Showing posts with label Sundown Collaborative Theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sundown Collaborative Theatre. Show all posts

Sep 1, 2016

Sundown's 5th Annual Drunken Mixed Tape


Two years ago, Sundown presented my extremely short work LIZARD BOY EATS A DORITO. This year, they are doing a sort of "Best of..." and LIZARD BOY was chosen.

Here's the details:

SUNDOWN COLLABORATIVE THEATRE PRESENTS…
“WE ALL (STILL) MAKE MISTAKES, THE B SIDES: A DRUNKEN MIXTAPE
SUNDOWN’S 5TH ANNUAL(ISH) SHORT WORKS FESTIVAL”
SEPTEMBER 9-11, 16-18, 23-25, 30- OCTOBER 2 @ 8PM

GREEN SPACE ARTS COLLECTIVE
529 MALONE
DENTON, TX 76201

We All (Still) Make Mistakes, The B Sides: A Drunken Mixtape features a variety of stellar acts ranging from the scripted and linear to the devised and absurd. This year’s festival explores how some of our biggest mistakes may inspire breakthroughs both personally and artistically.

In a new festival format, each night of performances will feature a different line-up of acts. 12 nights, 14 works, 1 festival!

Tickets are $12 general admission, $10 students/seniors.
Side B Special: Bring your program back to an additional performance and receive $8 admission.

To reserve tickets or pay in advance, call 940-220-9302 or email boxoffice@sundowntheatre.org.

info@sundowntheatre.org
http://www.sundowntheatre.org/



Oct 29, 2015

Combining Artistic Oil and Water

Brad McEntire at "tech" for DINOSAUR AND ROBOT STOP A TRAIN


This post was written by Audacity Theatre Lab Artistic Director and Sundown guest collaborator Brad McEntire. He is the writer and director of the current show DINOSAUR AND ROBOT STOP A TRAIN.

I am usually a one-man operation. I have made it a goal of mine for years to gain the skill sets needed to not just write plays, but act in them, direct them, produce them, design them, market them and so on.  Why? Because I want to make theatre as an artistic expression. Theatre that uncompromisingly delivers my ideas and aesthetics to audiences as directly as possible. In short, I don’t want to do covers.

If you think about it, most theatre artists perform/ direct/design/ produce (and, yes, I think producing is a kind of art) works already written from the extensive canon of history or from the recent smattering of contemporary theatre du jour. Most theatre artists make theatre for the sake of it because they enjoy the act of simply “making it.” It doesn’t have a larger agenda. The act of it, if you’ll pardon the pun, is more important than the message it is delivering. To draw a parallel from the domain of music, it is similar to dad bands made up of musicians who get together to play covers of their favorite songs. The joy is in the getting together to jam.

And, to be clear, there is nothing wrong with this approach.

After all, outside of the playwright and devised theatre ( …of which Sundown has done its fair share of in the past) theatre is, predominantly, an interpretive art form. It is for the most part, also, a collaborative art form.

I am interested in an alternative to covers and committees. It is these two factors - originality over interpretation and authorship over collaboration - that I have been questioning and experimenting with for the last two decades. And experimentation is the key. After all, my company is called Audacity Theatre Lab. From these two factors I have begun to question every idea I’ve had about the theatre: its cultural impact, how it is marketed and funded, how casting and rehearsals happen, how it operates as a nonprofit or commercial activity and so on. I have tried, over time, to eliminate the ineffectual and focus on the essence of what I was trying to create.

Like my great mentor Peter Brook, I have, in my own way, in my own surroundings, made my art a laboratory to search out what is really essential and what can be trimmed away.

That search has led me to disparate fields of study: clowning, puppetry, solo performance, improv, actor-managers, profit share systems of Elizabethean theatres and on and on. It has led me outside the domain of theatre altogether to study small publishing houses, new media studios and art galleries.

All this is to give context, because the very next question is: BRAD, WHY THE HELL ARE YOU COLLABORATING WITH SUNDOWN?

On the outside it is not a good fit. My approach of the independent, self-reliant auteur theatre artist is diametrically different than the ensemble, group-think approach of Sundown. It is in their name: Sundown Collaborative Theatre.

So here’s the why (“Why” is very big in my world)…

1.) It gets lonely on the fringes. Sometimes, as in this instance, I wanna play in someone else’s sandbox. I didn’t always seek to do the one-man band thing. I started out as everyone, doing traditional theatre with ensembles – both temporary and more permanent. Working on D&R has been a delightful, and informative return to those days. It is just plain nice to play with others once in a while.

2.) They are supportive of me. This is my third interaction with Sundown, and the most immersive, to date. In 2013, Sundown commissioned and produced my play CARTER STUBBS TAKES FLIGHT. Then they included my short piece LIZARD BOY EATS A DORITO in last year’s Short Works series. Now they have brought me to the table to write and direct a piece with them. Maybe this is because they also believe in new works for the stage or because they, like me, believe in small, progressive, independent theatre. Whatever the reason, that they dig my stuff is flattering. That they want to produce it is supportive. It is good to go where I am wanted.

3.) Maybe I’m wrong. You know all those theories and pronouncements I made above? Yeah, those don’t mean crap if they are not continually questioned and brought up for debate. As I have observed and worked alongside the actors, administrators and designers here at Sundown, I have been continually called to question things that I have, over many years, come to take for granted. Whether I continue to employ these hard-won methods or not, the testing of them is really important. That’s how progress is made.

I hope the readers of this post will make their way out to see DINOSAUR AND ROBOT STOP A TRAIN. It is the magic result of combining artistic oil and water and, just maybe, coming out with something greater than the sum of its parts.

Details on dates/times/tickets and such…HERE


Original post from the Sundown Tumblr


Oct 19, 2015

DINOSAUR AND ROBOT rises again...


My company Audacity Theatre Lab is co-producing with a small and scrappy Sundown Collaborative Theatre.The result will be a remount of my favorite plays DINOSAUR AND ROBOT STOP A TRAIN.

A press conference is held. A dinosaur from the past and a robot from the future explain about their involvement with supposedly saving a stupid little girl from a speeding train.

The show will play in two different cities over four weekends. Playing...


October 30-November 1 and November 6-8 @ 8pm

Point Bank Black Box Theatre

318 E Hickory St., Denton, TX



November 12-15 and 19-22 @ 8pm

Margo Jones Theatre

1st Avenue, Dallas, TX 75210

To reserve tickets, email: boxoffice@sundowntheatre.org

More info at: AudacityTheatreLab.com



Aug 17, 2014

DiscoverDenton.com has nice words about LIZARD BOY EATS A DORITO

A MIXTAPE FOR THE YOUTUBE GENERATION
DiscoverDenton.com | Wed, Aug 13, 2014 | Review by: Christopher Taylor 
Tucked into the UNT neighborhoods, round about Malone and Scripture, there’s a building that one does not usually notice. Past the shadows on Jagoe, past Mr. Chopsticks (unless you need pre-show nosh), sandwiched behind a large tree that mixtapeshades the entrance lies Green Space Arts Collective. The only reason that I know it is there is because I have had the pleasure of rehearsing, performing and viewing work done by any one of a number of bootstrapping theatre companies that perform outside of the gaze of your average theatre goer in Denton. This weekend, you will have two opportunities to see what Sundown Collaborative Theatre, one of the longest lasting independent theatre companies in Denton, is calling We’ve Done It Again: A Mixtape.
If you’ve studied your Shakespeare like good little boys and girls, you know that a green space represents a space where the normal structures of the world do not apply. This short works festival has nothing to do with Shakespeare (although Sundown is producing an adaptation of The Winter’s Talelater this year) and everything to do with defying the expectations of an audience used to being able to drag the scroll bar to the interesting part of the scene. Comprised of 9 short works, there is something here to appeal to all tastes. My particular favorites were John Goes to Mars by Jeff Hernandez, Role Reversal by Kelsey Johnson and Lizardboy Eats a Dorito by Brad McEntire.
John Goes to Mars reminded me of an Arthur C. Clarke story in that it plays in a world that allows for the concept of manned space travel to another planet without the need to explain exactly how it works. Hernandez focuses on the human element, the relationships and experiences of his main character to draw a larger metaphor for escape and through escape, hope. If this were an actual mixtape, John Goes to Mars would be “Space Oddity.”
Role Reversal takes a familiar genre and theme that Sundown loves, mashed up music with frenetic movement. A writer and character twirl around each other, controlling each other in turn until they come to a resolution. This might be the Tori Amos song on the tape.
Lizard Boy Eats a Dorito has, as the title suggests, one character and one point of conflict. Despite its simplicity, Lizard Boy (Robert Linder) captured the audience’s attention like nothing I have seen. Zappa.
I know. The music doesn’t all seem like it would fit together. Sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn’t. What does work is Sundown’s commitment to bringing creative theatre artists from Denton and Dallas together to create something unique, imperfect, yet still beautiful.
The shows do contain adult language and situations so leave the kids at home for this one and come out to Green Space Arts Collective this Saturday or Sunday evening at 8pm to see what Sundown Collaborative Theatre has in store. If you see the show, make a night of it and head down to the Austin Street Truck Stop for post-show dinner and East Side Denton for after dinner drinks.
We’ve Done It Again: A Mixtape has performances Saturday and Sunday evening at 8 p.m. at Green Space Arts Collective, 529 Malone Street in Denton.
Tickets are $10 for adults, $8 for students.
Original post... HERE