Showing posts with label GreatGod. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GreatGod. Show all posts

Mar 19, 2025

Pics of Great God at TCC-SE

Another one in the books. I Have Angered a Great God played March 12-14 at Tarrant County College-Southeast Campus with a student cast and crew. I directed (and wrote it, had a cameo and was a member of the backstage crew). It was a very difficult rehearsal/production process, but the show came out fine.

 Here are a few photos of the production.

Mia Jimenez as Roberta Von Ritchie Ritchie and Noah Flores as the Great God

Mia Jimenez as Roberta Von Ritchie Ritchie and Tamie Tubbs as Martha

Emma Woodley as Therapist Jones and Mia Jimenez as Roberta Von Ritchie Ritchie

Tamia Tubbs as Martha, Noah Flores as the Great God and Mia Jimenez as Roberta Von Ritchie Ritchie 


Emma Woodley as Therapist Jones and Noah Flores as the Great God

The playwright/ director as the Therapist's Therapist and Emma Woodley as Therapist Jones
[credit: Glen Ellman/ TCC-SE]

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Mar 12, 2025

Great God in the TCC Collegian

 

SE student Emma Woodley, playing Therapist Jones, speaks to the Tiki God, played by Noah Flores,
during a rehearsal of “I Have Angered a Great God.” [photo: Alex Hoben]

TCC-SE comedy tackles phone etiquette issue

Production delivers witty commentary with song, dance, Tiki god
March 12, 2025

Through snappy dialogue, odd situations and the help of a few songs, SE Campus’ production of “I Have Angered a Great God” explores etiquette and self-awareness in the modern age.

The play follows Roberta, a woman constantly on her phone with her quirky ex-bestfriend Martha, who retraces her steps with the melodramatic therapist Jones to find out how she angered a Tiki god with anger-management issues.

“I Have Angered a Great God” takes viewers through flashbacks of absurd situations and, like most of McEntire’s plays, features song and dance numbers. The play is written by SE adjunct Brad McEntire and will be his third play performed at SE Campus.

An experienced playwright, McEntire also works in non-profit theater. He originally planned to have the play take place through text messages but ultimately decided against it.

“Watching a person text is about as theatrical as watching paint dry,” he said in an email. “It is utterly boring and isolating in life to watch someone text in front of you. So, texts became spoken conversations for the sake of the play.”

SE student Emma Woodley plays therapist Jones, who is treating both Roberta and the Tiki god for their problems. Despite being a last-minute addition after a fellow actor got hurt and was unable to fill the role, Woodley said she was happy with how the show was coming together.

“It’s been pretty challenging, but also kind of rewarding,” she said. “I know it’s really hard to not have the full amount of time to fully get it, but I think it’s gonna go well.”

In the opening act, therapist Jones tries to help Roberta and the Tiki God work through their problems but often goes on tangents about her personal life. Woodley said Jones is the only sane character in the entire play.

“She’s the one that’s connected to every single character,” she said. “She’s trying to make sure the great God doesn’t get angry. She’s trying to understand what Roberta did. She’s trying to understand Martha and her crazy, awesome mind. It’s like she’s the one that kind of pieces everybody together.”

“I Have Angered a Great God” will be SE student Tamia Tubbs’ first main role in a play. She plays the now-ex-best-friend Martha and said the experience of working on the play has been great.

“I go home like, rehearse, rehearse, rehearse,” she said. “I want to make sure I get my lines down. Make sure I’m very clear, make sure I got the dance right.”

McEntire wrote the play after noticing how unaware of each other people have gotten in recent years. He said etiquette has been one of the casualties of contemporary culture.

“It helps us get along as people,” he said in an email. “I miss a certain level of empathy, decorum and politeness that used to be a part of everyday life. It might be my imagination, but people used to seem aware of each other without treating each other as, you know, other.”
For Tubbs, the play is about not being distracted by your phone all the time.

“Personally, I am on my phone a lot, but I’m very aware of my surroundings,” she said. “I wouldn’t relate to Roberta and her situation. I think I’ll make someone mad because I’m too focused on my phone.”

The play will run from March 12 -14.
Admission is pay what you can and was done to make the play as accessible as possible.
 Donations will go to scholarships for students in the theater department.
Woodley said viewers should turn their phones off for this play.

“Stop scrolling it and just enjoy,” she said. “This is a show about etiquette, manners and phone etiquette. So then, best to just pay attention and be aware of your surroundings.

Original post: https://collegian.tccd.edu/52821/entertainment/se-comedy-tackles-phone-etiquette-issue/


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Perhaps you would be interested in adding more excitement and romance, adventure and intrigue to your life. If that's the case, I don't know what to tell you. But I would suggest you subscribe to my newsletter. I mean, who knows? Life is full of surprises. I only send stuff out occasionally, but it is good stuff. Hit the button below...


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Feb 28, 2025

I HAVE ANGERED A GREAT GOD coming to TCC-SE

 

(click on to enlarge)

My play I Have Angered a Great God will be presented soon at Tarrant County College's Theatre Southest.

This is a full-length expanded version of the one-act I wrote back in 2010 for Austin's Frontera Fest and the Out of the Loop Fest in Addison.

Here's the blurb:
Roberta has somehow angered a Great God. She retraces her steps over the past few days to see where things went so horribly, horribly wrong. This task might be easier if she weren’t constantly, obliviously, on her phone talking with his now-ex-best-friend Martha, who barely made it into MENSA. I HAVE ANGERED A GREAT GOD explores what happens when contemporary cell phone etiquette meets an ancient elemental force: a Tiki God with anger-management issues... 

I am directing and am also playing a small part i had to write in. And I am part of the stage crew moving things n and off stage. Student cast and crew.

Dates and Times
• Evenings: March 12-14 at 7:30 p.m.
• Matinee: March 14 at 1:30 p.m.

Location:
C.A. Roberson Theatre, ESEC 1401,Tarrant County College, Southeast Campus, 2100 Southwestern Parkway, Arlington, TX

Admission is pay what you can. The box office opens one hour before performances for walk-up tickets (no reservations). Proceeds support TCC Southeast drama activities and scholarships.

More info: https://news.tccd.edu/2025/03/04/i-have-angered-a-great-god-opens-at-tcc-southeast/


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Mar 11, 2011

Nice review for I HAVE ANGERED A GREAT GOD

 Loop Review: 
I Have Angered a Great God
Audacity Theatre Lab gets Tiki with it at Out of the Loop.
by Kris Noteboom - TheaterJones.com
published Monday, March 7, 2011

If there’s one thing theater sometimes needs, it’s a lighter side. In a landscape strewn with weighty dramas, the occasional quirky comedy is an oasis for the laughter-famished gut.

And in I Have Angered a Great God, Audacity Theatre Lab gives the audience that healthy dose of comedic nourishment they so desperately need.

The brainchild of Audacity founder Brad McEntire, I Have Angered a Great God takes the audience on the flashback-laden tale of Robert von Ritchie Ritchie (Oscar Contreras), as he tries to figure out just what he did to spark the wrath of an ancient Tiki god (Jeff Hernandez).

Much of this introspection is accomplished in the office of his therapist (Jeremy Whiteker), who coincidentally also happens to treat Robert’s now ex-girlfriend, Martha (Angela Parsons), and the Great God itself. Due to a crippling selfishness, Robert is oblivious to how his actions affect those around him, particularly the Great God. Naturally, he comes to realize his mistake and make amends, but not until after most of his friends and family have paid the price in his stead.

Opening with a rapped prologue complete with cardboard cut-out Tiki gods, McEntire quickly establishes the expectations for the performance. It’s gonna get a little weird…but, in a good way.

Jokes pepper the non-sequential, sometimes hard to follow, script, and while they don’t always fully land with the appropriate oomph, McEntire’s offbeat sense of humor still manages to shine through.

Parsons and Whiteker bring substantial comedy chops with them to the production, and it shows. With all apologies to Hernandez, whose lines under his giant, cardboard Tiki head consisted of a series of grunts and barely decipherable words, Parsons and Whiteker stood apart from the bunch when it came to communicating McEntire’s unique comic voice.

McEntire himself, who delivers the opening rap and plays several other minor characters, channels Graham Chapman with his deadpan delivery. The purest measure of a truly gifted comedic performer is their ability to make any character funny. McEntire does that with his turns as a barista and a MENSA rep.

I Have Angered a Great God is a quirky romp through the human psyche, externalized in the visage of a blue-clad Easter Island escapee. The comedy is sometimes bungled in the delivery, but enough of it connects that this remarkably peculiar, yet boldly inventive, story comes out all smiles.

I Have Angered a Great God plays at the Addison Theatre Centre's Stone Cottage.

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Nov 24, 2010

Staged Readings of Works-In-Progress

Projects by Brad McEntire
On December 13 at 7:30 PM, Audacity Theatre Lab and Nouveau 47 Theatre will present Staged Readings of two works-in-progress by Brad McEntire.


I HAVE ANGERED A GREAT GOD
Robert von Ritchie Ritchie has somehow upset a Great Tiki God with anger-control issues. Robert retraces his steps over the past few days to discover where he ran afoul. It might be easier if he weren't constantly on his cell phone talking with his now ex-girlfriend Martha, who barely made it into Mensa. A brief satire of modern public etiquette. Newly expanded to feature a kick-ass hip hop opening number. 


THE DOLPHINS OF MARS
Roy has been dumped by his girlfriend. She snuck back to Earth on one of the last shuttles and Roy finds himself stuck on Mars. Now, the colonists are rioting and he has just enough time to send one last broadcast home before the bio-dome cracks wide open. 


WHEN: Monday, December 13, 2010 at 7:30 PM
WHERE: At Nouveau 47 Theatre in the historic Magnolia Lounge (Margo Jones Building), Fair Park, 1121 First Ave., Dallas, TX 75210.
COST: $5 suggested donation (includes FTP Comedy Troupe performance after the reading), BYOB.




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Jan 6, 2010

I HAVE ANGERED A GREAT GOD

A PLAY IN ONE-ACT BY BRAD McENTIRE

Oscar Contreres as Robert and Jeff Hernandez as The Great God
in I HAVE ANGERED A GREAT GOD

50 MINUTES / 3 M / 2 F / FLEXIBLE STAGING

Robert von Ritchie Ritchie has somehow angered a Great God. And now the Great God is out to exact revenge. Robert retraces his steps over the past few days to discover where things went so horribly, horribly wrong. It might have been easier if he weren't constantly on his cell phone talking with his now ex-girlfriend Martha, who barely made it into Mensa. A brief satire of modern public etiquette and private interaction... with music and dance!

PRODUCTION HISTORY

  • Staged Reading with Audacity Theatre Lab (January 2010)
  • Workshop Excerpt at FronteraFest, Hyde park Theatre, Austin TX (February 2010)
  • Staged Reading with Nouveau 47 and Audacity Theatre Lab (December 2010)