Thursday, December 27, 2012

A Quick Look Back . . .

I just realized that I didn't post any of the photos from our production of OR, in October! I certainly intended to, but for some reason it never happened. Caitlin is back in her classroom and Tim and Brandy are in a production out on Nantucket and I'm beginning rehearsals for Speed-The-Plow. Nevertheless, here are some photos from this great production:

Aphra deals with the Jailer - an olfactory challenge
Aphra visited by a mysterious stranger


Aphra won't negotiate with William Scott

Nell Gwynne attracted by Aphra's writing

Mutual attraction - not the writing


Charles II and Aphra - not the writing here, either

Charles meets Nell

Aphra and Lady Davenant
Charles, Aphra, Nell - the mutual attraction society


Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Bye, Bye Sylvia

The holiday season was ushered in with our production of A.R. Gurney's Sylvia. We had done the play about three years ago, and brought it back because so many people had asked for it. I was willing to do that only if I could get the original cast back together - and luckily for all of us, I did.

I wasn't sure if a lot of people would come back to see it, and was really apprehensive about doing the show again. That apprehension was, it turns out, unfounded. Sylvia sold out every performance and the last weekend included a waiting list of over 175 people! For a little theatre that seats 76, that's a big list. And it's not because everyone knew the name of the show or knew what to expect. It was because of the amazing performances that these people gave.

So now I'm deep into the dramaturgical water for Speed-The-Plow. Jeremiah, Sheila and Jonathan will be here on January 2nd to begin rehearsals. It's gonna be a hell of a show!

But before I get to that, let's take a few minutes to look back at some images from the wonderful people who gave you Sylvia:


I love you too!
Sylvia (Jeannie Hines) and Greg (Bill Chappelle)
"Forever . . . "

"I want to kill her, Phyllis!"
Phyllis (Dan Weintraub) and Kate (Kim Meredith)

"You may be right, she may be in heat . . . "
Greg, Sylvia, Tom (Dan Weintraub)

"Isn't she fucking gorgeous?!"
Greg and Sylvia

"I wanna kill that fucking cat!"
Sylvia and Greg

"May the best species win."
Kate and Sylvia

"Nice crotch!!"
Kate, Phyllis, Sylvia, Greg

"Off the couch!"
Sylvia and Kate

"Take your wife's hand"
Leslie (Dan Weintraub) and Greg

"Hey, you're talking about my dog!!!"
Tom and Greg


thanks to everyone who made this thing

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Getting Ready for Season Six

The blog is back from vacation, and ready to get going on the next season. August was consumed by actors, actor's agents, publishers - and then by costumes, props and building the set for the first show.


Power tools and lumber. "One by" stock, staples and glue will hopefully turn into a wall with a pair of double doors.



The frame is ready for the luaun cover. Then all I had to do was build eight more flats. Ah, the romance of creating live theatre. Still picking carpenter's glue out of my fingernails.

But that was then, and this is now. We've just finished our first week of rehearsals for Or, by Liz Duffy Adams. Wonderful characters - Aphra Behn, Charles II, Nell Gwynne - fetched from history. Very funny, very witty and exhausting!



Brandy Zarle rehearsing as Aphra (she's appeared here in earlier seasons, in Boston Marriage and Time Stands Still) and Tim Rush as King Charles II (also appeared here in Time Stands Still). Brandy is either  trying to convince the King that he still owes her some money, or she's telling Tim how silly he looks in that wig.



And here's Caitlin Glasgo (also seen here in Boston Marriage and Time Stands Still) making an indecent offer to either Aphra or Charles or both at the same time.

It's Sunday and the actors have the day off. That means that I'm off to the theatre to finish building, to finish the painting and install some sconces. Tomorrow we're back to rehearsal, trying to create a work that will leave people breathless in at least two senses.

More later.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

What's up for next season?

Still reading and figuring, figuring and reading. I've given myself another couple of weeks to come up with the line-up for season six. It's not only about reading scripts and finding contemporary work that is right for this theatre, it's also about finding the right actors (is she available in October? he's booked until April? schedule a studio in NYC for auditions, get the audition notices posted at equity, in the trade papers) and hoping to get licenses from the publishers (always a tension-filled waiting game).

So for now, everything is in limbo (it's a place I'm familiar with - right next door to where I live) while I wait and come up with a dozen contingency scenarios.

There's probably something for season six in one of these piles . . . 

When I know what it's going to be, I'll be sure to let you know.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Season Five has ended

Our fifth season (FIVE??? When I started this, I was thinking I'd try to do a couple of shows - but I've now directed 25 productions at SBT!!! It makes me tired to write that.) Our revels are now ended. Until we start season six.

Our final show, Dusk Rings A Bell, remains one of my favorite plays. Kent and Tracy are wonderful actors, and (equally important to me) wonderful people to work with. I have a feeling that you'll see them on our stage again in the future.

As promised, here are a few photos from the show:

She likes the slightly tortured, slightly ripped look.

That's the artifice of contrition! Forgive my passion.

And it ends with a kiss.

So that's all for now. Within the next couple of weeks, I'll be able to let you know what's on deck for next season.  Thanks to everyone who supports our work and who likes our work. Thanks to all the wonderful actors I was lucky enough to work with this season. That's the reason I'm doing this - so I get to play with great actors. It's been a great season.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Dusk Rings A Bell

I got an email from Stephen Belber (the playwright) before the show opened. I'd written to thank him for writing such a beautiful play. I love this play, and I think it's an absolute jewel. I've gotten lots of comments and emails from people who have said they think it's the best thing we've done this season. But back to Belber's email. He's currently directing a movie somewhere in Germany, and I was touched to get an email from him.  Here's part of what he had to say:

bill--thank you for such a wonderful email;  things like that really do make up what makes a writer happy.  i'm very proud of this play and i wish more people had seen or could see it.  it's something very close to me, so your words really do mean a lot.
i wish i could make it up there to see it myself, but i fear that might be tricky at this moment, but i wish you very, very good luck with it, and i THANK you for doing it in the first place.  
i hope we cross paths someday, either down here or up there.
thanks again, bill.  truly.
steve

The review in the Valley News was pretty lukewarm. She was very positive about the acting and the directing, but she wasn't thrilled with the play itself. Well . . . we'll continue to disagree on that one. Another review came in - this time from Michael J. Curtiss, who reviews theatre in New Hampshire on Caught In The Act. His review was anything but "lukewarm," so I thought I'd post it.

DUSK RINGS A BELL
produced by Shaker Bridge Theatre
directed by Bill Coons  
We all yearn to go back in time.  
Anyone who says otherwise is either a liar or under age four, which is roughly around the time when we start to realize that life's not fair,  humans do stupid things which hurt others, and that any second chances we might get are paid for in blood, sweat, tears, and oceans of regret. 
Is it the awareness that we can't go back the very thing which makes us want to fade into our own pasts - that dreadful finality of not knowing what we've got until it's gone, when we cast our thoughts back and paint those bygone days with the soft pastel colors of ennui and nostalgia?  
Or is it being mired in the stormy present, surrounded by the detritus of our choices, wondering how to cope, and yearning to escape and "undo" that which we hath wrought?  
DUSK RINGS A BELL, as produced by Shaker Bridge Theatre, doesn't go out of its way to answer these questions, but to raise them, and  provide theatre-goers with some of the reasons why two people do what they do,  what's possible when they come together at a point where their particular pasts and presents converge, and what potential future might be shaped from that convergence. 
DUSK's story is fairly straightforward- Molly (Tracy Liz Miller) remembers a note she wrote to herself and stashed away in the cottage she vacationed at the summer she was fourteen.  Now, twenty-five years later and on the cusp of forty, she wants to find that note, perhaps to recapture whatever youthful optimism might have existed then.   
She breaks into the cottage and retrieves the note, only to be discovered by the caretaker, Ray (Kent Burnham).  As Molly awkwardly rationalizes her reasons for breaking into the cottage, it turns out she and Ray met one incandescent night the very same summer Molly penned the missive to herself. 
Their shared past rediscovered, both Molly and Ray then relate their life stories from the point when they first met, and the play takes off from there.  
It's at this particular point that the gifts Miller and Burnham bring to the stage manifest themselves; as Molly and Ray, both actors articulate psyches which are scored and pocked by the lives they've chosen, yet they each manage to hold onto a sense of wonder at how the fates have conspired to reunite them, and the hope that they can make some sense out of where they are now, as the choices they made in the past bubble up from the well of secrets each thought had long been boarded over.  
The chemistry between Miller and Burnham is palpable almost from the first, and it is to each actor's credit that when they step away from interacting with one another to attend to other matters, they manage to pick up where they left off with the same intensity.    
This ability serves the play well, because DUSK doesn't follow a  chronologically linear through-line; instead, it skips back and forth in time, powered by Molly's and Ray's conversations and woven artfully with revelatory monologues which bring the characters out of themselves and in direct contact with the audience.   
In the hands of a less capable company, this method of staging would smack of artifice, but director Bill Coons's imprimatur is commanding and disciplined without being intrusive; through his cast, he manifests tight control over DUSK's transitions and interstitials, using them to sharpen the focus of what the characters want and how they seek to attain it, while retaining the play's edgy sensibilities.   
As Molly and Ray get reacquainted, a terrible shadow falls over them,  largely unstated in their moments together, yet brought sharply into view through the confessions they make to the audience; no matter what they do, any chance that they might have as a couple is doomed.  
In and of itself, this precursor to a not-so-happy ending would not only severely handicap a play, but stop it cold.  However, playwright Stephen Belber's intuitive treatment of Molly, Ray, and their situation ensures that being doomed isn't the relationship-killer one assumes it ought to be; it's an obstacle, and a daunting one, but both Molly and Ray manage to get around it, and move forward, by themselves and, yes, as a couple.  
How they do it, and whether the fruit of their efforts yields sweet fruit or bitter, is a journey worth witnessing.
This is the last play of Shaker Bridge Theatre's fifth season; it can certainly be argued that the company has made its bones by proving that  the place where the company does its work is incidental to the extraordinary scope of craftsmanship of which the company is capable.  
Shaker Bridge Theatre has made quiet Enfield their home, and, in the past five years, has demonstrated that art can and does thrive within a small community's rural boundaries.  
As a native of this West Central New Hampshire hamlet, I'm delighted  that Shaker Bridge Theatre has made my boyhood hometown their chosen vale, and reinvigorated not only the stately old town hall auditorium in which they perform, but also the larger community of theatre lovers who look for something beyond what might ordinarily be available to them.  
When season 6 rolls around in the fall of 2012, you'd be well-advised to stray from the more familiar theatre paths you're used to, and treat yourselves to what Shaker Bridge Theatre offers.  I know I will.   
“Caught In The Act”
Michael J. Curtiss

I'll be taking some production photos this weekend when the show closes, and I'll post them here next week. For now then, it's back to reading tons of scripts to come up with a season six.

- Bill

Saturday, April 21, 2012

DUSK rehearsals

Well, we're a week into rehearsals for Stephen Belber's amazing play, Dusk Rings A Bell. This is a shockingly beautiful play, and I have two remarkably talented actors to tell this story. Here are some pictures from early rehearsals


Kent Burnham

Kent's character trying to decide how much to tell her.

Tracy Liz Miller

Tracy's character temporarily enchanted.


I'm trying to decide if that's the enchantment I'm looking for.



Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Relatively Speaking

Some production photos from this hugely successful show!

Come on, it's only for six weeks.

Like it? It's your Mom's!

Hi, Daddy!

Happy ending . . . sort of.

Do you think he's a psychopath?


Black flowers?

Who is this? No really, who is this?

Come on in for a bath . . . 

Please stop calling me . . . for a while.

Is he buying my story? 

Please leave me alone . . . for a while.

We all had fun - hope you did.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

The review

The review for Relatively Speaking is in, and here it is:


Published 4/5/2012


In Enfield,
A Fine Farce
By Nicola Smith
Valley News Staff Writer 
Relatively Speaking, first staged in 1965, was British playwright Alan Ayckbourn's earliest significant success, and its intricate plot of epic misunderstandings, which transferred the sophisticated French bedroom farce to an English suburbia of mustn't-make-a-fuss, dear; have-you-trimmed-the-garden-hedge-yet?; let’s-put-the-kettle-on platitudes, set the stage for Ayckbourn's marvelous comedies to come.
It's being given a welcome, if slightly unexpected, revival in an inspired production running through April 15 at Shaker Bridge Theatre in Enfield. Unexpected, because Shaker Bridge has made its name locally for staging contemporary plays by American playwrights; and inspired, because director Bill Coons and the four-person cast have brought off a giddy farce.
Plays like Absurd Person Singular, The Norman Conquests, and Bedroom Farce made Ayckbourn famous, wealthy and one of the most produced playwrights in the English language.
Critical respect has been, at times, grudging, as if Ayckbourn's subject and style were not “serious” or daring enough, in the vein of a Harold Pinter or John Osborne, although as the recipient of both the Olivier and Tony Special Lifetime Achievement Awards, and a knighthood, to boot, such distinctions don't really matter anymore.
But anybody who admires Ayckbourn (as I do) can tell you that what he does so well is extremely difficult to pull off. Not only does he make people laugh, often to the point of helplessness, but he makes it look effortless. His plays are so formidably constructed that what looks easy and completely logical on stage could make a less gifted playwright weep with frustration trying to imitate him.
The plot is too involved to detail, and to do so would be to throw a wrench into the well-oiled machinery. But Ayckbourn draws on the time-honored mechanics of farce: mistaken identity, lickety-split timing and sexual confusion.
A young man, Greg, proposes to his reluctant girlfriend, Ginny, who says that while she loves him she's not sure she's ready to marry. She tells him she’s going to visit her parents for the weekend in the country. Greg suspects there's at least one other man, although Ginny denies it. Ginny leaves. Greg follows her, knowing only that she’s headed for a house in Buckinghamshire, or, in the succinct shorthand of a postal address, Bucks. The fun Ayckbourn has with that one syllable alone is worth the price of admission.
When Greg arrives at what he presumes to be the home of Ginny's parents, he thoroughly baffles the woman he takes to be Ginny's mother, the unfailingly courteous Sheila. Sheila is married to Philip, a certain kind of ruddy, tweedy Englishman routinely spoofed by the likes of Beyond the Fringe, Monty Python, Roald Dahl, David Lodge and their inheritors.
Philip appears stolid, conservative and unimaginative, and is irritated by even the slightest disturbance of the preferred order of things. But when Greg appears, order disintegrates almost immediately and the misunderstandings snowball to such a degree that reality itself becomes surreal, as if the characters existed in a parallel, not entirely comprehensible universe.
What makes Ayckbourn so funny is the way he abbreviates speech, or more to the point, what he leaves out. Everything hinges on what he omits. By not completing the phrases and sentences that would clarify matters, he allows misapprehension to flourish. When misapprehension thrives, so does comedy. And by combining that with the stereotype of the polite Englishman, who would rather die than admit ignorance or contradict someone, Ayckbourn is able to wreak comic havoc.
Coons has assembled a topnotch cast that smoothly juggles all the balls in the air at once. As the hapless Greg, Jay Stratton is sweetly befuddled, endlessly helpful (thus, in Ayckbourn's world, supremely unhelpful) and just a little dim. Greg is the catalyst for everything that goes awry, and Stratton draws on a wealth of subtly confused facial expressions and physical comedy to put that across.        
Sheila, played by Kay Morton, is as befuddled in her own way as Greg. No matter the circumstance, she serenely continues on her way, confident that her own good nature will put things to right. Sheila has her own repertoire of bright smiles and small talk that cover her confusion; she may not seem the sharpest knife in the drawer but in the end she has a wisdom born of feminine experience and intuition to, as in a Shakespeare comedy, re-order everything as it should be.
Mike Backman, as Philip, perfectly embodies the suburban Englishman whose home is his castle and who resents any intrusion into his suburban paradise. He's a master of both the slow burn and stalking off stage, and he gets a lot of comic mileage out of the search for a missing garden hoe. Ginny, played by Amelia Mathews, is a delightfully duplicitous ingenue. Together, all four actors don't miss a comic beat.
“Relatively Speaking” is at Shaker Bridge Theatre in Enfield through April 15. For tickets and information, go to www.shakerbridgetheatre.org/html/about.shtml or call 603-448-3750.       
Nicola Smith can be reached at nsmith@vnews.com.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Relatively Speaking is open!

Well, it's certainly been a while since I've been here with my little blog. I feel guilty about leaving it all by itself for so long, out in the cold and rain. For those of you who have asked . . . yes, I will try to do better. I've never been very good at compartmentalizing (is that a real word?), so when I'm in rehearsal I'm pretty much obsessed with that process, to the exclusion of everything else. Having done my mea culpa, let's try to get caught up.

Private Eyes turned out to be a hugely popular and successful show. It certainly took me by surprise - I thought it would be a little too strange for an audience to really embrace. Well, once again I was wrong. The Valley News review was a rave, and lots of people told me that they thought it was our best show ever. I love being wrong like that.

Here are some photos from the production:

Lunch with Lisa & Adrian

Matthew & Cory in a danse macabre

lunch is over

Matthew & Cory and some stolen wine

Dr. Frank counsels Lisa

Lisa puts up with Matthew's b.s.

He thinks blue is a good color for her.

And now we're open with Relatively Speaking, a "classic" English farce by Alan Ayckbourn. The audiences are laughing non-stop at this one! Wonderful performances from all four actors - Jay Stratton, Amy Mathews, Mike Backman and Kay Morton. We needed some photos for the poster, for publicity, etc., so we had a brief shoot with Jay and Amy. Here are some of the ones we did not use . . . I think they're pretty funny.







That's all for now . . . more soon when the review comes out, with production photos.