Posts Tagged ‘Eight’

Playwrights and Gender

Monday, July 13th, 2009

An article, Research points to a bias against female playwrights, in yesterday’s local paper caught my attention. It reminded me of a blog post dated June 19, in which I pointed to another article that highlighted female playwrights, in particular, Ella Hickson.  Gender aside, two leading playwrights, one male and one female, one legendary and one emerging, were chosen to showcase their work at the Festival based on artistic merit and literary ingenuity.  Legendary playwright Peter Brook will present  his U.S. Premiere of Love is my sin and relatively new playwright Ella Hickson will present Eight.  Check them out at the festival this year.  

Lynn Hobeck Bates, Public Relations Manager at the Ringling Museum

Let’s Hear it for the Girl!

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Ella Hickson stakes her claim again.

Read this great article on up and coming female playwrights by the Ruby Room.  We couldn’t have written it better.

Voting for Eight Cast

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009
Photo: Idil Sukan

Photo: Idil Sukan

Playwright and director  Ella Hickson’s performance Eight is now showing in London and they are doing a really “cool and snazzy” online voting page. Basically, when you purchase your ticket online you get to vote for four characters you want to be in the cast. There are no plans to do this at the Ringling International Arts Festival-Eight will be performed by young actors from the UK and students from the FSU/Asolo Conservatory for Actor Training, but it is cool food for thought for some other savvy theater company looking to shake things up a bit. What do you think?

Single Ticket Sales Off and Running

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Ticket sales are off-and-running and who’s the fairest of them all? Is it über-diva Meow Meow or Elevator Repair Services’ adaptation of Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises or perhaps it is María Pagés spicy Flamenco dancing? Let us know who you think is in the lead by sending us a comment.

Other performances include:

Azure & Artists World Premiere of Busk performed with OtherShore’s Snowfalls in Winter
• Ella Hickson’s award-winning theater production Eight
Peter Brook’s U.S. Premiere of Love is my sin
• Israel’s shining star Deganit Shemy & Company
• Chamber “A” and Chamber “B” featuring a piece by rising-star Mason Bates

You can help drive your favorite up in the polls by purchasing your tickets now. Single tickets and festival packages are available online or by calling the Historic Asolo Theater Box Office at 941.360.7399.

Let’s Talk About Community

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Lately we’ve been thinking a lot about community. From a civil, bureaucratic or creative point of view, our communities deal with a set of parameters that are formed from a variety of sources, cultural, geographic, or meteorological, just to name a few. The New York City community and the Sarasota community share a variety of traits between them, luckily these include a love of arts and a passion for their own histories (primary considerations for our work, of course), and even a few shared residents. When RIAF comes to town, it brings with it a community of artists that could be viewed in a refined way as reflecting a specific sphere of the arts world. New, avant-garde, post-?…all inadequate but common titles that define something brave, something unknown or even risky. At RIAF this is namely in terms of how the Baryshnikov Arts Center (BAC) as a unique entity functions in a way that allows focus to emerge on a number of artists. In as vast a landscape as NYC this is pretty tough stuff. Following its mission with vigor, the BAC encompasses a great deal of work with its support of dance, music, theater, performance art, visual art. This support is always more limited than one would hope, given the lack of resources any one entity can provide. But it’s what defines us as a community. The crucial choices that institution makes in terms of who it supports and why, and how the growth and skill set of that institution feeds the growth of its artists, is where the magic happens. It’s where venues define themselves and gain or lose audiences in a variety of ways, and where trend-setting destinations are born. For some of us, that magic is what gets you out of bed in the morning. For others, it’s what makes those talk shows on PBS so incredibly boring!So how can we create a festival whose infusion in the local community both feeds and is fed by it? Pedja Muzijevic (who curated the amazing music series and is himself a renowned concert pianist whose work we will have the pleasure of seeing at RIAF in October), has been dutifully emphasizing this practice from the start. Ella Hickson’s EIGHT was programmed with this in mind, as it will include four students cast from their unique acting program, which is a rare and unique treat in any Festival. We recently scheduled a day of residencies that will see tomorrow’s most prominent choreographers working with local arts high schools, and students working in the same day with two of the world’s finest theater practitioners: veteran actor Bruce Myers of Peter Brook’s C.I.T.C. and Elevator Repair Service. And with the phenomenal composer Mason Bates in the house adding to an already eclectic mix of the next generation of taste makers, the mix is sure to reach multiple generations on many areas of the community.

My recent contact with FSU/Asolo Rep. students and the local high schools reflects an amazing viability and interest in new visions for dance, music and theater in that area. I am truly impressed with the enthusiasm, even after having worked with communities all over the world. We are proud to support and enhance it, and look forward to the new stories that will be told in the future from those who witness the birth of RIAF…

Thomas O. Kriegsmann

Thomas O. Kriegsmann is a producer and curator who founded ArKtype in 2006 toward the long-term development, production and touring of new internationally based performance work on a variety of scales. His acclaimed work as producer has been seen across Europe, South Africa, East Asia, North and South America and Australia. Kriegsmann is Festival Director for the Ringling International Arts Festival. More info at Arktype.

So Much to Experience!

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

In less than five months, the Ringling International Arts Festival will be alive in Sarasota. The rich diversity of scheduled performances, exhibitions, and special events will provide an enriching experience for any arts enthusiast. The Festival will include world and US premieres, plus several works commissioned specifically for the Ringling International Arts Festival.

But who and what to see? Your choices include: contemporary art paired with Old Masters paintings, orchestra and chamber music, cabaret, traditional and experimental theater, Flamenco dance, contemporary dance, and so much more. Before single performance tickets go on sale this Friday, visit the Ringling International Arts Festival YouTube channel to preview video clips of the artists’ performances.

Then be sure to let us know who you plan to see.

Ella Hickson

Friday, February 20th, 2009

Ella Hickson

Ella Hickson

Ella Hickson
Eight

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

Ella Hickson’s debut play Eight swept the major awards at the 2008 Edinburgh Fringe Festival, including a Fringe First and the Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh Award. Eight delivers a rich portrait of modern Britain through a collection of incisive monologues from characters ranging from a single working mother to a young Iraq war veteran. Exquisitely tuned to the inner voices of her characters, Hickson balances biting humor with emotional honesty as she assesses what it means to be part of the current generation.  Eight’s cast will include young actors from the UK and students from the FSU/Asolo Conservatory for Actor Training.

“One of the most self-assured, startlingly well-written and moving pieces of theatre around.” – The Herald, Scotland

“[Ella Hickson] writes with a heightened sense of the rhythms and quirks of everyday speech and uses vivid, sensory details to create believable emotional states.” The New York Times