Check this fancy press release!
AHEM. AHEM:
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THE RUCKUS THEATER ANNOUNCES ITS FOURTH
SEASON,
DEVOTED TO THE WORK OF CHICAGO
PLAYWRIGHT SCOTT T. BARSOTTI
***NEW COMPANY, ENSEMBLE MEMBERS, AND
ARTISTS-IN-RESIDENCE ALSO ANNOUNCED***
Additionally,
The Ruckus presents two devised works-in-progress. In the autumn, Ruckus
Artistic Director Allison Shoemaker directs the workshop of Elise Mayfield is Samuel Clemens,
Samuel Clemens is Mark Twain,
which is devised by the ensemble and written by Ruckus Ensemble Members Aaron
Dean and Matt Test as part of the DCASE Theatre Incubator Series (August 27,
2012). In April 2013, The Ruckus workshops Chicago playwright Brooke Allen’s as-of-yet untitled piece
devised with the company, also directed by Shoemaker. Further details regarding
The Ruckus: Season 4, including casting and ticket information, will be
announced in the coming weeks. Please visit www.ruckustheater.org for more
information.
“Scott
is a remarkable writer, and we’ve all been fans for awhile now–so this season
is thrilling, to say the least,” said Artistic Director Allison Shoemaker.
“We’re able to collaborate with a playwright we admire, produce work that’s
unusual, vibrant and frightening, and provide a number of dynamic roles for
female performers in one fell swoop. The chance to create new work as an
ensemble with Brooke Allen and our own Aaron Dean and Matt Test is no less
exciting, so we’ve got a pretty remarkable year ahead.”
Scott T. Barsotti is a playwright and
performer originally from Pittsburgh, PA. Scott’s original plays include Kill
Me, The Revenants, Jet Black Chevrolet, Brewed, McMeekin Finds Out, and
Your
Teacher is Out Today and have been performed at many theatres
nationwide. His adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s The
Body Snatcher recently opened at Brisbane Arts Theatre in Queensland,
Australia; also in 2012, The Revenants will be produced
by Happy Medium Theatre in Boston, as well as New World Arts in
Goshen, IN. His work has been seen at the New York International
Fringe Festival, the Rhinoceros Theater Festival, and Collaboraction’s
Sketchbook, and has been produced and/or developed by WildClaw Theatre, Curious
Theatre Branch, Chicago Dramatists, The Route 66 Theatre Company,
Pittsburgh Playwrights, Roundelay Theatre Company, Theatre Seven of Chicago,
American Theatre Company, Tympanic Theatre Company, The Ruckus, and The
Visceral Company among others. He is currently adapting Geoffrey Hayes's
children's book The Mystery of the Pirate Ghost for Lifeline Theatre's 2012-13
KidSeries season. As an actor, Scott has appeared with WildClaw
Theatre, Lifeline Theatre, Curious Theatre Branch, The Mammals, WNEP Theater,
Collaboraction, Pavement Group, and Victory Gardens, and he has designed
movement for WildClaw and Strawdog Theatre. Scott is a Resident
Playwright at Chicago Dramatists. For more information about Scot T.
Barsotti, please visit his website at: http://scottbarsotti.wordpress.com.
Barsotti’s past works have been critically lauded in several
publications, including New City, Chicago Theater Beat, Chicago Reader, and the
Chicago Tribune. Chris Jones from the Chicago Tribune has called Barsotti “a
very promising young playwright.” Additionally, Brian Kirst from Sheridan Road
Magazine says, “Revolutionarily new… Barsotti proves himself to be a major
playwright in the making…” Of his upcoming work with The Ruckus, Barsotti says,
“Having a play produced is a thrill, having two
produced by the same group of artists in one season is an honor. I'm so
excited to be spending the year amongst the talent and ambition of The Ruckus,
and I can't wait to share my work with their audience and creative family.”
The Ruckus welcomes Lizzy
Powers and Derek Van Barham as
its newest company members in Chicago. Powers takes on the role of Company
Manager, and Barham serves as Literary Manager. New Ruckus Ensemble Members
include Daniel Caffrey (Tympanic
Theatre Company) and Kevin Lambert
(Ka-Tet Theatre). In addition to Barsotti, Artists-in-Residence for the 2012-13
season include Brooke Allen, Catherine Bullard, Scottie Caldwell, Julie Cowden,
Casey Cunningham, and Jennifer Roehm. Bios available at ruckustheater.org.
2012/2013 SEASON 4
Elise Mayfield is Samuel Clemens, Samuel Clemens is Mark
Twain | directed by Allison Shoemaker
August 27, 2012 at the DCASE Studio Theater
Somewhere
along the Mississippi River, a girl is dropped into a world sated in the
nostalgia and humidity of Mark Twain’s novels. Along the journey to find her
way back, she encounters many strange things- familiar faces from elsewhere, a
river that’s a conduit for time travel, and a strange book of verse detailing
many parallel universes, each containing its own Hannibal, MO. Help playwrights
Aaron Dean and Matt Test, director Allison Shoemaker, and the ensemble discover
when they are and who they could be in this workshop performance, a part of the
DCASE Theater Incubator Series. An audience talkback will follow the
performance.
Brewed by Scott T. Barsotti | directed by Anna Bahow
March 1- 31, 2013 at Teatro Luna
In the world of Brewed, the task is stirring a
pot…all day, every day. The six sisters don’t share the task as they once did.
With Nannette busy racing stock cars and Roxette off doing her own thing, the
others are left to shoulder the burden. But Paulette is fed up; Collette is
clueless; and Babette, crippled in more ways than one, is volatile. Juliette
does her best to maintain order and civility…for now. But why must they do
this? When one of the sisters calls everyone together, old venom bubbles up and
grievance flares, setting into motion an impossible moral struggle. Join The Ruckus and
Tympanic Theatre as they explore this new work about gatherings, sacrifice, and
the dark art of obligation.
Untitled by Brooke Allen | directed by Allison Shoemaker
April, 2013 at The Side Project Theatre
It’s
all fun and games, as the saying goes, until someone loses an eye. The
combination of liquor, loosened inhibitions, and silly hats usually makes for a
good time. But pair it with the no-man's land that is the switch to Daylight
Savings Time, and even an everyday revelry can bare its teeth. Brooke Allen
puts a scalpel to the mayhem in this workshop, devised with The Ruckus. An
audience talkback will follow the performances.
Facing Angela written by Scott T. Barsotti | directed by Kyra Lewandoski
June- July, 2013
Angela has lost her
face. Acquiring a new face alters more than skin and tissue, cutting into
Angela's relationship with her husband, Wes, and mutating her sense of
self. As Angela re-constructs, re-invents, and re-defines her identity,
Wes ceases to recognize the woman he loves, and doubts whether he really knows
himself either. This re-imagining of Barsotti's 2003 play, explored over
the course of the season with the cast and company, will delve deep into how we
recognize ourselves and those we go to bed with, and the collateral damage of
transformative change.
About The Ruckus Theater
Founded
by an industrious group of Michigan ex-pats, The Ruckus is composed of actors,
directors, playwrights, musicians, casting directors, publicity managers, grant
writers, baristas, grad students, poets, computer fixers, appointment-makers
and census-takers who aim to create a new kind of company—a casteless theater
that blends the lines between playwright and actor, audience and company
member. The Ruckus Theater is led by Artistic Director Allison Shoemaker,
Associate Artistic Director Joshua Davis and a company and ensemble of twenty.
We’re here to create, to examine, to invent, to
explode—to create a ruckus. The Ruckus develops new work and the artists who
create that work. Our ensemble breaks down the walls of traditional methods to
nurture new plays and challenge exceptional artists. We believe in creating our
process for every project from the ground up. We commit to the growth of our
ensemble, the artists we collaborate with, and the plays we develop. We aim to
deepen the cultural bedrock of our community by giving megaphones to new voices
and by making theater affordable. By fostering conversations that rip through
the curtain, we aim to lead both artist and audience down an unexpected path
with art that doesn’t play by the rules.
See
how we make a ruckus all over the internet on our blog, iruckus.blogspot.com; like us at facebook.com/theruckustheater; view our photostream at flickr.com/ruckustheater; follow our tweets at twitter.com/ruckustheater; and spend hours at youtube.com/theruckustheater.
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