Category: Kirk Douglas Theatre

Pulitzer Prize-winning 'Clybourne Park' paired with 'Raisin in the Sun' by Center Theatre Group

July 11, 2011 |  1:42 pm

Norris "Clybourne Park," Bruce Norris' drama that won the Pulitzer Prize this year, will make its Los Angeles debut at the Mark Taper Forum in the spring of 2012. Center Theatre Group said it will pair the production with a separate staging of Lorraine Hansberry's "A Raisin in the Sun" at the Kirk Douglas Theatre, running a few weeks prior.

Norris' play serves as a companion piece of sorts to "Raisin," imagining the events taking place before and after Hansberry's classic. "Clybourne" will be an original CTG production, and is scheduled to open March 21, running through April 22.

CTG will remount the Ebony Repertory Theatre's recent production of "Raisin," directed by actress Phylicia Rashad. The production will open Jan. 22 and run through Feb. 19 at the Douglas. Ebony's staging debuted in March at the Nat Holden Performing Arts Center.

The new season at the Douglas will also feature actress Charlayne Woodard's solo play "The Night Watcher" (Nov. 20 to Dec. 18), which had a staged workshop run at the La Jolla Playhouse before continuing to Seattle Repertory Theatre and New York's Primary Stages.

Continue reading »

Theater review: 'The Method Gun' at Kirk Douglas Theatre

June 16, 2011 |  3:57 pm

Method gun 1 

Like many obsessive acting teachers and directors, Stella Burden, the enigmatic guru who haunts “The Method Gun,” preferred process to product, rehearsing plays without a performance deadline, engaging in all sorts of improvisational horseplay and generally seeking to make transformative discoveries from the most oblique angles.

The one big difference between Burden and her more famous contemporaries, such as Stella Adler, is that Burden is a figment of the frolicsome imagination of Rude Mechs, the adventurous theater ensemble based in Austin, Texas. Nonetheless, this piece, which opened Wednesday at the Kirk Douglas Theatre as part of Radar L.A., the international theater festival now in full swing, pays humorous homage to her philosophy of acting, known simply as “The Approach.”

Here's the setup for Rude Mechs' fictional investigation: After Burden absconded to South America in 1972, her disciples were so beside themselves that they decided to continue their endless work on “A Streetcar Named Desire,” a version of Tennessee Williams' play without the characters of Stanley, Stella, Mitch or Blanche. “The Method Gun” re-creates not just this oddball performance but also the nutty exercises and personal travails that shaped its development.

Continue reading »

Kirk Douglas and wife, Anne, give new $1-million grant to Center Theatre Group

May 23, 2011 | 12:33 pm

Douglas Film legend Kirk Douglas and his wife, Anne, have awarded a $1-million challenge grant to Center Theatre Group, which will be combined with an earlier $1-million donation from the couple to develop new works for the theater.

The grant is being made through the Douglas Foundation, the couple's philanthropic organization that supports education, healthcare and other fields.

The organization said the challenge grant will be active for the next 10 years and that for every $2 that CTG raises, the foundation will add another $1. In a statement, Kirk Douglas, 94, said that "theatre was always my first love. ... Anne and I hope this additional gift will enable the Kirk Douglas Theatre to further its mandate of supporting new talent."

In 2004, the Douglases gave $2.5 million to help transform the Culver Theater in Culver City into what is now the Kirk Douglas Theatre. The 317-seat venue presents new plays, experimental productions and works in development. CTG's other venues are the Ahmanson Theatre and the Mark Taper Forum.

Kirk Douglas performed at his namesake theater in 2009 in an autobiographical one-man production titled "Before I Forget."

In 2009, CTG received a $1-million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to support experimental productions.

RELATED:

KirkdouglastheatreTheater review: 'Juan and John' at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

Theater review: 'The Cripple of Inishmaan' at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

Theater review: 'The Author' at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

 

 

 

-- David Ng

Photo (top): Kirk and Anne Douglas. Credit: Nancy Pastor / For The Times

Photo (bottom): The Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City. Credit: Craig Schwartz

Theater review: 'Juan and John' at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

May 20, 2011 |  4:00 pm

Rgs 1 
The montage of history never lets up in Roger Guenveur Smith's free-flowing solo piece “Juan and John,” which opened Thursday at the Kirk Douglas Theatre. Centering on an infamous day in the annals of baseball, the work branches out into a meditation on roughly half a century of public and private life. This whirlwind collage can get blurry in its subjective leaps, but Smith manages to hold together the material through the sheer urgency of his storytelling — his burning need to be a witness to what textbooks can render abstract and unreal.

The incident that provokes this geyser of memory happened on Aug. 22, 1965. Smith, a youngster, was at home in the Crenshaw district of Los Angeles watching on TV as his beloved Dodgers played the San Francisco Giants at Candlestick Park. Sandy Koufax was pitching for the Dodgers; Juan Marichal, known as the Dominican Dandy, was pitching for the Giants. The Dodgers were leading, 2-1, and the game was getting heated.

The details of what followed are still debated, but during Marichal's at-bat in the bottom of the third, Koufax apparently threw a retaliatory pitch that sailed over Marichal's head. Dodger catcher John Roseboro, perceived as taking justice into his own hands, came close to hitting or perhaps grazed Marichal's ear with the ball on his throw back to Koufax. Words were exchanged and after Marichal hit Roseboro with his bat, all hell broke loose.

Continue reading »

'Juan and John' opening crowd includes John Roseboro's widow

May 20, 2011 | 12:20 pm

Jj While the eternal Dodgers-Giants rivalry continued at Chavez Ravine Thursday night (alas, a 3-1 Dodgers loss), the implications of that decades-long clash played out 12 miles away on a stage in Culver City, where Roger Guenveur Smith’s "Juan and John" opened at the Kirk Douglas Theatre.

The one-man play, which Smith wrote and stars in, explores his own Los Angeles upbringing and subsequent life as well as current events since the mid 1960s.

Smith roots the piece in an indelible incident in the life of the Dodgers-Giants conflict-- when Giants pitcher Juan Marichal took a bat and attacked Dodgers catcher John Roseboro during a 1965 game in San Francisco.

For some in the opening-night audience, Smith’s portrayal of the event and his personifications of Marichal and Roseboro, as well as the ultimate real-life reconciliation between the two, had special resonance.

Roseboro’s widow, Barbara Fouch-Roseboro, was seeing Smith’s performance for the first time. She came away struck by the playwright and actor’s ability to channel facets of her husband.

“Roger got John’s laissez-faire qualities, plus his laid-back nature so well,” she said in the lobby after the 90-minute, one-act play’s conclusion.

“John was more than an athlete, he also prospered after baseball in the business we had together. But he was also in poor health for those 14 last years and I was preoccupied with living with the ups and downs... so seeing some of these things onstage was, for me, like experiencing some of them with fresh eyes.”

 “Sweet” Lou Johnson was a Dodgers outfielder from 1965 to 1967 and he was in left field at Candlestick Park the day of the Marichal-Roseboro incident. Last year, in a program on the MLB Network about the event, Johnson admitted that he was so enraged when Marichal clubbed Roseboro that he charged in from left field with blood in his eye for any Giants player he could find: “I was swinging at anything in a white uniform!”

Continue reading »

Robin Williams lets the tiger out of its cage

April 16, 2011 | 10:00 am

Robintiger When Robin Williams joined the Broadway cast of “Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo,” in which he stars as a very philosophical tiger, he knew he had to rein in some of his wilder impulses: the funny voices, the wild gesticulations, the intense need to improvise. But sometimes he just couldn’t help himself.

There he was, making his way through a scene where the tiger debates the existence of God, when he felt the familiar urge. “I just started spontaneously mimicking every world religion I could think of,” Williams says, unleashing a torrent of impersonations that touches on everything from Orthodox Judaism to Native American spirituality. “The director said, ‘That’s funny, you can keep it. We’ll give you three minutes.’ And I said, five minutes? And they said, ‘Three minutes.’ And I said, 'OK, have it your way. Five minutes.”

And yet, for the most part, Williams’ performance has been praised for his restraint. He understands the importance of playing this role straight, because the play's subject is personal for him. To find out why Williams feels so invested in the Iraq War, click here for our Arts & Books profile of him.

— Melissa Maerz

Above: Williams at the Richard Rodgers Theater in New York. Credit: Jennifer S. Altman / For The Times.

Theater review: 'The Cripple of Inishmaan' at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

April 11, 2011 |  5:00 pm

Cripple of inishmaan2 

The wicked hilarity of Martin McDonagh’s “The Cripple of Inishmaan” satisfies a tasty lust: It indulges our desire for aggressive laughter without trampling our need for more delicate sentiment.

In other words, this 1996 comedy delivers jolly dark fun that allows us to feel somehow all sweet and sensitive when it’s done. Credit the sensational Druid and Atlantic Theater touring production, now at the Kirk Douglas Theatre through May 1, for pulling off the paradox.

Set on one of the Aran Islands, so beloved by J.M. Synge, the play, under Garry Hynes’ keen direction, takes place in 1934, just as the American filmmaker Robert Flaherty has arrived to make “Man of Aran.” The news of the Hollywood invasion is slow to travel, but once it does all hell breaks loose.

 

Continue reading »

Theater review: 'The Author' at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

February 18, 2011 |  3:30 pm

The author 1 
Shakespeare famously turned the stage into a metaphor for life. Tim Crouch, a contemporary British playwright-performer of a playfully experimental bent, goes one step further — he transforms the audience into a good portion of the show itself.
 
For those of a spotlight-avoiding nature, be warned: “The Author,” which opened Thursday at the Kirk Douglas Theatre, is interactive with a capital I. At the start of the piece, I had the kind of butterflies I used to get on the first day of school when everyone in the class would have to introduce themselves. I knew I was in trouble when I was ushered into what appeared to be a backstage area divided by two blocks of stands directly facing each other. Conspicuously missing was anything resembling a stage. Instead of staring into an empty space, theatergoers were forced to gape at one other. I would have paid the stage manager a week’s salary to kill the house lights.
 
The awkwardness somewhat dissipates as, one by one, the four-person cast, occupying different sections of the audience, engages the crowd. Before I continue, however, let me say that I think “The Author,” which is being offered as part of the adventurous DouglasPlus series, is a worthy curiosity. I recommend the experience to intrepid theater folks who are as content contemplating a theatrical event as consuming one. But if you’re planning to attend the production, which ends Feb. 27, it would be better to read this review afterward. Spoilers are unavoidable, and the show’s novelty is integral to its meaning.

 

Continue reading »

Monster Mash: Egyptian Museum secured; porn at CTG; Pasadena Playhouse dumps Furious Theatre

February 2, 2011 |  8:11 am

Egyptian Museum

Safe... for now: Troops secure Egyptian Museum, home to the King Tutankhamen collection and thousands of priceless antiquities, after looters strike. (Los Angeles Times)

Amicable divorce?: Pasadena Playhouse evicts resident company Furious Theatre. (Los Angeles Times)
 
Any burning questions?: Culture Monster hosts a live chat with playwright Neil LaBute today at 1 p.m. (Los Angeles Times)

Porn at Douglas: Center Theatre Group commissions a musical about the sex trade industry. (Los Angeles Times)

Guess we're not a blog: Bloggers -- yes, bloggers -- get the first peek at the upcoming Broadway musical “Book of Mormon,” by “South Park” creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone. (Guyism)

Cheap labor: Tommy Tune is working on a new musical based on the rise and fall of Studio 54 with the help of college students who weren’t even born during the rise and fall of Studio 54. (Vulture)

Free admission: Google unveils Art Project, which lets you stay at home and visit museums around the world. (Los Angeles Times)

Getting into the habit: Tony winner Victoria Clark (“The Light in the Piazza”) has been tapped to play Mother Superior in Broadway’s “Sister Act,” which had its start at the Pasadena Playhouse. (Playbill)

Wanna buy a muse?: Pablo Picasso’s “La Lecture,” a portrait of his muse Marie Therese Walter, goes on sale at Sotheby’s in London next week. (BBC)

Keeping it (mostly) pure: Italian culture minister vows to minimize mega-ads on the Coliseum even though Tod’s shoes is sponsoring its conservation. (The Art Newspaper)

The big debate: Rahm Emanuel and other Chicago mayoral candidates on the Windy City’s biggest issue: Their favorite architectural landmark. (Chicago Tribune)

Um, where’s Klimt’s Adele?: Who were the 10 most influential artist muses of all time? Here’s one list. (Flavorpill)

And in the Los Angeles Times: Christopher Knight just loves the Charles Garabedian retrospective in Santa Barbara; Charles McNulty has some issues with “Death of a Salesman” in San Diego; a Supreme Court justice rules on Hamlet’s sanity.

--Lisa Fung

twitter.com/lfung

Photo: Troops surround the Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square. Credit: Chris Hondros / Getty Images

The Spotlight: 'A Pretty Filthy Evening' at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

February 2, 2011 |  7:00 am

First politics, now porn. Michael Friedman, composer-lyricist for Broadway’s “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson,” takes on L.A.’s adult entertainment industry in “Pretty Filthy,” a new musical commissioned by the Center Theatre Group. On Saturday, the Kirk Douglas Theatre presents selections from this work-in-progress, performed by Kathryn Hahn ("Hung"), Steven Weber (“Brothers & Sisters”) and others. Here, Friedman and book writer Bess Wohl discuss their research.

So you’re developing a scripted musical based on real-life interviews? 

Wohl: A lot of what people said is in the script, verbatim.

What kind of research have you been doing?

Wohl: On one set, Michael and I watched a vignette between a teacher and student. They didn’t have enough grips that day, so I held a light.

Friedman And?

Wohl: Not sexy at all.

Friedman: Porn stars are sexy. But the making of the product is like sausage. They stop and start over. You have to wait until the guy can start again. There’s a lot of down time. 

What was your strangest interview?

Wohl: I went to the set of “Not the Bradys XXX.” That pretty much collapsed every fantasy of my childhood. 

Did anyone discuss the controversy surrounding Derrick Burts, a.k.a. Patient Zeta, the performer who tested positive for HIV?

Friedman: Industry people feel that story’s been wildly inflated by the media: that these stories are exceptional proves the rule. There’s a dark side to any part of entertainment — music, television. People are abused everywhere. That’s why the interviewing is so important. We’ll put in a detail of our own and wonder, will the audience think that’s true in all cases? We don’t have an agenda. We’re letting the show ask the questions. 

Continue reading »
Advertisement
Connect

Recommended on Facebook


In Case You Missed It...

Video


Explore the arts: See our interactive venue graphics



Advertisement

Tweets and retweets from L.A. Times staff writers.


Categories


Archives
 



In Case You Missed It...