Meet Jeffrey Schmelkin & Untitled Time

Name: Jeffrey Schmelkin

What is your current project?

Right now, I’m currently producing my new musical “Untitled Time”!

Where are you performing your show and why is it a good fit for your production?

I’m currently producing my musical at The Midtown International Theatre Festival. This festival is an amazing fit for my production because they have a wonderful theater which is the perfect size for the place that the show is at right now. Because this is now the show’s second production (on a slightly larger scale than the last), this is the perfect opportunity to see how different types of audiences react to the work. Additionally, I’ve made some great friends with some of my fellow playwrights/composers/producers!

What’s next for you?

My goal is to get “Untitled Time” off-Broadway within the upcoming years.

What is the name of the last show you saw?

I recently saw the tour of Fun Home! The music is absolutely amazing and the show as a whole is just incredibly powerful—one of the many reasons I love live theatre.

Any advice for your peers?

Just keep persevering and let me know all about your upcoming projects!

Want More?

Website: http://www.jeffreyschmelkin.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/jeffreyschmelkin
Twitter: www.twitter.com/jschmelkin
Instagram: www.instagram.com/jeffreyschmelkin
You Tube: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrntC6iAPK3ekQgIlVsdnTQ

​Jeffrey Schmelkin is an award-winning composer, an experienced pianist, and a passionate teacher and music director. Jeffrey has music directed shows such as “The Wizard of Oz” and “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee”. His composition “Revival” debuted in Hawaii in early 2016. He is the composer of “Furniture: The Musical,” produced at the Midtown International Theatre Festival (New York City) in July of 2016. His new musical, “Untitled Time”, was produced at Hofstra University in early 2017 and will be produced at the Midtown International Theatre Festival (New York City) during Summer 2017. ​


Show Information: 

Schedule: Tuesday 8/01, 8:30pm Saturday 8/05, 5:30pm Sunday 8/06, 5:30pm

Venue: The Main Stage Theater at The Midtown International Theatre Festival, 312 W. 36th Street, NYC

Ticket URL: https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pr/975153

Meet Philip Santos Schaffer & The Anthropologists Save The World!

Save the WorldName: Philip Santos Schaffer
What is your current project? The Anthropologists Save The World!
Where are you performing your show and why is it a good fit for your production?
 
I am so excited to be working with The Anthropologists on this show! Within an hour of meeting for the first time, Melissa and I were discussing how we both recently had shifted to vegetarianism. My theatre education and experience is largely based in political theatre, and I am always looking for new ways that theatre can intersect with political action. I believe this show achieves that, on top of being a great night of theatre!
What’s next for you?
I am getting ready to go into my thesis year in Columbia’s MFA Dramaturgy program, looking at a fall that will hopefully include a lot of traveling, and working with my own theatre company, WalkUpArts.
What is the name of the last show you saw?
The Hunger Artist
Any advice for your peers?
 
Many of the best things I know, I learned from my peers, so I don’t know if I can give so much advice. Get a loft bed and keep your phone below it, so you have to get out of bed to turn the alarm off. I stayed in a job I hated for two years because I didn’t know what else I would do, and I wish I hadn’t done that.
Instagram: @pillypeng
Philip Santos Schaffer (AD/associate producer) is a multi-disciplinary theatre artist. Philip is one fourth of the creative team behind WalkUpArts, which he co-founded in 2013. WalkUpArts credits include Alone With Living Creatures (adapter, director), The Life of the Theatre (adapter, director), and A PLAY ABOUT DREW CAREY (playwright). Philip is an artistic associate, associate archivist, and ensemble member with The Living Theatre, since 2013. Producing and associate producing credits include Between the Seas, a Mediterranean theatre festival, HAIR (Columbia University and WalkUpArts), and Burning The Living (The Living Theatre). Other credits include God Likes You (playwright), Os Confederados (director), and Genius, Inc. (adapter). Philip is currently in his third year in Columbia University’s MFA Dramaturgy program.

Show Information:

New OHIO’s Ice Factory July 26 – July 29 at 7pm
New Ohio Theatre
154 Christopher Street; Buzz 1 + 5 + Enter to enter from sidewalk
Between Greenwich and Washington Streets

Meet Brianna Kalisch & The Anthropologists Save the World!

Name: Brianna Kalisch

What is your current project? The Anthropologist Save The World
Where are you performing your show and why is it a good fit for your production?
 
New Ohio Ice Factory Festival – Supports new/different kinds of theatre!
What’s next for you?
Not sure – open to suggestions! 🙂
What is the name of the last show you saw?
Cuisine and Confessions by 7 Fingers a Montreal-based contemporary circus company
Any advice for your peers?
 
Playing – being in a space to create – whether its kept and immortalized on stage or lives only its moment and space, is important and life giving. Find a way to do it.
Want More?
Twitter: @beekalisch
Instagram: @wandertheblue
Brianna’s is excited to reprise her role as Edda and work with The Anthropologists again! She has worked internationally in both Australia and the UK performing circus and theatre. Most recently she played Seline in the premiere of Anna Jordan’s new play (writer of Yen recently at MTC) A Serious Case of the Fuckits. She’s also recently worked on multiple acts for 360circus at Streb. And has worked with The Queens Theatre, The Garage Theatre Group, MN Shakespeare and Company, and others. She received her MA from the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama.

Show Information:

New OHIO’s Ice Factory July 26 – July 29 at 7pm
New Ohio Theatre
154 Christopher Street; Buzz 1 + 5 + Enter to enter from sidewalk
Between Greenwich and Washington Streets

TBB

Meet Sara Rademacher

IMG_9967Name: Sara Rademacher

What is your current project?

Caught Dreaming,” is a passion project straight from the mind of brand new playwright Ryan Dancho

Where are you performing your show and why is it a good fit for your production?

The show is at the New York Theeaterfest Summerfest playing on July 27, 29 and 30th. Ryan Dancho, the playwright, is immensely talented and has a unique voice that comes across in the play by bringing a non-voyeuristic perspective to mental health. Because he has such a fresh new voice, this playwright-focused festival provides the perfect venue to introduce him to New York. You can hear Ryan talk about personal connection to mental health issues and his impetuous for writing this important play from his Kickstarter video. (You’ll also get a sense of his off-beat sense of humor that is certainly not lacking in the script)! https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/2000611737/caught-dreaming-the-play

What’s next for you?

I’m actually working in four New Play festivals this summer! Before “Caught Dreaming,” you can see “Forever Young” by Judd Lear Silverman at The Gallery Players Black Box Fest (June 16 – 18), “Appetizers,” by Scott C. Sickles at The Greenhouse Ensemble’s 10 Minute Play Soiree (June 23 -25)

What is the name of the last show you saw?

“Composure,” by Scott Sickles at The Workshop Theatre

Any advice for your peers?

Schedule at least an hour every day where you are not allowed to think about your schedule.

Want more?

Website: SaraRademacher.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sara.rademacher.9

Twitter: https://twitter.com/saradrads

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/saradrad/?hl=en

Sara Rademacher is the Co-Founder and former Artistic Director of Elements Theatre Collective, whose mission is to bring professional quality theatre free of charge to audiences with limited access. Sara is dedicated to creating theatre to engage her community both locally and globally. She holds an MFA in Theatre Directing from Columbia University in New York City, where she currently lives and works. Some Favorite directing credits include The Last Five Years, Gruesome Playground Injuries, The Love Song of J. Robert Oppenheimer, and boom. Before forming Elements, she studied theatre in South Africa, and earned her BA in Dramatic Arts at UCSB. She has worked in Casting, Assistant Directing, Dramaturgy and other internships regional theaters including The Guthrie, Seattle Repertory, Mixed Blood, Marin Theatre, and more. Sara currently works at The National Theatre Conference. She continues to serve on the Board at Elements.


Show Information:

When: Caught Dreaming at The New York Theaterfest Summerfest plays July 27th at 9pm, July 29th at 1pm and July 30th at 6pm.

Tickets are $24.80
http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2944738

Meet Daaimah Mubashshir & Everyday Afroplay

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Name: Daaimah Mubashshir

What is your current project? Everyday Afroplay

Where are you performing your show and why is it a good fit for your production?

EVERYDAY AFROPLAY (EDAP) is a collection of tiny plays exploring contemporary ideas of blackness both globally and in an American-specific context. What’s happening here is kind of outrageous and impossible – there are 5 directors, a choreographer, 10 + actors, and designers working with me on 25 plays. JACK, which is located in Clinton Hill is so perfect for EDAP because there is so much room to experiment and test boundaries.

What’s next for you?

Since I got back from MacDowell Colony in January it’s been non-stop. I got the opportunity to present at Judson Memorial Church, Little Theatre, Classical Theatre of Harlem, Sanctuary at Here Arts, and NY Madness Festival. After Everyday Afroplay, I’ll be returning to my desk for rewrites, doing some traveling and probably taking a couple of naps.

What is the name of the last show you saw?

Frontières sans Frontiéres at Bushwick Starr.

Any advice for your peers?

Instead of advice I’ll reveal what’s working for me:

  1. Actively supporting my colleagues work; openly sharing how I secured opportunities with them because Karma is real.
  2. Sharpening my “Trust my instincts” skill set.
  3. Getting comfortable with asking for more.
Want More?
Website: www.daaimahmubashshir.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dmubashshir
Instagram: @everydayafroplayDaaimah Mubashshir is a NYC playwright and excited to return to JACK this year. Everyday Afroplay was developed at The Bushwick Starr and The MacDowell Colony. Other plays have been presented by Little Theatre, NY Madness, Classical Theatre of Harlem, Sanctuary at HERE Arts, Going to The River Festival, Ensemble Studio Theatre, Fire This Time Festival, and Rising Circle Theatre Collective. http://www.daaimahmubashshir.com


Show Information:

When: Thursday, April 27 – Sunday, April 30
Where: JACK
Address: 505 1/2 Waverly Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11238
Website/Ticketing URL: http://www.jackny.org/everyday-afroplay.html http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2737975

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 Tom Attea & The Folk Singer

Name: Tom Attea

What is your current project?

“The Folk Singer,” a new musical, which is being premiered by Theater for the New City on October 9th and is scheduled to run through October 23rd.

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

I wrote it because I was thinking about, as I frequently do, a new work for the theater that would, in a character-based way, reflect the times in an intelligent and entertaining way. I realized that today folk music isn’t as popular as it was in the 30’s and 40’s and again in the 60’s and 70’s. Given the multiplicity of problems afoot in the world today, I found the relative absence particularly ironic. I wondered what character would embody the problem and imagined a young folk singer, struggling to reach a wider audience. In his idea to get together other local folk singers, write all new folk songs with contemporary relevance and stage “A Folk Festival for Today,” I had the occasion to write new lyrics that would reflect the text and subtext of the times and allow the audience to share the content in the unique communal forum the theater provides for consequential thoughts and credible eloquence.

What’s next for you?

I often say that the more sensitive and logical you are, the more a generally insensitive and illogical world is likely to upset you. I’ve learned over the years that I’m only able to withstand the stresses of the premier of one new show a year. Between writing them, I write poetry or philosophy. For example, after my last show, I wrote a sonnet sequence and one of the sonnets was published by the literary magazine Poetica Victorian. Philosophy has also been a lifelong interest of mine. For example, I’ve subscribed to The Philosophers Magazine for years. I’ve developed a personal philosophy over time and, when I get an idea that develops it, I make a note. The philosophy informs all of my writing and is primarily about the need for humans to make a commitment to this life our primary devotion. For instance, in the show, there’s a song about sitting in a railway station, watching people drop things on the floor, leave them on their seats, etc., treating the station like the stopover on the way to their destination. The singer wonders how they’d treat it if they realized the station might be their destination. It’s sort of a variation on Aristotle’s thought that the way you can tell the difference between a public fountain and a private fountain is the private fountain is clean.

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

I’m inspired by people who have valued life itself in an intelligent way, by which I mean the thoughtful, mutually considerate care and fulfillment of its finest potential. These include the following: Chekhov, the exquisitely tender playwright of human interaction, who, as a physician, could write in one of his letters, “My holy of holies is the human body.” Albert Schweitzer, for his ethical principle of “Reverence or Life,” or, as he casually stated it, “What is good for life is good and what is bad for life is bad.” Bertrand Russell for, in the book Principles of Social Reconstruction, “New thought will be required … the world has need of a philosophy, or a religion, which will promote life…. Through the spectacle of death, I acquired a new love for what is living.” Contemporary philosophers include A. C. Grayling, who often writes about “human flourishing,” and Peter Singer, who advocates for the rights of all species. Unfortunately, thoughts like these are sometimes caught up in the so-called Right to Life movement, which makes no room for the life of the would-be mother or the would-be father. I believe that a fundamental aspect of the dignity of life is to be able make our own choices, hopefully, wisely, and, in fact, that the freedom to choose is necessary for the conduct of human life as it has evolved.

Want More?

Website: http://thefolksinger-anewmusical.com/

Tom Attea has written thirteen other produced shows, beginning with “Brief Chronicles of the Time,” which was presented as a showcase by The Actors Studio, where he was a member of The Playwrights Unit for 10 years. Since then, he has written the book and lyrics for ten musicals and two plays that have been presented by Theater for the New City. Tom received a TNC/Jerome Foundation emerging playwright grant and is a member of The Dramatists Guild.


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)

THE FOLK SINGER began previews on September 29th, opens on October 9th at the Theater for the New City (155 First Avenue between 9th and 10th Streets,
New York, NY 10003) and will play a limited engagement through October 23rd. Tickets are $15 ($10 for seniors and students.) Box office: 212.254.1109, SmartTix: 212.868.4444 or purchase online at http://www.smarttix.com.

The performance schedule for THE FOLK SINGER is as follows: Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 8pm, with matinees on Sundays at 3pm.

Review: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof by Tennessee Williams

CaptureThe lights come up on an inviting bed/sitting room with French doors opening out to a view of a magnificent plantation. This sets the tone for those familiar with a Tennessee Williams play.  You are invited to observe the web of secrets, deception, and shame and they begin with the opening lines between Maggie and Brick. The performance of this play hinges on a Maggie who entices the audience with her sensuality and a Brick who commits to his lengthy silences; a Big Daddy who is foreboding and unforgiving in his machismo and a Big Mama who is manipulative in her damedom; and a Gooper and Mae who have their own story supported by children who add to the chaos. The other characters are either managing the chaos or unintentionally adding to it.

Under the flawless direction of Kevin Schwab, the Parkside Players produced this wordy and layered play to great success. Mendacity is reflected in the subtle glances, closing and opening of the doors, and the story told between pauses and proximity between the actors. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is one of Tennessee William’s best known plays. This strong ensemble cast unabashedly convey all aspects of dying, alcoholism, deceit, love, and sex. The winner takes it all but who is the winner?

 

 

Parkside Players
Grace Lutheran Church
103-15 Union Turnpike, Forest Hills, NY 11375

Performances
Fridays, February 26 & March 4 @ 8:00 PM
Saturdays, February 20, 27 & March 5 @ 8:00 PM
Sundays, Februaryr 21 & 28 @ 2:00 PM

Visit www.parksideplayers.com for more info.

The Experience is Sometimes Not Knowing 

Last night I spent the evening with a theatre company that produced a show of which I wasn’t familiar. I love seeing shows that I don’t know. I had seen a show earlier in the week in the same fashion. I received an invite and I didn’t ask what I was seeing. It was really pretty awesome. I walked into the both spaces as a visitor in a new locale. I stepped in and took it all in – the space, the seating, the set. Then I sat down and was curious about what was going to happen. Both spaces were not conventional. The audience was a part of the action, the story, and the show. Yet, not intrusive. Subtle. I had no preconceived notions and was not wearing any of my hats (producer, director, publicist). I was just an audience member there for the ride. 
However, once curtain came down (metaphorically) I was able to appreciate how it was produced, directed and promoted. I was also able to really appreciate artists telling stories. That’s why I love theater so much. Why do this if it isn’t going to move someone? Who knows who’s in the audience who really needed that inspiration. 

This summer is full with great theater. I am thrilled to be on the production team on some amazing shows. Continue creating and see you at the show!