Author Archives: twebb1

Split Britches at Swarthmore 10/23 for a ONE NIGHT STAND…

Split Britches was founded 31 years ago by Peggy Shaw, Lois Weaver, and Deb Margolin in New York City. Since 1980 they have transformed the landscape of queer performance with our vaudevillian, satirical gender-bending performance.  Split Britches is a community of outsiders, queers, eccentrics – feminist because it encourages the imaginative potential in everyone, and lesbian because it takes the presence of a lesbian on stage as a given.
More info: http://splitbritches.wordpress.com/about/

Join us for a “One Night Stand”!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012
7:30 pm
LPAC Frear Theater, Swarthmore College
Free admission

Co-sponsored by the Departments of English, Theater, Film Studies, and Gender and Sexuality Studies

Split Britches at Swarthmore 10/23 for a ONE NIGHT STAND…

Split Britches was founded 31 years ago by Peggy Shaw, Lois Weaver, and Deb Margolin in New York City. Since 1980 they have transformed the landscape of queer performance with our vaudevillian, satirical gender-bending performance.  Split Britches is a community of outsiders, queers, eccentrics – feminist because it encourages the imaginative potential in everyone, and lesbian because it takes the presence of a lesbian on stage as a given.
More info: http://splitbritches.wordpress.com/about/

Join us for a “One Night Stand”!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012
7:30 pm
LPAC Frear Theater, Swarthmore College
Free admission

Co-sponsored by the Departments of English, Theater, Film Studies, and Gender and Sexuality Studies

Making Moves with idiosynCrazy

Making Moves

This fall Swarthmore College’s Dance Program continues an exciting partnership with Philadelphia dance/theater company, idiosynCrazy productions.  Performers from idiosynCrazy productions will work collaboratively with Swarthmore students in the exploration and discussion of methodology, performance, practice, and creation of dance.  This year, the focus will be on the process of dance creation and rigorous performance tools.  The project will culminate in a Spring semester showing/sharing in Troy Dance Studio.

Beginning in November 2012, this project will span both the Fall and Spring semesters. The process will create an opportunity for involved Swarthmore dancers to: develop meaningful relationships with professionals in the city, experiment with dance and performance collaboratively in a concentrated environment, and deepen understanding of what it means to be a professional dance artist.

Credit is available for those who are involved in this unique repertory opportunity.  A dance technique course should be taken concurrently.

Participants should expect rigorous creation and practice of movement material and compositional structures, utilization of vocal techniques in relation to movement practices, use of both set and improvised material within performance structures, and engagement of theatrical sensibilities.  Several directed sessions/workshops will be included with professional choreographers from Philadelphia and NYC, including Kyle Abraham of Abraham.In.Motion and Jane Comfort of Jane Comfort and Company.

All dancers are invited to join the Dance Program and idiosynCrazy productions for a conversation about the project on Monday, October 8th, at 9pm in Troy Dance Studio.  You may also consult dance faculty member Jumatatu Poe at jpoe1@swarthmore.edu for more information.

Making Moves with idiosynCrazy

Making Moves

This fall Swarthmore College’s Dance Program continues an exciting partnership with Philadelphia dance/theater company, idiosynCrazy productions.  Performers from idiosynCrazy productions will work collaboratively with Swarthmore students in the exploration and discussion of methodology, performance, practice, and creation of dance.  This year, the focus will be on the process of dance creation and rigorous performance tools.  The project will culminate in a Spring semester showing/sharing in Troy Dance Studio.

Beginning in November 2012, this project will span both the Fall and Spring semesters. The process will create an opportunity for involved Swarthmore dancers to: develop meaningful relationships with professionals in the city, experiment with dance and performance collaboratively in a concentrated environment, and deepen understanding of what it means to be a professional dance artist.

Credit is available for those who are involved in this unique repertory opportunity.  A dance technique course should be taken concurrently.

Participants should expect rigorous creation and practice of movement material and compositional structures, utilization of vocal techniques in relation to movement practices, use of both set and improvised material within performance structures, and engagement of theatrical sensibilities.  Several directed sessions/workshops will be included with professional choreographers from Philadelphia and NYC, including Kyle Abraham of Abraham.In.Motion and Jane Comfort of Jane Comfort and Company.

All dancers are invited to join the Dance Program and idiosynCrazy productions for a conversation about the project on Monday, October 8th, at 9pm in Troy Dance Studio.  You may also consult dance faculty member Jumatatu Poe at jpoe1@swarthmore.edu for more information.

Jeff Sugg ’95 reviews “Grace” for the Wall Street Journal

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444180004578016431210218750.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

By LIZZIE SIMON

Each week in Curtain Raisers, we invite a local theater artist to attend a show of his or her choosing and discuss the results. Last Thursday, the projection designer Jeff Sugg opted to see Craig Wright’s “Grace” at the Cort Theatre on 48th Street. Mr. Sugg’s Broadway credits include “33 Variations” and “Bring it On: The Musical.” He is a co-founding member, with Cynthia Hopkins and Jim Findlay, of Accinosco, whose next show, a climate-crisis musical called “This Clement World,” will have its premiere at St. Ann’s Warehouse in February. Mr. Sugg is currently working on the musical “Fun Home,” which will run at the Public Theater from Oct. 17 to Nov. 4.

Lizzie Simon for The Wall Street JournalJeff Sugg

“Every show, if you’re lucky, there’s three seconds of an emotional experience which becomes a spiritual experience because you’re having it with a room full of people having it,” Mr. Sugg said.

At Thursday night’s preview of “Grace” there had been not one but a bounty of such experiences. “This,” he said, “is why we do theater.”

The play follows a devout Christian couple, Sara and Steve (Kate Arrington and Paul Rudd), who have moved from Minnesota to Florida to pursue a business opportunity involving a chain of Jesus-inflected hotels. Sara feels out of sync and lonely and befriends their neighbor, Sam (Michael Shannon), a NASA engineer who has just survived a tragic car accident.

“It’s about faith—losing faith, finding faith,” Mr. Sugg said. “It’s really hard to write about that and do it well.”

At the start of the play the characters seem neatly divided between believers and the non-believers. Steve and Sara profess a breathless, blind faith, one that can prevent harm and beget real-estate deals. Sam, science-minded and recently traumatized, has no belief in a benevolent higher power, nor any patience for people who do. The exterminator who visits both apartments (Ed Asner), himself a war-crimes survivor, pretty much feels the same.

That any of these characters might switch sides during the course of the drama is not exactly a surprise—characters transform in the theater. But the miracle in “Grace,” as Mr. Sugg saw it, is that the audience is drawn from an academic questioning of whether there is any grace in the world to an unlikely, awestruck sense that there is. “For everybody in the audience who is laughing along in the beginning in all their atheist whatever, it’s like, ‘Bam, sorry dude, we got you.'”

If “Grace” hinges on one’s personal investment in the spiritual realm, on a parallel level the show bolstered Mr. Sugg’s faith in his profession. “On my worst days, I bemoan the fact that I’m not doing anything for society,” he said. “It’s easy to forget that theater can change the world. Or at least it can change people a little.”

Joan Marcus Mr. Sugg attended a performance of ‘Grace,’ above with Kate Arrington, Paul Rudd and Michael Shannon

“Grace” is a straight play with no projections, which Mr. Sugg, a projection designer, opted to see on account of that very fact. “I just did “Bring It On,” which is a big fancy musical,” he said. “I wanted to see something that was less visually extravagant and more bare.”

His work with projections has ranged from displaying super-titles, as he did in “Tribes,” to incorporating video, as he will with “This Clement World,” to providing setting, as in “Bring It On.”

“At its best, projection adds its own layer of story without being overly visually complicated,” he said. “There’s a certain amount of engineering involved, but in an ideal world you’re putting something into the story alchemically, as opposed to just using a bunch of screens.”

Typically, when he sees the work of other projection designers at the theater, he becomes a judge of aesthetics and technicality. “I’m thinking, ‘That sucks, that’s good, that’s a little off.'”

But in the absence of projections, “What my mind is able to do is freely imagine. There’s no job for me here.”

“Grace” may have lacked projections, but its set design, by Beowulf Boritt, was by no means old fashioned. On the set, both apartments overlap as one, with the furniture rotating on an inner ring in one direction and the apartments’ doors and windows rotating on an outside ring in the opposite direction. Behind them, clouds in the sky, likely painted on fabric, drifted continuously on a track. Dizzy yet? That’s the point. The impact can be disorienting and, as Mr. Sugg suggested, in complete service to the play and the performers.

He described the overall experience as “an ego attenuator. Here’s a playwright who wrote a beautiful play that doesn’t need projections to tell the story,” he said. “It just reminds me that the art form is much bigger than my contribution to it.”

A version of this article appeared September 25, 2012, on page A26 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Have Faith in the Theater.

Window on the Work: Lela Aisha Jones/Flyground on 10/22/2012 at 6PM

Join the dance program for a showing with Lela Aisha Jones and Flyground in the Troy Dance Lab on October 22, at 6PM.

The dancers will be featuring some excerpted work from the STREET GRACE SERIES. This Flyground Series is a contemporary collection of movement performance works that cleverly blur textual and bodily memories as they are uncovered in the histories of African/Afro/Black diasporic shared experiences in the US.  Currently the Series includes Native Portals of Lynching and Love, which is an abstract cultural narrative that transforms our relationship with the noose as an active agent in lynching through jolts of comedy and intensity.  It puts the image of the noose front and center for everyone to work through in their bodies and systems.  It starts internal and external conversations based on what has been missing or excluded as a part of our historical education in theUS—namely visibility, accountability, and healing.

*Lela Aisha Jones* is a native of Tallahassee, Florida and is at home when creating.  While in movement she found her entry point as an artist, she cannot be defined by one discipline or practice; her experiences have lead to a more nomadic existence. She is the founder of FlyGround—her creative home, co-founder of The Requisite Movers, and development coordinator as well as member of Mascher Space Co-op. Lela walks with her transitioned as well as living family; she is humbled and so thankful for all those who have nurtured her, especially her grandfather, mom, dad, and sister.

*FlyGround* experiences are in a genre of their own but never too far from home. Since 2009, it is a movement performance company that artistically archives and rethinks the intersecting lineages of the African/Afro/Black diaspora and US black lived experiences through abstract, physical and cultural narrative.  The work is a spiritual sanctuary that asks hard questions in safe spaces and honors the body and embodied experience as real landscapes that know life.  We walk coherently through cultures and traditions meeting where we can and realizing where we are varied.  We are grounded in native US vibes.  We are home grown traces of many.  We are consciously here.