Friday, August 29, 2008
Alcoholism, drug abuse and incest are the issues faced in “August: Osage County,” a Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize winning play coming to campus on Sept. 1.
Paul Stephen Lim, professor of English and founder of the English Alternative Theatre, said the play featured a dysfunctional family that students and the community could identify with.
“The stories that are told are fairly universal,” Lim said.
Cast member Roberta Gingerich said the play focused on one woman’s relationship with her three adult daughters. She said all of the characters in the play struggled with problems such as alcoholism, drug abuse and incest.
“They are not the pretty issues of our society,” Gingerich said.
The English Alternative Theatre will present the play in a new way: as a concert reading.
Lim said concert readings were unique because they helped bring works of literature and theatre to a broad audience without the use of a full set, such as scenery, or costumes.
“It’s like letting the words jump off the page,” Lim said.
With a concert reading, the actors generally hold their scripts and sometimes remain seated on stage until their scene begins.
Jim Carothers, professor of English and cast member, said the biggest challenge of a concert reading was bringing the story to life for the audience. He said it helped the performers to imagine they were performing a radio drama because the tone of their voices carried the emotion of the play.
Amy Devitt, professor of English and cast member, said actors should know the play thoroughly for a concert reading so they could focus on interacting with the other actors.
“It’s a challenge to just interact with your voice and not your body,” Devitt said
University faculty, retired faculty, alumni and local actors will make up the production’s cast. Many of the actors have performed together before.
Lim said it helped for the actors to be familiar with each other because it would be easier for them to find the chemistry needed to play a family.
He said it would also be helpful since they had such a short time to rehearse before the reading. The cast will begin rehearsals on Saturday.
“I know what they’re capable of and they know how I work so we can talk in a kind of shorthand,” Lim said.
Lim said the majority of new American plays are limited to five or six cast members and a small set because of the cost. “August: Osage County” is unique because it calls for a three-story set with an attic and 13 cast members.
The English Alternative Theatre presents concert readings of current plays free of charge every Labor Day. Lim said it made theatre affordable for KU students.
The concert reading will take place at 7:30 p.m. on Monday at the Lawrence Arts Center.
— —Edited by Brieun Scott
Who’s Who: Paul Lim
English professor and playwright runs club for students to write and perform ...
Paul Lim’s last act: playwriting in retirement
Playwriting professor and founder of English Alternative Theatre has decided to focus ...
Playwrights compete in own Final Four
Four student plays will be performed at the English Alternative Theatre in ...
Theater group to stage final performance
The nationally recognized English Alternative Theater will close its curtains after founder, ...
Rumors are wrong; ‘Jocasta’ clothes stay on
KU play looks at disappearance
A KU graduate student's play about a Linwood high school senior who ...
Festival chooses three KU female playwrights
Ketchup makes everything better, even maggot-riddled World War II rations, says one ...
Award named after English professor
Paul Stephen Lim is also a playwright and the award will honor ...
Student actors perform in ‘Macbeth’
Months of preparation, which began with auditions in August, culminate in tonight’s ...
University puts on student-directed play
Tennessee Williams’ one-act play “Auto-da-fe” will run Thursday and Friday night in ...
University Theatre to feature undergraduate plays
Two student productions kick off this weekend in University Theatre’s unique undergraduate ...
Mysteries on campus
Play addresses both sides of an issue
Tonight the University Theatre will perform "Keely and Du," a play that ...
Opera opens on campus
The production premiered on Thursday and will continue until Feb. 2.
Actor Mandy Patinkin to appear at University ...
Puppets bring fairy tale to life
The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People will perform “The King ...
"Guys and Dolls" opens on campus
Proceeds from the May 5 performance will go to the Douglas County ...
Spitfire Grill gives musical adult twist
The University’s summer play contains adult content, yet has an emotional response.
Symphony Orchestra plays overseas to save festival
Music students intervened in a failing German festival.
Department of theatre diversifies
A new student organization will address the issue of race in its ...
Professor says call to stage was call ...
Dennis Christilles, a professor in the department of theatre and film, says ...
Cast of 'Summer and Smoke' explain passion ...
The Tennessee Williams play is more than 60 years old, but contains ...
KU Theater members sing and act in ...
The opera takes place in the early 20th century and depicts relationships ...
Actors vie to become beauty queens in ...
The Kansas Summer Theatre's musical production 'Pagent' opens Friday.
University Summer Theatre promotes women in theater
This summer’s plays were written and directed by women and include all-female ...
French play highlights couples’ troubles
Show written in 1907 relies on timing, physical activity and relevant relationship ...
Play offers relevant themes for students’ today
On Wednesday the English Alternative Theater began performances of Sophocles’ tragic play ...
Play illustrates sisters' complex relationship
The University Theatre's play, "The Maids," portrayed the relationship between sisters, which ...
'Vagina Monologues' will aid domestic abuse victims
Although cast members are a bit nervous for their parents' reactions to ...
Theater graduates make stand out performances in ...
Local theatres give actors, writers and even directors, an outlet for creativity ...
Dramas portray parents’ first meetings
The English Alternative Theater’s one-acts performance and writing competition takes place today, ...
Student director makes KU stage debut with ...
One-act plays present unique challenge for first appearance.
Play explores race, gender, sexuality
This weekend, a Multicultural Theater Initiative production
KUlture: October 26, 2007
KUlture: Oct. 26 For more than 142 years, Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts ...
Ireland theater company to visit campus
The Mangiare Theatre Company, based out of Ireland, is hosting a three-day ...
Junior Whitney Rowland competes in playwright competition ...
Rowland’s plays have been performed in Lawrence.
Rock Chalk rehearsals begin
Students began rehearsals for the 59th annual revue over the weekend. Rehearsals ...
Unique Shakespeare production to be performed
The department of theatre will preform ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ in the ...
KU Theater presents ‘Translations’
The KU Theater program continues the celebration of 50 years at Murphy ...
"South Pacific" stuns at the Lied Center
Tony award-winning “South Pacific” came to the Lied Center last night to ...
From left: Kimberlee Hinkle, Libby Johnson and Hannah ...
1 comment
Kansas Jayhawk fans hold aloft a reproduction of ...
2 comments
Erin Saupe, a Ph.D. student from St. Cloud, ...
1 comment
0 comments
Armed robbers continue to threaten.
3 comments
Comments
EAT performs play in a “new way”
I am confused. I think this is just a staged reading, which isn't new, and when I took a class with Lim, he often encouraged us to attend when they were put on.
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID