Apr 122015
 


Contact: Hanna Bondarewska
(703) 475-4036; HannaB@aticc.org
or Eliza Anna Falk
(703) 618-1160;
eliza.falk@aticc.org
Literary Associate

Washington, DC, April 8, 2015

–For immediate release—

In Partnership with the Embassy of the Republic of Poland                                                                                        And the Department of Theatre and Dance at the George Washington University                                                                          Ambassador Theater Presents US Premiere of                                                        

THE TRAP

By Tadeusz Różewicz

...One of the most provocative and original of European playwrights of the post-war period….

Translated by Adam Czerniawski

Produced and Directed by Hanna Bondarewska

Music by Jerzy Satanowski

Sound by Paul Oehlers

Set Design by Carl Gudenius

Media Design by Riki Kim

Lighting Design by Michael Stepowany

Costumes by Sigridur Johannesdottir

Featuring: Matthew Payne, Colin Davies, Benjamin Koonz, Morganne Davies *, Alexander Rolinski, Ariana Almajan, Melissa Robinson, Madeline Burrows, Emily Gilson, Abigail Ropp, John Brennan, Peter Orvetti, Sue Schaffel, Ed Klein, Marlowe Vilchez, Michael S. Heller and Tiffany Pindell


WHERE: XX Bldg
814 20th Street NW, Washington DC
WHEN: May 28 – June 21, 2015
May 26, 27 Previews at 8 pm
May 28 at 8 pm, Opening & Reception follows
Saturday, 30, 8 pm Press Night
Thursdays – Saturdays at 8:00 pm; Matinees: Sundays at 3:00 pm

TICKETS: $20 – $40 Online: http://www.aticc.org/home/category/get-tickets
For 16 + Audiences
Media/Press: please e-mail us to reserve your tickets!

Please be advised there is a momentary nudity!

…anxieties and nightmares of an artist …Franz Kafka…

Inspired by life and work of Franz Kafka, “The Trap is a collage of events, images and sounds that deeply affected the artist.  Fears and nightmares, Kafka’s real life companions, found their way into many of his short stories and novels which continue to fascinate and baffle readers all over the world. The play, one of Różewicz’s last, is not only his poetic farewell to Kafka and a psychological portrait of an artist, but also his unique vision of Kafka’s destiny. To realize the vision, the avant-garde playwright alters traditional conventions of time and space and traps Kafka in the ultimate nightmare of the 20th century- the Holocaust.

Are you ready to witness cruel destiny in the making? Are you ready to step into the artist’s mind and experience his deepest fears and desires? Come and see The Trap and reflect on fragility of life and artistic creation. Join the Ambassador Theater’s team in discovering the world of an artist and experience a unique ‘open theatre’ of Tadeusz Różewicz.

Ambassador Theater’s mission is to build international cultural awareness, provide a high standard of international repertoire based on close relations with the diplomatic and cultural representatives of different countries in the United States, and provide international interactive educational programs for the youth of the District of Columbia, the D.C. Metro area, and around the United States.

ATICC is a 501(c)3 Nonprofit Organization. For more information, visit www.aticc.org

 

 

 

 

Mar 292015
 

Hanna Bondarewska: Ambassador on Stage

By Kasia RaniÅ›

When you first meet Hanna Bondarewska, the Artistic Director of the Ambassador Theater International Cultural Center (ATICC), you see her as a typical artist: spontaneous, energetic, passionate, perhaps slightly disconnected from reality… yet, full of practical ideas that can turn a seemingly impossible dream into reality.

She grew up in Warsaw in a home where attending theater, concerts and cultural events was part of regularly practiced family traditions. As a child, she performed in dance groups and school theater productions where her native talents were quickly recognized and she soon appeared on professional stage. She took her first acting steps in the Ochota Theater in Warsaw, under the watchful eyes of the prominent Polish film and theater director Jan Machulski and his wife Halina, known from multiple film and theater roles. Pursuing her passion, Hanna received her acting diploma from the Polish Ministry of Culture and incarnated various roles on stages throughout Poland, from Warsaw, Białystok, Olsztyn, Katowice to Toruń, among many others.

Hanna Bondarewska as Negma Sadiq in “The Visitor” by Alfred Farag

When eventually life took her to America in early 1990s, she continued to hone her acting, as well as directorial and management, skills in Washington, DC, Florida, and New York. She graduated Magna Cum Laude from Mt. Vernon College of the George Washington University and later worked as Executive Director at the Institute for Education. She performed at Washington Shakespeare Theater, Classika/Synetic Theater, Spectrum, The New York Polish Theater, Hippodrome and Acrosstown Theaters in Florida, to name a few.

However, Hanna’s lifelong dream was to open her own theater and in 2008, she turned that dream into reality. While she was teaching acting to young students, one day, a four-year old pupil overheard the conversation his teacher had with his parents, wishfully “dreaming” out loud: “If only each person living in America spared one dollar for my theater…”. Little Thomas came up to her, pulled a dollar bill from his pocket and said “Here is my dollar Miss Hanna, please start the theater”. She dared not to disappoint such hope and inspiration from a child.

The establishment of Ambassador Theater International Cultural Center was truly a leap of faith. In a city like Washington, which teems with theaters big and small, each competing for audiences and financial support, it was indeed an act of courage to pursue such an endeavor. Yet, it was done and after more than five years, Hanna’s theater continues to exist and is recognized as an important cultural institution. ATICC partnered with various embassies as well as organizations such as Institute for Education, Kosciuszko Foundation, American and George Washington Universities, to name a few. What started with that one dollar bill attracted others to join and become regular contributors. Of course, there is a constant need to develop more support in order to thrive and present interesting works from around the world and develop an international cultural dialog.

The Ambassador Theater and its performances target audiences of all ages while the ATICC’s education arm embraces children and youth. Its first highly recognized undertaking was a year-round in-school program put together with collaboration of Hanna Reiter, the wife of former Ambassador, Janusz Reiter at the Polish Embassy, the Washington Performing Arts Society, Embassy Adoption Program, and DC Public Schools. It culminated in the production called “Poland the Beautiful: An Imaginary Flight.” At the initiative of Poland’s First Lady, Maria KaczyÅ„ska, the students were rewarded with a trip to Poland, where they visited Warsaw, Krakow, ToruÅ„, Mazury, climbed the Sudeten Mountains, and performed at the Presidential Palace, as well as at other places across the country. Today, the center offers participation in drama classes, summer camps, in-school outreach programs and educational workshops. Its mission is to help students become well educated through the use of interactive learning method through theater games and art, and to develop essential communications skills. ATICC’s work also comprises discussions, play readings, bare bone productions and Literary Cafés projects, offering evenings of poetry and music.

Hanna Bondarewska as George Sand

Scene from “Summer at Nohant” by Jaroslaw Iwaszkiewicz

Hanna’s Polish roots are often reflected in ATICC’s activities. The first theater production at the Ambassador was the DC premiere of SÅ‚awomir Mrożek’s Polish masterpiece “Out at Sea” (Na peÅ‚nym morzu). As of today, the theater boasts fifteen premieres, including many Polish plays, such as “The Forefathers” (Dziady) by Adam Mickiewicz, “The Madman and the Nun” (Wariat i Zakonnica) by StanisÅ‚aw Witkiewicz (aka Witkacy), or “The Third Breast” (Trzecia PierÅ›) by Ireneusz IredyÅ„ski. The next production will feature “The Trap” (PuÅ‚apka) by the internationally acclaimed and highly respected Polish poet, Tadeusz Różewicz, who died in April 2014.

As the head of ATICC, Hanna Bondarewska wears many hats: she is a business manager, developer, artistic director, box office manager, house manager, and production manager, marketing director, PR and an actress herself. She says her acting skills, determination and enormous energy derived from her parents and God: “I believe, they were essential to get the Ambassador Theater on its feet and steadily proceed with its mission. I believe in honesty and love; these are the main driving forces behind it all. Passion!!!!!”

Hanna Bondarewska is a member of the Polish American Arts Association. For more information about her, the ATICC and all the wonderful people involved in it, see: http://www.aticc.org/home/ If you like what you see and want to invest in this endeavor, there is a “Donate Now” button you can click on and make your tax-deductible contribution.

Tadeusz Różewicz

Tadeusz Różewicz was born in Radomsko, Poland, on October 9, 1921. During World War II, he was a soldier in the Home Army, the underground resistance movement in occupied Poland. For two years, he fought in a guerrilla unit and wrote his first poems. After studying the history of art at university in Krakow, he began to publish both poetry and plays. His first volumes of poetry were Anxiety (1947) and The Red Glove (1948). After 1956, he primarily wrote plays, including The Card Index, The Witnesses or Our Little Stabilization, and The Old Woman Broods. In 1999, he published a collection of poems, family documents, photos and essays entitled Mother Departs, which won the Nike prize, the most eminent Polish literary award. He died on April 24, 2014, at the age of 92. Tadeusz Różewicz is widely considered one of Poland’s most important and influential writers. His works tend to focus on universal themes, but speak particularly to the generation of Polish adults whose memories of youth, like his own, are filled with the horrifying experiences of World War II. Różewicz often scorns the conventional techniques and philosophies of literature and frequently questions the validity of poetry itself. Różewicz explored the life of one of his literary heroes, Franz Kafka, in the loosely biographical play The Trap (1982). The play also depicts the demise of artistic creativity, played out against visions of the impending ‘‘final solution’’—Hitler’s largely executed plan for the systematic murder of all Jews in Europe. Washington audiences will have the opportunity to see The Trap in a production by the Ambassador Theater, scheduled for May-June 2015. It will be presented in the original translation by Adam Czerniawski, Polish poet, essayist, and author of short stories, now living in Wales. 5 The Ambassador Theater presents “The Trap” by Tadeusz Różewicz May 28 – June 21 Thu-Sat at 8 pm, Sun at 2 PM George Washington University, Building XX 814 20th Street NW, 2nd Floor Washington , DC 20052 http://www.aticc.org/home/upcoming-the-trap

 

Jan 222015
 
trapposter

Type: Theatre
Pay: Paid
Union: Union/Non-Union

Audition/Casting Date(s): Saturday, January 31, 25
Start/End Time: 3:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Location: Ambassador Theater at

CALLBACKS on SUNDAY –time will be Announced!

Building XX

814 20th Street NW, Washington DC 20052

the second floor in room 202.

Please e-mail your photo/resume at ambassadortheater@aticc.org
PLEASE REGISTER ONLINE through Eventbrite

Breakdown/Description:
Ambassador Theater is holding a casting call for The Trap by Tadeusz Rozewicz. The play will be produced at the Building XX of the George Washington University;

The Trap: Performances: May 28 – June 21, 2015 with the possibility of 2 weeks extension
ROLES  – Franz ( A Man, dark hair thin, reminding Kafka) Animula (a small girl or a boy or a young actor), Josie ( about 30 years old woman), Mother (Middle age woman), Father (Older Man, father of Franz), Ottla (Sister of Franz), Valli, (A young woman), Felice (An attractive woman), Grete, Zenek, Vic, Salesman, Waitress, Max, Cobbler, Barber, Executioners, Gentleman

About: …Anxities and nightmares of Franz Kafka…

Tadeusz Rózewicz was born in Radomsko, Poland on October 9, 1921. During World War II, he was a soldier in the Home Army, the underground resistance movement in occupied Poland. For two years, he fought in a guerrilla unit and wrote his first poems. After studying the history of art at university in Krakow, he began to publish both poetry and plays. His first volumes of poetry were Anxiety (1947) and The Red Glove (1948). After 1956, he primarily wrote plays including The Card Index, The Witnesses or Our Little Stabilization, and The Old Woman Broods. In 1999, he published a collection of poems, family documents, photos and essays entitled Mother Departs, which won the Nike prize, the most eminent Polish literary award. He died on April 24, 2014 at the age of 92.

Tadeusz Różewicz is widely considered one of Poland’s most important and influential writers. His works tend to focus on universal themes, but speak particularly to the generation of Polish adults whose memories of youth, like his own, are filled with the horrifying experiences of World War II. Różewicz often scorns the conventional techniques and philosophies of literature and frequently questions the validity of poetry itself. Różewicz explored the life of one of his literary heroes, Franz Kafka, in the loosely biographical play The Trap (1982). The play also depicts the demise of artistic creativity, played out against visions of the impending ‘‘final solution’’—Hitler’s largely executed plan for the systematic murder of all Jews in Europe.

FOR YOUR AUDITIONS:
Bring your photo/resume and be ready to read from the script ! You may also present a monologue.

Audition Address:

Building XX

814 20th Street NW, the second floor in room 202.

Washington DC 20052

Contact Information:
ambassadortheater@aticc.org

 

Oct 312014
 

October 30

Ariana Almajan as counselor Laura Whalen as and Marlowe Vilchez as Raymond (Rage) Stitt in Rage (Photo Credit: Val Radev)

At Flashpoint’s Mead Theatre Lab in downtown DC, Ambassador Theatre continues its tradition of provocative, daring theatre with its US premiere of Canadian playwright Michele Riml’s hard-charging, intensely relevant two-actor script, RAGE.

Set in the drab, basement office of high school “Peace Counselor” Laura Whalen, RAGE revolves around the escalating encounter of the counselor with agitated, about-to-be-expelled high school senior Raymond Stitt. Played with tremendous dexterity and fluid theatricality, actors Ariana Almajan as Ms. Whalen and Marlow Vilchez as Raymond move across the stage like prize fighters defending their titles to the death: she, the champion of Pacifism and the gentler angels of our nature, and he, the champion of realism and the darker angels of our souls. Who among them will win this battle for heavyweight championship of the world?

The student Raymond, known as “Rage” by his only two friends, has grown increasingly marginalized within the high school’s social milieu. Yet, even his two lone friends deserted him when his disaffection with hypocrisy and myopia exploded in history class. And certainly the history teacher’s patience was exhausted by Raymond’s intense inquiry into Hitler’s political appeal, and Raymond now faces suspension. We learn of Raymond’s chilling impersonation of Hitler as if he were making an impassioned speech to the Nazi Youth Brigade, though Raymond insists his speech was merely theatrical provocation.

Peace Counselor Whalen has nonetheless persuaded the history teacher to let her talk to the young man, and persuade him to embrace a more pacifist perspective. Raymond appears in her office just as she was about to leave to see Le Mis with her live-in (but still non-committal) boyfriend. Raymond challenges her to stay, and she soon acquiesces to his insistence.

Over the course of the play’s 90 minutes (without intermission), the confrontation between the two of them advances and retreats and ultimately escalates to an urgency that has become achingly real in schools across the continent. Yet, rarely is the anguished reasoning of disaffected and marginalized youth presented as clearly and articulately as it is in RAGE, and keen applause to playwright Riml on her incisive script.

Under Director Joe Banno’s able direction, Ariana Almajan and Marlow Vilchez excel at the verbal & eventually physical dual between them. As the 38-year-old, engaged-but-not-married peace educator Laura Whalen, Almajan brings a persuasive single-mindedness the role. Indeed, her character’s very identity, as well as her livelihood, depend on her unflinching embrace of peace and the promise of pacifism to quiet the heady waters of our times. She is at once calm, compassionate, insistent, and explosive. Marlow Vilchez’s portrayal of the young man Raymond embodies the accumulated outrage of the outcast. Vilchez fills the character of Raymond with brooding intelligence and grim conclusions disallowed by officialdom. Disillusioned and angry beyond what his young consciousness can bear, Vilchez brings Raymond’s pain full throttle onstage.

Set & Lighting Designer Jonathan Rushbrook has created an appropriately dreary, low-light basement space, and Sound Designer George Gordon gives us a precise and convincing soundscape. Costume Designer Sigridur Johannesdottir has clad the actors in contemporary attire that clearly evokes each the character’s personalities. Special applause to Stage Fight Choreographer Cliff Williams for the deft and effective physical confrontations.

A grueling, unwavering gaze at the limitations of ideology and the tragedy of marginalization, RAGE brings us to the brink.

Photo by Vak Radev.

Through November 16, 2014, at Flashpoint’s Mead Theatre Lab, 916 G St, NW

Tickets & information http://www.instantseats.com/index.cfm?r=D76A&fuseaction=home.venue&venueID=280

Advisories: Physical violence and strong language and content.

Appropriate for ages 15 and above.

 

Oct 312014
 

Rich Massabny
Producer/Interviewer/Reviewer
“Arlington Weekly News TV”
Comcast CHANNEL 69 –FIOS Channel 38
Broadcast 2014: Thurs., Nov. 6, 6 p.m.; Sat., Nov. 8, 10:30 a.m.; Mon., Nov. 10, 8:30 p.m.
richmassabnyreviews.blogspot.com
AMBASSADOR THEATER – - “Rage”
In the last two weeks, I’ve seen two of the finest two-person plays in a long time.
This one is the Ambassador Theater’s (D.C.), “Rage” by Canadian playwright Michele
Riml, winner of the 2005 Sydney Risk prize for Outstanding Original Play. “Rage” is a
hold-your-breath drama between a gun-toting high school student and a pacifist female
school counselor. With no intermission, this ready to die or kill student, Raymond “Rage”
Stitt (Marlowe Vilchez) and counselor Laura Whalen (Ariana Amajan) are locked in a
showdown in the counselor’s basement office. The acting between these two is so real,
especially in light of recent school shootings. Directed by well-known Helen Hayes
Award winner Joe Banno and produced by Ambassador artistic director and founder
Hanna Bondarewska. Do Not Miss This One!! “Rage” runs Wednesdays through
Sundays through November 16 at the Mead Theater Lab at Flashpoint, 916 G St. NW. For
more information and tickets, call 703-475-4036 or check the website at www.aticc.org.

Oct 282014
 

Theatre Review: ‘Rage’ at Ambassador Theater

October 27, 2014 by 
Ariana Almajan as counselor Laura Whalen as and Marlowe Vilchez as Raymond (Rage) Stitt in Rage (Photo Credit: Val Radev)Ariana Almajan as counselor Laura Whalen as and Marlowe Vilchez as Raymond (Rage) Stitt in Rage (Photo Credit: Val Radev)

It is not every day that many of us find ourselves staring down the nozzle of a gun from either side of the trigger, but if you go see Rage at Ambassador Theater–and you should go see it–then that is exactly what you will experience. Guns, violence and the puzzle of peace face to face, close up and personal. Written by critically acclaimed Canadian playwright Michele Riml, this two-person, award-winning play is directed by Joe Banno and produced by Hanna Bondarewska for the Ambassador Theater’s 5th season and the play’s US premiere.

Laura Whalen, played by Ariana Almajan, is a perky, pretty-in-pink high school counselor who enshrines Gandhi in her office and follows a pacifist lifestyle. At the play’s opening, her workday has drawn near its close, and though mentally checked out and ready to go enjoy the play Les Miserable with her boyfriend, she has one last appointment to squeeze in: the troubled Raymond. When Raymond comes in, we quickly learn two things; that he prefers to be called “Rage,” and that he gave a violent presentation in class and may be expelled. Before the session is over, Rage takes Laura hostage at gunpoint and tells her only one of them will be leaving the room. Who gets to leave is her choice. Will she choose to die at his hand for her pacifist lifestyle, or will she kill him and save herself, and presumably, others?

‘Rage’ is wonderfully executed, terrifyingly brilliant, and seriously scary.

Almajan gives such an excellent performance as Laura that at the beginning you might think, wow, she is not that good of an actress. You rapidly realize, however, that she is acting as someone who is poorly pretending to be someone and something she is not. With the shedding of layers, Ariana creates a character in Laura that is so real and vivid that the experience of it will likely leave you raw and shaken along with her.

Vilchez, playing Rage, will leave you rapt and held at terrified attention with his explosive performance. “I go off,” Rage comments, and throughout the play you never know when he will “go off” again, how many more times he might blow up and what he might do to Laura as she struggles desperately to find a way for them both to live.

Almajan and Vilchez allow the audience to step into their shoes and experience with them the situation unfolding in the tiny basement office. “If you can get in someone’s head, you have a better chance of understanding them,” Rage says towards the play’s opening, defending his presentation. This is exactly the idea of this production, and the artistic director, Hanna, hopes that in watching the play, a space for dialogue can open up and audiences will start engaging in the questions that shape the play. Rage allows the audience to step for a very long, unforgettable moment into the shoes of the gun wielders so often taking over the headlines and to experience what having to make life and death choices is like, and to question our own beliefs. To paraphrase one line of the play, “It’s easy to have ideas when you’re not confronted with anything,” and Ragedefinitely confronts the ideas society has built up around violence and peace.

Everything within this production pulls audience members into the experience of Rage; the spot-on lighting and sound effects; the intimate set that lets audiences practically sit in the closet-office with the action; the fast-fired dialogue and completely natural reactions of the characters–even the occasional joke or witticism that has the audience laughing in the darkness. Even the subtle details echo and engrave the heart of the play, like the way that Laura goes from happy-pink cheerfulness with tied back, tight hair at the beginning to an unbuttoned, colourless, messy haired, utterly undone being as Rage wreaks havoc on her and her beliefs. “You can’t be who you are with a gun in your face,” Laura screams back at Rage as he yells at her again about “being peace.” “Why not?” He asks her back. “There was always a gun somewhere.”

This gun itself; you, too, will come face to face with it due to the intimate set. From every angle of the stage, looking up and down its nose, watching it wave, waiting for it to go off along with Rage. There is nothing sheltering about this production, it is a powerful piece with no holds barred. This is Halloween, and everything right now is all about cool costumes and the scare factor. But if you really like scary and you want to be scared, then come see this production. Rage is wonderfully executed, terrifyingly brilliant, and seriously scary. Don’t expect to walk away unscathed: this is theatre at its most palpable.

 

Oct 272014
 

‘Rage’ at Ambassador Theater

by  on October 26, 2014

FOUR-AND-A-HALF-STARS11.gif

Michele Riml’s Rage made its US premiere this week at Flashpoint’s Mead Theatre Lab. A production of Ambassador Theater, directed by Joe Banno, Rage explores the dynamics of adolescent rage from a Canadian perspective.

Ariana Almajan (Laura Whalen) Marlowe and Vilchez (Raymond Stitt). Photo by Val Radev .Ariana Almajan (Laura Whalen)  and Marlowe Vilchez (Raymond Stitt).
Photo by Val Radev . 

The taut 90-minute drama pits a highly intelligent, disaffected high school senior against a pacifist 38-year-old student counselor. The results are engaging and provocative even if on occasion you might find yourself exhausted by the intensity of the exchange.

The violence of disassociation, estrangement, and disgust permeates the world. The violence of State agents also rages on around the globe, with the arms industry the only true winner. People who believe, as Gandhi did, that violence even when “it appears to do good, the good is only temporary; the evil it does is permanent,” have little sway, particularly in the United States where military spending even in sequestration far outstrips military spending worldwide.

Rage’s two-person dialogue–one part human drama, one part sociological experiment–depicts the emotional and intellectual landscape produced when the power of violence confronts a commitment to peace.

Ariana Almajan plays Laura Whalen, a part-time high school counselor, whose office is seemingly buried in the school’s basement. A committed peace activist, she truly believes that discussion will solve not only the world’s problems but more specifically the problems confronting young people as they struggle with issues of power and love. Her low status at the school and in society, however, demonstrates just how ill-regarded this pacifist approach to solving issues has become.

Marlowe Vilchez plays Raymond Stitt, aka. Rage, an emotionally explosive high school senior unable to come to grips with the hypocrisies of the adult world, or with the absurdities of his domineering mother and overly passive father.

Rage’s day has not gone well. During an oral history report on the rise of Hitler to power in Germany, during which he stepped into the shoes of the fiery orator and railed against the Jewish people, he and his ranting scared classmates and teacher alike. Now, he’s threatened with expulsion.

Laura has intervened in hopes of saving his high school career. She meets with Rage at the end of the school day. She successfully gets him to open up about the purpose of his oral report as she tries to understand his behavior and motives. When Rage pulls a gun on her, however, the counseling ends and Rage’s thought-experiment begins. Where it might end is up to the players.

Both actors do a fantastic job navigating the emotional rollercoaster that is Rage. Ms. Almajan realistically captures the vulnerability and the fear of the situation, while Mr. Vilchez keeps his disgust with the world specific and credible. Director Joe Banno’s pacing of the show is well modulated, even as the script dips into repetition a little near the end.

The design team of Jonathan Rushbrook (sets), Sigríður Jóhannesdóttir (costumes), Cliff Williams III (fight director), and George Gordon (sound) has used the Flashpoint space to good effect as well as contemporary iconography, both musical and visual.

Ariana Almajan (Laura Whalen) Marlowe and Vilchez (Raymond Stitt). Photo by Val Radev .Ariana Almajan (Laura Whalen) and Marlowe Vilchez (Raymond Stitt).
Photo by Val Radev . 

There’s little doubt that the concerns raised by Rage are on the minds of many Americans, even if individual gun ownership and “stand your ground” laws (not pacifism) are the doctrines most in vogue in the United States these days.

Rage can’t be beat for sheer intensity, and its issues are as pressing as tomorrow’s news.

 

Sep 222014
 

Contact:

Hanna Bondarewska

(703) 475-4036; HannaB@aticc.org or

Eliza Anna Falk: Eliza.Falk@aticc.org

(703) 618-1160;Literary Associate

Washington, DC, September 17, 2014

–For immediate release—


Ambassador Theater Presents

US Premiere of

RAGE

By Michele Riml

Will “justifiable” violence or passive resistance win the day? Who will survive?

Produced by Hanna Bondarewska

Directed by Joe Banno

Helen Hayes awarded director

Featuring: Ariana Almajan as Laura Whalen

Marlowe Vilchez as Raymond Stitt

WHERE: Mead Theater Lab at Flashpoint

916 G Street NW, Washington DC

WHEN: October 22 – November 16, 2014

October 22, 2014 Preview at 8 pm

October 23, 2014 at 8 pm, Opening  & Reception Follows

Saturday, October 25, 8 pm Press Night

Wednesdays – Saturdays at 8:00 pm; Matinees: Sundays at 2:00 pm

TICKETS: $8 – $40 Online: http://www.aticc.org/home/category/get-tickets

For 16 + Audiences

Media/Press: please e-mail us to reserve your tickets!

“A riveting work by the Canadian author, Michele Riml, recipient of the JESSIE RICHARDSON AWARD 2008!

In Rage a pacifist school counselor is tested to the limits when confronted by a radical, suicidal student. How far would she go to defend her principles?A gripping duel between an adult and a teenager. A violent clash of values and viewpoints. Peace vs violence and fear vs courage. Extreme circumstance, extreme choice and a shocking finale.

Ambassador Theater is happy to present a Canadian author, Michele Riml, to American audiences, as a follow up of 2013 Helen Hayes Canadian Partnership Award. Michele Riml is a critically acclaimed playwright from Vancouver, Canada. Her plays include Under the Influence, Poster Boys, RAGE, Souvenirs, On the Edge, The Amaryllis, Henry and Alice: Into the Wild and the international hit Sexy Laundry, which has been produced in Canada, Poland, Germany, New Zealand, Iceland, Mexico and the USA. Originally produced by Green Thumb Theatre in Vancouver, RAGE was the winner of the 2005 Sydney Risk prize for Outstanding Original Play and has also been translated into French and German. Her plays for young audiences include The Skinny Lie, The Invisible Girl and Tree Boy. Michele was nominated for the 2008 Siminovitch Prize. She is represented by Colin Rivers at Marquis Entertainment in Toronto.

Ambassador Theater’s mission is to build international cultural awareness, provide a high standard of international repertoire based on close relations with the diplomatic and cultural representatives of different countries in the United States, and provide international interactive educational programs for the youth of the District of Columbia, the D.C. Metro area, and around the United States.ATICC is a 501(c)3 Nonprofit Organization. For more information, visit www.aticc.org

Apr 112014
 

City of Alexandria Celebrates Arts and Extraordinary Arts Organizations and their Anniversaries!

Are you ready to move, perform in beautiful masks, entertain and have fun? Ready for an intensive movement, acting in masks workshops in May and June?

Call us immediately at (703) 475-4036

We are casting young Female/Male actors, movement/flexibility is a plus, acting in masks ability – some funny scenes, excerpts from “Dyskolos” by Menander to be performed at a special event in Old Town Alexandria June 14th at 2 PM!
A wealthy young man falls in love at first sight with a beautiful, but poor farmer’s daughter. The only thing that stands in the way of their happiness is the woman’s violent, misanthropic father. This play will be performed in an updated mask style drawing upon such diverse influences as Ancient Greek, Commedie Francaise, and The Three Stooges. Experience with physical acting, masks, pantomime and classical text are all helpful skills.

If you like to have fun and have some experience, please contact Hanna at ambassadortheter@aticc.org to schedule your casting call!

Mar 192014
 

The Washington Post

By Jane Horwitz, Wednesday, March 19, 3:36 PM

‘Happily Ever After’ is a winningly acted meditation on dysfunctional relationships

(Courtesy Ambassador Theater ) – Karin Rosnizeck and Doug Krehbel in Happily Ever After from Ambassador Theater.

Many are the ways in which men and women misconstrue, misapprehend and just plain miss the boat when it comes to love and marriage. These are enumerated in Cristina Colmena’s amusing trio of playlets under the title “Happily Ever After,” having its world premiere in a winningly acted bare-bones production by Ambassador Theater.

It’s a lean staging and a mere hour of theater — but a pretty full hour, all the same, at Flashpoint’s intimate Mead Theatre Lab. However, a more accurate title might be “Happily Ever After — Not.”

Colmena’s playlets hit the mark more often than they miss. As staged rather broadly for such a small space by Hanna Bondarewska (Ambassador Theater’s artistic director), they still elicit laughs of recognition. Who, after all, hasn’t had one or two dysfunctional relationships?

The three pieces are not equally funny or incisive, but they show that dramatist Colmena has flair, and a subtly European mind-set when it comes to romance. That follows, since she hails from Spain, though lives in New York now. The Washington-based Ambassador Theater, now in its fifth year, is devoted to staging theatrical works by authors from around the world. (“Happily Ever After” is performed in English.)

Actors Karin Rosnizeck and Doug Krehbel play the couples in each playlet, all named merely He and She. Brief blackouts allow them to switch with simple changes of costumes and props. A 45-degree turn of the large table, which sits lengthwise during the first scene, transforms it into a bed for the second and third scenes.

A title projected at the rear of the stage announces the first piece — “Misunderstandings.” While not unamusing, it is the least emotionally resonant and most artificial of the three. The lights come up on a young woman and young man, probably 20-somethings, sitting at opposite ends of the table. They were supposed to meet and patch up a quarrel, but one of them got the name of the bar wrong, so they each wait alone, too stubborn to call the other. They fume, but only to the audience. Once or twice, the actors move into the same space, reenacting flashbacks of the earlier, happier days of their affair.

In “Don’t Take It Personally,” the strongest of the three pieces, a pair of 40ish sophisticates smoke languidly after an anonymous liaison that led from a bar to her bed. Now she’s ready for him to leave, though by the clock it’s only pre-dawn. He wants to linger and cuddle. When she demurs, he calls her “cold.” She claims it’s self-protection, listing what can happen when you open your heart even a little: dating, then marriage, then children, then an apartment at the beach, then divorce. “Don’t Take it Personally” comes the closest to a bull’s-eye in performance, direction and authorial insight. It includes fewer speeches to the audience and more interaction between characters, which gives it a dramatic punch that goes beyond mere wit. And a tango interlude, in which the couple have a second erotic encounter imagined in steamy choreography, is fun, if constricted, on the tiny stage.

A married couple in their 60s take the spotlight in “Melodrama.” He snaps photos of Her for a 30th-anniversary celebration that their daughter is planning. While he clicks away, his wife breaks her pose to excoriate him and vent about her long marital misery. But her speeches are for the audience’s ears only. And when he finally pipes up, his words, too, are just for the audience. In the end, their fights remain unfought, except in their heads and our ears.

Lots of elements in “Happily Ever After” invite a more avant-garde approach than director Bondarewska takes. She mines the humor and familiarity in Colmena’s script, but this set of plays, because of how it is constructed, offers both professionals and students a chance to experiment.

“Happily Ever After” and “Typing,” another play by Colmena, have been published in “New Plays From Spain: Eight Works by Seven Playwrights” (Martin E. Segal Theatre Center Publications, New York, 2013), where the scripts appear side by side in Spanish and English.

Jane Horwitz is a freelance writer.

‘Happily Ever After’

By Cristina Colmena. Directed by Hanna Bondarewska. Sound and video design, David Crandall; set, Greg Jackson and Jonathan Rushbrook; lighting, Stephen Shetler; costumes, Basmah Alomar; choreography, Francesca Jandasek and Dan Istrate. Tickets $22-$37. About one hour. Presented through March 30 by the Ambassador Theater at Flashpoint’s Mead Theater Lab, 916 G Street, NW. Visit www.aticc.org.