Staged readings from the works of Sam Shepard
By Alec Clayton
Photo of Company, left to right: Jeff Salazar, Deya Ozburn, Jason Sharp, Meleesa Wyatt, Marilyn Bennett, Mark Peterson, and Peter Pendras, photo courtesy Marilyn Bennett |
Paradise
Motel is Toy Boat Theatre’s staged
readings from Sam Shepard's plays, short stories, poems, essays, journals and
interviews with actors Marilyn Bennett, Mark Peterson, Deya Ozburn, Jeff
Salazar, Jason Sharp and Meleesa Wyatt. Longtime Northwest guitarist and recording
artist, Peter Pendras will accompany the performance.
“In college I did an independent study course
on Sam Shepard and discovered that his plays, like August Wilson’s, gave the
world an honest glimpse into an American perspective of American Life,”
Peterson said. He goes on to say That Bennett’s selections give
audiences “a beautiful tribute
to Sam Shepard's effect on her work and I think in the spirit of Mr. Shepard's storytelling.”
Shepard
is an iconic American playwright and Oscar-nominated film actor who died July
27, 2017 of complications from ALS or Lou Gherig's Disease.
Born
in Fort Sheridan, Illinois in 1943 to an army officer, Shepard grew up on a
ranch in California and went to college in Texas. He first came to national
notice during the 1960s, winning three OBIE Awards for three short plays. His
greatest theatrical accomplishment was his 1979 full-length play, Buried
Child, about a dysfunctional family with a terrible years-old secret, for
which he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for drama. He also wrote screen plays,
directed for stage and screen, and was nominated for an OSCAR for his role as
Chuck Yeager in The Right Stuff.
Shepard's
cannon of plays and writings offers a dark and gritty portrait of the American
family. In plain, often profane language, his characters argue, abandon, return
after years away, love hard and fight harder. Many of his works are funny, his
characters given to high expectations and very low results.
“I grew up on Shepard's writings, and wanted to offer
some sort of homage to him and his incredible, unique writing, Bennett said. “I
am six years younger than Sam Shepard, and became aware of his work during my
college days in the UW School of Drama. While a graduate student in Seattle, I
performed at a Capitol Hill theatre in Shepard's early one-act play, the Cajun
thriller Back Bog Beast Bait with
fellow Paradise Motel company member, Meleesa Wyatt. I played
the Cajun conjurer, Gris Gris, miming recorded music on a fiddle as I roared
around the stage spouting beast prophecy and harassing those who feared his
coming. Needless to say, it was a blast and I was hooked.
“I began reading anything of Shepard's I could
find, and some years later, at University of San Diego, I directed his darkly
humorous family drama A Lie of the Mind.
I continued to read his writings: plays, prose, poetry, reflections, musings. I
was less enamored of his film work, but always found him a looker. Somehow, his
unique way of writing about and describing a dusty, flat, itinerant and violent
American West, and his long estrangement from his father, have always moved me.
And I am struck by the vulnerability of his fear of flying. His openness about
the progression of his ALS in Spy of
the First Person is devastating.
The reading includes pieces from many of his
non-theatre writings, including selections from Motel Chronicles and Cruising
Paradise, Hawk Moon, Two
Prospectors, The One Inside, Rolling Thunder Log Book and
his last work, Spy of the First
Person. Play excerpts include Back Bog Beast Bait, Curse of the
Starving Class, Buried Child, A Lie of the Mind, Fool for Love, True West, and
Sympatico.
"I'm a Shepard
newbie,” said Ozburn. “Never having been particularly drawn to the genre in
which he writes (that ‘dusty, flat, itinerant, violent American West,’ as
Marilyn describes it). Working with Toy Boat and Marilyn always expands my
horizons though, and I jumped at the change to have an excuse to dive in and
explore the sampling of Shepard's works that she had curated into this
performance reading. More than his plays, I'd say I've been drawn to his
poetry, writings on art, and his last work, Spy
of the First Person. I'm a big fan of his dry humor—at how un-precious he
is about his ‘process’ as a writer and an actor; the ridiculous situations
artists find themselves in to do what they do for an outcome at any cost.
Countering that with Spy at the end
of his life—absolutely open to the humility of losing with the fascination of
character study equal to one of his plays. He leaves you in a place of very
specified, detailed loss of things you take for granted. He leaves you with a
sense of the importance of family, and what lives on after."
This
reading contains adult themes and language; suitable for mature teens and
adults. It is a minimally staged
reading by six actors, underscored with American country-rock guitar by Peter
Pendras. Plays about 80 minutes, followed by wine.
Paradise Motel 8 p.m. Oct. 12 and 13, King's Books. 218
St. Helens Avenue, Tacoma, WA, $5.
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