Author: elliotttj

  • The Oracle Rests Before Opening Tonight

    Patrick Smith as The Oracle in our new play

    Patrick Smith plays Leo Sweeney, the titular character in the new play by Elliott & Queenan opening tonight, May 18th, and and we are thrilled to have him in that role. Other roles Patrick has done include Tony n’ Tina’s Wedding (u/s), Othello, Prometheus Bound (new transl. by Steven Sater), Paree! (w/Marni Nixon), The Shaw Project (various). TV: All My Children. Film: Choice and Chance (Best Short Film, Columbus Intl. FF). Recent Theater: First Person Pronoun (solo work @ TheaterLab). Recent Short Films: A Good Home, Murderer, Incognito Mode, Death Meets Toby, Mise en Scène des Morts (in French). Studied with William Esper (2-year professional program) and was fortunate to study for two years, just pre-pandemic, with the late, great Wynn Handman.

  • Will Micky Elevate to Oracle?

    Jasmine Dorothy Haefner is Micky Cohen in THE ORACLE

    Micky wants to… She wants…
    What does Micky want?
    REALLY REALLY REALLY want?

    For years, she has ‘facilitated’ the spectacular success of the current Oracle, the guru who every morning provides ’the three reveals ‘ to which everyone in the corporation must pay attention. But with a new Harvard super-forecaster suddenly on the scene, the future seems uncertain for her. Will Micky make a move? Buy a ticket at this link to find out

    Ed Altman as CEO Fred Spee ‘walks & talks’ with Micky (Jasmine Dorothy Haefner)

    Jasmine (Micky) is an actress and writer for the screen and stage. Her most recent work is 28 is Great, a comedic short film she wrote, produced, directed and starred in, which has won several awards. (Lighthouse International Film Festival, Astoria Film Festival, Twin Cities Film Fest). She is thrilled to be a part of this production and working with Knowledge Working Theater Company again. She is incredibly thankful to the writers, cast and crew for all of their work. Theater: True Love (New York Theatre Festival), Dust Vanishes Away (Dir: Gabriel Torres, RE: Encuentro 2021, Loisaida Center, NYC), Grudges (Knowledge Workings Theater Co.), EVICTED (Teatro Yerbabruja Experimental), You Are So Lucky, and others. Film: 28 is Great, Zoomers, I’m Listening (NY State International Film Festival), The Unexpected (Hoboken International Film Festival), and others. TV: Saturday Night Live, and others.

    •Instagram: @TheJasmineDorothy http://www.JasmineDorothy.com

    Patrick Smith as Leo and Jasmine Dorothy Haefner as Micky consider the future
  • Making Theater Live IS Wonderful

    Making Theater Live IS Wonderful

    Stage Manager Morgan Fears scribbles furiously while Jasmine Dorothy Haefner and Patrick Smith try to figure out what T.J. Elliott is asking

    Is knowledge power in corporate America? Or is some other less lofty commodity the secret ingredient to success and elevation to the C-Suite?  When the CEO of a mega-corporation brings in a Harvard hotshot to challenge his longtime knowledge guru, nicknamed The Oracle, their fierce and scathingly funny competition pulls back the curtains to reveal what really matters in the corporate world and changes the lives and loves of those who work for them too.

    That’s the thumbnail description of our play and our wonderful actors are bringing the text to sharp and funny life.

    Patrick Smith watches Hassan Hope and Alyssa Poon have an awkward phone conversation

    The Oracle by Joe Queenan & T.J. Elliott and directed by T.J. runs from May 18th until May 22nd at THEATER FOR THE NEW CITY on First Avenue in Manhattan between 10th and 11th Streets. Tickets are available through Eventbrite at this link

    T.J., Patrick, and Jasmine

  • A Quick Peek at Rehearsals for The Oracle

    Blocking The Big Exit is just important is figuring out the entrance

    Rehearsals are underway in our Equity Showcase production of the Oracle by T.J. Elliott and Joe Queenan. Our colorful cast of amazes us every night with their flexibility. Buy your ticket now for our limited run at Theater for the New City May 18th to May 22nd.

    The Oracle features Hassan Hope, Jasmine Dorothy Haefner, Alyssa Poon, Patrick Smith, and Ed Altman in this two act play with set design by Kathleen Ritter, lighting design by Mikelle Kelly, projection and sound design by Luke Lutz, and producing Services by Emma Denson & Ed Altman Stage Management by Morgan Lindsey Fears

    https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-oracle-a-new-comedy-by-tj-elliott-joe-queenan-tickets-310167026927

  • Views of the Cino

    a better look at our stage
    More peeks
    Looking up
    the tour continues
  • Get your tix for The Oracle Now

    Get your tix for The Oracle Now

    Tix are available for the limited five performance run at this link.

    How to succeed in business without really knowing…

    To coin a phrase

    by Claude Solnik

    In The Oracle, a new comedy by Wall Street Journal humorist Joe Queenan and T.J. Elliott, a CEO decides to make two executives compete for control. In the best case scenario, it’ll be great for business as two would-be oracles, or chief knowledge officers, duke it out. Failing that, it could at least be an entertaining battle to watch. Tix are available for the limited five performance run at this link.

    “Having two CEOs would be like having two suns in the same solar system, because the sun is the center of the universe,” the CEO says. “Whereas two Oracles is more like… having two hands.

    The Oracle, playing at Theater for the New City, 155 First Ave., in Manhattan, May 18-22, provides an entertaining look at office politics, changing workplaces, diversity, destiny, mining the workplace for comedy and drama with well-drawn characters, realistic, clever dialogue and a strong plot.

    This premier Equity Showcase production features Hassan Hope, Jasmine Dorothy Haefner, Alyssa Poon, Patrick Smith*, and Ed Altman.

    Queenan, a longtime humor columnist at The Wall Street Journal, and Elliott, a playwright and former Chief Learning Officer at a large corporation, have steeped The Oracle in reality and experience along with dark comedy. Tickets are $18 and $15 for seniors.

    Although The Oracle tells a fictional story of a CEO pitting employees against each other in a kind of survival of the most fit for corporate America, it’s a funny journey into the office, very different from the TV show of that name.

    This production at TNC is a powerful, new play about office politics writ large, not about the American dream, as Death of a Salesman is, but the largely unmined humor of American corporate reality.

    “How to succeed in business without really knowing,” Elliott jokes about an apt subtitle. “The ability to sell themselves and sell their ideas makes them successful.”

    This is a world where one character spouts the motto “My job is to make you a success,” although the reality seems very different. The motto “Do it yesterday” inadvertently dooms efforts to failure, in a world where we hear about a seminar on the (somewhat uncertain) future of uncertainty.

    “It’s about corporate dynamics,” Elliott says of his latest collaboration with Queenan. “Office politics are a subset of corporate dynamics.”

    The play is a blend of the two writers’ sensibilities, a mix of drama and humor surrounding the struggle to win around, or beyond, the water cooler. Queenan, who grew up in Philadelphia and lives in Tarrytown, wrote humor for Barron’s, Forbes and The New York Times before launching his “Moving Targets” column for the Wall Street Journal.

    Elliott was born in the Bronx, lived in New Jersey, worked in corporate America for many years, wrote business books, including one he co-wrote about making decisions, and lives in Princeton. This

    “The long story is if stuff is thoughtful and penetrating and intellectual, T.J. wrote it,” Queenan says. “If it’s a cheap laugh, I wrote it.”

    The Oracle finds fertile ground in a part of American life too often overlooked by theater, which seems to have a blind spot for the business world. Americans over a lifetime spend 90,000 hours at work, according a book titled Happiness at Work. And yet theater seems to turn a virtual blind eye to the humor, heartbreak and drama, of this central part of the American reality.

    “There aren’t many plays about business,” Elliott says. “Recently, there was a popular play about business, The Lehman Trilogy. It’s interesting that it sold out. I found it fascinating. We’d already written this play. “

    Ed Altman, who plays the CEO in The Oracle, worked in financial services for many years and has since appeared in theater and in television. He sees the workplace as a topic avoided by and natural for theater

    “People work all day,” Altman says. “Then they want to forget about the office, but there’s a lot going on there, a lot of drama and comedy. And it can be a good starting point for a play.”

    The Oracle looks at a world where every day is a new idea – literally. The unnamed business (we don’t know what it does, but it has a board) begins every day with “three reveals” or things to focus on, creating a 24-hour cycle of revelation that leaves a lot of time for enthusiastic eurekas, but not for execution.

    “As one character points out, oracles always say things that can be true no matter what happens,” Elliott says. “If you fight today, a great army will be destroyed. That’s right. One or the other.”

    The play involves dueling oracles with the business as a battlefield, as a gaggle of gurus go after each other with the gusto usually reserved for combatants in the World Wrestling Federation. They hurl business blather at each other like punches in a boxing match.

    “The play was always a black comedy, but it was more serious. I decided we should have these guys engaging in a duel that nobody else can understand,” Queenan says. “They’re constantly trying to one up each other.”

    The Oracle also looks at serious issues such as diversity and discrimination, along with biases that sometimes lead to uniformity rather than the benefits of different ethnicities and backgrounds.

    “I was in the position of recommending folks for high- level jobs,” Elliott says of his work life (an oxymoron a little bit like jumbo shrimp). “They would choose the person who was like them. They look like them, think like them, talk like them. They came from the same college.”

    The Oracle looks at a changing workplace where an older white guard and new guard including an Asian-American woman and African-American man vie for power. It looks at how those in the C-suite try to figure out the future – and deal with the past.

    “It’s clear that she is the better oracle,” Elliott says of a young Asian-American woman who faces resistance when she tries to get executives to invest more in the company and less in their own compensation. “She doesn’t understand corporate politics. it’s not the knowledge but the reality to sell, motivate and manipulate.”

    We spend time in a world filed with relationships, revelations and, now and then, revenge, as people get hired, fired and mixed up in sometimes Machiavellian machinations. The Oracle opens the door to a heartfelt, humorous view of the changing office, set in breakrooms, board rooms and at an unspecified business.

    In a play full of memorable moments, there’s one that lets us look into the depths, or shallows, of a deciding process that turns out to be simpler than one might expect. “There’s a twist, but no spoilers. Come see the play.” Elliott says of a guru’s secret sauce.

    The Oracle, Theater for the New City, 155 First Ave., NY, NY. May 18-22 , May 18, 19, 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. and a matinee Sunday May 22 at 4 p.m. For tickets go to EventBrite

    * Patrick Smith appears courtesy of Actors Equity Association

  • Yes, We Have a New Play Opening!

    (l-r) Hassan Hope, Jasmine Dorothy Haefner, Patrick Smith, Alyssa Poon, Ed Altman

    “Ipsa scientia potestas est” (‘Knowledge itself is power’)”
    Francis Bacon
    , 1597

    But is knowledge still the power in corporate America? Or has some other less lofty commodity become the secret ingredient to success and elevation to the C-Suite? When the CEO of a mega-corporation brings in a Harvard hotshot to challenge his longtime knowledge guru, nicknamed The Oracle, their fierce and scathingly funny competition pulls back the curtains to reveal what really matters in the corporate world and changes the lives and loves of those who work for them too. Following up on their stage and Zoom successes of their previous trio of plays, Alms, Grudges, and Genealogy, Joe Queenan and T.J. Elliott will unveil their new problem comedy (produced by Emma Denson and Ed Altman) this May of 2022 Off Broadway. Stay tuned  here at www.knowledgeworkings.com for further details.

  • You Can Still Catch Genealogy on YouTube (Link Below)

    (L-R) Atticus Cain, Karl Reinhardt, Jamie England, and Quanda Johnson Sort Out the Family Trees

    The live run of the problem comedy, Genealogy, by T.J. Elliott and Joe Queenan directed and coproduced by Dana Pellebon has ended at Broom Street Theater in Madison Wisconsin. Our sellout standing ovation audiences during this three week run encouraged us to keep on telling the story and, therefore, we invite you and whomever you think wants to engage with this Satire Of Inconvenient Family Ties to watch the video of Friday, November 19’s Live Stream at this link.

    The Hunts and The Wilsons aren’t fooling around
    The podcast that made it all happen! (Jackson Rosenberry as Glenn Weber)
    “We are not done!!!”
  • To Make Theater Live Ain’t Easy

    To Make Theater Live Ain’t Easy

    Karl Reinhardt: My Hero

    Theatre is a series of insurmountable obstacles on the road to imminent disaster.”
    Tom Stoppard

    On March the 12th, 2020, Joe Queenan I were set to audition actors for our second co-written play, Grudges.

    March 12th, 2020.

    That’s the day the pandemic hit the fan with the NBA canceling its season, ERs overflowing, and travel of pretty much any kind cancelled, cancelled, cancelled. Theater also just stopped. Around the country, whether in Broadway palaces or school gyms, Regional playhouses or East Village cabarets, it just stopped. Dead.

    But we couldn’t bear to give up. So, hatching our tagline #maketheaterlive,  we produced Grudges on Zoom followed by Within The Context Of No Context by George W S Trow, and my solo effort, the Swedish screwball comedy, Keeping Right.

    And then this year, we got to actually make theater really live again through the gracious coproduction of our third play, Genealogy, with Broom Street Theater in Madison WI. Because that’s what’s important about theater: it’s live. You have to remember the lines right then. The lights have to go up at the right time and the sound effects have to go off at the right time. And the audience is right there. Breathing, coughing, laughing, groaning: right there.

    Other arts amaze me, but theater is the one where you are least likely to know what’s going to happen. Oh, yes, there is a script, a text that the playwrights created and of which upon that foundation the director has formed a production. But every night the connection between the actors and the audience and even among the actors themselves can differ.

    The Irish critic Fintan O’Toole put it very well recently:

    “Live performers …make their own decisions, here and now, in this moment. In a filmed performance, the performer loses that power. It belongs to others – the director, the editor. But this also applies to us as members of the audience. At a live event, we choose where we look and how we listen. In a virtual event, other people are – sometimes heavy-handedly, sometimes subtly – making those choices for us. This is what we miss about live performance: the autonomy and integrity of the performer, our freedom to shape our own responses, the sense of our shared presence in space and time.”

    That’s one of the reasons why being able to see and feel and hear our wonderful actors perform Genealogy this month awed and thrilled us. But certain events reminded us of the fragility not only of theater, but of life. One of our team, one of our amazing actors, took ill. (He’s doing much better now and we trust on the road to a full recovery) And our astonishing director, Dana Pellebon, approached Karl Reinhardt (who had been doing spectacular work as our stage manager from day one) to ask him if he was willing to step into a role of a character who is on stage from beginning to end of our 95 minute play.

    And he did. Karl committed to make theater live. God bless him.

    He played the role last weekend and he’s playing it again this weekend including at our live stream performance on November 19th. (Tix are here; choose “11/19 Live Access” from the dropdown menu.) Stepping into a role that another actor has created without having had the benefit of the weeks of rehearsal, the space to learn lines, the experiences to forge connections with the other characters is beyond daunting. Try terrifying on for size. Yet Karl did it and he did it very well. That’s why on Saturday night when I get to see the live stream, I’ll be toasting not just the entire cast and the director and the crew but especially Karl Reinhardt who embodies the commitment to make theater live despite that “series of insurmountable obstacles on the road to imminent disaster.”

    The podcast upon which our characters appear in Genealogy
    Quanda Johnson and Atticus Cain
    Jackson Rosenberry as podcast host, Glenn Weber