Archive of pre-production information and photos 2007-2016, Humboldt State University Theatre, Film and Dance Performances in Arcata, California.
Showing posts with label Eugene Stickland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eugene Stickland. Show all posts
Monday, December 12, 2011
December 2011: SOME ASSEMBLY REQUIRED
How does a crazed family reunite to celebrate Christmas?
SOME ASSEMBLY REQUIRED
a holiday human comedy by Eugene Stickland at Gist Hall Theatre Thursdays through Saturdays December 1-3, 8-10 at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday December 11 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $10/$8 with a limited number of free seats to HSU students at each performance, from HSU Box Office (826-3928) or at the door. Directed by Rae Robison, produced by HSU Department of Theatre, Film & Dance.
Media Previews: lead story at Humboldt State Now, Tri-City Weekly, The Lumberjack, Arcata Eye, North Coast Journal, Humboldt Beacon.
Review: Humboldt Beacon.
Labels:
2011-12,
Eugene Stickland,
Some Assembly Required
Sunday, November 20, 2011
How does a crazed family reunite to celebrate Christmas? This play’s title suggests an answer: Some Assembly Required.
“It’s hilarious but it’s also heartfelt,” said director Rae Robison. “When these grown-up children return to the nest for Christmas, audiences can laugh while they compare the craziness of this family’s holidays to their own.”
“It’s hilarious but it’s also heartfelt,” said director Rae Robison. “When these grown-up children return to the nest for Christmas, audiences can laugh while they compare the craziness of this family’s holidays to their own.”
Labels:
2011-12,
Eugene Stickland,
Some Assembly Required
Walter (Kyle Handziak) is the oldest son, who disappointed his father by becoming an insurance adjuster instead of following in his footsteps in the barbed wire business. Walter has wandered home to avoid a Christmas Eve confrontation with his unhappy wife.
He finds his younger brother Gordon (Shea King) already there, the son with unrealized “potential” who is now slurping some unusual eggnog, cradling his childhood BB gun and turning the basement into a foxhole.
He finds his younger brother Gordon (Shea King) already there, the son with unrealized “potential” who is now slurping some unusual eggnog, cradling his childhood BB gun and turning the basement into a foxhole.
Labels:
2011-12,
Eugene Stickland,
Some Assembly Required
They are soon joined by Stacy (Karianne Nelson,) the middle child, now a refugee from an unnamed institution. She will explain why she mutilated her Barbie dolls. While she helps trim the Christmas tree with barbed wire.
Labels:
2011-12,
Eugene Stickland,
Some Assembly Required
Battered by experience that has exposed their personal flaws and doomed their dreams, they slowly allow hope back in, and move fitfully towards improvising a Christmas together, complete with turkey dinner. Well, more like a big chicken.
Labels:
2011-12,
Eugene Stickland,
Some Assembly Required
SOME ASSEMBLY REQUIRED: Our Cast
Dad: Evan Needham
Mother: Romy Clugston
Walter: Kyle Handziak
Gordon: Shea King
Stacy: Karianne Nelson
Mother: Romy Clugston
Walter: Kyle Handziak
Gordon: Shea King
Stacy: Karianne Nelson
Labels:
2011-12,
Eugene Stickland,
Some Assembly Required
SOME ASSEMBLY REQUIRED: Our Production
Producer: Margaret Thomas Kelso
Scenic Design: Jayson Mohatt
Costume and Makeup
Design: Erica Fromdahl
Lighting Design: Telfer James Reynolds
Properties Design: Katie Dawson
Sound Design: Ciera DeSouza
Stage Manager: Colleen Lacy
Asst. Director: Hunter Hutchins
Asst. Stage Managers: Kyle Ryan, Josephine Villegas
Sound Board Operator: Santiago Menjivar
Light Board Operator: JuanCarlos Contreas
Wardrobe & Makeup: Kaila Thomas
House Manager: Christopher Joe
Program: Debra Ryerson
Photography: Kellie Brown
Publicity/blog copy & design: Bill Kowinski
Labels:
2011-12,
Eugene Stickland,
Some Assembly Required
SOME ASSEMBLY REQUIRED: The Playwright and the Play
Eugene Stickland grew up in Regina in the province of Saskatchewan, Canada, and studied English at the University of Regina before earning an MFA in playwriting at York University in Toronto. He wrote plays for a theatre company in Toronto before moving to Calgary in the province of Alberta in western Canada in 1994, where he became playwright in residence at the Alberta Theatre Projects.
Shortly after he arrived in Calgary he was introduced at a local event by an emcee who mispronounced his name, and said “he’s a play writer, whatever that is, and he works at a place called Albert Theatre Projects, which I’ve never heard of.” An angry Stickland vowed to that audience, “I’m going to change this. By the time I’m done here you’re going to know how to spell my name and you’re going to know what a ‘play writer’ does, and you’re going to know that there’s theatre that happens in Calgary.”
Ten years and six plays later, he was an award-winning playwright, with productions throughout Canada, and his work translated into French and Russian and produced in Istanbul.
Some Assembly Required was the first of those plays, and became his best known and most widely produced. It was a finalist for the prestigious Canadian Governor General’s Literary Award.
Stickland actually began writing Some Assembly Required between his time in Toronto and Calgary, when he returned home briefly to Regina. He heard a story there about someone whose brother greeted his return home for a Christmas visit by attacking him with a hockey stick. That inspired him to write one scene, which he combined with his own brother’s arcane system for making sure his record albums got equal play so they would wear evenly. Though there's no hockey stick attack, elements of these first scenes remain in the play.
Then a chance meeting with Bob White, an Artistic Associate at Alberta Theatre Projects, led to an invitation to write a Christmas play for ATP. After a couple of workshops and rewrites, and with the help of White and director Don Kugler, the play was readied for production at the 1994 playRites. “In many ways the success of the play changed my life,” Stickland wrote in his introduction to the 2002 published version.
“He writes about people who are recognizable and relatable,” Bob White commented recently. “His characters have powerful emotions.”
But even though Some Assembly Required has had over 30 productions, few of them have been in the U.S. One was at the University of Central Missouri in 2004, with costumes designed by Rae Robison. Stickland came to the show and talked to the students in the production, and Robison met him. Now as director of Some Assembly Required at HSU, she’s using what she learned then.
“He’s an incredibly hilarious guy,” she recalls. “He came and saw the show, and it was really interesting to hear him talk about it. That production took a fairly absurdist approach—the show was set in a doll house under a giant tree. He appreciated what they did, but he talked about the real people and real events that the play was based on in various ways. He stressed the reality behind the absurdity, and so that’s how we’re approaching it here. We started with an image of a snow globe, the kind with a scene inside that you shake up to make it snow. We want to present a real family in this bubble. We don’t know much about them outside this house, but we get to see them deal with their lives and each other inside this bubble.”
Stickland has a more recent success with his play Queen Lear, and in October he was one of ten playwrights in residence at the Stratford Ontario Shakespeare Festival for a week’s retreat where he worked on his newest play, Those White Things in the Ocean. Apart from writing plays, Stickland has been a newspaper arts and entertainment columnist, and is a poet and spoken word artist.
Shortly after he arrived in Calgary he was introduced at a local event by an emcee who mispronounced his name, and said “he’s a play writer, whatever that is, and he works at a place called Albert Theatre Projects, which I’ve never heard of.” An angry Stickland vowed to that audience, “I’m going to change this. By the time I’m done here you’re going to know how to spell my name and you’re going to know what a ‘play writer’ does, and you’re going to know that there’s theatre that happens in Calgary.”
Ten years and six plays later, he was an award-winning playwright, with productions throughout Canada, and his work translated into French and Russian and produced in Istanbul.
Some Assembly Required was the first of those plays, and became his best known and most widely produced. It was a finalist for the prestigious Canadian Governor General’s Literary Award.
Stickland actually began writing Some Assembly Required between his time in Toronto and Calgary, when he returned home briefly to Regina. He heard a story there about someone whose brother greeted his return home for a Christmas visit by attacking him with a hockey stick. That inspired him to write one scene, which he combined with his own brother’s arcane system for making sure his record albums got equal play so they would wear evenly. Though there's no hockey stick attack, elements of these first scenes remain in the play.
Then a chance meeting with Bob White, an Artistic Associate at Alberta Theatre Projects, led to an invitation to write a Christmas play for ATP. After a couple of workshops and rewrites, and with the help of White and director Don Kugler, the play was readied for production at the 1994 playRites. “In many ways the success of the play changed my life,” Stickland wrote in his introduction to the 2002 published version.
“He writes about people who are recognizable and relatable,” Bob White commented recently. “His characters have powerful emotions.”
But even though Some Assembly Required has had over 30 productions, few of them have been in the U.S. One was at the University of Central Missouri in 2004, with costumes designed by Rae Robison. Stickland came to the show and talked to the students in the production, and Robison met him. Now as director of Some Assembly Required at HSU, she’s using what she learned then.
“He’s an incredibly hilarious guy,” she recalls. “He came and saw the show, and it was really interesting to hear him talk about it. That production took a fairly absurdist approach—the show was set in a doll house under a giant tree. He appreciated what they did, but he talked about the real people and real events that the play was based on in various ways. He stressed the reality behind the absurdity, and so that’s how we’re approaching it here. We started with an image of a snow globe, the kind with a scene inside that you shake up to make it snow. We want to present a real family in this bubble. We don’t know much about them outside this house, but we get to see them deal with their lives and each other inside this bubble.”
Stickland has a more recent success with his play Queen Lear, and in October he was one of ten playwrights in residence at the Stratford Ontario Shakespeare Festival for a week’s retreat where he worked on his newest play, Those White Things in the Ocean. Apart from writing plays, Stickland has been a newspaper arts and entertainment columnist, and is a poet and spoken word artist.
Labels:
2011-12,
Eugene Stickland,
Some Assembly Required
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