Monday 24 May 2004

Playbill.com - 24/03/2004

[Source]
Cast Set for Christopher Shinn's Where Do We Live Off-Broadway, April 21-May 30
By Ernio Hernandez
24 Mar 2004

The cast and new dates have been set for the upcoming American premiere of Christopher Shinn's Where Do We Live at Off-Broadway's Vineyard Theatre.

The playwright will make his directorial debut with the production set for a April 21-May 30 run with an official opening on May 9.
Where Do We Live, as described by the playwright, is "a play about two young men who live in the same apartment building and their lives intersect." The work premiered in May 2002 at London's Royal Court Theatre.

The cast includes stage and screen stars Jessica Chastain, Daryl Edwards (Miss Evers' Boys), Jesse Tyler Ferguson (On The Town), Luke MacFarlane (Juvenilia, the upcoming "Kinsey"), Burl Moseley, Jacob Pitts ("Euro Trip"), Aaron Stanford ("X-Men 2), Liz Stauber ("Almost Famous") and Aaron Yoo (wAve). The previously announced actress Michelle Williams ("Dawson's Creek,"Killer Joe) has left the production for another project.

The three-act play, which features a cast of nine actors and 17 characters, "offers a very panoramic view of New York City," Shinn told Playbill On-Line. "It's probably my most ambitious play."

The author's inspiration for the new work? "Really, it was [when] Sept. 11 [2001] happened; I owed The Royal Court a play, I had no money and I thought now is not the time to be broke," Shinn admitted. "It was written in a panic about being broke, starting on Sept. 12."

The design team of Where Do We Live features Rachel Hauck(scenic), David Weiner (lighting), Mattie Ullrich (costume) and Jill B.C. DuBoff (sound). The production also features original music by Storm P.

Shinn is the author of the plays Four and What Didn't Happen. Other plays include Other People, The Coming World and the scribe is also currently at work on a new musical with composer David H. Turner about a young composer who completes the unfinished musical of a late legendary Broadway songwriter.

For information about the Vineyard's upcoming season, call the box office at (212) 353-0303 or visit www.vineyardtheatre.org.

Friday 14 May 2004

CurtainUp - 14/May/2004

[Source]

Where Do We Live

By Elyse Sommer

People are dying in this building. They are dying of poverty, of drugs. I see them every day, there are no jobs, I see their children, they go to schools that are falling apart--- Stephen
Not all of them---Tyler
Well-- some of them---Stephen
Fine, but why does it upset you so much?---Tyler
I live here -- Stephen

Luke MacFarlane and Jacob Pitts
 (Photo: Carol Rosegg) 
Where Do We Live is Christopher Shinn's third Off-Broadway play. As in Four (his first and best), which transferred from the off-off-Broadway Worth Street Theatre to MTC's Second Stage, and last season's What Didn't Happen, Shinn's latest venture is framed by a defining date in the American experience.

In Four he used that most American of holidays, the Fourth of July, to examine the isolation and desires of four average individuals from a cross-section of American life in the year 1996, when the author himself was only a few years older than the inexperienced homosexual teenager on his first date. In What Didn't Happen, the playwright moved three years forward to explore what did and didn't happen to collapse the dreams of a group of once hopeful Clintonites.

Where Do We Live uses September 11, 2001 as a focal point in a tale of Manhattanites whose lives were already bombed out before the World Trade Center bombing. It features his largest cast yet -- 9 actors, 15 characters -- but then this isn't Hartford (the author's home town and the setting for Four) or a country cottage (the setting for What Didn't Happen) . The two key characters, are two men of approximately the same age who live in the same building but travel in very different worlds: Stephen (Luke MacFarlane) is gay, white, a middle class college graduate and writer with an overactive liberal sensibility; Shedrick AKA Shedd, (Burl Moseley), is heterosexual, African-American, and, for lack of an entree into a better way of life, a drug dealer.

The people figuring importantly in Stephen's life are his boyfriend Tyler (Jacob Pitts), a fledgling actor who lives off a trust fund and unlike the politically intense Stephen manages to be blind to the hopeless and needy; Stephen's college chum Patricia (Emily Bergl) who, as the play's voice of reason, lends a sympathetic ear to the conflicted Stephen as well as two gung-ho Republican stock traders (Aaron Stanford and Jesse Tyler Ferguson, in the first of their multiple roles) who frequent the bar where she works. There's also Leo (Aaron Yoo), an Asian gay man who adds another wrinkle into the racism issue when he sees Stephen's rejection of his overtures at a club as one more sign of his having "no access" and being "totally ignored."

In Shedrick's adjoining but different universe, we have his crippled uncle Timothy (Daryl Edwards), Lily (Liz Stauber), the sexy young Brit who's his white supplier's (Aaron Stanford again) girlfriend but seems to like to hang out with Shed. It is Timothy's habit of knocking on Stephen's door to borrow cigarettes and money that connects the lives of the two men and causes dissent in each apartment. Tyler considers Stephen a patsy for responding to Timothy's borrowing -- Timothy's involvement with Stephen also stirs up Shed's simmering resentment against the older man.

In his debut as director and writer, Shinn has created a visually effective, if often too busy, production. The messy personal and professional lives and the multiple issues play out on Rachel Hauck's versatile side by side set which cleverly accommodates the bar where Patricia works and a gay club into the side by side apartments. While he's elicited strong performances from the cast -- particularly from supporting players Jesse Tyler Feguson, Emily Bergl and Luke McFarlane -- he has failed to keep it from drifting along rather aimlessly and to make characters like Leo more a mouthpiece for moral statements than a real person. At almost two hours and without intermission, the issue stuffed dialogue rarely rises to really strong dramatic heights. As if he was aware of this, the director, has relied heavily on extensive and explicit sexual scenes to stimulate the audience and also to mitigate some of the overly long scenes. I'm talking about masturbation, cunnilingus, varied sexual positions -- this is not for anyone who thinks sexual activity should be left to the imagination!

As in his other plays Where Do We Live, reveals an author with a genuine concern for important social and personal issues. Even though it didn't engage me as it should someone who also "lives here", I look forward to Mr. Shinn's next outing.  



WHERE DO WE LIVE
Written and directed by Christopher Shinn

Cast: Luke MacFarlane (Stephen), Emily Bergl (Patricia), Aaron Stanford (Young Businessman 1/Young White Man/Young White Guy/Dave), Jesse Tyler Ferguson (Young Businessman 2/Billy/Young Art Student), Burl Moseley (Shedrick), Liz Stauber (Lily), Daryl Edwards (Timothy), Aaron Yoo (Leo/Cellist) and Jacob Pitts (Tyler). J
Set Design: Rachel Hauck;
Costume Design: Mattie Ullrich
Lighting Design: David Weiner
Sound Design: Jill BC DuBoff
Original Music: Storm P
Running time: 1 hour and 50 minutes without intermission
Vineyard Theatre, 108 E. 15th St (Union Square East and Irving Place) 108 East 15th Street, 212-353-0303
. 4/21/04 to 5/30/04; opening 5/09/04.
Tuesday-Friday at 8:00 p.m.; Saturday at 3:00 and 8:00 p.m.; and Sunday at 3:00 p.m.
Tickets: $50, with Student rush tickets are also available
Reviewed by Elyse Sommer based on 5/14/04 performance 

The New York Times - 14/May/2004

[Source]

THEATER REVIEW; Multiple Characters in a Human Kaleidoscope

By MARGO JEFFERSON
Published: May 14, 2004, Friday

New Yorkers know that bars are like neighborhoods. Hostile or incompatible groups are separated by bar stools instead of streets and apartments. Christopher Shinn's new play, ''Where Do We Live,'' which opened Tuesday night at the Vineyard Theater, begins in a bar like this.

A thin young writer in a print shirt sits at one end talking intensely to the bartender, a hip no-nonsense young woman, about his life. Two blustery businessmen sit at the other end talking about money.

''Is he gay?'' one asks when the writer has left. He has heard a lot of stories about how attractive women hang out with gay men because they're afraid of the real thing. ''I actually have a boyfriend, but thank you for your concern,'' Patricia (Emily Bergl) answers wryly.

What makes disparate lives converge -- or at least cross briefly -- and then go their separate ways? This is Mr. Shinn's subject. In an earlier play, ''Four,'' sex and loneliness drove people across the borders of age, race and gender. Here his cast has doubled: there are nine main characters. They are lovers, neighbors, friends, rivals and business partners.

Stephen, the writer (Luke MacFarlane), is in love with Tyler (Jacob Pitts), a sleek young actor. Temperamentally, it's clear they haven't much in common. Stephen is serious about his liberal politics; Tyler's trust fund frees him to take acting classes and go to auditions. There is bound to be a clash. What sets it off is Stephen's neighbor Timothy (Daryl Edwards), a middle-aged black man with one leg who started borrowing cigarettes and now borrows small sums of money.

To complicate things further, the young black man Timothy lives with deals drugs. Shedrick (Burl Moseley) wants to get out of the business but he hasn't yet managed to. The two apartments are on either side of a red brick set. The audience can't see into one without being aware of the other.

Middle-class bohemia versus working-class survival? It's not that simple. There's a kind of funky bohemianism going on at Timothy's place, too. A pert, empty-headed Englishwoman named Lily (Liz Stauber) has crashed there. (She would have been called a bird in the 1960's.) Lily is in love with Timothy's white drug supplier, Dave (Aaron Stanford). But she doesn't mind watching television and opening Timothy's fly while hoping for Dave's call.

Suspicion flourishes in both households, as does resentment. Shedrick lets Stephen know that his cigarettes and money are not wanted: ''You know, we O.K., we take care of ourselves.'' Tyler warns Stephen that the two black men may be working some scam together. While Tyler and Stephen make love, Shedrick puts on his Eminem CD and pumps up the volume of a blazingly homophobic song. (To hear the words blasting in the dark theater is pretty overwhelming. What is it about the swagger of pure hatred that mesmerizes people?)

There are many scenes, many conversations and many confrontations. Mr. Shinn is examining social, sexual and racial politics. Not just how we define our beliefs, but how we live: our habits and instincts. What happens psychologically when a middle-class liberal like Stephen argues with a working-class conservative, like Tyler's old friend Billy (Jesse Tyler Ferguson)? Or when a white suburban drug dealer like Dave confides details of his privileged childhood to Timothy and insists they are friends?

One night at a bar Stephen is approached by an Asian graduate student. Leo (Aaron Yoo) starts to talk compulsively: ''I don't know why I keep coming here -- I have no access. I'm totally ignored because I'm not blond and built and -- it's like, so clear here, like -- Who cares what we do in this world -- it's all how you look.''

Leo utters some sharp truths. But he feels less like a character than a catalyst put onstage to make sure certain things are said and done. This is due in part to Mr. Yoo's hyper performance, but also to Mr. Shinn's writing. The same is true for Lily, the English tweety bird. However shallow she is, a writer must make her worth our attention. As is, she's only worth our condescension.

''Where Do We Live'' unfolds over a month in New York in 2001. It opens in early August. So coke and Ecstasy flow, people couple, uncouple and quarrel, hearts are broken, and no one realizes that Sept. 11 is coming nearer and nearer. It makes us recall our own lives in all their intensity and triviality.

What I like best about ''Where Do We Live'' which runs through May 30, is its ambition. Mr. Shinn wants to do more than just repeat his successes. He wants to work with ideas as well as characters. He has directed his play this time around, and while it moves too slowly for my taste, the actors work very well together.

Mr. Shinn is certainly a skilled craftsman. Yet the craft shows so much that it dulls the emotions. Some devices, like the overlapping dialogue, grow too familiar. We can predict too many of the plot twists, even though they are well executed. And for all of the detail a few important stories were too sketchy: I wanted to know more, for instance, about the rage and contempt Shedrick shows for Timothy.

None of which means this play is not worth seeing. It is. Young writers are supposed to grow and that's what Mr. Shinn is doing.

WHERE DO WE LIVE

Written and directed by Christopher Shinn; sets by Rachel Hauck; costumes by Mattie Ullrich; lighting by David Weiner; sound by Jill BC DuBoff; original music by Storm P; production manager, Kai Brothers and Bridget Markov; production stage manager, Erika Timperman; director of production, Reed Ridgley; general manager, Rebecca Habel. Presented by the Vineyard Theater, Douglas Aibel, artistic director; Bardo S. Ramírez, managing director; Jennifer Garvey-Blackwell, executive director, external affairs. At the Vineyard Theater, 108 East 15th Street.

WITH: Luke MacFarlane (Stephen), Emily Bergl (Patricia), Aaron Stanford (Young Businessman 1/Young White Man/Young White Guy/Dave), Jesse Tyler Ferguson (Young Businessman 2/Billy/Young Art Student), Burl Moseley (Shedrick), Liz Stauber (Lily), Daryl Edwards (Timothy), Aaron Yoo (Leo/Cellist) and Jacob Pitts (Tyler).

Tuesday 11 May 2004

Playbill.com - 11/May/2004

[Source]
Christopher Shinn's Where Do We Live Opens at Off-Broadway's Vineyard, May 11
By Ernio Hernandez
11 May 2004

Christopher Shinn
The American premiere of Christopher Shinn's Where Do We Live opens at Off Broadway's Vineyard Theatre May 11.

The playwright makes his directorial debut with the production, which began performances at the downtown Manhattan venue April 21 for a run through May 30. (The opening night was changed from the originally announced date of May 9.)


Where Do We Live, as described by the playwright, is "a play about two young men who live in the same apartment building and their lives intersect." The work premiered in May 2002 at London's Royal Court Theatre.

The ensemble cast includes Emily Bergl (The Lion in Winter, "The Rage: Carrie 2"), Daryl Edwards (Miss Evers' Boys), Jesse Tyler Ferguson (On The Town), Luke MacFarlane (Juvenilia, the upcoming "Kinsey"), Burl Moseley, Jacob Pitts ("Euro Trip"), Aaron Stanford ("X-Men 2), Liz Stauber ("Almost Famous") and Aaron Yoo (wAve).

The three-act play, which features a cast of nine actors and 17 characters, "offers a very panoramic view of New York City," Shinn told Playbill On-Line. "It's probably my most ambitious play."

The author's inspiration for the new work? "Really, it was [when] Sept. 11 [2001] happened; I owed The Royal Court a play, I had no money and I thought now is not the time to be broke," Shinn admitted. "It was written in a panic about being broke, starting on Sept. 12."

 The design team of Where Do We Live features Rachel Hauck (scenic), David Weiner (lighting), Mattie Ullrich (costume) and Jill B.C. DuBoff (sound). The production also features original music by Storm P.

Shinn is the author of the plays Four and What Didn't Happen. Other plays include Other People, The Coming World and the scribe is also currently at work on a new musical with composer David H. Turner about a young composer who completes the unfinished musical of a late legendary Broadway songwriter.

For information about the Vineyard's upcoming season, call the box office at (212) 353-0303 or visit www.vineyardtheatre.org.