Friday, January 25, 2013

Jesus Hops the A Train... with six Gypsy Awards

Jesus Hopped the A Train brought home more honors from the Seattle Theater Writers circle than any other play of 2012; the Azeotrope production received six awards for excellence among the group's second annual slate of Gypsy Rose Lee Awards.

Seattle Theater Writers recognized Richard Nguyen Sloniker
for Excellence as a Lead Male Actor for his performance in
Azeotrope's Jesus Hopped the A Train, which received six
Gypsy Awards in all, including Excellence in Production of
a Play. Azeotrope photo by Jessica Martin.
“The winners represent coming to a consensus, which can be quite a challenge,” said Miryam Gordon, ringleader of Seattle Theater Writers. “It’s not easy to get people with very different opinions to agree. I think if we all agree, that must mean more than any one of our opinions on our own. And we all take these selections quite seriously.”

In addition to awards in 32 categories, Seattle Theater Writers also gave a Special Award of Recognition to Kathy Hsieh for Excellence in Playwriting in recognition of her long-running serial, Sex In Seattle, which wrapped up with Episode 20 last year. 

This was Weisenheimer’s first year participating with Seattle Theater Writers. My main difference with the group was my love for Strawberry Theatre Workshop’s production of Accidental Death of an Anarchist, which I received my vote for top play of the year as well as my nod for excellence in performance of a lead male actor for Ryan Higgins. I wasn’t able to persuade the group to go along with those particular ratings. As Gordon noted, reaching consensus is a challenge, and all of the honorees are most worthy of recognition.

The 2012 Gypsy Rose Lee Award Winners are:

Excellence in Production of a Play 
(Large Budget): The Pitmen Painters — ACT Theatre
(Small Budget): Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope

Excellence in Production of a Musical
(Large Budget): The Producers — Village Theatre
(Small Budget): Spring Awakening — Balagan Theatre 

Excellence in Direction of a Play
(Large Budget): Allison Narver — Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre 
(Small Budget): Desdemona Chiang — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope

Excellence in Direction of a Musical
(Large Budget): Steve Tomkins — The Producers — Village Theatre
(Small Budget): Eric Ankrim — Spring Awakening — Balagan Theatre

Excellence in Performance as a Lead Male Actor
(Large Budget): David Hogan — The Art of Racing in the Rain — Book-It Repertory
(Small Budget): Richard N. Sloniker — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope

Excellence in Performance as a Lead Female Actor
(Large Budget): Jennifer Lee Taylor — Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company
(Small Budget): Mary Ewald — Happy Days — New City Theater

Excellence in Performance as a Supporting Male Actor — any non-lead
(Large Budget): Nick DeSantis — The Producers — Village Theatre
(Small Budget): Dumi — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope

Excellence in Performance as a Supporting Female Actor — any non-lead
(Large Budget): Jeanne Paulsen — Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company 
(Small Budget): Nike Imoru — Titus Andronicus — upstart crow

Excellence in Performance as an Ensemble
(Large Budget): Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre (Kirsten Potter, Basil Harris, Montana von Fliss)
(Small Budget): Kittens in a Cage — Annex Theatre (Francesca Mondelli, Katie Driscoll, Lisa Viertel, Laurel Ryan, Tracy Leigh, Erin Pike, Erin Stewart)

Excellence in Set Design
(Large Budget): Scott Bradley — Clybourne Park — Seattle Repertory Theatre
(Small Budget): Deanna Zibello — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope 

Excellence in Costume Design
(Large Budget): Catherine Hunt — Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre
(Small Budget): Katie Hegarty — The Fairytale Lives of Russian Girls — WET

Excellence in Lighting Design
(Large Budget): L.B. Morse — Hedda Gabler — Intiman Theatre
(Small Budget): Amiya Brown — The Skriker — Janice Findley Productions

Excellence in Sound Design
(Large Budget): Evan Mosher — The Bells — Strawberry Theatre Workshop
(Small Budget): Michael White Hayes — Team of Heroes: Behind Closed Doors — Annex Theatre

Excellence in Musical Direction
(Large Budget): Jmichael — Pullman Porter Blues — Seattle Repertory Theatre
(Small Budget): Kimberley Dare — Spring Awakening — Balagan Theatre 

Excellence in Choreography or Movement
(Large Budget): Kristin Bohr Holland — The Producers — Village Theatre
(Small Budget): Pat Graney — The Skriker — Janice Findley Productions

Excellence in Local Playwriting
S.P. Miskowski — Emerald City — Live Girls! Theater

Excellence in Local Composing
Christian "Lil Kriz" Beeber — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope

Founded in 2011 and comprised of local writers and reviewers, Seattle Theater Writers is a group dedicated to raising public awareness of theater practitioners and the work produced by professional Equity and non-Equity theater organizations.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Seattle Theatre Writers nominations for Gypsy Awards

Azeotrope's Jesus Hopped the A Train
topped all shows with 10 nominations
for Gypsy Awards from Seattle Theater
Writers. The winners will be
announced Jan. 25
Weiseinheimer has been playing in the sandbox with Seattle Theater Writers, a critic's circle of local theater writers and reviewers, which just goes to show the group isn't too picky. Last week we put our heads together and came up with nominations for the second annual Gypsy Rose Lee Awards, our gang's top honors for excellence in Seattle-area theater. The winners will be announced Jan. 25.

“The range of nominees is a terrific representation of the enormous variety of excellent theatrical performances last year in Seattle, as well as the variety of opinions from our writers!” said Seattle Theater Writers founder and ringleader Miryam Gordon. “We feel our final slate reflects a real cornucopia of delights from a critics’ choice perspective.”

Azeotrope's Jesus Hopped the A Train leads this year's pack with 10 nominations. Torso, by Printer's Devil Theatre, received nine, and Or, (Seattle Rep) and Pygmalion (Seattle Shakespeare Company) each received seven. There was a lot of love for the Rep, which received a total of 13 nominations, the most of any company.

The rest of the Seattle Theater Writers: José Amador (Seattle Star), Stefan D-W (The Sunbreak), Miryam Gordon (Seattle Gay News and CultureMob), Jerry Kraft (Seattle Actor), Michael Strangeways (Seattle Gay Scene), and Scott Taylor (Drama in the Hood). You can follow Seattle Theater Writers on Facebook.

The nominees are:

Excellence in Production of a Play
(Large Budget):
Accidental Death of an Anarchist — Strawberry Theatre Workshop
Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company
The Pitmen Painters — ACT Theatre

(Small Budget):
Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope
Kittens in a Cage — Annex Theatre
Superior Donuts — Seattle Public Theater
Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre

Excellence in Production of a Musical
(Large Budget):
The Producers — Village Theatre

(Small Budget):
A Mouse Who Knows Me — Annex Theatre
Avenue Q — Balagan Theatre
Spring Awakening — Balagan Theatre

Excellence in Direction of a Play
(Large Budget):
Gabriel Baron — Accidental Death of an Anarchist — Strawberry Theatre Workshop
Valerie Curtis-Newton — Dirty Story — Intiman Theatre
Allison Narver — Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Jeff Steitzer — Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company

(Small Budget):
Russ Banham — Superior Donuts — Seattle Public Theater
David Burnett — Torso — Printer’s Devil Theatre
Desdemona Chiang — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope
Suzanne Cohen — Odin's Horse — Mirror Stage Company

Excellence in Direction of a Musical
(Large Budget):
Steve Tomkins — The Producers — Village Theatre

(Small Budget):
Eric Ankrim — Avenue Q — Balagan Theatre
Eric Ankrim — Spring Awakening — Balagan Theatre

Excellence in Performance as a Lead Actor
(Large Budget):
Mark Anders — Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company
Ryan Higgins — Accidental Death of an Anarchist — Strawberry Theatre Workshop
David Hogan — The Art of Racing in the Rain — Book-It Repertory
Trieu Tran — Uncle Ho to Uncle Sam — ACT Theatre

(Small Budget):
Richard N. Sloniker — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope
John Q. Smith — Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre

Excellence in Performance as a Lead Actress
(Large Budget):
Suzanne Bouchard — The Glass Menagerie — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Kirsten Potter — Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Jennifer Lee Taylor — Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company

(Small Budget):
Mary Ewald — Happy Days — New City Theater
Hannah Victoria Franklin — White Hot — Marxiano Productions
Sarah Milici — Suddenly Last Summer — Theatre 9/12
Sarah Rudinoff — Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre

Excellence in Performance as a Supporting Actor — any non-lead
(Large Budget):
Peter Crook — Clybourne Park — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Nick DeSantis — The Producers — Village Theatre
Jason Harber — Accidental Death of an Anarchist — Strawberry Theatre Workshop
Dan Kremer — Antony and Cleopatra — Seattle Shakespeare Company

(Small Budget):
Dumi — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope
Stephen Hando — Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre
Charles Norris — Superior Donuts — Seattle Public Theater
Ray Tagavilla — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope

Excellence in Performance as a Supporting Actress — any non-lead
(Large Budget):
E. Faye Butler — Pullman Porter Blues — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Ryah Nixon — Rent — The 5th Avenue Theatre
Jeanne Paulsen — Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company

(Small Budget):
Susannah Burney — Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre
Angela DiMarco — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope
Nike Imoru — Titus Andronicus — upstart crow
Morgan Rowe — Emerald City — Live Girls! Theater

Excellence in Performance as an Ensemble
(Large Budget):
Accidental Death of an Anarchist — Strawberry Theatre Workshop (Ryan Higgins, Jason Harber, Timothy Hyland, Galen Joseph Osier, MJ Sieber, Rhonda J. Soikowski)
Old Times — ACT Theatre (Anne Allgood, Cheyenne Casebier, Jeffrey Frace)
Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre (Kirsten Potter, Basil Harris, Montana von Fliss)
The Pitmen Painters — ACT Theatre (Daniel Brockley, Christine Marie Brown, Frank Lawler, Charles Leggett, Jason Marr, Joseph P. McCarthy, Morgan Rowe, R. Hamilton Wright)

(Small Budget):
Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope (Richard Nguyen Sloniker, Dumi, Ray Tagavilla, Patrick Allcorn, Angela DiMarco)
Kittens in a Cage — Annex Theatre (Francesca Mondelli, Katie Driscoll, Lisa Viertel, Laurel Ryan, Tracy Leigh, Erin Pike, Erin Stewart)
Titus Andronicus — upstart crow (Amy Thone, Kate Wisniewski, Tracy Hyland, Brenda Joyner, Rhonda Soikowski, Kelly Kitchens, Ki Gottberg, Nike Imoru, Peggy Gannon, Sarah Harlett, Therese Diekhans, Zoey Belyea, Kacey Shiflet, Nicole Merat, Terri Weagant, Donna Wood)
Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre (Sarah Rudinoff, John Q. Smith, Stephen Hando, Susanna Burney, Emily Chisholm)

Excellence in Set Design
(Large Budget):
Scott Bradley — Clybourne Park — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Matthew Smucker — Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Carey Wong — A Single Shard — Seattle Children's Theater

(Small Budget):
Bryan Boyd and Suzi Tucker — The Illusion — Sound Theater Company
Timothy Siciliano — The Skriker — Janice Findley Productions
Craig Wollam — Superior Donuts — Seattle Public Theater
Deanna Zibello — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope

Excellence in Costume Design
(Large Budget):
Ron Erickson — Accidental Death of an Anarchist — Strawberry Theatre Workshop
Catherine Hunt — Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Deanne Middleton — Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company
Deb Trout — Romeo and Juliet — Intiman Theatre

(Small Budget):
Eve Cohen — The Skriker — Janice Findley Productions
Katie Hegarty — The Fairytale Lives of Russian Girls — WET
Nina Moser — Happy Days — New City Theater
Kimberley Newton — Titus Andronicus — upstart crow

Excellence in Lighting Design
(Large Budget):
Michelle Habeck — A Single Shard — Seattle Children's Theatre
L.B. Morse — Hedda Gabler — Intiman Theatre
Rick Paulsen — No Man's Land — ACT Theatre
Andrew D. Smith — Pygmalion — Seattle Shakespeare Company

(Small Budget):
Robert Aguilar — Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre
Amiya Brown — The Skriker — Janice Findley Productions
Geoff Korff — Titus Andronicus — upstart crow
Jessica Trundy — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope

Excellence in Sound Design
(Large Budget):
Evan Mosher — The Bells — Strawberry Theatre Workshop
Chris R. Walker — Or, — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Robertson Witmer — The Art of Racing in the Rain — Book-It Repertory

(Small Budget):
Paul Hansen — The Skriker — Janice Findley Productions
Michael White Hayes — Team of Heroes: Behind Closed Doors — Annex Theatre
Jay Weinland — Odin's Horse — Mirror Stage Company

Excellence in Musical Direction
(Large Budget):
Jmichael — Pullman Porter Blues — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Tim Symons and Bruce Monroe — The Producers — Village Theatre

(Small Budget):
Kimberley Dare — Spring Awakening — Balagan Theatre

Excellence in Choreography or Movement
(Large Budget):
Kristin Bohr Holland — The Producers — Village Theatre
Sonya Dawkins — Pullman Porter Blues — Seattle Repertory Theatre
Denis Jones — Damn Yankees — The 5th Avenue Theatre

(Small Budget):
Pat Graney — The Skriker — Janice Findley Productions
Paul Ray — Disco Pigs — Sound Theater Company and Giant Productions
Lexi Scamehorn and Kathryn Van Meter — Spring Awakening — Balagan Theatre

Excellence in Local Playwriting
Kelleen Conway Blanchard — Kittens in a Cage — Annex Theatre
Keri Healey — Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre
S.P. Miskowski — Emerald City — Live Girls! Theater
Robert Schenkkan — A Single Shard — Seattle Children's Theatre

Excellence in Local Composing
John Ackerman — Torso — Printer's Devil Theatre
Christian "Lil Kriz" Beeber — Jesus Hopped the A Train — Azeotrope
Myra Platt and Theresa Holmes — Prairie Nocturne — Book-It Repertory
Anastasia Workman — Cafe Nordo: Somethin's Burning

Sunday, January 13, 2013

24 little hours

A film crew has been at 14/48: The World's Quickest Theater Festival the last couple of weekends shooting a documentary about the event, and last night as I was waiting in line at ACT Theatre they pulled me aside for a quick interview from the audience perspective. My comments were that 14/48 is better than Christmas, and that we reserve dates for it on our calendars as soon as we know them. I also allowed that, despite the fact that the odds are horribly stacked against the artists, somehow they usually prevail and the pressure cooker that is 14/48 delivers gems. Except, I added, for Friday night.

As luck would have it, we had friends and business colleagues in town from San Francisco Friday and dragged them out to our favorite theater event, and the result was something of a dud. We weren't very fond of any of the plays. The best of the lot was Pianos, Bikes, Swimming, and God, written by Wayne Rawley and directed by Pattie Miles Van Beuzekom. The sketch featured a lesbian couple, played by Amy Christer and Tonya Andrews, who were freaking out about the impending arrival of their first child. Beyond that, Darragh Kennan's caveman playing off the crowd during Gift From Moon was a rare highlight.

Our group speculated that the evening's theme, "God Will Provide", caused the artists to get altogether too ontological about things. At any rate, nobody seemed to think God provided us with very good plays on Friday. Despite this, everyone seemed to enjoy the outing, and the company. We hoped that plays Saturday, based on the theme "Something to Write Home About", would indeed be noteworthy.

Amazingly, the same group of artists that whiffed on Friday delivered seven pretty solid shows on Saturday. My favorite again was penned by Rawley, his Camp Lake SunnyLake, directed by Andrew Huntley, being a hilarious spoof of slasher flicks, in which all of the drug- or sex-crazed camp counselors get whacked. I know, sounds like a million laughs. It was! I also really loved I Dare You, written by Marcy Rodenborn and directed by Beth Raas-Bergquist, in which a sketchy character played by the delightful Seanjohn Walsh is running something of a hostel for traveling youth. They get high, they get jiggy on public transit, and in the end get past some issues in their pasts. In Betsy Barker, Episode #37 Teru McDonald plays the title character, an undercover animal control agent who busts up a hilariously evil puppy mill, leaving carnage in her wake. I know, sounds like a million laughs. It was! Mark Fullerton directed the script by Scot Augustson. Paul Mullin's The Patriarch was the story of a bitter father, his priest and soldier sons, and long-suffering wife, directed by Pamala Mijatov and performed admirably by Ben Burris, Danial Chercover, Stephanie Kim, and Sean Ryan. Not a bit funny, but the one serious gut-socker of the evening.

Strangely enough, the same thing happened last January, when we panned the Friday night shows of 14/48 only to love the same group of artists' offerings on Saturday. We wonder a lot about whether the day or time slot matters to the quality of the performances. I don't know that we have enough evidence to say. I suggested last year that it was a Friday the 13th thing. This year... New Moon?

Big props to Rawley, who nabbed the weekend's Mazen Award for his contribution to the spirit of risk taking and camaraderie embodied in the process (in addition to writing two nice scripts.) We really loved his Live! From the Last Night of My Life at Theater Schmeater last year, and look forward to the Schmee's production of his Attack of the Killer Murder... of Death later this year. We also have to add another rave for Megan Ahiers; as we waited in line folks were still talking about her two great performances from last weekend.

Mark your calendars for March 9, when 14/48 presents theater anonymous, in which none of the cast know any of the others until the night of the performance; for Kamikaze Weekend June 21 and 22, in which none of the participants know if they'll write, direct, act, design, or be a member of the band until  a random drawing; and for a seven-night 14/48 marathon Sept. 6-14, with seven plays every night (which we reckon makes it 63/168, which isn't as catchy a title for a theater festival.)

Friday, January 11, 2013

14/48 First Weekend, January 2013

It's almost time for the second weekend of January 2013 14/48, the world's quickest theater festival. So, we'd better write about the first weekend. 

Friday the 4th had a couple of highlights for us. The theme was "Back to Square One," and the opening play written by Maggie Lee and directed by Paul Budraitis, The White Queen, was a thrilling chess game. The always awesome Ben McFadden and David Brown-King battled as a knight and bishop on a giant chess board in a way that made me laugh with delight, even with my limited knowlege of chess. Carolyn Marie Monroe was a conniving queen and Lantz Wagner a vicious king in a game to the death. 

Expecting by Brendan Healy and dircted by Manuel Cawaling was a fun twist on the expectations we have about prospective parents, birth and adoptive. The bio parents, played trashy and sweet by Jason Harber and Libby Barnard, had their own way of testing the prospective adoptive couple's parenting skills—catching babies falling from the sky. Or dolls falling from the grid. Which is funny. Ok, you had to be there.

The Hulk (Trick Danneker) gets ready to make his move on
the dying 70-year-old virgin (Megan Ahiers) in Touch For
the Very First Time. 14/48 photo by Joe Iano.
Our favorite of the night was Touch for the Very First Time. Honestly, it's not just because I love everything I've ever seen that Matt Smith has written or Megan Ahiers has acted in. It was also directed by Jose Amador and the other actors were Chris Ensweiler, Trick Danneker, and Rebecca Shepherd. What a line up. This was an absolute delight. Ahier's aging character, stricken by cancer, announces to her friend that having sex is on her bucket list. And she wants it to be the first time for the guy too. So her friend figures, where can she find inexperienced men who can be persuaded to have sex with a dying 70-year-old virgin? Comic-Con! Of the two pals, it turns out "Spider Man" has tangled before; and Ensweiler's hilarious depiction of spidey sex is a sequence I can't quite forget. But "the Incredible Hulk" is taken with the woman he's been told by the quick-thinking friend is the first Bond girl—that's right, Ursula Andress—and the play ends on a touching note.

The theme for Saturday was "Over the Edge." We thought this was a strong night. The opener, In His Eyes, by Tina LaPlant and directed by Timothy Hyland, leaned a little too close to the theological for me, but the whiff of moralizing was cut with plenty of humor expressed by a farting nun, and Amanda Lee Williams, Libby Bernard, Carolyn Marie Monroe turned in redeeming performances. 

Jason Harber, left, and his ninja armadillo friend Chris
Ensweiler in 21 Run. 14/48 photo by Joe Iano.
21 Run was one we won't soon forget; by Matt Smith—who wrote two absolute gems this weekend—and directed by Paul Budraitis. The 14/48 gods were smiling when they hurled this weekend's Mazen award winner Jason Harber into the cast. He played a socially awkward guy alone on his 21st birthday to perfection. Chris Ensweiler, a superb actor we've often admired for his clown talents, got to clown it up as an imaginary friend/alter ego who's also an armadillo. And David Brown-King was terrific as the forgetful real-life friend. It would have been memorable—and scary—enough as a funny, goofy play about the inner life of guys. But Harber's character had just downed 21 shots in his solo birthday celebration, and the ninja armadillo was clowning around right next to our seats, and then the spotlight lit us up and I knew we were in trouble as Harber staggered straight for us and unloaded those shots. I felt a big gob smack against the side of my head. I think the Weisenheimer got the brunt of it. Turns out pink silly string is a rather good simulation for vomit! Everyone who came out to clean up at intermission was very concerned about us, kept asking if we were ok; we thought it was hilarious. 

Slice of Life by Eric Lane Barnes and directed by Manuel Cawaling was a terrific closer. They had a dream cast with the comedic chops to make this play sizzle. Ben McFadden, who owns every stage I've ever seen him on, killed as the knife-wielding, chain smoking, exasperated chef. Sarah Winsor as the  waitress was perfectly intimidated and infuriated by Megan Ahier's character, a bitch-on-wheels nightmare customer. Mark Boeker as her husband practically quivered with strained nerves trying to please his wife on her birthday and longing for some kindness. And Justin Huertas got the punch line as the busser who gives the horrible woman her comeuppance in the form of a gluten-free almond cake delivered directly to her pie hole, since the silverware was missing. And old gag but a satisfying one. 

And these are just the highlights; so many more brave performances, costumes, props, jokes, both nights. And as always, a big shout out to the fantastic 14/48 band who add so much to these plays.