Saturday, March 31, 2012

Beowulf's man for all seasons

Beowulf's man for all seasons:
Michael Fenlason takes helm as theater company's multitasking artistic director
Tayler Wancour For The Arizona Daily Star | Posted: Thursday, March 29, 2012

Michael Fenlason is no stranger to theater: He has written, directed and even started his own company.
Clearly, he knows his way around a stage. So he was a logical choice when Beowulf Alley Theatre looked for an artistic director.
Beowulf's board of directors named Fenlason the artistic director in late December, a new position for the company.
The artistic side was handled by committee, and Beth Dell, who stepped down late last year, handled the administrative side.
Fenlason will take on both jobs as artistic director.
He wasn't a newcomer to Beowulf; he's acted there, directed, and had his original scripts staged.
"I've been pretty excited about this place since I got here," said Fenlason, who first stepped into the Beowulf theater as a volunteer in 2009.
 
MAMTA POPAT / ARIZONA DAILY STAR
Michael Fenlason, who has written and directed, is Beowulf Alley Theatre's artistic director, a new position for the company. He leads the administrative side, too

Read more: http://azstarnet.com/entertainment/arts-and-theatre/beowulf-s-man-for-all-seasons/article_346fd378-1e19-5e0e-bc98-3d2325df8147.html#ixzz1qhnBar2w

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Faith in Science | Review | Tucson Weekly

Faith in Science | Review | Tucson Weekly:

Faith in Science 
Beowulf Alley illuminates a historical tragedy in a solid production of 'Radium Girls'
by Laura C.J. Owen @lauracjowen"

The plot of Radium Girls would make anyone nervous. It's a dramatization of the real-life case of workers in a radium factory in New Jersey who fell ill after painting watch dials with a glowing radium solution. The women licked their paintbrushes after each application, blissfully ignorant that the radium would eventually cause necrosis (rotting) of the bone, starting in the jaw.

... the ensemble cast does solid work, with Scott, Cormier and Boyd-Martin as stand-outs.


... Composer Alex Greengaard has provided a creepy, subtle soundtrack that creates just the right atmosphere.


... Radium Girls is a strong production and a smart choice for Beowulf Alley, now headed by recently appointed artistic director Michael Fenlason. The play, which premiered at the Playwrights Theatre of New Jersey in 2000, has been produced all over the country—and I'm glad Beowulf has brought it to Tucson. It's a darkly entertaining piece, and it carries an extra punch because it's a true story. 


Samantha Cormier, Bree Boyd-Martin and Nicole Scott in Radium Girls. - Tristyn Tucci


Read the entire review here: Faith in Science | Review | Tucson Weekly

'Radium Girls' recounts early battle for worker safety | Beowulf Alley Theatre Company

'Radium Girls' recounts early battle for worker safety | Beowulf Alley Theatre Company:


'Radium Girls' recounts early battle for worker safety
Just because you don’t know if something is harmful doesn’t make it safe
Posted Mar 21, 2012, 2:23 pm
Dave Irwin
TucsonSentinel.com

Beowulf Alley Theatre’s “Radium Girls,” set in the 1920s and based on factual events, is about ignorance and corporate responsibility. It provides a cautionary tale for our own time: Simply because the science doesn’t exist yet to prove that something is harmful, does not necessarily make it is safe. Think lead paint, thalidomide, even cigarette smoke.

The jam-packed drama, with nine actors portraying 30 roles in more than 25 scenes, is a reminder that under the rule of law, authority requires responsibility.
 
Samantha Cormier, Bree Boyd-Martin and Nicole M. Scott in Radium Girls.



Wednesday, March 21, 2012

"RADIUM GIRLS" review

"RADIUM GIRLS" A DISTURBING LEGACY

By Chuck Graham

TucsonStage.com

 

 

Look at your wristwatch. Does it have any luminous paint on it? Is the watchcase make of lead? Maybe it should be.

 

The fact is, even today, nobody knows what the “safe limit” is for radiation exposure. In truth, there probably is no such thing as a safe limit, since all radium poisoning keeps building up in every body for one’s entire lifetime.

 

But because the fatal effects of radium poisoning can take decades to become known, people generally shrug off the danger. There are, after all, so many more things that can kill you so much quicker.

 

Which brings us to the knuckle-grinding “Radium Girls” political play written by Washington DC playwright D.W. Gregory. 

 

Going where no Tucson stage company has gone before, Beowulf Alley Theatre Company brings out the shameful truth about corporate America’s history for creating a safe place for uranium workers.

 

Sheldon Metz has directed a cast of nine, most playing multiple roles, to recount the history of the Radium Girls, a New Jersey group of young factory workers in the early 1920s whose lives had no value to their employer, the U.S. Radium Corporation. The company’s business was painting watch dials and other instruments with radium paint. It was the Radium Girls who did the painting.

 

Basically, U. S. Radium knew its watch-dial painting operation wasn’t safe, but always downplayed the danger. 

 

The play’s relevance for today is that this business strategy hasn’t changed. A string of documentary films keep telling us how giant corporations continue pumping processed food full of chemicals with complicated names that some scientists have declared to be safe.

 

There were scientists in the 1920s happy to declare radium was safe to work with, too, if certain procedures were applied. Of course that was completely false.

 

The sad saga of these Radium Girls is fully documented. They have their own Wikipedia page, too. Actually, a little online research before seeing “Radium Girls” is highly recommended.

 

Much of the dialogue is based on direct testimony that is a matter of public record.

 

Gregory the playwright has structured her play more like a documentary film, as a string of scenes that generate talking points to move the story along. This makes it difficult to personally identify with any of the innocent victims, but Metz does what he can to dramatize each of the conflicts.

 

Nicole M. Scott plays Grace Fryer, the radium worker who suffered terribly from radium poisoning and led the lawsuit for safer working conditions.

 

Bree Boyd-Martin plays Katherine Wiley, the lawyer whose determination kept the suit from being buried under legal technicalities raised by U.S. Radium.

 

To be reminded of this pivotal piece of workplace history will make us all better citizens. To see how little has changed in the business world’s eagerness to value profits more than the welfare of its workers will make us all better citizens, too.

 

“Radium Girls” continues in performances through April 8 at 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. Sundays, at Beowulf Alley Theatre, 11 S. Sixth Ave. All tickets are $20, with discounts for online purchases. For details and reservations, 882-0555, or visit www.beowulfalley.org

 

 

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Active Imagination Theatre presents Rabbit Hood

Tucson Weekly:

Active Imagination Theatre

When: Starts March 17. Saturdays, Sundays. Continues through April 7
Rabbit Hood, an imaginative reinterpretation of Robin Hood as the Easter Bunny, opens Saturday, March 17, an continues through Saturday, April 7. Shows are at noon; $5 child or adult. Call or email theatre@beowulfalley.org for reservations or more information.