The economy's slow, but Actors' Gang says show will go on
Last June, Actors' Gang artistic director Tim Robbins, above, and his colleagues at the Culver City theater company received some paradoxical advice. The world economy was still shaky. Donations to the theater were down. The best short-term strategy for the theater troupe, the Gang was told, would be to save money by not putting on plays.
A theater company that doesn't make theater? Robbins' none-too-subtle response gave birth to the festival title.
The Actors' Gang's "WTF?! Festival," starts Oct. 13 (a Tuesday) and will run Tuesdays through Saturdays through Dec. 19. It's an ambitious lineup of rotating activities that will encompass live music, poetry, theater and dance performances, readings and film and documentary screenings. Some events will be free.
To longtime Gang watchers, this aggressive approach to battling the recessionary blues seems in character for the Ivy Substation-based company, which is known for its boldly experimental new works and intrepid interpretations of the classics. Conventional wisdom holds that lean economic times require artists and arts groups to rein in their ambitions. The Gang maintains that the opposite is true.
"This is exactly the time, when things are falling apart, when the economy is bad, it's the time to drop ticket prices, it's the time to create free nights, it's the time to figure out how to produce even though the economics say 'don't produce,' " Robbins says.
The new festival, he believes, will allow the company to maintain its artistic goals, preserve its extensive community outreach programs and bring new audiences to the theater while riding out what he calls this "crap economy."
The Oscar-winning actor is curating festival programming, which will bring artists such as Jackson Browne, Tenacious D, Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine and Ben Gibbard of Death Cab for Cutie to perform at the Gang's 99-seat space.
All festival proceeds will be directed toward the Gang's numerous outreach programs, which include pay-what-you-can nights for main-stage Actors' Gang productions, a free summer-in-the-park family theater series, a theater residence in local public schools and a rehabilitation-focused theater in prisons program.
On Tuesdays in November, the Gang and Pen Center USA will host conversations with such authors as Gore Vidal and L.A. Times book editor David Ulin. Pen American will present work produced by its Prison Writing Program, read by members of "The Shawshank Redemption" cast.
The theater and dance series will open with performances of the previously announced solo shows "The Need to Know: A Veteran's Journey from Fear to Freedom," written and performed by April Fitzsimmons, and "Death and Giggles" from Cirque du Soleil performer Daisuke Tsuji.
The festival will wrap up with the choral group Vox Femina.
For details, ticket prices and a complete schedule, call the Actors' Gang box office at (310) 838-4264 or go to www.wtffestival.theactorsgang.com/.
-- Reed Johnson
Photo credit: Los Angeles Times









Hey Tim what happened? I am Fan of Buenafuente and you left us waiting!
Hey Mr. Robbins left waiting the only Late Night Show in Spain this week in the promotion of his play "1984". The actor's manager called the show just 2 hours before the broadcasting saying Robbins would be in Bilbao not in Barcelona were the TV Show takes place, leaving the showman with no other explanation to give to the audience. The showman took the problem as a joke and could fix the broadcast but everybosy was very disappointed. Robbins participation on the show was broadly framed and promoting in Spanish Media. "Buenafuente" is the Spanish version of Letterman's TV format, every politician, actor, sport player, musician, artist, that wants publicity in Spain go to Buenafuente. Tom Hanks, President Zapatero, Bobbin Williams, among others had been in Buenafuente. Untill today T. Robbins has made not mention or explanation about his absence in the show. Very Rude. He should send a "Hello, I am Sorry" to the show if he wants to have people going to his play "1984" in Barcelona, Catalans are super proud and this it was very impolite.
Posted by: ana | October 01, 2009 at 07:34 AM
Saw The Actors' Gang production of 1984 in Barcelona last night. Excellent production, worthy of the superb novel (unlike previous films). Well done to all involved.
Posted by: Justin | October 04, 2009 at 07:59 AM