Interview with Barrie Gelles, Director of Marry Me a Little at The Gallery Players

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Barrie Gelles stages revivals in unexpected ways. That’s what she said to me when we were chatting about her upcoming revival of Sondheim’s Marry Me a Little. The musical premiered Off-Off Broadway in 1980 for a two month run and then ran again for a in 1981 at The Actors Playhouse. After that, Marry Me… enjoyed runs around the world though it’s never been produced on Broadway. Gelles felt that this was a musical that best reflects her aesthetic. She knew her concept of a two character play performed by three casts would be ambitious and a great challange. However, she knew she had her vision and the support of the historic,The Gallery Players, to make it happen. A woman after my own heart.

When I heard about your concept for Marry Me a Little, I was intrigued. This is a two character musical by Stephen Sondheim and your concept of a rotating cast (2 couples: a man and a woman; two men; and two women) is a fresh and new approach. It’s clever and ambitious. How did the concept present itself and how did you go about bringing it to fruition?

Barrie: I am going to cheat a little here and answer by way of the “director’s note” that I wrote for our audiences.  When I started working on this show, months before casting, it became clear to me that the appeal of this show was its central thesis on love. With that thought, it seemed obvious that this production could and should subvert the typical gender-normative casting and hetero-normative narratives of most musical theatre. The premise of Marry Me a Little is that of two strangers, living in New York City, in the same apartment building, one floor apart.  The story is about love lost and love yet to be found.  It seemed a perfect opportunity to be more inclusive and rethink the casting of the lovelorn duo. I decided to cast three separate duos (one male/female, one male/male, and one female/female) because I believed that the distinctly different interpretations of the same piece of art would create a unique musical theatre experience.

I appreciate you saying it was clever, and I acknowledge that it certainly was ambitious, because we didn’t have any more time that we would usually have to create a musical.  An equity showcase production allots five weeks of rehearsal, regardless of how many casts you may have.  On top of that, we are doing Marry Me a Little in repertory with You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown, so we had even less time.  We had to budget our time wisely and create a system in order to block the show with three sets of actors.  We spent each rehearsal tagging-in to the blocking session.  So we’d begin blocking our opening number “If You Can Find Me, I’m Here” and one duo would start the work.  About a third of the way through the song, they would step down and the second duo would get on their feet for the blocking session, then the third duo would follow.  Once the entire number was blocked, each duo would have a chance to run through it in its entirety.  It was as strange as it sounds and more marvelous than you can imagine.  

What are some of the challenges and breakthroughs during the rehearsal process?

Barrie: As you can imagine, it was very challenging to block in the way I have described.  However, many of our breakthroughs happened because the actors had a chance to watch someone else play their part.  By having three actors all creating the same character, they could be inspired by the adjacent interpretations.  

In order to keep the show cohesive, I insisted that all three duos commit to following one clear and consistent narrative.  In that sense, I was very much the dramaturg of the show as well as the director.  During the months leading up to rehearsal, I worked on the show a great deal.  It has no libretto, it is a sung through musical and it is made up of songs that were originally written to be part of other musicals.  Because these songs have been uprooted from their original context, they carry with them their ghosted meanings.  In order to direct this show, I had to strip the songs of their original narratives and reconsider them anew.  I had to create a given circumstances for the show and a narrative arc that we could all latch onto in order to ensure the coherency of the piece.  Because we had three casts, I had to go into the first day of rehearsal with this story already fully formed so that the actors would have a tether to keep them grounded in a very emotional musical that has no traditional plot.  I believe that this process allowed the actors to move into the more delicious realm of character development and intricate song work.  I think that the breakthroughs that they had (individually and collectively) about the songs were so rich because we hit the ground running with the narrative of the piece.

For practicality reasons, most of the blocking of the show is the same between the duos. But there are distinct differences in the physical interpretations of each of the characters.  No two actors play the characters exactly the same way, nor do they take up the stage space in the same manner.  One of the most challenging rehearsals was also the most delightful: I had to choreograph three different dances for “A Moment With You” in order to suit the actors’ bodies and to honor each duo’s particular story.  What other circumstance would yield such a crazy exploration?  

Did the script and score need to be adjusted to fit your vision?

We did not change a single word of the score – the music and lyrics have all remained the same.  In fact, there is a female actor singing the “Man” role and a male actor singing the “Woman” role and we didn’t even change the key of the music for them, we simply cast actors who could sing it (and can they ever!). Through the magic of musical theatre, where we are so willing to suspend disbelief while acknowledging the overt theatricality of people bursting into song, the pronouns and gender specific words just seem to blend into the narrative seamlessly.  This is a huge credit to the actors who are playing the roles.  

Why did you choose this show?

Stephen Sondheim’s music is so lush and so heartbreakingly complex.  It is a pleasure to work with his material.  But I mostly chose this show because it is a unique character study within a musical.  It has the trappings of a realistic, contemporary drama: it is the small world of an apartment, on a single Saturday night, where the action of the play is steeped in everyday life tasks such as reading the paper and pouring a drink.  But along with this “real life” simplicity comes an overwhelmingly emotional journey for the characters, told entirely through song.  Furthermore, because the two characters live in two separate apartments, they spend a great deal of the show without interacting with a scene partner.  The show presents one of the strangest and most intoxicating acting challenges in musical theatre: realism within a musical; unity while being alone; and a story about love that is of the past or the future, but not the present.


SHOW INFO

This is a charming and bittersweet musical featuring rarely heard songs by Stephen Sondheim. Two urban singles live through a Saturday night of deep yearning and sweet fantasies while never leaving the confines of their solitary New York City apartments. Together they breathe new life and meaning into a collection of trunk songs that were culled from the original Broadway productions of shows such as Follies, Company, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, and A Little Night Music. A must for Sondheim aficionados and any New Yorker who ever found themselves alone on a Saturday night, thinking about love that was lost and love to be found.

By special permission from Mr. Sondheim, Gallery will be presenting this two character musical with male/female, male/male and female/female pairings.]

THE CASTS OF MARRY ME A LITTLE

[A first for this show, there will be three rotating casts performing each weekend.]

Female/Female pairing

Laura Cetti

Cassandra Dupler

Male/Female pairing

Jesse Manocherian*

Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld*

Male/Male pairing

Adrian Rifat

Paul Williams


SCHEDULE

Thurs, Jan 26 @ 8:00pm (Jesse Manocherian & Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld) M/F pairing

Fri, Jan 27 @ 8:00pm (Adrian Rifat and Paul Williams) M/M pairing

Sat, Jan 28 @ 8:00pm (GalleryTalks) (Laura Cetti and Cassandra Dupler) F/F pairing

Thurs, Feb 2 @ 8:00pm (Adrian Rifat and Paul Williams) M/M pairing

Fri, Feb 3 @ 8:00pm (Laura Cetti and Cassandra Dupler) F/F pairing

Sat, Feb 4 @ 8:00pm (Jesse Manocherian and Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld) M/F pairing

Thurs, Feb 9 @ 8:00pm (Laura Cetti and Cassandra Dupler) F/F pairing

Fri, Feb 10 @ 8:00pm (Jesse Manocherian and Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld) M/F pairing

Sat, Feb 11 @ 8:00pm (Adrian Rifat and Paul Williams) M/M pairing

Thurs, Feb 16 @ 8:00pm (Adrian Rifat and Paul Williams) M/M pairing

Fri, Feb 17 @ 8:00pm (Jesse Manocherian and Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld) M/F pairing

Sat, Feb 18 @ 8:00pm (Laura Cetti and Cassandra Dupler) F/F pairing\

*appearing courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association


THE STAFF OF MARRY ME A LITTLE

Producer – Jonathan King

Director and Choreographer – Barrie Gelles

Lighting Designer – Scott Cally

Costume Designer – Hayley Zimmerman

Set Designer – Paul Radassao

Production Stage Manager – Jillian Christensen

Assistant Stage Manager – Emily LaRosa

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Meet Laura Cetti and Marry Me a Little

Name: Laura Cetti

What is your current project?

Steven Sondheim’s Marry Me a Little

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

The Gallery Players in Brooklyn. Gallery is an amazing space. The large, multi-level playing area really suits this piece as the designers have been able to really replicate a Brooklyn loft apartment. Also the fact that the audience seating begins just a few feet from the stage makes it feel as though they are right there spending our Saturday night with us.

What’s next for you?

Well… back to pounding the pavement! Also, I will be working with some good friends at Asterism Theatre Company on a new piece focusing on life after the election. How our nation has become untied and how we can become united again.

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?

Without a doubt it is the amazing “Marry Me” team. The 3 rotating casts, comprised of 3 men and 3 women all rehearse together in a tag team collaboration that has been soooo eye opening. To step out of your own scenes and songs for a moment and see it through someone elses eyes, told by someone else voice and body teaches me so much about myself and my interpretation of the character. The support has been overwhelming. We all depend on eachother and build eachother up. I can’t imagine taking on this difficult, sung through Sondheim without them. Especially Jesse and Paul the two brilliant actors who share the role of “Man” with me.

Want More?

Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/laura.cetti.5

Laura Cetti is a singer, actor and mother of two. Recent credits include Imaginary (New York New Works Festival, Semifinalist), We Were Children (Thespis Festival/Hudson Guild Theater), Lady Parts(The AlphaNY) and Pieces(Planet Connections Theater Festivity) for which she was awarded Best Supporting Actress in a Musical 2014.


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)

The Gallery Players

199 14th St. Brooklyn, NY 11215

January 26th – February 18th

Tickets can be purchased at www.galleryplayers.com

Meet Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld and Marry Me a Little

Name: Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld

What is your current project?

Marry Me A Little (in rep with You’re A Good Man Charlie Brown)

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

We are performing at The Gallery Players. The space has the kind of intimacy that the piece requires. It is just two actors and a piano on stage for 70 minutes. That’s it! It wouldn’t work as well in a larger house. In this theatre, we can create the kind of safe space that is necessary for the actors and the audience to really dive in emotionally.

What’s next for you?

I am also a voice actor and my newest cartoon called “Nella the Princess Knight” premieres on Nick Jr. on February 6th. You can also hear me on your TV every Saturday morning on Pokémon, Yu-Gi-Oh!, and Regal Academy.

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?

I would have to say my collaborators on this piece are my biggest inspiration right now. Building these characters has truly been a team effort among the three rotating casts, and it has been an incredible experience to see how the exact same given circumstances and blocking can create wildly different characters and moments on stage. Everyone has shown up with extreme generosity, lack of ego, and a readiness to play, and I feel so grateful to be in the room where it’s happening.

Want More?

Website: alysonleighrosenfeld.com

Twitter: @AlysonRosenfeld

Instagram: @alysonleighrosenfeld

Alyson was last seen in Seussical, The Baker’s Wife, Emma (TGP), Fish in a Tree (MMAC), The Last Cyclist (West End Theatre), Opa! The Musical (dir. Dan Knechtges), All The Rats and Rags (Joe’s Pub). Last heard: “Pokémon” (Disney XD), “Yu-Gi-Oh!”, “Regal Academy” (Nickelodeon). BFA: NYU Tisch. Proud member of AEA & SAG-AFTRA.


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)

The Gallery Players

199 14th St. Brooklyn, NY 11215

January 26th – February 18th

Tickets can be purchased at www.galleryplayers.com

Join Ghostlight Project TONIGHT!

IMG_8693.PNGTONIGHT, January 19 at 5:30 PM

On January 19, 2017 at 5:30 pm in each time zone across the country, members of the theatre community (from Broadway to regional theatres to high schools and colleges and community theatres) will gather in front of theatres and art spaces to launch The Ghostlight Project. This collective action will signify an ongoing commitment to social justice in the coming years, taking a variety of forms and actions for individual artists and institutions.

Inspired by the tradition of leaving a “ghost light” on in a darkened theater, artists and communities will make or renew a pledge to stand for and protect the values of inclusion, participation, and compassion for everyone—regardless of race, class, religion, country of origin, immigration status, (dis)ability, gender identity, or sexual orientation.

Many of you already serve as models for people newer to community engagement. We need not be uniform, but should be united as a field in championing our values. Continue to work daily/weekly/monthly for social justice in your world.

CLICK HERE to see Ghostlight Project’s website for host theaters around the country.

Here’s an incomplete list of New York City “hubs” you are welcome to join tonight at 5:30pm:

Midtown Manhattan
Times Square (on the red steps) and the ART/New York Theatres, 53rd Street/10th Avenue

Downtown Manhattan
The Public Theater and HERE Arts Center

Uptown Manhattan
The National Black Theatre

Downtown Brooklyn
The steps of the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM)

Bushwick, Brooklyn
Bushwick Starr

The Ghostlight Project is: Claudia Alick, Saheem Ali, Daniel Beaty, Alexandra Billings, Sammi Cannold, P. Carl, Rachel Chavkin, Lear deBessonet, Sarah Flamm, Rachel Hauck, David Henry Hwang, Christine Jones, Moisés Kaufman, Mia Katigbak, Jenny Koons, Lisa Kron, Tina Landau, Lorin Latarro, Zhailon Livingston, Rebecca Martinez, Jennifer McGrath, Okieriete Onaodowan, Lisa Peterson, Sam Pinkleton, Clint Ramos, Randy Reyes, Leigh Silverman, Kristyn Smith, Jeanine Tesori, Liesl Tommy, Stephanie Ybarra, David Zinn, and YOU.

For more information and to sign up
to participate, please visit:
http://www.theghostlightproject.com  

 

Meet Cassandra Dupler (Marry Me a Little & You’re a Good Man…)

Name: Cassandra Dupler

What is your current project?

I am currently playing Woman in MARRY ME A LITTLE, as well as the female swing in YOU’RE A GOOD MAN, CHARLIE BROWN.

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

The Gallery Players theatre is a wonderful, intimate setting which allows the actors to connect with the audience in an extraordinary way. This is ideal for the material we’re singing in “Marry Me a Little”. Our show is about the personal lives of two ordinary people, home alone on a Saturday night. Gallery’s theatre gives the audience an opportunity to get a personal, almost one-on-one glimpse into their private moments.

What’s next for you?

I’m back to auditioning, searching and hoping to do a piece as meaningful as this one.
Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?
My great aunt, Carol Sawyer, (the original Fruma-Sarah in the 1964 Broadway production of FIDDLER ON THE ROOF) has had an incredible impact on my life. As long as I can remember, we’ve talked about theatre, preparing for auditions and roles, and so much more. She has shared her personal insights about her Broadway and summer stock experiences at Tamiment. I grew up hearing anecdotes about such legends as Jerome Robbins, Zero Mostel, Betty Comden, Adolph Green, Leonard Bernstein, Neil Simon, Hal Prince and George Abbott, to name a few. She helped give me a deep foundation and a unique perspective on the world of theatre.

Want More?

Website: www.cassandradupler.com

NYC credits: MARRY ME A LITTLE (Woman), YOU’RE A GOOD MAN, CHARLIE BROWN (female swing) at The Gallery Players (upcoming!), FIRST COMMUNION (Barefoot Theatre, starring Anna Chlumsky)

Regional credits: SISTER ACT (Sister Mary Patrick) at The Fireside Theatre, THE NOTEWORTHY LIFE OF HOWARD BARNES (Maggie-lead) in Kooman & Dimond’s musical at the Goodspeed Opera House, GYPSY (Electra) at Connecticut Repertory Theatre, starring Leslie Uggams.

Other favorite roles: THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE (Mrs. Meers), ON THE TOWN (Hildy Esterhazy), CAROUSEL (Carrie Pipperidge), LES MISERABLES (Madame Thenardier), SMILE (Maria Gonzales), THE TAMING OF THE SHREW (Katherine), MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING (Beatrice), TWELFTH NIGHT (Olivia), YOU OUGHT TO BE IN PICTURES (Libby Tucker), THE GINGERBREAD LADY (Polly Meara), THE OWL AND THE PUSSYCAT (Doris W.), THE TIN WOMAN (Sammy), BERMUDA AVENUE TRIANGLE (Rita), WEST SIDE STORY (Rosalia), WORKING (Rose Hoffman), BOOK OF DAYS (Ruth Hoch), SCAPIN (Zerbinette)

Proud graduate of the Hartt School, BFA in Music Theatre


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)

The Gallery Players
http://galleryplayers.com/news/marry-me-a-little-youre-a-good-man-charlie-brown/

Review: Fringe of Humanity

As I got out of my seat, putting my sweater back on, it hit me that I just came off a roller coaster that just kept going up and doing spirals for 106 minutes. The play opens with high energy salsa in the background and a charged opening monologue by Calderon himself. That can at times be worrisome because the only place to go is higher and sometimes  a script doesn’t work out that way. That doesn’t happen here. The talented and giving ensemble pulls the audience into the hotel room and continues  to build the energy to a fever pitch as the story unfolds. Paul Calderon’s Fringe of Humanity is a high- octane, cocaine-fueled explosion of storytelling that keeps you glued to the next word, action, moment.

Fringe of Humanity tells the story of a director, Nick Valdez (played by Paul Calderon), finalizing his script before filming begins and the unredeemable  characters that contribute to the hour and forty-six minutes of mayhem. As they sort out their own defects of characters through the seven deadly sins,  the world outside is also violently crumbling.

I so enjoy watching actors enjoy their craft. Paul Calderon wears three hats as playwright, director and actor. Calderon’s strong and passionate writing lays the groundwork for his ensemble actors to embody his words.  His direction freed the ensemble to raise the stakes of their characters. The energy put forth by  David Zayas (Ross Gausmann), William Rothlein (Ken “Patch” Kelly), Rebecca Nyahay (Liz Gausmann), Luke Smith (Pierce), Alex Emanuel (Ryan), Jakob Von Eichel (Steve), Jessica Damouni (Vicky), and Feliz Ramirez (Crissy) is palpable in the space.

FRINGE OF HUMANITY stars David Zayas, Paul Calderon, William Rothlein, Rebecca Nyahay, Luke Smith, Alex Emanuel, Jakob Von Eichel, Jessica Damouni, Feliz Ramirez, Greg Prosser (understudy) and Nixon Cesar (understudy).  The production team includes Catherine Calderon (co-director, associate producer), Montgomery Mauro (lighting), Sebastian Mitre (assistant to the director, associate producer), Lindsey Hurly (stage manager), and Sarah Norris (producer).

FRINGE OF HUMANITY runs January 11 – 28, Wednesday – Saturday at 8pm with an additional 3pm matinee on Saturday, Jan. 21.  Access Theater is located at 380 Broadway on the 4th floor (at White Street) — accessible from the A/C/E/N/Q/R/6 trains at Canal Street or the 1 train at Franklin. Tickets are $18 at http://www.BrownPaperTickets.com.

 

Luck Be A Lady…This Lady

There was a moment during my end of year vacation when I realized that I really threw myself into creating theatre in different ways and didn’t even realize I was doing that. I worked on various projects that touched on commercial theatre, independent theatre and community theatre. I worked on cabarets, readings, festivals. All unique in their structures but with the same passion.

I was asked “why theatre?” in an interview with Theater in the Now. I answered that I ask myself this all the time because I do wonder. How did I get lucky to fall in love with this art form? How did I lucky to meet so many wonderful artists creating around the world? How did I get lucky to be able to do this as a career? Well, here’s an interesting thing about me. I don’t actually believe in luck. Luck to me is preparation plus opportunity. As it is for the many artists out in the world sharing their stories. It looks easy but the level of hard work, sweat and tears to put on a show is often not known.

I know. I enjoy interviewing the artists for this column. I know what they’ve done to get to where they are. So as we kick off 2017, let’s continue to create and share and support.

If you would like to share your current project being produced beyond Broadway, comment below or tweet me.

See you at the show!
Malini

Meet Jason Lasky & Last Exit Before You’re Off The Grid

jasonName: Jason Lasky

What is your current project? 

Last Exit Before You’re Off The Grid. This started out as a play about America in the future, but I conceived of it way before this past November. After the 8th, it seemed rather funny I’d had these thoughts, and then I went ahead and made some more specific references.

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

The Secret Theatre’s Act One: One Act 2017 A Short Play Festival. ST thinks it’s a good fit with the other plays they’re showcasing each night.

What’s next for you?

I am currently in Nairobi, Kenya working as the Head of Drama at an international school and am actively working on several theater projects: my full-length drama 40 Days of Night (supported by a grant from Theatre Communications Group and the Moscow chapter of the International Theatre Institute) for a premiere in Russia; a full-length tragicomedy co-written with my wife that ties Kenya and China together; a one-woman show; a one-man show; a physical theatre, Butoh-inspired piece for the ITI’s 35th World Congress in Spain this coming summer; I am leading drama teacher training for a group of LAMDA teachers in Nairobi; and I am talking with the the national coordinator of the Zimbabwe Centre of the ITI to lead movement workshops for the next generation of theatre artists in the spring- all this while finishing up my dual IB Teacher Certification and Masters of Education, for which I’ve maintained a 4.0 GPA throughout the last four semesters, and raising my son and daughter with the most supportive woman in my world.

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?

It’s a toss-up between my wife and me. It’s her because she’s got a million and one complete plays in her head. It’s me because I’m the one figuring out how to bring those to life while also breathing life into mine.

Want More?

Website: www.jasonlasky.com; www.40daysofnight.strikingly.com
Twitter: @j_lasky_writer

Jason Lasky is a playwright, actor, director and teacher. He is an alumnus of the Actors Studio Drama School MFA Playwriting program. He is the co-founder of Shanghai’s 5th Wall Theater and J. Lasky Productions, an international theatre company dedicated. His play Rendezvous: A Tragicomedy, co-authored with his wife Svetlana and presented at Shanghai LGBT’s Pride 6, was the first English-language play addressing transgendered identity in mainland China. His plays have been performed on three continents and translated into Chinese and Russian, and his one act play Mend the Envelope was published in QU Literary Journal in January 2016. His latest collaboration in Murmansk, Russia, 40 Days of Night, has been made possible through Theatre Communication Group’s On the Road grant. He has been publicized internationally, most recently in ITI-info magazine. Jason is currently the Head of Drama at Hillcrest International School in Nairobi, Kenya.


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)
The Secret Theatre
44-02 23rd Street
Long Island City, NY 11101
E, M, G or 7 train to Courthouse SQ/23rd St.
ONLY ONE SUBWAY STOP FROM MANHATTAN

Thursday 1/ 12 @ 7:30pm
Sunday 1/ 15 @ 5pm
Friday 1/ 20 @ 7:30pm
Sunday 1/ 22 @ 2pm
Tuesday 1/ 24 @ 7:30pm
Finals 1/28 @7:30 pm

TICKETS: http://aooa2017.bpt.me/
AT-DOOR: $18
ADVANCED: $15
Use Promo Code ‘early bird’ by January 7th
ANY (4) PERFORMANCES: $55 (must purchase 4 individual tickets….write to box@secrettheatre.com to select your dates)

2017: Desire, Ask, Believe, Receive + 1 More

My personal mantra for a long time. There’s also this:

Be in action.

If there is something that’s calling to you and you have yet to do it, then place an intention (desire), give it to the universe (ask), know that it will come to be (believe) and then wait for it to manifest (receive). It’s not magical thinking. Sometimes they come to fruition fast and sometimes they take a while. I set an intention in June and it manifested this week. I had to take a step back to absorb the reality of the situation. It was pretty cool.

The main part of this though is being in action around that intention. The Theatre Beyond Broadway Community continues to grow as more artists are stepping into their own and producing beautiful work. I thank each of you who have contributed to my site and continue to share your art. It doesn’t have to be magnanimous. It can be. If Broadway is your dream, go for it. If indie theatre is your scene, then yes! If you want to do one show a year at your local community theatre, do it. Yours truly spent 2016 in all those worlds. More to follow on that on my Beyond Broadway column for The Write Teacher(s).

So what’s in your heart? And how can I support you?  Or better yet, how can you stand by you!

Happy 2017! See you at the show.

 

Image result for desire ask believe receive

Meet Walk Up Arts & A Play About Drew Carey

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What is your current project? A PLAY ABOUT DREW CAREY

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

We’re performing in Speyer Hall at University Settlement, in the Lower East Side. Having seen and performed in this space before, we was very excited to work there again. We like working in spaces that feel like one big room, which Speyer Hall is, as opposed to formal theatre spaces, which we feel emphasize the separation between audience and performer. A PLAY ABOUT DREW CAREY is all about facilitating connection, and this space allows us to do so on a level that is more approachable than in a theatre where the audience sits many feet away from the stage, lights obscuring them from the performers’ gaze, hidden in plain sight.

What’s next for you?

We’re not sure what’s next after A PLAY ABOUT DREW CAREY, largely because we haven’t even charted the full life of this play yet – just this first production. If the production really works in the way that we’re all anticipating it will, then we’re going to make plans to prolong the life of the show. Because A PLAY ABOUT DREW CAREY is heavily improvised, and uses a lot of audience participation, we believe that it would be possible to continue performing it for a long time without the play stagnating. Hopefully we’ll get to see if that’s true!

Other projects we’re developing include our first musical, workshops for a performance of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and a two person Orestia. But right now we’re focusing on what calls to us, and reveling in the joy of not needing to plan too far ahead just yet.

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?
Philip Santos Schaffer (Playwright) : I’ve been thinking a lot recently about El Gueguense, a play from Nicaragua that is considered to be one of the first forms of street theatre in the Americas. My mother is from Nicaragua, and I’ve been lucky to spend time there recently. Their political situation has gone through many different phases of corruption (from the Spanish occupation to the US occupation, from dictator to dictator), and one of their major modes of response in the arts is through humor. El Gueguense is a play that combines dance and humor with a cutting political core. The play uses laughter as a tool for unification – in which the action of laughing at one’s oppressor creates a sense of community. In our current political climate and heading into the next few years, I think we are going to be looking for many modes of expressing political thought. And, I think it is going to be important to explore every option. El Gueguense is political and humorous without falling into camp or satire, which I think can be rare in American theatre. So, I look forward to continuing to attempt this exploration, which I believe we’ve begun in A PLAY ABOUT DREW CAREY.

Want More?

Website: www.walkuparts.org
Instagram: @walkuparts

Mission Statement
WalkUpArts creates living works. We explore the audience-artist relationship through multi-disciplinary, intimate, and communal experiences. With an intent towards maintaining a social-consciousness, we engage with audiences through new works and original adaptations of classics.

In pursuit of our mission, WalkUpArts is determined to:

Experiment with form and content
Build a theater from questions
Create a space for people to make eye contact
Affect real change in the audience, ourselves, and the world

WalkUpArts: Follow Your What-Ifs


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)
December 13 and 14 at 8pm at Speyer Hall at University Settlement – 184 Eldridge Street (Corner of Rivington), NY, NY 10002, Tickets at https://www.artful.ly/store/events/10672