than a plastic satchel and his incredible use of physicality, especially in his facial expressions.

In FEDYA DAVIDOVICH (PARTS I and II) directed by Alecia Chaisson, Rachel Chambers plays alongside Aren Chaisson. This series will absolutely take your breath away! After watching this, I guarantee that you will be plagued with one question… Was the butter actually REAL?!

Chris Matochi commands the stage in REHABILITATION. With once small shift of his eyebrow or the slightest twist of his head, he will turn you on or completely disgust you.

VARIATIONS ON THE DEATH OF TROTSKY is reason enough to see the entire show. Directed by Travis Johnson and performed by Vincent Barras, Nancy Ramirez, and Chris Matochi, we are given several comedic variations on, as the title suggests, the death of Leon Trotsky. Barras and Ramirez make an excellent Mr. and Mrs. Trotsky, moving from scene to scene with such grace. I do wish that the timing were a little tighter between variations because we see Trotsky rise from the dead a split second after the lights on the new variation have already come up. But, hey, it didn’t KILL the mood!

Brady McKellar’s costumes are, of course, stunning, and I am especially impressed with Trotsky’s hat. Fashioned with a mountain climbers’ axe, the hat was worn flawlessly by Mr. Barras.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that stage manager, Kelsey LaCoste, called an incredibly tight show. The actors’ diligence during set changes combined with traditional Russian music made transitions between each play incredibly smooth.

While the intimate setting of Theatre 810 is perfect for this show, anything staged on the ground was difficult to see from the fourth (and final) row. It is not distracting, but I would recommend that you get to the theatre early enough to grab a closer seat.

Kremlin Komedy is running Saturday April 27 at 7:00 pm during Festival International and it will also run the following weekend, May 2-4. Each performance is at 7:00 pm. The entire production runs nearly 45 minutes. Admission is $10.

If you've ever wondered what could possibly be more disgusting than having your wife clip her toenails at the dinner table, then you MUST go see Kremlin Komedy!
---Katie Slattery Lamson

Monday, April 8, 2013

Classes in Puppetry Arts!

Cité des Arts and Hobgoblin Hill Puppets
bring you
 Keys to the World of Puppetry
July 9-12, and 16-19


Contact: Alice Wallace, 337-856-4260 Or Christy Leichty 337-291-1122
What? Classes in Puppetry Arts
Who? Alice Wallace of Hobgoblin Hill Puppets
When?  July 8-11, and 15-18, 5:30-7:30 pm
Where? Cité des Arts, 109 Vine St., Lafayette, LA 70501
Cité des Arts Hosts Puppetry Classes for Adults
Have you been looking for the door to puppetry? Have you been hoping to entertain kids, incorporate puppetry into your classes, or bring puppetry into your own home? Well, now is your chance! Alice Wallace of Hobgoblin Hill Puppets, under the sponsorship of Cité des Arts, will be conducting puppetry classes for two weeks on July 9-12 and 16-19, and classes will start at 5:30 pm and end (tentatively) at 7:30 pm. (Some people might want to stay after class to discuss their new ideas, try an experiment, or ask more questions.)
Hobgoblin Hill Puppets is a traveling troupe begun in 1987 in Lafayette, Louisiana, by Alice Wallace, who is a teacher in the St. Martin Parish schools. Now, approximately two hundred puppets since the company’s beginning, Hobgoblin Hill Puppets have been featured performers at the Louisiana Renaissance Festival, Galveston’s Dickens on the Strand, Lafayette’s Festival International, the New Orleans Jazz Festival, and Puppeteers of America conventions in across the United States.
     The focus of these classes will include:
1. An overview of puppetry styles across the world 
2. Practice in developing voices
3. The opportunity to work with many different types of puppets
4. Experimentation with skits 
5. Examination of styles of puppetmaking
6. Instruction in theater construction
7. Open brainstorming sessions on how to work puppetry into your home, your class, or your life.
Miss Wallace will bring in her theater, many of her puppets, and a bucket of ideas on how to make puppetry work for you! Classes will cost only $200.00 per student.  Teachers, and students (high school/college) will get a $40.00 discount.  All you need to bring is an open mind and the courage to make a fool of yourself in front of others. Sign up before the class fills up! www.citedesarts.org or call 291-1122.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Fundraiser/ Ferlinghetti: A Rebirth of Wonder


 Fundraiser for Festival of Words with film Ferlinghetti: A Rebirth of Wonder

  Saturday, April 13, 2013
  7:00 p.m. poetry  --  8:00 p.m. movie
  Cite des Arte, 109 Vine St. Lafayette, LA 70501

CONTACT: Patrice Melnick: Festival of Words (337) 662-1032 or Cite des Arts (337) 291-1122

On Saturday, April 13, join us for a screening of the new film Ferlinghetti A Rebirth of Wonder.  The evening will also include beat poetry performances and a silent auction to raise funds for the Festival of Words. It all takes place at Cité des Arts on Vine St. in Lafayette, LA. 
The evening launches with beat poetry performances by local poet Jerry McGuire and other area poets.
At 8:00 p.m. begins the first run film Ferlinghetti: A Rebirth of Wonder.  In this definitive documentary, director Christopher Felver crafts an incisive, sharply wrought portrait that reveals Ferlinghetti's true role as catalyst for numerous literary careers and for the Beat movement itself.  As poet, playwright, publisher, and activist, Lawrence Ferlinghetti helped to spark the San Francisco literary renaissance of the 1950s and the subsequent “Beat” movement.  

The event will also include a silent auction that includes fine, handmade quilts by Le Coudre Points of Arnaudville and by Gwen Miller; art glass by Karen Bourque, paintings by William Turley; glass chimes by Jerilyn Lavergne and recycle art by Trish Ransom.  Food will be available as well as drinks through Cité des Arts’ Station Cafe.  Funds will go towards the annual Festival of Words, November 7--9, 2013 featuring Darrell Bourque, Genaro Kỳ Lý Smith and Naomi Shihab Nye.
Sponsored by the Festival of Words, Cane Fire Film Series, Cite des Arts, & Small-Time Cinema.  Cité des Arts is located at 109 Vine St. in Lafayette.  

Tickets are $15 @ Casa Azul in Grand Coteau and Cite Des Arts.  FMI: 337-662-1032 or 337-291-1122

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Acting Classes! Bill Coelius returns!

Commercial Acting 101 (101 Things You Need To Know Before Your Audition) taught by commercial veteran Bill Coelius, is the product of his experience acting in over 35 national commercials, and auditioning on a weekly basis in today’s market. From slate to set, Bill shares a carefully crafted game plan that will help you book and shoot that national commercial.
 From a reminder as basic as remembering to bring black socks to the shoot, to psychological exercises designed to help you recognize how your habitual patterns of fear-based thinking may prevent you from booking, Bill presents a myriad of skills, strategies and trade secrets that will turn your beliefs about yourself and the industry inside-out. Commercial Acting 101 covers everything from a review of basic skills such as slating, sign-in, and making copy your own, to the hidden rules of auditioning and the secrets of on-set behavior.


Commercial Acting 101 tackles everything from the mundane to the mystical. Does how you sign in affect your chances of booking the job? Are there things you can do while walking off set to ensure a future job? Are there absolute rules about acting that will help you book a national commercial? Can you work fearlessly, and truly enjoy every audition? Commercial Acting 101 will explain why all of those questions are answered with a definite YES!
 

Student Quotes:
     “This is the most effective audition class I've ever taken - and I've taken many of them. I BOOKED a commercial 2 days after the class ended. The specific skill set bill taught me in class, hands down, was the sole reason I booked that commercial. Bill's class helped me extinguish the nervousness and my fear that plagued so many of my auditions, thereby helping me to realize my true creative potential. As an actor, I feel transformed into the type of artist I've always wanted to be. I can't recommend this class enough. and I feel confident that I can book so many more commercials. THANK YOU, BILL!!”- Shuo Z.   
      “It was awesome. Bill was full of information, and he was positive and inspiring. I really enjoyed everything about it. I want to be taught by an actor who is a WORKING actor and knows what they are talking about!” –Hollie
     “ Bill was so kind and generous, and pointed out in a great way a deeper meaning on how to be successful. It was fascinating for me because I realized I am often only too happy to help people in my everyday life but had not thought about taking this into the audition room. Extremely helpful. Thank you.” -Liz F.
      "Bill is an enlightened teacher: it was hard for everyone to leave the room once class was over! Aside from the rich toolbox of practical, repeatable commercial audition skills that Bill imparts, the warmth, respect, enthusiasm, and high spirit of play that he brings to the room quickly brings out the best work in all actors. I left the class not only with the confidence to succeed, but with real excitement for my next commercial audition." –Jacquelyn L.
     “Bill is the Yoda of commercial acting technique.”- Chris B.


Class will meet April 13 & 14 (Sat-Sun) 10-5pm each day, location to be announced.
The cost for the class is $125.

You can contact Bill at  billcoelius@gmail.com or at 917 568 4391, or Aren Chaisson is acting as his 'local contact,' at arenchaisson@gmail.com

The Crandles at Cites des Arts!


An original comedy play called The Crandles by Keisha Orphey will be presented at Cité des Arts April 19-21.  Showtimes are 7:30pm on Friday and Saturday, and 2:00pm on Sundays.  Tickets may be purchased at the door, or with paypal from www.citedesarts.org

The Crandles centers on a blue-collared, African-American family.  In the first episode (scheduled for production at Cites des Arts April 19-21, 2013) Charles Crandle has won the lottery!  Three hundred and sixty eight million dollars!  What does a construction worker of twenty-plus years do with that kind of money?  

A native of LafayetteLouisiana, Keisha Orphey is known in the industry for Pacific Northwest Screenwriting Competition's Best Dramatic screenplay, Ella, a tribute to legendary jazz vocalist Ella Jane Fitzgerald. In 2008, she completed a second biopic,Trouble Man.  August 2008, Keisha adapted Vanish by New York Times Best-Selling author Tess Gerritsen, who personally read several drafts and made suggestions to the final script. Keisha also worked on Blues Boy with Director’s Guild member Peter Claridge of Peter Claridge Pictures (Germany).

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Cite Des Arts Fundraiser! WHO'S TRUST THE IRS?



Cite Des Arts announces it's Spring Fundraiser:  
"WHO’S TRUSTS THE IRS? MYSTERY DINNER THEATRE"
7:00pm April 4th at Bailey's Restaurent 5520 Johnston St, Lafayette

 Join us the evening of April 4th for a wonderful meal at Bailey’s. Not only will you have a delicious dinner, you may even learn a few new things about how to protect yourself from the machinations of the Internal Revenue Service. Keep your eyes and ears open throughout the evening. There will be opportunities to take home prizes and memorabilia. That is not to say there may not be an extra taste of murder and mayhem during the night. 

 The evening will begin with a cash bar at 6:30 and guests will be seated for dinner at 7:00. A steak dinner will be offered, with a Tilapia topped with crawfish etoufee alternative for those who prefer. Tickets are $60 per person for dinner and the show. All proceeds benefit Cité des Arts. For further information and reservations, please call Cité at 337 291-1122 or go to our website: www.citedesarts.org 

P.S. If you know of any “suspicious characters” who may attend, we do accept tips to their identity and the nature of their suspicious behavior – should there be any reason to suspect them of any crimes which may occur that evening. Cité may also be “tipped” for assisting in the setup of your unsuspecting “friend”.

Ongoing now! Man of La Mancha: Iberia Performing Arts League


Man of La Mancha,  the legendary Broadway musical, will be presented by the Iberia Performing Arts League in New Iberia March 8-24. Performances are Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings (7:30) with Sunday Matinees at 3:00.  Performances will be at the Essanee Theater, IPAL’s Art Deco home. Rating PG. Information can be obtained by calling the theater at 364-6114, e-mailing ipal@cox.net, or by visiting the IPAL website www.iberiaperformingartsleague.com.



The production is directed by Donald Voorhies, and stars Lynn Derouen (Cervantes/Don Quixote), Vincent P. Barras (Manservant/Sancho Panza), and Katelyn Stelly (Aldonza/Dulcinea). Additional cast members include Mitchell Prudhomme (Duke/Dr. Carrasco), Michael Parich (The Padre), Cindy Hebert (The Housekeeper), Lanie Marcantel and Blythe Bull sharing the role of Antonia (The Niece), Dawn Borel (Contora), and Will Grubbs (The Innkeeper). Mule Drivers are  Eli Hallmark, Seth Derouen, Mike Labiche, Phillip Smith, and Kerry Jackson. Other cast members include Michael Durand, Milton Resweber, Wanda Price, Rayna Theriot, Jessica Babineaux, Maggie Landry, Teresa Landry, Bo Belanger, Kerry Jackson, Keri Judice, Sheila Derouen, Rachelle Myers, Kaylon Khamphilavong, Wendy Parich, Renee Judice, and Kim Monroe.



            Man of La Mancha opened on Broadway in 1965, won 5 Tony Awards and ran for 2328 performances. Due to its universal appeal, it is the most performed of all musicals, having been translated into dozens of languages with performances worldwide. The show features Spanish and Flamenco style music and the noteworthy anthem “To Dream the Impossible Dream.”



            IPAL’s Man of La Mancha lavish production will be accompanied by a sixteen piece orchestra.  According to director, Don “Doc” Voorhies “Man of La Mancha is simply a beautiful show. It’s fun, it’s comic, it’s exciting, it’s uplifting and it ultimately delivers an important and moving message, whether for the upheavals and storms of the 1960’s or those of today.”



IPAL is working its usual magic and are expecting to have a great show.  In Voorhies’ production staff are Lynn DeRouen and Helen Hodge, Vocal directors; Bob Morgan, Musical Director; Mitchell Prudhomme; Assistant Director: Kim Degeyter, Choreographer; Teresa Landry, Art Director; Frank Sierra, Prop-Meister, and Mike and Katherine Caffery, technical directors.





This performance is supported, in part, by a grant from the Louisiana State Arts Council, through the Louisiana Divisions of the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts. Funding has also been provided through the Acadiana Center for the Arts, Regions Bank, Regions Insurance and Iberia Cultural Resources Association.

OPENING TONIGHT! The Glass Mendacity!



Eunice Players' Theatre Opens 44th Season With A Comedy

 

    As the Eunice Players’ Theatre opens its 44th season, Jody L. Powell brings to the stage The Glass  Mendacity, written by Maureen Morley and Tom Willmorth.  The two-act comedy is a spoof of Tennessee Williams’ most famous plays, The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof

    Williams’ plays are family dramas, and as such, they are filled with fragile and damaged Southern characters who are driven to madness, alcoholism, deceit, and fantasy. Thus, they are easy targets for lampooning and parody, which is just what the authors of this play have done with them. In addition, the authors have taken family members from each play, mixed them up, and created an entirely new outrageous brood. Audiences with a strong familiarity of Williams’ plays will get the most out of the show, but the humor of "The Glass Mendacity" is broad enough to make it appealing to all.

    In this mingling of characters where families are merged and relationships are shifted, Big Daddy Dubois is played by Kevin Miller of Eunice.  He is well known on the Eunice stage for dramatic and comedic roles from The Subject Was Roses, all of the “abridged” and “Tuna” plays, and more.  In Lafayette, he was most recently seen in The Rehearsal and he is a member of Acadiana Repertory Theatre, having recently been in their production of CAROL: A Broken Chain.

    Big Daddy’s wife, Amanda Dubois, who still recounts the number of gentlemen callers she had in her youth, is played by Mary Gail Lamonte DeVillier of Opelousas.  Mary Gail has been seen on the Eunice stage in many roles including that of Amanda Wingfield (from whom her current character is drawn) in The Glass Menagerie, Daisy in Driving Miss Daisy and Louise in Always…Patsy Cline.

    Together, they are the parents of Brick, so rendered catatonic by self-pity and alcohol that he comes across as a real stiff.  He is played by a certain gentleman from Tennessee, whom the audience must see to appreciate.

    Blanche Kowalski, the tragic nut case, is played by Deborah D. Ardoin of Eunice.  Debbi is a long time member of EPT, and a current member of Acadiana Repertory Theatre.  She was most recently seen in The Murder Room and A Nice Family Gathering in Eunice, and Buried Child in Lafayette.

    In this twisted reality, Blanche is now married to the working-class brute Stanley Kowalski, played by John Snyder of Opelousas.  John has studied contemporary theatre at ULL and The American Theatre for Actors in New York City, as well as classical theatre at The British American Drama Academy at Oxford. Eunice audiences may remember him from years past in Lend Me a Tenor and Playing Doctor.

    Maggie the Cat, the scheming seductress, is played by Katryn Schmidt of Lafayette.  No stranger to the stage, Katryn’s work includes roles in Lost in Yonkers, Our Town, and The Vagina Monologues.  Her film work includes Lord Byron, which was screened at the Sundance Festival in 2011.

    Erin Segura of Lafayette plays Laura Dubois, keeper of a glass menagerie and the dreamer whose shyness is underscored by her limp. Erin has an extensive theatrical resume throughout Acadiana including the roles of Shelby in Steel Magnolias at Teche Theatre in Franklin, Rita in Educating Rita at Iberia Performing Arts League in New Iberia, and Lucy Harker in Dracula in Lafayette. 

    Rounding out the cast is Allen Higginbotham of Eunice, playing Mitch, a combination of the gentleman caller and the lawyer acquaintance who properly greases the wheels and can’t keep his eyes off of Blanche.  Allen joined the cast of Rumours on the EPT stage 20 years ago, and made his way back to the boards in last season’s On Golden Pond.

Evening performances will be held March 14, 15, 21, 22, and 23 at 7:00 p.m.  A matinee will be held Sunday, March 17 at 2:00 p.m.  Dinner theatre (with steak and trimmings) is scheduled for Wednesday, March 20 at 6:00 p.m. at Ruby's on Second St., with the performance immediately following. 
 
    All seats are $10; dinner is an additional $15.  Tickets can be purchased at David Ltd. Salon or by calling David at 546-0163 or Debi at 457-2156 to charge by phone.  The theatre is located at 121 S. Second St. in Eunice.  This play includes very brief use of mature language and smoking of herbal cigarettes.



Season tickets are also available; the season ticket is $20, which allows the bearer entrance to 3 of the season's shows, the ability to make seating reservations, an invitation to the Irving Awards, and a ballot for the awards.  Patron and angel packages are also available. 



More information can be found on EPT’s Facebook page or at www.euniceplayers.blogspot.com.

WORKSHOP: Auditioning for Film vs. The



Auditioning for Film vs. Theater-
An On-Camera Workshop with Ashleigh Prather


Contact: auditionworkshop2013@gmail.com for reservations
When: March 22 & 23 10am-5pm
Where: TBA
Cost: $100

Auditioning for Film vs. Theater-
An On-Camera Workshop taught by Ashleigh Prather will expand your skill set and help you learn how to tweak your training and theater background so that your work stands out in On-Camera auditions.  Theater training is invaluable to actors and provides the foundation for a successful career.  Working in front of the camera is a completely different experience and different rules apply. Learn the tools of the trade in this introductory workshop taught by Ashleigh Prather, a Louisiana native who received her BFA from NYU and has appeared in Theater, Film, Television, and over 50 National commercials.
This workshop will cover what to expect from an on-camera audition vs. a theater audition and how to prepare so you deliver a strong and honest performance. Everyone in the workshop will work on camera.  The film and TV industry is booming in Louisiana, make sure that you’re ready!

AUDITIONS! Deathtrap

Auditions for the play Deathtrap by Ira Levin directed by Cooper Helm and produced by Scott Gremillion.

 Saturday, March 16 3:00pm & Monday March 18th 6:30pm at Cité des Arts 109 Vine Street/Downtown Lafayette
 
 
Cast:  
 
Sydney Bruhl (M) 50-65 a famous writer of Broadway plays
Cliff Anderson (M) 25-35 An aspiring young playwright
Myra Bruhl (F) 35-50 Sydney's self-effacing but charming wife
Helga Ten Dorp (F) 45-65 A famous German psychic
Porter Milgram (M) 50-60 A Brahmin Lawyer, friend of Bruhl family
 
 
Production dates are: June 13-30
 

Always wanted to act? Now's your chance!