Cheryl Thornburg
Sun News
If you're a big
theatre fan, No Strings Theatre Company has a deal for you! The
Black Box Theatre's One Act playfest, "Cheep Theatricks" continues
this weekend with five plays by 60's off-off Broadway playwright
Robert Patrick.
Ceil Herman who
directs three of the five plays read dozens of Patrick's works
and chose these to present in Las Cruces. They offer an eclectic
and very entertaining evening at the theatre. From the romantic
comedy of "Cornered" and "Still Love" to the futuristic "Camera
Obscura" to the bittersweet "One Person," Patrick's plays touch
on human experience, the need for companionship and the difficulties
of communication.
Perhaps the most
technically challenging for the actors is "Camera Obscura," a
real-time five minute play set somewhere, sometime in the future.
Shannon Gray and B.J. Anderson play a young man and woman who
have five minutes to get to know each other using a truly long
distance communication set-up - the problem is that it takes five
seconds for the sound and picture to travel across space, so they
have to wait for each other to finish - or they end up talking
at the same time and can't hear each other.
The pacing is
critical here and because the two actors are often speaking simultaneously,
it could lead to confusion, but director Ceil Herman and the actors
have worked very hard to make this fast-paced production into
a delightful trip that seems to end all too soon.
Garrick Garcia
gives the most powerful performance of the evening in the poignant
one-man play "One Person." Garcia plays a young gay man lamenting
the end of a relationship. The warmth and depth of his presentation
and the emotional envolvement he achieves with the audience is
impressive. Herman also directed "One Person."
"Cornered" is
a charming romantic comedy in which a husband, played by B.J.
Anderson, comes home to find that his wife, played by Shannon
Gray, has literally painted herself into a corner, and the two
converse across the room while she waits for the newly painted
floor to dry. The two work well together, whether in the rapid-fire
"Camera Obscura" or this leisurely love story.
"Still Love"
is a very different love story. Britney Bunker and Patrick Payne
play a couple at the end of their relationship. But here, the
playwright goes into reverse gear and scene by scene takes us
back to how it all began. This somewhat analytical approach is
fascinating.
The chemistry
between Bunker and Payne is what makes this production special.
Bunker is engaging as the young woman who falls for the young,
struggling writer, played with the usual skill by Payne. This
play also plays with time and director Bradd Howard keeps the
backward movement going at an accelerated pace until the end -
or is it the beginning?
Howard also directs
the final play of the evening, "Help, I Am" which features B.J.
Anderson as the last man on Earth - a dwarf on top of the Empire
State Building. This play is the most unusual of the bunch with
its absurd setting and dialogue. But between the antics and insanity,
there is an underlying message about loneliness that gives it
substance.
As with most
Black Box productions, the minimalist set designs and creative
lighting enhance the overall impact of the play. Of particular
note is the roll-up painted floor for "Cornered" and the red and
green lighting for "Camera Obscura."
All in all, "Cheep
Theatricks" is well worth the $5 admission.
Robert Patrick's
Cheep Theatricks runs through May 20 at the Black Box Theatre,
430 N Downtown Mall. Performance times are Fridays and Saturdays
at 8 p.m. and Sunday, May 20 at 2:30 p.m. All tickets are $5.
For reservations call 523-1223 or online at www.zianet.com/nstcbbt.
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