The reviews of Kate Dobbs Ariail, Belem Destefani, Sarah Ewald, Sylvia Pfeiffenberger, Adam Sobsey, Zack Smith, Megan Stein and Byron Woods were consulted for this article.
It's a question fit for the math part of some strange GRE test for the region's performing arts:
Unleash eight Indy critics on at least 130 theater productions over 345 days. Poll them and pore over their written findings to arrive at a preliminary group of 195 individual nominations over 15 categories. Then refine that set to a final list that effectively conveys the very best of what they saw. (Time limit: one week.)
Ready? Begin.
Unless otherwise mentioned, shows are listed in chronological order.
When the third playwright we interviewed kvetched about what a shell game "play development" can be, we knew director Joseph Megel was providing special assistance to dramatists sharpening their works for stage. But when gifted student and professional actors give brand new works their voice—and the group then solicits the audience's most thoughtful responses in after-show skull sessions—performers, public and creators ultimately get a lot more than the (free) price of admission from the process. If you want in on the last two presentations in the spring, go to eda.unc.edu/programs/theprocessseries.
You don't need deconstruction theory coursework to get how contingent the meanings of political events are. A TV remote control that flips between Fox, MSNBC and Comedy Central will do the trick. As Tectonic Theater Project members realized that parts of our culture were rewriting the death of Matthew Shepard, the creators of The Laramie Project got curious—and returned to Wyoming to see what its people thought now. Joining more than 150 theater companies worldwide, Burning Coal helped Tectonic premiere a new epilogue to the project in an all-star staged reading on Oct. 12. That sobering update spoke to large-scale cultural progress. It also candidly admitted the true difficulty of quantifying the amount of hatred that still remains. Ten Years Later had the courage to remind everyone how the dark side got its name to begin with: because sometimes it's hard to see.
Honorable Mention:
The clear winner: Schonfeld's courageous rock and soulful song-cycle sensitively articulated a series of moments in a divorce, largely from the husband's point of view. What could have been a bad SNL sketch is a prismatic set of rocking, thoughtful, raging, aching—but ultimately joyous—confessions: the perfect thing to play after an Aimee Mann CD to get the other point of view. Waken, Ford and Johnson's atmospheric washes conveyed the darkness and light of Hungry Ghost.
It's impossible to imagine Dog without the band Kate Ariail said gave "part of its life force," or Jersey Boys without the nonstop musical pulse that propels us through the show. If we criticized some of Pickett's substitutions in Nicholas Nickleby, there's no denying her achievements with this cast of 25, a number of whom served as instrumentalists before the show was over.
Honorable Mention:
Trujillo's razor-sharp moves sold the touring show about The Four Seasons. Ariail praised Javits' "excellent dance sequences" in April's Pride, before I applauded Formato's toothsome zombie/ beach dance fusion in October.
Wrap 'em up, send 'em home: clear superlatives in all areas of design for PlayMakers' six-hour-plus spectacle.
It's as if Bigsby clothed Place's archetypal figures in dreams that could suddenly change: Her fascinating garments transformed—literally—as some characters wore them. Maynard's sometimes subtle fusion of Asian and European garb impressed, before McIlwee's tour de force of 18th-century costumery in Amadeus.
Three entries recognized achievements in puppetry: If we had trouble decrypting the plot of Tori Ralston and Donovan Zimmerman's Hungry Ghost, we easily recognized the art in the haunted creatures we encountered. Later in the year, Zimmerman teamed up with Paperhand partner Jan Burger for their company's annual end-of-summer pageant, this year's The Living Sea of Memory. Finally, Zack Smith noted the puppetry in Exit the King created "an atmosphere Tim Burton would envy."
Honorable Mention:
Hamilton placed the ancient dust and cracked linoleum of a run-down taxi stand in Deep Dish's space. In a Hot Summer Nights show, Bernier and Marini's set pieces and projections quickly drifted among places in the heart. Rebecca Buck's forbidding dreamscape combined sand, brick, columns and barbed wire in Flee This Place, and Intemann created an urbane poolside setting in the same theater, two months later, for Much Ado About Nothing.
In interviews, playwright Howard Craft credited a number of discoveries he made while writing Caleb to the dramaturge and former Duke student who worked with him.
Honorable Mention:
Little Green Pig Theatrical Concern served two potent dystopias—the vivid anti-Sartrean underworld Ariail witnessed in February and Justice's grimly comic riff on al-Qaida in July. Cortese searched the generations of a family of Argentine dissidents for her own lost kin in this tender but clear-eyed act of political and personal remembering.
Midsummer, Casarino took 10 witty minutes to convince Bel Destefani of what a Mamet collaboration with Dr. Seuss would sound like. In August, an openly moved audience wept at the potent metaphor embodied in Living Sea's "Memory" sequence.
Directors have to see the world of the work before the audiences—or the actors—get there. Sylvia Pfeiffenberger praised Appel's nuanced interpretation that "let [Menagerie] breathe, unlocking its full dimensions like the prisms in ... Laura's treasured glass animals," while Ariail lauded Marks' "subtlety, musicality and sense for mercurial timing" in Hell. Matthews' August adventures probed a different underworld after helping four prep school brats humanize one another in R&J. Ewart's enviable vision invoked another time—and ancestors bearing disturbing similarities to us. Frellick and Hunter-Williams urged regional newcomers and veterans alike to fully inhabit the denizens of different urban business sites. Megel sculpted newbies and pros into a disciplined platoon in Caleb. In Nine Parts of Desire, the very-busy Ranii liberated nine different Iraqi women—in one actor.
Any group of actors can make a scene. These artists created whole worlds for us to navigate and get lost in that inspired audiences to make new discoveries—about our own lives, our own worlds.
Honorable Mention:
Corrections (Dec. 30, 2009; Jan. 3 and Jan. 4, 2010): The text has been corrected to distinguish between Chris Burner and Chris Bernier; see comments below. Also, Basil Twist was not involved with Paperhand Puppet Intervention's The Living Sea of Memory, and Tori Ralston should have been credited as co-designer and -fabricator of Exit the King.
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Wonderful article. However should be noted that under Best Scenic Design it should read Chris BURNER; under Best Ensembles A Dog From Hell it should read Chris BURNER;; Best Supporting it should read Chris BURNER (Fred Ozoki) from the Italian Actress. Thanks for the correction.
It turns out there are two talented theater professionals in the Triangle with similar names.
Chris Bernier co-designed the set for Drift at Hot Summer Nights at the Kennedy, as noted correctly in the story.
However, Mother is correct that the performer in A Dog From Hell and The Italian Actress is Chris Burner.
These two errors were introduced in the editing process; the story has now been corrected. Apologies to all.
@TheaterGoer: No, sound design is it's own category. What production would you have nominated for clear excellence in this field this year?
Glad to see JOhn McIlwee for costuming. BUT what about AMADEUS? Did anyone see it? Certainly the lead actors were much more accomplished. NO mention of them. BLUE was not as rich or difficult as AMADEUS. Yet an actor from BLUE gets honorable mention...wow
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