Sunday, April 30, 2006

Smithsonian article about GRENDEL



Evildoer
The Beowolf monster is a thousand years old, but his bad old tricks continue to resonate in the modern world

By Matthew Gurewitsch


What a giant Grendel must be. For supper he scoops up sleeping warriors 30 at a crack. Imagine the width of his jaws. Yet Beowulf the Avenger brings him down in single combat. Stripped of armor, Beowulf rips the monster’s arm off at the shoulder with his bare hands. Yet the hero is just a human being. Where does he get the leverage?

As invoked in the untitled, thousand-year-old manuscript from which we know him, Grendel has a voice to scream with, but no language; a presence to strike the heart with dread, but no clear form; a lineage going back to Cain, but no place in the fellowship of man. Dying, he escapes into the night. Later, it takes four straining warriors to carry his severed head. The blade that struck the blow melts like an icicle in Grendel’s boiling blood. His reign of terror has lasted a dozen years.

Who weeps for Grendel? Not the Old English bard who composed Beowulf around the eighth century, two centuries or so before two West Saxon scribes set it down. (The dates are hotly disputed.) The moral universe of the age was black and white. But to John Gardner, a novelist in the 20th century, it was natural to view the ogre with some empathy. After Shakespeare’s Richard III, Macbeth and Caliban; after Milton’s Satan; after the Monster of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Gardner’s attitude was hardly outlandish. After Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, to say nothing of Dr. Freud of Vienna, moral relativism is the air we breathe. Beneath the glamour of the Alien or the transgressive romance of the Villain lurks someone we need to know. In the immortal words of Walt Kelly, creator of Pogo: “We have met the enemy and he is us.”

Click on the title to read the whole article.

Julie Taymor is doing Grendel!


"Myths perform a God-like function, organizing our values and expressing our best hope for moral behavior. Myths need to be retold, because from generation to generation we forget them." - John Gardner

Academy Award-winning composer Elliot Goldenthal and Tony Award-winning director Julie Taymor collaborate on Grendel, a groundbreaking opera inspired by the Beowulf legend. Over 1,000 years ago, two anonymous scribes wrote down an epic poem about a Scandinavian hero who ended the bloody reign of the monster Grendel.

John Gardner’s 1971 novel, Grendel, approached the classic story from the monster’s point of view. Estranged from nature and outcast from the world of men, Grendel is a passionate thinker trapped in the body of a beast who struggles with his own existential conflicts and observations about humanity and about himself.

Using projections, puppetry, masks, and Goldenthal’s richly layered, highly emotional score, Taymor creates an enthralling visual landscape. In this world of kings, queens, storytellers and warriors, she and co-librettist J. D. McClatchy present a Grendel that is a quintessentially modern anti-hero. With language ranging from medieval to modern, Grendel serves as a gripping theatrical allegory of the human struggle.

Click on the title to go to a sight which has a video interview of Taymor and Goldenthal on their production.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

New Beckett Play Discovered



Article from "The Onion" about a new play by Samuel Beckett....

Scholars Discover 23 Blank Pages That May As Well Be Lost Samuel Beckett Play
April 26, 2006 | Issue 4217

PARIS. Just weeks after the centennial of the birth of pioneering minimalist playwright Samuel Beckett, archivists analyzing papers from his Paris estate uncovered a small stack of blank paper that scholars are calling "the latest example of the late Irish-born writer's genius."

The 23 blank pages, which literary experts presume is a two-act play composed sometime between 1973 and 1975, are already being heralded as one of the most ambitious works by the Nobel Prize-winning author of Waiting For Godot, and a natural progression from his earlier works, including 1969's Breath, a 30-second play with no characters, and 1972's Not I, in which the only illuminated part of the stage is a floating mouth.

"In what was surely a conscious decision by Mr. Beckett, the white, uniform, non-ruled pages, which symbolize the starkness and emptiness of life, were left unbound, unmarked, and untouched," said Trinity College professor of Irish literature Fintan O'Donoghue. "And, as if to further exemplify the anonymity and facelessness of 20th-century man, they were found, of all places, between other sheets of paper."

"I can only conclude that we have stumbled upon something quite remarkable," O'Donoghue added.

According to literary critic Eric Matheson, who praised the work for "the bare-bones structure and bleak repetition of what can only be described as 'nothingness,'" the play represents somewhat of a departure from the works of Beckett's "middle period." But, he said, it "might as well be Samuel Beckett at his finest."

"It does feature certain classic Beckett elements, such as sparse stage directions, a mysterious quality of anonymity, a slow building of tension with no promise of relief, and an austere portrayal of the human condition," Matheson said. "But Beckett's traditional intimation of an unrelenting will to live, the possibility of escape from the vacuous indifference that surrounds us—that's missing. Were that his vision, I suspect he would have used perforated paper."

Scholars theorize that the 23-page play might have been intended to be titled Five Conversations, Entropolis, or Stop.

In addition, an 81-page document, also blank, was found, which, for all intents and purposes, could be an earlier draft of the work.

"I suspect this was a nascent stream-of-consciousness attempt," O'Donoghue said of the blank sheets of paper, which were found scattered among Beckett's personal effects and took a Beckett scholar four painstaking days to put into the correct order. "In his final version, Beckett used his trademark style of 'paring down' to really get at the core of what he was trying to not say."

Some historians, however, contend that the play could have been the work of one of Beckett's protoges.

"Even though the central theme and wicked sense of humor of this piece would lead one to believe that this could conceivably be a vintage Beckett play, in reality, it could just as easily have been the product of [Beckett's close friend] Rick Cluchey," biographer Neal Gleason said. "And if it was Beckett, it's not outside the realm of possibility that, given his sharp wit, it was just intended as a joke. If Beckett were alive today, he might insist that it's not even a play at all. It could be a novella, or a screenplay."

Enthusiasts still maintain that the "nuances, subtleties, and allusions to his previous works" are all unmistakably Beckett. They also claim to have found notes and ideas for this play in the margins of Beckett's earlier works.

There are already plans to stage the play during the intermission of an upcoming production of Waiting For Godot.

Sunday, April 23, 2006

Century's 100 Most Significant Plays- Brit List


In Autumn 1998 playwrights, actors, directors, journalists and other theatre professionals were asked to nominate ten English language, twentieth-century plays that they considered 'significant'.
As a result, 188 authors were nominated for 377 different plays. Arthur Miller was the most nominated author, closely followed by Harold Pinter and Samuel Beckett. By including each playwright only once, with their most voted for work, the project aimed to present a broad and diverse picture of the last 100 years of theatre. This list was compiled by Brits for the National Theater's Century Project. I wonder what an American list would look like? Considerably different considering there are a lot of great American plays missing from the list. Can you name some that are missing? August Wilson is certainly not here and neither is Lorraine Hansberry's "A Raisin in the Sun."

How many of these have you seen? Read? Know?

And look...Godot is #1 - Come see Advanced Acting perform selections from Godot 7th hour May 6th and 7th for AP English classes!

1 Waiting for Godot Samuel Beckett
2 Death of a Salesman Arthur Miller
3 A Streetcar Named Desire Tennessee Williams
4 Look Back in Anger John Osborne
5 Long Day's Journey Into Night Eugene 0'Neill
6 The Crucible Arthur Miller
7= Private Lives Noel Coward
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead Tom Stoppard
9= Angels in America Tony Kushner
The Caretaker Harold Pinter
11 Saved Edward Bond
12 The Homecoming Harold Pinter
13= Pygmalion George Bernard Shaw
Racing Demon David Hare
15 Juno and the Paycock Sean O'Casey
16= Heartbreak House George Bernard Shaw
Top Girls Caryl Churchill
18= Playboy of the Western World JM Synge
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Edward Albee
20 The Deep Blue Sea Terence Rattigan
21 The Birthday Party Harold Pinter
22= Arcadia Tom Stoppard
An Inspector Calls JB Priestley
Loot Joe Orton
The Glass Menagerie Tennessee Williams
The Norman Conquests Alan Ayckbourn
Translations Brian Friel
28= Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Tennessee Williams
The Entertainer John Osborne
The Voysey Inheritance Harley Granville Barker
31 The Plough and the Stars Sean O'Casey
32= Glengarry Glen Ross David Mamet
No Man's Land Harold Pinter
34= Journey's End RC Sherriff
Saint Joan George Bernard Shaw
36= Absurd Person Singular Alan Ayckbourn
The Browning Version Terence Rattigan
Our Country's Good Timberlake Wertenbaker
Road Jim Cartwright
40= Endgame Samuel Beckett
The Iceman Cometh Eugene O'Neill
A View from the Bridge Arthur Miller
The Vortex Noel Coward
The Weir Conor McPherson
45= Nicholas Nickleby David Edgar
Peter Pan JM Barrie
Roots Arnold Wesker
Serjeant Musgrave's Dance John Arden
What the Butler Saw Joe Orton
50= Betrayal Harold Pinter
Blithe Spirit Noel Coward
Cloud Nine Caryl Churchill
Comedians Trevor Griffiths
Dancing at Lughnasa Brian Friel
The Front Page Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur
Master Harold... and the Boys Athol Fugard
Pravda Howard Brenton and David Hare
A Taste of Honey Shelagh Delaney
59= Closer Patrick Marber
Entertaining Mr Sloane Joe Orton
Jumpers Tom Stoppard
Oh What a Lovely War Joan Littlewood and the Theatre Workshop
The Madness of George III Alan Bennett
Murder In the Cathedral TS Eliot
The Pink Room (Absolute Hell) Rodney Ackland
Plenty David Hare
Sizwe Bansi is Dead Athol Fugard, John Kani and Winston Ntshona
68= All My Sons Arthur Miller
Equus Peter Shaffer
Insignificance Terry Johnson
Man and Superman George Bernard Shaw
Oleanna David Mamet
Royal Hunt of the Sun Peter Shaffer
Skylight David Hare
Waste Harley Granville Barker
The Widowing of Mrs Holroyd DH Lawrence
77= Bedroom Farce Alan Ayckbourn
The Faith Healer Brian Friel
Family Reunion TS Eliot
Forty Years On Alan Bennett
Noises Off Michael Frayn
Serious Money Caryl Churchill
Time and the Conways JB Priestley
When We Are Married JB Priestley
85= Amadeus Peter Shaffer
The Children's Hour Lillian Hellman
Copenhagen Michael Frayn
The Daughter-in-Law DH Lawrence
Dead Funny Terry Johnson
Design for Living Noel Coward
Good CP Taylor
Home David Storey
The Lady's Not for Burning Christopher Fry
Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme Frank McGuinness
Old Times Harold Pinter
The Philanthropist Christopher Hampton
Plunder Ben Travers
Run For Your Wife Ray Cooney

Thursday, April 20, 2006

We're Going to Edinburgh!!!! 2007!!!



Clayton High School’s Theater program selected to perform in the world's largest and most prestigious arts festival

Clayton High School’s Theater program was selected to perform in the world's largest and most prestigious arts festival, the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland. Held annually, invited performing artists from all over the world gather in Edinburgh, Scotland to take part in the Festival. Clayton’s Theater, recently recognized with 17 Cappies nominations on their 2005-2006 season, was selected as one of twenty-three high schools nationwide to perform during its session.

Clayton’s Theater program was selected by the American High School Theatre Festival (AHSTF) Board of Advisors to represent the United States as part of the 2007 AHSTF Program. The Board of Advisors is comprised of accomplished leaders in their theatrical profession, all of who hold prominent positions at colleges across the country. The Board reviews all completed applications and identifies the top high schools based on the schools' most recent bodies of work, awards, community involvement, philosophies, and recommendations which are outlined in an extensive application. Programs must be nominated by a college or theater professional in order to apply for selection. Jeffrey Matthews, theater professor and Coordinator of Acting and Directing at Washington University, nominated Clayton High School.

From August 1 to August 25, the Edinburgh Fringe Festival presents more than 18,000 performances of music, theatre, dance, and comedy during the three week run.

Clayton will receive four performance slots at the Fringe and full professional tech support before and during the Fringe. In addition, students will fly into London for tour and theater, then travel by train to Edinburgh, Scotland where they will rehearse, sightsee, take in performances, rehearse, perform, and rehearse! It will be a two-week once in a lifetime trip.

When Kelley Ryan learned about Clayton's nomination, she contacted Peter Sargent, the Dean of Webster University’s Theater Conservatory and a board member of AHTF, to learn more about the program. “I have seen statements on prospective student essays that state that the Festival was the single most important experience they had enjoyed. The feed back is consistently positive.” The cost of the trip will be a feat of fundraising, but on this issue Peter says, “It is an expensive proposition as you look at the initial costs. However, when you total up the number of days at a peak tourist season, the fact they provide a venue and tech support, arrange for some remarkable activities and put together a pretty full package, I think it is a bargain in terms of the emotional and educational experience.”

For more information on AHTF and the Fringe Festival log onto http://www.ahstf.com/pages/

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Stray Dog Auditions w/ roles for YOU!!!!!!

STRAY DOG THEATRE AUDITIONS FOR TARTUFFE!!!
The brilliant hilarious comedy by Jean Baptiste Moliere!

Check out auditions page for more info!

 
Stray Dog Theatre is holding auditions for the first show of the 2006-2007 season.  Tartuffe by Moliere (award winning Wilbur translation) opens October 5, 2005, and closes October 22, 2005.  Stray Dog Theatre's Tartuffe will be staged in a nontraditional place and time.  Stray Dog Theatre follows nontraditional casting practices.   
 
Audition dates & times: 
Thursday, May 4, 2006 : 5 PM -10 PM  
Saturday, May 6, 2006:  5 PM - 8 PM. 
 
Call backs: Saturday, May 6, 2006 8 PM - 10 PM.  Paid positions.  Prepare a 2-3 minute comedic monologue. (classical preferred but not required). Or read from the script. (sides provided). 
 
Location: The Little Theatre.  #1 Mark Twain Circle, Clayton, MO 63105 
 
Call: Artistic Director, Gary Bell at (314) 283-8698 for appointment time & more information.
 


 

VIOLET: THE MUSICAL Wash U Peforming Arts Department




A show worth seeing! This looks like a really interesting ensemble musical. A potential SRM. I'm going to try and go sometime this weekend!



Violet, set on the highway and backgrounds of the American South in
1964, delivers an upbeat and emotionally gripping celebration of
theatrical storytelling at its very best through a mixture of bluegrass,
rock, country and gospel music.



April 21, 22, 27 & 28 @ 8pm

April 23 & 30 @ 2pm

A.E. Hotchner Studio Theatre



Tickets are $15 General Admission

$9 for students, seniors and W U faculty/staff

Box Office: (314) 935-6543

Friday, April 14, 2006

Cappies Nominations Announced - Congratulations!






The Cappies is a national program that encourages high school students with interests in the performing arts and in journalism. Student critics review productions at neighboring schools and then vote on Tony-like awards, which are given at the end of the year to performers. One review of each participating show also appears in the St.Louis Post-Dispatch. Out of 33 awards, Clayton received nominations in over half the categories. Each of the 33 categories has five nominees. Only one student from each school may qualify for a category. Sixteen schools participated in this second St.Louis season of Cappies including both public and private schools. All 25 Clayton student nominees, plus the nominated pit orchestra, are invited to attend the nominees’ reception at Eureka High School on Sunday, April 30th. The following week on Sunday, May 7th, the Cappies Gala and Awards Ceremony will be held at the Blanche Touhill Performing Arts Center where students from all over St.Louis, including our cast from “Into the Woods,” will perform for their peers and family.

The Nominations
Sound – Andrew Dallas for Into the Woods
Lighting – Andrew Dallas for The Winter’s Tale
Stage Crew – Aaron Jay for Into the Woods
Orchestra – Clayton Orchestra for Into the Woods
Ensemble in a Play – The Shearing Party for The Winter’s Tale
Ensemble in a Musical – The Movement Chorus for Into the Woods
Cameo Actress – Cherish Varley as the Old Shepherd in The Winter’s Tale
Female Vocalist – Nisrine Omri as Cinderella in Into the Woods
Comic Actress in a Play – Angelina Impellizzeri as Autolycus in The Winter’s Tale
Comic Actress in a Musical – Emily Goldstein as Little Red Riding Hood in Into the Woods
Comic Actor in a Musical – Brian Koehler as Prince Charming in Into the Woods
Featured Actress in a Musical – Karen Wong as the Narrator in Into the Woods
Lead Actress in a Musical – Angelina Impellizzeri as the Baker’s Wife in Into the Woods
Lead Actor in a Musical – David Redick as the Baker in Into the Woods
Best Song – Last Midnight sung by Jessie Kissinger in Into the Woods
Best Musical – Into the Woods

Which one doesn't belong?




Hmm...one of these sad clowns isn't sad....5 pts to the first person who can tell me why he's so happy!

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Waiting for Godot


by Simon Callow (The Guardian)
The following was written in July prior to Peter Hall's production of Waiting for Godot in its 50th anniversary.

Beckett's informed love of the great vaudevillians - especially Laurel and Hardy and Chaplin - enabled him to produce a work which stirs the heart of anyone who has been moved to laughter or tears by clowns, existing as they do in the tension between the dread of being alone and the horror of dependency. Eric Bentley, remarked of the first New York production that "highbrow writers have been enthusiastic about clowns and vaudeville for decades, but this impresses me as the first time that anything has successfully been done about the matter". Of course, it helps if the actors playing Vladimir and Estragon are great clowns or vaudevillians themselves. Bentley saw Bert Lahr - the Cowardly Lion from The Wizard of Oz - in the role of Estragon. "The perfect execution," he said, "by a lowbrow actor of a highbrow writer's intentions"; 20 years later, in London and Manchester, Max Wall performed the same service.

But such casting is a luxury; the play's opening image, of a tramp/ clown in his bowler hat, tugging at his boots, with a solitary tree behind him, shortly joined by his identically attired comrade, creates the sort of deeply stirring emotion that the first sight of a great clown produces. These men - like all the great theatre images: Mother Courage with her cart; blind Lear; Falstaff wrapped around Doll Tearsheet - come from our dreams, from deep in our unconscious memories. We are them; they are us.

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Summer Shakespeare - Midsummer!!!!




Hey you! Yeah you! You wanna take acting class this summer with me and a guy that worked at the Royal Shakespeare Company in England for 20 years. A guy who worked with Peter Brook! You don't know who Peter Brook is? What kind of theater student are you!? Google him now. Right now. Log off and google before you read another word.

You know who he is now? OK, so now you are really interested in this class taught by this guy who worked with Peter Brook, right? Anyway, if you would be interested in taking class and performing in A Midsummer Night's Dream for 3 weeks this summer in Forest Park - then just come on over to my office and let me know. The cost is only $340.00. That is class and rehearsal from 9am - 3pm. There are auditions for this show on April 8th, but with my recc you won't need to audition.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Ever Wanted to Join the Circus? Here's Your Chance!


Circus Flora needs 3, strong, enthusiastic ring crew members this
summer to
set up tents, drive tent stakes and assist with other circus tasks.

Ability to take directions well a plus.

Some travel required.

Work Schedule:
May 16 - Arrive Charleston
June 1 - Depart Charleston

June 7 - Start St. Louis
June 27 - End St. Louis

July 24 - Arrive Nantucket
Aug 1 - Depart Nantucket

Contact Pili Dressel at pdressel@slsc.org or 314-378-1135 to apply.

CLICK ON THE TITLE FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT CIRCUS FLORA

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Match the play to the artist





A. Arcadia
B. Lion King
C. Richard III
D. Fences

Email me with the answers and get extra credit!

You Must Go On After Beckett. I Can't Go On After Beckett. Go On.




By JONATHAN KALB (NYT) 1311 words
Published: March 26, 2006

SOME years back, the playwright Tony Kushner amused a conference audience by talking about two different types of theatrical enterprises: ''lasagna'' dramaturgy and ''matzo'' dramaturgy.
His own plays, like ''Angels in America,'' clearly fell into the lasagna category, he said, providing a grandiose, chewy and multilayered immersion in particular social realities. Matzo drama, by contrast, was thin and spare; it required what Mr. Kushner called a ''spiritual discipline'' that he didn't feel equal to, and to him the quintessential ''matzo of a playwright'' was Samuel Beckett.


That matzo would have been 100 years old next month, and predictably, there is an avalanche of productions, readings, publications, academic conferences and more around the world to celebrate the Nobel Prize winner's work. Yet Beckett, who died in 1989, has always had a somewhat uneasy relationship with the United States. After all, his embrace of boredom and emptiness is often at odds with America's love of bloat, thrill and fast-paced mannerism. Serious graduate students in playwriting invariably cite him as a major influence, and some of these folks (Christopher Durang, Richard Greenberg) have now achieved prominence in the field. Their work has mostly taken very different, more worldly paths from Beckett's, though.

Mr. Kushner is one of the playwrights who find Beckett's greatness to be dual-edged. He treasures him but said he worried that Beckett's influence could prove so powerful that it could threaten to paralyze a dramatist's writing. ''Beckett is like Shakespeare,'' he explained. ''He's very dangerous, because his voice is so overwhelmingly persuasive and influential. I never read him when I'm actually writing something. Because you can't. It's a voice that changes your own voice. It just completely overwhelms you. Or me, at any rate.''

He added: ''There are playwrights whose whole careers are based on doing half-baked imitations of Beckett's telegraphic, gnomic style. It's the gnomic side of it that's worrisome, because part of the game in Beckett is the way the writing is pitched on the line between profundity and meaninglessness.''

John Guare, whose work early on was compared to Beckett's almost as frequently (and superficially) as Edward Albee's was, made a similar point: ''Beckett's a great writer but a bad influence and almost sui generis. I hate the way people -- playwrights, directors, designers -- will create a Beckett-like atmosphere and think that gives their work relevance and depth. Beckett earned his despair. We can't spray on that despair.''

Mr. Guare, who teaches playwriting at Yale, added: ''Young writers used to think tramps speaking non sequiturs passed for playwriting. As a teacher, you want to stop people from writing pastiches of Beckett.'' As Mac Wellman, the director of Brooklyn College's graduate playwriting program, said, Beckett's plays have a strain of cruelty in them, and without it, his work becomes ''saccharine and faintly sentimental.''

''It's leprechaun theater -- charming little leprechaun clowns in bowler hats,'' he said. ''There's a lot of that sort of theater around.''

A number of the 17 playwrights surveyed over the past few months for this article teach at prestigious institutions. They have experienced widely different degrees of interest from their students about Beckett, however. Neither Mr. Durang, co-director of the playwrights program at the Juilliard School, nor Richard Nelson, chairman of the playwriting department at the Yale School of Drama, could remember Beckett's name arising in discussions of student work. In contrast, Paula Vogel, director of the M.F.A. playwriting program at Brown University, said he played an essential part in her teaching.

Mr. Wellman warned of taking such accolades too seriously: ''A lot of people claim to like Beckett and don't really.'' He pointed out that Beckett's stripped-down art was conceived during a time of postwar desolation that ''is really inconceivable for us now.''

Richard Maxwell, a young playwright whose work has been compared to Beckett's, echoed that sentiment. The author of ''House,'' ''The End of Reality'' and other plays deliberately saturated with banality and lethargy, Mr. Maxwell said, ''Beckett's work is a little too cerebral and bleak for me to completely embrace.'' He continued, ''I have a kind of appreciation for what I imagine to be rigor, and that rigor seems to belong to another time.''

The shortest theory on Beckett's influence came by fax from David Mamet: ''He was a great kisser.'' The most elaborate and upbeat theory came from Ms. Vogel, who declared that ''Beckett enabled women to become playwrights.''

''I wonder what would've happened had Beckett existed as a colleague, or a contemporary, or even as a forerunner to Virginia Woolf,'' Ms. Vogel said. ''What would've happened if she had seen the ability to dramatize stasis, where drama was no longer about the conflict of men in action, but was instead a conflict of perspectives? I think Virginia Woolf would've become a playwright.''

''The huge gift that Beckett gave to theater, to women playwrights in particular, is our notion of dramaturgy: a non-Aristotelian, nonapocalyptic sense of time, sheer chronicity that stretches to eternity,'' she continued. ''In the 1960's, women experimental writers were criticized for being static, but they actually would have stayed away from drama without Beckett's model, because quite frankly it wasn't a form that appealed to their different notion of dramatic time.''

Another prominent playwright, Tina Howe, agreed. ''Because of Beckett, playwrights could stop thinking about the intricate hoops their characters had to jump through to ponder the more compelling question -- why do they have to jump at all?'' she said. ''We were suddenly given permission to work from the inside out. This was especially thrilling for us lady dramatists, because it meant we could toss out all those constricting male hoops and design our own obstacle courses. And what courses they've been -- mutable, obsessive and sublime.''

Yet reverence for Beckett can sometimes border on the oppressive, said Theresa Rebeck, whose numerous plays include several that scrutinize female behavior codes (''Spike Heels,'' ''Bad Dates''). ''The fact is there is an element of the theatrical community which looks down on a more story-centric and 'traditional' kind of playwriting,'' she said. ''Beckett is sometimes used as a club by these people, who sneer at those of us who are moved by a well-told story.'' The avant-gardist Richard Foreman, whose own style steers clear of conventional ''well-told stories,'' used the same epithet: ''I respect Beckett, and obviously he was of great importance, but I resent the fact that people tend to use him as a club to beat down other avant-garde efforts.''

It is also true that Beckett's rigor and discipline can make other theater look trivial and loquacious. Will Eno, another young playwright whose work has occasionally been compared to Beckett's, said, ''I think his significance grows, our need for him grows, in correlation to the piles of junk and nonessentials our culture seems bent on producing.''

To Mr. Eno, the author of the fractured and self-consciously self-denigrating monologue ''Thom Pain (Based on Nothing),'' Beckett will be important ''as long as people still die.'' Indeed, part of what makes Beckett's plays vital is the way they boil down essential experiences -- birth, death, even the act of watching the play -- into such condensed and exquisite packages. That is why Mr. Greenberg, currently one of America's most prolific and frequently produced dramatists, finds Beckett's work necessary. ''Beckett's plays are on some profound level about the excruciation of time,'' he said. Theater, after all, can hold the audience hostage for hours; Beckett makes that playgoing experience a part of his plays.

''If a lesson can be extracted from this that's of use to a student playwright, it's this,'' Mr. Greenberg said: ''The playwright's primary act is the taking of time; for this not to be pure theft, time has to be acknowledged, somehow, as the inevitable subject of every play -- as the thing that's happening in the room.''

No one concentrates the mind better than Beckett on the splendidly dubious pleasures of being there.

Missouri High School Makes the NYT



By MARC ACITO
Published: April 3, 2006
Portland, Ore.

WITH the Disney Channel's "High School Musical" fast becoming the download of choice for tweens, it looks like we theater geeks are finally getting the attention we deserve.

And some we don't. Like in Fulton, Mo., where three members of a local church objected to the high school's fall production of the musical "Grease," even though one of them hadn't even seen it. In a response that would have made Joe McCarthy proud, Mark Enderle, the school superintendent, then proceeded to overturn the choice of "The Crucible," Arthur Miller's indictment of McCarthyism, as the spring play.

Instead, the students in Fulton just finished performing "A Midsummer Night's Dream," that wholesome frolic about youthful rebellion, pagan magic and bestiality. As Dr. Enderle told Wendy DeVore, the drama teacher, her actors "shouldn't do anything on stage that would get a kid in trouble if he did it in a classroom."

Next up, "Algebra! The Musical."

On second thought, one thing that will certainly get a student into trouble in a Fulton classroom is not reading "The Crucible," which is part of the 11th grade curriculum. I guess, like school prayer, reading "The Crucible" is something that has to be done silently.

Click the post title to read the whole article!