Musical play hits comedic high note

Articles and Reviews — DJ Kelly @ September 22nd, 2008

Bob Clark, Calgary Herald

Published: Monday, September 22, 2008

Lunchbox Theatre presents Stagefright by Jim Betts through Oct. 4 at Vertigo Studio. Tickets: $13-$16, available by calling 265-4292.

Rating 3 1/2 out of five

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Lunchbox Theatre has launched its new season with an original musical comedy whose admittedly modest charms still managed to hit enough high notes over the course of 50 minutes to warrant a bigger audience than the sparse but receptive crowd that greeted its opening on Thursday at Vertigo Studio.

The show in question, Stagefright, is a reduction/re-working by Canadian playwright Jim Betts of his own two-act musical of the same name, first produced in 1978.

The shorter version of Stagefright was commissioned by Lunchbox as a celebration of the venerable noontime theatre’s inaugural season in new ground-floor digs beneath the Calgary Tower — although ongoing renovations won’t allow the company to officially take over the space until the opening of the second Lunchbox show, David Mamet’s A Life in the Theatre, in October.

With Stagefright, a book musical about growing forward instead of going back, we meet self-help addict Claire (Mallory Minerson) who decides on a Freudian course of action that tells how her life’s “worst moments” can be worked out on stage, through plays.

To assist in her dubious self-therapy, the naively optimistic and generally bouncy Claire enlists the help of two recently divorced actors — flirtatious and playful Derek (Kevin Rothery) who thinks it’s all going to be a gas (and besides, it pays), and Derek’s disillusioned Eeyore of a former wife, Trudy (Natascha Girgis), who doesn’t.

What ensues takes us entertainingly through the gist of Don Juan, Ibsen (A Doll’s House, plus a dollop of Hedda Gabler), and Noel Coward.

Under Mark Bellamy’s experienced direction, the pace and high spiritedness of Betts’ clever little piece rarely falter, the actors bringing an attractive gloss and economy to their play-acting that fits in comfortably with Terry Gunvordahl’s mostly trunk-and-wardrobe representation of a rehearsal set and Deitra Kalyn’s costumes.

As the silent fourth member of this rehearsal cast, musician Brent Rock — playing Wayne the Pianist — gives his colleagues all the support they could ever need in making the most of the show’s bland but good-natured ditties.

bclark@theherald.canwest.com

CBC Radio Stagefright Review

Articles and Reviews — DJ Kelly @ September 22nd, 2008

CBC Radio’s Sharon Pollock reviewed Stagefright on The Homestretch this past Wednesday. She also talks about the new theatre and the Push to the Finish Campaign.

CBC\’s Pollock on Plays \’Stagefright\’ Review (Real Audio)

StageFright Tech Week and Opening

Blog Entry — admin @ September 20th, 2008

After having spent two weeks in rehearsals this week saw StageFright leave the rehearsal hall and move into the Studio at Vertigo where it will live until October 4th.  This past week has been what is referred to as “Tech Week” where the show gets transformed into its final product with the addition of lights, costumes and set pieces.  The cast and crew have spent tireless hours working with director Mark Bellamy and our wonderful design team: Deitra Kalyn (costumes), and Terry Gunvordah (set and lights) to bring StageFright to life.

While the cast spent Monday putting the finishing touches on the show acting wise, the crew (lead by Production Manager Caitlin Ferguson) prepared the Studio Theatre, moving set pieces, building risers and hanging and focusing lights. Tuesday was spent running the show numerous times to allow for every technical element to be tweaked to perfection. Wednesday brought an audience into the Studio for the first time as StageFright had its preview performance, followed by opening on Thursday. As the week comes to a close both cast and crew are well into the routine of the run.

On behalf of the cast and crew I’d like to thank the entire staff at Lunchbox Theatre for facilitating our needs and allowing us to make StageFright a success. I’d also like to thank our amazing volunteer ushers that make every performance possible.

 

Looking forward to seeing everybody at the theatre,

 

Alec McCauley
Apprentice Stage Manager

Another opening, another show

Blog Entry — Tags: , , , , — admin @ September 17th, 2008

Well. It’s official. Our 2008 season has begun. Today Stagefright opened to an enthusiastic response. Natascha, Mallory and Kevin under the guidance of Mr. Bellamy, sang and danced their way into our hearts. Thanks to all including our production, admin and front of house staff for a great job. That’s what team work is all about!

The stage floor is being laid today in our theatre. Soon actors will be trodding the boards in our new home. The countdown is on.

Can’t wait!

Martie

Metro Calgary - Curtain about to rise on new theatre

Articles and Reviews — DJ Kelly @ September 11th, 2008

Curtain about to rise on new theatre

NEIL MACKINNON/METRO CALGARY

 

Wires jut from the ceiling; red concrete walls are half-painted, and while Lunchbox Theatre isn’t so majestic yet, it will be in 40 days.

A little over two years ago, the Theatre left its home of 30 years at Bow Valley Square and renovations are humming along at their new site, a former car dealership, at the base of the Calgary Tower.

A goal of completing the 150-seat project got a boost from the province yesterday with a $500,000 commitment from Culture and Community Spirit Minister Lindsay Blackett.

“Anybody who wants to be defined as a first-class province or city, has to have a thriving arts scene,” Blackett said. “We’re not a cultural wasteland anymore, we’ve got a lot going for us and I dare say, if you put everything we have in totality in the province compared to Toronto, we’d kick their butt.”

The funding announcement also kicked off Lunchbox’s drive to collect another $500,000 in 50 days from private donors, said its artistic director, Martin Fishman.

“The final push is really on,” he said.

Lunchbox Theatre begins performances on Sept. 17, with Stagefright. Call 403-265-4292 for more information.

  ROBIN KUNISKI/for Metro Calgary

Martin Fishman, Lunchbox Theatre artistic director, Minister of Culture and Community Spirit Lindsay Blackett, James Bailey, president, and Leslie Biles, general manager, show off the provincial government’s support for the group’s new theatre.

Calgary Herald - Lunchbox opens $500,000 provincial boost

Articles and Reviews — DJ Kelly @ September 11th, 2008

Lunchbox opens $500,000 provincial boost

Lunchbox Theatre is moving in fast on its first season in a new home.

Thanks to a $500,000 boost from the Alberta government announced Wednesday, Lunchbox can now bank a cool $1.1 million in its final charge towards a fundraising goal of $1.68 million. The announcement came only weeks away from the company settling into its partly completed street-level performance space beneath the Calgary Tower.

“A request was put into our department and I was told that Lunchbox needed the money and they needed it fast,” said Alberta’s Minister of Culture and Community Spirit, Lindsay Blackett, following the announcement at Lunchbox on Wednesday that marked the start of the theatre’s Push to the Finish fundraising campaign. “I have the discretion to be able to do that, since I’m responsible for arts and culture, (but) I have to make sure that I’m looking at the four key pillars of our cultural policy.

“Supporting Lunchbox fit in that like a glove.”

“It’s extremely inspiring,” says Lunchbox artistic director Martin Fishman. “The provincial government is showing great courage, faith and trust, both in Lunchbox Theatre and in theatre in general in Calgary by donating the $500,00 to our new space.

“They’re really stepping up to the plate. It’s really encouraging, and I think it bodes really well for the future of theatre in Calgary.”

Asked about the four-month challenge of re-locating Canada’s longest-running producer of one-act plays several blocks south-east of its longtime Bow Valley Square premises, Lunchbox artistic director Martin Fishman describes it as less of a challenge than an experience that has proved “really positive.”

“Our subscriptions are higher than they’ve ever been (up 20 per cent, and counting) and, as far as getting the theatre itself built, we’re right on schedule,” Fishman says.

Still basking in the glow of its showing at the 2008 Bettys, where it took home five statuettes, Lunchbox will formally inaugurate its new 150-seat home next month with the Oct. 20 opening of its second production of the season, David Mamet’s A Life in the Theatre.

Kicking off the Lunchbox lineup before then, however, is the newly adapted Jim Betts musical Stagefright, which debuts Wednesday at Vertigo Studio.

“As far as operations go, we’re in great shape,” Fishman says, citing last season’s surplus of more than $60,000.

Fishman, who took over the artistic reins of the popular 33-year-old noon-hour theatre partway through last season, looks forward to the challenge of attracting new audiences, while at the same time retaining the loyalty of longstanding Lunchbox supporters.

“My whole thing is to make us more current,” Fishman says, noting that Lunchbox will continue to draw on comedy and musicals as the main ingredients of its midday fare. “There really is an energy and a buzz in this city.”

Accordingly, a major change is in store for the Lunchbox Petro-Canada Stage One play development program.

Although it will continue to solicit scripts from across Canada, workshopping some of them with a view to production as part of future Lunchbox seasons, Stage One will also feature a second tier of new play creation.

“I’m actually going to commission six playwrights from across the country to write for us for the 2009-10 season,” says Fishman. “I think Calgary is at a point where it’s such a cosmopolitan city that by writing for our audience and for the city, you’re obviously writing for the country.” And that, he says, “is a really interesting change that’s happened.”

bclark@theherald.canwest.com

Calgary Sun - Lunchbox’s new home nears completion

Articles and Reviews — DJ Kelly @ September 11th, 2008

Sep 11, 2008

Lunchbox’s new home nears completion

An exciting announcement took place at the base of the Calgary Tower yesterday morning, smack in the middle of a place that once housed a car dealership.

That same space is now home to the world’s longest-running noon-hour theatre company, the 33-year-old Lunchbox Theatre.

Forced to vacate it’s former spot in Bow Valley Square two years ago, Lunchbox found itself faced with the daunting task of securing a new downtown lease space.

But as is so often the case in Calgary, the stars aligned, truckloads of community support and piles of cash from generous sponsors like Encana and TransCanada Corp rolled in, and the company now finds itself nearing the end of a massive conversion. The swanky new location of the Lunchbox is almost ready to open its doors, preparing for October 20 when its second production of the season – ‘A Life in the Theatre’ by David Mamet will debut.

Fresh on the heels of Saturday’s first-ever Alberta Arts Day, yesterday saw the Honourable Lindsay Blackett, Minister of Culture and Community Spirit, hand over a $500,000 cheque towards the theatre company’s fundraising campaign at a press conference attended by industry insiders and age-old fans of Lunchbox alike.

“Lunchbox Theatre is a prime example of the great local arts programming found in many towns and cities across Alberta,” said Minister Blackett. “The provincial government’s generous contribution shows that culture is indeed alive and well in Alberta.”

Artistic director Martin Fishman also took the opportunity to launch the final fundraising push that will attempt to raise the remaining $500,000 needed to complete the $1.6 million project over the next 50 days.

“The Minister and the Government have shown courage, trust and faith not only in Lunchbox Theatre, but in the vibrant theatre scene in Calgary,” said Fishman. “They have embraced the community spirit of our city. We call on all Calgarians to join us with that same community spirit as we launch our ‘Push to the Finish Campaign.’

To follow the final construction of the city’s famed noon-hour theatre, visit lunchboxtheatre.com


L to R: Lunchbox Theatre artistic director Martin Fishman, Minister Lindsay Blackett, Lunchbox president James Bailey and general manager Leslie Biles outside the new location at the base of the Calgary Tower, accepting some seriously fat cash from the provincial government…

Minister of Culture announces $500,000 to the new Lunchbox Theatre

Media Release — DJ Kelly @ September 11th, 2008

Media Release
For Immediate Release

Minister of Culture announces $500,000 to the new Lunchbox Theatre
as Lunchbox Theatre launches ‘Push to the Finish Campaign’

September 10, 2008 (Calgary, AB)The Honourable Lindsay Blackett, Minister of Culture and Community Spirit, today announced the Government of Alberta’s generous contribution of $500,000 to the new Lunchbox Theatre. The announcement was made at a 10am press conference held in the new theatre space – currently under construction at the base of the Calgary Tower.

“Lunchbox Theatre is a prime example of great local arts programming found in many towns and cities across Alberta,” said Minister Blackett. “The theatre’s exciting lunchtime performances and outreach programs continue to contribute to Calgary’s artistic development and growth, which is why I am pleased the Government of Alberta is providing $500,000 to support the new Lunchbox Theatre.”

Immediately following the announcement, Minister Blackett, presented a cheque to Lunchbox Theatre’s Artistic Director Martin Fishman, and Lunchbox Theatre president James Bailey. Martin Fishman then officially launched Lunchbox Theatre’s ‘Push to the Finish Campaign’.

“The Minister and the Government have shown courage, trust and faith not only in Lunchbox Theatre, but in the vibrant theatre scene in Calgary,” began Fishman. “They have embraced the community spirit of our city. We call on all Calgarians to join us with that same community spirit as we launch our ‘Push to the Finish Campaign’ to raise the final $500,000 necessary to complete our brand new theatre over the next 50 days. Together we can say ‘We helped build Lunchbox Theatre’.”

After 33 years in downtown Calgary, Lunchbox Theatre is in the process of building a new theatre at the base of the Calgary Tower. The new theatre is slated to open on October 20 with Lunchbox’s second production of the season, A Life in the Theatre by David Mamet.

The worlds longest running lunchtime theatre, Lunchbox Theatre is a professional company that produces at least six plays per year as well as the Petro-Canada Stage One new play reading series and the BD&P Emerging Director Program. The 2008/09 Lunchbox season begins September 17 with Stagefright, a new musical by Jim Betts, in The Studio at Vertigo Theatre Centre, directly across the hall from the new Lunchbox Theatre.

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More information or interview requests:
DJ Kelly
Marketing and Communications
Lunchbox Theatre
403 265 4292 x 229
dj.kelly@lunchboxtheatre.com

FFWD Weekly - Snack time

Articles and Reviews — DJ Kelly @ September 11th, 2008

Snack time
Martin Fishman hopes to bring ‘edgier’ feel to Lunchbox Theatre


For anyone who assumed that Lunchbox Theatre had reached its curtain call, the Calgary staple’s 2008-09 season is proving there’s a second act left after all. Hand it to the drama of circumstance, though: it was a hell of a break.

For almost 33 years, the unique lunchtime theatre founded by Bartley and Margaret Bard in 1975 made its home in the downtown Bow Valley Square. But with the relatively sudden end of the company’s rent-free lease in 2007, Lunchbox was faced with an essential dilemma — how to continue producing work for corporate Calgary without a downtown address. As if the question wasn’t acute enough, the company’s imminent homelessness was followed swiftly by the departure of artistic director Rona Waddington, who had replaced Johanne Deleeuw, the Bards’ hand-picked successor, after the board of directors terminated the latter’s contract in 2005.

The outlook, to all outward appearances, was bleak.

Then late last season, the company announced its new home in a former Mercedes dealership at the base of the Calgary Tower. Offering the company the chance to build a theatre from the ground up, allowing for adjustable seating and staging, the new theatre will see its first performances under artistic director Martin Fishman.

Better known to Calgary audiences as the artistic director of Mount Royal’s summertime Shakespeare in the Park, the former interim AD hopes to bring an “edgier” feel to the company’s productions, taking advantage of the new location to maintain and expand the long-running company’s audience base.

“We’ve got a large core of older audience members who’ve been very faithful over the last 33 years and will hopefully continue to be,” he says. “But moving here to the cultural heart of Calgary is an opportunity to expand our audience base, and to more truly reflect the kind of city Calgary is now as opposed to when [the Bards] began 34 years ago.”

According to Fishman, it was last season’s With a Twist, a modern satire that included, among other things, cyber sex and swearing, that opened his eyes to the possibility of future Lunchbox offerings.

With a new space embedded in Calgary’s downtown theatre district, he believes the company can engage more directly with other local work. Conceding that Lunchbox’s one-act plays will always maintain a level of safety that’s marked the company since its beginnings, he sees works like Stagefright, the season’s first production, as more “in touch” with the company’s hoped-for broader audience.

Adapted from a full-length version, Stagefright (September 17 to October 4) is a musical taking aim at self-help through a woman’s attempts to have actors perform her life and, in doing, expose its flaws. Written by Toronto playwright Jim Betts, the chaotic swirl of music and catharsis will be followed by A Life in the Theatre (October 20 to November 15), a two-hander written by David Mamet and directed by Fishman, an ardent Mamet devotee.

From a valentine to the theatre to the requisite Christmas comedy, Norm Foster’s The Christmas Tree (November 24 to December 20) will hit the season’s midpoint, followed by a musical tribute to Frank Sinatra called Come Fly With Me (January 19 to February 14). “The Frank Sinatra tribute is a no-brainer,” says Fishman. “Everyone loves Sinatra.”

Originally performed by writer Darren Hagen, an Edmonton-based drag queen, Tornado Magnet (February 23 to March 21) will replace Hagen with local actor Karen Johnson-Diamond for the company’s second-last production, before human actors will replace whales in Lunchbox fixture Clem Martini’s The Invention of Music (March 30 to April 25).

Of the season’s six productions, two, The Christmas Tree and The Invention of Music, are original Lunchbox Theatre commissions. Fishman says that further commissions will allow the company to create Calgary-centred works drawing attention to the increasing sophistication of the city.

But if the company’s commissions are providing opportunities for new work, perhaps one of the most exciting promises of the new space is the possibility of a new, flexible stage in the downtown core that would likewise offer Calgary artists the chance to produce their own work. “My hope is we can rent [the main stage] out to smaller theatre companies at minimum cost,” says Fishman. “I know a lot of the younger companies are trying to run a space and it’s prohibitive. Breathtakingly expensive.”

While Lunchbox’s rehearsal hall will still be rented out at commercial rates, Fishman is promising that smaller companies will be able to take advantage of the theatre proper, which is necessarily vacant during the hours when most companies would be staging work. With Lunchbox finding its own second act, it’s comforting to think that its success might also offer the same lease on life to other local companies.

StageFright Rehearsal Process

Blog Entry — admin @ September 10th, 2008

Our first week of rehearsals for StageFright has come to a close, and what a week it has been. This week has been spent creating a shell for the show and starting to fill in the gaps. After spending the first couple days working out all the little kinks textually and musically in the show, we’ve moved into the process of blocking and choreography. There is an interesting aspect of this show as it is being “improvised” by the characters onstage. As such the movements and characterizations need to be “discovered” by the characters throughout the show. As the play goes on characters find props and costumes onstage and use them to create their characters. 

There are a staggering number of musical numbers in relation to the length of the show. As such Brent Rock, our musical director, has spent hours ensuring that everything sounds magical and flows smoothly together.  This fun filled, energetic show was cut down from the original two-act version of StageFright by the original playwright Jim Betts. As such, the cast and Director Mark Bellamy spent a day going through the show and trying to ensure that as much of the original characters and plot come through in this shortened form.

As we move into our second week, we’ve started to fill in the gaps of the shell we created last week and begun working through the show scene by scene. In this process the cast takes the time to clarify their intentions for saying each line and executing each movement. Though it can be slow and painstaking, it is this process that really brings the show together. At the same time we’ve been working on each musical number making sure that the choreography matches both the tone of the music, as well as the words and context of the show.  

We’ve also begun to slowly add technical elements into the rehearsal process, such as props and costumes. As actors start to put down their scripts they have their hands free and can start to figure out what will work and what won’t, both in the context of their characters and also what they are able to work with onstage. Due to the relatively small cast for this show it allows us, the stage management team, to take the time to respond to the individual needs of every actor and help to facilitate everyone’s specific process. 

- Alec McCauley (Apprentice Stage Manager)

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