Monday, December 10, 2007

The Shalimar LATE AND LIVE

The Shalimar
LATE AND LIVE
A buffet of exciting, transgressive new performances by some of NYC's favorite downtown artists.

THIS WEEKEND!
10PM, Dec. 13-15
$FREE$ with Admission to You People
$5 if you don't see You People
$2 Brooklyn Brewery Brews and $4 Whiskey regardless

Thursday December 13th
Neal Medlyn's R.I.P. BABY MEDLYN, an all-new, all-hip-hop memorial service for Neal's dead baby, complete with back-up dancers and tribute video with Brendan Kennedy and others and Jody Christopherson performs something brand new.

Friday December 14th
Journey Home, the first episode of The RedTerror Squad's radio drama about a little family who take the short-cut to one kitty's homeland, Zhenesse's Christmas Dinner, and something amazing by Tommy Smith.

Saturday December 15th
Adam Lerman's America and brand spanking new work by Jessica Hedrick and Kim Gainer.

More performances to be announced, please check theshalimar.blogspot.com for updates.

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YOU PEOPLE review

New Theatre Corps

Monday, December 10, 2007
You People

In five short glimpses of people you've seen before but possibly never considered, The Shalimar have painted an impressive mosaic of American life -- through the eyes of the disaffected, the obese, the immigrants, and the religious. From comic parables like "Deseret Desire" to the bleak realism of "Tostitos," it's time to meet You People.

Reviewed by Aaron Riccio

Be they religious, obese, foreign, rebellious, or illegal, they're still people first, and The Shalimar's latest production You People aims to remind us of that, whether it's by doing a few rock numbers or a few one-act plays. This approach, while a bit sloppy and not as put together as LA FEMME EST MORTE (or Why I Should Not F!%# My Son), succeeds at being a lot like a melting pot of ideas, and there isn't a bad play in the bunch.

The first playful piece is Josh Liveright's Deseret Desire, in which we see two lovers getting all worked up with some serious kissing. Unfortunately for John (Justin Okin), Desiree (Laurie Naughton) will only take things so far on account of her religious beliefs ("butt stuff" is apparently OK from time to time -- ah, the vagaries of interpretation), and thanks to director Camilo Fontecilla's clever direction (the two sit at a distance from one another, responding to each other's kisses without actually giving or receiving them), we can actually see his frustration. It isn't long before John's agreeing to marry her, bring his kid up in the Church, hell, go to church himself -- anything for God, ahem, sex -- which says a lot about how some people treat religion in this country, especially when the sheets come off.

The next piece, Sharyn Rothstein's Miss Morley's Revenge is a more straightforward piece, and while it's nothing we haven't seen before, it's always a pleasure to see someone stand up for themselves, even when it's through the gaze of an impenetrable smile. In this case, Marilyn Hardy (Dawn Evans) is one of those self-righteous offenders who suggests "diets" and "moderation" like they've never been considered before, and Laura Morley (Kelli Lynn Harrison) just smiles and nods, being endearingly sarcastic as she plots her revenge. It's not a particularly deep play, but R. J. Tolan directs it without any menace, making it ordinary enough to remind us of just how often this well-intentioned discrimination goes on.

In Nastaran Ahmadi's Splinter, the discrimination is a bit more opaque. Man (Charles Semine) is an Irish student whose visa in America is about to run out. Woman (Jen Taher) would rather he didn't, as she's in love with him, but despite her desperate offers to marry him, he doesn't want to stay: "Being in America's only fun if you're American." It's an insidious comment, especially since Jessi D. Hill directs him as being so well-adjusted, happy, and normal; if we can't make this sort of visitor like us (the air has a smell, he says), who will like us?

Taking a more comic approach to the same thought is Hilly Hicks Jr.'s Blanco, in which an illegal immigrant, Blanca (Nina Freeman) tries to Google her American dream, with the help of her electronics store friend, Daryl (Blaire Brooks). Their discovery, through a gay video chat site, is that in America, you can not only achieve anything, but you can be anyone, and be accepted for it. Samuel Buggeln uses two unnamed actors (Chris McKeon and Chip Brookes) to bring the open gates of the Internet to life, but manages also to achieve a level of solemnity when "El Blanco" and "Army Cock" reveal who they are when they're not dreaming.

The best piece of the night is Michael John Garces' Tostitos, which is a rather frightening glimpse at disaffected youth in this country. Red (Andres Munar) rides around the stage on a bike, snarling at everything, while his punk hanger-on, Annie (Jenny Gomez) follows on a skateboard. Tanya (Barrett Doss), a good girl, has unfortunately fallen for Red, and he berates her even as he takes free sodas and candies from her, refusing to make any emotional connection. When Tanya's father, Danny (Edwin Lee Gibson) shows up, the two violently collide, and the lack of respect and understanding on both sides is frighteningly palpable. May Adrales doesn't hold anything back in the physical staging of this piece, which means she doesn't attempt to explain or justify the way these characters behave, and the piece is better for its mysterious bursts of anger, its violent teasing, and its aggressive banter (all of which Mr. Garces has refined far better in this short piece than in his last disjointed play, Acts of Mercy).

The evening transitions through each of these plays with songs from Davide Beradi and Tommy Smith, but with the exception of the last number, "You People," which actually engages the audience, these songs serve only to give the cast enough time to change the sets, and simply aren't clear enough; the direction from Shoshona Currier and Joey Williamson doesn't help either, as the 80s costuming doesn't fit the modernity of the other pieces, nor does it really speak to those people -- what they're doing is too easily identified with, too much a part of our culture. But if the play's the thing, then You People's got it.

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The InterArt Annex (500 West 52nd Street)
Tickets (212-352-3101): $10.00
Performances (through 12/16): Thurs. - Sun. @ 8:00

Posted by Aaron Riccio at 12/10/2007 11:33:00 AM

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Friday, November 16, 2007

tickets on sale for You People

You People (Short Plays About Those People)









The Interart Annex
500 West 52nd Street #2W
btwn 10th and 11th Aves

Nov 30-Dec 16
Thurs - Sun
all performances at 8pm

only
$10

get your tix here
or call 212-352-3101



Blanco
by Hilly Hicks Jr.
directed by Sam Buggeln

Deseret Desire
by Josh Liveright
directed by Camilo Fontecilla

Miss Morely's Revenge
by Sharyn Rothstein
directed by R.J. Tolan

Splinter
by Nastaran Ahmadi
directed by Jessi D. Hill

Tostitos
by Michael John Garcés
directed by May Adrales

Songs by Tommy Smith and Davide Berardi
directed by Shoshona Currier and Joey Williamson

with
Matt Bridges, Chip Brookes, Blaire Brooks, Devin Dunne Cannon, Barrett Doss, Dawn Evans*, Nina Freeman*, Edwin Lee Gibson*, Jenny Gomez, Kelli Lynn Harrison, Heather Lamb, Lizzie Moore, Andres Munar*, Laurie Naughton*, Justin Okin*, Allison Jill Posner, Charles Semine*, Jen Taher*

Shani Colleen Murfin stage manager
Joey Williamson musical director
Ariella Bowden costumes
Ien DeNio sound designer
Lisa Kopitsky fight choreographer
Lucas Benjaminh Krech lighting designer

*denotes member of actors equity association

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Tuesday, October 30, 2007

seeking hard rock bad ass hair band singers



The Shalimar is currently seeking submissions for its evening of new short plays. The show features a "band" of guys who narrate the entire evening with comedic 80s rock songs by Tommy Smith.

The show runs Nov 29-Dec 16, Thurs- Sun nights, all performances at 8pm. Rehearsals begin Nov 10.

Seeking: White males, any age. Rock singers with a great comic streak. No instruments necessary. Air guitar skills a plus.

Please submit your headshot and resume to staffing@shalimarproductions.org with ROCK BAND in the subject line. No Pay. EQUITY/NON-EQUITY

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Tuesday, October 09, 2007

just a tease...




edited by Joey Williamson. filmed by some guys in Edinburgh.

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Monday, October 01, 2007

Knighthawk

Tommy Smith is a magical human being. He is writing the body of The Minstrel Show. He went to Juilliard. He programs a night at Galapagos (actually, does he still do that? Hey Tommy, do you still do that?) He makes performance pieces with Reggie Watts. He drinks whisky. He has a family house in Ireland. He writes plays in verse and he likes to rap. He is wearing the blond wig in the video below. Please watch it.



Knighthawk Director's Cut from Tommy Smith on Vimeo.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Welcome to Wallindia

Go see Curtis' traffic island this weekend!

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Thursday, September 20, 2007

more pictures of major award winners

I know you must be sick of it by now, both of you who read this blog, but here are more pictures of us having memorable heart-warming times in Edinburgh. Lynsey, one of our SCAMP street team sent these to me. They warmed my teeny tiny heart.

Here we are at Oloroso the night we opened. The people you don't recognize are Sam from SCAMP (next to Joey), Alex a SCAMP actor (next to me, where he BELONGS!) and Lynsey (between Atticus and Craig).







Craig at the SCAMP Haggis Dinner at The Assembly Rooms. Funny, this is the only picture Lynsey sent from the haggis dinner. Actually, she seemed to have sent along a lot of pictures of Craig...interesting...



And these are at Star Bar after we won our award. See the glint of triumph in our eyes! Or is that just the glint of whisky...





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Illumination Rounds

This play is by Josh Liveright who is one of our writers for The Minstrel Show and runs The Interart Annex where we perform many of our plays. He is an alumni of the ATL apprentice program, he is very good to The Shalimar, and he is from Maine! If you find yourself in need of art and culture Columbus Day weekend or the weekend after, go see it! Support theater!

Plus it stars an Australian actress I met in a sauna...





the interart theatre development series and zena group present

illumination rounds
a play by josh liveright

directed by paul smithyman

featuring mark schulte and freya fox

sets by anita fuchs
lights by lucrecia briceno
sound by david m. lawson
video by william cusick and alex koch
costumes and make-up by tarafawn marek
violence by judi lewis-ocker
stage manager, julie griffith

OCTOBER 4 to 15
thursdays through mondays at 8PM
10 PERFORMANCES ONLY!

interart annex
500 west 52nd street
corner of 52nd and 10th

reserve by return email or call 212 604 4505

suggested donation $15

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Monday, September 17, 2007

SEEKING 2 INTERNS

Seeking Interns

Award winning NYC based theater company The Shalimar seeks 2 Productions Interns for fall/winter 2007 to work with Artistic Director Shoshona Currier. Please send resume and letter of interest to shoni@shalimarproductions.org.

Seeking two individuals who have an interest in theater administration, producing, or directing. This is a truly hands-on internship designed to give young theater artists the opportunity to learn about the day-to-day work of a small theater company. Past Shalimar interns have gone on to act, direct, and tour internationally with the company. Transportation stipend available.

Internship Requirements:
October 2007-January 2007


10 hours/wk of administrative work in Upper Manhattan office.
Duties Include: development research (grants, festivals, sponsorship,
etc...), organizational work (filing, copying, etc...), assisting in
seasonal mailings, helping to schedule readings, rehearsals,
performances, and workshops.

Minimum attendance of 3 rehearsals/wk.
Duties include: Assisting the director and stage manager in rehearsal, attending production meetings,assisting the dramaturge with research, taking rehearsal notes,
occasionally running rehearsals and/or warm-ups, actively
participating in the creation of the plays.

Participation in Shalimar Fundraisers
Duties include: Attending planning meetings, working on various fundraising committees, working at the events.

THE FALL SHOWS

Those Ones: A Modern Day Minstrel Show
November 29-December 16
at The Interart Annex

A controversial new take on our ever popular annual ten-minute play festival. It's "us vs. them" as writers confront stereotypes with ruthless candor and wit. Our modern interpretation of this old but not entirely forgotten form.
With new plays by Michael John Garces, Tommy Smith, Hilly Hicks Jr., Sharyn Rothstein, Josh Liveright and Nastaran Ahmadi.

Late and Live
November 29-December 16
at The Interart Annex

The Shalimar is thrilled to announce this brand spanking new late night series, with offerings from some of New York's most exciting theater artists. Schedule TBA.

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