Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Congratulations, Cast of Freud Meets Girl!



Congratulations to Seamus Sullivan, Blair Bowers, Melissa Hurt, Jason Schlafstein, Michael Saltzman, and Aviva Pressman for many weeks of effort, a huge amount of teamwork, and a willingness to stay present and proactive through a challenging, truly rewarding rehearsal process. Hats off to you!

And, to all who were able to join us for this fallFRINGE production, many thanks! We hope you had as much fun as we did!

Watch this blog for further Wayward goings-on, keep your creative minds engaged, and we'll see you soon!

Carry on,
Wayward.

Monday, November 22, 2010

WAMU Interviews Wayward

Much to our delight, Rebecca Sheir of WAMU's Friday program Metro Connection approached us recently looking to discuss what it means to start a theatre company from scratch. We're no experts, but we certainly have a few thoughts on the subject!

You can listen to the radio feature here, which includes interviews with Freud Meets Girl lead actor Seamus Sullivan and writer/director Hunter Styles.

Thanks WAMU!

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Welcome To Therapy


We're open!

After a successful first week of performances, we're stoked for more and looking forward to next weekend with excitement. Don't be left behind! Join the marvelous cast of Freud Meets Girl for our 4 remaining performances:

Fri Nov 12th @ 9:00pm
Sat Nov 13th @ 10:00pm
Sun Nov 14th @ 3:00pm
Sun Nov 21st @ 7:15pm

See you at The Shop!

-Wayward

Monday, November 1, 2010

Fringe Interviews Hunter

Freud Meets Girl writer and director Hunter Styles is the subject of November's feature "Interview With A Fringe Artist," a monthly series published by the Capital Fringe Festival.

In the interview, Hunter discusses myth, magic, ensemble work, and the evolution of a show that, in a matter of months, has seen multiple productions and a remarkable display of supporting talent. Also, black Spandex.

I've been happy to find that the cast and crew of this November show are a tenacious bunch. I feel very little time wasted, and very few ideas abandoned. It's been a bit of a trick, working re-casting and re-design into this process since July, but it's been a tremendous chance to see this young story in a totally new light.

For the full article, click here.

Full listing of showtimes and ticket info for the remount of Freud Meets Girl is here.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Freud Speaks!


Being David Freud
reflections on the rehearsal process
from Seamus Sullivan

The thing about theater, the real infuriating, invigorating, defining thing about theater in DC is how community-based it is. It's infuriating because of limited audience exposure in the age of Netflix and YouTube: tell me it doesn't make you cry inside to know that no matter how good your production of Angels in America is, probably not as many people will see it as have seen Pants on the Ground. That's a topic for another post, though.


The invigorating thing about working in a community of artists is that, in addition to forming partnerships and friendships, everyone who stays here and works for a few years gets to see all the other artists showing off their abilities over time, and learns their strengths and weaknesses. Such-and-such a director has a knack for staging epic plays, such-and-such a writer churns out fantastic situations with naturalistic dialogue, such-and-such an actor has precision comic timing but room for dramatic growth.

This familiarity with someone's skill set is a big help when figuring out who to work with on a given project. It also makes bucking people's expectations an exciting and scary thing for an individual artist.


Acting again two years after my last role at Georgetown University (Hans Blix in Stuff Happens) has been like that. People in the greater DC theater community who know my work (all eight of them) know me as a playwright. A few months ago I acted in a ten-minute play about college baseball, which we used to test acoustics in the new theaters at my workplace. I have a dirty line about how a used baseball glove smells like your hand when it's been inside a special someone, and when I reached this line during a run-through, one of the actresses who was also performing later, an actual professional who's probably played to more people in her fullest house than I have in everything I've ever written, directed or acted in to date, a remarkably sweet and good-natured woman with whom I've attended church, gasped and said "Seamus!" as if she'd never expected me to reach such depths of even fictional depravity. That's something I'll cherish.


Which brings me to Freud Meets Girl. When fellow Waywardian and Georgetown theater veteran Hunter Styles gave me the chance to play David Freud in the fallFRINGE remount, I was all kinds of excited because:

A). It's a tremendous script- subtle, ambitious, thematically deep without hitting you over the head, fast-paced, way funny. As a playwright I'm still jealous of it.

B). The character has a tragic arc right out of Frankenstein and does a half-dozen other things I've never gotten to do even when acting at Georgetown. I've gotten to dress up as Charles Guiteau and dance my way up the gallows, but I've never played someone in a fraying marriage, or made the impassioned pleas David does for his life-threatening experiments, or faced the devastating personal revelations that flatten poor Dr. Freud by the story's end.

C). While I'm nervous playing a leading man, this leading man is a neurotic, distracted creator fueled by too much ego and too little sleep. So that's not exactly outside of my range.


Rehearsals with Mr. Styles, producer Jewell Fears, and the shipshape cast they've assembled have born out my suspicions that this process would be crazy fun. We've made new discoveries almost nightly, and everyone's shown a lot of invention and openness to exploring the very best ways to have all the characters bounce off each other onstage. Punches fly, clothes are torn off, and Spanish-speaking zombies lurch into scenes.


Come see us at Fort Fringe starting November 5. You'll see something new- not just from me, but from the whole cast, and from Hunter, who's tweaked the script for the better, and who's building a Kirby-esque, light-up dream machine for this production.

- Seamus

Rehearsal pics!


Flirting!
Reading!

Yelling!

Pouting!

Inquiring!

Fighting!

Studying!

Conference calling!


This, and so much more, opening November 5th!


Friday, October 15, 2010

TICKETS NOW ON SALE!!


Tickets are now on sale for Freud Meets Girl, opening November 5th as part of fallFRINGE, a series presented by the Capital Fringe Festival.

Click here to buy your tickets today, before they're all gone!

See you at the theater!

- Wayward

Meet The Cast of FMG 2.0

Wayward Theatre is very pleased and excited to announce the cast of Freud Meets Girl for November's fallFRINGE series.

Our six talented actors have courteously arranged themselves in alphabetical order. They are:


Blair Bowers (Sophie) is excited to be working on her first post-college graduation show with Wayward Theatre. Other local credits include Rorschach Theatre: Living Dead In Denmark; helping to launch Splashlife: The Millenials. Blair has a BA in Theatre and Dance from James Madison University.

Melissa Hurt (Rebecca) is excited to perform with Wayward Theatre and thrilled to be a part of DC theatre after being away for ten years. She has worked as an actor, director, dramaturg, producer, voice/speech trainer, and makeup artist in Washington DC; Baltimore, MD; Richmond, VA; Dodge City, Kansas; Eugene, Oregon and Sydney, Australia. Melissa teaches performance at the University of Mary Washington.

Aviva Pressman (NORM) is excited to be playing her very first machine in the exciting Fall Fringe Festival! Credits include Rorschach Theatre: Klecksography; Wayside Theatre: Man of La Mancha, Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure, Miracle on 34th Street, Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story, Harvey. Aviva has also worked as a voice over artist, director, and acting teacher.


Michael Saltzman (Oscar) Recent acting credits include First Stage: The Hunchback Variations; Open Drawer Theatre Company: Please Listen; University of Maryland: The Illusion, The Distance From Here; Weekday Players: Picasso at the Lapin Agile; Nu Visions Theatre Company: Breathe; Howard University: Joe Turner Has Come and Gone. Michael is a graduate of the University of Maryland theatre department.



Jason Schlafstein (Roger) was last seen onstage as Hal in Proof at RLT, and in a staged reading for Active Cultures. He is Assistant Director and interim Production Manager for The Odd Couple at Theater J. He will next be Assistant Directing If You Give a Cat a Cupcake: Adventure Theatre and Directing a staged reading for Doorway Arts Ensemble.



Seamus Sullivan (David) Recent credits include: Page to Stage: Sixty-9/11; Active Cultures: Horseplay with the MJTA and the Source Festival: Bunny, Bunny. His writing has appeared as part of Rorschach Theatre's Myth-Appropriation series, Arena Stage's Downstairs series, the Capital Fringe Festival, and Page to Stage. His last year was spent writing fifty short plays about Horatio's adventures after the events of Hamlet.


More to come on the strange and magical rehearsal process for Freud Meets Girl!

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Calling All Actors!

Spread the word! We would LOVE to have you in to check out the next step in the development of this piece. Love, Wayward

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

AUDITIONS
for a brand-new WAYWARD THEATRE production of
FREUD MEETS GIRL
the smash hit of the 2010 Capital Fringe Festival!


DC’s Wayward Theatre is currently casting for a new production of

FREUD MEETS GIRL
Written and Directed by Hunter Styles
Produced by Jewell N. Fears


to be presented as part of FallFRINGE, a new three-week performance series presented by the 2010 Capital Fringe Festival.

Auditions will be held in DC, at a Metro-accessible location TBA.

Auditions scheduled in 15-minute blocks during the following times:

Monday, September 6: 1pm-5pm
Saturday, September 11: 12pm-6pm
Sunday, September 12: 12pm-6pm

To schedule an audition, please email freudmeetsgirl@gmail.com with your availability.

If you are available for the rehearsal/performance dates, but NOT available for the audition times, or if you have any other questions, please email and we will see what we can do to accommodate you.

The auditions will be cold readings from the script. There will not be sides available before the date of the auditions.

Rehearsals will begin on Monday, September 27th.

Performance dates (9 performances likely) will fall between November 4th and November 21st, 2010.
(Our specific performance schedule is forthcoming from Fringe HQ).

Please note – although Wayward Theatre is a Non-Equity theatre, this Fringe Festival performance will fall under the AEA umbrella, allowing both Non-Equity and Equity members to fully participate without conflict.

Thanks!

Best,
Jewell Fears, Producer

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

To Dreamers Everywhere

Dear artists and friends of the arts,

A huge thanks to everyone for making Freud Meets Girl such a tremendous success. Over the course of five shows we sold 296 out of 300 total seats, which makes for a 98% attendance rate. As Sigmund Freud might say, Not too shabby!

Whether you performed, designed, or simply showed up with a curious mind, you helped to make this show happen, and Wayward Theatre thanks you!

And, we hope you are excited for what comes next! Keep your eyes on the site and your ears open for our upcoming plans and performances. More soon, we promise.

Carry on,

Wayward Theatre

Friday, July 23, 2010

VOTE For Us In The Washington Post!

The Going Out Gurus over at The Washington Post want to know what your favorite Fringe play has been this season!

Give Wayward Theatre and all our hard working actors and designers a nod by voting for Freud Meets Girl at the official vote page.

And once you've voted, check out the cool graphic displaying the results.

Over 1,000 people have voted so far. Don't miss out on this exclusive and somewhat shameless popularity contest!

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Warning! Warning!



Boop boop, danger, Will Robinson! The reading from our populometer is off the charts! We've sold out tomorrow's show of Freud Meets Girl!

So, come see it on FRIDAY at 10pm.

If you don't know where to buy tickets... then read any other post we've ever put up here, like, ever.

WE WILL LOVE YOU FOREVER if you come, and maybe introduce you to some other popular people, like those hot ladies over there at the bar.

LAST CHANCE! Friday's the final show.

Hunter

Monday, July 19, 2010

FMG Gets a Great Review on DCist!


You're not still hesitating, are you? Don't miss out on the runaway hit of Fringe 2010, amigos.

After seeing Freud Meets Girl, Sarah Sherman with DCist writes that "director Randy Baker works in perfect concert with a core cast of six" and finds the show "remarkable... a gem in hiding."

And, ultimately, "the results are staggering - and terrifying."

We'll take that and run with it!

So, run with us through our final two performances at The Clinic:

Thu July 22nd at 8pm and Fri July 23rd at 10pm

Fifty million Elvis fans can't be wrong. Get those tickets while you still can by clicking on the pretty blue link in the top-right column.

And, read the full DCist review here.

See you soon!

Hunter

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

DC Theatre Scene: 5 Stars! FMG is a TOP PICK!



Critics rave! Freud Meets Girl is one of the hottest shows this summer!

DC Theatre Scene awards the show a 5-out-of-5 rating, making it a TOP PICK for the festival, and calls it "Wonderfully imaginative... a mind-blowing experience!" and "a superlative Capital Fringe offering!"

Read the full review here.

We're selling fast. Don't get left in the dark. Tickets are available online at the Fringe Box Office, or by phone at 1-866-811-4111.

See you soon!

Hunter

Sunday, July 11, 2010

FMG is a Washington Post Editors' Pick!


All that late-night art-making pays off!

Freud Meets Girl opened to a sold-out house yesterday.

And today’s review in the Washington Post is pretty stellar. Peter Marks calls it “juicy sci-fi… terrifically cast” and “a breathless… nifty entertainment, filled with winning performances.”

Don’t miss your chance to catch this terrific production. Tickets are available online at the Fringe Box Office, or by phone at 1-866-811-4111.

Get ‘em now before they sell out!

And, hope to see ya there!

Hunter

Congratulations, Cast of Freud Meets Girl!


To our wonderful six actors (from left: Andres Talero, Laura C. Harris, Misty Demory, Eric Messner, Katie Atkinson and Tony Bullock): Congratulations on a fantastic, sold-out first performance! Keep up the brilliant work!

Video Clip: The Classroom Scene @ Preview Night

Friday, July 9, 2010

Preview Pics!

Thanks to everyone who checked out our preview performance at the Gypsy Tent Bar Thursday night! For those of you who missed it, here are some pictures.

Next stop, opening night! Well, opening afternoon. We hope to see you at the world premier at 1:30 tomorrow. You can purchase tickets here:
http://shows.capfringe.org/shows/474-Wayward-Theatre-Freud-Meets-Girl.html

The line.

The stage.

The bar!

The bar, from another angle.

Between shows.

More to follow!

-Seamus, Blogger-in-Chief

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

We're on Facebook! And Twitter!


What hits the spot after a long trip to the dentist? A nice big glass of theatre magic, methinks.

David loves Wayward, and you do too!

So, find us on Facebook: Business page Wayward Theatre.

And hit Like to follow along.

And/or: Follow us on Twitter @WaywardTheatre.

You like us, you really like us!

*Blawwwggh!*

Saturday, June 12, 2010

How's The Script Coming?

Funny you should ask. It's going swimmingly, with weekly re-writes and feedback from rehearsal to help shape the final product.

In short? It's bigger and better. More thrilling. More creepy. More fun.

At first, logic dictated I start with this simple, timeless equation:


I can only describe what's happened since then as the following:


Join us in July.
It. Will. Be. Awesome.

Carry on,

Hunter

Friday, May 21, 2010

The First Modern Scribes Reading

Today we have our illustrious author, Hunter Styles, sharing some thoughts about last Sunday night's Modern Scribes reading with Artists' Bloc. We'll be doing one more private reading while Hunter continues tweaking the script, and then we'll have a public reading in less than two short weeks:

Freud Meets Girl: A Modern Scribes Reading
Thursday, June 3 at 8:00 PM
Woolly Mammoth Theatre, Melton Rehearsal Hall
641 D St, NW
Washington, DC 20004

It'll be your big chance to hear the script in action before the Fringe Festival, so definitely don't miss it. Here's Hunter.

First off, Artists' Bloc rocks. It's a real pleasure to get involved with them after the success of developing Seamus's play Skywriter last year. The Bloc has a great attitude to workshopping that's both rigorous and carefully considered. Even after the workshop was over, taking a few extra minutes to brainstorm with moderator Lee Liebeskind at his car gave me a lot to ponder for the next draft.

This was the first time I've heard virtually any of this thing out loud. Until the first workshop it had only been playing out in my head. So, I was surprised to find some spots in the text that are overwritten - where simplicity is best, and where I can really pare it down - and that some ideas and sentences I always considered 'placeholders' actually sound pretty great out loud!

That's one of the great things about theater, though. A good actor communicates so much through the quality of their voice and their body language. In the earliest draft of a play like this, it's hard to imagine exactly what the live actor will contribute, so at times I've struggled to make perfect sense on paper. But now, hearing it performed, I feel compelled to strip it down, strengthen the action, trust the actors, and trust the audience to follow along with us.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Meet the Freud Meets Girl Cast!

After some private auditions last month, we emerged with a Freud Meets Girl cast that can only be described as kick-ass. You'll have a chance to see them in action at a public reading of FMG that Artists' Bloc will be conducting on June 3 at 8:00 PM in Woolly Mammoth's Melton Rehearsal Hall. Watch this space tomorrow for more news on that front.

In order to sate your burning curiosity, I figured I'd go ahead and introduce our lovely, Freudian cast to you now. In alphabetical order, here they are:

Katie Atkinson (Becca) was last seen with Constellation Theatre Company in The Ramayana. Also with Constellation: A Flea in Her Ear, Crazyface, Temptation, The Good Woman of Setzuan and The Arabian Nights; Washington Shakespeare Company: The Miser; Forum Theatre: Antigone, The Skriker; Shakespeare Theatre Company: Lady Windermere's Fan; Rorschach Theatre: Living Dead in Denmark, A Bright Room Called Day; Journeymen Theater Ensemble: The Inspector General; Spooky Action Theater Company: The Marriage of Bette and Boo; and Synetic Theater Blackout Series: My Way Little Girl. She has worked as an actor and teaching artist at Shakespeare and Company in Lenox, MA and is an Associate Artist with Constellation Theatre Company. Katie has a BFA in Drama from Syracuse University.



Tony Bullock (Roger) received his BFA in theatre from William Carey College in Mississippi. He then attended the journeyman program at the Warehouse Theatre in Greenville, South Carolina. He later received his MFA from Florida State University Asolo Conservatory for Actor Training in Sarasota, Florida. He has worked professionally as an actor in Florida, Mississippi, South Carolina, and has been living and working in D.C. for the past two years. He most recently played Hamlet (the zombie king) in Rorschach’s production of Living Dead in Denmark and Sefton in Stalag 17 at American Century.


Misty Demory (NORM) is delighted to be working with Randy on Freud Meets Girl. Misty was seen most recently in The Ramayana with Constellation Theatre Company. Other Constellation credits include, Crazyface, The Marriage of Figaro, The Oresteia, The Arabian Nights and A Dream Play. Other DC credits include Imagination Stage: Helen Hayes Nominated Lyle The Crocodile, Playing From The Heart, Lost and Foundling. Studio Theatre SecondStage: TempOdyssey. Phoenix Theatre DC: Silent Heroes and The Kathy and Mo Show. Misty is an associate artist with Constellation Theatre Company. Misty can currently be seen in commercials for Luray Caverns. She would like to thank her phenomenal husband for taking such loving care of their babies while she is at the theater.


Laura C. Harris (Sophie)'s professional credits include Amazons and Their Men with Forum Theatre, 26 Miles at Round House Theatre and Two River Theater Company, The Winter’s Tale and The School for Scandal at Folger Theatre, 1984 with Catalyst Theater Company, Rough Guide to the Underworld with Riverrun Theatre Company, What Remains with the Source Festival, Long Beach '44 with Washington Women in Theater, An Experiment with an Air Pump with Potomac Theatre Project, and Cigarettes and Chocolate at Atlantic Stage 2. Laura is a graduate of Middlebury College with a BA in Theatre and Film. Infinite thanks to family, friends, and FREUD.

Eric Messner (David) has been working in the DC/Baltimore area for some time now. Some notable appearances in the DC area include: Lucius in Titus Andronicus with WSC, and as Chicago in Is He Dead?, as Jeff in Omnium Gatherum, both with Olney Theatre Center, and as The Howie Lee in Howie the Rookie and Paul Foggarty in Scenes From The Big Picture (Helen Hayes Nomination) with Solas Nua. Other favorite roles include: Sigismund in Life’s a Dream, Jacques Roux in Marat/Sade and as Justin Timberlake/Harrison Ford in Crumble…Lay Me Down Justin Timberlake. Eric has toured nationally as Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing, and Duke Orsino in Twelfth Night with the National Players, and internationally as Howard in the Keegan Theatre’s Ireland tour of Death of A Salesman. Most recently he played the poet and ambassador Edward Dyer, in Taffety Punk's production of Burn Your Bookes. Upcoming: Mr. Scary in Junie B. Jones, Jingle Bells, Batman Smells at Imagination Stage.


Andrés Talero (Oscar) is excited to be working with Wayward Theatre for the first time! Previous credits include Constellation Theatre: The Ramayana (Vibishana/Ensemble); Rorschach Theatre: Living Dead in Denmark (Horatio); Catalyst Theatre Company: Roundheads and Peakheads (Lopez), 1984 (Philpot); Doorway Arts Ensemble: Anima (James), GALA Hispanic Theatre: Elliot: A Soldier's Fugue (Elliot), Valor (Tomillo), Agravio y Mujer. Andrés has also performed in the 2010, 2009 and 2008 Young Playwrights' Theatre Festival for YPT. Andrés received his Bachelor's in Theatre in 2006 from the University of Maryland. He would like to thank his family and wonderfully patient and caring wife Lacey for her continued love and support.

-Seamus, FMG Blogger-in-Chief

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

SHOW ANNOUNCEMENT

Carry on, Wayward!

We have selected and begun work on the main show of our second year, to be performed at DC's Capital Fringe Festival in July 2010.

The play, called "Freud Meets Girl," is a world premiere from Wayward member and new playwright Hunter Styles.

"Freud Meets Girl" will be directed by Randy Baker, who also serves as Co-Artistic Director of Rorschach Theatre.

Check back in soon for further announcements and details!

-Hunter

Our Name Change

Yes, we're young and somewhat angry. But we felt that Angry Young Theatre Company was always something of a placeholder name, until the right one came along.

So, after much deliberation, AYTC has become Wayward Theatre.

Why?

Three major reasons:
1. We wanted a name that captured some of the transient romance of forging art from sharp, rebellious brains and deviant mindsets. 
2. It's full of W's, which is an old Celtic good luck charm.
3. Sarah always sings this song when we have meetings.

So, Wayward Theatre it is! Keep us on your radar as Fringe 2010 approaches.

- Hunter