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The Callboard:
The online home of the men and women of the Department of Theatre
and The Clarence Brown Theatre at the University of Tennessee

The Callboard Blog

February 27, 2010

Halpern Lecture on Drama History March 18

Filed under: University of Tennessee, Theatre — rchoover @ 12:13 am

The UT Department of English will sponsor a lecture “Greek Theater and Democratic Thought: Arendt to Rancière” by Richard Halpern, Professor of English at Johns Hopkins University. The lecture will be held on Thursday, March 18th, in 1210 McClung Tower, from 4-5. A short reception with the scholar will follow.

On Friday, March 19th at noon, in 1210 McClung Tower, Professor Halpern will lead a seminar on his recent essay “Eclipse of Action: “Hamlet and the Political Economy of Playing” (in Shakespeare Quarterly 59.4 [2008]). Graduate students are especially encouraged to attend, though others are welcome.

At both talks, Professor Halpern will speak about his current book project “Eclipse of Action: Tragedy and Political Economy,” which traces the dilemma of modern tragedy to an economic context that elevates making or production over doing or action, and uses this context to cast a retrospective glance over the history of tragic drama from Aeschylus to Beckett.

Professor Halpern’s research interests include sixteenth- and seventeenth-century literature, especially drama; Shakespeare; modernism; literary theory, especially Marxist and psychoanalytic; aesthetics; science and literature. He is the author of Shakespeare’s Perfume: Sodomy and Sublimity in the Sonnets, Wilde, Freud and Lacan (Penn, 2002), an exploration of relations between sexuality and aesthetics. His most recent book is Norman Rockwell: The Underside of Innocence (University of Chicago Press, 2006).

Professor Halpern has taught at Berkeley, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and Yale. He won an NEH Fellowship in 1993-1994 and is currently on the editorial board of English Literary History.

Richard Halpern’s visit is part of the 2009-2010 Visiting Speakers Series sponsored by the Department of English.

The lecture and seminar are free and open to the public. For more information, contact Mary Dzon (mdzon@utk.edu).
 

 

February 12, 2010

Play Reading Saturday Feb. 13

Filed under: Theatre, Official Business, Reading Series, Clarence Brown Theatre — rchoover @ 1:10 pm

Bare Feet on a Cold Floor
by Kathryn Rickson

will be read on the stage of the Carousel Theatre Saturday, February 13 at 12 Noon.

featuring: Elizabeth Norment, David Kortemeier, and Ned Schmidtke of the cast of Oedipus the King.

A discussion will follow. 

 

 

February 8, 2010

Bus Stop Auditions

Filed under: Theatre, Auditions — rchoover @ 5:54 pm

Auditions:  Tellico Village production of BUS STOP

Joan Dorsey, Director, gives the following info for casting of three roles:

           Cherie: Marilyn Monroe role in movie

           Bo: young socially naive and aggressive cowboy

           Elma: high school waitress in diner

   ** All three are onstage throughout the play…major, MAJOR roles

Auditions:  March 4, Thursday at Tellico Village Rec Center 7-9 PM

            March 6, Saturday at Tellico’s Yacht Club 3rd floor  12-2 PM

no “pay”…however, a great opportunity to do 3 “major roles” for experience or for a “showcase”.

About the director:  I am a retired drama teacher from Philadelphia that taught in a magnet school of performing arts…teaching only drama and doing 6 productions a year.  I have done theatre all my life and continue to direct and perform in theatre and do television commercials in retirement here in Tennessee and in Orlando prior to moving here in 2005.  This can be an great opportunity to learn as well as perform…a great “showcase” for a drama student at UT.

Rehearsals to begin early April

Show dates:  May 20,21,22

My phone number is: 865-408-1071 my residence

If I am not home, leave messages and I will return the call

 

 

The Wedding Party on the Eiffel Tower

Filed under: Theatre, Students — rchoover @ 5:49 pm

For Immediate Release:

The Wedding Party on the Eiffel Tower
At Clarence Brown Lab Theater Feb. 11-14
                                                                                                                   

The Wedding Party on the Eiffel Tower, a zany romp by French playwright Jean Cocteau will open Thursday, Feb.11 and continue through Sunday, Feb. 14 with three evening and two matinee performances in the Clarence Brown Theater Lab Theater on the University of Tennessee campus in Knoxville.

It was just over a year ago that UTK senior theatre major Samantha Senn of Oak Ridge received the go ahead to direct and produce the play in the UT facility. It is an independent student production by Senn overseen by faculty advisor Casey Sams. All performances are open to the public free of charge.

Senn has performed on stage and worked in numerous staff and crew positions as well as directing short, five to 45 minute, films for classes.  Most recently she was the Assistant to the Director for both A Christmas Carol (2008) and The Triumph of Love in 2009. She had a directing class with Kate Buckley, UTK , and was a writer/director/actor for the classes’ final presentation, Anonymous Lives. 

Why did she choose this play, first performed in Paris in 1921?

“I was intrigued by the concept of both the show and the futurist movement as a whole,” she said thoughtfully. “The idea of reality versus a representation of reality is fascinating and the commentary provided on the mechanization of daily life is very relevant in today’s society.”

What exactly is the play about?

”Well,” the producer says, “It’s a one act play centering on a wedding reception gone terribly wrong. Just when you think you’ve figured it out, something else happens and any theories you had fly out the window. The entire cast’s lines are spoken by two Narrators who control the action on stage, and join in periodically. Although, as the show progresses they learn that they might not have as much control as they originally thought, or do they?”

There are lions, ostriches, mimes, dysfunctional families, a 320 square foot mural and a giant camera. There is even a song and dance routine!

Scenic Artist Kelsey Roy created the large mural backdrop for the show. In a blending of cubist and post impressionistic styles she has painted an impressive, colorful depiction of the Parisian skyline.  She and Senn are both 2006 ORHS grads. The other Oak Ridge participant in the show is Sandra Herrera, the Wig Mistress.

An artistic team of nine and a technical crew of four support the cast of 12.
 
There are evening performances Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Feb. 11, 12 and 13, at 8 pm with matinee performances Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 13 and 14, at 1:30 p.m. The house is open 30 minutes prior to each performance. Admission is free.   Additional information on the show is available at this Facebook Link: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=454867155520&ref=mf

Cast (In order of appearance)
First Narrator: Dana Parks; Second Narrator: Harrison Hayes; Ostrich: Clarissa Dufrense; Hunter/Telegram/Art Dealer: Adam Hutsell; Manager/Bathing Beauty: Molly Kessler; Photographer: Zach Parker; Bride: Alison Sculley; Groom: Seth Johnson; Mother-in-Law/Father-in-Law: Harrison Young; General: Jacob Baker; Child: Josh Cook; Lion/Art Collector:: Renee Hines.

Artistic Team
Director/Producer: Samantha Senn; Stage Manager: Jenna Purdy; Assistant Stage Manager: Amber Autry; Lighting Designer: Jason Heitt; Costume Designer: Natasha Koetsch; Sound Designer: Meg Deshaies; Set Designer: Samantha Senn; Scenic Artist: Kelsey Roy; Waltz Choreographer: Zach Parker; Wig Mistress: Sandra Herrera.

 

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