Archive for Eclectic Company Theatre

Newest LA Weekly theatre review — Askance

Production photo by David Nott.

Gentle readers, here is this week’s theatre review for the LA Weekly, of playwright Kerr Seth Lordygan’s new melodrama,

 

Askance

 

now playing at the Eclectic Theatre in NoHo.

 

Click this link and scroll down to read it — OR — just read it here!

 

Playwright Kerr Seth Lordygan grapples with some profound subject matter in his drama set in an old people’s home. The inhabitants are facing relocation and an uncertain future, so tempers are flaring. Eventually some deep and harrowing memories resurface and unexpected connections are revealed.

To his credit, early on Lordygan deftly elicits sympathy for his characters, with the prickly banter between the old couple Milly (Kenlyn Kanouse) and Irving (Joseph Cardinale) cross-cut with their tender courtship decades earlier (young Mille is Beth Ricketson, young Irving an excellent Adam Coggins). RJ Farrington is great as the gruff and sassy nurse, her stern quips masking true affection for her charges, while Taylor Ashbrook delivers her usual grace as the caring nurse. Sabrina Lloyd’s sensitive direction maximizes the script’s nuances and allows room for meaningful glances.

Less successful are the too numerous monologues from old-timer Sylvia, who has dementia, yet Ivy Jones brings some magnificence to her ramblings before the play devolves into histrionics.

Eclectic Company Theatre, 5312 Laurel Canyon Blvd., Valley Village; Thurs.-Sat., 8 p.m.; Sun., 6 p.m.; through Feb. 13. (818) 508-3003. (Pauline Adamek)

This week’s theatre review for the LA Weekly

Hurricane Season - Taylor Ashbrook - photo by Chelsea Sutton

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Gentle readers, here is a link to my latest theatre review for the LA Weekly, covering week two of the Eclectic Company Theatre’s eighth annual month-long festival of new plays, called –

Hurricane Season.

Scroll down!

Happy reading!!

Review by Pauline Adamek

Hurricane Season 2011 – at Eclectic Company Theatre

HS11-image

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Now in its eighth year, the Eclectic Company Theatre in NoHo is once again staging Hurricane Season, their new works festival and playwrights”™ competition that showcases the short-list winners of their annual one-act play writing competition.

Report by Pauline Adamek

The various plays submitted this year went through a rigorous selection process.  The result? Die-hard theatre enthusiasts can see twelve different plays being staged over several weeks – three plays per weekend – until early August. Audiences will be asked to rate the three plays in order of preference and hand in their ballot at the conclusion of the evening.

Each of the first three weekends of Hurricane Season will feature a new program of one-act plays that have never been produced before. The audience favorite of each weekend will be invited back for a finals weekend of three more performances.

All plays in the competition have been selected by members of The Eclectic Company Theatre”™s reading committee. Monetary prizes will be given to the top three best-written plays as determined by an independent jury.

The schedule of plays being performed is as follows:

Week One, July 15-17:

“Rollercoaster of Love.” Written by Joe Musso. Directed by Biff Wiff. Cast: Mason Hallberg, Niki Blumberg. A rollercoaster is a literal metaphor for a young couple”™s relationship.

“Things That Go Hump in the Night.” Written by Peggy Dougherty. Directed by J.C. Gafford. Cast: Meghan McConnell, Elizabeth Southard, Bert Emmett. Daughter doesn”™t want mommy sleeping with her boyfriend in the next room.

“Sex and Money and Money and Sex.” Written by Jack Karp. Directed by Dean Farell Bruggeman. Cast: Trent Walker, Tiffany Cole.  The title pretty much sums up the preoccupations of a couple, presented four different ways.

Week Two, July 22-24:

“Damien.” Written by Dean Farell Bruggeman. Directed by Wendy Radford. Cast: Taylor Ashbrook, Mark Burford. A middle-aged Southern woman suspects her neighbor”™s dog of being an emissary of evil. What will she do about it?

“Stalking Pollyanna.” Written by Hal Corley. Directed by Katie Witkowski. Cast: Jeremy Mascia, Mark Motyl. A middle-aged gay man spots his boyhood movie-star crush, Hayley Mills, in a bookstore.

“Holey Smokes.” Written by Ellen Elizabeth Steves. Directed by Dana Amromin. Cast: Dean Farell Bruggeman, Jason Britt, Wendy Radford, Biff Wiff, Margaret Fennell Flynn, Michael Harris, Trip Langley, Brighid Fleming, Kendall Willmot, Dawn Meyer, Andrew Beckham, Mia Eden, Fletcher Hoffman. A big hole suddenly appeared on Ruley”™s land. It”™s got supernatural powers, and they”™re not benevolent.

Week 3, July 29- 31:

“Out of Order.” Written by Michael Wolfson. Directed by Susan Lee. Cast: Darrell Philip, Margaret Fennell Flynn, Sarah Allyn Bauer, Tim Sprague. That confessional booth in the local church is a genuine portal to the Beyond, where angels might look like business executives or Goth punks.

Lobster Man.” Written by Jonathan Cook. Directed by Kerr Seth Lordygan. Cast: Beth Ricketson, R.J. Farrington, Tim Sprague. In a devastated post-apocalyptic world, a man comforts his ailing sweetheart with the tale of the Lobster Man, who suddenly materializes right there.

“The Ballad of Bertha and Clyde.” Written by Diane Sampson. Directed by Shawn Abramowitz. Cast: Ivy Jones, Ashleigh Boiros, Gordon Wells, Brian E. Smith. An aging man and woman are very attracted to each other and want to get it on. There”™s just a couple of obstacles for them to hurdle first.

Week 4, August 5-7:

Audience favorites of the festival.

The weekends of Hurricane Season 2011 display the most appealing playwriting from the many, many submissions considered. Sit back and enjoy.

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Hurricane Season 2011

The Eclectic Company Theatre

5312 Laurel Canyon Blvd. (between Chandler and Magnolia), Valley Village, CA 91607.

WHEN: July 15- August 7, 2011. Fri. & Sat. at 8pm, Sun. at 2pm

ADMISSION: $15.00

Special Hurricane Season pass $45 (four tickets to any performance, a savings of $15).

RESERVATIONS: (818) 508-3003.

Online ticketing here.

99 Impossible Things – Eclectic Company Theatre, NoHo

photo by Chelsea Sutton.

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Playwright Chelsea Sutton directs her own whimsical yet thoughtful play, 99 Impossible Things, over at the Eclectic Company Theatre in NoHo. In it, a handful of twenty-somethings (more or less) congregate at the cozy, lounge-y Magic Bean coffee shop, hanging out and seeking refuge. Eventually each of their various and poignant life stories is revealed in Sutton”™s examination of loss and the difficult process of grieving.

So, while the play kicks off with some light, comedic banter, pretty soon the play”™s themes take on a more serious tone. Everyone here, it seems, has something troubling in their past that they either having trouble coming to terms with or refusing to face.

At the onset, a trench coated fellow, Harold (Jason Britt), delivers a slightly hardboiled yet thoughtful monologue, declaring himself a pragmatist. His quest, we learn, is to either invent or assemble the titular 99 “˜impossible things,”™ such as his idea for a “grow a puppy” kit. It makes for some quirky conversations, including the observation, “Some people need an impossible thing to believe in.” One typical and funny exchange is when a character barks at Harold, “You don”™t have to be rude!” Harold”™s gruff response – “It”™s not rude if it”™s true!” – gets you laughing and thinking. But as his obsession with his inventions becomes more manic, it”™s apparent there”™s a lot of tension simmering beneath the surface, especially as he keeps frequenting the café his deceased fiancée Emilia used to run with her now forlorn sister. Ellen (Tiffany Cole) is the gal who now manages the Magic Bean coffee shop minus her sister and she is a grouchy, inflexible proprietor.

The nutty homeless woman Alice (Barbara Scolaro), who uses the coffee shop as her sanctuary from roughing it on the street, keeps pestering people with her lousy card tricks. But was she once really a magician?  How did she become the hopeless case she is today?

Flitting around our troubled heroes and heroines are an assortment of mythical creatures, that only each of them can hear or see, such as a playful, silent and pretty Sea Monkey girl (Jillian Easton) clad in an aquamarine-blue filmy outfit with three antlers sprouting from her head.

photo by Chelsea Sutton.

Ellen has an equally grumpy guardian angel Gabie (RJ Farrington) who only reveals herself when she wants to converse with her charge and they share some funny and prickly rapid-fire banter.

Then there”™s the anti-social, leather-jacket wearing Jaye (Jessica Lightfoot) – who or what is she running from? And does she have to smoke real cigarettes?!? Yuck!

There may not be a cohesive plot, just a collection of stories about people on the verge of a breakdown, but Chelsea Sutton”™s 99 Impossible Things chock full of fanciful ideas and may find a soft spot in your heart.

99 Impossible Things

Eclectic Company Theatre

5312 Laurel Canyon Blvd., Valley Village;

Performances:

Fri.-Sat., 8 p.m., Sun., 7 p.m., through Feb. 13th 2011.

Tickets: $18.00

Box Office:

(818) 508-3003

Review by Pauline Adamek

Traveling Carnival Freakshow – Eclectic Company Theatre

poster

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Opening tomorrow, December 3, 2010, is the Traveling Carnival Freakshow – a holiday-themed show featuring an amalgam of elements of theatre, dance, burlesque and cabaret.

Traveling Carnival Freakshow expresses the milieu within which the narrative of this show takes place within its title. Set on Christmas Eve in a Dust Bowl town, a traveling carnival freakshow has rolled into town bringing with it a dark, magical force.  A young drifter falls for a carnival freak, a female who is part woman, part puppet and part machine, but emotionally all too human. She is in thrall to the carnival”™s owner, an evil woman with sorcerous powers. Will the young man be able to rescue her?

The story is very loosely based on the legend of The Nutcracker. It”™s a new show for the holidays, but definitely not for kids. Like last year”™s  very successful Eclectic Company Theatre holiday presentation, X-Mas Cabaret, this new evening will feature a variety of guest specialty artists. Last year”™s roster included burlesque dancers, belly dancers, a juggler, a vocalist and a stand-up comedian, all of them top-flight. Expect more top-quality variety acts this year, in a solidly entertaining show for adult audiences.

Is it a play? Is it a cabaret? Is it dance? It”™s all of the above.

The cast for Traveling Carnival Freakshow includes (in alphabetical order)  Danielle Cintron, Questa Gleason, Mason Hallberg, Jeff Newman, Beth Ricketson, Erin Treanor and Sahar Yousefi.

CONSUMER ADVISORY: This show is suggested for Adult audiences (18 and older).

Special guest artists as of this posting (more may be added later):

Burlesque performer Judy Luck: Dec. 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12.

Burlesque performer Akira Inaction on Dec. 10.

Burlesque performer Holly Rock-It on Dec. 17.

Macabre performance art by La Petite Guignole on Dec. 18 and 19.

Burlesque performer Scarlett Letter on Dec. 18 and 19.

Written by Chelsea Sutton and Questa Gleason and directed by Chelsea Sutton, this show is produced by Erin Treanor, Mason Hallberg and Questa Gleason for The Eclectic Company Theatre. Choreography is by Mason Hallberg.

WHERE: The Eclectic Company Theatre, 5312 Laurel Canyon Blvd. (between Chandler and Magnolia), Valley Village, CA 91607.

WHEN: December 3- 19, 2010. Fri. & Sat. at 9, Sun. at 8pm.

ADMISSION: $15.00 (cheap!)

RESERVATIONS: (818) 508-3003.

ONLINE TICKETING: go here.

Report by Pauline Adamek.