Archive for the ‘The Performances’ Category

Pulitzer Prize-Winning Playwright Returns To Florida To Premiere New Play At RIAF!

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010
Nilo Cruz

Nilo Cruz

To call Nilo Cruz a Florida native may be going a bit too far, but it would be fair to say that he is a Floridian. Cruz, an author of several plays, a Pulitzer Prize Winner and a recipient of a Tony Award nomination, will be returning to Florida for his new play, Hurricane. The play contains many of the same themes that are present in his other plays that speak of the Cuban-American experience of journey and displacement.

Cruz came to America from Cuba as a young boy of ten. His family settled in “Little Havana” in Miami and Cruz studied theater at Miami-Dade Community College. He later moved to New York and then received his M.F.A. in 1994 from Brown University. In 2001, he served at the playwright-in-residence for the New Theatre in Coral Gables, FL, where he wrote Anna in the Tropics, winner of the 2003 Putitzer Prize in Drama and the Steinberg Award for Best New Play as well as recipient of the 2004 Tony Award nomination. His decision to premiere Hurricane at the Ringling International Arts Festival is a testament to how influential the Festival has become.

The play tells the story of how a severe tropical storm displaces a family and their struggle to reconstruct their lives. The play is rooted in many of the same challenges that have faced characters from previous plays, namely struggle, failure and triumph against extreme adversity. Christine Dolen of the Miami Herald says that Anna in the Tropics is a “passionate, explosive tender play, one filled with Cruz’s evocative imagery, language that almost seems tactile.” We look forward to Hurricane being more of the same!

You can purchase tickets for Hurricane by calling the box office at (800)660-4278 or visiting our website. Hurricane is also part of the Night Of Premieres celebration on October 13 which includes a pre-performance toast and post-performance gala. Tickets for the Night of Premieres can also be purchased by the box office at (800)660-4278 or visiting our website.

Grabbing The Moon With Both Hands

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Andrew DawsonImagine that you had the challenge of captivating an audience of astronauts by telling them the story of Apollo 11… with only your hands. You could not speak. There was no backdrop, no theater lights. There was only music, narration, a table and you. Could you do it? Andrew Dawson has done it, and the astronauts gave him a standing ovation.

It may be one of the more challenging pieces of the Ringling International Arts Festival, but Space Panorama could possibly be one of the sleeper hits. In a world with complex special effects (think “Apollo 13″) and Broadway expectations (think “Phantom of the Opera”), how is it that a man with his hands has been so successful at telling the story of Apollo 11 that he was chosen to be part of the Festival to begin with? It is because he understands that through simple and imaginative story telling, an actor can take an audience to the moon.

“Space Panorama shows what Americans can do. It shows what theater can do without a lot of technological wizardry.” – Los Angeles Times

Dawson has extensive performance experience in the world of “physical theatre”. He has studied dance, theatre and mime in London and New York and has performed extensively on film and onstage. He has also helped choreograph and direct other pieces, so he is certainly up to the challenge. In 1989, he proposed the creation of a performance piece with just a table and himself to the Northern Festival of Mime and Dance in the UK. With the constraints of such a small space, he chose to tell the story of Apollo 11, one of the greatest and grandest events in human history. The piece has been so successful that he was asked to perform in front of 200 veteran astronauts in Houston, TX. He admits to being a little nervous, but Buzz Aldrin, John Young and all of the other astronauts loved it!

Tickets are still available by calling the box office at (941) 360-7399 or visiting the Festival site.

Opening Night by Les SlovaKs Dance Collective

Friday, September 3rd, 2010
Les Slovaks Dance Collective

Les SlovaKs Dance Collective

So what would it be like if you could play games and run around acting foolishly like you did when your were five? Would you even know how to behave? Would the social norms of adulthood ultimately restrict you from really having a good time? Les SlovaKs Dance Collective in many ways has managed to take dancing virtuosity and mix it with boyish spunk and child-like imagination. This is not to say that their dance style is not full of serious themes and undertones. They are keenly aware of the social, political and gender implications of their art form, but they still communicate in a way that is reminiscent of childhood.

The five dancers come from Slovakia. Four of the five, Milan Herich, Peter Jasko, Anton Lachky and Milan Tomasik, started dancing at folk festivals when they were five and spent most of their lives together. Each watched as communism fell and gave way to the modern democratic country of today. They met the fifth dancer, Martin Kilvady who is also from Slovakia, in Belgium where they currently reside. Rooted in their folk dancing experience, their style is playful, energetic and sometimes comical. They call it “new traditional dance”. They have no choreographer. Their creative process is extremely collaborative with the result being highly diverse and at times what seems improvisational. The concern might be that their dance is considered too childish, but in a recent review, the company was referred to as “five supreme geniuses in movement”.

Opening Night features Simon Thierree on violin onstage playing music that is very influenced by Eastern European tradition. It is not traditional folk music, however. Along with the dancers, they attempt to create a new folk style that is rich in physicality, artistic themes and high energy. It will surely be one of the most memorable performances of the Ringling International Arts Festival.

Tickets are still available by calling the box office at (941) 360-7399 or visiting the Festival site.

YouTube Promo for Punto Ciego

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Check out this promotional video for Punto Ciego. An abbreviated version of this dance piece will be featured in Rubberbandance’s Loan Sharking.

Rubberbandance Group’s Loan Sharking

Friday, August 6th, 2010
An image from Loan Sharking by Rubberbandance Group

An image from Loan Sharking by Rubberbandance Group

It might not come naturally for most choreographers to combine the graceful beauty of ballet and the raw power of hip hop, but Rubberbandance Group’s (RBDG) Victor Quijada does it effortlessly. This peculiar union of classical and urban was on display recently at the American Dance Festival in Durham, NC (read a review). “The piece never pauses to catch its breath, rushing nonstop through flips and rolls, turns and lifts,” says the Times Union of Albany, NY, “as elegant and beautifully composed as classical ballet but with all the ‘wow’ factor of hip hop.”

Quijada grew up in the rap culture of Los Angeles where he studied ballet starting in high school, and he has spent his career blending the two very disparate art forms. RBDG was formed in 2002 in Montreal where Quijada had been working with the Les Grands Ballet Canadiens de Montreal. After gaining success on international levels, Quijada choreographed Loan Sharking in 2008. The piece combines elements from earlier performances to offer a wide perspective on the different styles and techniques RBDG utilizes. The result is a frenetic and exciting work of art that is a perfect fit for the Ringling International Arts Festival.

Tickets are still available for Loan Sharking by calling the box office at (941) 360-7399 or visiting the Festival site.

Day 4:Mosh Pits With Meow Meow

Sunday, October 11th, 2009
Meow-Meow 13

Meow Meow crowd surfing at the Ringling International Arts Festival

I have seen several seasons worth of productions at the FSU Center for the Performing Arts. I have seen musicals, trilogies, Shakespeare, farce and all sorts of other performances. I never thought, however, that I would one day see a stage dive. Last night, at the late-night performance of Beyond Glamour: The Absinthe Tour by Meow Meow, was a night of the unexpected.

She was characterized as a post post-modern showgirl, a talented singer who drags cabaret “kicking and screaming into the 21st Century” (Time Out New York). There was nothing that could be said about Meow Meow which could prepare Sarasota audiences for the performance. Using audience volunteers(or forced recruits) as bizarre stagehands, co-performers and props, the show was dynamite. The highlight was the stage dive that required everyone in center of the orchestra section to carry the singer from the stage to the back of the house and then back again. I imagine that there were quite a few pacemakers working overtime last night.

As for her singing, here is what Susan Rife had to say: “Meow Meow has a spectacular, smoky voice that wraps its way sinuously around cabaret standards…”

Day 3:How About Those Sonnets??

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

How is it that after 38 plays, the Bard of Avon could possibly find the time to write 154 sonnets as well? Maybe he just wrote them for fun. Either way, his sonnets have not received nearly the same amount of attention that his plays have received, but they are still just as well crafted and just as lyrical.

In Love Is My Sin, a theatrical reading of Shakespeare’s sonnets, the internationally acclaimed director Peter Brook weaves together a collection of sonnets loosely tied to themes such as jealousy, separation and death. Even though there is no plot or character development, the sonnets work like short scenes. The actors, Michael Pennington and Natasha Parry, recite the poems like musicians playing their instruments. Pennington is especially adept at performing the work with his delicious baritone voice.

I went home and pulled out my Works of William Shakespeare to reread the poems just to marvel at how quickly Shakespeare could deliver emotion and character in poems only three stanzas and one couplet long.

User-Generated Content

Friday, October 9th, 2009
Actors perform a scene from Ella Hickson's Eight

Actors perform a scene from Ella Hickson's Eight

Wow. I don’t think that I was ready for Ella Hickson’s Eight. It is hard to conceive that a collection of mostly unrelated monologues which explore class, war, racism, sexuality and power could so effectively rip out my heart, toss me around like a toy and leave me for dead. I loved it. Audience members get to choose 4 of the monologues ahead of time, so I can’t even promise the same experience, but I can assure you that the experience will be explosive.

Here is what Jay Handelman of the Herald Tribune’s blog 24Seven had to say about it: “And Thursday’s performance of “Eight” made me wish there was time to see all eight monologues…”

Opening Night Concert

Friday, February 20th, 2009

Robert Spano

Robert Spano

Florida State University Symphony Orchestra
Robert Spano, conductor
Pedja Muzijevic, piano

Wednesday, October 7  – 8:30 p.m.
Mertz Theater / FSU Center for the Performing Arts

Program:
F. Liszt,  Orpheus
L. Beethoven, Concerto for Piano and Orchestra no. 4, op. 58
F. Liszt,  Les Preludes

Robert Spano leads the Florida State University Symphony Orchestra and pianist Pedja Muzijevic in the inaugural concert for the Ringling International Arts Festival. Recognized as one of the most imaginative conductors of his generation, the Grammy Award-winning Spano is in his eighth season as Music Director of the Atlanta Symphony. He has conducted the greatest orchestras of the world including those in Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, New York, as well as the Royal Concertgebouw (Amsterdam), Filarmonica della Scala (Milan) and BBC Symphony Orchestra. Pianist Pedja Muzijevic has performed to acclaim with the Milwaukee Symphony, Dresden Philharmonic, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and Residentie Orkest in The Hague.

“Robert Spano has that great skill in a conductor of making every performance radiate joy. You would think, each time, that he has been waiting all his life to make this music happen, and that he is darned well going to make it happen to the utmost.” – The New York Times

“Pedja Muzijevic is a virtuoso with formidable fingers and a musician with fiercely original ideas about the music he plays.” – Financial Times, London

Compañia María Pagés

Friday, February 20th, 2009

COMPAÑIA MARÍA PAGÉS

COMPAÑIA MARÍA PAGÉS

 

Compañia María Pagés
Flamenco y Poesía

Thursday, Oct 8: 2:00 p.m.
Friday, Oct 9: 5:30 p.m.
Saturday, Oct 10: 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, Oct 11: 2:00 p.m.
Mertz Theater
Tickets: $30, $25, $20, $10

María Pagés is one of Spain’s leading flamenco virtuosos and the recipient of her country’s highest honor, the National Dance Award. In her latest work, Flamenco y Poesía, she translates the cadences of poetry into dance, revealing a shared language between the words of José Saramago and Federico Garcia de Lorca and the rhythms of the human body. Performed by her company of nine extraordinary dancers and musicians, Flamenco y Poesía continues Pagés innovative journey into the depths of flamenco and beyond. 

“An artist of passionate force” - El Periódico de Catalunya

“María Pagés’s flamenco pulls tradition forward into her own ample creative territory using large doses of sensuality…She danced wrapped and tangled with her own body, broken into angles or filling up the vertical space that goes up to the sky; pulling us along with her and scorching us.” – El Mundo

“One of the most exceptional voices of flamenco dance…” – ABC