Monday, August 06, 2007

Please come see my play!

Rainbowlicious.

Please please please! :) And pleeeease purchase your tickets in advance so we can feel good and know you're coming. That would make us really really happy. Seriously. There is nothing that would make us more happy right now than to know that people are actually coming to our first show. (Or barring that, if you're booked that night, ANY show.) Seriously seriously seriously.

(But statistically speaking, and I am speaking from a staff p.o.v. right now, shows the last weekend of the festival will likely be sold out if you try to buy tix at the door. So especially if you are planning to come the 23rd, 24th, or 25th, I'd recommend advance ticketing.)

The Boy on the Other Side of the World
at the Linhart Theater @ 440 Studios
440 Lafayette Street

Wed 8/15 @9pm... opening night! COME OPENING NIGHT! YES!
Sun 8/19 @ 4:30pm...
Thu 8/23 @ 4:45pm... sneak out of work early and come to the show!
Fri 8/24 @ 9:45pm...
Sat 8/25 @2pm...


You can purchase tickets...

on the internet

by going to www.fringenyc.org

by phone
9am-7pm (NYC time) inside NY: 212.279.4488. outside NY: 1.888.FringeNYC

in person @ FringeCentral
80 Carmine Street (at the corner of Varick Street)
Daily Noon til 8pm

(If you come in person, and you're super-lucky, I may even be the manager on duty. Woo-hooo! And you can visit me! Woooo-hooooooo! And I'll be super-perky because I have declared that fudge is an acceptable breakfast food. YUM!)

All of these options are up until 24 hours before showtime. But if it's same day, then tickets will only be available at the door, cash only. As you can probably expect, you can find me there at every show. Hope to see you!

Labels: , ,

Monday, July 09, 2007

I slaved over this description.

3pm-17

The fine folks over at The New York Theatre Experience provide great coverage of FringeNYC. Their website, nytheatre.com, is the only outlet that reviews every show in the festival each year. Plus, they run some cool promo opportunities that allow artists to get the word out about their shows. And guess what!

That's right! I'd like you to click on over there and read this description of The Boy on the Other Side of the World that took me days to write. No, not days! EONS! IT TOOK ME EONS TO WRITE 200 WORDS!*

I know, I know, I don't post for weeks and now you've got three posts in 24 hours plus outside reading. I'm sorry! I've just had a crazy spell of productivity the past few days. I think it's because Hilary went camping. Hilary went camping and I had to overcompensate. I even did my hair as an actual girl would and took an entire set of self-portraits.


*Mucho thanks to Hilary, Violet and Abigail who at various stages gently coaxed me through getting that description done.

Labels: , , , , ,

Sunday, July 08, 2007

Actors. Thank you, sweet Dionysus.

audition room, casting, happy playwright

This is me looking rather elvish in the casting room on Friday. When I saw this photo, I thought it a sure sign that Aragorn would arrive imminently and whisk me away. Alas, not so much.

Instead of the King of Middle Earth, though, I (along with Hilary) got a full cast for the production. And I say, if I can't have my second-favorite literary crush of all time, well... then... uh... what do I say? Oh yeah. WE'VE GOT A COMPLETE CAST! So how 'bout a warm welcome for the gentlemen.

Mike Callaghan as DistantBoy the Human Guy

Mike Callaghan

Tyler Hollinger as Male Muse

Tyler Hollinger

Pretty feckin' fantabulous, they are. Just like the ladies.
What's better than Jill and Hil together directing a play?
Jill and Hil together directing a play that has a full cast! Of course!

Labels: , , , ,

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Incubate Myself. Forswear Nothing.

I'm not exactly sure what that means, but that's what came out when I started rearranging the magnetic poetry on Kim's refrigerator. If I were more motivated, I could get out the rest of her magnetic poetry set and see what else comes out, but what I probably should do is track down some food, prepare lessons (considering I resume teaching on Monday), and write at least a scene from one of the plays that I am working on so that when I go to the writing group meeting tonight, everyone else won't think I've spent the past few weeks staring at walls.

Actually I've been working hard, just not on the plays. I've been working at the Fringe Festival, and whenever I'm not at FringeCENTRAL, I'm trying to see as much theater as I possibly can, and talk to as many other theater-obsessed people as I can, and just trying to get myself into the proper mindset to get through drafts of these two plays. Especially the one that I am avoiding. About Richie and Jude and being a kid back on 11th avenue and 9/11 and how painfully blue the sky is in New York at this time of year. Am I avoiding it because it's not ready to be written or am I avoiding it because it's a really emotional subject and it's just much easier and more enjoyable to write comedy?

I suppose I am getting ready to Incubate Myself.

As far as the Forswear Nothing part...well, let's just say I'm going to try to keep an open mind to the messages that the universe seems to be slapping me in the face with recently. Otherwise, I have a few friends who would be only too happy to do some literal slapping of my face.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Friday, August 19, 2005

Someone Else Who Answers to Lally

Lally is my new friend. Most of my family calls me Lally. (How's that for Jill trivia?) Lally is the only other person I've ever met who answers to "Lally." This is only one of the ways that this may be the strangest connection I've made with a perfect stranger since Kim didn't even blink when I announced a burning desire to chop up one of the other members of our Drama Since WWII class. If you knew my life, you'd know that for this to be the "strangest connection...", well...it's going to have to be really, really strange. The condition of someone being a complete stranger does nothing to stop me from saying exactly what I'm thinking. Except in really, really, really strange cases. But that's a story for another time. For me to self-censor, you know it's gotta be a winner. And now I fear I have over-used the word strange, and perhaps been too lazy to find a better candidate.

Lally comes to FringeCENTRAL, and I am helping her take care of administrative ticket-buying stuff for the performances of her play, The Eisteddfod. We discuss real estate. We feel we should own some. Other people, younger than we are, are making us look bad. Playwriting isn't immediately the most lucrative of professions.

Yesterday, I go see the show's first performance. I'm in the lobby, rifling through my bag, looking for my staff access badge. "I love your necklaces," she says, "or is it one?"

"It's one," I tell her. "I actually wrote about it in one of my essays."

"Can I read it?" she asks.

I watch the play. I love the play. It's absurd and dark and wickedly funny and true while still retaining the air of the imaginary. "Your writing style," I tell her, "it's spare, and the characters have this intriguing darkness to them."

"Come out for dinner with us," she invites, and later answers my thought, "We think we we're attracted to people for their light, but it's their dark side that keeps us intrigued." We giggle wickedly and I tell her that that's exactly what I'm writing about right now. "I have to read it," she says.

Lally is a waitress. "Hospitality and theater," she believes, "are really so much the same. You're putting on a show whether you're accomodating guests or on stage." I marvel that that's almost word for word what I wrote in one of my essays. She's up for reading that as well. Oddly enough, it's the same essay that prominently features the necklace she loves so much. This is getting freakier by the second. It's not like she's reading my mind; it's like all the stuff in my head is in hers as well. What the heck else is in there? What the hell else is in this essay, she wants to know.

Eventually, I have to leave to meet Kim and go to the egg-breaking show. Lally and I exchange all sorts of contact information and plan to do lunch or dinner or whatever before she goes home. "You really ought to come to Melbourne," she tells me, "You would love it." It's always been on my to-do list, I tell her. We part ways on 9th Street. "This is so funny," she says, "I feel like I have a new friend."


Ok, so besides the fact that I've just befriended the playwright, you all should go see The Eisteddfod. First of all, you know that I can't be friends with someone if I don't really respect their work. But also, the direction is superb, the visual design is striking and spare, the lighting is used creatively to perfect effect, the soundscape is unnervingly haunting, and the acting is phenomenal. The cast of two, Jessamy and Luke--it's impossible to take your eyes off them. She evokes such a wounded vulnerability with this character, it was surreal to be discussing silliness and shoe-shopping with her only an hour later. And he is an absolute chameleon, shifting with seeming effortlessness from puppy-dog passiveness to abject humiliation to raw masculine command. The theater company is Stuck Pigs Squealing. They have six more shows during the festival, then are remaining in NYC for an August 31-September 10 run at Ontological-Hysteric Theatre.

Labels: , , ,