Home BLOGS Blotch Stage West

Posts Tagged ‘Stage West’

Stage West Takes “Steps”

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010 by Jimmy Fowler

This week’s ”Stage” page features an interview with Jim Covault, artistic director of Stage West and director of their current comic production Alfred Hitchcock’s The 39 Steps, which opens tomorrow (Thursday). AH39S is a shot of undiluted theater for fans of the daredevil aspects of live performance, as three actors assum

POSTER IMAGE FROM A U.K. PRODUCTION

POSTER IMAGE FROM A U.K. PRODUCTION

e more than a hundred roles in retelling the complicated plot from Hitch’s 1935 spy classic. If Stage West pulls it off, this could become one of the most talked-about North Texas shows of the year.

Here’s a brief but very famous clip from the original film version that gives you a good feeling for all the incidental complications – handcuffs, sandwiches, silk stockings (va va voom!) — that the Stage West actors must work with. Here’s a clip from the same handcuffs-sandwiches-stockings scene in the Broadway production of AH39S. Here’s a ten minute entertainment news/promotional piece about the U.S. touring production that came through Dallas earlier this year. (Covault saw that staging and made different creative choices for Stage West’s version).

Stage West Seeks Visual Artists

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010 by Jimmy Fowler

For Stage West’s upcoming 32nd season – which runs from October to September, 2011 – the theater company is seeking visual artists to exhibit their work during the run of each show. Paintings, drawings, prints, photos, and all “wall-friendly” art will be considered – if it is professionally framed and presented. Anywhere from six to 18 visual artists will ultimately be selected to display their work throughout the 32nd season. Interested artists should submit 3-5 digital images to dana@stagewest.org with “32nd Season Art” in the subject line. Deadline is September 15. Serious inquiries should be directed to Dana Schultes at 817-338-1777.

Stage West’s Playwriting Festival

Thursday, May 27th, 2010 by Jimmy Fowler

The naked word is celebrated by some of the Fort’s top actors and directors at this weekend’s Texas Playwriting Competition Festival May 28-30. For the third consecutive year, Stage West will produce and host staged readings of new works by Texas playwrights who won the competition. Thomas Ward’s Binge, Walter Wykes’s Certificate of Death, and the late Steve Lovett’s Hopelessly Puccini will all receive interpretations by artists including Dana Schultes, Justin Flowers, Jerry Russell, John Davies, Linus Craig, Renee Kelly, and many others.

The weekend’s big draw might be actors Russell and Joe Berryman reuniting for the May 29 reading of Edward Albee’s The Zoo Story, the incendiary “two guys meet on a park bench…” piece of modern theater that has miraculously survived five decades of dissection by undergraduate students. The Zoo Story was Stage West’s very first production back in 1979, and it featured Russell and Berryman.

Stage West’s Nuclear Option

Friday, March 12th, 2010 by Jimmy Fowler

This week’s ”Stage” page offers a review of Michael Frayn’s ultra-cerebral and kinda frosty WWII meditation “Copenhagen,” currently receiving a looong but spirited production at Stage West. As the great nuclear physicists Werner Heisenberg and his mentor/confessor Niels Bohr debate intentions and motivations under the terrifying shadow of the atomic bomb, lay audiences may be wondering, “Is there a real historical/scientific basis to all this verbal wizardry, or are Frayn and Stage West just taking me on a ‘fission trip?’” (Ahem).

Here’s an interesting BBC documentary on the Bohr/Heisenberg meeting that “Copenhagen” riffs on. Also, you might want to check out The Coen Brothers’ predictably bleak and comic take on Heisenberg’s much-misunderstood Uncertainty Principle.

Attention FW Playwrights

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010 by Jimmy Fowler

North Texas stage scribes have a little more than six weeks left to submit their mind-blowing, redefining-theater-as-we-know-it scripts to Stage West’s Fourth Annual Texas Playwriting Competition. Submissions with entry forms must be postmarked no later than April 15. The playwright must have lived in Texas for at least two years, and the play must not have received a prior professional staging. The winner will receive a cash prize and, even better, a staged reading of his or her script using Stage West’s formidable pool of theater talent.

A 2010 Stage Sked

Thursday, January 21st, 2010 by Jimmy Fowler

Fort Worth’s top four small theater groups have announced most of their 2010 schedules by now, and the offerings look unusually scrumptious. I don’t know how much the long national mood of unrest and pessimism has influenced season planners, but upcoming dramas and comedies are heavy with nagging questions about family stability, world history, and the ability of the individual to create meaningful change. (There are some nicely idiosyncratic musical revues, too).

Check out these skeds for Stage West, Circle Theatre, Jubilee Theatre, and Amphibian Productions. Then, make a late New Year’s resolution: “See more theater.” Your local starving stage rats will thank you.

Stage West Announces Winners

Thursday, August 27th, 2009 by Jimmy Fowler

Winners of Stage West’s third annual Texas Playwriting Competition were announced today, and the judges couldn’t pick between two scripts – “Binge” by Waco’s Thomas Ward and “Certificate of Death” by Arlington’s Walter Wykes. Both plays bagged the top prize. “Hopelessly Puccini” by the late and much beloved Dallas playwright Steve Lovett took the runner-up spot. All three will get a professional staged reading during a “new works” festival scheduled for May of next year at Stage West. Congrats to all!


Search


Lamb for Break-Fast

Lamb for Break-Fast People can debate the merits and minuses of major world religions all they want, but to Chow, Baby, at least one aspect is a no-brainer. In the heavily Catholic c...
More:

It’s Electric, Booga Wooga Wooga

It’s Electric, Booga Wooga Wooga Fort Worth is gonna be bustling this weekend. Saturday is Fall Gallery Night , which means that a lot of us are going to be hopping from gallery to gallery –– Artspa...
More:

The Tillman Story: “Why Are You Shooting at Me?”

The Tillman Story: “Why Are You Shooting at Me?” I used to live in Arizona, so I remember Pat Tillman wreaking havoc on the football field for Arizona State University. After going on to do the same for the NF...
More:

Clowns and Flags

To the editor: In his article, “Bigots’ Last Stand,” writer E. R. Bills obviously implies that the Confederate flag is a symbol of racism. He groups it with the ...
More: