Archive for 2009

BackStage Stays Busy

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

We at BackStage Theatre Company are quite busy these days. On February 27th, we opened our Jeff Recommended production of Shelagh Stephenson’s “The Memory of Water,” which plays through March 28th. We are also now in full pre-production mode for the final show of our 2008-2009 season, “On An Average Day” by John Kolvenbach. At the same time we are shoring up preparation for our upcoming 10th season.

And yet, our ensemble still manages to find time to make impressions in the greater theatre community.

We currently have five ensemble members participating in three Jeff Recommended productions around town. In addition to Rebekah Ward-Hays and Ron Kusava appearing in our own “Memory of Water” (with scenic design by our very own Heath Hays), BSTC Ensemble Member Michael Pacas is currently playing in Griffin Theatre’s Jeff Recommended production of “The Robber Bridegroom.” And BSTC Ensemble Member Brenda Barrie is turning some serious heads and making a major critical impact with her much lauded performance in LifeLine Theatre’s Jeff Recommended “Mariette In Ecstasy,” now playing at Lifeline Theatre.

And now, BSTC Ensemble member and Managing Director, Katherine Keberlein, is currently rehearsing to join the cast of the much ballyhooed mega-production of “Don’t Dress for Dinner,” now playing at the Royal George Theatre. Katherine was least seen in BSTC’s 2008-2009 revival of “How I Learned to Drive.” We are thrilled for her!

You can check out a feature article about Katherine and the extension of “Don’t Dress” here.

Exciting times for our Ensemble!

Reflection on Water

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Observing a mid-process, rehearsal-room run of “Memory of Water,” I was awestruck by a particular passage of Stephenson’s remarkable writing. In this mysterious scene, Mary appears to be having a conversation with the ghost of Vi, her mother. As is the case with all great writing, nothing is exactly as it seems. But the enigmatic exchange is full of mystery and regret, pain, and longing.

“VI: You invent these versions of me and I don’t recognize myself–

MARY: I’m not listening to you–

VI: I’m proud of you, and you’re ashamed of me–

MARY: I am not–

VI: I hear you say it all the time. I’m not like my mother, I’m not. I’m like my father. Look in the mirror. Why can’t you see it? Everyone else can. Look at the curve of your cheek, look at your hands, the way they move. You’re doing it now. That’s me. I got it from my mother. She got it from her mother. And on it goes, so far back that we don’t know who began it or on what impulse, but we do it, we can’t help it–

MARY: I’ve inherited some of your gestures. So what?

VI: Don’t try and reinvent yourself with me. I know who you are.

MARY: You don’t know anything.

VI: I look at you and I see myself.

MARY: Have you finished?

VI: Never.”

This remarkable passage of dialogue, so dense with the inescapable legacies that our families imprint upon our psyches, is a paradigmatic example of the kind of thematic questions that BackStage hopes to raise. Enjoy the writing. Come see the show.

The Actors Heart: “Memory of Water.”

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

Rebekah Ward-Hays

Rebekah Ward-Hays

Rebekah Ward-Hays will be seen as “Catherine” in BackStage’s upcoming The Memory of Water. Rebekah is a Jeff Award winning actress and an ensemble member of BackStage Theatre Company. She offers the following thoughts about her ongoing relationshp with this character that she will very soon bring to life on our stage.

“First of all, I love Catherine – let’s just get that out in the open! She is one hot mess, and I can relate to more than a couple of her quirks and downfalls. This play is so beautifully written and the relationships are full of honesty and pain and laughter. It’s a true delight to look forward to the words I get to say and finding all the ways I want to say them. There is something special and frightening about being given an opportunity to play a character with whom you truly identify, especially if it is an identity recognized by some your less desirable qualities! I know what it’s like to talk too much when you’re nervous, to monopolize out of the need to be liked, the desperation and fear at the idea of being alone – all of these parts of Catherine are the things I love about her. Which is why, I guess, I come at her with compassion – because I have to find that for myself in my own “disaster” moments. This play makes me think of my sister and my mother – with whom I have close, loving, passionate relationships. It reminds me of how we’ve always done a dance in terms of communicating – someone wins, someone takes sides, someone loses. This play is a waltz of taking turns and cutting in – dynamics at their best. One of my favorite moments thus far involves a scene at the very end of the play where Catherine recalls something their mother used to do – wake them up at night and have ice cream sodas and dance to Nat King Cole. My own mother loves the snow, and one of my favorite memories is the time she woke my sister and I in the middle of the night, then we all went out into the first season’s snow and made snow angels. Those are the times to remember – when everyone danced together.”

Rebekah Ward-Hays is extremely happy to be working with her BackStage family again! She recently performed with them in the Jeff-Nominated Best Ensemble piece Waiting for Lefty as Edna (where she received a Best Supporting Actress Nomination). She was also seen with BackStage as Charlie in Zombies from the Beyond, and Sabina in the Jeff Recommended The Skin of Our Teeth, for which she garnered a Best Actress Jeff Citation. Rebekah has worked with many other Chicago theatres including Strawdog Theatre, Collaboraction, the side project, Steppenwolf Theatre, Court Theatre, Northlight Theatre, & Remy Bumppo. Film credits include Helix, Drone, and is currently shooting Four-Letter Man.

The Designer’s Eye: “Memory of Water.”

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009
The rehearsal process for “The Memory of Water” is officially underway. At this early stage of the process, the director and the designers deal with the constant interplay of image vs. action. To illuminate the predominant images that are floating around both the rehearsal room and the design table, I asked our resident scenic designer to speak to some of the more potent images that have been influencing the way he has been approaching this particular piece of theatre.

“The central concept regarding The Memory of Water design is that of the fallibility of memory; how memory has detail when you specifically remember events and places, but all of the time and space surrounding those events is fuzzy. To communicate this idea, no detail of the setting can be untouched by this idea, family photos, walls, furniture and even the floor.

This idea is best illustrated by the photos below. In the photograph of the airplane, note how the door leading to the interior of the plane is sharp and clear while the photo blurs at the edges. This draws us into the plane, to see what is inside:

In the photo of the Sign, we see the place very clearly depicted, but not what is happening:

In the play, the sea is encroaching on the house. The sea encroaches on everybody’s memories and colors them, and this influences their memory of their childhood home. The sea will also take the house. It will reclaim the land it now batters, including this home. In the course of events, all of the sisters discuss their memories of their collective childhood, but we do not know whose memory is the most accurate. This begs the question of whose memory of the home do we see? I believe it is all of the memories, including Vi’s, clashing and combining to create the environment that we witness throughout the course of the play, much in the same way that the sea is in a constant battle with the beach only yards away from the home.

There is an incredible struggle between perception and truth in the course of events leading to a Mother’s funeral. This struggle needs to be subtly depicted in the Design of the show for a successful environment.”

Heath Hays, scenic and props designer, “The Memory of Water.”

Heath is a freelance Scenic, Sound, Projection and Lighting designer and a member of Backstage Theatre Company where he has designed the Jeff recommended productions of Waiting For Lefty (Scenic) and Medea (Scenic), as well as Bloody Bess (Scenic), Beauty on the Vine (Scenic), Zombies from the Beyond (Scenic), and The Ruling Class (Sound). Heath has worked for several theatre companies in Chicago and the surrounding areas including: Infamous Commonwealth Theatre Company, Seanachai Theatre Company, Grey Zelda Theatre Group, The Mill, Hell In A Handbag Productions, Village Players, Audacity Theatre, and several others.