Theatre Vertigo https://theatrevertigo.org Sat, 30 Jan 2021 02:57:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.2 https://theatrevertigo.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/cropped-favicon512px-32x32.png Theatre Vertigo https://theatrevertigo.org 32 32 Fertile Ground 2021 Virtual!!!! https://theatrevertigo.org/2021/01/29/fertile-ground-2021-virtual/ Sat, 30 Jan 2021 02:55:03 +0000 https://theatrevertigo.org/?p=1824
]]>
The Shoebox https://theatrevertigo.org/2020/11/12/the-shoebox/ Fri, 13 Nov 2020 02:03:16 +0000 https://theatrevertigo.org/?p=1744

The Shoebox Theater

The Shoebox

Dear Portland Theater Community,
This has been an unprecedented year. This is a time when we are all soul searching - what does it mean to be an artist, a citizen, an arts community?
Theatre Vertigo has been no exception to the times we live in and we have been making tough choices like all small arts organizations. As a consequence we have made the strategic decision to let go of The ShoeBox.
We have been so grateful to call this theater a home for the past seven years. The artists we have been able to support and give voice to as managers of the space and as artistic producers continue to inspire us every day. We would like to honor the artists who have given their time, energy, and hearts to the Shoebox.
The ensemble extends a deep thank you to everyone who has supported us along the way. We are looking forward and we are very excited about what the future holds for Theatre Vertigo and for our community.
With love and gratitude,
The Theatre Vertigo Ensemble
]]>
Peace, Aristophanes https://theatrevertigo.org/2020/10/29/peace-aristophanes/ Thu, 29 Oct 2020 08:04:38 +0000 https://theatrevertigo.org/?p=1675

Peace, Aristophanes

Like many small theatre companies around the world, we have toyed with online presentations and readings.

Here is our presentation of Aristophanes' Peace.

Featuring
Jacquelle Davis
Tom Mounsey
Devon Roberts
Heath Hyun Houghton
Kaia Hillier
and Special Guest Cassie Greer

]]>
NW Theatre Workshop https://theatrevertigo.org/2020/09/11/nw-theatre-workshop/ Fri, 11 Sep 2020 17:27:11 +0000 https://theatrevertigo.org/?p=1564

Bad Citizen: Parts I & II

Bad Citizen: Part I – Live, Interactive Performance – Online

September 18, 2020 – September 19, 2020

Bad Citizen, a new collaboration of Northwest Theatre Workshop and Theatre Vertigo, is a festival of eight new, short plays, which explore the challenge of being a citizen in a divided society. The first four plays will be presented online September 18-19, 2020, and the second four plays will be presented online October 9-10, 2020. Each live performance includes a post-show conversation with cast, crew and audience. Bad Citizen, a new collaboration of Northwest Theatre Workshop and Theatre Vertigo, confronts the challenges of being a citizen in a divided society in a festival of eight new short plays.

As a prologue, NWTW offers a provocative, interconnected article series entitled, “Can Democracy Survive Without Theater?” The series examines theater’s role in democracy through personal essay.

Bad Citizen marshals the forces of both Northwest Theatre Workshop and Theatre Vertigo to enlist the power of theater in dealing with important issues that reflect our world and time. Their combined years of experience developing and presenting new work make this collaboration an ideal one in dealing with such a challenging subject.
Get your tickets here: https://www.nwtw.org/events/
 
Bad Citizen: Part II – Live, Interactive Performance – Online
October 9, 2020 – October 10, 2020

Bad Citizen, a new collaboration of Northwest Theatre Workshop and Theatre Vertigo, is a festival of eight new, short plays, which explore the challenge of being a citizen in a divided society. The first four plays will be presented online September 18-19, 2020, and the second four plays will be presented online October 9-10, 2020. Each live performance includes a post-show conversation with cast, crew and audience. Bad Citizen, a new collaboration of Northwest Theatre Workshop and Theatre Vertigo, confronts the challenges of being a citizen in a divided society in a festival of eight new short plays.

As a prologue, NWTW offers a provocative, interconnected article series entitled, “Can Democracy Survive Without Theater?” The series examines theater’s role in democracy through personal essay.

Bad Citizen marshals the forces of both Northwest Theatre Workshop and Theatre Vertigo to enlist the power of theater in dealing with important issues that reflect our world and time. Their combined years of experience developing and presenting new work make this collaboration an ideal one in dealing with such a challenging subject.
Get your tickets here: https://www.nwtw.org/events/
]]>
Bad Citizen https://theatrevertigo.org/2020/08/29/bad-citizen/ Sat, 29 Aug 2020 14:05:21 +0000 https://theatrevertigo.org/?p=1289

Bad Citizen

Citizenship in divided society explored in articles, showcase of new plays
Northwest Theatre Workshop, Theatre Vertigo team to present Bad Citizen project
Bad Citizen, a new collaboration of Northwest Theatre Workshop and Theatre Vertigo, confronts the challenges of being a citizen in a divided society. The companies will present eight new short plays in May inspired by the subject, and, as a prologue, they are publishing an interconnected article series with the provocative title, “Can Democracy Survive Without Theater?” The series features personal essays on theatrical experiences and their capacity to transform perspectives and create constructive dialogue. “We hope to demonstrate theater is the place that can ignite democratic discourse and deepen connections to others,” says Ciji Guerin, NWTW Producing Artistic Director. NWTW and Theatre Vertigo combine years of experience developing and presenting new work dealing with challenging subjects, she adds. “We bring complementary skills, a compatible outlook, and a joint belief in the power and responsibilities of theater to address the difficult issues of our day.” Director Tamara Carroll, with teaching and directing accolades across Portland, has agreed to helm the ensemble of Vertigo actors for the project. The showcase will conclude with a panel-led audience discussion about what citizenship means today and how these plays might help people to find common ground and bridge divides. Bad Citizen will marshal the forces of both NWTW and Theatre Vertigo to enlist the power of theater in dealing with important issues that reflect our world and time, Guerin says. “Oregon has a vibrant corps of writers, actors, directors, and producers and a growing cohort of theater lovers who are passionate about new work. This project will serve them all, at the same time it serves our mission to empower live theater as an active and timely cultural force.”

Articles: https://www.nwtw.org/series/can-democracy-survive-without-theater/

]]>
A Map of Virtue – Conversation with Erin Courtney https://theatrevertigo.org/2018/10/09/a-map-of-virtue-conversation-with-erin-courtney/ Tue, 09 Oct 2018 19:49:21 +0000 https://theatrevertigo.org/?p=843

Circular Experiences

Last week Vertigo company member, and A Map of Virtue director Emilie Landmann, had the chance to spend some time chatting with the playwright, Erin Courtney. Erin's play is filled with sparse stage directions and many unanswered questions, creating an aura of mystery surrounding the play. We wanted to dive a bit deeper into how the play was conceived, and what inspired such a unique piece.

!Minor Spoiler Ahead!


 EL: It's so hard describing this play to people without giving anything away. Cast member Paige Rogers compared it to "Love Actually," the way that it starts out with people meeting, then it turns to horror. And I love that surprise, that change.

EC: That was my goal, that it resembles something else at the beginning and that the tone of the play changes. Before the first production, there was no indication in any of the press material about any kind of horror or violence. So people were really shocked and scared.

EL: When you started writing it, it was part of a writing retreat with 13 other playwrights...

EC: Actually, the writer's retreat was separate from 13P, though some of the playwrights were on the retreat. The retreat was organized though Pataphysics and it was Erik Ehn who ran it. We were out in the woods, we were silent, and it was really scary. That's where I started the play, then a few years later we formed 13P and then when it was time to pick which play I wanted to be the artistic director of for my 13P slot, I thought, A Map of Virtue would be the hardest play. It would be the hardest to get produced, the hardest to explore, It's the most adventurous play of mine, so I thought, "that's the play I should do."  It's the most challenging.

EL: Yeah, it is!

EC: Have fun! [laughs]

"...he had us all set an alarm or just wake up in the middle of the night, get out of bed, write for about an hour..."


EL
: How did you start writing the play?

EC: I started with those monologues at the beginning and I didn't yet know that they were going to be kidnapped, then Erik Ehn had us do this wonderful thing- and I would recommend this to any writer- he had us all set an alarm or just wake up in the middle of the night, get out of bed, write for about an hour, then go back to sleep. So I was in this creaky old house in the middle of the night, half asleep and using dream logic, I started to write the part about the headmaster and the bird and the captivity. I went back to sleep and read it in the morning and I was like, "Oh, I guess this play is going to go to a darker place." That's how that came about.

EL: Do you have a favorite type of bird? Since there is a big theme of birds in the show.

EC: A meadowlark, of course!

EL: Was there any reason for the birds as a recurring image in the play?

EC: I do love birds. I think they're beautiful, when they're flying they're so beautiful. But I'm interested in birds because of the way we put so much symbolism on them as these figures of freedom and perspective. They have a "bird's-eye view" and they can fly above us. But the life of a bird, I imagine, is very challenging. They're just trying to stay alive like all other creatures. I like how birds are so elegant and beautiful, as humans we attach so much poetic significance to them, but that poetic significance we attach to them may not be what their lived experience is...

EL: Tattoos are a big plot point. Do you have any and do they have any meaning?

EC: I do have quite a few tattoos, I love tattoos. I’m writing a musical right now with Max Vernon called “The Tattooed Lady” that’s about the original tattooed ladies in sideshows at the turn of the century. As for significance, at the time I wrote “A Map of Virtue” I did have a swallow, a bluebird [laughs], on my back though, not on my chest. And it’s holding two cherries and it has a little star underneath it. So… the bluebird/swallow on my back is- I think I was turning 40 and it was going to be a symbol of committing to creative progress for myself, and then the little cherries are my two sons, and the little yellow star is my husband. So it was like, how to balance having a creative life and be courageous and forward moving and also, you know, have a family.

EL: That’s beautiful!

EC: Aw, thanks! And then, when I was in tech for “A Map of Virtue” in New York, I got a giant sugar skull on my arm, practically a sleeve, with these flowers… [laughs] So I really stepped it up.

“A great love carries within it a mourning for love.”
-Edmond Jabès, The Book of Questions


EL
: Were there any pieces of media, like films or books, that you drew inspiration from after you got your first inklings for the show?

EC: The main source of inspiration was also on that writing retreat. Eric Ehn asked each of us to memorize a poem, in silence, the first night.  He had each of us take an envelope and each of us had a different poem in the envelope. Mine was from Edmond Jabès, who’s an Egyptian poet. It’s an excerpt from a longer poem he wrote, called “A Book of Questions,” and it’s a post-holocaust poem. It’s about how people survive trauma and tragedy, and how language survives, and how does love survive. There are certain images in that poem that filtered into the play.

EL: Do you have any inspiration for the horror aspects of the play?

EC: Probably the show that scared me the most was the original “Twin Peaks,” in that way where evil is not explained. And this is true in the world, I think. I think really violent people, sociopaths, and psychopaths, cannot be understood. They’re operating outside of societal norms in such a way, their logic is inexplicable. It's scarier and more realistic to not explain why.

Michael J. Anderson as The Man from Another Place in Twin Peaks

EL: Do you have a favorite virtue?

EC: Well, the one that just popped into my head is curiosity. I think that’s a life-long virtue that helps you stay engaged and interested in the world.
EL: Are there any moments in the show that you’re the most attached to, that you love the most?

EC: I love towards the end when Mark and Victor describe how they met. I like those two monologues.

EL: They’re very sweet.

EC: And when that sweetness comes in the play is just really important to me.

EL: That’s one thing that I really enjoy about this play is how it ranges from comedy to horror. I would love to hear about that juxtaposition between the two.

EC: I think the kind of comedy that I like in films and in theater and in my life is that kind of awkward comedy and you’re thinking “maybe I shouldn’t be laughing,” not because it’s politically incorrect, but because it’s so dark [laughs]. And so, I like that kind of comedy and how we tend to use comedy when we are in pain, and how we use comedy to alleviate suffering. And then I also like comedy that’s about social anxiety and the way it’s sometimes really awkward to be a human.

"I would like it if people would leave the theater questioning their own assumptions."


EL
: How would you describe your voice as a playwright?

EC: One thing that I’m interested in is juxtapositions and how- it’s sort of related to what you were saying about comedy, about how when divergent images or emotions are placed right next to each other there is an electricity or emotion that comes from the juxtaposition.

EL: What do you want audiences to walk with from any production of “A Map of Virtue?”

EC: I think a few things… I would like it if people would leave the theater questioning their own assumptions. Also thinking about responsibility and how are we responsible for each other. And I hope people will reflect on cycles of violence, the presence of circular experiences in life and also the danger of repeating things without knowing you’re doing it.


A Map of Virtue open October 19th at The Shoebox Theatre and runs through November 17th. Be sure to book your tickets!

]]>