Tuesday, November 10, 2009

“Cancel your subscription to earth.”

Last week I witnessed an event that encapsulates the entire spirit of the WTF?! Festival. It was a performance by a group of Los Angeles teenagers called Get Lit! There were no joints or benzadrine- The “Lit” refers to Literature and more specifically what these explosive and rising voices care about is poetry. A few generations ago the idea was “tune out” but this crew challenges its audience to “tune in.”

“I should have called instead of updating my status on social network
sites, no I am not well, yes I am struggling,…

Gone are they, the days of coming by with chicken noodle
Now I would rather send you an e-caldron of broth via face book…

But I give you my poetic word that I dying to live again.
and just be.” (excerpts from Humanity by Azure Antoinette, Get Lit! Artistic Director)

There is some classical poetry in their repertoire. The list of “classical” poets is outside my limited knowledge on the subject. We heard the ripping words of Carol Muske-Dukes, Claude McKay, Joy Harjo, Sekou tha Misfit, Robert Pinsky and others. From that list how many people know who the poet laureate of the United States is? Of California? I am ashamed to admit that I had no idea.

But this wasn’t a class room. The walls of the old substation reverberated and chimed with the clear and steady toll of students laying it out. Line by line. On subjects that mean something to them. Some poems that I heard were over 50 years old and I had no idea because it seemed like they came straight from the diary of these fearless fresh faces.

Each performer torched the stage with insights on the struggle and pain of being young. The cultural images of wealth all around. The eccentricities of Los Angeles. The empty homes, the shallowness, the loneliness that is high school.

I was on the edge of my seat. All night. (Full disclosure: while training at the Actors’ Gang we often sit on the edge of our seats to give our focus and energy to the performers on stage). I only saw one fool snapping his fingers in the audience. You see, these poems mandate foot stomping and shouts as a justified response.

The performance is just as fascinating at the choice of poems. There is a range of age and experience in the group. From program graduates- who are off at college- to younger “greener” members. On this night we witnessed the newest and youngest player perform for the first time. His selection was a remarkable original composition. One of his older poet performers asked “Why is he such a genius?”

If you attended this performance you would have witnessed both the group and individuals make new discoveries with each performance. The older members are confidant of their ability to grab an audience. They use polished gestures and have developed a few satirical characters for comedic effect. What the younger crew lack in swagger they make up for it with their choice of poems and sincerity to the words. This is the group’s strength and staple.

Their performances were almost anti performances. The emphasis of the language and the rawness of their presence was totally engaging. Actors’ Gang founding company member Ned Bellamy said after the show “For actors, If you don’t steal from them you’re crazy. Notice their hands. They were so relaxed. Just by their side.” Their focus and intensions were passionate and playful.

The night lacked a tedious theatricality one might expect from a high school group. It’s not a play. It’s an experiment for these students of language to see if they can get it all out and if we can hear it. While there’s may be the usual cadence of today’s spoken word, the youthfulness and perspective of the Get Lit! Players add shoot-the-moon high stakes that has been absent from my previous exposure to live lyrical expression.

There is an immediacy for each of them. Their influences are upfront. They are not pretending. One of the original poems that was performed was about a broken relationship of a mother and a father who shared custody of the son. The mother was in the audience and of course gave her son a ride home after the show.

Tim Robbins, Artistic Director and curator of the WTF?! Festival, spoke with the students before they went up. He chilled with them and tried to make them feel welcome to the theatre. The conversation skipped from where they lived to their involvement with the Get Lit! program. He then told them what it is we do at the Actors’ Gang. Tim urged these young students to seek out the truth. He admitted it can sometimes be hard to know what it is. But ultimately, a truth told to a few people has more power to change than a lie told to millions.

As the students listened in silence and they readied themselves for their impending performance, the WTF?! Festival became quite clear: as we navigate our way out of a politically Orwellian nation state where war is peace, we need to continue questioning ourselves and challenging each other to notice the connections, even the smallest ones. To perceive the ordinary though the extraordinary. And dance in the face of despair.

The Get Lit! Players agree. Collectively they performed the words of Sekou tha Poet: “I want to be life./ I want to make things grow, and move, and breath, and reproduce, and respond. / I just want to make things respond and react and rejoice and relax and relate and release and receive as soon as I recite.” I can’t help but smile about one of the poet’s recent Twitter posting “Chillin in the green room with Tim Robbins at the actors gang gettin ret for the show. Lovin life.” Lovin’ life indeed. Get Lit! comes back to the Actors’ Gang this Thursday, November 12. Tickets are pay what you can.


Wednesday, November 4, 2009

WTF?! Photos week 2

Ok so we are running a little behind on these photos.

Saturday October 24. Jackson Brown. What a night. It was a family vibe. Jackson's son Ryan played along with Tim Robbins and his son Miles. Not to mention friends and family of the Actors' Gang. It felt like the Ivy Substation transformed into a laid back living room. These music nights are turning out to be very chill.




Saturday October 24. Closing matinee performance of The Need To Know: A Veteran's Journey from Fear to Freedom. Here is a photo of a talk back after her final matinee performance. There were veterans, students, friends and new friends who stuck around to hear what April had to say about her life and her art. In the park no less!





Friday October 23. Closing Night of Death and Giggles. Lots and lots of balloons... This wacky show was a co production with Three Chairs Theater.

Pictured from left to right (front) are performers Eleanor Van Hest, Jessica Erskine, Daisuke Tsuji, Cristina Bercovitz , (back) crew Seth Compton, and Josh Zeller.



Wednesday October 21. The Aristocrats with filmmaker Paul Provenza. This movie is vile. And ridiculous. Paul Provenza spoke afterwards but not before Rick Oveton entertained us with some jokes and Billy the Mime performed "Thomas & Sally-A Night At Monticello."

Pictured left to right Emery Emery, Rick Overton, Paul Provenza, Tim Robbins, and Billy the Mime. So, what's YOUR act called...?

Tuesday October 20. Filmmaker Emily Kunstler screened a documentary about her father, the revolutionary lawyer William Kunstler. He was a far out guy who was involved in some interesting and important cases. Their film will be showing again in LA at the NuArt starting November 20th.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

WTF?! Festival

Looking back at week one. It was a wild start to the WTF?! Festival. The line up is huge. If you haven't heard what were doing click the links to the right to peep the schedule. We'll be releasing photos daily through Twitter @theActorsGang. Keep your eyes open for special announcements.








The format is this: Free documentaries on Tuesday nights, comedy film screenings, and we just finished two theater pieces; "The Need to Know" and "Death and Giggles." Coming up ahead there will be literature nights, dance troups, and a Jonny Cash tribute comedy cooking show. Each week ends big with an amazing line up of music theough December including Serj Tankian, Jenny Lewis, Ben Gibbard, Tom Morello, and John Doe. But that's getting ahead of ourselves. Take a look at some photos from the first week.










Ahhhhh, The D. Did you know that Jack and Kyle first met at the Actors' Gang? They gave back in a huge way by capping off week one of the WTF?! Festival.










Free screening of documentary "Sir, No Sir!" Filmmakers and veterans were in attendance for questions and a discussion about the film. From Left to right: April Fitzsimmons, Tim Robbins, David Zeiger (Filmmaker "Sir, No Sir") , Michael Prysner (Iraq Veteran's Against the War), and Fabain (Navy Veteran).









Sarah Silverman might be the funniest woman alive. We screened her movie "Jesus Is Magic." Along with filmmaker Liam Lynch she took questions and spoke about the film. She also came back for a visit during the Tenacious D set to regale us with a few tunes.


We will have more photos to share with you very soon. But you should come down to the Culver City to experience these events for yourself. The Actors' Gang has been performing in Los Angeles and around the world for 28 years now. Artistic Director Tim Robbins came up with the idea for the festival when he was told that it would be safer for him and the future of the company if we did not produce anything for the next few months. "We're not very good at doing nothing." Instead of boarding up the theatre, the doors are being flung wide open. Hope to see you around.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Death and Giggles + Sock and Shoe


The Actors' Gang and Three Chairs Theatre Company take us on an eclectic, kinetic, and exciting night of edge of your seat frivolity featuring former Cirque du Soleil performer Daisuke Tsuji.

The evening begins with Soul Mate, a lonely shoe's search for his perfect pair. Brought to life through found object puppetry, this charming and poetic love song leaves us bittersweet and hopeful. Death and Giggles transports us to the absurd world of the afterlife, mixing sock puppets, clowning, dance, and balloons to tell the story of one man's transcendent journey. This visceral performance pulsates with humor and joy even as it delves into our darkest questions of mortality and joy.

Limited Engagement!
September 18 through October 23
"Late Start Fridays" at 9 pm and
Saturdays at 8 pm (9/19, 9/26, 10/10)

TICKETS:
Reserved Seating: $15 Students/Seniors: $10
Present a dinner receipt from a Culver City restaurant and get $10 tickets at the door (call for details).

Co-created by Daisuke Tsuji and Cristina Bercovitz
Sound design by Jonathan Snipes
Light design by Francois-Pierre Couture
Puppet design by Cristina Bercovitz and Shannon Kennedy
Featuring Cristina Bercovitz, Jessica Erskine, Daisuke Tsuji, and Eleanor Van Hest

This show is rated 'B' for potential balloon humping.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

The Need to Know


The Need to Know: A Veteran's Journey from Fear to Freedom is the LA Weekly Award-winning coming of age story written and performed by April Fitzsimmons and directed by Steven Anderson.

A former Air Force intelligence analyst and "irresistible presence" (Los Angeles Times), she brings audiences along on her personal, 20-year, all-American journey from warrior to peace activist. Joining the military at age 17, the young recruit believes that serving her country will make a difference in the world; instead, she discovers lies and deception. Traveling from a Montana jail, into the United States Air Force, through the halls of the National Security Agency and down to the beach with the Arlington West Memorial, hers is an unforgettable transformation. Join April and guests for a Veteran's Forum following most shows.

September 17 - October 24 (No performance 10/3, No forum 10/17 & 10/24)

Running Time - 90 minutes - No intermission
Special Discounts for Students, Seniors and Student
Groups - ask the box office when you call

All Vets are FREE with Military ID

Wednesday, June 10, 2009


"Goodbye to clocks ticking- and my butternut tree! and mama's sunflowers-" final two performances of Our Town July 10 & 11 2009

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Our Town is Extending to July 11th

Come to the Actors' Gang production of Thornton Wilder's classic play.

"beautiful" ... "meaningful" ... "terrific"

Tickets are still available for this weekend. For tickets go to www.theactorsgang.com

There will not be a matinee performance on Sunday June 14. The theatre will also be dark for the weekend of June 18-21. Shows will resume again on Thursday, June 25 and run until July 11.

Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays 8:00PM and Sunday matinees at 2:00PM
Tickets are $25.00, Students and Seniors $20.00, Children under 12 $10.00

Monday, May 11, 2009

The Reviews Are In For Our Town

LA Weekly - Go
"This is a beautifully rendered and moving Our Town."
Full review



Backstage West - Critics Pick
"After 71 years, Our Town remains vibrant and meaningful—and after 28 years, so does the Actors' Gang." Full review



Culver City Observer
"I will simply state now- go see it, it can change your life...Some have called Our Town possibly 'the great American play.' I could not agree more and the Actor's Gang's interpretation and performance was flat out terrific. Kudos to all the cast, crew and staff for their excellence."



Shagehappenings
"No subtly in the text is missed, it is exposed, and the play’s humor, tension, and humanity is fully realized as if blowing dust from the cover of an old, but favorite book."
Full review



Examiner
"The Actors' Gang brings a fresh Our Town to Culver City."
Full review



Jesther Entertainment
"...we should value each and every moment, and it is in this transcendental sense that I cherish the experience of seeing the Gang’s thought-and emotion-provoking production of this classic."
Full review



Buzzine
"If you’ve never seen Our Town, you must."
Full review


Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Klüb Wins Best Revival



The 30th Annual LA Weekly Awards were held and Klüb was announced as the Revival Production of the Year (of a 20th or 21st century play). Director Mike Schlitt (hogging the microphone), baldy playwright Mitch Watson, and cast members who attended the event are pictured above accepting the award.


The theme of the ceremony was 1950's. Recent Klüb escapees Madam Verona and Hank the Human Acid Tank are pictured here(photo by Timothy Norris). Madam V is in a dazzling blue dress and Hank the Human Acid Tank is sporting this outfit from his recent audition for I am Cuba: The Remake. Both are following their dreams. For a full listing of winners visit LA Weekly online.

Congratulations you freaks. It was a team effort.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Catonsville Extends 1 WEEK!

The Trial of the Catonsville Nine is extending one week and will now close March 28th.

Don't miss post show talk backs with cast members and special guests.

Sunday 3/1 after the 2pm show: David Zeiger - Director of "Sir No Sir" http://www.sirnosir.com/

Sunday 3/15 after the 2pm show: Blase Bonpane - Activist and Director of the Office of the Americas


Friday, February 27, 2009

October 1968



Read the review at LAist           Photo by Kim Zsebe

Friday, February 20, 2009

Trial of the Catonsville Nine



GO! THE TRIAL OF THE CATONSVILLE NINE In May 1968, Father Daniel Berrigan (Andrew E. Wheeler ) and eight other peace activists seized 378 draft documents and publicly burned them with napalm to protest the Vietnam war and other American government atrocities. Drawing on court transcripts, this play is an account of their trial, which ended in conviction and prison terms for all defendants. The script — Saul Levitt’s stage adaptation of Berrigan’s original verse rendition — lays out an impassioned argument for following the dictates of one’s conscience, even when it involves breaking the law. Each defendant relays what spurred them to take action: a nurse (Paige Lindsey White) who witnessed American planes bomb Ugandan villages, burning children, a couple in Guatemala (Patti Tippo and George Ketsios), who saw American money used to outfit the police while peasants starved, an Alliance for Progress worker (Corey G. Lovett) who became privy to CIA machinations in the Yucatán. Taking it all in is the presiding judge (Adele Robbins). Her sympathies, reflecting ours, lean toward the defendants, even as she rules against them. Under Jon Kellam’s direction, cogent performances successfully counteract the script’s didactic language and cumbersome progression, even though Robbins’ performance lacks nuance. Perhaps most disturbing is the piece’s reminder that the aggression and subterfuge of the Bush administration constituted not a reversal of past policy but a radicalized extension of it. Actors’ Gang at the Ivy Substation Theater, 9070 Venice Blvd., Culver City; Thurs.-Sat., 8 p.m.; Sun., 2 p.m.; through March 21. (310) 838-4264. (Deborah Klugman)

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Scrooge Must Die! and He Will

Scrooge must die this weekend for real. The show will be closing on Saturday night. We have three more performances Thursday - Friday - Saturday 8:00PM. Don't miss it!