Tuesday, October 30, 2007

“Yikes!” An Interview with WIT

Karyn Miller, Manager of Visual Arts & Communications at the Cultural Development Corporation, sat down on a recent rainy morning to delve into the wonderful world of Washington Improv Theater (WIT) with Artistic Director Mark Chalfant and Managing Director Topher Bellavia. WIT, currently a resident organization at Flashpoint, will become a resident organization at Source upon completion of the renovations.

How long have you been a resident organization at Flashpoint and how has being a part of an arts incubator helped your organization?

Mark: We became a resident organization in 2004 when Flashpoint opened and were one of the pilot resident companies. It was really instrumental to the organization and came at just the right time for WIT’s growth. We were starting to develop a training program – so the community organization and the peer organization was very helpful.

What do you look forward to with your move to Source?

Mark: We’re looking forward to having a bigger audience and connecting with that bigger audience. Also, the technical aspects of being in a bigger space – there’s more you can do with more space to play in. There are more organizations using the stage to interact with and I think it’ll be more intense since there will be a lot of overlap with the way that we’ll be rotating the use of the performance space. There’s really no loss of intimacy because the space is so flexible. You can still have a really intimate show. When we do Improvapalooza we’ll be able to get 300 people in and out of Source in 5 hours – we couldn’t have done that at Flashpoint.

Also, Source was one of the first venues that we played in, so it feels good to go back. It’s like we’re completing the circle.

If funding was no obstacle, where would you be and what would you be doing?

Mark: We would have bought Source ourselves.

Topher: If there was one change we could make to Source, it would be to put a putt-putt golf course on the roof.

How do you juggle simultaneously being directors, administrators, artists and teachers? Do you ever improvise or forget to improvise at the wrong times?

Mark: We’d probably be voted “guys most likely to make wise-cracks during serious meetings.” But then again we’ve really never felt much pressure to turn that off completely. There’s an opportunity for levity and humor everywhere – it helps us communicate better as people. Though, sometimes when we’re stressed because of all the organizing and management that we have to do, it can be hard to let that go at the beginning of a rehearsal or performance.

Topher: Mark and I have been working together for 8 years and we’ve developed an ability to play together offstage, as well, which helps when we’re making business decisions or dealing with conflicts. The hard thing is having an office upstairs and a playing space downstairs. On Friday, I have to finish up paperwork and then go downstairs to be funny onstage.

What attracted you to this form of theatre? To me, it’s always been analogous to the archetypal dream where you’re speaking publicly… naked.

Topher: I have nightmares that I’m onstage and don’t know my lines. I was a theatre major at Wesleyan and did theatre in high school. I was always horrible at memorizing lines. I was good at getting the essence of the dialogue, but couldn’t ever remember my exact lines and other actors would end up having to adjust their lines because of me. But I knew I was an actor and being able to perform improv allows me act in a more immediate way than scripted theatre. I go to a play and think “oh my god” you have to say the exact same thing every night – torture.

Mark: I was a student of improv before I wanted to be a performer. It’s about personal transformation and pushing yourself to explore other personalities and other strategies to deal with people other than the default way. I was able to discover parts of myself that I was on the verge of losing. It can be very hermetic in DC and it’s easy to get sealed in a box. It’s healthy to shake those expectations up. At the time I came to improv, I was temping, I had just come back from Russia and I was looking for a job in international relations so that I could use my language skills.

Topher: I was also temping for two years. I intended to go into politics, but immediately fell into the throws of bi-polar depression and mania and just went to work and then home for two years. I saw an ad for WIT’s classes and went and those classes pulled me out of my shell and helped me to understand myself and seek help. Improv literally saved my life. The nature of improv is freeing – it’s putting the cart before the horse.

Are there common misconceptions about improv?

Topher: The primary confusion that people have is that you don’t aim to be funny, you aim to be truthful and that’s funny. If you aim to be funny, you’re not going to hit it.

Mark: One of the fundamental things of improv is to be honest, to speak and live the truth of the moment no matter how awkward, violent or painful it is, so that you get better at doing that in your own life.

After seeing the iMusical, I had to wonder if there are covert ways that the actors communicate and cue one another on stage. What’re your secrets?

Mark: We have some structure like “verse chorus” songs versus “tagline” songs though 1/3 to ½ of the songs end up being free-form. The ensemble is so connected to one another that you know when someone needs help. If I’m doing fine, no one really needs to come; if people can heighten, clarify or add to what I’m doing, then they’ll come onstage.

Topher: That’s why we have rehearsals. To establish trust and understanding between people. To learn to listen and read subconscious cues.

Mark: There is a maxim in improv that if the scene is going great, leave it alone. And if it starts to sink, jump in and paddle. It may seem counterintuitive because if a scene is going well, you’d want to join it, but you may end up breaking it.

Topher: One human trait is required to do improv: basic human empathy – the ability to read other people and know what they are going through and to know why they are doing what they’re doing

It’s time for random questions… What’s your favorite pop culture guilty pleasure?

Mark: “What the Buck” on YouTube. It’s a black hole of delicious, trashy, celebrity goodness. It sticks to your teeth. Forever.

Topher: Sunday morning news shows. Meet the Press. It’s terribly trite and shallow, but I DV-R and watch all of them.

Would you rather do improv with Keanu Reeves or Patrick Swayze?

Mark: There’s a Zen-like saying that “A good improviser should be able to improvise with a paper bag.” So… Keanu Reeves.

Topher: Keanu because have you seen Patrick Swayze recently? Oh yikes!

Is there anything that I didn’t ask, that you want to say?

Mark: Our classes are held at 13th and V Street, so we’re really looking forward to being at Source and being able to teach classes, perform and have our offices all in the same neighborhood [the 14th Street corridor].

Topher: That neighborhood is seeing a real resurgence and we’re excited to be there for it.

Mark: Having our classes and everything in the same neighborhood will help us to build a community. We’ll all be able to have a designated hang out. We just need to find a watering hole without $8 vodka tonics…

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Source Construction Delay(s)

Anne Corbett, CuDC's Executive Director, gives us an update on the renovations and delays at Source...

You may have noticed that Source still looks the same…no open-topped dumpster obstructing the sidewalk, no crane flying in the sky, no fresh new façade calling out to you as you drive by. Yes, it’s true, the renovations that we said would begin in January, then in the spring, then absolutely no later than August after the fringe, still haven’t begun.

What can I say? We at Cultural Development Corporation are suckers for chasing dollars with strings – I mean chains – attached to them.

Good news is that we applied for a federally-backed funding through DC Department of Housing that we just might be able to get. The bad news is that it takes time to vet the funding process and we become ineligible if we start construction prior finishing that process. So we are stuck in hurry up and wait and leaving all of Source’s fans wondering. Sorry about that.

For now, we are still programming Source in its as-is condition – perhaps you enjoyed Arabian Nights and didn’t even notice? And we will continue to do so through the end of the year.

The new story is construction will begin first week of January 2008. If that changes, you’ll be the first to know.

Thx for the patience, anne

Friday, October 19, 2007

Source Documentary

Nadine Gabai-Botero is CuDC’s Campaign Director and focuses on the campaign to raise $3.5 million for the renovation and initial operations of Source – targeting leadership gifts, donor cultivation, marketing and communications strategies for the project, as well as special events. Over the summer, I worked with local filmmaker and producer Marty Huberman (VideoArt Productions) on a documentary about Source. It is one of the most interesting projects I’ve worked on in the six years I’ve been at CuDC (and we’ve done some pretty great projects)! CuDC hired Marty to tell the Source story from the perspective of the artists, directors and playwrights who worked at Source over the years and the many people who were involved with saving the theatre in 2006. Not being one of the theatre buffs on staff, I didn’t know much about many of the people we interviewed. I was captivated as I listened to Eric Schaeffer describe what Source was like there in the early 80s, or heard Rick Foucheux his experiences on stage (including the time he crashed his head on the theatre’s cement floor and they had to stop the show so he could get stitches!). It sounded like an exciting, crazy time to be in the DC theatre scene. In addition to the 5-7 minute video we are producing, the DVD will include an “oral histories” section, where you can listen to the artists talk about their experiences. Like I said, I’m no theatre buff, but I think it’ll definitely be one to add to your collection if you have an interest in Washington theatre history. We hope to have the finished DVD in time for the holidays (stocking stuffer, anyone?).

Monday, October 15, 2007

To the playwrights....

A welcome to all the artists…
I am very excited and honored to be involved with the revitalization of the Source Festival. I wanted to touch base personally to let you know how much it means to me that each of you are making this happen through the energy of saying "yes".
-Jeremy Skidmore
Producer

Now Playing at Source... Constellation Theater Company

Merin Frank, Development Associate extraordinaire at Cultural Development Corporation sat down this week with Constellation Theater’s luminous artistic director and founder, Allison Stockman, for some tall, skinny, extra foam cappuccino’s and all things Constellation, Source and Arabian Nights…

“While working at a nonprofit arts organization probably won’t afford you that house in the Hamptons, it often affords you the opportunity to see some great art. I was lucky enough to recently attend the opening night of Constellation Theater Company’s Arabian Nights at Source. I had a chance to sit down with Allison Stockman, the company’s founder and artistic director, and ask her a few questions about Arabian Nights, Constellation and Source.

Merin: Why a new theatre company and why now?
Allison: Well, I wanted to direct and actually select the work I was directing. I had a great team of people that was dedicated to the same things. We wanted to present work with heightened, elevated language and a wide scope. And work that didn’t necessarily get produced as often as, perhaps, it should.

Merin: As a relative theatre outsider, your first two plays, Dream Play and Arabian Nights, seem so different. Why did you choose them as Constellation’s first two productions?
Allison: I found that they had certain similarities. They both present much told stories in a different light. They have a certain longevity of perspective, Dream Play being 100 years old and Arabian Nights even longer. I am also really drawn to ensemble casts with actors playing multiple roles. I think that allow[s] an actor to explore their range, but it also speaks to our potential to transform ourselves as people.

Since we are about epic and expansive theatre, I liked that they are both set in worlds that inspire bold visual design. And they both have an element of humor to them. They show that theatre can be comic and epic. Epic theatre doesn’t have to be dark.

Merin: I saw a lot of parallels between the character of Scheherazade and Constellation. She is one lone woman who takes on the establishment, a sort of the masses vs. the mighty, and I was wondering if you/Constellation identified with that at all, as a newcomer to the theatre scene?
Allison: I hadn’t thought of that, but in a way, Constellation is much like Scheherazade. We both believe that stories – and art – can lead to change or transformation in people. Stories can open people up, help them be more understanding and compassionate. I think that’s why theatre remains significant today.

Merin: I found Mary Zimmerman’s adaptation, particularly the ending, very powerful. Why did you choose her version of Arabian Nights?
Allison: Well, with the ending, people either like it – it is compelling to them – or they hate it. It is actually written in her stage directions and while a director doesn’t approach the stage directions as binding, I kept the ending because I felt that it was a big idea and a compelling point to make. Two theatre companies have produced her adaptation, one in 1992 (when she wrote it) and on in 1994. It’s funny that neither of the reviews for either production mentioned the ending, but every review we have gotten has mentioned it.

There is a quote early in the play, when the characters are talking of the culture of arts, learning and knowledge in Baghdad, which goes something like “but everyone is at war with us.” And this is set in the 9th century. It is fascinating to me that the play is still so relevant today, particularly Mary Zimmerman’s adaptation.

Merin: Why Source?
Allison: I have loved Source since the first time I walked into it. It was actually during the Festival and it was the first time that I had been selected to direct something. This is my 7th show at Source, after shows with the Source Theatre Company and the In Series.

I love the flexibility of the space. It can be a lot of different worlds.

I had been living in the East Village and this area had that gritty feeling to it. Unfortunately, during my first show here three of my actors were held up on the same block as the theatre. But its changed so much, its amazing. My mom goes shopping on the same street where people were robbed!

I also love the idea of it. The original mission of the Source Theatre Company was about being a source of creativity and great theatre, but also about being a resource for people, for young actors and directors and people interested in theatre.

I’m so excited about the renovation. There is a lot to be said for “gritty,” but I am more interested in people walking into the theatre and walking into another world, feeling that the space has been transformed. Not just people walking in and thinking, “oh, poor artists, they have no money.”

Merin: What is the future of Constellation?
Allison: Eventually, to have our own theatre space with shows running year-round. But in the more immediate future, we’d like to do better and better shows as our resources grow. Anything from expanding the use of music, bolder, larger sets, working with equity actors and really strengthening our team. With every show, we get better as collaborators, as a team. I’d love to keep pushing past our boundaries.

Merin: Is there anything in Arabian Nights that you feel hasn’t been given its due in all of the great reviews you have received? Any hidden gem?
Allison: I have to say that the most rewarding reviews have all mentioned the ensemble element. That is so important to me. But… something that hasn’t been mentioned – I really like the confusion of stories.

Merin: Thanks, Allison, for coming and letting me ineptly interview you.”

Friday, October 12, 2007

Six Degrees of Ashley

It’s exciting to envision the future of a post-renovation Source by sampling the current productions of ensembles that will be making the stage at Source their home. Last weekend was a good example if you got to see the opening of Catalyst Theater Company's The Trial. The company received recognition in the Washington Post recently for their brave attack on high ticket prices. The same weekend Constellation Theatre Company received a rave review in the Post for their production of The Arabian Nights currently running at Source. As a curious side note, both productions use the talent of Ashley Ivey, who performs in the The Trial and is the choreographer for The Arabian Nights. And while playing six-degrees-of-Ashley, we frequently see Mr. Ivey around the CuDC offices at Flashpoint where he works with future Source resident company, The In Series.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Source Festivus

CuDC officially announced the Source Festival on September 17, 2007, almost a year after we started thinking about how to revive the Washington Theater Festival. There was a lot of pressure since the DC theatre community has changed a lot in the years since the festival. That’s where Jeremy Skidmore comes in. We’ve hired him to produce the festival, along with Merry Alderman and Jessie Gallogly. It’s going to be an exciting three weeks. We’re kicking it off with a week of 10-minute plays, each one directed by a local artistic director. Followed by a week of multidisciplinary work – dance, film projections, music, theater, improvisation, mime, spoken word, juggling, poetry, performance art – it’ll be a great adventure. Finally, week three will be 4 one-acts, selected from a group of 20 emerging playwrights. Audiences won’t know what not to see. And just as importantly, the Source Festival is a chance to bring together the DC theatre community, in a space where so many artists got their start. It’s all just really good energy.

Right now we’re looking for 10 minute plays. Check out www.sourcedc.org/sourcefestival for more information on the festival and how to submit your work.