Highlights, Lowlights, Stagelights! My theatrical adventures by Lisa L. Wiley
Monday, December 31, 2012
Ring in the New Year!
Sunday, December 30, 2012
NEOMFA Festival read thru
Friday, December 28, 2012
Creating an Original Character
"Got Something To Say? Let Me Do The Talking!"
Voice Over Artist
Cleveland, Ohio
419-366-3734
www.lisalwiley.com
at Convergence Continuum FEB 7-16 Thurs.-Sat.
visit www.convergence-continuum.org for more info or (216) 687-007
Friday, October 19, 2012
Kid Simple!
"delightful, inventive"..."surreal comedy"..."fast-paced and buoyant"...
"it defies succinct description, so you'll just have to see it for yourself" (Andrea Simakis, Plain Dealer)
Full review at: http://www.cleveland.com/onstage/index.ssf/2012/10/convergence-continuums_kid_sim.html
Moll, a girl who invents things, wins the science fair with a machine for
hearing sounds that can't be heard. But when a sexy shape-shifting Mercenary
steals the invention (and her heart), she must embark on a quest to save
noise as we know it. Accompanied by the last boy-virgin in the eleventh
grade, Moll crosses chasms, rafts rivers and mounts mountains into a wacky world where sound mutinies. Kid Simple is filled with live sound effects, rebellious onomatopoeia, and a host of woodsy temptations.
JUST TWO MORE WEEKENDS! Kid Simple runs at 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays through October 27 at the Liminis, 2438 Scranton Rd., Cleveland, OH 44113. Tickets are $15 general admission, $12 for seniors(65+) and $10 for students. For reservations and information visit http://www.convergence-continuum.org or call 216-687-0074.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Kid Simple
OPENS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5 AT CONVERGENCE-CONTINUUM
convergence-continuum continues its 2012 Season with the Cleveland premiere of Kid Simple: a radio play in the flesh by Jordan Harrison. With its whizbang sight and sound gags, sci-fi references, fantastical situations and characters, general loopiness and sheer fun, Kid Simple is a treat for the imagination and intellect.
Moll, a girl who invents things, wins the science fair with a machine for hearing sounds that can't be heard. But when a shapeshifting Mercenary steals the invention (and her heart), she must embark on a quest to save noise as we know it. Accompanied by the last boy-virgin in the eleventh grade, Moll crosses chasms and rafts rivers into a world where sound is always more than what meets the ear. Kid Simple is a quirky fable of innocence and experience, featuring live sound effects, mutinous onomatopoeia, and a host of woodsy temptations.
Kid Simple is directed by converge-continuum company member Geoffrey Hoffman and features actors Jaclyn Cifranic, Clint Elston, Robert Hawkes, Tom Kondilas, Layla Schwartz, Laura Starnik, and Foley artists Lisa Wiley and sade wolfkitten.
Kid Simple opens Friday, October 5 and runs at 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays through October 27 at the Liminis, 2438 Scranton Rd., Cleveland, OH 44113. Tickets are $15 general admission, $12 for seniors (65+) and $10 for students. For reservations and information visit http://www.convergence-continuum.org or call 216-687-0074.
Monday, August 20, 2012
Review of Con-Con's "MilkMilkLemonade"
Con-Con's 'MilkMilkLemonade' hits and misses with abandon
Bob Abelman
News-Herald, Chagrin Valley Times, Solon Times, Geauga Times Courier
Member, International Association of Theatre Critics
This review will appear in the News-Herald on 8/24/12
True to its purpose—to offer theater that "expands the imagination and extends the conventional boundaries of language, structure, space, and performance"--Convergence-Continuum is staging a highly entertaining, thought-provoking play about being true to one's purpose.
Joshua Conkel's "MilkMilkLemonade," which first appeared off-off Broadway in 2009, tells the tale of an 11-year old boy named Emory who lives on a poultry farm with his Bible-thumping, cancer-ridden grandmother. Emory thinks of himself as being more of a girl than a boy and, ostracized by his classmates, spends most of his time with a giant talking chicken, a Barbie doll, and an abusive neighbor named Elliot whose rough-housing masks his homosexual leanings and self-loathing. All are portrayed by adults.
The innocent, effeminate Emory simply wants to be true to his nature while those around him deny their own. He is content choreographing elaborate ribbon dances, dreaming about performing show tunes on a TV talent contest, and wishing he was a girl in body as well as in spirit. Emory's Nanna could not be less Christian or nurturing as she strives to keep him on the straight and narrow. Linda the chicken seeks asylum from being turned into McNuggets. Elliot denies the good within him by stealing Emory's innocence between bouts of pyromania.
Like the children's rhyme referenced in the play's title, whose lilting melody gives way to a sophomoric laundry list of base bodily functions, Conkel's "MilkMilkLemonade" is told with a children's storybook aesthetic while exploring much darker themes.
Because this outrageous play is jam-packed with clever one-liners and assorted bits of absurdity—including the chicken doing stand-up comedy ala Andrew Dice Clay and the doll lip-syncing to the 1970's self-discovery anthem "I've Never Been to Me"—this Con-Con production merrily bypasses "MilkMilkLemonade's" deeper meaning and lapses into broad comedy.
By accentuating all that is funny, and there is plenty that is funny, director Cory Moiner provides a very entertaining evening that loses touch with what is meant to be thought-provoking. His primary vehicle for doing this is Zac Hudak, whose portrayal of Emory is as free range as the poultry on his farm. Possessing Pee-wee Hermanesque man-child charm, quirky physicality and mischievous undercurrent, Hudak turns dark comedy into sight gags and the play's underlying poignancy into unabashed playfulness.
His wonderful fellow actors—including Sarah Kunckik as Linda the Chicken, Marcia Mandell as Nanna, Brian Devers as Elliot, and the hilarious Lisa Wiley as the terrified narrator, Elliot's reabsorbed fetal twin, and other odd characters—follow suit. So, too, does Clyde Simon's sound and set design, resulting in a campy, fun romp void of texture.
In spite of itself, there are moments in this production when the playwright's sober intentions seep through. The best example is when Emory and Elliot play house. Things turn intriguingly revealing when Elliot, as husband, sucks on a Colt 45 malt liquor and, in a world-weary voice beyond his years, complains about his day. Emory, as wife, wistfully watches the bug zapper on the front porch and says, "Funny how I always root for the moths."
Like moths drawn to the flame, neither Emory nor anyone else in this play can overcome their destiny or true purpose. This is true even in a production that has turned Conkel's play into something it is not.
The 80-minute one-act "MilkMilkLemonade" continues through September 8 at the Liminis Theatre in historic Tremont. For tickets, which range from $10 to $15, call 216-687-0074 or visit www.convergence-continuum.org.
Monday, July 30, 2012
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Lady in a Leotard
I have been Stage managing for the Convergence Continuum here in Cleveland. In doing so I was hoping to meet some people and network. I recently auditioned for a show there and got the role! Below is a little bit about this gem of a theatre and their goal. Also is a description of the show I will be in and the dates! Visit the website for ticket information!
ARTISTIC STATEMENTMost theatres are like mirrors, reflecting the familiar. You go to a show, you sit, you watch a play, and then you go home. You watch the actors from across the chasm of a "fourth wall." Everything is nicely laid out for you as you view what is comfortably, safely beyond that wall, confident that you will be made, indeed are expected, to understand the experience in terms of conventional logic.
Aren't we all tired of that by now?
What if theatre weren't a mirror reflecting the familiar, but an opening into unknown territory? What if there were no fourth wall? What if, instead of going to the theatre to watch a play, you crossed the threshold into the world of the play to experience it? Theatre that expands the imagination and extends the conventional boundaries of language, structure, space, and performance that challenges the conventional notions of what theatre is. What sort of theatre would this be?
We are convergence-continuum.
MILKMILKLEMONADE
by Joshua Conkel
directed by Cory Molner
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
K5 Specs (Episode 1-2)
K5 Specs (Episode 1-2)
K5 Specs (Episode 1-1)
K5 Specs (Episode 1-1)
Monday, June 11, 2012
OCTA Northwest Conference
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
New Role and Adventure
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Fun with Auditions! Part 2
Friday, February 17, 2012
Fun with Auditions! Part 1
My first year in Cleveland I tried to network and meet as many people as I could. I did lots of technical theatre. It seems that theatres are always looking for technical people so it was pretty easy to get our there and network. This year I made a "resolution" that I would start auditioning for stage or film roles. Not that I am going to stop doing technical theatre but I really want to get onstage or in front of the camera. I want to act.
Last year I signed on to be a Production Assistant/Script Supervisor for a local film. I joined and learned alot about filming. Before this adventure I did a couple of small extra parts in front of the camera but that was the extent of my film experience. The film is a feature length made up of 10 or 11 vignettes. I was assigned as PA/SS for about 5 of the shorts. I recently completed the shorts to which I was originally assigned and learned that they were auditioning for another vignette. The director, originally from Cleveland, was now in LA practising her craft. And, the writer of the piece was also working in LA. The short featured 2 female leads and a crowd of extra females.....It was stated pretty early on that one of the leads was already cast with a known actress from the LA area. (which for a local project, all of the above mentioned acclaimed participants is great because it means a greater possibility for distribution later because of the names attached). I was going to audition for the 2nd lead role. I read the script and began thinking of characterizations that the director might be looking for.
But....then it was announced that yet another LA actress had agreed to join the cast. Again- Awesome news for the production! I really want to be a part of this collaboration! Audition night was approaching and I was hoping that there would be a role for me! After all- there are no small parts!