Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Tucson: Beowulf Alley Theatre Hosts Readers' Theatre

Beowulf Alley Theatre Company Hosts Readers’ Theatre

 Contact: Beth Dell

(520) 622-4460 (media questions only)

email: theatre@beowulfalley.org

 

 

Tucson, Ariz. (November 25, 2008) — Beowulf Alley Theatre Company, 11 S. Sixth Ave., continues its Readers’ Theater Program on Monday, December 1, 2008 at 7:15 p.m. Admission is pay-what-you-will.

 

Fallen Soldier by David Dudley

 

tells the story of Greg, a photojournalist on assignment in an unforgiving war-zone, and Jack, the soldier who saves his life when their company is ambushed. After their escape, they find shelter in an abandoned apartment building. As they await rescue, they find themselves at war not only with the enemy, but with one another. When Jack falls victim to sniper fire, Greg is left to do battle with the most ruthless opposition imaginable: The human mind.

 

Readers’ Theatre is a stimulating event and a terrific opportunity for both playwrights and audiences. Playwrights have a chance to be heard and audiences have a chance to hear new and dynamic works being developed for the theater as well as contribute to their development by participating in discussions following the readings. Throughout each year, guided by its Artistic Development Committee, Beowulf Alley Theatre will offer a selection of thought-provoking readings to Tucsonans and visitors to Tucson.

 

Playwrights may submit proposals for the inaugural 2008-2009 season by following the instructions, online at www.beowulfalley.org, “Cast & Crew,” “Directors & Playwrights,” “Playwrights.”  Inquiries regarding participation (actors, volunteers) in the Readers’ Theatre Program may be made by e-mailing theatre@beowulfalley.org.

 

A non-profit arts organization, Beowulf Alley was founded based on dialogues with local actors who wanted a permanent home for theatre artists from the Tucson community. Today, its intimate 95-seat theatre provides a facility that meets professional standards where performing artists, educators, and technicians can develop and present their skills. Because Beowulf Alley engages a talent pool that calls Tucson “home” for its productions, the Theatre is committed to helping grow a new generation of Tucson talent with its education programs for young people. And true to its roots, the Theatre maintains ongoing dialogues with the community, including Dialogues with theatregoers after the first Sunday matinee performance of each of its season plays – an opportunity for theatregoers to discuss the plays with the director and the performing artists. Writers who cover the Tucson arts scene say the Theatre provides its audiences with “the best total package”—plays, performances, and productions that are high in artistic and technical quality.

 

Monday, November 24, 2008

Eight building owners vie for city facade improvement program

Eight building owners vie for city facade improvement program

Eight building owners vie for city facade improvement program
Eight owners in downtown vie for matching funds
TEYA VITU
Published: 11.25.2008

Eight downtown building owners submitted applications Monday for the city's facade improvement program, which will supply matching funds to restore historic building fronts.
A nine-person committee headed by the Downtown Tucson Partnership in the next week or two will select four or five proposals to fund with $530,000 in leftover downtown revolving loan funds from 1982, said Glenn Lyons, the partnership's chief executive.

The committee meets Tuesday afternoon to sift through the applications, and Lyons expects a decision by Dec. 1 or Dec. 8. Lyons expects the City Council to consider the picks in early January.

Earlier in the year, 23 proposals were submitted involving 30 downtown structures. These were cut to eight property owners who were invited to submit proposals using architects funded with $7,500 from the city program fund for each proposal.

"We're really dealing in a world of intangibles," Lyons said. "There were 30 buildings that qualified and we have to pick four."
Lyons said the committee will consider factors such as the type of building, how the owner proposes to improve the facade, the visibility of the improvement and the value of proposals for the city money invested.

The selection committee consists of Lyons and Teresa Bommarito from the partnership; Fran La Sala and Nicole Ewing-Gavin from the city manager's office; Brooks Jeffery, associate dean of the architecture school at the University of Arizona; Demion Clinco of the Tucson-Pima County Historical Commission; developer Phil Lipman; Mary Lou Focht, owner of Old Town Artisans; and Jonathan Mabry, the city's historic preservation officer.

The property owner has to match the city investment, which will be as much as $125,000 for a corner property and $90,000 for a mid-block property.

The eight properties are:

• W.A. Julian Building (former Club Asylum), 111-121 E. Congress St.; built in 1905.
• 256-278 E. Congress St. (Tooley's on Congress); built from 1916-28.
• 64 E. Broadway (former Southern Arizona Legal Aid); built before 1919.
• Wig-O-Rama, Grill, Vaudeville Cabaret, 98-110 E. Congress St.; built in 1904.
• Rialto Block, 300-320 E. Congress St.; built 1919-21.
Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 S. Sixth Ave.; built in 1921.
• The Screening Room, 127 E. Congress St.; built in 1912.
• ArtFare The Muse, 51 N. Sixth Ave. - the small building between Arizona Hotel and Sears Executive Center, all three leased by ArtFare: built in 1931.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Tucson Weekly: Keeping a Distance "Crossing Elliot"

Keeping a Distance"Crossing Elliot"

PUBLISHED ON NOVEMBER 20, 2008

Keeping a Distance
"Crossing Elliot"
7 p.m., Thursday-Saturday, Nov. 20-22
Beowulf Alley Theatre Company
11 S. Sixth Ave.
227-0727; beowulfalley.org

Michelle Sciarrone said that when the cast and crew first read the script of her play Crossing Elliot, many thought she could have been writing about their own lives. In fact, anyone who has been in a long-distance relationship may find the play very familiar.

Crossing Elliot is about the long-distance relationship between New York-based Rikki and her Los Angeles-based boyfriend, Elliot. Rikki first meets Elliot, an up-and-coming writer, when she interns at her magazine's West Coast offices. When Rikki returns to New York, the power struggle begins.

"People can really relate to the characters," Sciarrone said.

Sciarrone, a creative-writing senior at the UA, began writing Crossing Elliot three years ago. She sought out guidance from visiting dramaturg Heather Helinsky and then rewrote the script.

"(It had the) same storyline, but I rewrote it structurally and technically," Sciarrone said. "From there, it took off."

While the characters and dialogue are realistic, the play has elements of surrealism. For example, the New York and Los Angeles sets are right next to each other on stage, separated only by an invisible line, Sciarrone said. The characters do not interact with each other, and instead communicate by cell phone.

Things get really difficult for the couple, and for the audience, when Rikki starts seeing somebody else.

"(Elliot) doesn't know it, but the audience can see them right there," Sciarrone said of Rikki and her new flame.

To find out whether Rikki and Elliot make it, see the play this weekend.

As for Sciarrone, she hopes to continue writing and producing, though she said the production process is stressful.

"I've never actually got to see my art from the audience perspective, so I'm just really looking forward to it," Sciarrone said. --C.C.

Tucson: Fundacion Mexico presents "Undocumented Historias in the Desert of Dreams"


From: Castro-Salazar, Ricardo [mailto:rsalazar@pima.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 1:26 PM
Subject: Dec 5 Event

Download the brochure here: www.beowulfalley.org/Undocumented Historias brochure.pdf

Undocumented Historias

in the Desert of Dreams

l Author Miguel Mèndez l Photographer Anselmo Rascan l Choreographer Yvonne Montoya l Dancer Sofia Martinez l Painters Marisol Badilla, Pupe GOmez and Victor Navarro l Poet Dulce Encinas l Musician ,and Composer Guillermo Saenz

 

December 5, 2008 at 7:00 p.m.
Presented on the stage of the
Beowulf Alley Theatre
11 South 6th Ave. Tucson, Arizona

A multifaceted performance and artistic

interpretation of the life histories of young

immigrants and their dreams

 

Admission: a donation appropriate to your means

100% of your donations will be utilized for scholarships for
immigrant students and are tax deductible.
A reception and silent auction will follow the event.

Produced by
Dr. Carl Bagley, Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, UK
Dr. Ricardo Castro Salazar, VP of Fundacion Mexico

 

Note: This is not a Beowulf Alley Theatre Production.  Questions? – contact:

 

Ricardo Castro-Salazar
Division Dean of Instruction
Pima Community College, East Campus
8181 East Irvington Road
Tucson, AZ 85709
520.206.7661
 
Mission: To develop our community through learning.
Vision: We provide access to learning without the limits of time, place or distance.

 

---------------------------------
Tucson Theatre Announcements List
Archive and subscription information on http://tucsonstage.com

 

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Booze-free family bash downtown set for New Year's Eve

Booze-free family bash downtown set for New Year's Eve


November 17, 2008, 11:57 p.m.
TEYA VITU
Tucson Citizen

Alcohol-free, family-oriented New Year's Eve entertainment will fill downtown from 4 p.m. to midnight Dec. 31 as Tucson joins 107 other American cities that stage First Night arts festivals.

More than 40 staged events will take place continuously in 45-minute cycles at the Leo Rich Theatre, Beowulf Alley Theatre, the Scottish Rite Cathedral and the Tucson Children's Museum as well as on outside stages at La Placita Village, the Tucson Music Hall and in front of the children's museum.

A badge gets one into all the indoor events, and the outdoor events are free. Badges cost $12 each for everyone 13 or older, $6 for children 6 to 12, and children 5 and younger get in free.

Tickets will go on sale in the first week of December, said Glenn Lyons, chief executive of the Downtown Tucson Partnership, which is putting on the event.

Soon after Lyons arrived in Tucson in February, he had the idea to stage an arts-oriented theater crawl on New Year's Eve.

"What I want people to do is come downtown and enjoy themselves and realize there is a whole host of opportunities for them for family entertainment," Lyons said. "There's a lot of music, some comedy and theater shorts."

Lyons had 4,000 badges printed for the inaugural First Night, but his target in future years will be 20,000 to 30,000 attendees, which he says is the typical attendance in similar-sized cities that stage First Nights.

"In any given hour, we can seat about 1,000 people indoors," Lyons said.

Boston launched the initial First Night in 1976 as a finale to the bicentennial year. That eventually spawned First Night International, a Johnson City, N.Y.,-based organization that provides the First Night framework. This is based on the Four Pillars: community, celebration, the new year and the arts.

Tucson joins big cities such as Pittsburgh and Birmingham, Ala., and smaller cities such Fullerton, Calif., and Monterey, Calif., that all have New Year's Eve celebrations affiliated with First Night International.

Lyons estimates the cost at $100,000, with $15,000 supplied by Cox Communications and $5,000 each from the offices of Mayor Bob Walkup and Tucson City Councilwoman Nina Trasoff and from the Tucson Pima Arts Council. TPAC is covering the cost of outdoor stages at the children's museum and La Placita Village. In-kind support valued at $60,000 will come in the way of media advertising.

Government organizations hope the expenditure will help bring activity to downtown.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Miss Elle Productions presents "Crossing Elliot" on the Baron Stage @ Beowulf Alley Theatre

Miss Elle Productions Brings you
Crossing Elliot
On the Baron Stage @ Beowulf Alley Theatre Co.
 
November 20-22 2008
7pm
 
$10 at the door
Call (520) 227-0727
Boxoffice Information
 

When Rikki accepts a job in New York City she is forced to leave everything in Los Angeles behind.  Including her boyfriend Elliot, an on-the-rise writer ready launch his own career. Tempted by their newly found freedom from one another, the couple must re-evaluate the seriousness of their relationship and decide if their love is worth going the distance.

 

Aisle seats: Arts picks for the week | www.azstarnet.com ®

Aisle seats: Arts picks for the week www.azstarnet.com ®:

Aisle seats: Arts picks for the week
Tucson, Arizona Published: 11.14.2008

Beowulf Alley Theatre launches its late-night series, LNT@ the Alley with '3 a.m.: In the Absence of Time and Memory' by Jennifer Copland.
The edgy comedy is about a disc jockey wrestling with issues such as free speech and love. Oh, minor issues those. . . .

Performances are 10:30 p.m. today and Saturday at Beowulf Alley, 11 S. Sixth Ave. Tickets are $7 at the door. Call 882-0555.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Beowulf Alley Cancels Auditions for 3 Guys in Drag

 

Contact: Cynthia Jeffery

520-744-5220

email: cjeffery@kold.com

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre Audition for

3 Guys in Drag Selling Their Stuff

CANCELLED

 

Tucson, Ariz. (Nov. 10, 2008)— Beowulf Alley Theatre Company, 11 S. 6th Ave., has CANCELLED the scheduled auditions for a male role in 3 Guys in Drag Selling Their Stuff by Edward Crosby Wells. The actor who was originally cast has been able to adjust his schedule and will continue in the role. Thank you for your interest.

 

Beth Dell

Theatre Manager 

 

 

Friday, November 07, 2008

Lovely guitar, lyrical script highlight 'Noche' | www.azstarnet.com ®

Lovely guitar, lyrical script highlight 'Noche' www.azstarnet.com ®:

Lovely guitar, lyrical script highlight 'Noche'
By Kathleen Allen
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona Published: 11.07.2008


Oh, how we longed to love "Noche de los Muertos."

The Gavin Kayner play, which is getting its world premiere at Beowulf Alley Theatre, is laced with tension, humor and grand ideas, such as the battle between the state and the church in Mexico. It's a good script.

And we so want Beowulf, which has struggled since the loss of its artistic director, Stephen Elton, at the beginning of the 2007-08 season, to make it.

But this production, in spite of a mighty effort by director Sheldon Metz, falls flat.
Oh, there were bright moments in the play, and some good acting.

But the heart of the story, the character who gives it its shape and deeper meaning, is Tomas, a Villa revolutionary who carries a heavy guilt about his drinking, his killings during the revolution, and about the disappointments others have experienced at his hands.
Much of what drives Tomas is never said, and so his internal life is key in shaping a character with depth and nuance.

Esteban Oropeza, who played Tomas, lacked the finesse to carry the emotional complexity of such a crucial character.

Still, he is ruggedly handsome, looks like a revolutionary, and his performance had some wonderful physical touches — his drunk scenes were masterful; overplaying drunk is a common acting problem, but not one he had.

Angelica Rodenbeck's Irma, Tomas' lover and a voice of reason, was road- and revolution-weary, and you could believe that she lived all the worry and passion that was etched on her face.
Jordana Franco as Catalina, the young school teacher who is to take over the school from the church, is full of idealism and innocence. It was easy for the audience to understand her commitment and her drive.
Metz clearly has an affinity for the material, and has added touches that underscore the ambience of the play — most notably the wonderful guitar music, composed and played by Alex Greengaard.
And Kayner's script is full of lyrical writing. People "scattered like quail," and revolutions "swept over us like the wind." Impressive, that.

It's always thrilling to see a new play that holds such promise, and kudos go to Beowulf for having the guts to produce it.

We just wish that its full potential had been realized.
review


"Noche de los Muertos"
• By: Gavin Kayner.
• Director: Sheldon Metz.
• When: 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 1:30 p.m. Sundays through Nov. 16.
• Where: Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 S. Sixth Ave.
• Tickets: $20, with discounts available online.
• Reservations/information: www. beowulfalley.org or 882-0555.
• Cast: Anthony Auriemma, Caroline Latron, Sydney and Vince Flynn, Jordana Franco, Tenoch Gomez, Alex Greengaard, Janet Henderson, Rene Lopez, Esteban Oropeza and Angelica Rodenbeck.
• Running time: 2 hours, 20 minutes, with one intermission.
● Contact reporter Kathleen Allen at kallen@azstarnet.com or 573-4128.

Thursday, November 06, 2008

Tucson Weekly : Arts : Faith Versus Progress:

Tucson Weekly : Arts : Faith Versus Progress:
PUBLISHED ON NOVEMBER 6, 2008:

Faith Versus Progress
A Mexican town in 1927 is the site of a conflict over education in Beowulf Alley's fine new production
By JAMES REEL

"a production that is praiseworthy in every respect..."

Are we defined by our stories, or by our actions?
That's a question posed by a character in the new Gavin Kayner play Noche de los Muertos, set toward the end of the Mexican revolutionary period. The storytellers are adherents to the Catholic church; the men and women of action are the secularists behind the revolution. Which of those two forces, incompatible when pushed to their heights of fervor, would set the course for 20th-century Mexico?




Noche de los Muertos is the latest offering from Beowulf Alley Theatre Company, and it opened just in time for the Day of the Dead, a time to honor one's ancestors, who are said to visit the altars we prepare and nibble on the snacks we leave, although, unlike Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny, they leave nothing in return; having given life to us some decades before seems a sufficient enough gesture.

Noche is set on the Day of the Dead in 1927 in the town of Magdalena, not far south of Nogales. A young schoolteacher and her entourage have arrived to take over public education from the local priest, one of only about 40 in Mexico who have not yet been killed or driven from their posts by the post-revolutionary government and its supporters. But Catholic partisanship remains strong in rural areas and frontier towns like Magdalena, and the priest refuses to give up his post. In his opinion, and that of supporters like the woman who runs the local cantina, it's the teacher who must be driven out.

Seven decades later, Catholicism continues to choke many progressive movements in Mexico; only this year has legislation in the capital city liberalizing divorce and abortion laws survived judicial review, despite continuing conservative opposition. Things aren't much better here north of the border, with religious groups continuing to demonize homosexuals through legislation, and pushing to include creation myths in school science texts. Whatever good that faith may produce within individuals is being negated by its regressive incursions into secular society.

Today, the arguments tend to take the form of school-board harangues and testy books by the likes of Christopher Hitchens. But in 1927 Mexico, partisans of either side argued with bullets, knives and ropes.

Kayner's play is even-handed enough to generate sympathy for Magdalena's faith-based community, if not for its actions. As the cantina owner, Palancha, notes, death is no barrier to a believer's communion with dead loved ones, but forgetting is. For Palancha, forgetting one's family, one's stories, one's (Catholic) culture would be catastrophic, and the arrival of the young teacher, Catalina, means potential disaster.

On the other hand, Catalina and her poet-boyfriend, Renaldo, simply want to modernize Mexico and raise the intellectual level of its downtrodden people. Yet they do not represent the entire revolution; their traveling companions, Tomas and Irma, were fighters, not thinkers. They are the rougher, rural side of social change, and indeed, Tomas in some ways had been little more than a bandit with a higher calling. He did something terrible along the way, and now he tries to drink the memories away, rendering him incapable of helping Catalina when she needs him.

Who among these people, including the defiant, regressive priest, is truly righteous? Kayner puts them to the test, and finds them wanting in various ways. It's a fine script that digs into these characters' psyches and motivations with integrity and understanding, and never for a moment smacks of Anglo literary tourism.

The Beowulf Alley production, under the swift, fluid direction of Sheldon Metz, takes these characters and their situation seriously. The cast is fine, but the most consistent and perceptive work comes from Angelica Rodenbeck as Irma and Janet Henderson as Palancha--honest, insightful and always natural in their delivery.

The rest of the cast members--Esteban Oropeza, Jordana Franco, Tenoch Gomez and Anthony Auriemma--also fare well, although some of their line delivery is rather flat when the dialogue grows expository or abstract. Yet they all gain fluency with the script's intensification of emotion, which means that the heightened second act comes off especially well.

Mime Caroline Latron is a mesmerizing presence as a Day of the Dead "bone man" come to life, and guitarist/sound designer Alex Greengard provides a perfectly appropriate, mostly live score. The set design, by Joel Charles, artfully crams four realistic rooms onto the stage all at once, and if the result in a couple of scenes is rather claustrophobic, this is not a problem when the action is able to open up into the downstage area. The costumes by Norma Kayner and Liz Rollman handily evoke the era, and contribute to a production that is praiseworthy in every respect.

Noche de los Muertos
presented by Beowulf Alley Theatre Company
7:30 p.m., Thursdays-Saturdays; 1:30 p.m., Sundays, through Nov. 16
11 S. Sixth Ave.
$20
882-0555; beowulfalley.org
review

Buenas 'Noche': New play wordy but worthwhile

Buenas 'Noche': New play wordy but worthwhile


November 05, 2008, 6:16 p.m.
CHUCK GRAHAM
Tucson Citizen

Wordy but worthwhile. That would be the three-word review of Gavin Kayner's new play "Noche de los Muertos," receiving its world premiere at Beowulf Alley Theatre. This tale of tortured conflict takes place in Mexico on Nov. 2, 1927.




It is the traditional Day of the Dead in a year of religious revolution for Mexico, so there is lots of historical information to absorb before the end of Act One. After intermission the pace picks up considerably, and so does the tension.

In 1917, we are told early on, the Mexican government decided to make a clear separation between church and state. As you might imagine, this didn't sit well with the Catholic Church. But the decision didn't sit well with many of the people, either. They wanted the church to stay in charge. Especially those villagers who depended on their priests for guidance on many aspects of daily life.

Deep into 1927, this radical change was finally being implemented in Magdalena, a town famous for its shrine to St. Francis Xavier. Assigned to be sure a secular teacher gets installed in the village school is the government official Reynaldo (Tenoch Gomez).

He accompanies the young firebrand teacher Catalina (Jordana Franco). Guarding them both are two soldiers of the secular revolution, Irma (Angelica Rodenbeck) and Tomas (Esteban Oropeza). Like an army from the Antichrist, they come storming into Magdalena and confront the village priest (Anthony Auriemma).

Representing the villagers who love their priest and hate Mexico's new government is the strong-willed Palancha (Janet Henderson). She runs the tiny cantina where many of the discussions take place.

Adding atmosphere by their presence, without speaking a word, are Boneman (Caroline Latron) and a trio of identical masked figures completely in black (Rene Lopez, Sydney Flynn and Vince Flynn). Making the strongest impression by far is Boneman, wearing black formal attire with a painted white skull face, skeleton ribs and bony fingers.

Boneman maintains a bemused attitude toward all the flouncing around of these humans who are grappling with issues of morality far above their pay grade. But in the spirit of Día de los Muertos, Boneman is never scary. At times he is actually respectful of the tormented ways that these twisted souls tear at each other.

While the play is billed as a contest between church and state, it can also be seen as a brilliantly drawn schematic for the terrible things that can happen when opposing forces obsessed with being right start banging heads.

We think of the Christian fundamentalists in the United States, Muslim fundamentalists in the Middle East and the rigid governments they confront. Inevitably this is a lose-lose situation.

By placing this clash of ideas in a foreign country in a different time period, it is hopefully easier to appreciate the need for thoughtful compromise in our own country as the pendulum of extremism tries to swing back toward the middle.

Sheldon Metz directs the Beowulf Alley production. Though the cast's performances feel sincere, some are more effective than others. All the characters could use more shading of expression instead of just standing and shouting their lines.

But there is also wisdom in the writing. As a work in progress, "Noche de los Muertos" will be a full plate of ideas for theatergoers who take the time and have the patience to fully digest each scene.

Sunday, November 02, 2008

'Noche de los Muertos' comes alive

'Noche de los Muertos' comes alive


'Noche de los Muertos' comes alive
World premiere production tells story of 1927 Magdalena church-vs.-state revolution in Mexico.
CHUCK GRAHAM

Published: 10.30.2008

Can lightning strike twice in the same place? Tucson playwright Gavin Kayner hopes it can.
He returns to Beowulf Alley Theatre with a new play, "Noche de los Muertos," set in Magdalena, Mexico, in 1927.

The backdrop of the story is based on historical fact during a controversial time when the Mexican government wanted to undermine the influence of the church over the people. It is performed in English.
Just last year, the industrious Kayner pulled off one of the most rare feats in show business. He rented the Beowulf Alley Theatre and paid the production costs to present another of his plays, the philosophical "Thumbs." Even though the subject matter was complex and the dialogue somewhat elevated, audiences lined up at the box office.

The unknown playwright with his unknown play had become a local hit.
"Surprisingly enough, we made money," Kayner says modestly with a chuckle.
So when Beowulf Alley put out the call for new plays earlier this year, the enterprising artist stepped up with "Noche de los Muertos."

"It had won some earlier awards for writing, but this will be the first full production," Kayner says.
In August, Kayner says, several workshop performances of "Noche" helped in fine-tuning some of the nuances.

"And there was affirmation from the audience, as well," he adds with a smile.
Now the world premiere of "Noche de los Muertos" opens Saturday, the day before Día de los Muertos.
"They gave me the play to read and I loved it," says Sheldon Metz, a new face in town. "It's timely and important. This is a play that needs to be seen.

"It's about the conflict between church and state, an issue that has been very important in the last two elections for president in our country. But the play doesn't try to point fingers at anyone. There are antagonists and protagonists on both sides."

Metz, with a résumé that includes many years of quality theater experience in southern California, moved to Tucson in June. Then he was drawn to Beowulf Alley's open format for actors, directors and playwrights. After signing up to direct "Proof" at the downtown theater in the spring of 2009, Metz couldn't resist directing "Noche" as well.

"The characters are so real," Metz continues. "And this is definitely a director's play. Gavin gives you everything. All the lines are on the page. The emotions as well as the words. Everything is there.
"So it is up to me, the director, to get the actors to provide the best phrasing, the right shading."
This being a world premiere, both the director and the cast have an opportunity to create completely new characters out of their imaginations. There is no earlier production precedent for Metz to either follow or reject. His empty stage becomes a plain sheet of paper to fill with his own designs.
"My part is over," Kayner says. "I don't think I want to attend any rehearsals. I do have my own vision of the play, my own image of what it should look like.

"But theater is so invigorating because it is such a group effort, with input from so many people."
Metz plans to share that invigoration, as well. He talks about the process he likes to use in developing each actor's performance.

"I work on individual roles with each of them, sharing ideas, collaborating, helping find specific moments in the play that open up the emotions of their characters," he explains.

"Although there is a lot of Mexican culture in the play, most of it is inferred," the director explains. "All these characters are very accessible. The audience will identify with each of them."

Kayner remembers "Noche de los Muertos" was originally one of his short stories. It was inspired by the frequent trips he and his wife make to Mexico. In the town of Magdalena there is an annual pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Francis Xavier. The saint's statue rests in a reclining position. At the shrine, the pilgrims believe they must try to lift the head of the statue of St. Francis.

Those who aren't deemed worthy of God won't be able to lift the saint's head.
"That had powerful psychological implications to me personally," says Kayner. "I wouldn't want to try it. What if it turned out I couldn't lift it?"

But the play is not about the ritual. The play is about what happened in Magdalena in 1927 when Mexican President Plutarco Elías Calles tried to make all the Catholic schools secular ones. Government officials were killed. Priests were killed. Violence erupted between the people and the army. Revolution was in the air.

"In the play, it says over 2 million people died in these waves of revolution," Kayner says.
The play is set in motion when a government-appointed schoolteacher, Catalina, arrives in Magdalena to replace the local priest in educating the village children.

Catalina is accompanied by Renaldo, a government official, Tomas, a veteran member of the revolutionary forces, and Irma, a jaded soldier who would rather be living in the United States. When the priest refuses to co-operate with Renaldo, there is a murder before intermission.
"But the play isn't a whodunit," cautions Kayner. "It is more of a who's-gonna-pay-for-it."
additional information


IF YOU GO
What: Beowulf Alley Theatre presents "Noche de los Muertos" by Gavin Kayner
When: 7:30 p.m. preview Friday, opening at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, continuing at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays, 1:30 p.m. Sundays through Nov. 16
Where: Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 S. Sixth Ave.
Price: $20 general admission, discount prices online only
Info: 882-0555, http://www.beowulfalley.org/

'Muertos' at Beowulf | www.azstarnet.com ®

'Muertos' at Beowulf www.azstarnet.com ®

Published: 10.31.2008
'Muertos' at Beowulf
New play, set in Mexico, about battle between church and state
By Kathleen Allen
ARIZONA DAILY STAR

It all started with St. Francis. "I had written a short story about the lifting of St. Francis' head by pilgrims," said playwright Gavin Kayner. "The idea is, if you can lift his head, you are right with God. I thought that was a powerful idea, and I filed it away."
Years later, he revived the idea and it became the inspiration for his play "Noche de los Muertos," which will premiere at Beowulf Alley Theatre. Performances start with a preview tonight.
The St. Francis story turned out to be a small part of the play, which tells a powerful story about the battle between church and state.

"The underlying premise is, who will determine our fate, the church or the state?" says Kayner, a retired teacher from Amphitheater Public Schools.

It takes place in 1927 in the village of Magdalena, just south of Nogales. There, the Catholic Church has a strong hold on the people's hearts, souls and education. A young, idealistic schoolteacher comes to town. The government has tapped her to take the school away from the church and to teach the students.
The play is heavy with conflicts that are spiritual, physical, sexual and internal. Written in English, it's also a tight, suspenseful story with a healthy dose of drama and action.

Kayner did extensive research on Mexico's history for the play and even based his schoolteacher on a historical figure.

He started the play in 2004 and ended up rewriting it completely three times.
"I think it's very, very close to being what I want it to be," said Kayner.

The script was strong enough to persuade director Sheldon Metz to break a promise to his wife that he wouldn't direct a play until the spring.

Metz has worked as a director for 47 years. He just moved to Tucson from Los Angeles and was unpacking when Beowulf Alley called and asked him to consider directing "Noche."
He read it and knew that promise had to be put aside.

"The play has power and emotion," said Metz. "I felt it was a powerful, important piece."
Once his wife attended a reading of it, she agreed, and Metz came onboard.
Guilt and innocence both drip over the script. But it never becomes didactic, nor does it point fingers.
Metz liked that.

"There is more than one side to every story. I want to leave the audience with the decision of who's right and wrong.

"When you see the play, you can forge your own conclusion as to who is guilty."
Metz, who has directed nearly 100 plays, says that "Noche" fits with his concept of what theater should be.

"Theater is meant to make people think," he said.

"When the audience leaves, I want them to discuss the play. I want them to linger over a piece of pie and talk about the play for another hour.

"The show is full of opportunities for the audience to think. I think it's a powerful, powerful play."

Preview
• "Noche de los Muertos"
• By: Gavin Kayner.
• Director: Sheldon Metz.
• When: Preview is 7:30 p.m. today; regular performances are 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 1:30 p.m. Sundays through Nov. 16.
• Where: Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 S. Sixth Ave.
• Tickets: $20, with discounts available online.
• Reservations/information: www. beowulfalley.org or 882-0555.
• Cast: Anthony Auriemma, Caroline Latron, Sydney and Vince Flynn, Jordana Franco, Tenoch Gomez, Alex Greengaard, Janet Henderson, Rene Lopez, Esteban Oropeza and Angelica Rodenbeck.
• Running time: 2 hours, 20 minutes, with one intermission.

● Contact reporter Kathleen Allen at kallen@azstarnet.com or 573-4128.