Just Wrought

Recovering playwright, once won a STRANGER Genius Award for theater. Now writing a bloated novel about… G-d help me! Theatre.

Tag: Seanjohn Walsh

  • Live Blogging “Swing Time” – The Sunday Run-through

    Live Blogging “Swing Time” – The Sunday Run-through

    I’m watching the first act of Sandbox Radio LIVE!: “Swing Time”, which we will be performing live tomorrow at ACT in downtown Seattle, but will also be broadcasting via podcast as soon as we sweeten the sound.

    I can relax a little for the moment because my two bits aren’t until act two.  As per usual, I’m Sam in episode 12 of Markheim, but I also got drafted as a concessions vendor in our staging of the classic baseball balladry, “Casey at the Bat”.

    There’s an intense ambient confusion to late process rehearsals—cue-to-cues and dress runs, etc.—that I find deeply unnerving, even though as a playwright I usually had absolutely zero responsibilities. Amidst the tumult, I am grateful for directors in a way I usually don’t admit to. I recall, at these times, my deep admiration for anyone who can handle chaos—indeed choreograph it— with expertise and élan. Two names leap to mind, Leslie Law, the director and producer of Sandbox Radio, and John Langs, who directed the Seattle premiere of my play Louis Slotin Sonata and the world premiere of The Sequence, my staging of the real-life race to decode the human genome. I offer you this memory of John, utterly out of context to protect the innocent and guilty alike, after having sat through 10 hours of tech as cool as a cucumber, then suddenly shouting: “Would someone please muzzle that fucking dog!”  The show’s mascot Jack Russell Terrier had apparently rubbed John’s last nerve raw.

    For now, I get to sit and blog to you, gentle reader, about how much I love Juliette Pruzan’s particular whimsy, which you’ll be able to witness yourself in her original piece, “Swing Time Swing Set” written especially for this show, and performed with delight by Seanjohn Walsh, Kathryn Van Meter, Amy Bush and others. I pride myself on knowing where the laughs will come in a new work.  I’m not always right, but I can assure you there are plenty in this one. Probably some you’ll surprise us with when you come see tomorrow.

    If you haven’t already, get your tix here.

  • Sandbox Radio Live: Episode Two- "Horror Show"

    Sandbox Radio Live: Episode Two- "Horror Show"

    Episode Two of Sandbox Radio is now available on iTunes chocked full of Halloween offerings for your listening delight and convenience.  Here’s what you’ll find.

    Act 1

    @1:50 “The Hands of a Girl” by Ki Gottberg

    @21:15 “The Back of the 358 #1” by Paul MullinThe lovely Leslie Law leads Sandbox Radio

    @22:35 “Markheim: Episode 2” by Paul Mullin

    @37:40 “The Back of the 358 #2” by Paul Mullin

    @39:10 “The Black Cat” adapted from the story by Edgar Allen Poe.

     
    Act 2

    @0:37 “PSA: Hanford Challenge” by Elizabeth Heffron

    @3:45 “Madame Flora” by K. Brian Neel

    @9:32 “The Request” by Vincent Delaney

    @21:50 “The Back of the 358 #3” by Paul Mullin

    @23:25 “Pipe Play” by Elizabeth Heffron

    @43:02 Finale/Credits. Music Director: Jose Gonzales

    (Sandbox Radio Live: Horror Show, was recorded at West of Lenin on October 10, 2011. The show was engineered by Christopher Stewart, mixed by Dave Pascal and Rob Witmer, and directed by Leslie Law.)

    Paul Mullin and Charles Leggett as Sam and Markheim

    For you true Markheim geeks I’m including the script of Episode Two below the fold.  Enjoy it while you can, ‘cuz “Things can always get uglier, right?”

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  • A Show You Don’t Have to Come See

    A Show You Don’t Have to Come See

    How often do you get a plug for a show in which the plugger says he doesn’t really care if you come see it?  Well, that’s exactly what I’m telling about this second edition of Sandbox Radio Live: The Halloween Episode.

    Well, all right, hold on a second.  Fact is, I really would like to see you there in the audience, but our seating at West of Lenin is extremely limited and we will sell out.  So no matter what happens, some of you who show up without reservations will be frozen out, S.O.L, on the sidewalk outside, while the happy few who booked at Brown Paper Tickets early enough watch it live.  (Book ahead here.)  But do NOT despair.  It’s Sandbox Radio remember?  And the whole point of us doing it is to make a permanent recording.  Our first episode is available for you to listen to right now, for free! at iTunes.  (Listen here.)

    The podcast of Episode One, at 90 minutes, is admittedly quite sizable.  In future, perhaps The Sandbox might look at ways to create a table of contents with time-stamps so you can go to the sections of the show that most interest you.  In the mean time, download it so that you have something to play the next time you’re stuck in traffic.  You won’t regret it.  (And after you have a listen, please consider posting a review of the show.  It’s the best way for you to let us know what you do and don’t like, and it also raises Sandbox Radio’s profile on iTunes.)

    And look for the podcast of Sandbox Radio Live: The Halloween Episode coming out shortly after the live performance on October 10!

  • Sandbox Radio – Worth the Wait

    Sandbox Radio – Worth the Wait

    A bunch of us founded the Sandbox Artists Collective a few years ago “as a place for mid-career artists to explore their craft in the company of their peers.”  Unlike most assemblages of show folk, the Sandboxers weren’t in any hurrsandbox_radio_episode_01y to produce publicly as a group.  Most of us were already performing, writing and/or producing professionally elsewhere. We were not, however, completely quiet in our first years, hosting salons, like Playground in which four Sandbox playwrights wrote specifically for Sandbox actors.  Finally, however— and fully to the credit of Leslie Law’s leadership— the membership felt the urge to share what happens when we put  our collective mind into putting on a show.  The result was last month’s Sandbox Radio Live, Episode 1, available now in podcast here.

    On an individual artist’s note, Sandbox Radio Live has given me the opportunity and motivation to finally flesh out a project I have been percolating since high school.  For all that time, all I knew was that I wanted to wright a nasty noir angel detective saga.  Now you can listen to the first chapter of Markheim on the podcast, with the incomparable Charles Leggett starring in the title role of the reluctant semi-heavenly gumshoe.  Below the fold I am posting the script in case you want to follow along. 

    And be sure to attend the next episode of Sandbox Radio Live on Monday, October 10th at West of Lenin, the fabulous new theatre space in Fremont, when Markheim adjusts to life in the strange city of Seattle, and begins his search for the reasons that brought him here.  Special appearance by the fellow that Jesus Christ Himself once called “the Prince of the World.”

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  • Notes from a Pure Success

    This past Monday night the Sandbox Artists Collective held its Spring Salon, An Ensemble Playground, with member actors reading short plays that member playwrights had written specifically for them, with an added twist that each playwright had to use seven of ten words assigned by another participating playwright.  I know that the trope “honor and pleasure” gets thrown around a lot, but in this case, my experience of being the member sponsor for this salon was unequivocally both, and you can add “thrill” and a “joy” to the mix, since the whole process reminded me a bit of childhood Christmases, when making presents ran a close second to the fun of opening them.

    I jotted some notes which I share with you here, mostly roughhewn:

    Preshow

    • People are wandering in, enjoying the food, wine and cookies.  Some Sandboxers, but other folks too, including– god help us all!– young people interested in fresh and locally grown plays.
    • 7:10, everyone is still eating, drinking, chatting, playing pinball machines and getting to know one another, which was the primary intent of this salon so I’m reluctant to get things started.

    Play One

    • Anita Montgomery’s  “The Ties that Bind”
    • Early it dawns that Leslie Law and Peter Dylan O’Connor are playing sister and brother, and it’s perfect.  Not only do they convincingly look the parts but their interaction is laced with that particular pain that only a brother and sister grown apart suffer.
    • Is this great acting, great writing, great casting?  Well, the writing essentially is the casting, so . . .
    • Fold in Dave Natale as the palpably estranged  step-brother, again pitch perfect, and the brilliance builds, blissfully untraceable to any single artist in the process, the way great theatre should be?

    Play Two

    • Ki Gottberg’s “Felt”
    • Leaps straightaway from the precipice of “qualia” one of Ki’s ten assigned words (by me: full disclosure).
    • Richard Ziman, gamely filling in for Shawn Belyea, plays a lovable pompous philandering pendant, bookended by his wife (Tracy Hyland) and his young lover (Renata Friedman).
    • Again the voices are pitch perfect.  Even the silences with which both Tracey and Renata charge the beginning of the piece seem written particularly for them. 
    • Ki writes four roles actually, gamely making full thematic use of the yet-to-be born Hyland baby Tracy so gracefully carries.
    • The arc of the piece, launching in absurdist comic verbosity gently lofts into a bitter-sweeter, clearer atmosphere and touches down so gently in shared humanity.  Maybe we can share our experiences, our “qualia”.
    • So exciting to see another playwright attack a subject I have longed to approach and do it so differently and successfully. 

    Play Three

    • “The Eulogy” by Elizabeth Heffron
    • Immediately we know that Mik Kuhlman, Lori Larsen and Seanjohn Walsh are siblings.  Siblings again! and also death, as they’re at a funeral: Anita’s characters were at a viewing.
    • Elizabeth clearly knows each of her actors so well that she can trust them with just enough dialogue to nail the moment without overdrawing it.   
    • The local references to a Ballard and a sex besotted Scandinavian parking lot king has the audience eating out of the palm of Elizabeth hands.  They can taste freshness, like eating a salmon they just watched being pulled out of the locks.

    Play Four

    • “Satsuma” by me, featuring Rik Deskin and Gin Hammond. 
    • Again the performers find their characters’ voices like virtuoso’s picking up their favorite fiddle
    • And  again, it’s siblings.  What’s with the synchronicity?  Is it that many of us in the Sandbox have known each other for so long that we see each other as brothers and sisters?  Or is it, like Lori Larsen suggests in the talkback, just some Jungian archetype that happens to  be floating for the moment in the collective ether.  Either way, it seems like a phenomenon uniquely connected to the immediacy of the work.

    Afterwards, we all agree we have to do something like this again.  The theatrical potentialities unleashed in the fusion of local playwrights with local actors with local audiences are just too powerful to ignore or leave untapped.   I know the Big Houses are busy staying alive, but they need to ask themselves why they are not more actively engaged in this uniquely fertile process.  There’s surviving and then there’s thriving, and Monday night felt like the latter to me. 

    And not just me.  Every person in that room felt it. That’s the singular beauty of theatre.  At its best, there’s nothing singular about it.

  • The Sandbox Artists Collective’s First Ever Ensemble Playground Salon!

    THE PROBLEM

    Of all the excellent points and counterpoints made in recent discussions about how new work is suffering in the American theatre, perhaps the one that hits hardest home for me is that playwrights have generally drifted away from writing for a specific ensemble.  I know I have been guilty of this sin; knowing even as I committed it that the scripts which I have written for specific actors have been some of my most artistically satisfying as well as popular among audiences.  Local work means local actors, and playwrights need to form better connections with the talent that surrounds them in the city they call home.

    ONE SOLUTION

    The Sandbox Artists Collective has dedicated its Spring Salon to an experiment wherein member playwrights write material with specific member actors in mind.

    WHAT?  HOW?

    On April 10 at the Elysian brew pub, five Sandbox playwrights (or their proxies) drew names from an envelope containing 15 Sandbox actors.  Over the course of a month, the playwrights personally and individually met with each of actors we drew.  We then wrote 10 – 25 pages of brand new material specifically for our selected actors. These pages will be read publicly at the Sandbox’s Spring Salon.

    THE TWIST

    Each of the playwrights gave another writer a list of ten words, seven of which they were obliged to include in their script.  (For instance, Anita Montgomery gave me “magic”, “earthquake”, “bat-shit”, “circumcision”, “pilates”, “semi-sweet”, “funk”, “solipsistic”, “satsuma”, and “largesse”.  Hell, those constitute a play in themselves!)

    WHO

    The Sandbox playwrights involved are Ki Gottberg, Elizabeth Heffron, Anita Montgomery, Paul Mullin and John Paulsen.  The Sandbox actors involved are Shawn Belyea, Rik Deskin, Renata Friedman, Gin Hammond, Tracy Hyland, Mik Kuhlman, Leslie Law, Lori Larsen, Todd Jefferson Moore, Paul Mullin Dave Natale, Peter Dylan O’Conner and Seanjohn Walsh.

    WHERE

    The Sandbox Salon 2010 Spring Salon will take place at the THE STUDIO @ 15 MCGRAW, 15 McGraw Street, Seattle WA 98109, on the top of Queen Anne Hill.

    WHEN

    Monday, May 10 at 7PM. 

    HOW MUCH

    Admission is free, though we may beg you for a $5 suggested donation to help bring you innovative Sandbox Projects like this in the future.