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HERE WE ARE: THEATRE FOR ONE

Shyla Lefner discusses Native American voting rights in in DeLanna Studi’s Before America Was America (photo by Cherie B Tay)

HERE WE ARE
Theatre for One
Thursday nights through October 29, free with advance RSVP, 6:00 – 7:30
Tickets available every Monday morning at 10:00 for that Thursday’s performances
theatreforone.com
bfplny.com

In the October 1 New York Times Offstage discussion “How I Miss Broadway,” Jessie Mueller, Neil Patrick Harris, Danielle Brooks, and Audra McDonald talked about what they missed most about live theater. “I miss the holy communion between the audience and the performers,” six-time Tony winner McDonald said. “It all happens right there in the moment. You’re forced to be in that moment with this group of people that you will never be all together with again, and there’s something so magical about that. . . . We all start to beat with one heart; our humanity comes through as that one being. We become this one thing.”

During the pandemic lockdown, I have watched a lot of theater online, but as good as some livestream Zoom readings, very short new works made with cellphones, and previously recorded stage performances have been, they cannot capture the rush that comes when you walk into a theater, take your seat, skim the Playbill, then wait with intense anticipation for the lights to go down and the curtain to rise. “I miss the live energy exchange with the audience,” Mueller longingly explained. Only theater can foster that kind of intimate relationship, where you are part of a crowd but also believe that the actors are speaking specifically to you, that the writer’s words are meant just for your mind, heart, and soul.

Theatre for One’s “Here We Are” comes the closest to conjuring that feeling, that swell of emotion between audience and performer. It is not only a brief, temporary panacea for what ails you; it fills a deep need for those desperate for live theater to return, taking advantage of current technology to make that exhilarating connection again.

Over the past ten years, Tony-nominated set designer Christine Jones has been touring Theatre for One, short plays performed for one person at a time inside a mobile four-by-eight-foot repurposed musical equipment container. She and co-artistic director Jenny Koons have now reimagined the project for the internet, commissioning eight works written, directed, and performed by BIPOC women (with one exception), presented live for one person at a time, sitting at home in front of their computer. The key is that not only do the actors have their video and audio turned on but so does the audience member, allowing the performer to gauge the viewer’s reaction in real time — and in some cases even engage in very brief conversation.

Nikkole Salter has a lot to say about race and publishing in Lydia R. Diamond’s Whiterly Negotiations (photo by Cherie B Tay)

Every Monday morning at ten, free timed tickets for that Thursday’s shows become available, but they go in a hurry; blink and they’re gone, so don’t hesitate. Each play generally lasts between five and eight minutes; on Thursday at your scheduled time, you follow a link and enter a code, which sends you into a kind of chat room while you wait to be sent to your show. You won’t know which play you will see until it starts; you cannot choose in advance, which adds to the excitement and mystery. Over a dark gray screen, other anonymous audience members make comments that appear in text bubbles that fade after a few seconds, evoking the whispers overheard while you get comfy in your theater seat, standing by expectantly for the show to begin. Just as one occasionally engages in small talk with one’s seatmates, you are encouraged to engage with the others online, mentioning where you’re from, expressing how you’re doing during the pandemic, and opining about how much you miss live theater. An unidentified facilitator keeps the discussion going as some people are whisked away to their show and others continue to hang out. Be patient; it sometimes takes ten or fifteen minutes before you go to your show, but this period can be very peaceful and calming. Don’t keep checking your watch or social media; as McDonald said, be in the moment.

And then it happens: The comment bubbles disappear, your camera goes on, and you are suddenly face-to-face with an actor filling your screen. It’s a stunning encounter that will have you breathless at first; it can also be a bit awkward, as you don’t know whether to say anything, either at the beginning or later in the piece, when a question might or might not be rhetorical. The actors are ready for all circumstances, but you should definitely err on the side of caution, as you would at an actual theater. That said, there do seem to be occasions when a response is fine. When I saw one work for the second time, the actress paused when she saw me, recognizing me, and asked whether I wanted to see something else instead. I said no, that I would love to see the play again, and I enjoyed it even more this time around, perhaps partly because of that extra personal contact.

Eisa Davis recalls a haunting memory in Lynn Nottage’s What Are the Things I Need to Remember (photo by Cherie B Tay)

I’ve seen seven of the shows thus far, and they have all been captivating and deeply affecting, dealing with the current state of the world without getting too overtly political. In Jaclyn Backhaus’s Thank You Letter, directed by Candis C. Jones, the endearing Mahira Kakkar shares a letter she wrote to civil rights pioneer John Lewis, detailing how his crossing of the Edmund Pettus Bridge impacted her Indian family. In Lynn Nottage’s What Are the Things I Need to Remember, superbly directed by Tiffany Nichole Greene despite the clear limitations of physical space, Eisa Davis portrays a woman who brings up an old memory that still haunts her. A memory is also at the center of Carmelita Tropicana’s Pandemic Fight, directed by Rebecca Martinez, as Zuleyma Guevara recalls battling with her ex-boyfriend, a straight white Buddhist monk, over race. “In my pandemic university I’m majoring in race and white fragility,” she says. “I’ve had a crash course getting woke and I’m amazed at how much I did not know. In this pandemic are you having fights with your loved ones? Because I am.”

Lydia R. Diamond deals with another aspect of race relations in whiterly negotiations, directed with flair by Greene, in which Nikkole Salter portrays a Black writer having problems with her white editor. “So listen . . . it really is probably a by-product of this place that we’re in now. I um . . . I’m a little, raw, right now. . . . And . . . also, white people have been fucking with me for a really long time,” she forcefully declares. “I’ve been thinking, does America still need a book about the intersectionality of race, class, and gender in politics and fashion? And . . . You know what . . . Fuck all white people.” She gets right to the point, and it’s not an easy one to swallow, no matter who you are.

Shyla Lefner is much more relaxed in DeLanna Studi’s Before America Was America, directed by Tamilla Woodard, as Sequoyah Jolene Sevenstar, a Quoya woman who composedly examines the history of Native American voting rights. Voting is also the subject of Regina Taylor’s Vote! (The Black Album), directed by Taylor Reynolds, in which she remembers her grandmother putting on her Sunday best to go vote while she now worries what she will do in the face of the coronavirus crisis, occasionally peering out the window behind her, searching for the spirit of her grandmother as well as trying to decide whether it’s safe to go outside at all.

One of the most powerful works, strikingly directed by Candis C. Jones, is Stacey Rose’s Thank You for Coming. Take Care., which makes the viewer a character in the story. Patrice Bell portrays prison inmate Larhonda McKinney, who is receiving a special visitor. “To be clear, you look good. / You look whole,” she states. “I can’t speak to your insides, though. That’s what actually matters, right? Especially since — / I’m ramblin’.” She could really be addressing any of us during the crises that are tearing apart friends, families, and the country as a whole. The only play I haven’t seen yet is the one that gives the project its name, Salter’s Here We Are, which is directed by Woodard and performed by the only male participant, Russell G. Jones.

In the Times panel, Harris said, “We live in a hella-divisive world right now, and if there’s any way for people to be united by a singular experience, whether it be fun, and dancers, and sets that move around, or whether it be a singular voice that causes you to think in different ways that you didn’t believe before, making a moment of going to do that, regardless of what you think and where you live and who you are, I think that that community is valuable. I think the theater community, the acting community, is valuable, but almost more valuable is the theater-watching community.” Theatre for One’s “Here We Are” is a giant step in that direction, reinventing the relationship between the acting community and the theater-watching community even as we’re all stuck at home around the globe, yearning for the connections that live theater gives us.

AN EVENING OF NEW YORK SONGS AND STORIES WITH SUZANNE VEGA: LIVE AT THE BLUE NOTE

Who: Suzanne Vega, Gerry Leonard, Jeff Allen, Jason Hart
What: Two livestreamed concerts
Where: Blue Note Jazz Club online
When: Wednesday, October 7, 9:00, and Thursday, October 8, $24, 3:00
Why: Beloved singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega might have been born in California, but she is a true New Yorker, raised in Spanish Harlem. She is celebrating the release of her live album, An Evening of New York Songs and Stories, with two shows that will be livestreamed from the Blue Note in Greenwich Village, where she will perform the full record with guitarist Gerry Leonard, bassist Jeff Allen, and keyboardist Jason Hart. On October 7, the show will begin at 9:00 for US audiences, while the October 8 show will start at 3:00 for overseas fans, although you can watch either or both concerts no matter where you are. The record, which was released on her label, Amanuensis/Cooking Vinyl, on September 11, features sixteen songs from throughout her career, focusing on New York City as a theme, including “Marlene on the Wall,” “Ludlow Street,” “Freeze Tag,” “Tom’s Diner,” “Luka,” “New York Is My Destination,” and “New York Is a Woman” in addition to a cover of Lou Reed’s “Walk on the Wild Side.” (Ten years ago, Dutch DJ Ben Liebrand did a mashup of Reed’s underground classic with “Tom’s Diner,” which you can listen to here.) Vega, who has also written her own one-woman biomusical, Carson McCullers Talks About Love, has been a fun presence on social media during the pandemic, doing interviews (she discussed her part in the New Group production of Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice here) and playing songs and telling stories from her home (check out her Greenwich Village Folk Festival set here), so this full-band show is a don’t-miss opportunity to not just hang out with a New York treasure but fall in love with her, and the city, all over again.

LESSONS IN SURVIVAL

Who: Kyle Beltran, Dan Butler, Helen Cespedes, Kalyne Coleman, Crystal Dickinson, Brandon J. Dirden, Ricardy Fabre, Yonatan Gebeyehu, Marin Ireland, Peter Mark Kendall, Nicole Lewis, Nana Mensah, Joe Morton, Deirdre O’Connell, Keith Randolph Smith, Ryan Spahn, Chris Stack, Myra Lucretia Taylor, TL Thompson, Nicole Villamil, Victoria Villier, Reggie D. White
What: Historic talks put into contemporary context
Where: Vineyard Theatre
When: October 6 – November 1, community conversations free, others $5-$9 per person per event, All Access Pass $60
Why: Conceived by Marin Ireland, Peter Mark Kendall, Tyler Thomas, and Reggie D. White, the Vineyard Theatre’s “Lessons in Survival” features a group of actors dubbed the Commissary reenacting historic speeches, interviews, and conversations from activists and artists during revolutionary times. Episodes such as “Survival Is Not a One Time Decision,” “I’m Trying to Make You See Something,” and “When You Say Revolution . . . What Do You Mean?” will be performed by Kyle Beltran, Dan Butler, Helen Cespedes, Crystal Dickinson, Brandon J. Dirden, Nicole Lewis, Joe Morton, Deirdre O’Connell, and Keith Randolph Smith, presenting the words of Nina Simone, Lorraine Hansberry, James Baldwin, Angela Davis, Fannie Lou Hamer, Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison, Nikki Giovanni, and others, directed by Tyler Thomas, with video design and editing by Josiah Davis and music by Daniel Kluger. Performances take place Tuesday and Wednesday nights at 8:30, with ticketed open rehearsals on Thursday nights and free Sunday afternoon community talks that can be viewed over YouTube and Facebook Live. To get ready, you can watch a discussion about the series here.

Tuesday, October 6, 8:30
“Survival Is Not a One Time Decision,” words by Nina Simone, Lorraine Hansberry, and Audre Lorde/Blanche Cook, with Nicole Lewis, Kalyne Coleman, Myra Lucretia Taylor, and Deirdre O’Connell

Wednesday, October 7, 8:30
“I’m Trying to Make You See Something,” words by James Baldwin/Dick Cavett, and Paul Weiss, followed by live tweeting about the vice presidential debate, with Ricardy Fabre, Chris Stack, and Dan Butler

Thursday, October 8, 8:30
Live Open Rehearsal, words by Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis and others, with Crystal Dickinson, Brandon J. Dirden, and Victoria Villier

Sunday, October 11, 5:30
Live Community Conversation, free

Tuesday, October 13, 8:30
“When You Say Revolution . . . What Do You Mean?,” words by Angela Davis, Georgia Gilmore, and Fannie Lou Hamer, with Nicole Lewis, Ricardy Fabre, Crystal Dickinson, and Helen Cespedes

Thursday, October 15, 8:30
Live Open Rehearsal, words by Bobby Seale, Bobby Seale/Bob Costas, and Ericka Huggins/Angela Davis/JoNina Abron/Barbara Rogers, with April Matthis, Reggie D. White, Sevrin Anne Mason, Adam Chanler-Berat, Brandon J. Dirden, Kristolyn Lloyd, Clarissa Marie Ligon, Nicole Lewis, and director Tyler Thomas

Sunday, October 18
Live Community Conversation, free, 5:30

“The Old Leadership Is Dead,” words by Bayard Rustin, with Kyle Beltran, Yonatan Gebeyehu, and TL Thompson, 8:30

Tuesday, October 20, 8:30
“Something Is Beginning to Crack,” words by Maya Angelou/Mavis Nicholson and James Baldwin/Mavis Nicholson, with Myra Lucretia Taylor, Marin Ireland, Joe Morton, and Deirdre O’Connell

Wednesday, October 21, 8:30
“This Country’s My Problem and Your Problem,” words by Toni Morrison and Charlie Rose, James Baldwin and R. H. Darden, with Dan Butler, Yonatan Gebeyehu, Nana Mensah, and Ryan Spahn

Thursday, October 22, 8:30
Live Open Rehearsal, words by Muhammad Ali/Nikki Giovanni, Joan Baez, Pete Seeger, and more, with TL Thompson, Jennifer Ikeda, Crystal Dickinson, Nicole Villamil, Peter Mark Kendall, Peter Gerety, and director Tyler Thomas

Sunday, October 25
Live Community Conversation, free, 5:30

“This Country’s My Problem and Your Problem,” words by Toni Morrison/Charlie Rose, James Baldwin, and R. H. Darden, with Dan Butler, Yonatan Gebeyehu, Nana Mensah, and Ryan Spahn, 8:30

Tuesday, October 27, 8:30
“Lie to Me,” words by James Baldwin/Nikki Giovanni, with Kalyne Coleman, Crystal Dickinson, and Reggie White

Thursday, October 29, 8:30
Live Open Rehearsal, with words by Lucille Clifton/Sonia Sanchez, Sarah Keys Evans, John Lewis, and Paul Robeson, with Keith Randolph Smith and others

Sunday, November 1
Live Community Conversation, free, 5:30

“To Teach Is a Revolutionary Act,” words by James Baldwin/Nikki Giovanni, with Kyle Beltran, Nana Mensah, Kalyne Coleman, and Joe Morton, 8:30

A GLIMPSE INTO THE WORLD OF NARCISSUS

Andrew Jordan’s rotoscoped animations are part of sneak preview of Christopher Williams work at New York Live Arts

Who: Christopher Williams Dance
What: Live performance and virtual presentation
Where: New York Live Arts lobby, 219 West Nineteenth St., and online
When: Tuesday, October 6, free in person, $5, $15, or $25 online, 7:00 and 7:30
Why: Choreographer Christopher Williams’s evening-length dance, Narcissus, was scheduled to make its world premiere at New York Live Arts, but that has been postponed indefinitely because of the pandemic lockdown. However, Williams will be offering a taste of the work both live in person and online with “A Glimpse into the World of Narcissus,” a pair of ten-minute activations taking place in NYLA’s glassed-in lobby on October 6 at 7:00 and 7:30. Set to Nikolai Tcherepnin’s 1911 score “Narcisse et Echo” for the Ballets Russes, the piece explores the classical myth through a contemporary queer perspective. The sneak peek features projected rotoscoped animations by longtime Williams collaborator Andrew Jordan, hand-painted drawings, and what Williams calls a “live, socially distanced tableau vivant” performed by Cemiyon Barber and Logan Pedon. If you want to experience the activation from the sidewalk outside NYLA, it is free and first-come, first-served, with masks and social distancing required; you can also watch it live online for $5, $15, or $25, depending on what you can afford.

LAS AVENTURAS DE JUAN PLANCHARD ONLINE PREVIEW WITH LIVE Q&A

Who: Edgar Ramírez, Moisés Kaufman, Jonathan Jakubowicz, Daniela Bascopé, Elba Escobar, María Gabriela de Farias, Rafael De La Fuente, Christian McGaffney, Iván Tamayo, Franklin Virguez, Amanda-Lynn Williams
What: Livestreamed performance of selections from new play and Q&A
Where: YouTube and Zoom
When: Tuesday, October 6, free with RSVP, 7:00
Why: New York City’s Tectonic Theater Project and Florida’s Miami New Drama are teaming up to present the world premiere of select scenes from Tectonic founder and artistic director Moisés Kaufman’s first Spanish-language play, Las Aventuras de Juan Planchard. Written and directed by the Caracas-born Kaufman (33 Variations, The Laramie Project), the work is based on the novel by Venezuelan author and filmmaker Jonathan Jakubowicz that became a rallying cry for the anti-Maduro movement. “I’ve witnessed my native country devastated by the Bolivarian Revolution. Chavez, Maduro, and their amoral cronies and henchmen have bankrupted one of the richest countries in the world, and brought about famine, disease, and scarcity of basic goods,” Kaufman said in a statement. “I’ve been eager to write a play about the situation there but couldn’t do it because I’ve been gone for twenty-five years. But then I read Jonathan’s novel and I knew I’d found the story I wanted to tell. This play wouldn’t be allowed to be performed in Venezuela today — but the online preview will allow Venezuelans to see it; in fact, all of Latin America will be able to see it, and that fills me with great joy.” The play features Daniela Bascopé, Elba Escobar, María Gabriela de Farias, Rafael De La Fuente, Iván Tamayo, Franklin Virguez, Amanda-Lynn Williams, and Christian McGaffney as the title character.

“If you multiply the money made by Al Capone by the money made by Pablo Escobar and adjust for inflation, you would still be nowhere near the amount of cash that has been stolen by Hugo Chavez and Nicolas Maduro,” Jakubowicz added. “They have undoubtedly performed the biggest robbery of all time, and it’s all been done in the name of socialism. The Adventures of Juan Planchard is an inside look at how this mafia operates. I wrote it as a desperate attempt to reach my fellow Venezuelans, and never dreamed that it would become an international bestseller. It also never crossed my mind that one of my all-time heroes, Moisés Kaufman, would end up adapting it for the stage. When I saw the first reading of his play, I was blown away. And I know that fans of the novel, and those who have never read it, will be both physically and intellectually seduced by Juan Planchard, his adventure, and his immense moral dilemma.” Following the prerecorded performance on YouTube, Kaufman, Jakubowicz, and Miami New Drama artistic director Michel Hausman will participate in a live Zoom Q&A. The fully staged show is scheduled to be performed in person, with an audience, at the Colony Theater in summer 2021 if regulations allow.

OTHELLO 2020

Who: Grantham Coleman, Franchelle Stewart Dorn, Jennifer Ikeda, Harry Lennix, Patrick Page, Madeline Sayet, Jessika D. Williams, David Sterling Brown, Erika Lin, Ayanna Thompson, more
What: Performances and discussions surrounding Shakespeare’s Othello
Where: Red Bull Theater livestream
When: October 5, 7, 12, 15, 19, 22, 26, 28, free with RSVP
Why: One of the most remarkable aspects of William Shakespeare’s plays is how relevant they remain today, as companies infuse the histories, comedies, and tragedies with contemporary relevance. Red Bull Theater, one of the most active troupes during the pandemic lockdown, will take on the Bard’s The Tragedy of Othello, the Moor of Venice with “Othello 2020,” a series of special programs that explore the work’s lasting impact as it continues to thrill and challenge audiences around the world. “All of us at Red Bull are excited to deepen our exploration and understanding of the intersection of race and classical theater,” artistic director Jesse Berger said in a statement. “This October, with Shakespeare’s Othello as our launching point, we invite audiences to take a deep dive into these issues as we examine them from a variety of perspectives over the course of four key projects. Together, we’ll ask, ‘What does Othello mean for us in 2020’?” The initiative begins October 5 with the RemakaBULL Podversation “Exploring Iago” with Patrick Page, who will perform one of Iago’s most important speeches (“Thus do I ever make my fool my purse: / For I mine own gained knowledge should profane, / If I would time expend with such a snipe. / But for my sport and profit. I hate the Moor”), then talk about it with associate artistic director Nathan Winkelstein; Page played Iago opposite Avery Brooks’s Othello in 2005 at the Shakespeare Theatre Company.

On Wednesday afternoons at 2:00, the free webinar “Exploring Othello in 2020” consists of salon seminars examining the work in the context of racial justice and the BLM movement, featuring BIPOC voices, moderated by Shakespeare scholar Ayanna Thompson; each week will feature readings, by Keith Hamilton Cobb (American Moor), Franchelle Stewart Dorn (’Tis Pity She’s a Whore), Jennifer Ikeda (Women Beware Women), Anchuli Felicia King (White Pearl), Harry Lennix (Radio Golf), Madeline Sayet (Where We Belong), and Jessika D. Williams, who is currently portraying Othello at the American Shakespeare Center in Virginia. On October 12 at 7:30, Cobb will deliver a live benefit reading of his one-man show, American Moor, in which he auditions for a white director, followed on October 15 at 7:30 by a Bull Session with scholar Erika Lin, original director Kim Weild, and members of the company. On October 19, Red Bull teams up with the American Shakespeare Center for a benefit reading of King’s Keene, which takes place at at a Shakespeare conference, directed by Ethan McSweeny and starring Grantham Coleman, followed October 22 at 7:30 by a Bull Session with scholar David Sterling Brown and members of the company, moderated by Anne G. Morgan. All events are free with advance RSVP.

KEEN AFTER HOURS

Who: Kate Baldwin, Marsha Mason, John-Andrew Morrison, Jasminn Johnson, Pearl Cleage, Kate Cortesi, finkle, James Anthony Tyler, Melissa Li, Kit Yan
What: Weekly interactive discussions about theater
Where: Keen Company website, Facebook page and YouTube channel
When: Monday nights at 6:30, free
Why: New York’s Keen Company recently announced that its twenty-first season will include five world premiere audio plays as they adapt to the pandemic lockdown. In the meantime, the off Broadway troupe, which has staged such works as The Good Thief by Conor McPherson, The Breadwinner by W. Somerset Maugham, Beasley’s Christmas Party by Booth Tarkington, Painting Churches by Tina Howe, and Boy by Anna Ziegler with such actors as Brian d’Arcy James, Keir Dullea, Matt McGrath, John Cullum, Kathleen Chalfant, and the always amazing Thomas Jay Ryan, has begun “Keen After Hours,” free, live discussions taking place every Monday night at 6:30. The series kicked off September 21 with George Salazar (Tick, Tick . . . Boom!) speaking with marketing manager Billy Recce, managing producer Ashley DiGiorgi, and artistic director Jonathan Silverstein, followed the next week with Brenda Pressley (Surely Goodness and Mercy). The program continues October 5 with Kate Baldwin (John & Jen), October 12 with the “Hear/Now” launch party with 2020-21 season playwrights Pearl Cleage (Blues for an Alabama Sky), Kate Cortesi, finkle, James Anthony Tyler, and Melissa Li & Kit Yan, October 19 with Marsha Mason (I Never Sang for My Father), and October 26 with John-Andrew Morrison and Jasminn Johnson (Blues for an Alabama Sky).