inthe works - TheatreWorks
Transcription
inthe works - TheatreWorks
TheatreWorks inthe S I L I C O N works V A L L E Y The Hound ofthe Baskervilles REMINDER: POST-SHOW DISCUSSION WEDNESDAYS By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Adapted by Steven Canny & John Nicholson 4/9, 4/16, 4/23 with cast and artistic staff April 2–27 Sherlock Holmes Onstage S herlock Holmes holds the Guinness World Record for being depicted on film and television more frequently than any other human literary character. But long before appearing onscreen—before Sir Arthur Conan Doyle had even finished penning his adventures—Sherlock Holmes began his illustrious career onstage. Between 1899 and 1930, William Gillette’s play Sherlock Holmes was produced seven times on Broadway. Both the playwright and the star, Gillette had an enormous impact on popular depictions of Holmes from that point on. The deerstalker hat, for example, wasn’t a staple in Holmes’ costume prior to the play. Also, the iconic calabash-style pipe is said to have been chosen for those early stage productions, as the large air chamber beneath the bowl made the prop easily recognizable from the audience, despite the fact that it would have been unsuitable for Holmes’ preferred tobaccos. Sherlock Holmes remained a popular subject onstage in the century that followed. Author Amnon Kabatchnik’s Sherlock Holmes on the Stage: A Chronological Encyclopedia of Plays Featuring the Great Detective identifies over three dozen plays, including a handful written or co-written by Conan Doyle himself. In more recent decades, playwrights Charles Marowitz and Jeremy Paul had Sherlock-centric plays on Broadway and London’s West End respectively, and two musical adaptions— Baker Street and Sherlock Holmes: The Musical—were born. And of course, Steven Canny and John Nicolson’s hilarious spoof will delight TheatreWorks’ audiences this April. – Katie Dai For tickets, call 650.463.1960 For more info, visit theatreworks.org Costuming The Hound of the Baskervilles The Hound of the Baskervilles Plot Synopsis A gust of wind and an eerie howl sweep through the English moor, where a lone man is out walking. Suddenly he realizes he is being pursued, collapsing as a snarling hound bounds toward him. It’s a terrifying start to the play—so terrifying in fact that the actors stop the show to warn the audience about what they’re getting into. As in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s classic tale, Sherlock Holmes and his colleague Dr. Watson set out to unravel the mystery of the legendary hound that stalks the Baskerville estate. The duo is also charged with protecting newly arrived heir Henry Baskerville from becoming the hound’s next victim. But in this original telling, Holmes’ dazzling detective work is enhanced by the zany antics of the threeman ensemble, resulting in a hilarious send-up of one of literature’s greatest mysteries. Costume Designer B. Modern has designed a stunning range of costumes for the three men you will see on stage, from beautiful ingénue to mysterious gypsy, from at-home London to the misty moors. TRACY MARTIN Darren Bridgett, Ron Campbell, & Michael Gene Sullivan What does it look like when three actors play twenty different characters? For starters, they each need costume pieces and props in order to help make the transition clear to the audience from one character to the next. THE CAST In Order of Appearance Sir Henry Baskerville Darren Bridgett* Dr. John Watson Michael Gene Sullivan* Sherlock Holmes Ron Campbell* Stagehands Jed Parsario Alfred Rudolph Stage Manager Assistant Stage Manager Jamie D. Mann* Emily Anderson Wolf* *Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States Actors’ photos and bios can be found on the The Hound of the Baskervilles page on TheatreWorks’ website. theatreworks.org/shows/1314-season/houndofthebaskervilles Costume renderings by B. Modern For tickets, call 650.463.1960 For more info, visit theatreworks.org An Interview with Actor Michael Gene Sullivan Prior to the start of rehearsals, Marketing and Digital Communications Manager Jonathan Amores conducted an interview with The Hound of the Baskervilles’ Michael Gene Sullivan. Jonathan Amores: You are a resident playwright, director, and a principal actor with the San Francisco Mime Troupe. For those unfamiliar with the Troupe, could you explain what the Troupe is about? Michael Gene Sullivan: The San Francisco Mime Troupe is a 55-year-old, Tony Award-winning professional theatre which, despite its ridiculously misleading name, does not do silent mime! No walking against the wind! No trapped in a glass box! No tights... unless the role calls for tights! Lotsa talking and singing. The Troupe is a collectively run, activist theatre—meaning that with each of our original plays we are using theatre to activate our audience, to inform them on issues of equality, social and economic justice, environmentalism, and show them some action they can take. And we use comedy to tell people hard truths because, as Oscar Wilde said, “If you want to tell people the truth make them laugh, or they’ll kill you.” JA: How do you think your performance experience with the San Francisco Mime Troupe will influence your work in The Hound of the Baskervilles? MGS: The Troupe’s style of performance is descended from the broadness of Comedia dell’arte and American melodrama, so I’m very used to working in a broad, farcical style. Also most of the shows the Troupe does are free in the parks, which isn’t as bucolic as it sounds. Trying to inflame 3000 people in Dolores Park in San Francisco with the musical subtleties of a song about racist injustices of the War on Drugs while you’re dressed as a giant caterpillar requires an honest commitment to looking ridiculous to tell the story. That’s my life. Ask my wife. And that’s what I hope to bring to this play. Not the caterpillar costume, the honestly ridiculous part. Though that would be funny. JA: You’ve been in several TheatreWorks productions, most recently 33 Variations. What is special about working at TheatreWorks? MGS: I was recently looking at a complete list of my work, For tickets, call 650.463.1960 and realized that TheatreWorks is where I’ve worked second most! And I am neither masochistic nor greedy enough to show up at a soulless theatre that many times just for the money. TheatreWorks is a wonderful example of how a large, nationally respected LORT theatre can keep its roots in the community, and a nurturing and respectful relationship with the local talent. They have their feet on the ground, and have a commitment to excellence and making the world a kinder, fairer place. That means a lot to me. And on the purely acting side once you work at TheatreWorks it’s as if you are part of an extended company, rather than simply an ex-employee. Also, TheatreWorks has always had a commitment to sensible open casting. If it doesn’t matter, or it augments the story, they consider any actor for any role if that actor brings the right energy, ability, and is the right fit. Not everyone in the audience notices—which is good—but where else would a black actor like myself have the chance to play a bearded and adorable German performer who makes his living playing Jesus, as I did in Twentieth Century? JA: You, Ron Campbell, and Darren Bridgett were all in Twelfth Night here at TheatreWorks in 2007. What was that experience like? MGS: Funny you should ask. Just so happens, in that particular show, we barely interacted on stage! Ron was Malvolio, Darren was Aguecheek, and I was Orsino—a role recently described to me as “the least funny character in a show full of clowns.” Yeah. Darren and I went straight from doing that show into a show at the Aurora Theatre in which we played brothers. We also commuted to both shows together. I think we had a day off between closing night and first day of rehearsal, so Continued on page 4 For more info, visit theatreworks.org Familiar Faces We were lucky to find three actors who can perform The Hound of the Baskervilles as well as Darren Bridgett, Ron Campbell, and Michael Gene Sullivan. You’ve seen these powerhouses on our stage before—all together they’ve 1 2 appeared in more than 20 TheatreWorks productions. Can you name the shows pictured below, each featuring actors from The Hound of the Baskervilles? 4 3 Answers: 1. Michael Gene Sullivan with Ajuana Nzingha & Anise E. Ritchey in Once on This Island (1993); 2. Michael Gene Sullivan with Jackson Davis in 33 Variations (2012); 3. Ron Campbell in Twelfth Night (2007); 2. Darren Bridgett with Julia Motyka in The Learned Ladies of Park Avenue (2006) Sullivan Interview Continued from page 3 we ended up spending four months of seeing each other six days a week. And that, my friend, is a lot of Darren Bridgett. I think even his wife cuts him off at five. The main times I got to interact with both of them was in the dressing room, which was almost as much fun as being on stage! They are both a lot to keep up with! It wasn’t quite competitive, but I think all of us felt we’d scored when we could crack the others up while we got ready—especially for me, what with the whole “least funny character” thing. MGS: Everything. I love a good farce, and this should be a really fun one. I’m also one of those nerds who has actually read The Complete Sherlock Holmes—repeatedly —so the chance to play Watson is kinda geeking me out. These are amazing, iconic characters in the canon of western literature, and I get to run around in tweed and a fake mustache! This brings me to another good point about the production: the weight I’ll lose! By the time this show closes I will look like beef jerky with an afro and finally fit into my old suits. Thanks, TheatreWorks! JA: What are you looking forward to in The Hound of the Baskervilles? For tickets, call 650.463.1960 For more info, visit theatreworks.org 7 Hilarious “Hound” Adaptations There have been over 20 film and television versions of The Hound of the Baskervilles, and many editions of the books, including graphic novels and comic strips. Although most maintain the horror aspect of Conan Doyle’s original story, many of the adaptations have sought to draw out the humor in the story. The TheatreWorks production is the latest in a long line of humorous “Hounds”. Seven of the most notable comic adaptations include: 1. MAD magazine’s 1954 parody, “Shermlock Shomes in The Hound of the Basketballs!” 2. Chip ’n’ Dale Rescue Rangers episode, “Pound of the Baskervilles” 3. Disney’s “The Hound of Basketville,” starring Mickey as “Sherlock Mouse” and Pluto as the hound 4. The 1978 film adaptation starring Peter Cook and Dudley Moore 5. Gary Larson’s The Far Side comic, “The Parakeet of the Baskervilles” 6. The Far Left Side’s “The Wereslug of the Baskervilles” 7. The PBS series Wishbone’s adaptation, where Wishbone (a Jack Russell terrier) daydreams that he is Sherlock Holmes – Syche Phillips For tickets, call 650.463.1960 For more info, visit theatreworks.org