THREE TALL WOMEN in the Frear!

Three Tall Women by Edward Albee

Performances: Feb. 25th and 26th at 8pm, Feb. 26th and 27th at 2pm

Three Tall Women renders the life of a 92-year-old woman whose life has been reduced to crying fits, frequent bathroom trips, a few rapidly decomposing memories, and the rare visit from her son.  In this Pulitzer Prize-winning play, Edward Albee offers an unflinching look at how ideals are born and abandoned, how grudges are formed and relinquished, and how love and grief pass continuously in and out of our lives.  A darkly funny lament on death and dying, Three Tall Women explores the evolution of the self over the course of a life, inviting us to contemplate our deepest fears about love, legacy, and loss.

Honors Acting Majors Eva Amesse (’11), Nell Bang-Jensen (’11), and Isa St. Claire (’11), portray the three tall women of Albee’s masterpiece, playing against type by embracing a rigorously physical approach to character.  They are joined by cast member Brian Ratcliffe (’11), in the role of the Son.

Directing Workshop and Lighting Design present a NIGHT OF SCENES

The Department of Theater’s

Directing Workshop (THEA 035)

In collaboration with Lighting Design (THEA 004B)

Presents

A NIGHT OF SCENES

Consisting of excerpts from:

Miss Julie, by August Strindberg

Directed by Michelle Fennell ‘12

Lighting Design by Isa St. Clair

Betrayal, by Harold Pinter

Directed by Ryane Diskin-Cahill ‘13

Lighting Design by Nell Bang-Jensen ‘11

Top Girls, by Caryl Churchill

Directed by Lori Barkin ‘12

Lighting Design by Emily Letts HC ‘11

A Lie of the Mind, by Sam Shepard

Directed by Jeannette Leopold HC ‘13

Lighting Design by Jeff Schneider HC ‘13

FREAR ENSEMBLE THEATRE (ROOM 1 LPAC, LOWER LOBBY LEVEL)

WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY, DEC. 8 & 9,  @ 7 pm

Free and open to the public without advance reservation

Senior Company presents METAMORPHOSES by Mary Zimmerman

The Department of Theater at Swarthmore College will present Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses in the Lang Performing Arts Center’s Frear Ensemble Theatre on Friday, December 3rd at 4:30pm and 9:00pm and Saturday, December 4th at 3:00pm and 8:00pm. The Senior Company includes Eva Amessé ‘11, Nell Bang-Jensen ‘11, Emily Letts ‘11, Joshua Lipman ‘11, Isa St. Clair ‘11, and Brian Willis ‘11, with guest performers Ben Hattem ‘12, Thomas Powers ‘13 and Brian Ratcliffe ’11.  The production also includes set design by Professor Laila Swanson, lighting design by Jessie Bear ’09, sound design by Louis Jargow ’10, costume consultation by Tara Webb ’94 and props design by Vianca Masucci ’13 and Logan Tiberi-Warner ‘11.  The event will be free and open to the public without reservations.

Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses is a non-naturalistic play that uses mythic elements to tell stories about human transformation.  The play is based on the myths of Ovid as translated by David Slavitt, along with several other fables as interpreted by the playwright, and includes words from a poem by Rainer Marie Rilke.  After initially premiering in 1996 at Northwestern University, it was picked up in 1998 by the Lookingglass Theatre Company in Chicago and then premiered off-Broadway in October 2001 at the Second Stage Theater in New York.  Metamorphoses opened on Broadway at the Circle in the Square Theater in 2002, was nominated for Best Play and won a Tony Award for Best Direction.

The play builds a foundation of striking images that examines human behavior and emotions from different viewpoints. Senior Company has staged the production as a series of fantastical, Greek vignettes in an abstract and thought-provoking environment.   Senior Company’s collective design and collaborative process focuses this production on the storytelling, explores the relationships of the multitude of characters present in its world, and showcases the central idea of the play. The characters are not the actors themselves, but various storytelling personas that the actors manifest using props, physicality, and costumes.  The goal is to offer tales to ponder and wonder about, not to make the audience choose sides between story and storyteller.  As Mary Zimmerman states, “the Greek gods, I believe, are twelve different names for feelings inside ourselves….”

For further information about these events, contact Tara Webb at 610-328-8260 or twebb1@swarthmore.edu

AUDITION FOR PRODUCTION ENSEMBLE (Thea 022) SPRING 2011!!!

AUDITIONS FOR PRODUCTION ENSEMBLE (THEA 022; Spring 2011):

SATURDAY, NOV. 20

ROOM 115 KOHLBERG

Script: George Bernard Shaw’s FARFETCHED FABLES (1950)

Concept: This adaptation of FARFETCHED FABLES is the rehearsal of several censored television broadcasts that were produced back in the days when television was almost always live.  Created in the era spanning I LOVE LUCY and Joseph McCarthy, this production of FABLES will draw on these and other sources to create a framework around George Bernard Shaw’s off-kilter text.  Acting for both the camera and stage space will be emphasized, and characters comprising the television production crew in the 50’s (not in the original script) will be developed by the acting team through improvisation.

Director/Professor: Lars Jan ‘00

SCHEDULE
12:30-3:00 pm
: Individual auditions

(sign up sheet outside Theater Department Office, 13 LPAC)

3:00-4:00 pm: Break

4:00-6:00 pm: Group Callback Session

(will be done in 1-2 groups for at least an hour each)

Everyone auditioning should come prepared to perform two monologues totaling no more than 4 minutes in length.

Audition material can include non-text-based movement, physical theater pieces, and/or text from any genre.

ADDITIONAL CALLBACKS ON SUNDAY ONLY IF NEEDED

CAST LIST WILL BE POSTED ON MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, OUTSIDE 13  LPAC

THOSE ON THE LIST SHOULD PRE-ENROLL FOR THEA 022, 042, or 062

Auditions are open to all students that have taken Acting I (THEA 002A)

THEA 022 fulfills a requirement for all Theater majors and minors

Students that have previously done Production Ensemble may audition and be cast again for academic credit, registering for THEA 042 or THEA 06.

Copies of the script for the production will be made available through the Theater Department Office (15 LPAC) starting Monday, Nov. 15

REHEARSAL SCHEDULE:

Production Ensemble rehearses weekly on the following schedule:

Thursdays: 4:10-6:40 pm & 7:30-10:30 pm

Fridays: 1:00-5:00 pm

Sundays: 12 noon-6:00 pm

This schedule will be expanded for tech/dress rehearsals and performances March 20-27, 2011.  Performances will take place the weekend of March 25-27.

Other than for a post-mortem meeting for the students and faculty involved, the work for the production will be finished by March 27.

The production team includes Laila Swanson as set and costume designer, Jim Murphy as lighting designer, Lars Jan as digital media designer, and Louis Jargow ’10 as sound designer.

Questions: contact Allen Kuharski (akuhars1@swarthmore.edu)

Spring 2011 New Class: Integrated Media for Performance with Professor Lars Jan!!!

INTEGRATED MEDIA FOR PERFORMANCE: MEDIA & TECHNOLOGY DESIGN (THEA 004D)

PROF. LARS JAN ‘00

SPRING SEMESTER 2011

MONDAYS 1:15-4:00 PM & 4:15-6:15 PM

OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS WITHOUT PREREQUISITE

The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the application of various visual and audio technologies in live theater and dance performance.  The course also will explore the emerging phenomenon of hybrid creative practices that utilize technology to further expand 21st-century storytelling, design, and genre.  Discussion of the historical and theoretical context of contemporary mixed-media performance will be combined with an orientation to the available technologies found at Swarthmore and beyond, with an emphasis on video. The class will include the conceptualization and preparation of a series of individual studio projects. The course is designed to serve all students regardless of prior experience in theater production.

****

LARS JAN is a director, designer, writer, and media artist.  He will be teaching INTEGRATED MEDIA as well as directing PRODUCTION ENSEMBLE (THEA 022) in Spring 2011.

The son of first-generation émigrés from Afghanistan and Poland, Lars is committed to international artistic research and exchange.   He has studied and worked extensively in Japan (Tondo Ningyo Joruri Theatre, 2003-04), Afghanistan (2005), and Ukraine.  Lars is a 2000 graduate of Swarthmore College and completed his MFA in Directing and Integrated Media at CalArts with the support of a Jack Kent Cooke Fellowship.  Lars is the recipient of the 2008 Sherwood Award, granted by Center Theatre Group to an innovative theatre artist in Los Angeles.  He has created new work and taught in residence at Princeton University’s Atelier Program as well as at Mount Holyoke, Swarthmore, and Amherst Colleges.

In 2009 and 2010, Lars Jan researched and created new works while a resident fellow at The MacDowell Colony (Peterborough, NH), EMPAC (Troy, NY), Brookfield Properties Arts Program (Los Angeles, CA) and The Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography (MANCC; Tallahassee, FL). His work has been supported several times by the Swarthmore Project in Theater.  His original performance, film, and installation works have been seen at The Whitney Museum of American Art (New York, 2005/2010), Symphony Space (New York, 2005), REDCAT (Los Angeles, 2006/2009), PianoSpheres (Los Angeles, 2010), The Kirk Douglas Theatre (Los Angeles, 2010), The Philadelphia Live Arts Festival (2004-2010), and The Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) at RPI (Troy, NY, 2010).

He is the founding artistic director of Early Morning Opera, a multi-disciplinary art lab based in Los Angeles that specializes in live performance. He will premiere selections of a new opera, Makandal, at Art Basel (Miami) in December 2010.

The Yes Men in the LPAC Cinema on October 7th!

SWARTHMORE COLLEGE’S DEPARTMENT OF THEATER AND THE WILLIAM J. COOPER FOUNDATION PRESENT A PERFORMANCE-LECTURE WITH THE YES MEN

September 15, 2010The Department of Theater at Swarthmore College and the William J. Cooper Foundation will present THE YES MEN in a performance-lecture on Thursday October 7th at 4:15PM in the Lang Performing Arts Center’s Cinema.  The event will be free and open to the public without reservations.  Live presentations by THE YES MEN are hilarious, insightful, disturbing, and thoroughly entertaining. The prolific pranksters discuss their legendary hoaxes and identity corrections through storytelling and multimedia – featuring props used in the pranks and unreleased footage from their recent and classic exploits.

THE YES MEN are a group of activist performers started by two notorious pranksters who organize events in order to bring attention to corporate, government, and institutional policy contradictions. The two founding artists, Mike Bonnano and Andy Bichelbaum bring their backgrounds in the fine and performing arts to raise awareness about issues of social concern. THE YES MEN have gained international acclaim and notoriety for exposing dehumanizing business practices and helping to keep critical issues in the international spotlight. They do this through impersonating representatives of powerful corporations and government organizations such as ExxonMobil, McDonald’s, and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. THE YES MEN’s famed hoaxes include a collaboratively produced fake New York Times announcing the end of the Iraq War, inserting queer soldiers as characters in a video game, and the false announcement of the World Trade Organization’s dissolution in order to shift focus to helping the poor.  One of their earliest interventions was commissioned by the artists’ collective RTmark and involved switching the voice boxes of Barbie and GI Joe dolls in stores at Christmastime.  Their recent activities have involved posing as members of particular corporations and policy organizations to affect potential outcomes. For example, Andrew Bichelbaum appeared on CNN as a spokesman for Dow Chemical, taking full responsibility for the Bhopal disaster and promising to use $12 billion to compensate victims. In this sense, his appearance as a corporate spokesmen announced the position the company should have taken. They call this “pranking for progress,” which involves telling “little lies to get at big truths – the idea is to reveal the real hoaxsters.” These “culture jammers” try to bring attention to inequities or hypocrisies through performance practices that model alternative behaviors and possible outcomes. The faculty advisors for the project are Assistant Professor Erin B. Mee in the Department of Theater and Associate Professor Janine Mileaf in the Department of Art.

THE YES MEN will also host a Workshop in the LPAC Frear Ensemble Theatre titled “Developing Performance Pranks for Social Activism” on Friday October 8th from 2:00 – 5:00PM. This event is free and open to students, but please contact Professor Erin Mee (emee1@swarthmore.edu) to reserve a space.  THE YES MEN will also be organizing an on-campus action with Workshop participants.  Please contact Blaine O’Neill (boneil1@swarthmore.edu) for more information.

For further information about these events, contact Tara Webb at 610-328-8260 or twebb1@swarthmore.edu.

Coming to campus October 1, 2010: Telephone Bronco does CARTOGORAPHASIA

Come see Telephone Bronco’s Cartogoraphasia, on FRIDAY OCTOBER 1ST at 8PM in the Frear Ensemble Theater, LPAC. Cartogoraphasia was developed for this year’s Philly Fringe and originally performed at the Circle of Hope Church in Philadelphia.

from the Broncos:
We tethered together myriad strings: memory, subjectivity, personal and political borders, sexuality, and the nature of the mind. Cartogoraphasia is the result of our explorations along all these paths. No surprise, then, that it’s also a celebration of anyone who is an intrepid adventurer, whether they’re exploring the caverns of their own subconscious or the contours of a lover’s hand. Cartogoraphasia’s themes ran together as our synapses fired, drawing distant connections and logics together. Eventually a web appeared, and the entire project of Telephone Bronco unfolded. We hope that as you take in the performance, the links will become clearer and more complex.

Telephone Bronco Theater Company is comprised of Theater Department alums and current students Nell Bang-Jensen ’11, Isa St. Clair ’11, Emma Ferguson ’10, Eric Holzhauer ’10, McFeely Sam Goodman ’10, Louis Jargow ’10, and Jessie Bear ’09. Take this once-in-a-lifetime chance to see Cartogoraphasia right on campus!

Swarthmore artists at the LiveArts-Philly Fringe 2010!

Swarthmore theater and dance alumni, faculty, and staff are again strongly represented in this year’s Philadelphia LiveArts-Fringe Festival, running September 3-18, 2010.

Those participating include:

Telephone Bronco Theater Company makes their collective debut with the world premiere of CARTOGORAPHASIA, created by the company on campus this summer with the support of the Swarthmore Project in Theater.  Company members include Nell Bang-Jensen ’11, Jessica Bear ’08, Emma Ferguson ’10, Sam Goodman ’10, Eric Holzhauer ’10, Louis Jargow ’10, and Isa St. Clair ’11.

Performances at Circle of Hope, 1125 S. Broad Street.

September 3, 4, 10, 11. (Fringe Festival).

The Groudswell Players will make their collective debut with the world premiere of HOW TO SOLVE A BEAR.  The company includes Jesse Paulsen ’09 and Emma Ferguson ’10.

Performed at the Mainstage at the Adrienne Theatre, 2030 Sansom Street.

September 4, 6, 9, 12, 17 (Fringe Festival).

Director and digital media designer Lars Jan ’00 is collaborating with choreographer Nichole Canuso on the world premiere of a dance-theater piece TAKES, by the Nichole Canuso Dance Company.  Performing in the piece is Dito van Reigersberg ’94 (of Pig Iron Theatre Company).  Technical and lighting direction by LPAC Staff Office member Dave Todaro.  TAKES was supported in part by the Swarthmore Project in Theater.

Performances at Theater West at The Hub, (SW corner of 5th Street and Fairmount Avenue in Northern Liberties).

September 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 17, 18  (LiveArts Festival).

Playwright and actor Adriano Shaplin (part-time instructor of playwriting in the Department of Theater) performs in the world premiere of his latest play FREEDOM CLUB, a collaboration between his company The Riot Group and Philadelphia’s New Paradise Laboratories.

Performances at the Arts Bank, 601 S. Broad Street (corner of South Street).

September 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 11 (LiveArts Festival).

Pig Iron Theatre Company is presenting the world premiere of their latest production, CANKERBLOSSOM, directed by Dan Rothenberg ’95.

Performances at Christ Church Neighborhood House, 20 N. American Street (near 2nd & Market Streets).

September 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 (LiveArts Festival).

Dance faculty member and choreographer Jumatatu Poe ’04 is presenting the world premiere of his piece UNSTUCK on a double bill with choreographer Eun Jung Choi.

Performances at the Live Arts Studio, 919 N. 5th Street (at Poplar Street in Northern Liberties).

September 11, 12 (Live Arts Festival).

Green Chair Dance Group is performing in GRAVITY THEATER, a collaboration with InMovement Dance and Amanda Varone.  Green Chair Dance Group consists of Sarah Gladwin-Camp ’05, John Beauregard ’05, Greg Holt ’05, and Hannah de Keijzer ’06.

Performances at InMovement Studio, 737 S. 8th Street (South Philadelphia).

September 15, 16.

Greg Holt ’05 is performing in the world premiere of choreographer Brian Sanders’ SANCTUARY, presented by his company Junk.

Performances at Theater East at The Hub (SW corner of 5th Street and Fairmount Avenue in Northern Liberties).

September 3, 4, 5, 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18 (LiveArts Festival)

Additional information about these and the many other performances in the LiveArts-Fringe program this year can be found in hard copies of the festival guide that are available in the LPAC Lower Lobby (outside the LPAC Staff Office) or by going to www.livearts-fringe.org.

Tickets can be bought any time on line by going to the festival website and selecting “Shows”.  The festival box office will be open starting August 23 at The Hub (at the SW corner of 5th and Fairmount Streets) in Northern Liberties.