PEP | Performers Exchange Project

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Help us Take Ann Sisters on Tour in 2010!

Hi New and Old Friends of PEP, won’t you give a lil something to help us take our newest work to other places? We set up a KICKSTARTER project to make it easy. Give as little as $5. Giving more gets you some cool PEPpy gifts…

Ann Sisters at The Hamner Theater March 25-26

We begin our tour of our newest original play Our American Ann Sisters with a two-day run at The Hamner Theater in Nelson County on Thursday, March 25th, and Friday, March 26th. Both shows are at 7:30. Tickets are $10. Call The Hamner for information and ticket reservations at (434) 361-1999.

video by Brian Wimer

Audiences React to Our American Ann Sisters

We feel so honored to receive all this lovely praise from people who saw Our American Ann Sisters:

“I never go to the theater. Perhaps once a year I’ll see a play (perhaps not). I came to yours because I thought that it would be fun to see what you and your colleagues had created. I was completely blown away. Of course it was like nothing I’d ever seen before. I’m still not sure exactly what happened, but I was captivated.”

“Don’t miss this one…”

“Ok, so I would really spend two hours watching you fold laundry, because your sense of your physicality is absurdly compelling. Fortunately, I got to watch you embrace a broad spectrum of characters with other equally irresistible actresses tonight. Thank you all for creating such a rich theatrical experience!”

“I’m too tired to wax as rhapsodical as I’d like this evening, but I did want to say how much I loved the whole thing, and especially that Sophia’s play was the cat’s pajamas. Wearable fainting couch! “

“you were amazzzzing. the play was so shockingly, rockingly fantastic. brava!”

“It was touching, hilarious, and thought-provoking and I thought you were all brilliant and lovely….I sincerely hope this isn’t the last time Ann Sisters hits the stage. “

“What an awesome evening of entertainment.I laughed so hard during the finale dance as Jude struggled with the enormous paper screen. The costumes were just magnificent, Kay’s MC bustier, Sian’s fainting couch, Kay as the old man of the woods, Jen as Hawthorne. Wonderful! The consummation of Hawthorne and Sophia’s love under the skirts ala Gunther Grass’ Tin Drum was perfect! A tour de force. Thank you Thank you Thank you.”

“soo good…an amazing show…”

“Fabulous!”

“LOOOOVed the show, cant remember when i’ve laughed so hard! Victorian gal my fav. thanks!  “

“you guys were awesome! LOVED the show…congrats on a job well done – hope to catch it again.”

From Clare Aukofer at The Daily Progress:

And now for something completely different. No, it’s not Monty Python. It’s “Our American Ann Sisters,” which had its world premiere Friday in the Live Arts Upstage.

This is performance, but not a play. It’s theater in its purest sense, performance with text (and context, and even subtext) but no script, a story informed by performance rather than the other way around. It’s women gone wild, aided and abetted by men in lesser roles or entirely offstage.

Though the show is in the Live Arts space, it’s a product of the Performers Exchange Project. The group as such came to be in 2005, but its founders and members (Martha Mendenhall, Sian Richards, Jennifer Hoyt Tidwell, Kara McLane Burke and Doreen Bechtol) are area theatre veterans, sometimes in more conventional work, sometimes with other unconventional groups, including Foolery and the Zen Monkey Project.

According to the program, this show began conceptually more than a year ago, with the idea of staging a “historical re-visitation of the ideas and philosophical writings of the Transcendental thinkers.”

As time, work and creativity transcended that idea, it morphed into a focus on the “19th-, 20th- and 21st-century experience of growing up female.” And that led the group to three American sisters – Mary, Sophia and Elizabeth Peabody, women who all made significant impact on the America of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, and who certainly transcended the expected roles of women of the time.

Don’t worry. It’s still really funny, because one thing women have learned over the years is to laugh at our lives, even when they seem least laughable.

There’s no way to know whether the sisters would have laughed at these very liberal interpretations of their lives, but they certainly would have supported something – almost anything – different from the status quo of the society into which they were born.

The show defies description, but is structured into three segments, each focusing on one of the sisters. They all have their moments, but a favorite is the second of the three, focusing on on artist and semi-invalid Sophia Peabody (Sian Richards) just before she weds Nathaniel Hawthorne (yes, that Nathanial Hawthorne) – and influenced by, among others, Phyllis Diller and Frida Kahlo.

One of its funniest elements is her costume – or is it the set? What makes it work so well is that Richards remains in character, though the character is admittedly a little wacky. In fact, a strength of the show is that most of the performers play the ridiculous completely straight, without unneeded accessories.

An exception might be Kay Ferguson, who’s not a regular member of PEP but who participated in this project. Her bio notes that she’s studied clowning, so she acts as sort of a ringmaster for this circus of ideas. Jude Silveira takes his role as the Beautiful Assistant quite seriously, so he’s very funny.

This is creative theatre at its finest, with a whole host of creative minds to credit. Kara McLane Burke is listed in the program as the person who “cajoled and maintained” the director and performers, while Mendenhall conceived and directed the show and Bechtol, Ferguson, Tidwell and Richards created and performed it. John Paul Scheidler’s set couldn’t be better, nor could Jenny McNee’s costumes, especially when one of them marries part of the set, making for laughs and a good point.

It’s all good, they’re all good and this is a really funny show that remembers the audience while not neglecting creative integrity for its creators. In short, it’s really good theater.”

Live Arts run a smashing success!

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Thank you to everyone who made this run possible: Live Arts, our Donors, our Production Team, and our Audience. Onward to the next phase. Stay tuned…

darn snow!

Due to snow, our final performance has been cancelled. Apologies to all who couldn’t see the show. We plan to keep working on it, so there is always hope!

We Open Tonight!

[singlepic id=237 w=320 h=240 float=]Tonight is the world premiere of our original play Our American Ann Sisters at Live Arts’ UpStage Theater. We are so excited to show you the fruits of our labor over the past 18 months, and grateful for all the community support throughout our process. When we sent out our last email about our $5,000 budget shortfall, you responded immediately and we are now just $1,300 short. If you haven’t given yet, would you consider a small donation? You can do it quickly online!

StudioVirginia, a regional NPR show, interviewed us about the making of Our American Ann Sisters. The show aired for the first time yesterday, and will re-broadcast this weekend. You can also listen online.

Please note our showtimes and get your tickets before the shows sell out:

Friday, Dec 4, 2009 at 8:00 pm [SOLD OUT]
Saturday, Dec 5, 2009 at 8:00 pm
Wednesday, Dec 9, 2009 at 8:00 pm
Thursday, Dec 10, 2009 at 7:30 pm
Friday, Dec 11, 2009 at 8:00 pm
Saturday, Dec 12, 2009 at 8:00 pm
Sunday, Dec 13, 2009 at 2:00 pm
Wednesday, Dec 16, 2009 at 8:00 pm
Thursday, Dec 17, 2009 at 7:30 pm
Friday, Dec 18, 2009 at 8:00 pm
Saturday, Dec 19, 2009 at 8:00 pm

Thanks & Love,
Martha, Sian, Jennifer, Kara, and Doreen

Poster for Live Arts performances

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check it on out- designed by Matt Thomas

new donors

We’d like to sincerely thank the following for their donations since our last appeal:

Frans and Dalal Preidel
Bobbye Goldstein
Ingrid Berger and Mark McLane
Cate Andrews
Bob Hoyt
John Conover
Jude Silveira
Kevin Wood
B Stanley
Patrick Dooley
Steve Taylor
Judy Mendenhall
Terry and Jim McLane
Framestone Solutions
Nora Brookfield
John Mendenhall
MC Jones
Betsy Noble
Marisa Vrooman
BG Hays
Miller Susen
Lang & Latham Murray
Michael Lundblad
Max Fenton
Mary Catron
Ft Lauderdale Insurance Services
Sandra Higgins
Susan Nuss
Angela Richards
Richard and Judith Warner
Sandy Mendenhall
Elvira Tate
Rob Calvert
Meri Jane Smith

Our complete list of donors

$2,191.03 and Counting!

We put out the call and you are responding! Thanks to all who have contributed in the last few days since we let you know we were $5,000 short of our budget for our upcoming world premiere of Our American Ann Sisters. If you haven’t given anything yet, would you consider something small? Anything at all?  Change from your sofa cushions? You can do it conveniently online by clicking this link.

Love,

PEP

One Month to Go and PEP Needs Your Help!

In addition to the substantial individual contributions PEP has received thus far, we were fortunate to receive two foundation grants, from the SHEA Collaborative and the Charlottesville Area Community Foundation. However, we find ourselves with a budget shortfall of $5,000 and just four weeks left to go before Our American Ann Sisters premieres at Live Arts on December 4th. We are so proud of the progress we’ve made:

  • We have raised 95% of the $63,270 budget we established to take us through the premiere at Live Arts in December.
  • We now have a finished script we’re working with.
  • We redesigned our website and have been documenting our process on a blog with multimedia samples.
  • We completed the two playwriting workshops with the community.
  • We are underway with our collaboration with Shannon Worrell, a local musician who’s created original music, designers Mark Schuyler, Jenny McNee, John Scheidler, Thadd McQuade, and filmmaker Billy Hunt.
  • We will be conducting a FREE workshop for performers interested in our process at Live Arts November 17-19.

We believe our work is setting an important precedent in our community. We believe Charlottesville is capable of supporting a groundbreaking professional company of theatre artists, but we need the investment of community members such as as yourself to pull this off. Can you help us reach our goal? Any amount is appreciated!

You can contribute through PayPal or by mail:

Performers Exchange Project
c/o Kara Burke
3311 Ridge Road
Charlottesville, VA 22901

We sincerely appreciate your time and consideration.

Love,
Martha, Kara, Jennifer, Sian and Doreen

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