Rants, raves, and musings about the Bakersfield Theatre community by yours truly - a real life theatre addict
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
SPACE: The Musical - New Vidcast Episode
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To celebrate the 30th Anniversary of the release of the first “Star Wars” movie, the Gaslight Melodrama Theatre and Music Hall is paying tribute with their latest production, which opens exactly thirty years to the day of the original “Star Wars” motion picture. Come on down dressed as your favorite "Star Wars" or "Star Trek" character and experience the most fun you’ll have all summer.
Join the crew of the USS Rent-A-Ship as their fearless leader, Captain James B. Jerk, leads them in a battle against the evil Flingons in a fight to save the Galaxy from intergalactic war. With the help of young Duke Flyswatter and the old, but wise Master Won Ton Kenobi, there’s no way this adventure could be anything short of fun. This comedic parody, which lampoons everything from Star Wars to Star Trek, is sure to be a show every techie, trekkie and family will enjoy.
TheatreAddict.com would like to thank Roger Mathey for doing such a great job maintaining the "This Week In Bakersfield Theatre" email list over the past few years. Unfortunately, he is unable to continue. I will attempt to take up the slack by starting the TheatreAddict.com Drama News, effective immediately. Please subscribe and I will attempt to keep you up to date with upcoming shows, auditions, and more!
MAY 11, 12, 18, 19, 25 & 26 @ 8 PM Suggested Donation $10 for Adults and $5 for Students
Synopsis: In 1934 in Berlin Max and his lover Rudy are recovering from a drinking and sexual encounter with a homosexual SA trooper. Two storm troopers burst into the apartment and slit their guest's throat, beginning a nightmare odyssey through Nazi Germany which ranked homosexuals on a lower human scale than Jews. They flee to a straight cabaret singer who performs in drag. He scornfully gives them the money he got from the Nazis for revealing their address. On the run, Max meets his discreetly homosexual Uncle Freddie who suggests that Max get married and practice, as he does, homosexuality on the side. Max refuses to abandon Rudy. They're caught and enroute in a boxcar to Dachau. When Rudy is beaten to death, Horst, another homosexual prisoner, warns Max to deny knowing him. At Dachau, he and Horst plan to survive but it is not to be.
Starring: Justin Brooks, Ronnie Hargrave, Jeremiah Heitman, Joshua Hensley, David Rock, Lorenzo Salazar and Brandon Turner.
BCT is looking for a show to do in August outside of our regular season. If you have an original piece or something in public domain you've always wanted to do then contact me at
actionfolksinger@yahoo.com
to have it considered.
To be upfront and honest you will have use of our lights our sound and our theatre but nothing else. Anything you want or need beyond that you will have to provide for yourself.
Also in lat August we're having a sketch slam in which local comedy groups will compete for a cash prize. If you have one sign up. If you've always wanted to start one here's a great excuse. Contact me at the e-mail above.
Join the Spotlight Theatre for a staging of an American classic, Tennessee Williams' A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE, starting at the Spotlight on May 11th! This celebrated play has had a long and successful run on Broadway and the road. A tragic and effective drama which ranks as one of the greatest in our theatre, the play reveals to the very depths the character of Blanche du Bois (Sheila McClure), a woman whose life has been undermined by her romantic illusions, which lead her to reject-so far as possible-the realities of life with which she is faced and which she consistently ignores. The pressure brought to bear upon her by her sister Stella (Amy Hall), with whom she goes to live in New Orleans, intensified by the earthy and extremely "normal" husband of the latter Stanley (Rikk Cheshire), leads to a revelation of her tragic self-delusion and, in the end, to madness.
We saw "Bent" and "Corpus Christi" at The Empty Space last night. I took some interviews about Bent and I'll be making a video promo this coming week. So, this blog is to ramble about the late night show.
One-fourth of the way through the show, which retells the story of Christ in a theatrical and ultra-alternative way, I looked around and wondered if I was dreaming. No, seriously. There was something so eerie about what I was watching. I was in a dimly lit, enclosed space. There were more people on stage than in the audience.
They were speaking words and ceremony that was terribly familiar, but so bizarre that I was certain any second I would wake up. I would tell my wife about a dream I'd had, in which all these familiar actors were on stage. Jeremiah Heitman, as Jesus, was making out with Zach Sanders as Judas. Why did I like this Jesus (Joshua) so much more than the fag-hating Christ that so many in Bakersfield envision? Why did it make so much sense? Besides homosexuality, not much else had changed. Except the time and place. And details that I can't put my finger on.
For a moment, I had pleasure in a thought. I recalled how much I LOVE the Empty Space because of this quality.
This was not the only time I had sat in that small space, watched something unfolding...and wondered.
What is this? What is going on? Where am I?
...with wide eyes and eager heart, actually pondered reality itself.
How profound is that? How valuable? Now THAT is escape.
On the one hand, I feel lucky to belong to a small club of enlightened individuals who have discovered this. Sometimes it seems a bit silly, as a handful of us wander into the space and pay our 5 bucks. Is this really theatre, or a club of people who yearn to feel and experience? When the audience size is so small, it doesn't feel like a show. It is a world we create. There is little difference between those in the audience and those a few feet away. We all came for the same reason. It's our secret club.
On the other hand, it's a travesty that Bakersfield is unaware of what they can experience within these walls. If some could see what I saw...two men virtually consumating their love affair in a concentration camp...Jesus having sex with Judas on prom night...they would be enraged! Ecstatic! In the streets! If that happened, it would be a phenomenon of sorts. But is that fair? Would it just kill what is special here?
I can't be certain. I am still wondering how to let everyone in on the special art that I am addicted to. I sit in the dark, and I become someone else. I go on a journey much bigger than a movie or even drugs could bring about.
Three quarters of the way through Corpus Christi, I was 100% positive I was dreaming. I heard lines from the Bible coming from the weirdest places. Was I at Church? Was this "play" calling me, in a bizarre way, back to faith?
Joshua/Jesus died. The lights came up. I wasn't dreaming. We got into our car and drove home.
Today, again, the world is slightly different. My point of view is shaken. My reality is skewed. I am thoughtful.
All that for 5 fucking dollars.
I'm addicted to this experience. I am glad for it.
There's a new sheriff in town, yall, and she's bringing honest criticism back like it's 2005. Whatever that means. She kicks off her rampage-0-reviews with a hard look at BCT's "Rocky Horror Show," which opened this past weekend and plays through May 19th.
To give you a taste, she begins the piece by saying "this review is only my opinion and if you don't agree or think I'm a bad person you can suck it."
If you enjoyed that and want more, this blog is for you.