Archive for May, 2010

It’s a Secret . . .

Monday, May 17th, 2010

We dance round in a ring and suppose,

But the Secret sits in the middle and knows.

Robert Frost

Does your family have a secret?

I bet it does . . .

Some secrets are discovered, some are revealed and some secrets actually die with the keeper.  But all families have them.  Some of these secrets are personal; things that a parent does not want the children to know about, for instance.  Some secrets are collective; a detail, or an event or a circumstance that the entire family is guarding from the outside world.  Whether personal or collective, a secret is a secret, and we guard them sometimes as closely as we guard our lives.  And the effect of a secret in a family can have a diverse effect on the tribe.  A secret can protect a family and it can also tear a family apart.

But humans have also demonstrated that we have a strangely obsessive attraction to the secrets in the lives of others.  The popularity of tabloid and reality television in the last decade prove that this human curiosity is not fading, not in any way.  The truth about humans:  we obsess over the skeletons in other people’s closets.

So.  Now to the fun part.

BackStage Theatre Company has a family secret.  And we are going to reveal it you.  Eventually.

For right now . . . we will drop a few hints.  Firstly, the secret itself is about our upcoming 2010-2011 Season.  Next season features an extraordinary pair of plays, a Chicago premiere and a reexamination of a contemporary classic . . . both revolving around the idea of family secrets.

And that’s all we’re saying . . . for now.

But in the meantime, we are making our 2010-2011 subscriptions available to you, and in honor of the theme of Family Secrets, we are keeping the delicious details to ourselves.  If you’d like to purchase one of our Secret Subscriptions, you can follow this link right here and with the code word SECRET, you can buy a subscription to our 2010-2011 Season sight unseen . . . at a 33 percent discount.  And you will be the first to know the details of the Secret Season as they are uncovered.

But here’s the thing.  We cannot hold onto this secret forever.  People talk.  Details leak.  We know this.  So, each time a piece of the secret is revealed, the price will go up.  And if you wait until the secret season is fully revealed, you will pay our normal subscription price.

So.  What are you waiting for?  Be the first to know.

And stay tuned . . .

In Good Company

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

The Jeff Committee recently released their list of nominees for 2010.  Among that list were four nominations for BackStage Theatre Company.  What an exciting way to end a 10th Anniversary Season.

Three of the nominations were for our production of John Kolvenbach’s On An Average Day.  BSTC ensemble member Tony Bozzuto was recognized for his heartbreaking and dangerous performance as Robert; a developmentally arrested man who has been waiting in the kitchen for the return of his father and his brother, both of whom abandoned him over a decade earlier.  Ensemble member Heath Hays was recognized for his incredible scenic design, which transformed every inch of the tiny Chemically Imbalanced Theatre space into the junk-riddled abandoned house in which Robert ceaselessly waited.  And guest artist Geoff Coates was recognized for his astonishing fight choreography, which remains (to this day) one of the most unsettling, dangerous and deeply heartbreaking fight scenes I have ever seen in a play.  Refrigerators were dented, baseball bats were swung, trashcans were smashed, beer cans were hurled, and a huge metal table was completely overturned . . . all done within inches of the toes of the audience, and still managed to be perfectly safe.  But at the heart of this remarkable fight was a chapter of the story that simply could not be told otherwise.  Geoff knew from the first rehearsal that his fight needed to continue the story when the characters could no longer communicate with words.

Lastly, BSTC ensemble member Rebekah Ward-Hays was recognized for her tremendously brave work in our production of Wallace Shawn’s Aunt Dan & Lemon. There are very few actors in this town who could manage the enormous task of sitting in a chair for an hour and a half and articulating horribly disturbing truths directly to an audience with a sweet smile, and then somehow manage to retain even an ounce of empathy.  Ms. Ward-Hays proved to be a storyteller of the most seductive and delicious kind; spellbinding the audience with rich nostalgic imagery, while simultaneously twisting their socio-political sensibilities around the spindle of her dangerous worldview with terrifying ease.

Also nominated for work outside of BackStage was ensemble member Brenda Barrie for her title role in LifeLine Theatre’s Mrs. Caliban. Although personally, we thought she was deadly brilliant as Aunt Dan to Rebekah Ward Hays’ Lemon, in Mrs. Caliban Ms. Barrie brought to vivid life a woman so deeply entangled in the extraordinary losses of her ordinary life, that she engages in a strange but deeply sensual and lifegiving affair with an amphibian monster.  Sound strange?  It was.  But in the skilled hands of Brenda Barrie, it was also deeply moving, cathartic and unexpectedly affirming.

The 2010 nominations included some of our favorite guest artists.  Jared Moore (who designed the lights for this years Orange Flower Water) was nominated for his work in New Leaf Theatre Co’s The Man Who Was Thursday. New Leaf Theatre is a wonderful company whose artistry we respect and admire, and so we were thrilled to see that Thursday was also given a second nod by recognizing the work of playwright Bilal Dardai who adapted the tricky novel to the stage in such a wonderfully unique way.  Frances Limoncelli (guest director for 2009′s The Memory of Water) was recognized twice for two separate adaptations for LifeLine; Busman’s Honeymoon and Mrs. Caliban.  And Jason Huysman (who appeared opposite Tony Bozzuto in our nominated production of On an Average Day, as well as this season’s Orange Flower Water) was recognized for his heartfelt performance as Biff in Raven Theatre’s production of Death of a Salesman.

Looking over Jeff’s impressive list of nominated artists, we at BackStage Theatre Company are deeply grateful to have been able to celebrate an Anniversary season in such rich company.  Congratulations to every single artist on that list.  Here’s to an equally enlivening 2010-2011 season!