Theater Around The Bay: Your Place Is Not To Complain, Young Man

Every day in his mind, Stuart Bousel holds a one man conference about gender parity in the Theater Community. Today, he offers you a glimpse inside.

On my way to work, I walk past a grade school playground where young boys and girls are running and playing, engaged in their physical education routine. Now and then I have helped them retrieve a ball that went over the fence, but rarely do I notice them beyond the general background noise and semi-suburban quaintness that characterizes that particular stretch of Castro. Today, however, my mind already muttering over the pieces of this essay as it formed in my head, I heard one of their instructors (a man) say to one of his students, “Your place is not to complain, young man, but to just do the best you can do!” and of course, that got under my skin as quickly as possible. Partly because I agree with the spirit of what the instructor is saying, and partly because I think that a person does have an obligation to complain, when a person really thinks there is something to complain about. The trick is knowing when to do it, and for how long, and how to recognize when it’s time to stop complaining and start doing something. And then, of course, just what exactly you should do so that you can solve the issue without becoming the issue yourself.

Today, on the other side of the Bay, the annual TBA conference is going on and one of this year’s focuses is Gender Parity. An important subject to be sure, but I prefer my important subjects argued over in living rooms with articulate people sipping cocktails, or on Facebook where I can somehow justify procrastination easier than in my actual life, so I skipped the conference. Also because I’m broke and need to go to work while I still have a day job. Still, it is a bit of a shame, because as a person in the Theater Community (see how I used the capitals there to emphasize Big Picture) who pays attention to what’s trending and what everyone is talking about, I’ve been very aware of the ongoing discussion about opportunities in the Theater Community, who gets them, and how gender plays a role in that, and I’m almost interested in hearing what official representatives of the Community are saying about it. I say “almost” because another part of me is also just truly bored by the whole thing.

Saying I’m bored by the discussion about gender parity doesn’t mean I believe we shouldn’t be having it: it just means that I, personally, am beginning to wonder if I really have anything valuable to either get from it or to contribute to it. From what I can tell, there are a lot of angry women out there and they have every right to be angry, but at the same time, I’m starting to feel like their effort to be heard is overwhelming their ability to listen, and that the protest, though necessary, would rather be resolved with immediate re-action over measured discussion and strategic action. And that if some of them can exact a little retribution in the process- even better.

Perhaps I feel this way because I find myself tempering my own desire to engage with a nagging doubt that I’m really welcome to do so. I find that, depending on who is doing the talking, I now have an earnest fear of being accused of sexism should I do anything aside from absolutely agree with whatever that woman is saying. The truth is, while I know that I am not sexist (or racist, or homophobic, or anything else I’ve been accused of for just not being of the same mind as everyone else), my desire not to spend hours defending myself (as opposed to defending my stance) can sometimes sorely outweigh my desire to engage, more so lately than in the past.

Perhaps my reluctance is also because a lot of the solutions I see many of my concerned peers propose or champion, seem to be the theatrical equivalent of a crash diet: i.e. let’s over-compensate for as much as we can for past imbalances, even if that won’t actually provide a long term solution to ensure a healthy future. Or in straight forward, non-allegorical terms: let’s minimize involvement of men in the theatrical process, if not take them out of the equation entirely. Which sounds ridiculous when I write it out (and probably more so when you read it) but it takes very little digging around to find that quite a lot of female exclusive groups, festivals and events seem to be cropping up lately. Which, personally, I find distressing, because if there is one thing nobody in the Theater Community needs, it’s less inclusivity- even if the motivation behind that is, ironically, to be more inclusive.

I understand, enormously, the impatience of people (regardless of how they identify) who feel they have not been treated fairly or given a chance, and I also understand the earnest desire (usually fueled by guilt) on the part of the people who have been given a chance, to “correct” the past by making the most earnest effort possible in the present. That said, as someone who firmly believes we only condemn the future to be the past when we continue the systems of the past under a different name, this mentality of “you had your turn, now it’s ours” doesn’t work for me. You can’t balance the scales with imbalance on the other side. And you can’t win a war without allies. The complications, of course, lay in how we define allies,  how we win them over, and how we keep them on our side, whatever our cause is. Generally speaking, alienation is never the solution to any of these questions, and yet alienation is sort of where I see the current discussion heading.

And sure, maybe I just feel that way because I am a man. A white man. Because I am currently in a romantic relationship with another man I am a homosexual, and because I was raised by a Jewish father whose family had a stronger influence on me than my Christian mother’s did, I tend to identify as a secular Jew, but the truth is, the only religion I’ve ever really loved are the cults of Helios, Selene and Apollo, and my personal mantra is better expressed by the myth of Eros and Psyche than, say, The Joy of Gay Sex, so essentially I’m a white man and many people in my life, particularly many people in my artistic life, feel a need to constantly remind me of that. Sometimes they are right too, and sometimes they are annoying and pretentious, and sometimes they really hurt my feelings because they make me feel like the part where I was born lucky enough to be part of the dominant culture means I somehow have limitless possibilities, no hurdles of my own to overcome, and perhaps most outrageous, am not as inclined to need and desire the love, respect and good will of my peers as they are.

“I really hope, out of everyone we know, Nicholas Greene makes it big some day,” my friend, the writer Alexander Pope, says to me as we’re talking about all our fellow writers.

“I hope we all make it,” I respond.

“Yes,” she says, “But I hope she makes it more. I mean, I love you and everything, but she’s a woman and the world needs more women playwrights.”

Yes, that’s definitely true… but I guess I don’t see why the world needs more women playwrights any more or less than it needs me. Which is not, I think, how Mr. Pope means me to take her comment. In fact, I know it’s not. But it still hurt because it sent me the message that by virtue of being a man, I was less valuable and most certainly not unique. An entirely selfish perspective on my part, I realize, but in an industry where all but a chosen few are constantly being told how un-valued they are (and even those people get rejected), forgive me for clinging to the belief that I am just as deserving of recognition and reward as Nicholas Greene- a playwright who I absolutely also believe should get everything their heart desires. But because she is a great writer, a visionary artist, a good person, hard-working and dedicated to her craft and much better at putting herself out there than I am. Not because she is a woman. That means absolutely nothing to me except that, so long as current personal trends continue, I probably won’t ever be sleeping with her. Naked time is really the only time I ever concern myself over who has a penis and who doesn’t.

I also allow that this particular issue might be particularly poignant for me because I was dedicating myself to making the Theater Community a better place for women- and men- long before it became fashionable to do so. As long as I have been attending theater and making theater I have been attracted to work that featured interesting female characters. I have never given much thought as to who wrote or directed something, but as a guy who has numbered the Broadway musical of The Secret Garden and the play ‘Night Mother as amongst his top ten favorite shows since he was 12, let’s suffice it to say I’ve got gender blind taste (I was once informed by an obnoxious writing colleague, who we shall call Archduke Henry, that I had “women’s taste”- unpack that shit, if you will) when it comes to whether a man or woman wrote it, directed it, or stars in it.

As a theater maker, I have done my best to uphold a value system based on this premise. As a producer I have produced a number of plays by women, and I have hired a number of female directors over the years. As a director, I choose work where the women play important roles and which will allow me to work with actresses whose skills and strengths I admire. When I have chosen to do classic plays where the women’s roles are fewer or less interesting I have found ways to rectify that: I made a number of characters in The Frogs, for instance, female, and I directed a production of Hamlet with women, as women, in the roles of Claudius, Rosencrantz, Horatio, Polonius, Marcellus and Hamlet himself. As a writer I pride myself on creating interesting, complex women’s roles in all my plays, and with the exception of three plays (out of forty) that I have written, if there are more than four roles, at least three of them have been women, and my only single-sex full-length show is an entirely female cast. And I know I’m not the only male theater maker who can make claims like these, all I’m saying is, it’s really sort of a slap in the face when somehow I get lumped into “the problem” side of the problem. Which I sometimes do, usually when I’m asserting that as much as I value the contribution of women, I don’t value the contribution of men any less, and while we’re at it, yes, I am offended, producer, when you tell me, “I love your play but sadly, I only produce the work of women writers.”

I think everyone is valuable. I include myself in “everyone.” If we’re going to have to rank people and prioritize who should be successful and who shouldn’t be, I would want someone to do it based on talent, ability, hard work, dedication, good will and vision (not necessarily in that order), with gender (or race, for that matter) not factoring into the equation at all. I also understand that this can be hard for some people to do, and that on some level, as a white man, it’s easier for me to cry “Hey, let’s all win the war this way!” because for centuries, I have been winning the war without really having to try. For me, it’s a choice to get involved rather than just continue to reap the rewards of my birth (though for the record, the ability of the average white man to benefit purely from being a white man is greatly exaggerated) and I recognize that. But while I don’t expect to get a medal for throwing myself on the side of the side that should win (Gender Parity, in case you were confused), I also don’t expect to be punished for doing that, particularly by the side I’ve been fighting on! And lately I’m starting to feel kind of punished. For having a penis.

Not that I think people mean to punish me when they uphold as progressive theater companies that prioritize works by female writers or plays with all female casts, or when they champion certain productions because the director is female, or the lead, etc. Though I think it’s a bit patronizing to emphasize those aspects of a work over whether or not it’s actually good, I would be lying if I said I had never done the same thing, and I think we do that kind of thing, as people, out of well-meaning intentions that should be applauded for their sincerity, even if they are somewhat lacking in a sophistication of thought that fails to see the greater implications. I am 100% behind subject-based festivals, showcases and groups putting out work in an effort to gain more awareness for those female theater artists or female-centric art they believe are under-represented so long as no effort has been made to exclude men who might be able and/or interested in contributing to that conversation. It’s only when I find myself being belittled or shut out for being a man that I get angry and then sad. Angry because I hate being shut out just for being who I am, and sad when I recognize that many women have probably felt this too, but apparently some gleaned a desire to be the one barring the gates due to that experience, rather than being the one throwing them open.

“People don’t become better people if we don’t sometimes tell them they have hurt us or done something wrong,” my therapist, let’s call him Queen Elizabeth, once said to me. “Morality is not inherit, neither are ethics. We have to work at them. We have to help each other work at them. The joy comes from the moments of victory we achieve in our struggle to be good. The struggle is because no one can master it, we are all just trying to do the best we can do, fighting against both the world and our own natures at the same time. One of the ways we support the people we love is to tell them what they’re doing wrong, or could do better.” In context, he is telling me this because I have been having intensely negative feelings towards an ex-lover of mine (let’s call him Princess Sasha), and struggling with the part of me that wants to scream at him, versus the part of me that wants to rise above it and move on. “What do you think you will get out of it if you scream at him?” Elizabeth asks me. “Will it help you feel better? Will it help you focus on moving on?” Excellent questions, really, especially as I was mad over a past I really couldn’t change and probably was keeping alive via all the anger I was carrying. But figuring out what to actually do about something is much harder than complaining about it, and finding a path towards internal balance that didn’t involve hurting other men like I had been hurt turned out to be even more challenging. For a while there, I had to build a walled garden that only a selected few were let into because I was suspicious of everyone, including myself, and you really had to be like me to not be put on immediate watch. But the truth is, nothing there really bloomed until I was open to a variety of gardeners and I came to understand that there was room for everyone and anyone who had the common goal of creating a beautiful garden. Maybe we’re not there yet as a community. Maybe we’re in a stage of needing to complain, or of putting walls up around the garden. I get that. But boy is it starting to feel like I’m being shut out of a lot of walled gardens.

My friend Shelmerdine, who in some ways is the love of my life (sans penis), and certainly a muse of mine, struggles with her own version of this. She has so much anger and fear that is sourced in years of being dismissed, ignored, undervalued, objectified and generally treated badly because she is not just a woman, but a physically attractive one, smart and sensitive and talented and in other words, a threat to everyone, including other women. She frequently submits her writing under a male pseudonym and when I confronted her about it she admitted that it was partly because she felt she had to in order to be to taken seriously, but also because “I’d rather be a man, anyway. I rarely find women interesting.” And I laughed and tried to come up with all the examples I could think of strong, interesting women, real and created by artists, only so she could nod and shrug and say, “Sure, but it comes down to this: I don’t relate to any of them. Not really. And it’s not because they’re strong or not strong, but because they’re still fundamentally defined as women. And I don’t want to be a strong woman. I want to be a strong person.” And I understood what she meant. Personally, I can’t stress enough how much I love being a man. But I don’t want that to define me, in the eyes of other men, or women, any more than I want to be defined as white or gay. And I definitely don’t want it to define my work, or be the basis on which my work is judged, funded or performed.

“Your place is not to complain, Young Man,” is an accidental statement that to me implies some of us have the right to bitch about feeling like the deck is stacked against us and some of us do not. The truth is, we all feel that way sometimes, and we all have the right to complain. “Just do the best you can do!” is also an accidental statement, and to me, it’s solid advice, because really, that’s all we can expect of anybody, in a world where everything is unfair and probably most things always will be, because fair isn’t really something ingrained into human nature and it takes work to be good. And that struggle to be good and to be fair, is neither male nor female, and being one or the other makes you no more naturally inclined to be part of the solution or part of the problem. Each individual soul is on its own journey, and that is why each voice is valuable, and should be individually evaluated when it speaks through its art or otherwise.

A project I have just begun is adapting Kristin Hersh’s memoir Rat Girl into a stage play and I’ve already made the sincere but ridiculous proposition that it should be adapted, in part, because it’s a great story about young women and would provide excellent roles for young women to play with the added bonus of being based on real women they could admire and look to as role models. While I do believe all that, the truth is, what interested me the most in the project was that, as a long time fan of Hersh’s, I bought her book expecting a celebrity autobiography with a hipster twist and instead I got a book about a young person struggling with her art and her life and her own insanity and it reminded me so much of myself I knew I had to work with the material somehow. The fact that she is a woman and I am a man didn’t really occur to me at any point, but when I read this particular passage I felt oddly vindicated for all the years I had maintained that none of that should ever really matter anyway:

“…writer after writer points out that we’re teenagers and three of us are female. We never have answers to these non questions. “Teenager” just means stupid. And is there a difference between male and female people? Is there?  Seriously. I have yet to identify a single character trait I would attribute solely to one gender or the other.

Tonight one of the sexist journalists is a woman who’s angry that Dave is a man. “Why didn’t you hire a woman to play drums?” she asks me accusingly.

I’m at a loss. “Because Dave’s not a woman,” I answer, “I didn’t ‘hire’ him anyway; he doesn’t get paid.”

“I’m a volunteer!” Dave chirps happily.

She gives him a blank look and then turns back to me. “Surely you would agree that you play female music.”

“Sometimes we play female music,” I say. “But not any more often than men do.”

Which is really what I’m getting at here: there is no such thing as Men’s art or Women’s art. There is just Art. Sometimes that Art is about women, and sometimes it is about men, and sometimes it is about both, but the idea that the nature of the Art (and the audience it is intended for) is inherently decided by the gender of the creator is implying that its value is also based on that. And the fact is, I value this memoir because it’s amazing and insightful and beautifully written and that’s really what I should be talking about when I talk about why I want to adapt it, and why someone should produce it, and why it needs to be in the world, reaching as many people as it can, for all those young women who can look on Hersh as a role model. And all those young men too.

Ask me who my influences are and I will rattle off a dozen names and still feel like I haven’t named everybody (I’m big into inter-textuality) but certain names always come up quickly: Peter S. Beagle, Hal Hartley, Stephen Sondheim, John Guare, Marsha Norman, E. M. Forster, Bret Easton Ellis, Sally Potter, Shakespeare, Victor Hugo, Tolkien, The Bronte Sisters, HP Lovecraft, Kristin Hersh, Tanya Donelly, Chopin, Berlioz, Racine and All The Greeks. Yes, it’s a very white list, and it’s a lot of men. But if you were to dig deeper and ask which characters in fiction, plays, movies most influenced me, you might be surprised to find out how many of them are women. And if I had to pick one figure, above all others, that really solidified my sense of self it’s probably Orlando, from Virginia Woolf’s novel of the same name and Sally Potter’s film adaptation of it.

From the first time I saw the film I immediately identified with this strange, lost, erudite but horribly naive soul who feels like a complete freak regardless of its sex. The love affair Orlando begins, both with a woman and with poetry, strikes a deep chord with me, and it’s true she experiences this as a man. But a deeper chord is struck with me when he is in the body of a woman, and running from the garden where she has lost himself, trips and whispers to the ground, “Nature take me- I am your bride.”  To me, that moment is all about how we finally start to accept and love ourselves once we recognize that feeling like you’re left out and unwanted and there’s no opportunities is kind of the human condition.

With or without a penis.

Stuart Bousel is one of the Founding Artistic Directors of the San Francisco Theater Pub and a prolific Bay Area writer, director, producer and occasional actor. You can find out more about him here, at http://www.horrorunspeakable.com.

Theater Around The Bay: What is Solo Performance Exactly…?

Local writer and actress Annette Roman talks about her life in solo performance and her secret (or not-so-secret prejudice against storytellers.

When I tell people I “do” solo performance, they invariably ask me if I’ve heard The Moth on NPR. I grit my teeth like when I’ve just told someone I’ve had chronic migraines since I was a baby and they’ve asked me if I’ve tried “eating breakfast,” after which they have “never had another migraine in my life!”

I occasionally stumble across a broadcast of The Moth [link: http://themoth.org] while driving (the only venue where I listen to the radio, except in bed in the morning in the vain hope that the financial news will jolt me awake so I’ll get to work on time). The Moth stories are compellingly written and delivered, but they are not solo performances.

Storytelling is a story told by one person about themselves and other people. Solo performance is a performance by one person, of themselves and other people. Solo performers seem more likely to work with directors and other performers who help them cut and shape and perform their work. Storytellers seem more likely to wind up on the stage without availing themselves of the tools of theater because their friends and family, tired of hearing the same anecdote for the umpteenth time, suggest they go “share” it with strangers for a change.

Perhaps my prejudice against storytelling stems from the fact that I can always think of ways a storyteller could benefit from the techniques of solo performance, but not vice versa. Solo performance is to storytelling as Ginger Rogers is to Fred Astaire; she does everything he does, plus more (in her case, the same—backwards).

I’ve seen story tellers who do have a great story to tell—and mess it up by explaining their points, repeating themselves as if they have all our time in the world, and the most heinous crime of all: using that weird breathy “I’m sharing something moving and important” voice. Which poets are also guilty of. As well as spoken word artists.

To digress a little further in defining solo performance by what it’s not, spoken word is poetry and storytelling combined with the addition of a driving rhythm and a hostile, or at least petulant, attitude. I applaud the voice spoken word gives to those who might not otherwise write, perform, and be heard. But it isn’t solo performance—so please stop inviting me to poetry slams after serving me a wholesome breakfast and telling me I’m a racist if I don’t want to go. Okay, you don’t actually say that, but I know what you’re thinking…

Now if you’ve seen a bad solo performance, you’ll never reply to my invitations to attend one with me. Solo performers can be narcissistic, self-indulgent attention whores who trick you into paying them to (unsuccessfully) do their therapy on stage. And there aren’t even any elaborate costumes, scenery, or soundtrack to distract you if you’re bored, disgusted, or embarrassed. (This is why I prefer foreign films to American ones; if the movie sucks, at least you get to be in Paris for a couple of hours.)

Solo performance is best when it’s autobiographical. Otherwise it runs the risk of being gimmicky—look at that one person act! The minute I saw a woman slowly pull her hair back into a ponytail and don a baseball cap to transform from an elderly woman into a 10-year-old boy at a solo show about the Australian bush fires…I wondered why the theater was so full. She did all the right things, played clearly distinguished characters, made poignant points. But I left feeling—meh.

One last pet peeve about solo performers… Since they are the only person on stage, they sometimes try to get you to participate in their show. My philosophy is, if I pay the money, you do the work. I feel this way about Peter Pan productions too—quit traumatizing children by making them clap to save Tinkerbell with the result that they’ll never buy theater tickets as adults. We paid for our little darlings to watch you save the smug tranny fairy! (While I’m on the subject of kids theater, please don’t make your little girls wear those nasty wool tights that sag to their knees under their theater formal-wear velvet dresses. Turned me off to the stage for decades.)

For a painfully accurate parody of the pitfalls of solo performance, see this Portlandia episode. [link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcyJW-GeMDc.]

Personally, I love solo performances in which the writers/performers expose themselves—and thus us. Playwrights can hide behind clever writing and other actors delivering their words. Solo performers can’t.

If you’ve seen a good solo performance, it will resonate with you longer than any book, movie, or story. 80-something solo performer Gene Gore’s show Cheesecake and Demerol chronicles the story of her personal journey through the Feminist movement, transitioning from dutiful wife and mother to AIDS activist. [link: http://roguefestival.com/events/2013-03-02-cheesecake-and-demerol-neighborhood-thrift-1730-10-00/]. No fiction on such topics, even by someone who lived through the reality, could be as poignant to me as this first-person live account.

Watching a solo performance is like meeting a distant relative for the first time—a particularly articulate and well (but not overly) rehearsed one—and listen to an hour’s worth of the best stories of their life. In Thao Ngyen’s solo show Fortunate Daughter [link: http://www.thaosolo.com/fortunate-daughter.html], I “met” Thao’s extended Vietnamese family. Through her performance, I had an opportunity to empathize with her family’s culture and experiences they would never have shared so intimately with an outsider and stranger. (Incidentally, this is why one out of four families disown their solo performer relatives.)

Finally, I’ll admit, I did watch a wonderful storytelling performance recently. It was an excerpt from Zahra Noorbakhsh’s show All Atheists Are Muslims [link: http://www.zahracomedy.com], which it turns out she normally presents as solo performance, “acting out all the parts.” I cried, I laughed (loudly, because that’s what you do to encourage a lone actor on stage). Afterwards she told me she was trying it out for the first time in this storytelling format…so she could perform it at The Moth.

Theater Around The Bay: Let’s Hear It From You

Stuart Bousel takes a moment to talk about how our blog has been growing steadily upward.

February has proven to be a breakthrough month for the San Francisco Theater Pub blog!

For the first time since the blog was started by one of our founding artistic directors, Bennett Fisher, in March of 2010 (so we’re coming up on our anniversary!), we have shot past 4,000 hits in one month- and a short month at that! Where as once we usually got about 25-50 hits a day and 500-800 hits a month, we now average 150-200 a day and 2,500-3,500 a month. This increase in traffic is, without question, due in large part to having moved to more regular content, and it’s thanks to the efforts of Ashley Cowan, Eli Diamond, Helen Laroche, Marissa Skudlarek and our various guest bloggers (like the cast and crew of The Odyssey on Angel Island, and Nicky Weinbach from Made in China) that we can start to say the Pub’s online presence is delivering the same mission of inclusivity and being a platform for the community, as it does in the flesh at the Cafe Royale each month.Thank you to everyone who has been a part of it: contributor and reader alike. We hope you stick around for more!

Starting tomorrow, we’ll be adding actress/writer Allison Page to the regular writer rotation, alternating weeks with Cowan Palace, and next week we’ll begin a new regular guest blog by actor/writer Evan Johnson as his new play moves towards its premiere production at the New Conservatory. That will be running alternate weeks with Theater Conservatory Confidential, on Fridays. Additionally, we have a new monthly event, being presented in conjunction with the Exit Theater, starting March 23rd, called Saturday Write Fever. Like all other Theater Pub events, it’s free and all about creating collaborations between artists and busting down the wall between the audience and the creators, so please join us!

At the same time that the blog has been gaining momentum and increasing its profile, I personally have found myself having more and more conversations with various theater people about what they’re doing, how they’re doing it, and what they hope to get from it versus what they actually get from it and just how they feel about that. A lot of those interactions have started with, “I read your posts from a few weeks back and it’s had me thinking…” and I have to say, it’s been wonderful to hear that and even more wonderful to have so many exciting dialogues about this art form and all its social and practical complexity. In the last few weeks my life has been characterized by some of the most honest and inspiring talks I’ve ever had in the ten years of being part of this theater community. It’s been like… final semester of college level of sincere and memorable, but unlike the last semester of college, it doesn’t have to end.

The “Theater Around the Bay” section of the website (basically every Tuesday we don’t have a performance that night- which is most Tuesdays) has always been, and will always remain, an on-going catch-all for whatever news, rants, musings someone wants to contribute and I want to take a moment to remind people that we’re always looking to publish something- the days we don’t it’s literally for lack of content, not because we turned someone down. We shy away from reviews (unless it’s happening in service of a larger thesis) because we want this to be more of a discussion/process/promotion part of the internet (there are plenty of other places to post reviews), but after that caveat almost anything theater related could potentially have a home here. An article about what’s troubling your theater life. Your favorite place to get a burrito before a show. A profile of someone you think is doing great work. A profile of your own work. Upcoming projects or on-going concerns. All these things and more are welcome. Please pitch us if you have an idea! We want to hear from you, and the more voices we can get on here over the course of a year, the better.

On that note, thanks again for reading. And because I’ve been thinking and talking a lot about this lately, if you have moment, leave a comment about what inspires you to keep working and making theater. I feel like every one of these great conversations that I’ve been having lately, that’s the one thing we don’t talk about enough. We talk about what is wrong, sure, and we talk about our work, usually, and we talk about other the tenor the scene and other people, always, but I think it’s just the nature of many artists (or maybe it’s just human nature) to forget to take the time to also focus on what does work, what infuses us with the will to keep on, what makes the baloney worth cutting through and putting up with. So, today, let’s put things back in balance and tell us what you love about the medium, the scene, or yourself. Or all three.

The best thing about the internet is that there’s always room for more.

Stuart Bousel is one of the founding artistic directors of the San Franciso Theater Pub, and a prolific writer and director. His website, http://www.horrorunspeakable.com, will tell you all about it.

Theater Around The Bay: Going Dark

Lest you think Theater Around The Bay, our catch-all column for general Bay Area Theater news and discussion, exist only so Stuart can rant, we thought we’d change it up this week and bring you a more somber bit of news from Theater In The Woods, who are part of the parent organization (Atmostheatre) that provides Theater Pub with its non-profit status and helped get us established. Karen Offereins, the Artistic Director of Theatre in the Woods, gives us a history of the project that recently closed its doors after a ten year success story.

In 2002, five actors who met at a Studio A.C.T. class started a theatre company called Theatre in the Woods in Woodside.  The first outdoor production was a combination of monologues and scenes featuring the five actors (and two ensemble performers) called Conversations in the Woods.  It ran two weekends, with two shows back-to-back each day for an audience of twelve for each performance.  Our audience was led by a guide to various spots on the five acre property where different scenes took place.  An entire summer was spent clearing a forest, setting up performance spots, building a mini stage, and preparing for the show.  Just for fun.  And to see if it could be done.

L-R: Karen Offereins, Victor Carrion, Brian Markley,Gina Baleria, Bill Sorgen, Kari Wolman, and Reagan Richey

L-R: Karen Offereins, Victor Carrion, Brian Markley,
Gina Baleria, Bill Sorgen, Kari Wolman, and Reagan Richey

I am one of those five actors, and I think I can say for all the co-founders that we didn’t think we’d do more than that one show.  And we certainly never thought that we’d end up selling out three of our past four productions, entirely.  After ten years, eleven productions, and many changes to our small staff, I’m still amazed at what we created from such a small core group of people.  We produced all but one show at our outdoor forest site, mostly incorporating our trademark of using multiple locations in the forest for each production.  In 2006 we changed our company name from Theatre in the Woods to AtmosTheatre when we decided to expand to San Francisco and produced our first show there in the backyard of a hair salon, two one act plays by John Patrick Shanley that we called Wash, Rinse, Repeat.

Working with and in outdoor theatre is a real challenge.  And for us, we had to do everything from scratch.  This involved building many projects:  a mini stage, a full size stage, a bridge, a shed, picnic tables, and an amphitheatre with seating carved out of a hillside and another full size stage facing it, with Harrington Creek in-between.

The Harrington Amphitheatre, designed by Brian Markley


The Harrington Amphitheatre, designed by Brian Markley

The amount of blood, sweat, and tears that went into producing our shows was only matched by what went into working at what we call, “The Land.”  I can’t quite describe what it was like, except to say that watching the reactions of our audiences when they visited our bit of forest for an afternoon hike and theatre show made it all worth while.  And I can shamelessly say that I think that people who got to see our shows were lucky.

A still from "A Midsummer Night's Dream" in 2007.

A still from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” in 2007.

“Why go dark?  Well, the need to do so all comes down to what so much of theatre depends on (outside of talent), resources.  While we were able to easily take part in the acting roles, we were not so good at finding big time donors/sponsors/grants or people (especially with their own transport) for our staff.  You might think that selling out our shows would make it easy to afford our costs, but even the large successful theatre companies need major donors and sponsors to keep afloat.  The lack of financial assistance and core company members proved to be too big of a hardship for the remaining few of us who were already finding it difficult to manage fulltime jobs along with keeping our theatre company running.  So we decided to end our adventures at The Land, having created sold-out shows that delighted our audiences and having made long lasting relationships with artists and crew that will continue to live on and grow.  Not a shabby way to end to our story.  For now.

Our credits:  Conversations in the Woods (2002), The Woods (2003), No Exit (2004), The Ives of March (in August)? (2005),Rosencrantz & Guildernstern Are Dead (2006), Wash, Rinse, Repeat (2006, in San Francisco), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (2007),Freedomland (2008), The Frogs (2009), Alice in Wonderland (2010), and Twelfth Night (2011).

This is all relevant to this blog because San Francisco Theater Pub was founded in 2009 by AtmosTheatre company members: Stuart Bousel, Victor Carrion, Bennett Fisher, and Brian Markley.  Victor had often talked about a ”Theater Pub” venue inspired by Joe’s Pub in New York, where we might expand our productions into San Francisco in a space that would be part bar, part theatre stage.  Via the efforts of Stuart, Ben, Brian, and Victor, and an existing relationship with Cafe Royale’s then owner and AtmosTheatre, SF Theater Pub was born. I feel truly fortunate to have been a part of it, to have shared it with so many people, and to have been able to end our tenure on such a high note.  We may return someday.  We weren’t able to say to each other that we’d never come back.  And based on our patrons’ responses to the announcement of our going dark, we’ll have an audience to return to.  That’s something to be quite proud of.

Brian Markley, Karen Offereins, and Victor Carrion, the remaining co-founders thank their collaborators and audiences.

Brian Markley, Karen Offereins, and Victor Carrion, the remaining co-founders thank their collaborators and audiences.


Karen Offereins has been the Artistic Director of AtmosTheatre for six years and is a Bay Area actor, producer, and director.  More information about AtmosTheatre can be found at their web site - www.atmostheatre.com.

Theater Around The Bay: The Fantasy And The Reality of a Non-Profit Office

An undisclosed intern talks about her first few weeks working at a major Bay Area theater company.

About a month ago, I started working for one of the Bay Area’s LORT theaters. My hope was that I’d be able to marry my previous 4 years’ experience in corporate America with my love for theater. I took the job with the hope that it would illuminate for me the Next Big Step in my career; that I would walk into the administrative offices of this theater company and find a pastoral scene of happy, passionate, like-minded people, ready to talk at the drop of a hat about their favorite experience in the theater; that I would feel the click of a puzzle piece finally set into place.

But would I be writing this article if that’s what I found?

Instead, my experience has been much more like Gisele entering Manhattan a la Enchanted. Things that I have long taken for granted are not in place here: we have a shared server but not collaborative editing functionality, so people are forever saving over one another’s edits or referring to outdated files. My department’s database of core information is questionably reliable and difficult to pull information from, putting a fog over everything we do. My biggest project at the moment is to move our department over to a digital filing system — we are still using paper files. There is quite literally a ton of paper to shed.

All that is like moving through molasses, but it’s potentially fixable over time. The thing that really shocked me, really burst my bubble, was the energy of the people around me.

I erroneously assumed that the offices of a non-profit — and in particular of a theater company — would be humming with the energy of doing something lasting and great. (Blame it on The West Wing.) Those people exist in pockets here, and some departments are more humming than others, but mine feels disappointingly like any other company. There is bickering, there is discord, there is apathy. I don’t know if I’m naive or courageous for expecting more.

But despite the initial disappointments, I’m grateful for the chance to see this reality. And I’m grateful for my time at a well-run Internet company, even if it wasn’t my ultimate passion, because it gave me something to compare to. I’m thrilled to sit at my desk here, listening to snippets of the Artistic Director’s jovially curse-laden conversation. I get to hear the Casting Director brainstorm with her team about which men to bring in for next winter’s piece.

And perhaps most thrilling of all, when I watch the directors of my own department, I feel very strongly the sense that I could do that. I could have that job, and be great at it. To someone who has been walking in the dark towards God-knows-what for almost 6 years, barely seeing 3 feet in front of her, it’s terribly comforting to feel like there’s some light, somewhere, out in front of me.

Theater Around The Bay: You’re Never Gonna Work In This Town Again

Stuart Bousel talks about the surprising response to his blog of the previous week. Once more, names have been changed to protect the innocent. Will this end up being a trilogy? Who can say…

Last week I published a blog entry about my experience as an audience member at Berkeley Rep’s “The Wild Bride.” I have to say, in all honesty, it was more for my own benefit that I did this than anyone else’s, and so when the article went from the usual 150-200 hits, to 500 and then 800 and then 1000, I was more shocked than pleased- though I was pleased too. All artists have to create for themselves first, but even the most self-assured, self-sustaining, the-reward-is-in-the-journey of us still long, on some level, for recognition of what we’ve put out there because your work isn’t complete until it’s reached an audience and reacted to.

And the reactions to my blog (titled “Theater Around The Bay: Please Take Your Conversation Home”) have been really kind of amazing- and by that I don’t mean universally positive. I have had people write to tell me they enjoyed the piece, it made them laugh, it made them nod their head in agreement, it made them think about stuff they should be thinking about, even if they didn’t agree. I have had a surprising number of people thank me for “blowing the whistle” on a problem they felt wasn’t talked about enough, and wasn’t unique to my community either- people from Seattle, New York, Houston, Portland, Boston and Chicago. Honestly, that’s not surprising, because everywhere there is a group of artists all working to their own ends, there is going to be a sub-society rife with all those problems we thought we left behind in junior high school and/or Salem, Massachusetts circa 1692. And I’m only halfway joking when I use that last example because one of the responses I got was an e-mail from someone saying, “Funny. Hope it was worth blowing your potential career, loser.”

Um… what?

Let’s go back to the spring of 2004, and I am a fresh young thing in the San Francisco Theater scene who has produced five local plays and appeared in a handful of others. Like most aspiring artists of 25, I am both insanely driven, insanely energetic, not bad looking, and kind of an asshole. I mean, I don’t think I’m as big of an asshole as some 25 years olds I have known, but I have that young person’s tendency to react first and think second, and I’m more confrontational than constructive. I’m actually not that different from who I am now, I just hadn’t learned to deal with myself as well as I do currently. It’s arguable I may have also been happier then, but I’m a lot more centered now.

Anyway, it’s spring of 2004 and I am experiencing a brief hayday as a suddenly in demand actor- again, 25, male, reasonably good looking, can play straight and have some basic training. We all know that means I owned this town (and does that arrogance bother you? Good!). A phone call comes in from a guy who saw a play I was in earlier that year and he wants me to read for a role in his new play that he’s also producing. I am deeply flattered and so I accept the offer without asking to read a script first (again, I’m 25). I go in to read for the role and the director (let’s call him “Saruman”) tells me, point blank, “Well, you’re not really the right guy for the part, but “Sauron” really wants you, so I guess you can do it.” I know now, of course, I should have said, “No thanks” and walked out the door, but I’m 25, and I hear, “Sauron validates your existence” and so I sign on.

That’s how these things always begin, isn’t it?

One week later, in the middle of rehearsal, I quit the show. I have only done this two other times in my life, and one of those times I even ended up staying with the show in a bunch of small parts because the director needed somebody to play them and she was too nice for me to walk out on with a week and a half until she opened. Saruman, on the other hand, is a total douche bag to me, to all the actors, but especially to me, the guy he doesn’t want in his play, the guy he feels he was forced to cast, the guy who he has no problem saying that to in front of everybody. I mean, come on, really? I have had my moments of losing my patience as a director, but I have never told an actor they weren’t wanted because how the hell am I going to get them to do something for me if they know I don’t like them? Of course, if you think Saruman sounds like a piece of work, “Grima Wormtongue,” the stage manger, was even better. When she and Saruman weren’t fighting right in front of the cast over dumb stuff (props, our stipends, an actress’s haircut) or she wasn’t voicing her opinion about us directly to the cast, she had the nerve to continuously remind all of us how “professional” she was. When I dropped my script on her table and announced I was done with the show following a humiliating dressing down by the director, Grima followed me down the hall screaming:

“I’ll make sure you never work in this town again!”

Just as the elevator doors closed I turned and smiled, “Bitch, please. I’m a producer.”

Now, you probably think I meant, “Bitch, please, I’ll just make my own work,” but I actually meant, “Bitch, please, I have been putting on plays since I was 18 and thus I know that every day, all day long, somebody somewhere in the Theater Community is doing Something that should result in them never working in this town again and the sheer fact of the fucking matter is- they will work in this town again.” Will it be easier for some than for others? Absolutely. If they are a white heterosexual male- or can play one- they will basically have to murder someone to not be considered for casting and if they are acquitted I give it six months before someone either convientely forgets the death of Theoden, or decides to brag in their press release about how they have cast an aquitted murderer in their show. If the theoretical offender is rich and can pony up cash for a show or a season- wave the six months no matter what they do or who they are. For the rest of the world, the likelihood that they will “never work in this town again” is pretty low because if there is one thing the theater world always needs it’s more people. Especially people willing to work for little, or for free, or at the drop of a hat, usually because they are replacing someone who dropped out of a show for reasons ranging from refusal to be a director’s punching bag, to the old (and somehow more socially acceptable), “Oh, a better opportunity has come up- so sorry, so mean it!”

The irony of the theater world has always been, from my perspective, that in an art form that would literally cease to exist if everyone acted the way I have seen some people habitually act, there are virtually no real repercussions for bad conduct, breaking commitments or even total incompetence. Just think of all the famous people- actors, directors, writers, whatever- who are at least partly known for being terrible people and/or terrible to work with- and yet they still keep getting work. I mean, sure, maybe at some point someone can have such a bad reputation nobody will touch them with a ten foot pole but for some reason unless we are personally screwed over by someone, we generally tend to give them a chance no matter what we’ve heard if for some reason we want them or need them for our own project. And honestly, that’s how it probably should be, because every relationship and every situation is different, and just because “Denethor” doesn’t think “Faramir” is worth the air he breathes, doesn’t mean you won’t get along great together, and even “Gandalf,” who let’s be honest, we all want to work for at some point, still screws up sometimes and thus should be given, and give, the benefit of the doubt. So you might as well stand up for yourself and tell the truth about what you think and see and stop worrying what’s going to happen to you because the fact is, since nothing happens to the people who do actually screw people over, nothing will happen to you for just trying to be honest, right? I mean, nobody can actually ensure you “never work in this town again” can they?

Not so quick to agree, are you? It’s okay, I understand why. I too have occasionally thought, “Oh shit! I went too far and now They can see me and They know! The Eye! Not the Eye!” Like I said, I was an asshole once, but these days I’m no where near as brash, though I probably appear more-so on the surface. For years I spent a good deal of my time repressing my opinions, at first from a sincere desire to get along with everyone, and then from a strange fear of what would happen if I didn’t get along with everyone. As if that would be so terrible. Turns out my confidence returned the day I realized no matter what I say, They will live- and so will I. The difference is that once my confidence came from believing I was untouchable; now it comes from no longer giving a fuck.

No longer giving a fuck about what? Well… making it, namely. Whatever “making it” really means. I know what it means to me, but I suspect for a lot of people, including in the theater community, it means something to do with a combination of money, fame and, let’s call a spade a spade: power. Whether that’s power over what others think or power over what others do, or just the power to live our own lives entirely on our own terms with no consideration of others.

And the response to my article last week made me very aware of that.

All of the responses, from “You speak the words of my heart!” to actors playfully (or is it?) caveating their posting-board opinions with “Still cast me everyone!”, to the people who felt they had to defend “The Wild Bride” and Berkely Rep even though my blog wasn’t attacking either, to “Hope it was worth blowing your potential career.” They’re all versions of, “How could you say that? Aren’t you afraid the Balrog will hear you?”

Frankly, I’m rather hoping the Balrog does. Frankly, it would be rather flattering to know the Balrog pays attention.  Frankly, it would be nice to have confirmation that the Balrog actually exists. I mean, sure, it’s a scary prospect that it might manifest by ripping my head off, but if it exists at least I know all those scripts and resumes and press releases have been received by something because the alternative- that they just go into a black hole of nothing- kind of means my whole life has been a lie.

Another flashback:  a terrified 11:30 PM e-mail from my friend Eowyn, panicked as all get out because Morgoth, the Artistic Director of Mordor, had responded to some post she had made on her blog and OMG she didn’t know what to do! Said post had been MILDLY inflammatory but completely legitimate, a thoughtful and reasoned critique (that pulled no punches) of one of their recent orc raids (I mean, productions), and Eowyn was a smart and articulate person who’d said only what she really thought and she really had nothing to fear. But she was afraid, genuinely, that she might say or do something (or already had) that would genuinely prevent her from advancing in the theater world.“But you’re so much better at arguing with people online than I am!” she responded to my response which was basically, “Have at it, Sheild Maiden!” No girl, I’m not better at it than you: I just don’t care as much about the potential outcome as you do, because I already know I’m never gonna work in Mordor. Or if I do, it’s not going to be because I did or did not kiss Morgoth’s One Ring. Frankly, that’s kind of insulting to Morgoth to suggest it’s the only way I could get into Mordor- or the reason I wouldn’t.

There are a lot of characters in books and movies and plays that I relate to, and many more that I admire. But if I had to pick one character, above all others, that I both relate to and admire, it is, naturally, Galadriel. Our obvious similarities aside (otherworldly beauty, magic powers, ability to pull off white at any occasion), I admire her generosity, her evenness of temper, her compassion. I relate to how she has carved out this little kingdom in the wilds, and she’s done her best to make it both lovely, and a safe place for people to come to, either to rest or to join the cause. I relate to her desire to be fair in her dealings with everyone, to welcome them into this one patch of the planet she can control, and to try to help them do whatever it is they are on their way to do. And I relate to her fierce loyalty to this place, her willingness to defend it at all costs.

But most of all, I relate to her temptation. I relate to the moment when she is offered The One Ring, and while I admire her ability to turn it down, I relate to the moment she almost takes it. I relate to her desire for the power to crush her enemies. I relate to her desire for the power to exact revenge on those who deserve to have revenge exacted upon them. And I relate to the part of her that thinks, “Well, it’s okay if I do this, because I’d still be one of the good guys, right? I mean, there’s no way I’d ever not be one of the good guys, is there?” Thankfully, I also relate to the part of her that knows this would most likely not be the case. How we use whatever small amount of power we have is what ultimately defines us. And we do all have power- namely the power to speak, the power to listen, and the power to rise above our desire to control those abilities in others. Let’s try to use that longing to empower people instead.

Here’s the point of all this: it’s unlikely that our major theater companies and their big time decision makers are actually Mordor and Sauron, Moria and Morgoth, but so long as we act like we need to whisper their names in code whenever we talk about them and dance around their egos like they have the power to make or break our careers, then they will be super villains ruling evil kingdoms- whether they want to be or not- and we will run the risk of being Sauruman, Wormtongue, the Balrog- doing our best to keep whoever we perceive as below us on the totem in a state of subordination. Because that’s what is at the heart of “You’ll Never Work In This Town Again!” It’s a cry, like a spell or a curse, uttered by the less powerful in an attempt to channel what they perceive as the more powerful so as to assert themselves in hopes of becoming the more powerful. Or to put it simply, it’s a threat. Like a knife to someone’s throat.

There is a real danger to anyone who uses that approach, or buys into it when someone else does. You will ultimately be corrupted and your art will be corrupted. Those of us that do our best to stay out of it run our own risk of being trapped in our little fiefdoms, becoming a Rivendell, a Grey Havens, a Lothlorien, perhaps brilliant in and of ourselves, but always isolated and always on the brink of being extinguished, and always doing less than we could if we just stopped trying to curry favor, or didn’t have to always be on the defensive (admittedly, my worst sin). I believe most of our problems as collaborators and undoubtedly our division from each other, stem from a mentality of “what if what I do brings the Eye upon me?” as if one, the Eye can’t take it, and two, we should be doing our best to please the Eye. Not to belabor the allegory (too late, I know) but any place we need to flatter our way into, or muzzle ourselves to be acceptable for, is not going to foster trees with gold leaves and or save the Shire, okay? It’s going to turn you into an orc, or expect you to act like one. And yeah, you might be an orc with a bigger budget than the elves, but are you making anything worth doing with that? Am I the only one who remembers that once upon a time, all the orcs used to be elves?

My two favorite people in the Bay Area theater scene, let’s call them “Sam” and “Rosie”, are both leaders of small, scrappy, but incredibly important, corner-stone companies and both people who have taught me a thing or two about graciousness, generosity, inclusivity and integrity, despite the occasional moments I’ve thought “pesky hobbits, don’t they realize I’m an elf?” One of them has made it a point to hire and engage their own competition and most vocal critics; the other has created opportunity after opportunity for artists in this city to work and create, and has done so without censorship or personal artistic agenda entering the mix. I saw one of them tell a director they would stand with them against whatever backlash their production incurred, and I saw the other tell a room full of theater creators of every level that we were, all of us, artists, and that art would save the world if we worked together.

If they’re reading this, and they recognize themselves, they’re probably wondering why they have to be the hobbits. Because hobbits are cool and there is a reason one is chosen to carry the One Ring. The humans, you see, get their rings and are corrupted by them. They want power too badly. The elves, they get theirs and they use their rings to seal off their domains and hunker down and that’s fine, somebody has to be the Evenstar, but somebody has to be friggin’ Aragorn too, right? Only the Hobbits have the ability to take the Ring where it needs to go because they are humble and resilient and optimistic. They stand up for themselves, they say what they mean, and they have no use for power beyond what it takes to sustain their own gardens, yet they still find ways to help someone else tend their own. And every now and then one of them finally does what the rest of us are afraid to do- either because we’re too afraid, or hedging our bets, or too busy defending our borders. And someone has to do this, my friends, or we’re all going to live in fear of each other until, one by one, we have all flickered out from frustration and exhaustion.

Anyway, this epic has gone on long enough. Just like the source material I’m borrowing aliases from because I’m a mere elf.

But to the bullshit orc who sent me that email, my career is going to be just fine. I got Sam on my side, and I got Rosie. I got Merry and Pippin and Fatty Bolger. I got Eowyn and Faramir and maybe Gandalf and somewhere out there is a Frodo and I am going to be a light for that poor crazy fuck who will do what I’m too tired and too apathetic and probably just too old to do. And even if all I have is me, I still hope that one day all of us, including you, will plant flowers in Mordor together. And when I run into you over the athelas patch, I know we won’t talk about that time you thought you could hold a knife to my throat only to discover I’m not actually afraid of never working in this town again.

The only thing I’m afraid of, is turning into you.

Stuart Bousel is one of the founding artistic directors of the San Franciso Theater Pub, and a prolific writer and director. His website, http://www.horrorunspeakable.com, will tell you all about it.

Theater Around The Bay: Please Continue Your Conversation At Home

Stuart Bousel comes clean about the real reasons he ultimately walked out of Berkeley Rep’s “The Wild Bride”.”

Yesterday afternoon, a friend whom we shall call “Wagner” (all the names in this rant will be changed so I won’t feel bad about whatever it is I’m about to say), dropped me an instant message saying he had an extra ticket to see “The Wild Bride” at Berkeley Rep that night, and since I’d heard some good stuff about this show (which is in its second incarnation) and I didn’t have anything else to do (which is a lie because I have so much else to do and I’m really enjoying David Wong’s “John Dies At The End” right now), I jumped on the BART after work and headed over to the East Bay for an impromptu man-date, hoping to be blown away by a show the SF Chronicle deemed “The Best Show of the Year!” last year, and several friends of mine had waxed poetic about.

To say I was underwhelmed is putting it lightly- especially as this show was a creation of the British theater group Kneehigh, who were the folks behind the beautiful and moving “Brief Encounter”, a show that ACT hosted a few years back. Thankfully, I actually didn’t know they were the creators until I was flipping through the program and noticed the director’s bio. I say “thankfully” because I want to believe my opinions on this show are based on what I was watching, not just disappointment due to false expectations and artist loyalty. But what about all those good things I’d already heard from reviews and friends- couldn’t that have raised that bar too high? Honestly, no. One, because I hadn’t followed the reviews of “The Wild Bride” beyond what the critics I regularly read wrote and two: I have learned to always take local buzz with a grain of salt. Frankly, I’ve been an active creator and appreciator of theater since I got here more than ten years ago (seriously, on day 6 after my move, I went to see- and greatly enjoyed- Shotgun’s “Troilus and Cressida”), and there is so much I love about this theater scene, but if I had a nickel for every show in the Bay Area that gets undeservedly called “genius” or gets a completely unwarranted standing ovation, I’d have enough money by now to move to New York, where I sometimes feel like the kind of theater I personally enjoy is more prevalent.

I recognize those are fighting words- particularly from someone who is as vocal (and active) in the local theater scene as I am. But what you’re ultimately going to discover is “the point” of this article, is not that I begrudge anyone their taste, but rather that I’m getting a little tired of being a complicit part of what another friend of mine (let’s call him “Valentine”) calls “the Yay-Bay”: basically the idea being that as residents of the Bay Area (but particularly the Axis of Smug that is San Francisco, Berkeley and The New Republic of Oaksterdam) not only is our poop gold, but anyone else who shows up and takes a shit in our yard is automatically elevated to Golden Goose status so long as they tell us what we want to hear: namely that we’re edgy, smart, and nowhere near as disconnected from the harsh realities of the world as a great deal of the rest of the world perceives us to be.

From my own perspective, both as a creator and as an audience member with a critical eye, I will admit I have noticed there is a local tendency to respond, sometimes with real anger, at anyone who calls us on this, and to actively turn our attention away from things that would challenge us to be more thoughtful about our own lives, more considerate of perspectives “less enlightened” than our own, and more open to the possible rewards from letting ourselves experience the full range of intellectual and emotional experience- in art, and in our actual lives. My friend “Seibel” likes to say that the Bay Area is a terrible place to get your heart broken, because there’s a resentment of anyone who brings the party down; I know what he’s talking about (though most of my friends are amazing bastions of support in my low periods), and when it comes to the arts I tend to agree: this is not always a great place for self or socially reflective art about being in a bad situation, disillusioned, or heart broken- unless that heartbreak is over Bush winning an election, in which case you’ve just pooped gold. See, we are allowed to be angry here, but preferably about stuff we can all agree upon. And yes, I feel like there is an enormous pressure for us all to agree here, or not speak if we don’t agree. Which is another way of agreeing.

I don’t want to imply that New York is some bastion of integrity in these regards because it’s not- it too suffers from an insular world view that tends to place itself at the center of the universe and many New Yorkers I know are guilty of looking on the rest of the world as a place where handmaidens come from (any city that isn’t New York) and open space filled with peasants (any other place where people live). And New York theater is notoriously self-referential and a great deal of what is successful there follows the tri-fold agenda of 1) be about New York 2) re-affirm New York is the center of the universe 3) reflect the vast cultural and social diversity of New York, subtly underlining the idea that no one need ever come from anywhere else because New York, like Noah’s Ark, already has two of everything- and everyone. And I say this as someone whose favorite play, hands down, is John Guare’s “Six Degrees of Separation.” But the thing about New York is that for all its solipsism, it is a place where most people have embraced an under-current of constant change and aspiration and all the attendant fear and anxiety that comes with following your heart, while the Bay Area has often been pegged as being about attaining and maintaining a level of lifestyle best described as “laid-back, comfortable”, but detractors of the Bay Area see as “lazy and indulgent.” As a young local musician I recently had a drink with told me, (we’ll call her “Margaret”), “In New York they ask, ‘What’s your passion?’, in Los Angeles they ask, ‘What’s your dream?’ and in San Francisco they ask, ‘What’s your pleasure?’” Not a bad question to ask, mind you, but if we accept this characterization, (and I have to admit, I immediately agreed it was pretty accurate), then it is indicative of the heart of the problem I/we struggle with here and that’s a certain culturally ingrained resistance towards anything that discomforts us or screws with our way of looking at the world.

Which is the real reason I walked out of last night’s performance of “The Wild Bride”.

The fact is, if anyone ever should have loved this show, it is ME. I am sucker for three things in this world, and the number one thing is mythology or fairy tales of any variety. The second is folk musicals- those shows which incorporate music and singing into their stories while actively avoiding the trappings of mainstream musical theater in an attempt to create something widely appealing and accessible as opposed to glittery or virtuosic (not that there isn’t a time and a place for that). The third thing, however, that I am sucker for, is human feelings. Put some emotion on your stage, from screaming teenage raw to drawing room repressed- and even if I hate your story or hate your characters, I’ll probably still find something to like about your show because honestly, I go to the theater to feel, it’s that simple. As much as I like to be intellectually stimulated if there is no emotional hook I don’t see the point- of anything really. I personally believe it’s our emotions, and not our intelligence, that actually sets us apart from the lesser animals. Or rather, what I really believe is that our emotions, and our attempt to understand our emotions, are the signs that we actually are intelligent, and not just the varying degrees of clever that we see demonstrated by birds and snakes and other critters that have learned to bash their food against a rock or play dead when a bigger critter comes a long.

For me, “The Wild Bride” lacked an emotional center that conveyed to me why the story was one this theater troupe felt a need to tell. Throughout the first act, despite the obvious craft and skill on stage, I became progressively aware of the math of the show, of what the artists behind it were doing, and less and less interested in what was going on in the world of the play. By the time the glowing pears showed up, I was thinking things like, “Oh, that’s cool looking, wish I had thought of that and hey that actress looks like she’s having fun trying to get the pear in her mouth” and not, “Awww, the trees are feeding this poor broken woman of their own accord- it’s a miracle!” Which means the show failed for me. Look, I love highly theatrical ideas and design- I get why Kushner wants you to see the strings on the Angel, and as a guy who has been in “The Fantasticks” three times and still cries at the end, I don’t need or desire realism and I value meta-theater enormously. My own writing is highly satirical- I make fun of everything, particularly myself, and I think irony, surrealism, absurdism, symbolism and all the other isms all have their place. But for heaven’s sake, is it so much to ask that by forty-five minutes in I should care about something or somebody on stage? I don’t have to like them, I don’t have to admire them- but I should feel like I am invested in them. I ALWAYS know I am watching a play when I am watching a play, because I am not delusional (that way). For me, suspension of belief begins the moment I sit down in the theater because I am a lifetime theater goer and I know that’s my part of the game we’re all playing. I have never done acid because I don’t need to- I have an overly active imagination as it is. The one thing I need, and then I’ll do a great deal of the rest of the work myself, is an entry into the story you are telling me- and for me that entry needs to be human. Not a design element. Not a cool idea. Good design and good ideas are what elevate the experience, but if there’s no humanity there, there is no experience for me- good or bad. And frankly, non-experience is the only thing I feel isn’t worth my time because life is too short to not be engaged. To me, “The Wild Bride” felt as cold and distant and as if someone was standing center stage reading me the light cues instead of telling me a story that was important to them, about people they felt I should care about.

Maybe it was an off night. I kind of doubt it, because I know what makes a good script and little of that was there, but I also can see how in hybrid theater where the songs and movement are a massive chunk of the script (arguably more important than the dialogue), something can work better on nights when the cast is really selling it. Then again, maybe they were selling it and all they had to sell was a flat story with undeveloped characters and no real stakes. Or maybe it was the best performance of the best show in the world and it just wasn’t my thing. Any of these things could be true but the result is the same: I wasn’t enjoying it. Yes, I politely applauded the end of act one, (which was an astounding example of anti-climax), but when Wagner turned to me and asked if I liked it I said, “No,” then laughed and said, “Honestly, good tech and performances aside, I feel like I’m watching bad college theater. It’s all concept but no content. Or really, it’s more like children’s theater, only with children’s theater it wouldn’t have a second act and we’d know at the end of an hour what the moral of the story was.” My friend piped in with his own opinions, which were not as damning, but equally as strong and less than enthusiastic. And that’s when Martha, sitting in the row in front of us, felt a need to step into our conversation.

I have come to accept that part of living in the Bay Area is that strangers feel they are allowed to talk to you whenever they want. You have to understand that this is not an easy thing for me to grasp- my parents are from New York, where strangers only talk to you because they are lost tourists or potential muggers, and I spent my formative years in Arizona, where there is a strong culture of “stay the fuck out of my business unless I invite you in.” In the Yay Bay, we have a lovely climate of friendliness and perennial smiles that when I first moved here actually confused the shit out of me because like a lot of newbies, I kept thinking I had made all these friends only to realize “friendly” and “friend” are not the same thing (my dad, as New York as they come, would frequently say, “when are you going to realize that nice people are usually liars?”). It took me two years, more or less, to understand that people here are people just like they are everywhere else, and some are good and some are bad and most are just trying to get through life, but because so many of us are comfortadores here (thanks Joss Wheedon, for coining the term), boldly on the lookout for our next good glass of wine and/or casual sex partner (and I am not saying that’s a bad thing), we have cultivated a culture of “it’s all good” and many have internalized it to mean “there are no boundaries” and that is bullshit. I have boundaries. You should too. One of those boundaries are that if I am not talking to you, and you don’t know me, then you ask to be part of my conversation. You don’t just walk in. I mean, the women in the row behind us were talking about their low blood sugar and how cold the theater was. Did I turn around and tell them there were cookies and possibly more heat in the lobby? No. And maybe I should have. But I didn’t get the impression they were sharing their woes with me and I personally consider it rude to rush in to help unless someone is bleeding on the sidewalk and nobody has called an ambulance.

This woman in front of us, however, (we will call her “Martha” because I don’t know her actual name), obviously had no such sense of boundaries. Nevermind that our conversation is in a different row- which to me is like a different table at a restaurant, where the idea that each conversation is an island not to be breached is inherent to good service- or that it is intermission and so we’re hardly disturbing the performance. Nevermind that we’re talking about the play we’re watching and thus attempting to make the most of our night at a disappointing theatrical experience. Nevermind that for all she knows, we’re actual theater critics, or agents, or potential producers, or students, and this is our job or in some other way we’re obligated to have an opinion and to articulate that opinion. Nevermind that as normal audience members we have the right and the obligation to respond to the show as honestly as we can, so long as it’s not screaming our thoughts aloud while the actors are on stage. For some reason, Martha feels she has every right to turn and say, “Hey guys, please continue your conversation at home. People can hear you.”

At another point in my life I would have told this woman to go fuck herself and learn that being polite means not listening in on someone just because you can technically hear them. At another point in my life that wasn’t that point, I would have told her that it is our duty to express our opinions of the work as audience members, and that in the theater and during intermission was perfectly fine as that’s kind of what intermission is for (contrary to popular belief, it’s not to get snacks or pee- in the olden days, people did that all through the show)- a moment to process what you’re seeing and to do so socially, as in theory that should heighten your enjoyment of the next act. At still another point in my life, I would have probably apologized to her, certain I had done something wrong, even though I hadn’t. But in the last few years I have started to follow the advice of a friend of mine (let’s call her “Gretchen”), and whenever these moments happen I now hear her voice in my head saying, “Is this your hill to die on?” And 90% of the time now, I say “no.” So, instead I turned to Wagner and said, “On that note, I’m out.”

“Seriously?”

“Yup. I don’t need to watch the second act, and I definitely don’t need this pretentious Martha’s attitude, and it’s a long BART ride home.”

“Oh, well, I’m not staying by myself.”

And that’s why two men in their early 30′s, perhaps the theater community’s most coveted demographic after two men in their mid 20′s, walked out during the intermission of “The Wild Bride.”

So here’s the thing… if Martha had turned and said, “You know, I really like this show,” I would have been taken aback (boundaries!), but I also would have probably said, “Well, to each their own… hey, why do you like it?” And maybe she would have responded and maybe we would have had an awkward conversation and maybe we would have ended up having a drink after the show to talk more. But instead, she basically tried to shame me for having an opinion, and for expressing that opinion, and that infuriated me so much I walked out on a show that I was otherwise willing to see through to the bitter end because I have only walked out of three other shows before in my life. My friend “Mephisto”, who is also a theater maker with much stronger and much more vocal opinions than I, likes to talk about how theater is dying predominantly, in his opinion, because people feel it’s a duty to attend and not a joy, that it’s exclusionary and not inclusive, and because you’re not really allowed to react to it but instead expected to act like good little boys and girls. Now I don’t quite agree to all that, or with some of Mephisto’s attempts to solve it (like, say, having vegetables thrown at the actors), but at moments like this I do see his point. I mean, honestly, if I’m not allowed to have and express a dissenting opinion at the show, no matter how much the local literati like something, then there really is no reason for me to bother showing up to a live performance. Because the fact is, the only reason to see something live is to have that “in the moment” response- be it joy, laughter, tears, or anger. Hating something is another way of enjoying the experience of experiencing it. Ironically, what Martha made me realize is that I didn’t hate “The Wild Bride”, but I was hating the lack of experience that was watching it. I was bored. Which is a legitimate response, and I was processing it in substantive way. But Martha, in full Yay Bay fashion, doesn’t want to hear anything that’s gonna harsh her buzz, and since I can’t prove otherwise, I kind of take it that it’s less that she cares what I think, so much as she objects to me expressing it.

On the BART home, Wagner confesses he has already seen the show once and doesn’t like it- and that it’s a relief to know he’s not alone (note to self: he fears the backlash of the Yay Bay as much as I do). In fact, the whole reason he asked me is that he wanted to see the show again, but also to have someone to talk about it with. Which is precisely the point of this epic rant: we go to the theater, or really any live event, to engage, not exist in a bubble unto ourselves. We have our living rooms and streaming Netflix for that. The thrill of witnessing a performance or even a film is due, in large part, to the energy of the people around us- and our inability to control that energy. I have been in the audience of a show that people hated knowing that I alone was cheering it on- and grateful for that experience. I have also sat in the audience of a show where all of us were taken in by that special magic that sometimes emerges and brings everyone together. Both experiences are valuable. Both experiences are what make going to the theater such a crap shoot, and so exciting.

My dear friend “Helen” has an awesome story about being the only person laughing at a comedy performance she genuinely and heartily adored (these weren’t pity laughs), while a bunch of stone faced couples sat around her refusing to give the performer anything more than the occasional smile or titter. At the end of the show, the audience, practically silent the whole time, gave a standing ovation that mystified Helen. She had liked the show- a lot- but it was, after all, a light comedy. Afterwards, as the audience was filing out of the theater, a woman near her (“Lilybeth”) turned and said, “I can’t imagine how the performers could concentrate with you laughing like a hyena all night long.” Helen replied, “I think it’s a shame to come see a show and not express your enjoyment of it.” Lilybeth responded, “You are mildly retarded.” Yes, that happened in San Francisco. Yes, we still laugh about it. To this day, Helen refers to herself as “mildly retarded.” She now remembers that part of the evening more than she remembers the show itself. The irony of this is that the woman who probably thought she was defending these poor put upon performers, has in Helen’s memory, managed to completely upstage them. But then, being called retarded by another adult who doesn’t approve of how you laugh is a pretty hard act to follow.

A few years ago I adapted and directed a stage version of a book of stories by Peter S. Beagle called “Giant Bones,” a show that, for the record, had reviews that ran the gamut from glowing, to telling me I should never put on a play again. We had a night of the show where literally half of the audience walked out at intermission, and we also had nights when people couldn’t stop gushing to us afterwards. But that’s not why I bring it up, the relevant part is that in “Giant Bones” there is a city where theater has been banned, and the main character of the play, who is the director of a traveling theater company, talks about how on the surface, everything in the city is good, life is calm and orderly and dignified, and no one seems to really have any objections to the way things are done. It’s an exceptionally comfortable place to live, known for its lovely gardens, its thriving markets, its good food. “But as for what its people really think or feel?” he asks, with a shrug. “Well, that’s what the theater is for” says his lead actress, and the implication is that the theater is not just a place for the artist to tell the truth, but for the audience to do so as well. Both about what’s happening outside the theater, and in the theater itself.

Any theater company worth its audience knows how valuable audience discussion is, and they know it starts in the theater. At Theater Pub, we close every show telling the audience to stick around and talk to us, and I have maintained from the beginning that it is precisely that element of Theater Pub, the part where the audience can so directly congregate afterwards to discuss what they’ve just seen, that has made us a success. I’m sure many theater companies wish they had such a built in salon so readily attached to their productions, but most of them don’t. For most of them, the one moment they really have to foster audience discussion before everyone races out the door, is intermission.

Unless you happen to be sitting behind Martha Yay Bay, in which case… is this your hill to die on?

Stuart Bousel is one of the founding artistic directors of the San Franciso Theater Pub, and a prolific writer and director. His website, http://www.horrorunspeakable.com, will tell you all about it.

Made In China: The Saga Continues

Nicky Weinbach brings his new musical ever closer to opening night.

We are currently in our last month of rehearsals for Made in China. With that said, tickets for Made in China are now on sale here and at madeinchinamusical.wordpress.com/tickets. Get your tickets now, and visit our Facebook page here for a promotional code to receive $5 off a general admission ticket for opening weekend. We also have a new poster design (below) from artist Andy McKeegan.

All business aside, the last couple of weeks have been a little tough, scheduling-wise what with the holidays and what not. But, we are headed in the right direction. We’ve accomplished a lot so far but still have a good amount of work to do. Tomorrow, we have our first sitzprobe (rehearsal with the singers and orchestra without blocking). I’m hoping the rehearsal moves pretty smoothly. The sitzprobe for the staged readings went pretty fast back in April, so this one should be pretty good, too.

I don’t have too much to say this time around. The cast is certainly working hard, and their effort is showing. The quality with which they sing at a stand still now needs to be applied to when they’re actually moving. It’s always a little trickier to sing your best when you’re performing choreography, which is why breathing as much as possible helps so much. The musical director for a production of Into the Woods in which I performed during my senior year of college told me once that Broadway singers breath a lot. They breath all the time because they’re moving a lot as opposed to opera singers who pretty much stand still the whole time. I suppose that’s when it’s more important to follow good technique. For musicals, you want to do your best to hit the notes well while still moving. Thus, breathing a lot helps a lot. Perhaps, this isn’t the best advice to reveal over the Internet, but it’s what works.

Anyway, I hope to see all you readers at one or more of the performances of Made in China. Buy your tickets now, and enjoy this really cool poster (again, below). Until next time!

MadeInChina_MF

We Have A New Mission Statement and New Opportunities!

So, nineteen of us went to the woods: Founding Artistic Directors Stuart Bousel and Brian Markley, Art Director Cody Rishell, and long time collaborators Megan Cohen, Jeremy Cole, Ashley Cowan, Nick and Lisa Gentile, Karen Hogan, Dan Kurtz, Sang Kim, Maria Leigh, Will Leschber, Carl Lucania, Jan Marsh, Karen Offereins, Sunil Patel, Kirk Shimano and Marissa Skudlarek. We spent two nights making food together, drinking, arguing and laughing about art, the local theater scene, and the best and worst of the first three years of Theater Pub.

On Saturday we spent six hours seriously looking at the future of the Pub, the way we structured our season, how we got people involved, etc. We talked a lot about what made Theater Pub special, what worked the first couple years, and most importantly, what wasn’t working any more, and what needed to change to allows us to not only move into the future, but continue to grow.

We decided one thing that definitely had to change was our mission statement, and after about half an hour of tinkering and trying out different phrasing, this is what we came up with:

“The San Francisco Theater Pub produces re-imagined classics and scripted orginal works in a casual bar environment, emphasizing collaboration and connection between new and established theater artists and audiences.”

That’s one classy complex sentence, isn’t it?

But in all seriousness, we are excited to have a mission statement that fits what Theater Pub has become, and encourages us to keep in mind our core value systems (namely fun, inclusivity, creativity and artistic challenge) as we move into the future. To get things going on the right foot, we spent dinner that night brainstorming the January show, which will be produced by Sang S. Kim, producing for us for the first time!

In it’s three years, we’re proud to say that Theater Pub has worked with over 200 actors, directors, musicians, writers, producers, artists, dancers, and tech people- fifty-three of whom have been involved with three or more shows! Those are impressive numbers for any theater company, and we’re glad to have given so many people a chance to shine, try something new, push their own boundaries, and entertain our audience. Going Forward, we want to make sure that we keep bringing in new people, even as we work to strengthen relationships with our favorite collaborators, and hence we will be opening six of our one night slots in our 2013 year, to new producers.

So- got an idea for a one night show that works in a bar-space like ours and you think fits in with the new mission statement (and the kind of crowd we tend to attract)? Let us know! We’ll be accepting project ideas for the following dates, all the way up till January 1st!

February 18
April 15
May 20
June 17
August 19
November 18

Additionally, we are looking for a larger project for October, to play October 15, 21, 22, 28 and 29. Halloween themed preferred, but not limited to. This production could potentially be fully staged, though once again, within the limitations of the bar (i.e. we don’t do much in way of standing scenery, full orchestras, or lots of light and sound).

Be sure to include as much info as you can- about you, anyone you want to bring in with you (actors, musicians, etc.), how you see this idea working in the bar and what your plan is to get thing thing on its feet with a budget of zero. Remember this is indie theater as trench warfare- innovative and passionate wins the day!

Send proposals to theaterpub@atmostheatre.com

Looking forward to hearing your ideas!