Roundtown Players Seeks Hotel Luggage Cart

Author: dfilas  //  Category: Call Board

Roundtown Players is currently rehearsing for their upcoming production of I Never Sang for My Father, and they are seeking a hotel luggage cart as a prop. If you can lend or donate one or know someone who can, please contact board member Tahrea Maynard at tahreamaynard@yahoo.com. This production opens April 23rd, so, if you can help, please do so!

Thank you!

Theater of Imagination: A Workshop with Hector Aristizabal

Author: kthreadgill  //  Category: Waiting in the Wings

WHEN: Saturday, May 1, 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 6 p.m.
WHERE: Wild Goose Creative, 2491 Summit St.
ADMISSION: $35 general; for students admission is free. For tickets or information call 614/975-1085. To find out more visit www.burningfeather.org

Hector Aristizabal comes from Medellin, Colombia and works all over the world using theater as a means to resist oppression, live without fear and build community. He draws on the techniques of Theater of the Oppressed, with its ability to inspire political activism, resolve conflicts and question authority. His work also invokes ritual — the root of theater — storytelling and drumming and his approach is imbued with a spirit of playfulness that is central to reawakening the imagination. As we search for new ways to create and sustain community and fight injustice, Hector uses spontaneous theater games that tap into the freedom within us.

Auditions for Ugly Duckling at Columbus Children’s Theatre

Author: kthreadgill  //  Category: Call Board

Columbus Children’s Theatre announces auditions for “Ugly Duckling: A Hip-Hop Dramedy” by Matt Johnson.

WHEN: April 18th and 19th @ 7:00pm; Callbacks April 20th @ 7:00pm

WHERE: Park Street Theatre, 512 N. Park St, Columbus, OH

PREP: Actors should come with a prepared song and music. Accompanist will be provided. Bring current resume and photo (Snapshot is fine) and dress ready to dance! Also bring your calendar to indicate conflicts with rehearsals. Readings will be from the script.

INFO: Columbus Children’s Theatre Conservatory will hold open auditions for the Summer Youth Performance Company and the World Premiere of this modernized adaptation of the Ugly Duckling story.

PERFORMANCES: August 4th-14th, 2010

Call Board: Second Round of Hay Fever Auditions at BCTCo

Author: dfilas  //  Category: Waiting in the Wings

The 2nd round of auditions for “Hay Fever” is scheduled for this Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday (March 21, 22, and 23) at 7PM at the Harmony Artistic Center, 3979 Parkway Lane, Hilliard.

ROLES NEEDED: Looking to fill four roles – two men and two women, who can play ages 20-30.

PERFORMANCE DATES: June 4, 5, 6, 11, 12

REHEARSAL START DATE: April 11

QUESTIONS: Please call Aynn Titchenal at 614-599-0338 for more information.

Call Board: Auditions for King of the Golden River with Buckeye Youth Theatre

Author: dfilas  //  Category: Call Board

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Buckeye Youth Theatre announces auditions for “King of the Golden River”

Auditions are being held Monday and Tuesday March 22nd and 23rd 2010, at 7:30 p.m. each night, at the troupe’s performance venue, Harmony Artistic Center, 3979 Parkway Lane, Hilliard, Ohio. A headshot and resumé are requested, but not mandatory; a monologue is not required. Auditions are open to the public, and will be cold readings from scripts, which will not be provided in advance.

Synopsis
From the classic fairy tale by John Ruskin, retold by Margery Evernden . Hans, Schwartz and Gluck are three brothers living in the legendary past. Hans and Schwartz are cruel and lazy, and Gluck, the youngest of the three, looks after the cottage and does the cooking - and is often treated badly.
One evening they are called on by a mysterious visitor who is in reality the Southwest Wind. The elder brothers dismiss him rudely. And then - disaster befalls the land!
The Southwest Wind destroys their valley turning it into red sand.
The cruel older brothers try alchemy and melt down Gluck’s prize heirloom, a gold mug, which looks like the head of a golden bearded man.
This action releases the King of the Golden River! A finely dressed man who tells Gluck that a far-off river may be turned to gold by casting in three drops of pure water.
It is a hard and dangerous journey. The two elder brothers are defeated by their selfishness. Will Gluck be able to restore his country to its former wealth?

Roles available:
3 men between ages 15-30 1 woman any age
1 man 40 and up
1 child between ages 8-15

Show dates: May 7-16, 2010
Friday and Saturday nights at 8:00pm
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 3:00pm

Set Pieces Available for Pick Up

Author: dfilas  //  Category: General Website

BCTCO has about 20 plywood set pieces left behind by a former tenant, some made up to look like trees, some to look like bushes, stone walls, and a fence-type gate. They are from about 3×4 to very large. Would be great for a children’s theatre or a troupe needing easily movable outdoor set pieces, or just a troupe with room to store them (you’d need around a 10×10 space or so to store them). Basically, instant set. We’ll donate them to anyone who wants them, all they have to do is bring a truck to the Harmony Artistic Center sometime when we’re there and take them away. Questions can be directed to bctco1@gmail.com or call 570-0385. We’d like them out of here asap as we need the space for other uses. Thanks.

Review Roundup: Curtain’s Hedda Complex and Fragile

Author: dfilas  //  Category: Review Roundup

Photo by Dale Bush

Photo by Dale Bush

by Bob Weesner

When Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler was first produced in 1891, audiences didn’t understand it, and reviewers failed to recognize it as the great classic it would become. And when we say “it,” of course we refer to the central character of Hedda. She alone drives the plot forward. She alone makes the unremarkable characters around her remarkable, bending them to her formidable will.

In fact, if this was a one person play, it would still be fascinating.

Hedda is a study in contrasts. She hates her place in the society of her age, yet almost desperately wants to be accepted by it. She finds a sense of obliged destiny fulfilled by being married, but has nothing but disdain for her husband. Being raised by a single parent (a father in the military), her interests do not at all reflect those of proper young ladies during the latter part of the Victoria influenced era. Her open yearning for equality is her attraction, and the very denial of it determines not only her character, but also her fate.

Knowing all this in advance, I was intrigued to see how Curtain Players would handle an epic play in a petite theatre.

Frankly, they did pretty well.

The setting for the play is both comfortable and bright. Since the audience area is only six rows deep, there is an abiding intimacy here. Likewise the costumes appeared to be correct (and expensive) to my untrained eye. “Job well done” to designers Matt Hermes and Drew Washburn, and to costumer Joyce Leahy.

In a cast of worthy performances, Micah Jenkins first stands out. As the cuckolded husband, his presentation of subtle weakness was constantly creative. I was impressed. I often forgot I was watching someone act.

I never forgot I was watching acting when I was saw Joe Lusher as the judge. I wasn’t surprised to read of his Shakespearean background. I can only describe his performance as “rich.” I would occasionally back away from the involvement of the work to just enjoy pure style.

As the writer Lovborg, the raw power that Jeremy Ryan Brown brought to the set impressed me. He was the only male in the cast who could consistently stand up to the Godzilla-like personality of Hedda Gabler.

In a strong supporting role was Laura Miller as Thea. She must be good. I disliked the weakness in this character from her first moment on stage.

Also in smaller roles were Nancy Meyer and Linda Browning Hughes. In both cases I would like to have seen more.

And then there’s Hedda … When she first stepped on stage, Emily Bach reminded me of Walt Disney’s Alice in Wonderland. After three minutes she reminded me of Lady Macbeth. By the end of the evening I wasn’t sure exactly what I had seen – other than it wasn’t going to fit well into any of my pre-conceived boxes. Here is a character so complex, so driven, yet so fragile … Ms Bach handled it all with seeming ease. In addition she added an almost hypnotic charm – one of those “I-am-the-flame-you-are-the-moth” kind of things.

With the high quality of everything else, I was disappointed with Matt Hermes’s direction. For example, the character of Hedda was too openly domineering, right from the beginning. A softer start would have allowed the character to “grow,” revealing more depth. What bothered me the most was the amateurish blocking – the unmotivated moving of people from one side of the set to another. Often three people would be jockeying for position to see who stands next to whom. Not good. And likely these mistakes might have been unnoticed if the quality of acting was less than it is.

Hedda Gabler will continue to be performed at Curtain Players Community theatre, 5691 Harlem Road, Galena, Ohio 43021, through March 21 on Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm and on Sundays at 2pm.  For tickets and information, call 614.360.1000 or visit the company’s website.  Tickets cost $14 for adults, $12 for students and seniors.

****
For most of his career, Bob was employed as a television director, working for stations from Los Angeles to Columbus. During this same time period he wrote and directed plays for theatres all over the Midwest. For several years he was the drama critic for the Spectator newspaper chain and for channel 6 here in Columbus. Bob has won numerous awards, including two Emmy awards, A Freedom’s foundation award, and two recent awards from the National Writers Digest Playwriting Competition.

Callboard: Auditions for Honk, Jr. at Phoenix

Author: dfilas  //  Category: Call Board

Auditions for Honk Jr.

What:
Honk Jr.

When:
Thursday, March 18, 2010, 6:00pm - 9:00pm and March 20, 2010, 1-4PM

Where:
Columbus Performing Arts Center
549 Franklin Avenue
Columbus, OH 43215

Preparation:

No registration or preparation is required to audition. Plan to sing, dance and have fun!???

Check out www.mtishows.com/show_detail.asp?showid=000233 to go to the MTI page for Honk Jr. where you can learn about the characters, the story and even listen to some of the songs in the show!

Synopsis:

Auditions for Honk Jr. are open to anyone ages 9-14.

Honk Jr. is a musical comedy based on The Ugly Duckling and is written by George Stiles and Anthony Drewe

Performances Dates are: Friday May 14 @ 7pm?Saturday May 15 @ 2pm & 7pm Sunday May 16 @ 2pm

Those interested in participating only need to come to one of the two auditions. We may ask some of you to come to call backs later on Saturday evening.

Auditions, rehearsal and performances will take place at the Columbus Performing Arts Center (Davis Center) 549 Franklin Ave. Columbus, OH

Questions? Contact:

Joe Bishara via email at:jbishara@phoenix4kids.org

Review Roundup: CCT’s New Space Births a Stunning Candida

Author: dfilas  //  Category: Review Roundup

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Between the inauguration of a brand-spanking-new space, a universally strong cast, crisp direction, and the witty mastery of George Bernard Shaw’s script, Columbus Civic Theater’s Candida impressed both reviewers.  Columbus Civic Theatre presents Candida Thursdays through Saturdays until March 27th at 8:00 p.m. in their new location at 3837 Indianola Ave., Columbus. To reserve tickets or for more information, please visit their website at www.columbuscivic.org or call (614) 447-7529.

Candida Offers Smart Laughs in CCT’s New Space

candida1

by Tahrea Maynard

Columbus Civic Theatre continues continues with the second weekend of George Bernard Shaw’s comedy, Candida, running Thursdays through Saturdays. To toast the new space at 3837 Indianola Ave., CCT opened its doors March 11th to mark the new beginning with wine and various goodies for a delighted audience, including this reviewer and few colleagues. The new compact CCT space is a renovation in progress, still boasting bare drywall, disassembled chairs, the smell of sawdust.

These details however, are long forgotten as soon as the play begins. Though Candida centers on the uncomfortable love triangle between the main character, Candida (Britt Kline), young poet Eugene Marchbanks (Doug Mondell), and Candida’s husband, Reverend James Mavor Morell (Ben Gorman), Shaw also smoothly inserts social and political commentary pitting Morell, a Fabian socialist, against Burgess, an unwavering capitalist- issues surprisingly topical given the current political climate in this country.

Now, these political subjects may seem uninteresting or downright boring to those expecting to attend a comedy, but rest assured there is nothing boring about this particular show.  Audience members may remember Kline and Gorman’s pairig in CCT’s 2009 production of A Doll’s House. They may also recall the splendid job the two did performing as husband and wife in an emotionally broken and tense marriage. In Candida, the duo again plays husband and wife, rekindling their easy onstage chemistry, only this time they portray a couple in a drawn out emotional chess match. These talented powerhouses gobble up Shaw’s words. Kline  exhibits fearsome strength as she interacts with Mondell’s Marchbanks, a young poet who has the misfortune to have fallen in love with caustic Candida. Mondell does well in this character, flouncing into chairs, moping about, and utilizing tragically hackneyed words of love in attempts to woo her away from what he feels is a dull and loveless home.

Comedic elements in this production also come from the rest of this wonderful cast: Rachel Mock, Todd Taylor, and Shane Egan. Mock portrays Morell’s faithful and no-nonsense typist Proserpine “Prossy” Garnett. Mock delights, using her harsh clicking of the typewriter and a haughty demeanor to convey crystal clear emotions every moment she takes the stage. Prossy’s single moment of lowered inhibitions and giddiness, though full of infectious giggles misses the mark in that Mock seems to play what should be a moment borne of drunkenness too steadily and too cerebrally. Otherwise, this CCT newcomer does the role justice.  Taylor as Morell’s assistant, Reverend Alexander “Lexy” Mills, stamps the small role with a sweet and charming goofiness.  Shane Egan plays Burgess, a character who demands respect and attempts to be classy with laughable results. Egan’s superior vocal work and inventive physicality help Burgess stand out as a hilarious audience favorite.

Technically speaking, CCT settles well into its new space.  The lighting includes slight shadowing of faces downstage, but this is no major distraction from Melinda Anderson’s wonderful costuming or Jon Anderson’s simple and well-dressed set. The small stage allows for ample space for the authentic setting and boasts great acoustics and sightlines.

Candida continues this weekend, Friday March 12th and Saturday March 13th in the new CCT space. If you cannot make it to this outstanding production this weekend, clear your schedule this month to come out and support these fine actors and this wonderful theatre company.

*******

Tahrea Maynard has just finished directing her  third children’s production with Roundtown Players, where she has been a board member for six years. She also frequently appears in productions with Rosebriar Shakespeare Company. Tahrea also teaches Musical Theatre classes with the Charmion Performing Arts Center in Circleville. check out her director’s blog and personal blog.

CCT Opens New Space with a Bang
candida2

by Krista B. Threadgill

I’ll be honest—Thursday was not a good day for me. Traffic woes, meetings running over, and nasty weather were more than enough to spoil my mood before reporting to Columbus Civic Theatre to see a play that I knew little about (shameful for someone with an English degree) in a location I knew even less about. After driving past it twice, I finally found CCT’s new home: a converted doggy daycare nee garage. After sinking into the most comfortable seats I’ve found in any theater in the metro area, all of the cares and stresses of my day evaporated as George Bernard Shaw’s Candida came to life before my eyes.

Shaw wrote Candida as an answer to Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House, which CCT produced last fall. In Candida, we meet James Morell (Ben Gorman), a pastor with a full speaking calendar, and his typist, Prossy (Rachel Mock), who is secretly in love with him. After a three-week absence while their children were ill, Morell’s wife Candida (Britt Kline) is returning home, much to his delight and Prossy’s lament. Candida’s capitalist father, Burgess (Shane Egan), is also happy to hear that his daughter is coming home as he’s hoping that she might use her influence over her husband to help him secure some manufacturing contracts. Meanwhile, the young Eugene Marchbanks (Doug Mondell)—a family friend—has decided he is in love with Candida, despite their great age difference and Candida’s inconvenient marriage; and Morell’s protégé, Lexy Mill (Todd Taylor) is doing his best to emulate everything about his boss. It’s up to Candida to set everything back to rights while balancing the fragile male egos around her.

Rich Albert directs a fine cast through this incredibly funny script. Kline’s Candida is spirited and engaging, and her final speech to her dueling suitors is both endearing and playful. Mock’s Prossy is wonderful; she is able to shift from prickly irritation to sentimental warmth in the blink of an eye and with utter believability. Mondell, making his debut with CCT, has pitch-perfect timing with Eugene’s socially awkward moments. Mill’s comedic pacing with Lexy is fantastic, and Egan’s performance is also outstanding. The director chose to have the actors use only slight British variations on certain words and phrases rather than full-on accent reproduction, which is pleasing to the ear and a welcome departure. As a whole, the cast performs well together and has the audience rolling in the aisles as they animate Shaw’s words.

The set, designed by Jon Anderson, is a nice recreation of a turn-of-the 20th-century study with lovely Persian rugs and tapestry-covered chairs. Overflowing bookcases and an antique typewriter complete the look. Melinda Anderson’s period costumes are beautiful in design and flattering in construction. Rich Albert also designed the lighting, which is simple and effective. The musical selections between acts are lively and period-appropriate.

Despite a rough day, a leaky roof, and some of the worst traffic I’ve ever seen that wasn’t snow-related, CCT’s production of Candida washed away my troubles and left me smiling long after the curtain closed. Although the new space is still a work in progress, CCT are building a lovely new home. Overlook the plaster dust, partially installed seats, and unpainted drywall and experience an excellent company producing a wonderful show. I can hardly wait to see what they have in store for us next.

*****

Krista Threadgill spent her childhood following her parents around the Actors Guild of Parkersburg. After that, she wiled away her summers at Jenny Wiley Amphitheater, and she has performed in two Neil Simon plays. She has an English degree from the Ohio State University.

Callboard: Auditions for Hay Fever at BCTCo

Author: dfilas  //  Category: Call Board

Auditions on Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday (March 14, 15, 16) from 7-9 for Bread & Circus’ Hay Fever at Harmony Artistic Center, 3979 Parkway Lane in Hilliard.

Details:
Looking for both men and women, must be able to pass for ages 20-30…head shot and resume appreciated but not required…cold reading from script…bring schedule conflicts for period from April 11 through June 3. Performances are first two weekends in June (June 4,5,6 and 11,12).

Visit www.bctco.org for more information.