Saturday, January 24, 2009

Dinner serves more than just food - WildLife

Dinner serves more than just food - WildLife

Dinner serves more than just food
By: Kim Kotel
Issue date: 1/21/09 Section: WildLife


The Pulitzer Prize-winning play, "Dinner With Friends," written by Donald Margulies, exhibited nothing short of a spectacular performance of various kinds of relationships in the raw.

The performances run thru Jan. 25 at Beowulf Alley Theatre located in downtown Tucson, camouflaged among similar cement buildings, the tobacco store on the corner and a music shop across the street.

The first scene opens on a married couple, Gabe (Art Armquist) and Karen (Carrie Hill), gushing about their trip to Italy, the tomatoes, the little old lady smothering them in her fists -- oh, and Karen's erratic driving, while their longtime friend and solitary dinner guest, Beth (Rhonda Hallquist), looks about as excited as the emotionless panela dessert sitting on the counter.

It turns out the risotto has more ability to stick with it than Beth, and with a tearful burst of agony the plot unfurls; Beth's husband Tom has left her. He wants a divorce.

And suddenly an estrangement between husband and wife winds its way through the relationships both individuals possess with their best friends - couple to couple, friend to friend and, even for Gabe and Karen at the end of the cycle, husband to wife. The dialogue is packed with repressed energy, flaring unexpectedly and finishing every scene with driving force.

Perhaps the beauty of the play lies in its title "Dinner With Friends." A simple event playing itself off as an understatement. It's what drives the plot and what Beth, Tom, Karen and Gabe's world revolves around: conversations that change our delicate static of life with every word spoken and left unsaid.

The set looks like it got snatched from your own living room, and the acting was nothing short of impressive. Margulies captured a dark, volatile and very normal part of life, lacing it with humor and adding yet another dimension of what makes us human. Beowulf Alley Theatre Company and director Susan Arnold made it breathe.


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Dinner with Friends
Beowulf Alley Theatre Company
Runs through January 25

Actors and Crews wanted for LNT@the Alley and Out to Lunch Theatre

 

Media Contact:

Michael Fenlason (Late Night): MichaelFenlason@aol.com

Susan Arnold (Out to Lunch): smarnold@dakotacom.net

Beth Dell: theatre@beowulfalley.org

 

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre

11 South 6th Avenue · Tucson, AZ   85701

Administration 622-4460 · Reservations 882-0555

www.beowulfalley.org

theatre@beowulfalley.org

 

Actors and Crews wanted for LNT@the Alley and Out to Lunch Theatre

 

(Tucson, AZ – Jan. 24, 2009) Beowulf Alley Theatre Company is holding auditions for its late night and lunch time theatre series. Auditions will take place at 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on Wednesday, January 28 at the theatre, 11 South 6th Ave, Downtown between Broadway and Congress. Performance for late night will be February 20-22 and February 27-28 at 10:30 p.m. Performances for the lunchtime theatre will be February 11, 18, and 25 at 12:15 p.m. for 30 minutes of theatre.

We are seeking a variety of actors for late night:

·         Males who can play characters 20-40s

·         Female actors who can play characters in their 20s-30s

There are three plays under consideration. One play is a musical so plan to come to sing any piece you want – a capella.

We are seeking a variety of actors for lunch time:

·         Males who can play characters from mid-20s to mid-40s

·         A male who can play a character from mid-50s to mid-70s

·         Females who can play characters from mid-20s to mid-40s

·         A female who can play a character from mid-50s to mid-70s

Lunchtime theatre includes three 10-minute plays and is presented to entertain those who need a lunchtime break from work, those who have free time during the day, seniors who are retired and folks with limited resources.

Sets, props and costumes are minimal. Rehearsals are scheduled according to availability of the director, cast and crew but will begin immediately. We invite the community to get involved. What you lack in pay will be made up in creativity, collaboration and FUN! We are also building a planning committee for late night activities and lunchtime theatres so if you have ideas or want to get involved, let us know. Turn your volunteer time into play time!

 

If you can’t make these dates and times but are interested or if you have any questions, contact Michael Fenlason (Late Night) at MichaelFenlason@aol.com, Susan Arnold (Out to Lunch) at smarnold@dakotacom.net or email Beowulf Alley at theatre@beowulfalley.org.

 

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Actors and Crews wanted for LNT@the Alley

Media Contact:

 

Michael Fenlason: MichaelFenlason@aol.com

Beth Dell: theatre@beowulfalley.org

 

 

Beowulf Alley Theatre

11 South 6th Avenue · Tucson, AZ   85701

Administration 622-4460 · Reservations 882-0555

www.beowulfalley.org

theatre@beowulfalley.org

 

Actors and Crews wanted for LNT@the Alley

 

(Tucson, AZ – Jan. 20, 2009) Beowulf Alley Theatre Company is holding auditions for its late night theatre series. Auditions will take place at 8:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. on Wednesday, January 21 and at noon until 2 p.m. on Saturday, January 24, 2009 at the theatre, 11 South 6th Ave, Downtown between Broadway and Congress . Performance will be February 20-22 and February 27-28.

 

We are seeking a variety of actors:

·         Males who can play characters 20-40s

·         Female actors who can play characters in their 20s-30s

 

There are three plays under consideration. One play is a musical so plan to come to sing any piece you want – a capella.

 

There is no nudity involved. We’re building a late night program at Beowulf Alley and want actors who are interested in newer, contemporary plays with an edge. Sets, props and costumes are minimal and performances are 10:30 to midnight on Fridays and Saturdays and 7:30 on Sundays in conjunction with our mail stage schedule for now. Rehearsals are scheduled according to availability of the director, cast and crew. We invite you all to get involved. What you lack in pay will be made up in creativity, collaboration and FUN! We are also building a planning committee for late night activities so if you have ideas or want to get involved, let us know. Turn your volunteer time into play time!

 

If you can’t make these dates and times but are interested or if you have any questions, contact Michael Fenlason at MichaelFenlason@aol.com  or email Beowulf Alley at theatre@beowulfalley.org.

 

Friday, January 16, 2009

Beowulf serves savory 'Dinner' | www.azstarnet.com ®

Beowulf serves savory 'Dinner' www.azstarnet.com ®

Accent
Beowulf serves savory 'Dinner'
By Kathleen Allen
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona Published: 01.16.2009

Grab a seat and pull it up to the table for "Dinner With Friends."
The Beowulf Alley Theatre production of the Donald Margulies Pulitzer Prize-winning play is an evening full delectable fare.

Much of that is thanks to a cast that embraces the characters and a director who lets the play breathe.
"Dinner With Friends" is about two couples: Gabe and Karen and their friends Tom and Beth.




Gabe and Karen introduced their friends to each other and pride themselves on a match well made.
But a dozen years later, Tom and Beth split apart, not very amicably. Gabe and Karen are thrown for a loop, take sides and question their own relationship and what marriage means.

Not earthshaking subject matter — plays and movies often cover this territory.

But Margulies does it with such a sharp wit, well-drawn characters and rich dialogue that it feels fresh.
And this production, directed by Susan Arnold to clip along at a contagious rhythm, is rich with laughs balanced by some serious relationship issues.

Art Almquist and Carrie Hill's Gabe and Karen have such a strong rapport, and are so well-rooted in their characters, that they make the snappy dialogue, little glances and constant back and forth seem like the most natural thing in the world.

Watch how they pass a bottle of wine. Or make a bed together. They are two people who revel in their domestic bliss.

Rick Shipman and Rhonda Hallquist's Tom and Beth give such a tension to their relationship that it's difficult at times to watch them.
As this marriage falls apart, so do the friendships. And the reasons they were ever friends in the first place come into question.

Because this solid script has a cast and director who are so invested in the material, don't be surprised if you leave the theater paying a bit more attention to your relationships.

"Dinner With Friends" sneaks up on you, hangs with you for some time and leaves you fully satisfied.

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


review
"Dinner With Friends"
• By: Donald Margulies.
• Presented by: Beowulf Alley Theatre.
• Director: Susan Arnold.
• When: 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 1:30 p.m. Sundays through Jan. 25.
• Where: Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 S. Sixth Ave.
• Tickets: $20. Discounts available if purchased online, www.beowulfalley.org
• Information: 882-0555 or www.beowulfalley.org
• Running time: 2 hours 20 minutes, with one intermission.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Tucson Weekly : Arts : On Commitment

Tucson Weekly : Arts : On Commitment

PUBLISHED ON JANUARY 15, 2009

Thoughtful casting and fine writing lead Beowulf's 'Dinner With Friends' to success
By JAMES REEL

"Beowulf Alley Theatre Company has just opened a strong production of Dinner With Friends, deftly directed by Susan Arnold."

Donald Margulies won a Pulitzer for his play Dinner With Friends, but that doesn't mean it's either an epic or a spectacle in the tradition of such winning plays as August: Osage County, Rent, Angels in America: Millennium Approaches or The Kentucky Cycle. It's a smaller, tighter work more in the manner of Doubt, Proof and Wit.

Indeed, at first glance, the subject of Dinner With Friends seems mundane: how four people are affected by divorce. What makes Margulies' comedy/drama Pulitzer-worthy is its slightly unusual angle: This is not so much an account of how relationships fall apart as a consideration of how they might hold together.

Beowulf Alley Theatre Company has just opened a strong production of Dinner With Friends, deftly directed by Susan Arnold.

The lights come up in the dining room of Gabe and Karen as they're trying to entertain their longtime friend Beth with an exquisite meal and too much detail about their recent culinary trip to Italy. But Beth has something on her mind other than avoiding the verbal slideshow, and finally blurts it out: Her husband, Tom, is leaving her for another woman.




Rick Shipman, Carrie Hill, Art Almquist and Rhonda Hallquist in "Dinner With Friends."

Nobody knows quite how to deal with this--not Beth, and not Gabe and Karen. Shocked, they can't do much more than pry a few details out of Beth and assure her that she and Tom are their closest friends. And then they stare at each other across the table, frozen in the headlights of oncoming danger.

Gabe and Karen introduced Beth and Tom to each other a dozen years before. Both marriages have seemed placid and conventional, but if Beth and Tom can split without warning, how fragile might Gabe and Karen's own complacent marriage be? Besides which, there's the usual quandary when a couple sees friends get divorced: Which friend will they get custody of? Will they be able to retain them both as friends, or will they lose them both?

Tom, who was unable to attend the dinner, is distraught when he learns that Gabe and Karen have gotten only Beth's side of the story. And, as the play progresses, it's clear that Tom has valid complaints of his own. Identifying the victim here is no easy task. Also, what role might Gabe and Karen have played in the marriage's demise? After all, we see in a flashback that they're the people who brought the two together in the first place, and it was clear then that Beth and Tom most certainly were not made for each other.

Through the play, Margulies tests the bonds within the couples, between the couples, between the women, between the men. The success of a production depends on casting; director Arnold made an unusual choice or two, but it all turned out for the best.

As Margulies writes him, Tom would seem to be some sort of middle-aged stud-manqué, yet at Beowulf Alley, he is portrayed by Rick Shipman, more roly-poly and cuddly than studly. As Shipman plays him, Tom is a man whose success with women lies mainly in the past; marriage has made him soft, and he yearns for firmness--of body, of character, of intent.

Last year, I heard that Arnold was having trouble casting the role of Gabe; she considered several other strong actors before settling on Art Almquist, who turns out to be a fine choice for a couple of reasons. First, he shares with Shipman a certain boyishness that makes it impossible for them to represent men as entirely selfish villains. Second, he has a comfortable, offhand rapport with Carrie Hill, who plays Karen with the sternness and backbone the male characters lack. Almquist and Hill are thoroughly convincing as a longtime couple casually in sync, whether recounting their trip in counterpoint or simply making a bed together.

Then there's Rhonda Hallquist as Beth, undergoing the deepest transformations over the course of the play, from distraught in the opening scene, to ditzy in the flashback, to radiant in the end; in her last scene, she somehow looks younger. It's called acting, not makeup.

If anything is missing from the performances, it's the last bittersweet measure of regret. Hill handles this very well at play's end, and Almquist has a nice little speech about passing time and a growing awareness of mortality, but otherwise, the balance tilts toward the comedy rather than the drama.

Scenically, Dinner With Friends is more ambitious than Beowulf Alley's norm, and Joel Charles has come through with fine sets, including a pair of paintings (presumably by Bill Galbreath, credited with "special scenic artistry") that look like a cross between Van Gogh and Anselm Kiefer--a perfect manifestation of what the dialogue describes as Beth's "neo-psychotic" art style.

Before the play begins, the usual admonition to turn off cell phones and pagers includes a new directive: No texting during the performance. I understand that rampant text-messaging nearly disrupted a performance at another theater recently. Come on, people: Sit down, shut up and pay attention. That's the least you should do, whether your commitment is to an evening in the theater, or a lifetime in marriage.

Dinner With Friends
presented by Beowulf Alley Theatre Company
7:30 p.m., Thursday-Saturday; 1:30 p.m., Sunday, through Jan. 25
11 S. Sixth Ave.
$20
882-0555
beowulfalley.org

Stanislavski Workshop Wants YOU!

 

 

Philip Bennett (L) and class of students at Beowulf Alley.

Still a Few Slots Available in the Stanislavski Ultimate Technique Workshop

Taught by ActingLab@the Alley Instructor, Philip Bennett

“How do spectators understand a play? Through consecutive, logical and expressive actions.”  Sonia Moore

Actors, directors or writers who wish to experience Stanislavski’s Ultimate Technique can still register for a three hour workshop taught by Philip Bennett at Beowulf Alley Theatre on Saturday, Jan. 17th 10 a.m.   Participate ($25) or observe ($15), but don’t miss this opportunity to study ‘Active Analysis’, so powerful as to have been suppressed for over 30 years!

Sign up at http://www.beowulfalley.org/html/stanislavski_s_ultimate_acting.html 
or call 882-0555.

 

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Drama depicts the reality of marriage after the honeymoon

Drama depicts the reality of marriage after the honeymoon

January 14, 2009, 9:10 a.m.
CHUCK GRAHAM
Tucson Citizen

Drama depicts the reality of marriage after the honeymoon

One thing about the institution of marriage, it will surely make you thoughtful. Donald Margulies explores some of the deeper thoughts in his play "Dinner With Friends."




Rick Shipman (from left), Carrie Hill, Art Almquist and Rhonda Hall star in "Dinner with Friends."
Photo by Scott Griessel/Creatista, courtesy of Beowulf Alley Theatre Co.

Susan Arnold has put these ideas on stage at Beowulf Alley Theatre Company, directing four actors through a strong, clear production that will affect anyone who has been married. Now that society has decided it's OK if people have active sex lives without being married, some of the play's questions feel even more poignant.

But doesn't it seem remarkable that, after several hundred thousand years of human evolution, the solution to preserving permanent relationships hasn't been figured out? How difficult can it be? A couple of people meet, enjoy each other, have fun and say, "This is so great, let's do it forever."

Then when difficulties ensue, the people in trouble can check on what thousands of other people did with exactly the same problem.

Why don't the solutions that work out pretty well get passed along to the next generation? This is where Margulies comes in. He suggests there may be times when keeping the marriage together really isn't the most important part.

On the other hand, maybe he's wrong. Should two people even think about getting married if they aren't committed to sticking it out?

On the third hand, suppose these two determined people keep compromising their individual dreams of happiness so they can stay married. It is 50 years later and what have they gained?

You can sit in coffee shops and see lots of senior citizen couples sharing a table but staring off in different directions, oblivious to each other. Wouldn't both of them rather be somewhere else?

Margulies insists on asking "When is enough, enough?"

Carrie Hill and Art Almquist play Karen and Gabe, the bouncy couple who stay together because she talks all the time and he listens. Gabe maintains his dignity by occasionally making fun of Karen, who doesn't seem to notice because she's too busy thinking of what to say next.

But everyone considers Karen and Gabe the perfect couple, especially their friends Beth (Rhonda Hallquist) and Tom (Rick Shipman). After all, it was Karen and Gabe who first introduced Beth and Tom one summer long ago on Martha's Vineyard.

So when Beth and Tom split up early in Act One, Karen and Gabe are shocked. Karen immediately takes Beth's side, while Gabe suggests a more reasoned approach.

Then the story skips around in time, going back almost 13 years to the rosy beginning of this troubled marriage - then leaping ahead to five months after the couple's initial split. All that time-shuffling strengthens our appreciation of the issues. We can be reflective, while the characters struggle onstage to decide which is more important - stability or the opportunity for change.

All four actors feel modern and real, giving their dialogue delicate shading and subtle nuance. They live upscale, civilized lives and use big words in their arguments.

Their conversations, whether humorous or conflicted, are well-balanced and fully expressed. Each cast member gets several sympathetic moments as the power in their relationships keeps shifting.

The marriage of Beth and Tom provides all the trauma in the middle portions. Karen and Gabe are the emotional bookends who set up the conflict, then get to dramatize its final resolution.

The only odd note was that on opening night the other actors kept saying Karen's name was Carrie. That should be cleared up by this weekend.



Dinner with Friends Opening Night Was Lively!

 

 

OPENING NIGHT of DINNER WITH FRIENDS WAS TASTY

(Tucson, AZ) Toasts continued following the opening night performance of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play, Dinner with Friends by Donald Margulies, directed by Susan Arnold, starring Art Almquist, Rhonda Hallquist, Carrie Hill and Rick Shipman at a glorious reception provided by Pastiche Modern Eatery and Beowulf Alley’s Board of Directors.  Succulent shrimp, mouth-watering salmon and decadent chocolate fondue took center stage as audience, cast and volunteers celebrated a delightful performance of the newest offering at Beowulf Alley Theatre.

“My husband and I … drove all the way from SaddleBrooke.  The play was well worth the effort… We will tell our friends.”

“We attended opening night…We think you have another hit run on your hands. My wife and I both enjoy [the] experiences we have with your Company. We pin (y)our flyers …up at our work places, and encourage friends and family to try and make your theater part of their entertainment…The lighting was really great and plays an important part…The stage hands are really busy…and handled everything great…The entire cast and crew are setting a new bar for…plays and performances.” 

If you missed opening night, not to worry. Pastiche Modern Eatery will be working their magic again for the Primavera Foundation benefit performance with reception to follow at the theatre on Thursday, Jan. 22 at 7:30 p.m.  The additional $10 added to the price of your ticket goes directly to Primavera Foundation. Primavera sows the seeds of change by strengthening lives, building communities, and advocating for social justice. To address their mission, Primavera's innovative programs and services provide a full range of opportunities to help people transition from poverty to greater well-being and security.

While tickets are selling quickly for the next two weekends of performances, good seats are still available - there are no bad seats in Beowulf Alley's 95-seat theatre! Thurs.-Sat., 7:30 p.m. and Sun. at 1:30 p.m. Visit www.beowulfalley.org today to purchase your discounted tickets or call 882-0555! The general ticket price is $20.

Thanks to all the Beowulf family of volunteers, especially the talented young people from The University of Arizona School of Theatre Arts Department of Technical Design and Production and the Tucson High Drama Program.  We’re here for the future of theatre in Tucson!

***

Dinner with Friends by Donald Margulies

Cast members: Rick Shipman, Art Almquist, Carrie Hill and Rhonda Hallquist

 

Friday, January 09, 2009

Reality bites pair's vision in 'Dinner' | www.azstarnet.com ®

Reality bites pair's vision in 'Dinner' www.azstarnet.com ®


Accent
Reality bites pair's vision in 'Dinner'
By Kathleen Allen
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona Published: 01.09.2009

Put yourself in Gabe and Karen's place, two of the four characters in Donald Margulies' Pulitzer Prize-winning play, "Dinner With Friends," which Beowulf Alley Theatre opens Saturday.



Art Almquist, left, Rick Shipman, Carrie Hill and Rhonda Hallquist star in
Beowulf Alley Theatre's production of "Dinner With Friends."
Scott Griessel / Courtesy of Beowulf Alley Theatre

Gabe and Karen were just newlyweds when they introduced Tom and Beth to each other. Tom and Beth married, and the four of them became great friends, doing everything together.

So when Tom and Beth announce they are getting a divorce, Gabe and Karen are thrown for a loop. Wouldn't you be?

And they begin to question their own relationship. Wouldn't you?
"Gabe and Karen introduced this couple, created them, in a way, into a vision of the perfect couple," said Susan Arnold, director of the production.

"That sustained them. In life, we have a vision of how it's going to go. When that vision is upset, we adjust. I think that process is very interesting to look at."

In any other hands, "Dinner With Friends" might become a one-note piece.
In the hands of Margulies, it's a much different beast.

"I love the way he writes and the way he examines the human condition," said Arnold.
"He's very even-handed with his characters."

Consequently, he makes a piece about a break-up something more, she added.
"It's more about the shock waves that emanate from all four characters. It speaks to our perceived notions about the way life should be."

And it's a play that Arnold hopes will stick with audience members.
"I've always felt theater is a wonderful vehicle for examining the human condition and raising questions, for getting people to think," she said.

"I would like the audience to walk out of the theater and talk to each other about what they saw and what they heard."

"It's more about the shock waves that emanate from all four characters. It speaks to our perceived notions about the way life should be."

Susan Arnold,
"Dinner With Friends" director

● Contact reporter Kathleen Allen at kallen@azstarnet.com.

Thursday, January 01, 2009

Families ring in New Year at downtown First Night | New Year's Eve party

Families ring in New Year at downtown First Night New Year's Eve party:

"Families ring in New Year at downtown First Night"

December 31, 2008, 11:14 p.m.

TEYA VITU
Published: 01.01.2009

Downtown threw a family-friendly New Year's Eve party and plenty of families showed up.
And had fun. Downtown.
Droves of families got out of the house for the last night of the year or, rather, First Night, as organizers dubbed the event that brought entertainment of all sorts to a half-dozen indoor and outdoor venues.
"Normally, we'd be at home watching TV. This is way better," said Manny Ramirez, who was at the Tucson Children's Museum with his sons, Fabian, 6, and Ian, 2, and his wife, Brenda. "The kids will be burned out and we can stay up to midnight without them."
About 2,000 people checked out the inaugural alcohol-free, family-friendly First Night put on by the Downtown Tucson Partnership.
"I loved it," said Andy Nix, 6, who had just seen "Stories that Soar!" at Beowulf Alley Theatre. "I liked the puppets and the ghost popping and everything."
Andy went to First Night with his sister, Annabeth, 8, and his father, David Nix.
David Nix said he took the kids bowling last New Year's Eve and First Night was an improvement.
"Oh, yeah, it's been great," Nix said. "We went to three programs already. They loved them."
First Night buttons - $12 for adults and $6 for kids - got people into events at the Leo Rich Theatre, the Scottish Rite Cathedral, Beowulf, the Fox Theatre and the children's museum.
Free outdoor entertainment was available at La Placita Village, outside the children's museum and in front of the Tucson Music Hall.
Local singers Lisa Otey and Diane Van Deurzen usually perform at private parties on New Year's Eve.
"The whole concept, it's family," Van Deurzen said after their first set at Beowulf. "We love downtown. We like the idea the whole night is music."
Three-generation groups were common. Laura and Chuck Freebairn went downtown with their son, Kyle Freebairn, 25, who brought his son, 6-month-old Owen.
"This is our first year out," Laura Freebairn said. "We're from the Northeast Side. We were willing to make the drive. We're hearing great music. We're happy."
Chuck Freebairn suggested the next First Night have more outdoor bands and Kyle suggested organizers consider a family price when setting admission fees.
Cox Communications gave out small, blinking blue lights which people wore to give the evening extra sparkle.
Laurie O'Brien was tending to her daughter, sleeping 4-month-old Caitlyn, outside the children's museum while husband Mike had 5-year-old twins Michael and Jack at the nearby free puppet show.
"We're having fun," she said.