Monday, March 7, 2011

The Oregonian Reviewed my show!

A critic from the Oregonian was in our audience last night. Here's what she wrote:

One of the great things about going to the theater is that we can watch a man experience the pain and humiliation of slipping on a banana peel and we can feel completely free to chortle with delight. If we did this in real life, we'd be branded unfeeling sadists and our fellows would rightfully keep their distance.

"A Company of Wayward Saints"
When: 8 p.m. Thursday-Friday, 2 p.m. Saturday and 8 p.m. Friday, March 18
Where: Sellwood Masonic Lodge, 7126 S.E. Milwaukie Ave.
Tickets: $15, lunacy
stageworks.org
The drama, as we have come to internalize its conventions, permits us this emotional distance. Arguably, our understanding of this conventional way of relating to actors begins at the very start of Western theater with the masked actors of ancient Greek drama. The masks served as both a disguise and a physical barrier, a way to further distance the players from the audience. The masks reappeared in Italy in the 16th century in a form called commedia dell'arte, where actors played specific, well-known character types while wearing masks that represented each type.

"A Company of Wayward Saints" is Lunacy Stageworks' current production about a traveling commedia dell'arte troupe, Le Compagnie de Santi Ostinati, searching for a way to finance its trip home. They seem to have found it when the Duke of Spokane (there are several local references, including a particularly timely one about cavorting with a wench in a bioswale) promises to pay for the trip if they will put on a show to his liking.

In the first part of the play we meet the performers, commedia dell'arte types all. There's Harlequin (Glenn McCumber) who serves as the master of ceremonies, Scapino (Samuel Holloway), his zany apprentice who juggles and somersaults. Both actors make their roles memorable by their ability to express character and emotion with their bodies.

There is Harlequin's wife Columbine (the grounded Heather Lundy Kahl) who keeps him in line, cranky old man Pantalone (Daniel R Somerfield), flirtatious Ruffiana (the delightful Chelsie Thomas), and Joe Clayton as Capitano, the blustery army officer.

Then there are the young lovers, Isabella (Corinne Elizabeth Christian) and Tristano (Chase McNeill). In the first part, they are not masked, but their expressions and movements are so mannered that they might as well be. She is preening and flirtatious, he is earnest and easily flustered. Finally, there is Dottore (Gregory Barrett), physician of Bologna (or "baloney," according to the cat calls of his troupe members), who wears a mortarboard cap and a mask with bushy eyebrows, and is a blowhard and a know-it-all.

Despite some very funny antics, there are problems in the troupe. Personal differences have arisen, and there is talk of breaking up. The central question becomes whether they can overcome their individual egos and function as a single unit to achieve the common goal of reaching home. (It should be noted that despite the storyline, director Sean B. Kelly has the actors working together flawlessly.)

The second part of the play holds an unnerving surprise: The actors have removed their masks -- and the conventional behaviors that functioned as masks. The audience is forced to confront a group of performers who have become much more like themselves. Suddenly, we are a little worried at having laughed at the banana peel.

In terms of the storyline, some time has passed. The silly young lovers have transformed. Isabella is now a woman in the throes of labor and Tristano is her anxious husband, outside the birth room, hearing his wife's primal moans and fearing everything that is unknown and beyond his control. The Dottore is now a wise and compassionate figure who counsels and reassures the father-to-be.

The scene is very moving, not just because it is powerfully acted, but because we have been put off balance emotionally. It's as if a taciturn and somewhat silly friend we've known for years suddenly breaks down and confesses all his tragic secrets. Removing the masks demonstrates the power these terrific actors hold over us. As an audience we follow them willingly, from masked to unmasked, from emotional distance to absorbed intensity.

Eventually, the troupe does manage to pull it together. In this way, not only does the troupe learn to form a community that works toward the common good, but that community is shared with the audience, who celebrate the good fortune of those on stage.

Note: The performance on March 5 ended with Gregory Barrett, the actor who played the Dottore, proposing to lighting designer Lindsay Bernal onstage. It was a delightful moment, made all the more interesting by its reflection of the central motifs of the play: Here was yet another unmasking that actually brought the actors completely into real life, and here was a celebration of renewal shared by us all.

-- Carol Wells

Sunday, February 27, 2011

We're Open!


This last weekend was the opening weekend for "A Company of Wayward Saints." We were operating amidst dire predictions of Snowpocalypse 2011, and it definitely affected our turn-out. However, the opening night on Friday was fantastic. Great house, good show, and a wonderful reception afterwards. We had food donated from a couple of local restaurants, a local chocolatier (one of the actor's girlfriend is working on becoming a professional confectioner). We even had a professional DJ. As production manager for the show, I gave a toast, which felt super weird, but all in all, was great fun. Another highlight of my week was emailing George Herman, the playwright, inviting him to attend our show. I nerded out over that a little bit, gloating to Adam that I'd written George. No response as of yet, so no idea if he got the email, doesn't care, or is just slow technologically. Whatever, I emailed George.
I also spent most of the morning on Wednesday at work doing bits for a video blog Krysta wants to start on Youtube. We filmed six different spots (I did 2 of them), to be posted every other week or so over the next few months. As soon as those start going up, I'll put a link to them in here.
It was a crazy weekend, and I definitely crashed last night. I spent most of today attempting to catch up on cleaning, and then had a couple of friends from Charlotte's over to watch the Academy Awards.
Tomorrow, I knuckle down. Go back to the gym (literally didn't have time over the last week and a half). Spend the annual three hours doing our taxes, woohoo. Grocery shop so that Adam has something to eat while he studies and I have something to take to work to eat apart from dry cereal.
Everything for Adam is pretty much business as usual. He got a 96% on his first test of the semester this last week. He's studying to preach his next sermon from Romans in a few weeks. Next week, he registers for his two community college classes, a basic English composition/writing class, and a western civilizations class.
Hugs to all.



Sunday, February 13, 2011

Playing Catch-up

Whoo, what a month.
Ok, thank you everyone for the birthday wishes and gifts! The day itself was kind of odd. I had to work, so we didn't really get to celebrate. However, Krysta let the other girls working that day and I try on some of the prom dresses. And Adam had wine and presents waiting for me when I got home, which was really sweet.
Work has been crazy this month. I've been running the front desk on Saturdays, and we've been averaging 48 appointments on a standard 9 - 6 day. While this is great for the store's bottom line, it pretty much feels like getting hit by a very loud hurricane that leaves dresses everywhere. On Friday morning, Krysta and I hauled a bunch of our prom gowns to Century High School where we dressed the girls who were escorting all the male contestants in the "Man of the Century" Pageant. It was so much fun working with the girls, they had great energy, loved the gowns, and marketed for us like crazy.
The show has been gearing up more and more. We start tech rehearsals this weekend and open next weekend. It's really coming together beautifully, and I'm thrilled to be part of this project, especially having loved the script for so long. We just recently found out that George Hermann, the playwright, actually lives in the Portland area. We're really hoping to entice him to attend our talk-back session after our matinee show, but haven't gotten a response from him yet. The guy is roughly 92 now and wrote the show over 50 years ago, so his mobility and enthusiasm may not be in our favor.
Tonight, Adam and I went out for dinner as a late birthday/early Valentine's treat. We tried Yuki Sushi over in Hillsboro, and it was a lot of fun. The restaurant was tiny, but service was excellent (our waitress was this little Asian mom-type who recommended great sake), and the food was really good. May have to go there again.
Adam is surviving spring semester with some frustration. Tomorrow he's meeting with an academic advisor at Portland Community College to figure out the two gen-ed classes he's planning to get out of the way here. We're both hoping he can keep his head above water when he's in the midst of four classes instead of the three of last semester and two at the moment. Fortunately, his campus visit at Western Seminary was very positive. We have lots of hope for that once we're done with Ozark and the bachelor's degree.
I'm trying to attach a picture from the prom assembly and from the show, but blogspot isn't loving me right now, so we'll see how it goes.
Christian out!

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Multnomah Falls

While Marv, Linda and Cammie were visiting for Christmas we took a few hours to hike around Multnomah Falls, just outside of Portland. Here's some pictures from our trip.



































Hope everyone had a great Christmas!

- Adam and Cori

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