Thursday, February 28, 2008

Revolution for the Working Stiff

You are lucky, oh intrepid two dozen or so subscribers....

My rant of yesterday directed at the poorly conceived "backlash" piece Jonathan West pooped out over here was... not worth your time. Discretion is the better part of valor, and valorous as I am, I spiked it. Needless to say I disagree with Mr. West on most points, and his destructive tone.

But it also brought me to question why I (and by I, I mean everyone) feel the need to destroy a blog post I disagree with rather than simply state (what I feel to be) the correct position on it. I don't mean Fisking it, I mean the honest-to-god need to humiliate the moron who dared post without really reading over it to see that he was suggesting that people who want to get paid for their talent are whiners and that asking for a living wage is the equivalent of wanting a fully funded 401K and a vacation home in the Sun Belt.

After realizing I was being a douchebag I tried to go back and write a reasoned response to it, and I just couldn't. I had so much contempt for a (seemingly very nice) author that I had never met that I couldn't simply sit down and write a rebuttal to an easily rebutted snark piece.

Is it simply the anonymity of the internet? I don't know. I doubt it given that my name is all over this thing. But that leaves me with the simple truth that I am a douchebag. So I choose to officially decide that we default to the negative because tearing down is easier than building anything and that of course I am not a douchebag. (Also? We like being funny.)

Nick agrees on the rant front.

We're boring Leonard Jacobs 
(Note to self: We need to have a talk at some point about where the line is between having an honest community discussion about problems, and keeping a unified positive face - also need to question Mr. Jacobs at some point about when there were Unified Theatre Theories and what they were.)

And Devilvet would like a short primer.

To wit:

So, people are clamoring for a new model? A new model for making theatre? There is a lot of diatribe about tribes. Alot.
So tell me in 250 words or less how you are going to change theatre for the better?

"But, I can't do it in just 250 words?" Well then, you're dead at the starting gate.

How are you going to change theatre? I'm not opposed to change. But, all this talk of tribes seems to me to be more of a return to the old ways (Living Theatre, Hoffman School of Byrds, Wooster Group, Judson Church)...and I like that but...
I don't need a sound bite, but I need a simplification please...it is getting a touch too pedantic for me.

Please. How? I don't need someone to tell me...please read these five books...please read my 25 part post on the issue...I need some to excite me and inspire me with their succinctness, sincerity, and simplicity.

Ah succinctness, the bane of all amateurs, and of this amateur in particular.

Before I take my noble stab at the Community Minifesto let me say this: I am not capable of changing Theatre, or Theatre in America. I am capable of changing Theatre in Austin, and I sure am going to try.

Little Red Riding Hood Postcard

Community Minifesto

I have no changes to make to the Broadway model, the Off-Broadway Model. the Off-Off Model, or the Regional Model. I am not a part of those models. Nor is it likely I ever will be.

I live in the uncodified world of Small Theatre or Indie Theatre, and the fourth goal of my new beginning (there is no revolution if there is no paradigm) is to get it good and labeled. Audiences know labels, they trust labels, we need a label.

The first three goals of course are Community, Community, Community. In a fully integrated theatre community (first horizontally, then vertically) both capital and performing space resource deficits fall away in prominence and we begin to winnow the resource redundancies that exist. As those deficits stop preoccupying the front burners of our minds we can go back to having the creation of art at the forefront.

It will require ego deflation to accept that for instance I will design your postcards or write your press releases so you can focus on your show, while my show is 6 months off. But the freedom it will bring will make a difference in the final product.

Which is the point.

Any successful theatre in your area is good for your theatre. If it means that you have to do some scutwork so that they can get some extra scenework in? So be it. Having a community behind you as you do extra scenework will be empowering. That is tribe to me.


It's a start anyway. On Transformations we comped a member of the Vestige Group to see the show and she ran our box for the night, and The Incomparable Andrew Varenhorst (Best of Fest woooo!) ran it for a weekend. When they need a thing? I'm there. We are so often competing for resources that it's hard to remember that we're on the same team.

Is this new beginning something that happens through the Austin Circle of Theatres? I don't know. That remains in the future. Before we bring community ideas to a group that may help facilitate them, we need to have a group of people looking to be a community.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Night, Marsha

Finally, at least for this go-round, I like what this play represents: a life-long association of a writer with a group of actors and a theater. This is why Shakespeare wrote so much, he had a whole gang of actors waiting to do his work. Go down the list — the writers who wrote a lot of wonderful plays were always associated with a community of actors they could write for: Shepard, Chekhov, Brian Friel, Alan Ackbourne, David Mamet, Lanford Wilson, Caryl Churchill, Richard Foreman, Wendy Wasserstein. Playwrights who live apart from theaters and actors have a lot of trouble getting their work done. Playwrights need to be around actors, need to be a part of a theater’s life.

It is worth noting that Mr. Letts began his theatrical life as an actor. Plays by actors tend to have lots of crazy stuff in them, and whatever else they’re about, they’re always about how much fun it is to be on the stage. “True West” springs to mind here. But this sense of fun is something writers with no acting talent can catch. And it’s definitely something the audience likes. We could use more things happening in the theater, and fewer plays where people sit in chairs and talk.

If we wanted to do one single thing to improve the theatrical climate in America, we’d assign one playwright to every theater that has a resident acting company. People wonder why so much great work came out of Actors Theatre of Louisville in the early days. I was there, so I know it was simply that you had everything you needed: actors who wanted to work, empty stages ready for plays and an artistic director who gave everybody a chance to do whatever they wanted as soon as they could think of it. Playwriting in America has suffered a devastating blow from the development process that keeps writers separate from the rest of the company, working on the same play for years. What playwrights want is what Steppenwolf has given Mr. Letts: a way to get a new play done, see what works, and then go on to the next one. “August: Osage County” is way more than a wonderful play. It is how we get back to having American plays on Broadway. We get them written for actors who want to do them, then producers get on board and start selling tickets.


There are two knee jerk response to Marsha Norman's wonderful piece in the NYT Sunday Book Review.

  1. YEAH MARSHA YOU GO GIRL!
  2. There ARE no resident acting troupes anymore, so PBBBBBT!

Which is always enlightening.

For my part I come away from the glow of that passage with a different two thoughts.

  1. The warmth that she carries throughout this article, both the review and the quoted passage, is desperately missing in the theatre world in general. Scott? We would do well to find a tone AS warm when we're suggesting changes to the paradigm and business model.
  2. I am coming off a workshop week with the whip smart Sheila Callaghan and I need to shout a hearty amen to the whole damn thing.

I did a reading of Ms. Callaghan's The Pretty Pretty , or the Rape Play over at Salvage Vanguard, and we hit it reasonably hard last week to see if there were any loose parts. There weren't really.

It was wonderful to have the writer in the room helping us through the layers as they unfolded to us. The play is so in-your-face that it's easy to miss the many many layers the first couple of times through.

But it felt like anti-development. IT was much more about Ms. Callaghan asking us how things felt, or about whether this or that was clear  than us imposing our opinions of how theatre should be. It was really wonderful. I hope it was as useful to her as it was fun for me.

But I can imagine what it would be like to hone such a thing for specific voices. I was an ill fit for my character. Not terrible, he's just a little broader in the shoulders than I am. But in a residential situation he would be me. Or a mask built off of my mold... it would be wonderful.

Meanwhile - to the Left of the Revolution

As midwinter sits on our chests, stealing our breath, revolution stirs in the hearts of men.

And women. of the theatreospehere. Ish

Whatever. Imagine that the Movie Announcer Guy is reading it. It sounds cool.

Revolution is of course stirring in my heart but then I'm a revolution junkie from way back thanks to Mr. Lucas.

Mike Daisey and Scott Walters are fomenting a revolution.

The name of the revolution is something something regional theatre.

Mr. Daisey has codenamed it  How Theatre Failed America... but that's not regional theatres,  that's  all of us.  Mr. Daisey has regional theatres in the crosshairs because those are the fields he plays near.  As with anything, the Thing that has failed us is the thing immediately upstream of where we're sitting.

Mr. Freeman got lumped in with the revolutionaries and asked to be removed from the rolls over here, commenting on the overt Us/Them of the argument.

Of course all arguments are Us/Them by definition.

They/Thems are observations, not arguments.

But let me clarify: My argument is entirely with Us.

By which I naturally mean me (like James Comtois I am a New Hampshire native and come by my Calvinism fairly - which is not to say that James has some sort of innate Calvinism, I just.... never mind).

Is it true? Have Regional Theatres failed America? I have no idea. I have no idea how to even begin having an idea. I can look at their stated goals and where they are and say they haven't reached them. but I used to say I want to be President. What I can say is that we as theatre artists are failing this generation of Americans, and we're going to need help from the ostensible top to fix it.


Regional theatres are messed up. With their convoluted corporate arts approach to choosing a season, the unnecessary importing of talent and the dodging of controversy in search of subscriptions it's easy to cast aspersions from the street. They are doing business the way they feel they need to, they are surviving in a poisonous climate for the arts, and they may not be originating the groundbreaking work we think they should be, but nether are they only ever doing the Commercial. The fact that they are not doing your work isn't a sign of a failed mandate.

What we need isn't to fix the Regional Theatres, or to depose them and set up a new system. We need to brand and market the level under them. Regionals have taken a lot of the status that Broadway had. Even your neophyte theatergoer in search of brand understands that they aren't getting the most challenging work of the form. Indeed there is ample reason to think that's part of the reason they're going to Broadway in the first place. But people need their brands, they need security.

Scott Walters in his most recent post on Daniel Quinn, a cornerstone of Mr. Walters' push toward tribe-based companies, posits that program is the problem and that we are drawn to creating program despite the invariable failure of all things programmatic. Human folk (I would say all sentient beings, but I'll hesitate to speak for them) need structure. Out entire universe as understood is indeed nothing but nested taxonomies. Our quarrels are from different branches of the organizational tree. It's how we define our very large and mystifying existence.

And we need that understanding in the theatre world.

We need for "Broadway" to mean something, and "Off-Broadway", and "Off-Off", and "Regional".

We need it because our audience needs it. And we need them.

A prospective audience member needs the assurance that a company, or theatre, or director has been vetted somehow.

For someone to take a risk on you and your show (say a 14 part performance art anthology) your audience needs to have a way to determine whether or not you have a core competence. This is of course on its root level the purpose of the critic. But as critics continue to deny their position as the gatekeepers of the theatrical kingdom (insisting that they are separate), it is incumbent on the theatre community itself to provide legitimacy as it grows.

There are only two ways to achieve that legitimacy. Earn it after years of production and reviews and core audience building. Or to have a recognized group pass it on.

If there becomes a recognized link between theatres and groups they share their legitimacy. Salvage Vanguard here in Austin has done this with the groups that they sponsor. More companies need to do it.

The Regionals can do it easily. Not by creating junior companies or adjuncts, but by giving their stamp to local companies that are doing the work that is too challenging for their subscriber base. Which would also allow the companies to avoid situations like the one Chloe Veltman observed in her piece on ACTs production of Blood Knot. In Chloe’s opinion ACT has a production out of step with their main space and no grittier space to use for that run. If ACT were partnered with several smaller groups and moved Blood Knot OUT of the Geary for its run and took its crowd to a grittier space more appropriate to the play, they give ACTs stamp of approval to another physical space, and show their subscribers that that scruffy theatre downtown is perfectly okay to see a show in.


Snow White Postcard

"Travis, you gone off on a pretty meandering path again...what the hell does this have to do with Scott and Regional theatres?"

Wouldn't you like to know.

Kidding.

Simply this.

The Regionals aren't Broken for themselves, they're broken for us.

We don't need to fix them to do what we want to do, we need the legitimacy that they have (and can convey) to build our own audiences and inheritable legitimacy.

From the above link Walters post:

Old minds think:
If it didn't work last year, let's do MORE of it this year.


New minds think:
If it didn't work last year, let's do something ELSE this year.

Let the Regionals do more. It will either work or it won't. If you're truly revolution-minded then you aren't really suited to their game anyway.

Start your own.

And remember the whole while that we're on the same team.

 

Monday, February 11, 2008

Content Soon

Until then:

A friend asked for my help with an entry in the Alamo Drathouse Filmaking Frenzy for Be Kind Rewind

That entry is here:


But we need your help.
We need for you to vote it up.
(Here: Link)

There is an annoyance of course, which is that you have to register for the FF website to vote (IP logging is too good for them apparently).
If you have the time and inclination and could pass this on to YOUR network of friends I would greatly appreciate it.

------

After this commercial break we'll return with content such as "Wait you mean MY theatre isn't regional?" and "How do you overcome resource hoarding in small theatre?"

Also? Some pictures.
You'll like it. Stay tuned.