Saturday
Oct022010

Exclamation Point 8! MASKS

Informal Performances, Readings, & Viewings of New Works
October 2, 7 pm
Art at 12 Gallery
12 Farnsworth Street
Fort Point, Boston

photos by Daniel J. van Ackere

For our eighth Exclamation Point!, Fort Point Theatre Channel presented a variety of new works on the theme of "masks" from playwrights, puppeteers, filmmakers, videographers, performance artists, poets, songwriters. . . .

The lineup:

> About Face, excerpt from a play in progress by Holly Adams

> The Esteemed Dottore of Bologna Offers His Authoritative, Erudite, and Thoroughly Supercilious Meditation on the Mask, by Teatro delle Maschere (behindthemask.org, which also displayed a selection of masks for show and sale)

> Face Time, a play by R.D. Murphy

> I. Zombi, excerpt from a "document" movie by Jeremy Newman

> The Masked Man, a song by Larry Plitt

> Ms. Sassy France, a play by Mary Driscoll

> Punctuare, a dance/new music work created by the dancers and musicians of bodydrama

> Stick on Saint Mary's Beach, an animated poem by Cynthia Bargar and Nick Thorkelson

> Superhero, a play by Mark Harvey Levine

> That Fool's Emperor: A Musical about Nothing, excerpt from a work in progress by Skip Schloming and Gene Hodsdon

> Migration, a handmade film by Douglas Urbank with live accompaniment by Jorrit Dijkstra


Friday
Jan012010

Carny Knowledge: A Sideshow Extravaganza of Original Plays and Extraordinary Oddities

Silvia Graziano & Marc S. Miller, Impresarios
January 29-February 6, 2010
Cambridge YMCA Theatre
820 Mass. Ave.
Central Square, Cambridge

photos by Daniel J. van Ackere

Carny Knowledge -- a dazzling array of carnival-inspired plays and carnival-style performances -- using new-timey production methods to evoke old time-y interpretations. Drawing its roots from the sideshows that spread across the nation from the mid-1800s to the mid-1900s, Carny Knowledge conjured up that mysterious thrill  that would envelop curious onlookers every time the circus came to town, accompanied by the cacophony of sideshow barkers promising the wonders of the world to those who had never strayed far from home.

Modern times may dictate that these simple thrills are gone. That there are no mysteries left to unearth in this plugged-in, tuned-out age. But in January and February, 2010,  Fort Point Theatre Channel proved them wrong by crossing into Cambridge with a gaggle of playwrights, filmmakers, musicians, dancers, roustabouts, and other diverse practitioners of the carny crafts, to create six thrilling evenings of ballyhoo, burlesque, and incomparable carnival-style entertainment.

Carny Knowledge was Fort Point Theatre Channel's second playfest, a place to transform ideas into workshop productions.
What was in store every evening, besides the Carny Band (Nick Thorkelson, his brother and former Monkee Peter Tork, Tim Jackson, and guests), artistic installations enveloping audiences and performers alike, and popcorn?
 


 

THE PLAYS

With You or Without You. Great magnetic balls of steel!! Rolling this way, that way . . . Video and audio art by Bebe Beard and Lou Cohen. Adapted especially for Carny Knowledge.

Tales of the Midnight Carnival, a set of very short vignettes by talented Toronto-based writer Peter Cavell about a bizarre,  twisted traveling carnival. A U.S. premiere.

Love Me, Leave Me, by David Dudley of New York City, explored both our capacity to forgive and the concept of "freak." A world premiere.

On My Chest, with San Francisco writer Gaea Denker-Lehrman's very original lyrics set to the tune of "Be My Guest," was a disgusting ditty about the most perverse of acts, performed in full drag. An East Coast premiere.

Wife of Bobbo, by Massachusetts playwright M. Lynda Robinson, investigated marriage at a crucial point, taking on a deep topic with a lot of fun -- and questions left at the end. Adapted especially for Carny Knowledge.

Lionel Banished, by FPTC member Nick Thorkelson, asked, "What happens when the lion tamer goes to the dogs?" A world premiere.

Scuffle and Jump, by John Weagly of Chicago, presents Penny, who entertained us with her tap dancing, inspired by Fats Waller, Fred Astaire, and Ginger Rogers - but there's something about her. . . A world premiere.


INSTALLATION PIECES AND CARNY CRAFTS
Bella Curva offers duo contortion, combining the flexibility and strength of contortion with the grace and artistry of dance.

The Boston Hoop Troop, a collective of hula hoopers, practices, performs, and teaches the graceful art of hoop dance. Featuring Little L, Lolli Hoops, and Marria Grace.

Clowns on the Left
and other animation pieces of Massachusetts filmmaker Mick Cusimano were unique, reflecting the contradictory impulses we all feel about sideshows, circuses, and ourselves.

The Crocodile Boy Project, See the Freek! by Ed Valentine of New York City and Megan McDavid of Colorado, featured both an onstage "show" and a backstage interactive element where we learned more about the freak's life than we could ever imagine. A New England premiere.

A Different Spin, a group of Boston-based performers spreading their love of circus across the country, offered a variety of pieces from their repertoire, such as juggling, glass walking, card tricks, plate spinning, acrobatics, clowning, and more. Featuring Ricky Hawkins and Michael "Mooch" Mucciolo.

Honey Suckle Duvet, burlesque dancer and tarot reader, captured audiences in a golden sweet embrace, whether she was undulating to the sultry rhythms of soul, sensually moving to classical, or boldly strutting to rock.

Gathering, a video "sideshow" by Douglas Urbank, blended hand-altered 16 mm and super 8 mm film with stills, ink, paint, and other media. A world premiere.

Nicholas Ridiculous, the human block head who pounded nails into his nose, juggled knives, and escaped from a modern institutional straight jacket.


AND WITH THE PARTICIPATION OF:

Sylvie Agudelo, Danny Bryck, Nick Cegelka, Mary Driscoll, Liz Fenstermaker, Christie Lee Gibson, JaRaj the Man-Schwa, Tanya Kutasz, David McCaleb, Sharon Montella, Vawnya Nichols, Sally Nutt, Allen Phelps, Casey Preston, Steve Rumpler, Todd Sargent, Robin JaVonne Smith, Daniel J. van Ackere, Mark Warhol 

Saturday
Nov142009

Exclamation Point 7: Music on the Fly

An evening of inter-genre performance works featuring made-up music
Curated by Robin Smith and Christie Lee Gibson
35A Channel Center Street, Fort Point, Boston
November 14, 2009


With new works and works in progress, Fort Point Theatre Channel's seventh Exclamation Point! featured music combined with video, acting improv, and other visual/stage components.

Featured musicians, writers, actors, actresses included: Jon Burrowes, Jorrit Dykstra, Mary Fegreus, Liz Fenstermaker, Christie Lee Gibson, Daniel Harris, Allen Phelps, Alejandro Simoes, Robin Smith, Scott Sweatt, Nick Thorkelson, and Arvid Tomayko-Peters. 

Photos

Friday
Jul172009

Present Imperfect: A Gallery of Short Works by Harold Pinter

July 17-26, 2009, Midway Studios
Directed by Caitlin Lowans and Brendan Shea

photos by Daniel J. van Ackere


With Kate Bailey, Lisa Caron Driscoll, Carlos M. Harris, Janelle Day Mills, Adam Sanders, and Brian Sergent

Set and Lighting Designers: Ian and Peter Agoos; Costume Designer: Sylvie Agudelo; Composer/Sound Designer: Lou Cohen; Props Designer: Cara Pacifico; Stage Manager: Vawnya Nichols;  Producer: Marc S. Miller; and Victoria Cyr, Kurt Cole Eidsvig, Silvia Graziano, Nick Thorkelson, Daniel J. van Ackere, and more. Thanks to www.freesound.org for the many sound samples used in this production.

 

 

 

 

This Fort Point Theatre Channel production honored the most important playwright of his generation and a 2005 Nobel Laureate in Literature. Pinter's short works offer a less-familiar side of a playwright who is well known for haunting plays and tension-filled movie scripts. While maintaining his trademarks of conflict, complexity, and compassion, these six plays bring humor, even whimsy, into the equation and also convey the playwright's evolving concerns over the years.


 

A Kind of Alaska: A middle-aged woman wakes up after 30 years passed in a coma induced by sleeping sickness. In her mind she is still 16, and her attempts to  fathom the changed world into which she reemerges are poignant and emotionally charged and devastatingly brilliant theatre.

New World Order: The fear and uncertainty conveyed by this short piece powerfully remind us that the evils of the world will always try to conquer us if we don't heed the warnings. It offers a strong indictment of today's world in a manner that is straightforward and subtle, dark and darkly humorous.

Night: Two people sit at a table sipping coffee and talk about how they became lovers.

Request Stop: In this brief monologue, a woman rehearses her interactions with a hostile world.

Silence: A young girl's encounters with two male friends are told in three separate streams of thought, swimming with memories.

Victoria Station: A dispatcher tries to direct a strangely vacant driver to a waiting fare. But Car 274 is already carrying a mysterious passenger.

Friday
May082009

Exclamation Point! 6 PERFORMING POETRY

photos by Daniel J. van Ackere

On Friday, May 8, 2009, at Bob's Your Uncle/Front, a store and gallery in the Fort Point neighborhood of Boston, we presented our sixth evening of short works.

Our theme, "performing poetry," encompassed poems read by multiple voices, live and pre-recorded, integrated with film, mime, drawings, music, fabulous costumes, and the destruction of fresh fruit.

With contributions from: Cynthia Bargar, Sarah Bayer, Leslie Clark, Victoria Cyr, Mary Driscoll, Kurt Cole Eidsvig, Leora Fox, John Gayle, Christie Lee Gibson, Frederick Goodwin, Silvia Graziano, Amy Demus Grunder, Stacey Lane, Meron Langsner, Mark Harvey Levine, Ellen Margaret Lewis, Jean Monahan, Loyda Navarro, Larry Plitt, Ed Stever, Nick Thorkelson, Douglas Urbank, and Joanna Vogel.

We also relied on the reading and acting talents of Randy Danson, Robert Dinsmore, Philana Mia, Marc S. Miller, and Steven Rumpler. The evening was coordinated by Silvia Graziano

Performing Poetry took place on the opening evening of Fort Point Art Walk, the Fort Point Arts Community's spring open studios event.

 

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