Monday, September 23, 2024

NEWS: The Passion of Zoe Roosevelt

 


You are cordially invited...

On Saturday September 28, 2024 there will be a free reading of the first act of my play The Passion of Zoe Roosevelt.    The Broadwater Theatre at 6320 Santa Monica Blvd (near Vine) opens its door at 10am.  It is presented under the auspices of Fierce Backbone Theatre Company.

Attendance is FREE.  Feedback requested.

This is a four character play, with the first act showing a group of people (two actors, two writers) coming together on an important day in November, 1914 during what was then called "The European War."  

The cast is:

  • Zoe Roosevelt -- Emily Asher Kellis 
  • Ferdinand Riley -- Skylar Silverlake
  • Giselle de Vere --  Brittney de Leon
  • Josephine Bligh -- De Ann Odom
  • Stage Directions – Matthew Kamm

Monday, September 9, 2024

The Body of Ciara Molloy (review)

Spoilers ahoy! 


 I am one of those who calls September "Halloween Eve." So too the folks at Force of Nature Productions whose The Body of Ciara Molloy offers the start of the creepy season with an immersive experience based on Irish folklore.

We are introduced by The Darkness (Gloria Galvan) into the theatre, built with bricks from an old Irish pub where events from 1866 are doomed to replay again and again and again.

So far, so good.  We almost immediately meet the denizens of the pub (which is also a funeral parlor, just for fun and plot points) including the proprietress Deirdre O'Byrne (Redetha Deason) and others such as her daughter Nóirín (EmLee VassiLos), plus patrons Deaglán (Phillip Wheeler) and Finbar (Michael Guthrie-Minty) and even Fiadh (Heather Vazquez).  Soon enough we start meeting others such as Officer Sean O'Hanley (Tom Jones), Deputy (Sebastian Muñoz) and--rather startlingly--a Banshee (Tricia Guthrie-Minty) as well as the Dullahan (Kyle Felts)!

Then there is Ciara Molloy (Cassandra Moselle) who as the title suggests is a very important person.  Now, this is a tale involving a series of weird events, ones very memorable not least because the supernatural rears its un-natural head(s).  But unlike a more mainstream performance, things do not all happen before all of us.  Rather it depends on where we the audience members go.  There are options, and we can go back and forth.  That it likewise depends very much on an atmosphere of a certain time, a specific culture, which the production goes to considerable lengths to create--haiku like--with minimal but important details.

It makes for a very cool night of spookiness, with more than a few touches of genuine poignancy (this is what impressed me most to be honest).  Makes a nice change from virtual trips to fear-drenched Transylvania or similar environs this season.  Methinks that is one reason "Fallen Saints" by FON continues to attract audience members year after year.  

Audience members are also invited to a “The Shady Yew Experience” to enjoy a drink, play shove ha’penny, get their fortune told, and much more, including some very nice stew!  

Just two shows nightly at 8:00 & 9:15 PM, followed by the interactive “Shady Yew Experience” at 10:30 PM, Fridays and Saturdays until September 21, 2024 at the Brickhouse Theatre 10950 Peach Grove Street North Hollywood, CA 91601