MySpace


Cockroach Theatre Company



Last Updated: 10/1/2008

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 29
Sign: Sagittarius

City: LAS VEGAS
State: NEVADA
Country: US
Signup Date: 8/27/2006

Blog Archive
[Older      Newer]
 /  / 
Friday, October 03, 2008 
The Las Vegas Weekly
Thu, Oct 2, 2008 (midnight)

Up to the job
When words and body parts collide

Jacob Coakley

Mac Wellman's 7 Blowjobs, put on by Cockroach Theatre at the Onyx, now through October 4, is a modern satire that discards straightforward dialogue and naturalism to achieve an overall surreal effect, gaining meaning through repetition and disassociation—say something nonsensical long enough with the right intonation and the words can take on new force. In this case, the ravings of a right-wing senator's office staff become ever more harried as they examine seven unnatural, disgusting, yet utterly hot photographs that have been delivered to the office, trying to determine if they are, in fact, pornographic pictures at all. It's hard to tell—parts have been swollen beyond recognition; others are completely disassociated from areas of the body where they should be attached and have been made ambiguous. (Is that the Pope, or the senator's son?)

Wellman's text mirrors the ambiguous state of the pictures, providing space for the audience to fill in what audacities are contained in the pictures, and wiggle room for the jokes about sex (which are plenty, and funny). Body parts are separated from body parts, meaning from words, and finally, the lines demarcating self and others become blurred and eradicated. What is in the pictures, and what is in us, and what parts of us are in the pictures have become confused and melded together. The indecency is all in us.
Unfortunately, plays like this almost always contain one solid thesis statement where the scope of the play is laid out succinctly and coherently, abandoning both absurdity and complexity, and 7 Blowjobs is no different, dissolving into a neat commentary on government corruption and right-wing moral hypocrisy.
It's a tall order to carry all that theory into performance, and Cockroach isn't quite up to it, but the piece is funny and sharp enough to work even without this level—the production is hysterical, instead of sublime. The first act is dominated by Dot, the office receptionist (played by Mundana Ess-Haghabadi), and office staffers Eileen (Evelyn Barnett) and Bruce (Levi Fackrell). Their examination of the pictures and each other, and everyone's intermittent submission to the lust engendered by the photos, makes for a hysterical office scene that plays like a pornographic, comedic Lord of the Flies. The second act mixes religion into the fray, and Taylor Hanes steals the show as the grounded Senator Bob, who takes all the strangeness in stride. His ending speech skewering absolutely everyone in the political canon is priceless, and not for those among us who are even remotely right-wing.
Friday, September 26, 2008 

Current mood:  confident
Category: Goals, Plans, Hopes
City Life Full Article

Slaves to their art
With equal parts discipline and passion, a small theater in a kink store acts up
BY DAVE SURRATT

We Las Vegans have gotten very fond of insisting there's no real interest in community theater in this town. In fact, it barely has the ring of a complaint anymore. After years of watching eager new companies rush in to fill an off-Strip drama vacuum only to retreat with their tails between their legs, often muttering about lack of audience support, we've gained perverse confidence in our "no one here cares" diagnosis. And we've begun slapping it onto each new failure with the bitter gusto that replaces hope.

There's optimism left, though, in those who make the shows and those who watch them.

More and more, that optimism has been gathering at Commercial Center's 953 E. Sahara Ave. address and, more and more, it's been finding validation there. Don't worry; this isn't another cruel story to get you excited about the next big thing that might happen. This one's about a big thing that already happened and is still happening. Judging from the number of locals dying to be a part of it, claims of artlessness in Sin City are increasingly hard to defend.

That's the situation inside the Rack fetish wear shop where, past the gauntlet of leather skirts, chaps, muzzles, masks, gags and floggers, you'll find a cozy 100-seat auditorium improbably nestled inside the store. Like its namesake, the Onyx Theatre is dark this rainy Wednesday afternoon. Cockroach Theatre Company -- one of several now using this space -- is well into rehearsals for 7 Blowjobs. Mac Wellmen's still-relevant political satire isn't quite the voyeurist smorgasbord implied in the title, but rather an exploration (penned in 1991, before the Lewinsky affair) of censorship, morality, church-and-state separation and other knotty issues that crop up when seven salacious photos are mailed to the office of a conservative Southern senator. Desks, swivel chairs and potted ficuses define the setting, and if just one of those stage lights overhead were aimed back toward the theater, it would be easier to find a distant seat without noisily banging a knee into the armrest, which I've just done.

Those onstage don't seem to notice. Actor-director Ernie Curcio and his cast are busy polishing scenes from the frenetically written piece, gunning for the nuanced line delivery and comic timing needed to avoid the train wreck seen all-too-often when cocky companies get in over their heads with a work this challenging.

"That is precisely what--" begins actress Mundana Ess-Haghabadi, continuing a steely tirade after crossing from stage left toward Curcio.

"Sit me down on that," he interrupts, suddenly in director mode.

"That is precisely what I'm talking about," she finishes, this time planting a hand on Curcio's shoulder and pressing him down into a chair with authority, right on the adverb's middle syllable, while actors Taylor Hanes and Evelyn Barnett look on from their own positions.

After a few minutes they do notice me. We exchange greetings across a stretch of seats and the performers insist they won't be distracted by my lurking in the shadows for a bit. They're not kidding; after a moment of easy conversation, all four of them are straight back to business and into their characters so deeply it's disorienting, as if our micro-chat had never even happened. It makes sense. You don't make it to the Onyx stage these days without knowing something about how to handle an infinity of distractions, internal and external.

"[In Cockroach], I see a talented company that's been around for years," says the gatekeeper, Onyx Director John Beane, sitting in a T-shirt and blaze-orange beanie at a cluttered desk in the office he shares with Rack owner Michael Morse. "I think [7 Blowjobs] is something that'll interest our public. It's something with courage to it ... courage in the subject matter. It takes a lot to make it really work and they can pull it off."

After lying dormant for years after an initial flurry of inspired, fringy productions, Cockroach has awakened again for a four-show 2008-2009 season. The company plans on moving into their own new space at downtown's Neonopolis later this year, but until then, Onyx remains the best fit for this troupe and the anti-mainstream fare they're known for doling out.

"We've got a lot of people over 50 in our audience," says Cockroach Managing Director Levi Fackrell. "This one's not going to be for everyone necessarily, but we figured anyone coming to see a play called 7 Blowjobs isn't gonna mind walking through a fetish shop. Besides, it's a beautiful theater and I love this space."

While rehearsal goes on, Beane gives his own take on why this is a match made in Sodom.

"Part of it is just the infamy of this location," he says, describing one reason for the growing attractiveness of his venue among adventurous drama companies and audiences alike. It's not everywhere, he reminds, that you can go see a play in a theater encased in a fetishwear shop that's itself tucked into a corner known for gay leather dives and notorious sex clubs like the Green Door, situated a scant hundred feet down the sidewalk from his burgeoning arts culture nexus. All the surrounding sordidness makes people feel they're in the right place for a real theater experience.

"Shakespeare would be proud of that," Beane grins, going on to describe the aesthetic he likes to see -- or smell -- in a company before greenlighting any production at Onyx.

"It's really all about the people involved and ... smelling what's burning in them. If I can get a scent on that, of someone who's got something, some kind of power about them ... even if there's a little less finesse to it ... that's the first thing. That has to be there."

It's a striking departure from what you'll hear from more traditional theater companies proud of their diverse content and cover-all-bases programming. Beane's talk of "burning," "power" and "something" make it clear he isn't looking for mass appeal. His priorities are elsewhere, he'll tell them to you straight, and it's hard to get across with mere ellipses and italics just how infectious his energy is in conversation. One minute the guy's shifting in his seat, fixing his eyes skyward and hunting down the perfect word to convey something ineffable to begin with. Then he's leaning forward, leveling those eyes right at you and exploding into a kind of guttural eloquence, expounding on ideas you can tell have been curing in his mental smokehouse for longer than he can remember.

By the written word, his vision comes out like this, as presented in the mission statement at www.onyxtheatre.com: "We provide a space dedicated to personal artistic expression, free minds, unrestrained entertainment and socially relevant art." Compare that with what appears at the top of Cockroach's homepage ("Cockroach Theatre exists to satify a hunger for defiant theatre in artists and audiences") and you might get a better sense of the anti-orthodoxy overlap that's helped this and other partnerships along. But talk -- like the typical off-Strip theater ticket price -- is cheap. What's really going on here that's so exceptional?

Onyx's history isn't a long one, but has the depth you'd expect from a place three times its age. Rack owner Morse built this cavern himself in 2006 just to alleviate his own disgust with what he saw then as a lackluster community theater scene. Mainstream companies like Las Vegas Little Theatre had the space, while offbeat groups like Social Experimentation and Absurd Theatre (SEAT) had the passion for stage but no real place to call home.

"I knew this community needed a place for alternative theater," says Morse, "and I had the money to get this venue to work, so I did."

Once the space was finished, locals who'd caught wind of the project were treated to a couple productions (Torch Song Trilogy, Sordid Lives) that, while they didn't dazzle utterly, were solid enough and a few notches edgier than the safe-zone comedies and classics audiences had been getting elsewhere in town.

Then came Beane, whose own company, Insurgo Theatre Movement, had already been active for five years in Southern California. Lysistrata was its first production at Onyx, mounted in May 2007, with a script partially modernized by the future venue director. Not a perfect show, but the rigor and vigor this company brought to long-dead Aristophanes' tale of war-weary Athenian women witholding sex from their soldier husbands was undeniable, heralding bigger things to come.

Over the next year, Onyx would see productions of Hamlet (with emotive force Katrina Larsen in the gender-bending titular role), Witkiewicz's absurdist The Water Hen, Emily Lauren's winsome, one-woman burlesque show Sugarpuppy and South Park creator Trey Parker's fake blood-fest Cannibal! The Musical, which generated enough praise and ticket sales ("Lines going out the door," says Beane) to warrant its return a month later for a second run. Even now-defunct New American Theatre Project, the most promising and independent fringe troupe from a year before, rushed to get in on the Onyx action last November, producing Neil LaBute's queasy Bash, a trifecta of unsettling monologues including one man's agonized confession to having watched while his baby accidentally smothered itself under bedclothes.

This past August, Good Medicine Theatre Company put up Little Dog Laughed, a caustic, coming-out-themed piece in which Beane acted. Just before that came the darkest, most insidious A Midsummer Night's Dream Vegas has ever seen, infused with lots of nudity, sure, but more importantly with Insurgo's subtler blend of crafted gloom and hypersexuality. That show packed the house with community theater-interested Las Vegans -- the same ones so many still claim to be as mythical as Oberon's fairies.

As for the near future, expect similarly provocative contributions from Good Medicine, Cockroach and Atlas Theater Ensemble, who mount David Mamet's American Buffalo in January, with its themes of theft, betrayal, reconciliation and scalding dialogue throughout. Efforts from outside companies will still be heavily augmented by Insurgo, who holds up its end with original horror spoof Dragula (it's what it sounds like) in October, followed by Vegas local Shawn Hackler's recent adaptation of Kafka's man-turned-vermin Metamorphosis in November, followed fittingly by Tracy Lett's Bug closer to Christmas. More and more, newly penned pieces are taking priority over the older, Tony-winning crowd-pleasers.

"This year we're at about 50-percent original work," says Beane. "We're moving toward a season of all originals. That's the goal ... that current, modern stake in things. That's what saves this place from being a museum."

Suddenly, the originals are pouring in; all this buzz built up around Onyx has led to, on average, a new submission every day from somewhere outside its immediate circle. On top of continued communications from current Strip performers and other contributors with whom he's already forged relationships (after Tropicana-based Second City Las Vegas went belly-up last month, several members formed Improv Vegas, now performing weekly here), Beane's mailbox is filling with entreaties from the ranks of the unknown. One recent week saw four different one-man show proposals sent in by ex-drag queens, choreographers and other former Vegas performers with a desire to get back into the old scene via this new portal that Onyx seems to offer. Of course, true talent is still a universally rare commodity and Vegas is no exception. While Beane loves all the interest and is loath to miss anything that comes in -- he reads all submissions -- he says the presumptiveness of many "applicants" can be irritating.

"How do I say this?" he begins, pausing and looking up again. "Community theater is the karaoke of theater. The MySpace. Everyone can be a star, a celebrity. Motherfucker, no you can't. I know, because I fuck up a lot myself. It's not as easy as some people want to think to do this kind of thing."

Occasional bursts of outrage notwithstanding, Beane doesn't come off as nearly the arrogant bastard he fears when explaining the success of Onyx so far. It's not about one company's genius, he says, but about a kind of genius many more would-be trend-setters might show if they weren't spread so thinly. By sticking to a core creative vision and pushing it hard -- as opposed to chasing all the other beats a modern company is "supposed" to hit, like social programs, classes, second seasons or a special kids' series -- Onyx has avoided dilution into the dull groupthink and complacence that can afflict a maturing company. The gut instincts that drive good art come first, he insists, and nothing should be allowed to compromise that arrangement. True, there's a business savvy that's essential to success here -- as former owner of a small but successful computer company, Beane has that too -- but outside theater groups who share his "art first" sensibility are the ones more likely to bring that requisite fire to the Onyx table. "Why should anyone pay just to see us walking around feeling good about ourselves?" he says.

Back at the rehearsal, Cockroach has moved on to the next scene. In his shredded jeans and button-up, Curcio squats down, stage front, between Hanes and Barnett, coaching them all to rise up with waggling Hallelujah hands on the word "ontological." In another moment, all three are wide-eyed, babbling and gesticulating madly, Curcio still giving directions while standing on his head in a chair. Then they do it all again. And again. They practice the scene as many times as it takes to give Friday's opening night show-goers what these performers are convinced they want and deserve, despite what's become the conventional wisdom about Vegas and the arts.

"Is there really no audience interest here?" asks Beane. "Are we just a bunch of degenerates here who shun real culture? I don't think so. I think there's been more confusion in the ones putting on shows than in the ones watching them."
Thursday, September 25, 2008 

Current mood:  touched
Category: News and Politics
In some ways, the title to Cockroach Theatre's current production at the Onyx is misleading.

Despite risque title, play far from provocative

..

Marc Wellman's script is a very conventional, what might be called "safe" comedy, about a conservative senator and his staff who are sent seven pictures featuring someone they may or may not know in various sex acts. They all get uptight, naturally; they all condemn the lewdness, while trying to hide their getting turned on.

On a bad day, Neil Simon could have written most of this, but Wellman was smart enough to give his routine work a title that stands out: "7 Blowjobs." That sounds naughty, but apart from some sporadic adult language, there's no nudity, no audience peeking at the pics, no sex acts. This has been advertised as provocative theater, but I found it as provocative as a repeat "According to Jim" episode.

You can have some occasional fun with Wellman's one-note characters. There's a charismatic preacher (played by the enormously charismatic Ernie Curcio) who goes on the make for the attractive but outwardly straight-laced administrative V.P. (the versatile Evelyn Barnett); the nerdy, perpetually aroused assistant (the beautifully befuddled Levi Fackrell), and the senator himself (the authoritative Taylor Hanes) who works hard (and in vain) to maintain an aura of dignity.

Wellman's milking dry of the obvious jokes is one major problem. Actor Curcio's decision to direct is the other. Curcio conducts at a frantic pace from beginning to end.

The only way to make some of this comedy work, I would think, is to find enormously different levels for it. The play needs to build into its own ridiculousness. What I kept seeing was the same scene being played over and over again.

Curcio is a too all over-the-place actor to be able to direct himself. His energy and intensity need to be channeled. And certainly the rest of the cast could have benefited from a detached eye guiding the proceedings. Why do so many talented actors shortchange the importance of a director? I'd argue it's physiologically impossible for an actor to behave honestly in character moment-to-moment while also watching and evaluating all the other performers and production elements.

Scott Fadale's set consists of pieces of nondescript desk furniture that do nothing to establish the feel of Wellman and Curcio's world.

But since this play doesn't really have a world, Fadale's neutral blandness is at least consistent.

Saturday, September 20, 2008 

Category: Blogging

Last night the production 7 blowjobs opened to the roar of laughter @ the Onyx Theatre.  It was extremely well executed and recieved by all, with big belly laughs.

See you at the show----

Get your ticket before it sells out. (www.CockroachTheatre.com)

-CT

 

 

PREVIEW ARTICLE - LVRJ - NEON

what
: "7 Blowjobs"

when: 8 and 11 p.m. today and Saturday (additional performances through Oct. 4)

where: Onyx Theatre, 953 E. Sahara Ave.

tickets: $15 (cockroachtheatre.com) $18 @ door.

..TR> ..TABLE>

Las Vegan Ernie Curcio lived in New York for five years as a budding stage director, but he avoided going to see all the anti-Bush and anti-war plays there. It's not that they insulted him politically. He just found them kind of redundant.

"Political theater is something I try to stay away from, because it's like, geesh you're preaching to the choir," Curcio says. "OK, man, can you say anything that's good?"

.. --> startclickprintexclude -->


DOUG ELFMAN: Not a Political Statement

Provocatively named Cockroach Theatre production a political satire is being played 'dead serious'
..TR>
.. -->QUIGO--> .. type=text/javascript>adsonar_placementId=21160;adsonar_pid=167778;adsonar_ps=-1;adsonar_zw=250;adsonar_zh=250;adsonar_jv='ads.adsonar.com';..> .. language=Javascript src="http://js.adsonar.com/js/adsonar.js">..>  .. -->END QUIGO-->

 

 
.. --> Multimedia Home Page Content --> ..TR> ..TABLE>..TABLE>.. --> endclickprintexclude -->

Now the onus is on Curcio to say something good in a political play he's directing at the Onyx Theatre, debuting tonight. It's called "7 Blowjobs," a satire penned by three-time Obie-winning playwright Mac Wellman.

The six-actor play begins with a homophobic Southern Republican receiving a delivery of sex photos. He freaks out, prays and calls on a reverend. The politician and repressed Republicans in his circle experience a range of raw emotions while examining the photos, damning the pictures while also feeling arousal and other natural reactions.

When Curcio's company, Cockroach Theatre, did the first read-through of the satire, it was clear there were scenes stacked with comic elements. But Curcio wanted to take the play "dead serious."

"It's not a political statement," he says. "That's the thing we've been trying to avoid immensely. ... We want to get to the heart of these characters and humanity."

"In this kind of play, it's easy to say, '(expletive) you,' and have a laugh at everyone's expense. But in Cockroach's hands, it's going to be something human," Onyx director John Beane says. "The great satire is ultimately about ourselves."

These are parodies of Republicans who convulse, drool and become "wiggly" (according to stage directions), while dealing with bottled-up sexuality. Like satire generally, it's not supposed to adhere to realism. But a goal of Curcio's is to make them empathetic and not two-dimensional punch lines.

Hypocritical characters "condemn people," Curcio says. "But they themselves are being turned on, until they disintegrate," melt, erupt or face other consequences.

Cockroach landed on this play because the group wanted to do a Wellman script, and the presidential election made this one topical.

The setting is a throwback to the cultural wars of the past generation. Wellman wrote the 1991 play after Sen. Jesse Helms went on a rampage against photo artists supported by the National Endowment for the Arts.

Wellman's writing has been described as esoteric and experimental, among other adjectives.

"He does a lot of style like Gertrude Stein, where it repeats but changes" incrementally for effect, Curcio says. Some lines include, "I am not a pervert. I went to Bob Jones University," as well as, "Can you please not use your imagination?" and "That is not a blowjob. That is the Pope," according to a CurtainUp.com review of a production elsewhere.

Two knocks against the play in other cities have been its static stage direction and verbal repetition. In other productions, characters deliver long monologues standing in place. Curcio wants to get around that by stylizing the physicality. Beane says Cockroach presents plays with a "muscular, visceral take on things."

As for onstage sexuality, there are clothed depictions of gyrating. But sex isn't naked-y in this production.

"Not this one. Maybe the midnight show," Curcio jokes. "Just give the audience participation that night."

Contact Doug Elfman at 702-383-0391 or delfman@reviewjournal.com. He blogs at reviewjournal.com/elfman.

.. src="http://img.video.ap.org/p/j/apovn.js " type=text/javascript>..>
 

Powered by
Google Translate
English
Albanian
Arabic
Bulgarian
Catalan
Chinese
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
Estonian
Filipino
Finnish
French
Galician
German
Greek
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Indonesian
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Maltese
Norwegian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swedish
Thai
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese

Saturday, September 20, 2008 

Category: Blogging
 ELECTRIC VISIONS OF PERTERBIA---
 
This production ran one-night only @ the KGPA to packed audiences.  We added a midnight show to accommodate----

.. -->endclickprintexclude-->.. --> startclickprintinclude -->

Director ready to serve up guerrilla theater

.. --> startclickprintexclude -->.. -->------Related Videos-------->.. -->--------------Related Stories---------------->

.. -->------------Sidebar 1--------------->

Ernie Curcio didn't need to get hit by a New York taxicab to realize that he, along with his brand of guerrilla theater, belonged in Las Vegas.

But shortly after said taxi ran him over, he decided it was time to return to Las Vegas, not to get away from reckless cabs but to go to the audiences he knew who were starved for the kind of theater Curcio wanted to bring to the stage.

.. --> startclickprintexclude -->.. --> endclickprintexclude -->

The public will get the chance to see his vision of theater Saturday in Cockroach Theatre's "Visions of Electric Perturbia" at the Katherine Gianaclis Park for the Arts, 5900 Boulder Highway. Curcio will be directing and, along with collaborator Barbara Ann Rollins, financing the performance.

The event, a collection of art, theater and music, is Curcio's effort to get Cockroach involved in late night guerrilla theater again. He is one of the founding members of the theater troupe.

"I got burned out in New York," says Curcio, who lived there for five years before returning to Las Vegas in March. "The audience there is kind of tainted, they've seen it all already. The Vegas audience is hungry, that's what drew me back, that the work would be more appreciated."

A reception featuring sculptures by artist Jesse Smigel kicks off the evening at 9 p.m. That's followed by performances from local bands The Las Vegas Club and The Novelty Act.

At 11 p.m., "Vision Ary," the first of three original short plays, will be presented. The one-person play, written by Evelyn Barnett (Rollins' stage name), deals with a psychic accused of a crime.

"Robert & Anna," was written by a friend of Curcio's, Elan Zafir. It deals with a New York couple who feed off of each other's strengths. Anna is a dancer who needs the financial support of boyfriend Robert. He needs Anna's emotional strength and soul. When she tries to break up with him, things get dicey.

The evening closes with "Perturbed," a play written by Curcio, examining the taboo feelings a teacher has for her fifth-grade student.

In Curcio's absence, the local theater scene grew; he's anxious to be part of it again.

"The energy's great, the talent's great, there's just a lot going on right now in Vegas," Curcio says.

Rollins and Curcio's return to Cockroach is a welcome injection of fresh energy that was missed in their absence, says Levi Fackrell, managing director of Cockroach Theatre.

"Perturbia" isn't part of Cockroach's formal season, Fackrell says. The idea for it was born when he, Curcio and others were trying to plan the upcoming season.

"We were trying to steer it towards mainstream. Ernie said that's great but I really want to do this guerrilla theater," Fackrell says. "It's an experiment and we wanted to get people energized about the park again because it's such a unique place to perform."

Contact reporter Sonya Padgett at spadgett@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4564.

.. --> endclickprintinclude -->
Thursday, September 13, 2007 

Category: Blogging
Dear readers and theatre patrons,

I've just read our second review from our Las Vegas leg of our run of the original dark comedy, The Methuselah Tree, and I just had to jot a thought or two. The title of the review is "The twilight drone," and the production is cited as a "campy mess."

The review journal review: "Methuselah' tries to make something out of nothing"

A Point of information: Cockroach Theatre traveled to Minnesota for a national Fringe festival with this same play- same cast (aside from our new apparition character, The Man in the Attic)- with the same blocking, same lines, same intentions, and yet - a completely different audience. I offer this only as a side-bar because I am suprised at the local critics response to a show that was written up so gloriously by our preceding audience.

fringefestival.com: "I had heard good things about this show, and it exceeded anything I thought it would bring. The acting is unbelievable..."

In fact, what I've discovered (and please see the show and call me out on this) is that the line seems to be drawn in the sand pretty objectively- people really love this play (belly laugh at the jokes, discuss it passionately, and come back to see it in repetition)- or get so lost thinking too hard- it becomes a "metaphorical mess..."- a frustrating and unpleasant experience.

What changes nightly on this show that the response can be so dramatically different?

The audience. The experience becomes so dramatically different from night to night- as a cast, I feel like our audience becomes our final character- "what type of play are we doing tonight?" And that is what makes this play such a strong piece of theatre. It can stand alone as a comedy, an absurdist perspective on the fleeting nature of life- cast a line to people who have a strong faith and inspire them to discuss "The MAn in the Attic" and what happens when he/she's no longer present in your life.

The real richness of a live performance comes to the surface with a script like this, and you can "over"-think it. Most people do. During our run in Minneapolis, a ten year old girl was overheard in the lobby after the show. To paraphrase, she said:

"the man in the attic is God and Jeremy died and danced in heaven with his mom and god at the carnival"

yup.

I don't think this play is a metaphorical mess. I think there is an overall theme that you understand or do not- depending on your personal faith- and that is:

"Humanity needs God- not religion- but a personal connection with something greater than ourselves to finally be happy and healthy. Without it, we're doomed to toil in our basements to find a solution that was never there to begin with."

Do I think you should see this play more than once to enjoy the richness of it?

Yes.

I would say the same thing about Shakespeare, Mamet, Williams, Beckett, Sartre, Checkoff, and a few other guys that did ok in the performing arts. Jayme McGhan, please keep writing and inspiring people to challenge their brains to think about life in a different way- otherwise Theatre Companies like Cockroach Theatre would have thrown in the towel years ago and died of saddness for lack of having interesting words to say, and worthy scripts to produce for the survival of our chosen collaborative art form.

Cast/Crew- lets have a great show tonight- we've got a story to tell.

Respectively,

William Adamson
Artistic Director,
Cockroach Theatre Group
Thursday, September 13, 2007 

Current mood:  good
Category: Blogging
The twilight drone

The Methuselah Tree looks for cosmic meaning in a campy mess

by STEVE BORNFELD

THERE'S ABSURDIST THEATER. Then there's theater that makes your brain cross-eyed. Under the latter you can file The Methuselah Tree, which would've sent Samuel Beckett fleeing to a Neil Simon play.

Staged by Cockroach Theatre, this metaphorical mess -- an hour-long, intermission-less "dark comedy" -- is an unfortunate fumble by talented UNLV playwriting alum Jayme McGhan. It's set in the basement laboratory of Harris (William Adamson), a frantic "metaphysical scientist" (oh hell, he's a mad scientist!) obsessed with inventing a gizmo that, once ingested, replaces sin-riddled souls with a "bionic" version, morally cleansing humanity. His motto: "Every man must save himself." Nagging wife Murielle (Dana Martin) tries to refocus him on their family, dances alone to scratchy records and babbles about building big towers (the Twin ones?). Bratty son Jeremy (Tom Sawicki) decapitates small rodents and frets over "The Man in the Attic" (portrayed as a shadowy, backlit figure).

Dad sacrifices son to test invention ... Mom talks about a tree that roams around, scooping up people like hitchhikers to ride its limbs ... Mom and Dad don't screw anymore ... Mom is sacrificed for Dad's invention ... spirit of son rescues Mom (maybe) ... Attic Man pantomimes ... tree branches invade house and are beaten back ... Dad starts out dangerously unstable and finishes certifiably insane ... one might ask, "What the fuck?"

Maybe it has something to do with post-9/11 America, human frailty, immortality, family dysfunction, cruelty to rodents (PETA alert!), the fallout from a poor sex life, the fate of humanity, the meaning of the universe and God (the dude in the attic). Or maybe not. Whatever this is, it's designed to be deep and plays as dopey -- a strident, mind-numbing muddle. (The program notes even include a detailed plot description to help audiences decode it, an alarming no-confidence vote.) Critiquing the performances by Adamson, Martin and Sawicki might be useful until you wonder whether this could have been saved by Brando, Olivier and Barrymore. Cockroach Theatre is one of the most adventuresome troupes in town, and sadly absent lately. They've been genuinely missed. But while unconventional choices are admirable, indecipherable choices are regrettable.

Methuselah reportedly lived more than 900 years. Patience for The Methuselah Tree dies in less than nine minutes.


The Methuselah Tree

Thu.-Sun, Sept. 13-16, 8 p.m.

Threshold Theatre

www.cockroachtheatre.com

$20
Wednesday, September 12, 2007 

Current mood:  contemplative
Category: Writing and Poetry
"every man must save himself..." by peter schmidt:
...by seeing this show. there is a great deal of depth and complexity to the play that begs one to internilize the deeper questions in life. The symbolism throughout makes this work richly beautiful. it has it all, comedy, touching moments, insanity, and a deep spiritual message that is not put on any soapbox. One can relate, in some strange way, to all the charictors through energetic and heartfelt acting. well worth the watch.


"Genius" by Ryan Nelson:
Jayme McGhan's, The Methuselah Tree, is like manna from that place on top of the clouds. I've never seen something that made me think and laugh out loud at the same time. Jayme McGhan is a really up and comer. Will Adamson, as the metaphysical scientist Harris, gave a masterful performance, capturing all the vim and zeal this wild eyed inventor demands. The Methusela Tree is everything The Fringe is about.


"Amazing." by Matt Weerts:
I had heard good things about this show, and it exceeded anything I thought it would bring. The acting is unbelievable, led by a guy who, according to his bio, grew up in Vegas. I cant picture riding my BMX around the strip, but it served him well, because he hit every note without overplaying any of them. McGhan's script slides between comedy, drama, absurdity and surrealism with lines that cut through metal one minute and slide back across the pond like a child in the middle of winter the next. In a festival loaded with talent, I can excuse us for not seeing this play coming. But now there is no excuse for anybody out there reading this. Get to one of the last three performances of this show. This company traveled from Las Vegas to put something great on for us, and I just hope we show them what Minneapolis is all about by selling them out their last three performances. Wonderful Show.


"This is what the fringe is all about!" by Douglas Lafferty:
After a long day of fringing, I ended my evening with Cockroach Theatre Company's (from Las Vegas) production of The Methuselah Tree. I can't remember the last time I've seen such an intense work of theatre. The actors were incredible! If you like DARK comedy and absurdity, this one is for you. I was still thinking about it when I woke up this morning. High-energy, high concept, very funny, and at times quite scary. Overall, highly reccomended!


"absurdist indeed" by cathy vanstralen:
This play is ironic, delightful, mystifying, shocking, touching, funny. The actors are all superb. Dana Martin is nothing short of a miracle on the stage. This is an intense experience...I thought of this play long after it was over.


"Thank God for Theatre like This" by The plays the thing:
I think we've witnessed a theatrical moment of genuine brilliance at the theatre garage...and I do not throw that word around lightly. The Methuselah Tree is that rare event that DEMANDS an audience member to use their minds, hearts, and souls. It cries out, "Push aside your apathy for one moment and fire your synapses, feel something genuine!" Unlike most absurdist plays, this one presents a new hope, a deep hope. One can forgive the playwright for the religious overtones because, well, frankly they make the show what it is. Without them, it would fall flat on it's face. I feel proud to have witnessed this.


"metaphoric love and religion" by Fringivitis Vulgaris:
I saw this one in a nearly empty house, early in the Fringe. My blood sugar was low, and it was the third show of the night. The combination was enough to make this show less simple than the script really is. Briefly: what a freakshow that family is! I very much liked the actors, particularly the son and the Man in the Attic. The use of the shadow screen was effective. In general, the props were an entertaining part of the show. The Tree itself was a letdown, both as prop and as metaphor. (Brittle tentacle-monsters, anyone?) I recommend this show for that classic WTF feeling.


"Too abstract" by Ed R:
This play started out with promise - with interesting set, quirky characters, and excellent acting. But for me - much (all) of the humor fell flat - and the screen play quickly disintegrated into a heap of tapioca pudding. The turning point for me was the "viorous shaking" scene and on my ride home - my thoughts turned to how the screenplay could have taken a better, different direction at that point. Anyway - it was a near full house - and one small contingent in the back was at periodic full guffaws. If nothing else - will provide interesting dinner conversation in trying to deconstruct the play.


"Mixed feelings." by Rex Winsome:
I don't know exactly why i didn't like this play more. I could have loved it. Some of the acting was weak, but some of it was great. The absurdism was marvelous, but some of the dialog was too like some absurd classics, threatening to become absurdist cliche' (a cliche that works great when you run with it, and terribly if you stumble into it). The plot starts out wonderfully mysterious and potentially epic, metaphysically important, then devolves into just a love story. A great existential love story where the couple's romantic ideal is non-existence, but a love story nonetheless.


"Neither fish nor fowl" by poetess extrarordinaire:
Great premise but lost the existential underpinings on too many props, shouting and attempts at comedy.


"Huh??" by Kay Jackson:
I appreciate absurdist theater, love being challenged with interesting ideas, and give kudos to artists willing to step way out on the edge. Unfortunately at the end of this show my reaction, like that of my companions, was "what????" and worse, "who cares?"
Wednesday, September 12, 2007 

Current mood:  bitchy
If you're interested to see what the Las Vegas papers and opinions are saying-

By ANTHONY DEL VALLE
REVIEW-JOURNAL
REVIEW
What: "The Methuselah Tree"

When: 8 p.m. Thursday-Sunday

Where: Threshold Dance Theatre, 4780 W. Harmon Ave., Suite 10

Tickets: $15-$20 (cockroachtheatre.com)

Grade: D-

The first minutes of Cockroach Theatre's "The Methuselah Tree," by Jayme McGhan, fool you into thinking it's about something.

We're in the basement laboratory of a middle-aged man. We know he's middle-aged, because the young actor, William Adamson, has gray coloring streaked throughout his hair.

We find out he's a metaphysical scientist obsessed with his work. Wife Murielle (Dana Martin) wants more attention and talks a lot about the once-beautiful sensation of being touched. Son Jeremy (the angelic-looking Thomas Sawicki) does weird things like decapitating hamsters and setting their corpses on popsicle sticks. ("Boys will be boys," says Daddy.) Then there's that man in the attic (seen only in silhouette) who keeps saying to Jeremy (through a hole in the ceiling), "Receive me, I am the light."

This is the stuff of which fascinating absurdist drama is made. But McGhan has much less on his mind than it first appears. The meanings of all these arty symbols becomes apparent very early in the 54-minute evening, and you keep hoping that something more complex is about to happen.

Director Sarah Norris is not a good match for McGhan's hocus-pocus. She treats his simple plot and pretentious dialogue as if it were vintage Edward Albee. She encourages the actors to pump up the laughs and interpret, rather than become, their characters. Norris might have been able to bring this script to life if she hadn't worked so hard to make things funny.

Adamson is too cerebral, too sane, to convince us that he's an eccentric scientist on a mission. Martin stands outside her role, commenting on it. Sawicki gets off to a bumpy start when he makes an entrance that seems determined to force yucks, but manages several moments of beautifully felt honesty.

Scott Fadale's set does a fine job of suggesting the lunacy of this basement of horrors, but the uncredited lights are torture if you sit in the wrong seats. Glares from unmerciful gels blind the eye and frequently leave the actors in shadow.

The real problem, though, is that the playwright seems fascinated with a form of drama that his material doesn't justify. His dialogue promises surprise wrapped in a profound message, but the audience is always a step ahead of the author. And that's two steps too many.

Anthony Del Valle can be reached at DelValle@aol.com. You can write him c/o Las Vegas Review-Journal, P.O. Box 70, Las Vegas, NV 89125.
Saturday, September 01, 2007 

BARNES AND NOBLE (CHARLESTON/RAMPART)
is sponsoring Cockroach Theatre with a weekend fundraiser.  Anyone who comes in and makes a purchase today or tomorrow can present a coupon (CLICK'>http://www.cockroachtheatre.com/resources/pdfs/barnes-and-noble.pdf">CLICK FOR COUPON)  A PORTION OF THE SALE WILL GO DIRECTLY TO SUPPORT COCKROACH THEATRE!!!!! 

Buy a CD, a Book, Back to School Supplies, whatever- and help out your local cockroach theatre!

Performance today at 2:00pm, a snippet of our show that opens next week, and a bit about what we're up to as a growing theatre company. 

PLEASE REPOST!!!

Regards,

Will Adamson
Artistic Director