Tag Archives: solo performance festival

Five Questions With Yana Kesala

Solo Performance Festival #5 continues! Tonight, the lovely and talented Yana Kesala presents her show, The Ukrainian Dentist’s Daughter, based on her own experiences as an immigrant. Tickets are $12 adv/$15 at the door; this show closes May 4.

1. Where did you grow up, and how did you end up where you are now?
I played Ophelia in college and fell in love with my Hamlet. He had grown up in Kirkland and so a friend and I ended up taking a road trip here to check out the area where my crush had grown up. Falling in love with Puget Sound was an unexpected surprise–I just felt at home with the energy in this place as I never had in any of the other places I had lived: Chicago, San Francisco, Boston, and London. Growing up in Chicago I had honestly never thought twice about Seattle: I associated it with grunge music and men in plaid. But here I am–a Greenlake dwelling coffee junkie who works at a fair-trade and organic chocolate factory to fund my theater addiction. Life is grand.

2. Which performance, song, play, movie, painting, or other work of art had the biggest influence on you and why?
Evelyn and the Polka King was a play I saw in the fall of 1993 at the Steppenwolf in the fourth grade. I have absolutely no idea why I loved it so much, and reviews I have looked up for that production rate it as mediocre as best. But man, did I adore it. The music and the jokes, the energy: they just all looked like they were having so much fun! I wanted to play! I grew up with my parents taking me to the Steppenwolf and the Goodman in Chicago, along with museum trips and opera outings.  Being Ukrainian, loving the arts is just in your blood.

3. What skill, talent, or attribute do you most wish you had and why?
I wish I could wear lipstick without eating it all off or it ending up on my teeth.

4. What do you do to make a living? Describe a normal day.
My normal day changes all the time. Right now I’m a tour guide and work in the retail store at Theo Chocolate, the fair-trade organic chocolate factory in Fremont. I work there daytimes four days a week and on my days off from there I assistant teach with Macha Monkey Productions at Hawthorne Elementary in South Seattle: we’re working with 4th and 5th graders to guide them in the writing and production of plays based on civil and labor rights issues.  Free time outside of that lately has been committed to the writing, editing, rehearsing, and promotion of my solo show.  Not all of these activities pay me right now…but it’s spring, and I’m sowing the seeds for a (hopefully!) bountiful harvest in the coming months.

5. Why solo performance? What made you decide to pursue this show in this form?
February of 2009 I toured to Australia with theater simple. We performed multiple shows over nine weeks and I got to see a part of the world I never had before.  I made some great friends that were cut from the same piece of cloth that I am, despite being born and raised 7,000 miles away. I couldn’t leave without knowing that I’d be back someday. I had also been really inspired by all the productions I had seen in Australia and at the Edmonton Fringe in Canada, where I had toured with theater simple the summer before.  The chances that another opportunity for me to travel internationally with a great show and theater were highly unlikely…so I decided to change the odds. Creating my own touring show with just me as writer, director, and performer meant fewer people to pay. Much of it was a business decision. The majority of it, though, sprouted from a desire to create the perfect role for myself.  Every actor can relate to the feeling of constantly trying to be the solution to the problem when you walk into the audition room. In The Ukrainian Dentist’s Daughter, I am the solution: this role was literally written for me and my strengths. Writing this play also prompted me to interview my mother and get all her amazing life stories on paper in a cohesive and shareable way. She’s a cool lady. I like her a lot. I’m super excited for her to see this show inspired by her life.

Five Questions With Matt Smith

SPF #5 coverage continues! Matt Smith is a Partner on the web based Cookus Interruptus, a Communciation Consultant for organizations, and a world class fundraising auctioneer, and in addition to co-managing improv retreats with Rebecca Stockley, his new solo show All My Children, directed by Bret Fetzer, opened Wednesday at Theatre off Jackson and plays tonight and May 3 and 5 (tickets $17).

1. Where did you grow up, and how did you end up where you are now?
I grew up on Capitol Hill in Seattle.  I went to St. Joe’s. How’d I end up here?  A series of miscalculations. Har har. I love Seattle.  I love that that John and Babe and Michael Shepherd are opening The Totem House as a new Red Mill, with Fish & Ships.  When I lived in New York I always told people I could never stay away from Seattle for long. That was before the first vote against public transportation here in the ’70s.

2. Which performance, song, play, movie, painting, or other work of art had the biggest influence on you and why?
The first thing that comes to mind is the film  A Woman Under the Influence.  There’s a scene that made an indelible mark, and I don’t know why.  Peter Falk is on the phone at his construction site trying to talk his wife down, saying “Who loves you, baby?” in the most loving way.  That scene has been cut from the version available on DVD,  I rented the film just so I could see that scene again after 40 years or so, and it was cut out.  It felt like I was watching a film “I” was in, only to discover that I’d been cut out.  Which, of course, has happened.

3. What skill, talent, or attribute do you most wish you had and why?
I wish I was smarter, and stronger.

4. What do you do to make a living? Describe a normal day.
I am a fundraising auctioneer. I talk to people on the phone about their fundraisers.  I go to auction meetings. I walk my dog. I write a little. I ride the ferry, where I play Pac Man, limiting myself to one game per trip. I teach an improv class at Freehold.  I am also a partner with Cookus Interruptus.  I scheme with Cynthia Lair as to how we will change the world and get rich through this web based cooking show / soap opera. I talk to big companies about how the principles of improv, and sometimes they bring me in to tell them more. I rehearse with Bret Fetzer and we eat lunch together.  That’s a particularly  long day.

5. Why solo performance? What made you decide to pursue this show in this form?
No one would work with me… har har…I started out, at age 31, wanting to do stand-up.  I immediately discovered improv, and lost interest in doing stand up. I worked with a big group (Theatre Sports), then a three-person group (Seattle Improv: me, Roberta Maguire, and Ed Sampson) , then just me and Ed for 5 years or so, and after that Bret agreed to direct a story I wanted to do about living in Japan.  People often say, “Oh, it must be so hard to be up there on your own.”  Not true.  It’s much easier than working with others.  What’s lonely is when you tour, and you go to the dressing room of a big theatre, and there’s a large basket of fruit and flowers, just for me. My heart sinks. I prefer the crowded back stage of a SPF fundraiser at ToJ. These are a blast, by the way.  Come next year.  Bring some money.

Five Questions With Troy Mink

Our ongoing series of profiles of performers at SPF #5 down at Theatre off Jackson continues today with local fave Troy Mink, whose MeNtAl opens tonight. Tickets $12 advance, $15 at the door.

1. Where did you grow up, and how did you end up where you are now?
I was born & raised in Lexington, Kentucky (which, by the way, for what it’s worth, is also the hometown of George Clooney).  I ended up here in Seattle by getting a job as drama/music teacher at a private church school in Sea-Tac.

2. Which performance, song, play, movie, painting, or other work of art had the biggest influence on you and why?
As cliche as it sounds, and at the risk of seeming too sappy, I was really struck by the musical Les Miserables. I’d never heard the story of the bishop and the encounter with Jean Valjean and the silver candlesticks which really moved me at the time.  It was one of the things that inspired me to go into social work.

I also was and still am inspired by Robert Duvall in the films Tomorrow and Tender Mercies. In both films he plays a Southern, quiet man with incredible subtlety and heart. Also, both pieces were written by Horton Foote a favorite playwright/screenwriter of mine.

3. What skill, talent, or attribute do you most wish you had and why?
I wish I were more comfortable speaking with authority and comfort as myself.  Mike Daisey, whose show Wasting Your Breath was the first show I’d ever directed and the first solo show he performed, is a big inspiration for me. I watch Mike’s performance and am always taken by his performance and ability to capture an entire audience’s attention.

4. What do you do to make a living? Describe a normal day.
I am a “Community Outreach Worker” for Community Psychiatric Clinic.  I go into the office first thing in the morning where I receive a notice(s) from the county informing me of clients (of CPC) commitment to a psychiatric hospitalization, or arrested in county jail.  I then look up info to see what their crime was & when their trial is set.  For those clients involuntarily hospitalized I call the facility they are in to find out when their court date/time is.  I then go to the jail or hospital, meet with the clients, make a note of my visit & assessment & go back to the office.

5. Why solo performance? What made you decide to pursue this show in this form?
This is a personal account/story of a time and experiences that I, personally, have went through. I do multiple characters, who often interrupt the narrative and wish to tell their take on whatever it is I’m talking about. By doing the show as a solo performer my hope is that the audience, while they are following the narrative also get a sense of me “schizophrenically” (so to speak) telling the stories. The name of the show is Mental and as such deals with many of the mentally ill folks I’ve worked with in the past who have a diagnosis of schizophrenia, bi-polar disorder, etc.

Solo Performance Fest #5 Kicks Off at Theatre Off Jackson

The always amazing Terri Weagant, one of the artists in this year's SPF at ToJ.

Every person in the theater has a few formative moments, I think, those performances that in their sheer surprising and moving power made us become who we are, got us addicted to this ever-dying, ever-disappointing, anachronistic beast of an art form. The reason we stick with theater is precisely because of those moments–it’s like an addiction.

For me, one of the three or four performances that sticks out in my mind took place in 1997 or ’98, in a tiny little community theatre in Hillsboro, Ore. A friend of mine was a member of the company, Hillsboro Artists Repertory Theatre, and it was their fundraiser evening, a mixed showcase of mainly musical numbers ranging from a sassy take on How to Succeed in Business from the clearly gay but possibly not-yet-out kid, to a few ballads, to…you know, the typical mix of heartfelt tripe.

And then came the closer. I’d been told in advance that he was a character: an older retired man who’d been something on Broadway in his day (which I assume means no one), who’d been very generous to the company (probably a few hundred dollar donation), and was tolerated as the colorful character who was ever so slightly gauche with the teenage ladies. So he was invited to close out the revue, but when he came on, instead of launching in to a number, he just…talked. Told a story. Sang a few songs. And it was one of the most captivating things I’ve ever seen.

I still remember the set-up to the last number. It was, he explained, a song from a nearly forgotten Broadway musical of an earlier age, in which an older man and a younger man both fell in love with a young woman, who of course wound up with the more appropriate younger man. But here’s the trick: the song he was about to sing was the old man’s lament, and when, during previews (Catskills?) the woman went for the young man, the audience started booing. So the show closed, the ending was scrapped and rewritten, an lo and behold, now the young woman went for the older man.

I have no idea what musical it’s from, and the melody and lyrics have long since vanished from my memory. Hell, the story’s too neat and clean to be true. But I still remember him telling it. It was one of the single finest demonstrations of the most basic and profound power the theater has: a person, in front of an audience, keeping them rapt and leaving them ultimately profoundly moved by just telling a story.

Jerick Hoffer, another artist at this year's SPF.That’s one of the reasons that, despite my countless misgivings, I am and will remain a big supporter of solo performance. In the theater world, solo performance is more often than not a bastardized catch-all: a creative outlet for bored actors who fall back on monologue cliches, or worse, a weirdly commercially viable form of theater. I know more than one artist who relies on a salable solo show to make half a year’s living working the North American or European fringe fest circuit.

But there are definitely some solo performances that defy the term. One of the best pieces of theatre to come out of Seattle in years was Keith Hitchcock’s Muffin Face, a solo show that doesn’t feel like one. Nor does whatever the hell it is Mike Pham did onstage at the last NW New Works in I Love You I Hate You. And then there are the Charles Smiths or Paul Budraitises or Jose Amadors of the world, and yeah, even cynical, seen-it-all me has to admit, solo performance is a powerful and vibrant form

Tonight marks the opening of the fifth installment of Solo Performance Festival down at Theatre off Jackson, which runs through May 7. The festival is a little sparser than last year, but the programming is tighter. It kicks off tonight with the inimitable Lauren Weedman, an LA-by-way-of-Seattle performer, in No…You Shut Up!, which explores adoption. (Don’t let that touchy-feely description fool you–Weedman’s amazing.)

Local fave Terri Weagant (who not so long ago owned a production of the solo show to end ’em all, The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe) presents a original piece, Karaoke Suicide is Painless, “a multimedia karaoke comedy that explores the correlation between air guitar and personal choice.” Up-and-comer Jerick Hofer tries to step up Seattle’s take on queer solo performance (a form that always gestates in Seattle but in NYC is amazingly fertile) in Turning Parlor Tricks. And long-time Seattle theatre mainstay Bret Fetzer directs Matt Smith in All My Children.

The “Best in Shorts” evenings are always a mixed bag, to be honest, but are worth it for the truly dedicated because that’s the sort of format you’re going to see something amazing in, the type of 10-minute performance that three years later might blow your mind at On the Boards. And this year, a new tidbit has been added with “Voir Dire,” a mixed evening of storytelling from Seattle writers and performers, which continues to expand the base.

We’re going to be covering the festival throughout, so more information will come in the near future. That said, I caught most of the festival last year and was amazed at how often truly amazing little shows played to small audiences. I always worry that saying something like that will throw up red-flags, but I just want to be honest: this is the sort of thing that people shouldn’t miss. Theatre people who care about the form obviously need to be there. But non-theatre people who have little patience for tedious “acting” in big shows will be be surprised–most of these artists are here because they’re tired of traditional theatre productions, too. If the Rep and ACT and Intiman are the NBA, then SPF is March Madness: balls-to-the-wall, one chance only so bring your A-game theatre. Tickets are a steal at under $20 a show, and beer’s cheap on-site.