| Schedule: | National Ensemble Theatre
Festival - June 21-22 1999 Go to SF Arts Monthly article on the Festival |
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| Monday, June 21 6 pm PATCHWORKS: Life
And Legends Of The Coal Towns 8 pm YOU
CANT WIN: Memoirs Of An Outlaw In The American
West 10 pm THE
VOICE OF SOULS: Touchstone Plays Shakespeare's
Sonnets Tuesday, June 22 6 pm
DIAMONDS IN THE DARK: 8 pm MAD
LOVE 10 pm MATING CRIES by The Independent Eye Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Forum Theatre, 701 Mission Street at 3rd Street in San Francisco. TICKETS: $15 each or $30 for any 3 plays can be purchased in advance by calling the box office at (415) 399-1809. Half-price student tickets and senior and group discounts are available. For more information on the Festival or conference, please call (415) 399-1809. home | news | contact us | mailing list | archives | touring | bookstore
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San Francisco becomes home to the
inaugural Festival of Ensemble Theatre, June 21 and
June 22, at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts
Forum Theatre. This two day celebration of
collectively-created theatre features performances by
some of the U.S.s top ensemble companies, with more
than a hundred years of combined history, including: San
Franciscos own A Traveling Jewish Theatre; Bloomsburg
Theatre Ensemble (Bloomsburg, PA); DellArte
Players Company (Blue Lake, CA); The Independent
Eye (Philadelphia, PA); Irondale Ensemble Project (New
York, NY); and Touchstone Theatre (Bethlehem, PA).
The Festival is being produced under the auspices of the Network
of Ensemble Theatres (NET), a newly-formed consortium
of nationally-recognized ensemble theatre companies with
seed funding provided by the National Endowment for the
Arts. The Festival begins at 6 pm on Monday, June 21 with the West Coast premiere of PATCHWORKS: Life And Legends Of The Coal Towns by the Bloomsburg Theatre Ensemble. This original work designed for the whole family uses stories, songs and first-person narratives to illustrate the anthracite coal heritage of Northeastern Pennsylvania. A cast of three spin compelling stories of the men, women, boys and girls whose work in Pennsylvanias coal towns helped fuel Americas Industrial Revolution. At 8 pm on Monday, the Festival continues with YOU CANT WIN: Memoirs Of An Outlaw In The American West by the Irondale Ensemble Project. The play is based on the memoirs of Jack Black, a hobo/outlaw turned librarian/writer, in the American West at the turn of the century. This American Dickensian-style epic and "on the road" tale recounts Blacks experience in the San Francisco Bay Area of the 1880s where he encountered opium dens, western prisons and the inhabitants of the murky underworld that populated them. Both Jack Kerouac and William S. Burroughs credit Black with having tremendous influence on their work. Irondales production involves a cast of seven, portraying more than twenty characters, complemented by original and traditional music. Monday evening concludes with a 10 pm presentation of THE VOICE OF SOULS: Touchstone Plays Shakespeares Sonnets by Touchstone Theatre. Known for their movement based ensemble works, Touchstone takes on their newest challenge, the words of William Shakespeare. With humor and pathos, the ensemble uses the Bards tightly knit, 14-line poems to examine the condition of being human, loving and losing. Shakespeare fanatics and Bardophobes alike will be smitten by this buoyant and passionate journey through some of Shakespeares most articulate and powerful works. June 22, Tuesday evenings program begins at 6 pm with a one-night revival of A Traveling Jewish Theatres celebrated bilingual work, DIAMONDS IN THE DARK: A Celebration Of Yiddish Poetry. ATJTs ensemble goes beyond the "schlepping" and "schlemiels", crossing boundaries and exploding stereotypes about the Yiddish language by returning to the poetic impulse itself through use of performance, music, movement and the spoken word. Featuring a kaleidoscope selection of poetry and set within a postmodern musical score by Albert Greenberg and movement by Stephen Pelton, DIAMONDS brings a contemporary theatrical voice to the lyric passions of Yiddish poets. The San Francisco Chronicle wrote: "Poetic images glitter in DIAMONDS IN THE DARK." At 8 pm on Tuesday, DellArte Players Company presents its international touring production, MAD LOVE (LAMOUR FOU). Adapted from the 1935 expressionist film starring Peter Lorre, the play tells the dark tale of a brilliant surgeon who replaces the damaged hands of a concert pianist with the hands of a murderer. MAD LOVE, set in "the Theatre of Horrors" and given a unique DellArte spin, explores the thin line between horror and humor. The play explores the power of suggestion and its effectiveness as a controlling device. Directed by Jael Weisman, MAD LOVE features DellArte co-artistic directors Michael Fields, Joan Schirle and performer/writer Donald Forrest, a team responsible for more than fifteen collaborative works since 1977. The Festival concludes on Tuesday at 10 pm with The Independent Eye and their innovative work, MATING CRIES. This medley of six micro-plays celebrating the lust, comedy and wonder of human bonding is written and performed by The Independent Eyes founders, Conrad Bishop and Elizabeth Fuller. MATING CRIES is a web of word jazz and character snapshots, drawn from myth, from daydream and from the creators own 37 years as artistic life-mates.
A Traveling Jewish Theatre (ATJT) was founded in 1978 by Corey Fischer, Albert Greenberg and Naomi Newman. Helen Stoltzfus joined the ensemble in 1986. The company is dedicated to creating original works of theatre, as an ensemble and in collaboration with a variety of outside artists, that contribute to a generous vision of the human condition. ATJT recently celebrated its 20th anniversary with the opening of the companys newly-renovated 88-seat theatre center in San Franciscos oldest artist cooperative, Project Artaud. The Bloomsburg Theatre Ensemble (BTE) was founded in 1978 by a group of young artists studying with legendary acting teacher Alvina Krause. Today, the resident ensemble of eight, including actors, directors, teachers, writers, and a production manager, together with an administrative and technical staff, continues a long-term commitment to provide the non-urban region of Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania with unique cultural opportunities. BTE embodies the belief that theatre is a necessary tool for learning and communication and is dedicated to developing original works and adaptations of classics through the ensemble method. The DellArte Players Company is one of the few actor-managed ensembles in the U.S. Based in a small town in a rural area of Northern California, DellArte has an international reputation for its touring performances and professional school, the DellArte International School of Physical Theatre, which attracts students from all over the world. The core company of artists have been creating collaboratively since the 1970s, and their many original works have been seen in Brazil, Uruguay, Canada, Italy, Holland, Denmark, Sweden, and throughout the U.S.
The Independent Eye is a professional theatre ensemble using many story-telling forms to reflect shared human experience. Since 1974, the Eye has played over 3,000 performances in 34 states, including engagements at Chicagos Body Politic, Baltimore Theatre Project, Seattles New City Theatre, Milwaukees Theatre X, Pittsburghs City Theatre, New Yorks CSC Repertory, Theater for the New City, and Jean Cocteau Repertory, and many others. The Independent Eye is led by founding directors Conrad Bishop and Elizabeth Fuller. The Irondale Ensemble Project is an experimental/research theatre ensemble established in New York City in 1983. The company has roots in improvisation, traditional Stanislavski techniques, extensive movement work, and collaborative writing techniques. The primary goal of the ensemble is to discover how theatre can be utilized as an important or central aspect of daily life. Irondale has produced 25 major Off-Broadway shows, including the American premiere of Brechts CONVERSATIONS IN EXILE and ten original pieces.
Touchstone Theatre is a not-for-profit regional theater center based in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and is home to a theatre, a cafe and a professional resident ensemble dedicated to creating and presenting original theatre. Touchstone is committed to being an active force in the renewal of theatre as a vital form and in its use as a community-building tool. Founded in 1981, Touchstone is led by Artistic Director and Ensemble Member Mark McKenna. home | news | contact us | mailing list | archives | touring | bookstore |
Ensemble theatres have made a unique and significant contribution to the American theatre from New Yorks Mabou Mines and The Wooster Group to San Franciscos A Traveling Jewish Theatre and the San Francisco Mime Troupe, helping to create some of the most fruitful collaborations and impactful productions over the past three decades. What these diverse companies from coast to coast share is a deep commitment to long-term artistic relationships at the center of their work, embodied in the formation of an artistic ensemble. This inaugural Festival of Ensemble Theatre celebrates the tremendous creativity and power of ensemble-created work and offers it as an alternative model to the more hierarchical model that currently dominates the modern theatrical landscape. home | news | contact us | mailing list | archives | touring | bookstore
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