Posts Tagged ‘barter theatre’

The Desperate Hours

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Directed by Richard Rose
Scenery by Richard Finkelstein
Costumes by Kimberly Stockton
Sound by Bobby Beck

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Images courtesy Richard Finkelstein

There is no cure

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

Tech for The Cure for Love here at The Barter goes well. We got through the play in the first ten out of twelve so its two run throughs today and first preview tomorrow night. The playwright Jay Berkow is here and he seems pleased with this premier of his play.

I return to New York in two days to begin Marko the Prince.

Upcoming Projects

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

I sent off the contracts for a few shows I will be lighting at the Barter Theatre this spring and fall in Virginia. Two musicals and two plays. It should be a fun time. I had a great time working there this past fall on Dracula and Driving Miss Daisy and am very pleased to be returning.

Yesterday I met with my friend Kate to talk about a large scale project she is constructing for Burning Man. I can’t talk too much about it as the grant proposal is still being put together and we want to keep it under wraps until that is all settled. But it would be part sculpture, part architectural lighting and part environment/experience design. If we get the necessary funding, I think this could be an amazing project to work on and see realized.

It is a curious thing that it feels almost as soon as I made the decision to become more discriminating in the works I do, the projects I get offered become more interesting. The power of intentionality is an amazing thing.

I have organized a weekly meditation group with some friends of mine. It is a wonderful experience to have a small group of fellow sitters to be with on a regular basis. Very strengthening to my own practice as well as deepening connections with friends.

Finding a balance between the spiritual and the secular in life is an important thing. I think this is one of the things that I find so compelling about Burning Man. It rides that duality at its very core essence. In many ways that is explicitly what the project with Kate is about. Creating a space that serves as a channel between the daily life and the divine.

Too often I find I, like most people, get caught up in the day to day of this and that. We become so bogged down with the mundane details that the larger truly important things get swept away. Finding ways to remind ourselves of the big picture is something I feel is necessary to maintaining sanity and an overall healthy inner life. Any number of things can do this for different people. For me it tends to be art and meditation.

Driving Miss Daisy

Thursday, November 8th, 2007

Directed by Richard Rose
Set Design by Daniel Ettinger

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Photos courtesy Daniel Ettinger

Dracula Pictures

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

Directed by Richard Rose
Scenery by Cheri Prough DeVol
Costumes by Amanda Aldridge
Music by Bobby Beck

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All photographs courtesy Cheri Prough DeVol

Dracula Review

Monday, October 1st, 2007

Link

Rose directs with his usual bloody precision, Cheri Prough DeVol designed the effective set, Amanda Aldridge outdid herself in shrouding the actors, and Cindi A. Raebel managed the stage, which, I assume, meant keeping the blood supply flowing.
However, the technical stars of this show were the lighting by Lucas Krech and the sound designed by Bobby Beck. Very, very effective.

Dracula Preview

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

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From Dracula at The Barter theatre.

In the best possible way

Sunday, September 23rd, 2007

The Barter Theater is a community theatre in the best possible meaning of the term. It is a fully professional Regional Theatre that produces a wide range of programming specifically for the surrounding community that is its audience. A number of the plays, like the Dracula we open tonight, are adapted to locate them around community issues. This version is set in America in the 1920′s, specifically the Virginia Highlands where Abingdon resides.

The actors and other staff all live in and interact with the community and several are natives of the area. There is a saying that “All theatre is local” and while there are a number of exceptions, this organization certainly proves the rule.

Coming in from out of town to do these shows might, to some, appear to break that idea of serving the community, but I feel it enlarges it. Community is not solely bound by geographical locations. In our contemporary world where distance becomes increasingly mitigated by technologies like the internet fostering cross cultural pollination of ideas, creating works that are inherently part of that larger cultural dialog are vitally important.

And in a way it certainly fits the specifics of this play. The action centers around a foreigner from another country who “can control the weather and shift forms at will.” This is light.

Light is not just illumination. It is the weather, the progression of the day, the moon and the stars. It is the atmosphere that surrounds action and binds disparate activities together. In a world where that atmosphere is controlled by a person of foreign origin how perfect to for the light to be designed by someone from far away.

If all theatre is local, I believe it is equally true that it is about outsiders. True action can only exist when the status quo is out of balance. Without an inequality between the current state of things and ones desire for change there is no reason to act. If we become hungry our desire for food causes us to go and eat.

Theatre is about action.

As such the world must be unbalanced, out of alignment. Almost any play, and this applies to movies and other performance as well, begins with a world out of balance. A crazy king losing the throne, an ancient kingdom beset by plague, a young woman sick with a mysterious illness.

The action of the play is then to right that imbalance, or perhaps, to change the surrounding context such that the world balances along a new axis.

This can only be done by the outsider. The one out of balance, out of harmony, with the surrounding world. Henry V can only lead his country to victory because he was the debaucherous youth. The action of the play can only be portrayed by the crazy people who inhabit the world of the theatre.

A world set apart.

Like Halloween or Carnival, a person dons the clothing of another and for some span of time, rejects their own ego to inhabit the life of someone else. Worlds are created within, but apart from the surrounding world. A Temporary Autonomous Zone.

Even at a practical level our world exists apart from much the rest of the world. We go to work such that others can come for recreation. We rest on the day when most return to work. We live in fantasy and create new possibilities out of language, cloth, wood and light.

Part of, but apart from, the world. In the community but perhaps not of the community.

Tech Day Two

Thursday, September 20th, 2007

Here we are at the second 10 out of 12 for Dracula! Of course 10 out of 12 refers to the actors schedule, for me its a bit more like a 13 1/2 out of 14 hour day, and thinking about the crew’s hours makes my head hurt.

The show is coming along very well. We got through Act One yesterday and somewhat into Act Two. I think this is shaping up into a nice looking show. The people here are fantastic. Very pleasant in general and the crew is fantastic. We have been getting a lot of good work done.

Enough of the liveblogging from the tech table. Time to get back to work.

This and that

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

Focus went really well last night. We have a few things to finish up this morning before the first lighting session, but all in all it looks to be going well.

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In other lighting news, it appears that Live Design, formerly Lighting Dimensions has a series of blogs available to it readers. Both focus far more on the practical than mine does. A professional lighting designer based out of New York and a new student at CalArts. If you just can’t get enough lighting news here, these are some fine alternatives.


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