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[1 Mar 2010 | No Comment | ]
5 Questions with Gerry Gerringer, director <br />of ‘Beyond Therapy’ at Actors’ Theatre

He’s a bisexual who likes Kierkegaard, Mahler, Joan Didion and writing personal ads. She’s a freelance writer who keeps answering the ads he writes, even though he drives her nutty. Together, they’re Beyond Therapy. Gerry Gerringer directs the Christopher Durang comedy, on stage at Actors’ Theatre through March 21.

The show explores relationships between lovers, friends and therapists. In the spirit of the therapist’s couch, Gerringer was kind enough to answer a few questions for Weekend Santa Cruz….

Featured, On Stage »

[25 Feb 2010 | No Comment | ]
A Very Different <i>Jack</i>

It was a collection of empty whiskey bottles that led to the creation of the physical theater piece You Don’t Know Jack, appearing at The 418 Project. No, not because members of The Carpetbag Brigade were drinking while putting together this fractured fairy tale combining “Jack in the Beanstalk” with an alcoholic ghost, post-traumatic stress disorder and a dysfunctional family.

During an improv exercise, five Carpetbag Brigaders went out in the New Mexico sun looking for objects that inspire. The year was 2007 and the Bay Area group was doing a retreat with Wise Fool, a New Mexico arts organization with roots in puppetry. When all five members came back with empty whiskey bottles, inspiration struck Carpetbag Brigade founder and artistic director Jay Ruby….
(Photo by Jesse Olsen)

Featured, On Stage »

[23 Feb 2010 | No Comment | ]
5 Questions with Gary Young, <br />Poet Laureate of Santa Cruz County

Robert Frost once said that “Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words.” Students from Georgiana Bruce Kirby Preparatory School will be bringing their thoughts to life with emotion the first week in March, when they perform as part of Willing Suspension Armchair Theatre.

The students have been working on the show with poet Gary Young, who was recently named the first Poet Laureate of Santa Cruz County. A Pushcart Prize-winning poet, Young teaches at UC Santa Cruz. In 2009, he received the Shelley Memorial Award. Though busy teaching, writing and running Greenhouse Review Press, Young agreed to answer five questions for Weekend Santa Cruz….

Featured, Nightlife, On Stage »

[10 Feb 2010 | No Comment | ]
Love in a Minor Key

How strange the change from major to minor. It casts dark shadows on brightly colored tunes. Passions rise. Hearts yearn. “Some songs just get incredibly beautiful,” said Rhan Wilson, the brain behind the first-ever An Altared Valentine’s, February 14 at Kuumbwa.

Wilson, creator of Altared Christmas, brings his gift of reinterpretation to odes of love, transforming them into new works with the change of a key. “When we put it against this darker, passionate music, sometimes it increases the beauty and sometimes it brings out the lyrics and gets kind of funny…”

Artist's Corner, Featured, On Stage »

[1 Feb 2010 | One Comment | ]
‘Saw Player’ bows to immortality

Just outside Bookshop Santa Cruz, the man in the bowler sits frozen in time and space, his hands stilled as he plays a saw. Marghe McMahon’s 1978 sculpture of local legend Tom Scribner is a landmark of Pacific Avenue. It’s also the inspiration for Richard Bennett’s “The Saw Player,” one of the 10-minute plays being performed as part of Actors’ Theatre’s 8 Tens @ Eight through February 14.

The play takes the form of an imagined conversation between a sculptress, Lee played by Anna Hinde, and her subject, Sam played by Rick Kuhn. The two connect through the process of creating an artwork.

Featured, On Stage »

[19 Jan 2010 | No Comment | ]
5 Questions for Michael McGushin of Ariose

Songlike. That’s what the word “ariose” means. An apt name for Santa Cruz’s Ariose Singers, whose voices will be raised this weekend in music both ancient and modern. The 18-member group performs their winter a capella concert, An Evening of Snow, January 23 and 24 at Aptos’ Resurrection Church. The concert will include pieces by Samuel Barber, J.S. Bach, Francis Poulenc, Juan del Encina and Juan Vásquez….

Featured, On Stage »

[18 Jan 2010 | No Comment | ]
5 Questions with Karen Schamberg <br />of Willing Suspension Armchair Theatre

Every month, Willing Suspension Armchair Theater celebrates the written word by turning it into spoken word. Without sets, costumes or stage directions, the group performs readers’ theater, bringing audiences themed selections from literature.

This month, director Karen Schamberg presents An Evening of Claireity: Works by Claire Braz-Valentine. The evening celebrates the prose, poetry and plays of the internationally-produced writer, who lived in Santa Cruz until 2001. The show previews January 19 at Capitola Book Cafe before moving to Actors’ Theatre for two nights….

Featured, Nightlife, On Stage »

[11 Jan 2010 | No Comment | ]
Looping around to emerging sounds

The altered sound of a wine glass inspired Sayaka Yabuki’s latest piece, “Water and Wine.” The composition, which combines a chamber ensemble with live looping, has its world premiere January 15 as part of New Music Works’ first Night of the Emerging Composers at UC Santa Cruz’s Music Center Recital Hall. Also on the program are the world premieres of Remy Le Boeuf’s “The Third Elegy” and Stan Poplin’s “Detour,” along with Noah Meites’ “Bioskop.”

The four movements of “Water and Wine” take the listener on a 15-minute journey through liquid sound — from the frozen essence of Movement I to the boiling turbulence of the last movement — using violin, theremin, musical glasses, vibraphone, double bass, trumpet, percussion and looping….

Featured, On Stage »

[20 Dec 2009 | No Comment | ]
Bah, humbug! <i>Scrooge</i> at Cabrillo

Strip Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol down to its bones and you’ll find the story of a haunted man who comes to terms with his past and finds redemption. It’s that essence that director Andrew Ceglio wants audiences to find in his production of Scrooge, through January 3 at Cabrillo College’s Crocker Theater.

“It isn’t a Christmas show,” Ceglio said of the Cabrillo Stage production. “It’s a ghost story with Christmas as the main setting.”

The musical, by Leslie Bricusse of Dr. Doolitte fame, takes audiences through the life of misanthropic miser Ebenezer Scrooge via visitations by three spirits on Christmas Eve….

Featured, On Stage, Out and About »

[11 Dec 2009 | No Comment | ]
Pulling the strings of (puppet)Camelot

Gina Marie Hayes was five years old when she first saw Camelot. It was the first stage musical the native Santa Cruzian, now the founder and producing artistic director of Red Egg Theater, ever saw.

The show, with its magic and mystery, was a turning point in her life. “From then on, it was complete and utter dedication to theater.”

Now Hayes is putting her own spin on the knights of the Round Table with (puppet)Camelot, December 23 through 27 at Actors’ Theatre. A preview of the family-friendly Red Egg Theater production will be held 7: 30 p.m. December 15 at Capitola Book Cafe….