Showing posts with label Kitchen Sink Experiment(s). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kitchen Sink Experiment(s). Show all posts

Friday, October 9, 2015

Spotlight On...Andrew Scoville

Name: Andrew Scoville

Hometown: Elmhurst, IL

Education: New York University, Playwrights Horizons Theater School

Favorite Credits: Love Machine (Incubator Arts Project), People Doing Math (ongoing podcast, live show at Ars Nova), Fresh Ground Pepper (co-founder/co-director) Associate Director of Here Lies Love (Public Theater and National Theater)

Why theater?: I like people! It's most collaborative art form and I think its the most direct artistic conversation you can have with an audience. Good theater is like your favorite sandwich from your favorite bodega, umami, you know.

Tell us about Kitchen Sink Experiment(s): Kitchen Sink Experiment(s) is a play about a couple who let a scientist into their apartment to observe them. They become increasingly self-aware and are forced to deal with some of the unspoken elements of their relationship. It is done in a hyper-realistic style, so when the characters cook pancakes they are really going to be cooking pancakes and it will take place in a real life lived-in apartment.

What inspired you to direct Kitchen Sink Experiment(s)?: I was inspired to direct this piece because I am a fan of Colby! I had been interested in working with him, so when he brought this to my attention I was instantly intrigued. I am always looking for projects that deal with science or technology in one aspect or another, so the fact that there was a scientist as a character and the situation of the play was a scientific experiment, I was like "Wohoo! Double bonus!"

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I can't help it, I like high tech theater. Things that use technology in interesting ways. I am very drawn to the present and beyond. I like to imagine what the future might be like and put that on stage in interesting ways. This project is a different kind of passion for me, which is rooted somewhere in really trying to crack what life is like today, as a window into how our lives may be affected tomorrow. I am inspired by the radio, podcasts, and LOVE! Love is so inspirational, right?! In my experience, it makes everything better and more meaningful.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Robert Krulwich and Jad Abumrad from Radiolab, Neil deGrasse Tyson, The Books, and the eyeliner at 3LD.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Stay tuned for Medialounge, a pop up exhibition space for new digital art. It's gonna be bananas. And I always tell friends to check out Fresh Ground Pepper to find new collaborators and explore new ways of working!

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: I say Dwayne Johnson, my friend said a very friendly dog voiced by George Clooney, my wife said Josh Gordon Levitt . Either way, I'm pretty sure I just want it to be called "Bill Murray."

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: The Big Bang! Or I'd like to go to some o.g. Colosseum Programming-- any of those ancient amphitheaters.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Cooking shows and "Shark Tank". A week ago, I would have said competitive cooking shows, but now that I've seen "Chef's Table" on Netflix, I'm like F#*& that!

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Working for NASA.

What’s up next?: BOSSS Festival! I'm working with En Garde Arts to create a new piece with Bina48, the world's most advanced social robot. Dave Tennent and I are cooking up piece where actress Lynne Rosenberg will be going on a date with Bina48 for four performances between October 23-25. Also working towards a new live recording of a podcast I'm collaborating on called People Doing Math!

For more on Andrew, visit www.andrewjscoville.com

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Spotlight On...Colby Day

Name: Colby Day

Hometown: Alamo, CA

Education: New York University, Department of Dramatic Writing

Favorite Credits: Felix & The Diligence which a high school in Vermont performed and it was the most magical experience of my life. It’s a fishing adventure with mermaids and sea monsters and Nazi spies. Everything Flashes, a tour of your memories which I’ve developed and am still developing with so many folks (The In-Between People, Theater Reconstruction Ensemble, and Pipeline Theatre Company), and this video: The Greatest Play Ever.

Why theater?: It’s magic. Sometimes with LITERAL magic. Great theater is the closest I think I get to a religious experience. Bad theater is the closest I get to hell. And as a writer, theater is definitely the most fun form. You’re working with people, often smarter than you, and if you work with the right people, they’re making your stuff WAY better the entire time. And then you get credit for it.

Tell us about Kitchen Sink Experiment(s): It’s a kitchen sink show with a real kitchen sink. It explores what it is to feel observed, what it is to feel judged, and asks how the heck can we ever get comfortable in our own skin.

What inspired you to write Kitchen Sink Experiment(s)?: I wanted to challenge myself to write something hyper-hyper realistic and see what that would mean for an audience. It’s a show you can kind of live in and reach out and touch, without being “immersive” in the ways I don’t like. Nobody is going to force you to do anything, you can just observe and be taken care of. The seed of the idea came from a podcast I’d heard about a similar research project that had not gone well, and I thought “Oh, that’s a play!”

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Honestly? Magic. It doesn’t need to be real magic, but if you can do something that seems impossible onstage, I am sold. That can be big, like redefining a space, or it can be small, like taking me somewhere emotionally I did not expect. I like twists and turns.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I have to second pretty much ALL of Andrew’s list. And would add probably Woodshed Collective into the mix.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Go see Pipeline Theatre Company’s The Gray Man. It’s running right now and is beautiful and spooky and magic.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: I’d like it to be Ryan Gosling and it would be called “That Colby Sure is Sexy.”

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I’d love to go back and see the original failed run of Tennessee Williams’ Camino Real. That show is such a mess in a way that I love and admire and would 100% want to see. Or Our Town? I’m a sucker for sentimental shows.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Black & White Cookies. I will never not buy and eat one and I have strong opinions about each and every brand available in the NY metro area.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: A used car salesman.

What’s up next?: I’m doing a workshop of my show [untitled time dilation play] in November and then am putting together a reading of Edgy Christmas Reboot, a dark, gritty re-telling of the Rankin & Bass Claymation Christmas specials.

For more on Colby, visit www.colbyday.com. For more on Kitchen Sink Experiment(s), visit www.crashboxtheater.org.