Emerson College
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April 25th, 2012 by Tyler York

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

Emerson senior, Tierra Bonser was awarded the Kennedy Center/ Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of the Americas (LMDA) Dramaturgy Fellowship to the Kennedy Center MFA Playwrights’ Workshop and New Play Dramaturgy Intensive in association with the National New Play Network last week at the National Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival (KCACTF).

The Fellowship provides Tierra with a scholarship to spend eight days at the Kennedy Center this summer working as a dramaturg for a festival of new works. She will work alongside professional dramaturgy and directing mentors during the festival.

Tierra was nominated for this award on behalf of her work on Emerson Stage’s presentation of Louis Nowra’s The Golden Age in the spring of 2011, directed by Benny Sato Ambush. Working closely with Ambush as well as professor and professional dramaturg, Magda Romanska, Tierra’s first dramaturgy experience resulted in an annotated script, interactive lobby display, production blog, and diligent research work which helped shape the production as a whole.

Tierra, a BA Theatre Studies: Dramaturgy major, travelled to the Kennedy Center in Washington DC with fellow Emerson students, Shanna Allison ’13 and Juliana Gregori ‘12 as part of their awards received at the Regional Festival in January. Shanna, a BFA Stage & Production Management student, attended as a National KCACTF Fellow for Excellence in Stage Management for her work on She Loves Me, while Juiliana , a BFA Theatre Design/Technology: Costume Design student, attended as part of her National KCACTF Award for Excellence in Costume Design for Cloud Nine.

KCACTF is a national theater program involving students from colleges and universities nationwide. Through state, regional, and a national festival, KCACTF provides opportunities for students to compete regionally and, if selected, nationally in all areas of theater, including design, acting, production, management, dramaturgy and playwriting.

 



April 19th, 2012 by Tyler York

The online theater journal, HowlRound, has dedicated this week to a discussion of the establishment of The Center for the Theater Commons (The Commons) at Emerson College. HowlRound and The Commons was initially developed through The American Voices New Play Institute at Arena Stage in Washington DC. With its move to Emerson, a close collaboration between Emerson’s Office of the Arts and the Department of Performing Arts is set to begin.

With the process just taking shape, HowlRound’s Emerson week is diving into the motivations, aspirations, and challenges ahead through a series of blog and journal posts from the likes of Rob Orchard, Executive Director of ArtsEmerson, Melia Bensussen, Emerson’s Performing Arts Chair, and David Dower and Polly K. Carl, founder and Journal editor respectively at HowlRound.

Read posts like “The Center for the Theater Commons: Why Emerson? Why Now?” by Rob, “The Dream of a Center for the Theater Commons at Emerson College,” by David and Polly, and Melia’s “The Commons and Common Ground at Emerson.”

Today at 4:00 pm, David and Polly will be at a Forum for the Emerson community in the Semel Theater to discuss The Commons and answer questions about the project, which will be fully launched at Emerson in July.



April 11th, 2012 by Tyler York

by Magda Romanska

The trouble is

I can’t make sense of my life at all.

I can’t see a beginning and a middle and an end

It seems to me to be just a bunch of random vivid moments

I think, when I am on my deathbed,

I won’t look back on a story of my life

I’ll just remember a constellation of moments

vivid moments

but just that.

– Charles Mee, “Café le Monde”

In our precarious world of virtual friends appearing and disappearing under our fingertips at the click of the mouse, SITI Company is something akin to a miracle. Founded in 1992 by Anne Bogart and Tadashi Suzuki to redefine and revitalize contemporary theater in the United States through an international collaboration, SITI has just celebrated its 20th anniversary.

I have been working with the group on Café Variations for six weeks now. As a bona fide lifelong social outcast, I’ve doggedly trained myself – by desire and necessity – to descry the most diminutive movements: the elusive twitching of one’s eyelid, the subtle smirk at the corner of one’s mouth, the furtive glances, sudden silences, subdued signs and stealthy stares, the entire shadow game of our past passing through our bodies and our faces. The skill can be both a blessing and a curse for the dramaturg. I dubiously pride myself on being able to read with paranoid precision all of that inconspicuous symphony of micro-gestures that shamelessly betrays our history: recoiled-from love affairs, thwarted ambitions, the quotidian discontents of our lives.

Like any group of people who have known each other for over two decades, I expected SITI to carry its own history, but I can discern none of it. We have been working together now for six weeks, and the invisible incessantly eludes me. In the rehearsal room, there is no past; there is even no future. There is only the present moment, the now, the immediate. Every rehearsal room aspires to create that unbearable lightness of the present moment, when both past and future are shed like street clothes, but SITI turns being in the present into an art . . . a metaphor for theatre and for life . . .

The history of Western drama is invariably connected to Western man’s ontological and epistemological predicament – we construct meaning out of our lives in the same way we construct our dramas: following the Aristotelian model. According to Aristotle, the Greek philosopher and the first dramaturg, a well-structured play should have a beginning, a middle and an end. In this model, the meaning of the drama comes from the well-defined progression of deliberately arranged narrative elements: exposition, conflict, climax, denouement, catharsis. However we choose to create meaning in our lives – through love, sex, God, family, intellectual, artistic, altruistic or hedonistic pleasures – we follow Aristotle’s narrative structure, with a redemptive narrative and hope for a cathartic death at the end. This is particularly true for Americans, the eternal optimists compulsively making sense out of the most random, violent, senseless events – no death can go unredeemed, with foundations, memorials or new laws proudly flying in the face of the cosmic meaninglessness of it all.

But that is not how our lives are: old love affairs end with no poignant closure; unresolved friendships we’ve lost on the way to better pastures find no redemptions; lost letters, forgotten people, meaningless tragedies and moments of pure eudemonia appear and disappear with no higher purpose, out of nowhere and for no reason. Our lives are made up of a constellation of moments, with no promise of catharsis. The elusive connection between our dramatic tradition and our existential predicament is perhaps the reason behind the luxating anxiety we feel when theatre postpones the alembic gratification.

Café Variations is constructed from a constellation of moments from many lives, some arranged into stories, with a beginning, middle and end, others left unresolved, without closure, without meaning. The denizens of the café move through each others’ lives abruptly and on the sly, cruelly and gently, torn and lost, trying to both hold on to and escape one other, driven by love, fear and desire. Leaving and moving on, driving each other crazy, violently yearning for human touch, and megalomaniacally indulging in the solipsistic pleasures of rejection, they seduce, comfort, amuse and savage each other. We, the Tellurian creatures vis-à-vis our serendipitous universe. If you leave our café with one thought, perhaps let it be this one: there might be no grand meaning to our existence – perhaps “all of this happens by chance, by pure chance” – perhaps our lives are just that: “a constellation of moments” – but so what? Maybe this realization is as tragic as it can be funny. Maybe neither happiness nor unhappiness has to make sense. Maybe it is still all all right . . .

*****

Magda Romanska is the Dramaturg of Café Variations and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Performing Arts at Emerson College.

 



April 10th, 2012 by Tyler York

What’s it like to work with director Anne Bogart and the SITI Company? Assistant Director of Café Variations, Nick Medvescek, a junior BA Theatre Studies major concentrating in Performance & Directing tell us!



April 5th, 2012 by Tyler York

Jayson James, who plays Andrew C in the upcoming production of Café Variations, is a junior BA Theatre Studies: Performance major  at Emerson College. Jayson sat down with us to talk about the production. Watch the video!



April 4th, 2012 by Tyler York

 

George Gershwin’s masterful Rhapsody in Blue is both inventive and inspirational. It’s also the musical through-line of Café Variations, the unabashedly romantic world-premiere celebration of café culture co-produced by Emerson Stage, ArtsEmerson, and SITI Company.

Use Gershwin’s music to inspire your own work of artistic expression. Be inspired to create a performance, video, piece of writing, visual art, etc. All artistic disciplines are encouraged to submit!

Post on Facebook at http://on.fb.me/CafeVarES by Thursday, April 12 at 12 noon.

Tell your friends and fans to “Like” your post.

The submission with the most “likes” will receive 2 VIP tickets to the April 13 opening night performance of Café Variations and a FREE dinner at a fabulous Theatre District restaurant!



April 2nd, 2012 by Tyler York

Interview with Brian Scott, lighting designer

by Tierra Bonser

Brian Scott described his role as lighting designer as a, “visual storyteller with light composition, the purpose of which is to support the way a story is being told as a whole and to acknowledge the importance of smaller stories within it that can be brought out through wide shots or close ups.” Thank goodness this was a phone interview because I was knocked off my feet momentarily. I’ve been training as a performer at Emerson for the last four years and though my tract has taken me through many production positions and I’ve even worked as a tech for three of those years in the Cabaret student performance space doing basic lighting and sound, I never really connected the real meaning of lighting design in a production. I always humbly acknowledged the importance of this stage element and even awed at its visual power, but with one fell swoop Scott changed my whole perspective; suddenly he was an active storyteller with as much stage presence as an actor in the space. He said he sees himself as a:

Visual dramaturg whose job is to develop what the company is finding in rehearsal, but also to develop those parts of the production that I [Scott] connect with emotionally. I help to craft the world of the play so that things that are important to me are seen, but also I must give the audience openness to see and follow what compels them in the story.

Does this make him an editor, a visual manipulator? If the answer were yes, then Scott would argue that he isn’t doing his job. He does not wish to edit an audiences’ perspective of the play, he wishes to give them the opportunity to see more and to decide what they think is important and why. Scott said of Café Variations, “this piece has power enough to give audiences the opportunity to find their own bliss,” implying that if he were any kind of visual editor the audience would be trapped in finding his bliss.

As far as process is concerned, much of the work is intuitive and created when Scott enters the actual performance space. Ahead of time he has preliminary discussions with the company to determine the anticipated light requirements in the way of spotlights, specials and stage washes; but from that very basic outline, Scott enters the rehearsal ready to respond to the bodies on stage and the feelings he is picking up while watching—to fill in the so-called coloring and features of his design. In a way, what he is doing is similar to a location painter. The artist can prepare by appropriating all the required materials and might even have a sketch of the sunset in mind, but only when he arrives on the spot and sees the vast array of colors and feels the warmth of the sun’s rays on his face can he truly capture it in paint. Scott is a painter only his medium is light and his pallet is emotional resonance.



March 28th, 2012 by Tyler York

Last week we welcomed the twenty-first annual NewFest production to the stage with the black comedy, Rough & Tumble, by Patrick McDonald. Patrick is the recipient of the 2012 Rod Parker Playwriting Fellowship. His play, a comedic look at reality television and mankind’s too-easy spiral toward a more animalistic mentality when faced with a difficult or threatening situation.

Rough & Tumble, which premiered to sold-out audiences, was memorable and full of laughs. Enjoy the photo slideshow below of the production! NewFest 2012 continues tonight and tomorrow night with the NewFest Readings, staged readings of seven student-written and directed plays. See which scripts will be performed on Facebook!



March 26th, 2012 by Tyler York

by Magda Romanska

As a child, George Gershwin would constantly get in trouble, well on his way to become a juvenile delinquent. It was sheer luck that saved him when his mother decided the family needed a piano for Ira to start music lessons. However, as soon as the piano was pulled up through the window into their living room, it became obvious that it was George, not Ira, who has found his calling.

Gershwin was the musical genius of the Jazz Age, with wide ranging skills, equally at ease composing show tunes and symphonies, a man responsible for some of the most haunting, romantic and timeless songs in the American songbook, often credited for inventing the Hollywood and Broadway music of its early years. Like Leonard Bernstein, Duke Ellington, and a few others, Gershwin balanced between so-called “high” and “low” brow art. Today, more than a century after his birth, Gershwin is still one of the most revered American composers. His songs are constantly reinvented, re-imagined and re-recorded by the artists from all walks of life and music genres, from Elton John, to Sting, and Cher. George Martin, a record producer, once noted philosophically that, “Many groups of today will say that they wouldn’t have existed without the Beatles. Well, the Beatles couldn’t have existed without the Gershwins.”

Amy Henderson, a cultural historian at the Smithsonian Institution, once said that Gershwin “provided the voice for what he saw and heard around him every day. It’s this vitality, this raw energy.” Scott Wheeler, award winning composer and faculty member of the Emerson College BFA program in musical theatre notes that “Gershwin is one of those natural talents who make all other composers despair. Like Mozart, it all seems completely effortless, full of surprises without ever being forced. Also like Mozart, he was a magpie, combining musical techniques from various sources with immense originality and charm.” Gershwin’s music was eclectic, drawing on numerous traditions from across the globe. Michael Tilson-Thomas, conductor at the San Francisco Symphony points out that Gershwin “took the Jewish tradition, the African-American tradition and the symphonic tradition, and he made a language out of that which was accessible and understandable to all kinds of people.” Gershwin listened to the sound of the city and captured that sense of the moment in his songs. As Tilson-Thomas notes, Gershwin “expressed what it was to be alive at that moment as an American… to let people know what it feels like to stand right here on this street.” Stephen Terrel, the Head of Musical Theatre at Emerson College notes that Gershwin’s music is complex, with melody and rhythm playing off of each other. Terrell says: “What always thrills me most about Gershwin is his sense of rhythm. Even more than with melody, he used rhythm to define character, create conflict, express emotion, and even reveal the beating heart of a city. And if you want to dance…why look anywhere else?”

Gershwin became successful almost overnight, in 1924, with a jazz concerto written specially for band leader Paul Whiteman. Debuting as No. 23 on a program and titled “Experiment in Modern Music,” it was what later came to be known as “Rhapsody in Blue.” Many years later, Gershwin said that he got the idea for “Rhapsody” while on a train to Boston. To quote his own words: “It was on the train, with its steely rhythms, its rattle-ly bang that is often so stimulating to a composer… I frequently hear music in the very heart of noise. And then I suddenly heard – and even saw on paper – the complete construction of the rhapsody from beginning to end… I hear it as a sort of musical kaleidoscope of America — of our vast melting pot, of our unduplicated national pep, of our metropolitan madness.” Carol J. Oja in his article on “Gershwin and American Modernists of the 1920’s” notes that “Rhapsody’s” “premiere ranked among a handful of the most important musical events of the entire decade. [W]hen ‘a lank and dark young man’ of ‘extraordinary talent’ –as New York Times critic Olin Downes described Gershwin at ‘Rhapsody in Blue’s’ premiere–appeared on the stage of Aeolian Hall, he was hailed by some as the long-awaited American composer who could hold his own against a European titans. During its first year alone, ‘Rhapsody in Blue’ was performed eighty-four times by Whiteman. Gershwin recorded it that June with Whiteman’s orchestra, and sales of the disc totaled some one million copies.” With the song, Gershwin became an instant success, with hordes of adoring fans, especially women, following his every move. At 26, he became one of the youngest persons to grace the cover of Time magazine.

Although most of Gershwin’s songs are full of vivacious joy and infectious energy, there is an underpinning sense of sadness and longing that runs deep through his melodies. Some credit it to Gershwin’s Jewish-Russian roots and the family history.

George’s collaboration with his brother Ira seemed a natural fit, though reportedly the two of them couldn’t be more different. Ray White, curator of the Library of Congress’ Gershwin exhibit that took place during the centennial of Gershwin’s birth, notes that “George was a party animal, sophisticated and glamorous and a clotheshorse and out there playing the piano, and Ira was stay-at-home-and-read. George seems to have worked fast, in a sort of frenzy, while Ira was more contemplative or careful.”

George Gershwin died at the age of 38 of brain tumor. We can only wonder what would be the course of American music if he were to have lived to old age…

George and Ira Gershwin’s music can be heard in Café Variations.

*****

Magda Romanska is the Dramaturg of Café Variations and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Performing Arts at Emerson College.



March 23rd, 2012 by Tyler York

By Sarah Weintraub

As a photographer, I envy those artists who can go to cafés and sit with their tea or coffee for hours, finding key strokes or lines on paper to express the right emotion or meaning in the moment. When Magda Romanska, the dramaturg of Café Variations and my faculty advisor, asked if I would be interested in this project, the idea of composing scenes in a variety of cafés appealed to me immensely. I go to cafés with my friends as often as I can, and having an opportunity to create in such an artistic environment was exciting.

Photo by Sarah Weintraub.

The most difficult part of this project for me was finding locations that would allow me to photograph, then finding a time that worked with my schedule, the schedules of my models, and the days and times cafés would allow me to use. As someone who generally does street photography which is a more opportunity-based style of photographing, this experience of planning everything out was new and I have learned a lot from it.

Since I recently made a decision to pursue my love of photography instead of stage management, it was fantastic to be a part of such an exciting production in a way that relates to my new direction. I don’t want to fully leave theatre, as it has been a part of my life for so long. This project was a perfect way to blend my two passions.