Basil Considine

Musicologist, Composer, and Playwright

Archive for the ‘Performances’ Category

The Quickening Life of a Play

Friday, March 29th, 2013

Erin Brehm and I co-starred in a production of Barbara Blumenthal-Ehrlich‘s play Cleavage at the Universal Theatre Festival this past January. Cecelia Raker, herself a playwright, was the director; the production was a surprise cross-country meeting of two actors (Erin and myself) from the same town in Oregon who had never previously crossed paths. The production took place in the context of the Universal Theatre Festival’s final season in Provincetown, MA. (The producer and founder, Myra Slotnick, has retired from producing the festival to focus on playwriting.) It seems that everyone likes to see more Cleavage, because there is a new production coming to Boston this summer.

The chronology of Cleavage provides a useful illustration of how a play can pick up steam and gain circulation once it’s first picked up. This is from a combination of many factors: media exposure, professional recognition, fine-tuning and polish from feedback, increased confidence in the work and more circulation of the script, etc. The first production is usually the hardest, but if you get a second in the region you can build up momentum, as seems to have been the case with this (ahem) bodaciously-titled play:

  • First Appearance: Public Reading at Boston Bohemia (Boston, MA – November 2012)
  • Second Appearance: Single Performance at Culture Park’s 11th Annual Short Plays Marathon (New Bedford, MA – November 2012)
  • Third Appearance: Three Performances at the 6th Annual Universal Theatre Festival (Provincetown, MA – January 2013)
  • Fourth Appearance: ? Performances at the 15th Annual Boston Theater Marathon (Boston, MA – May 2013)

Sound good so far? Here’s the twist: the deadlines for the last cycle of UTF and BTM submissions was the same – Nov. 15 of this last year. The recognition that we’re seeing of Barbara’s work this year is partly the result of her not resting on her laurels and proactively sending things out for the next stage. It’s a good lesson for us all.

Appearing Soon at the Universal Theatre Festival

Monday, December 31st, 2012

I will be playing the part of Phillip in a production of Barbara Blumenthal-Ehrlich‘s play Cleavage. Cleavage is directed by Cecilia Raker and plays at the Universal Theatre Festival in Provincetown, MA from 18-20 January 2013.

The eponymous display will not be mine.

Update: Some news coverage of the festival.

Upcoming Play Performance

Tuesday, September 18th, 2012

My play The Abortion Bomb (2012) will be staged by Forearmed Productions in Philadelphia this November, as part of Plays and Players’ theatrical series The American Presidency: A Theatrical Response. The larger series is organized by the Plays and Players’ Theater; within it, Forearmed Productions is staging a Republican Theater Festival (in which The Abortion Bomb will be presented). The development of the Republican Theater Festival attracted considerable attention when it was first announced, and caused a lot of interested parties to weigh in with very strong opinions. It’s not every day that your call for submissions attracts Roger Ebert!

There’s not a lot of space in promo materials to give summaries of ten plays, so here’s the author (i.e., me)’s blurb about the play:

The play “The Abortion Bomb” was written in response to the renewed cultural debate over abortion that erupted in the United States in 2012. It engages with issues of social responsibility, conflicting beliefs, and cultural constructs surrounding a debate that still leaves Americans raw almost four decades after Roe vs. Wade.

“The Abortion Bomb” tells the emotionally-charged story of a small family in Middle America and their response to a member’s decision to seek an abortion: the good, the bad, and the ugly mixing with compassion, orthodoxy, and pain. Beliefs are challenged, tempers run high, and long-buried secrets are forced into the light.

I myself am very curious to see the other works in the festival. Phillymag.com has a writeup.