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A savage and hilarious look at human relationships
After
10 sell-out performances at Sydney's Tap Gallery in 2000, New York director
Karen Kohlhaas re-staged her triumphant show: An Adult Evening
of Shel Silverstein at New York’s Atlantic Theater in October
2001. Now it’s finally had the Sydney season it deserves, and audiences
lapped it up!
Shel Silverstein (1932 - 1999) is an American legend, most noted for
his children's books, The Giving Tree and Where the Sidewalk Ends. He
was also prolific as a singer-songwriter (A Boy Named Sue, The Cover
of the Rolling Stone, Ballad of Lucy Jordan), playwright, screenwriter
(Things Change with David Mamet), poet, journalist and cartoonist (Playboy
from the 1950s). An Adult Evening is a celebration of his wit and humour…
An Adult Evening of Shel Silverstein is a collection of ten vivid shorts
that use ingenious language to illustrate a bizarre series of relationships.
A well-heeled woman is in denial about having taken the first steps
to becoming a "bag lady." A husband and wife are in bed, enacting
the wife's fantasy of a shipwreck in which the husband is forced to
throw either her or his mother overboard. A father torments his daughter
on her birthday with hints of bizarre gifts (a dead pony is just the
beginning...) Silverstein creates a gleeful and macabre evening full
of physical and verbal slapstick, sick twists on highly identifiable
situations taken to a near psychotic fantasy level.
What
the Sydney critics said:
“The Practical Theatre Company’s production is like watching
an adult version of Sesame Street…see-sawing delight and utter
devastation…fantastic. This show is a rollicking series of slapstick
plays performed with a sense of life’s absurdity and human nature’s
ridiculous foibles.”
Lenny Ann Low, Sydney Morning Herald review, June 2002
"The acting is impressive throughout, often brilliant, matching
or exceeding the writer’s talent. The difficult, diffuse, fast-moving
program has been unerringly staged with New York director Karen Kohlhaas
at the helm. Praise is also due to the courage and judgement of producers
Melissa Bruder and Andrea Moor. This is the first venture of their newly-formed
Practical Theatre Company."
Peter Morrison, The Australian Jewish News, July 2002
“It’s hilarious – a great evening at the theatre
and a great laugh.”
Wentworth Courier, June 2002
“Punchy, sexy and funny…with passion and guts. Each piece
was unique and refreshing, moving from the quirky and amusing in ‘Bus
Stop’ to the hysterically funny in ‘Best Daddy.’ Brilliantly
black wit and humour…Karen Kohlhaas’ direction was superb.”
Laura Scrivano, Vibewire, June 2002
...
and the New York critics:
"Intermission sends the audience out with a clear
appreciation of human nature as perverse and laughable. The show works
as a fond tribute to an independent and eccentric intelligence"
Bruce Weber, New York Times, Oct 2001
"Even in the moments of bitter satire Silverstein presides and
brings gentle light to the moment"
Roy Sorrels, NY, culturevulture.net, Nov 2001
"Silverstein's slight but technically polished skits cover various
sexual and linguistic worries in a world that turns surreal or threatening
with the least provocation"
David Cote, TimeOut, New York, Oct 2001
The Practical Theatre Company Inc. is built on the principles of Practical
Aesthetics, an acting technique and philosophy of the theatre devised
by American playwright David Mamet (American Buffalo, Glengarry
Glen Ross, The Winslow Boy) and actor William H. Macy (Fargo,
Happy Texas, Magnolia).
Both Mamet and Macy are founders of the Atlantic Theater Company in New
York. Many Australian actors have traveled to New York to study the technique
at Atlantic, and many are now studying in Sydney with Practical Aesthetics
Australia, which was founded by Andrea Moor and Melissa
Bruder. Melissa is a founding member of the Atlantic Theater Company
and co-author of A Practical Handbook for the Actor. Andrea
is a well-known face on the Sydney stage, having performed over the last
22 years for STC, Griffin, Ensemble, Marion Street, and in countless television
shows and films.
Cast:
Matt Boesenberg (Spurboard, ATYP/STC; All Saints), Rosie
Fisher (Reclaim the Stage, ATYP; Stones in My Passway, Stables),
Julian Garner (Head On; Wildside, ABC), Nick Hardcastle;
(Girls’ Night Out; All Saints), Laura Keneally (BackBerner,
ABC; Better than Sex), Tamara Lovatt-Smith (An Italian
American Reconciliation, Downstairs Belvoir St. Theatre; Get Rich Quick),
Ben Mathews (Student at Atlantic School, NYC), Asia
Matthews (Academy, Channel 7; Killing Time), Shane Morgan
(NippleJesus, Bondi Fringe Festival), Kate Reid (Night
Mother, Darlinghurst Theatre; All Saints) Nadia Townsend
(Four Dogs and a Bone, Stables Theatre; Headstart, ABC).

Set: Walt Spangler Lighting: Antony Deary Sound:
Malcom Nicolls
Producers: Melissa Bruder & Andrea Moor
Director: Karen Kohlhaas
Karen recently directed the New York premiere of BOSTON MARRIAGE by
David Mamet for the New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater, which
opened in November 2002. In May 2002 she was associate director with
David Mamet for RICKY JAY: ON THE STEM at the Second Stage Theatre,
New York City. Karen has directed numerous other productions in New
York and at highly respected regional theaters in America.
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