Tag: newplays

  • HONOR Gets Honored in Our Very First Review

    HONOR Gets Honored in Our Very First Review

    We’ve been fortunate enough to have the pleasure of Darryl Reilly reviewing 3 of our Knowledge Workings Theater productions and we are grateful for his considerate criticism of HONOR that you can read in full at this link

    And then this morning we discovered that Time Out magazine has a featured listing for our play. The good news for us is that more people will learn about the opportunity to see 3 excellent actors — Alinca Hamilton, Ed Altman, and John Blaylock — lavish their talents on storytelling that is funny, sharp, and timely. We are only running until October 6: get your tickets now at our.show/honor

  • Sean Young & Joe Queenan agree: HONOR is great!

    Yes, THAT Sean Young!
    Yes, THAT Joe Queenan

    We appreciate the generous and enthusiastic responses of these two audience members from our run at The Chain Winter One-Act Festival this past February, but you should come and see for yourself.

    Tickets for HONOR are available here

    Performances will run September 19th through October 6th at The Gene Frankel Theatre: Wednesday-Saturday @ 7 PM, Sunday @ 1 PM

    The Gene Frankel Theatre
    24 Bond Street, New York, NY 10012

    For more information, email us at knowledgeworkings@gmail.com or visit us on Instagram, YouTubeTikTok and Facebook

    See the Instagram reel here

  • PLAYWRIGHTS PANEL ON SELF-PRODUCING

    T.J. Elliott

    SHORT(ISH) VERSION

    Read the detail below but click here to Sign up for a discussion on Playwright Self-Producing taking place 8:30 PM Wednesday September 25th after the 7PM performance of HONOR at 24 Bond Street at the Gene Frankel Theatre in Manhattan.

    There is absolutely NO requirement or expectation that prospective attendees of the session will attend the play beforehand. HONOR has a 7:00 PM curtain and a running time of 65 minutes; Therefore, any playwright is welcome to show up at 8:30PM just for this discussion on self-producing. There is NO fee for attending this playwright community gathering. If you wish to attend HONOR, go to our tickets site here and enter the discount code ‘playwright’ for $10 off the ticket price. 

    Our Panel

    Alinca Hamilton

    John Mark Lucas

    Claude Solnik

    Janani Sreenivasan

    LONGER CONTEXT-SETTING VERSION 

    Back in March, I began to publish online a series of brief essays, 13 Ways of Looking at Self-Producing drawing upon my own experience as a playwright doing that double duty on eight stagings (three via Zoom) since 2018. I wrote then that during that period as a number of theaters closed and festivals suspended solicitations that  “Finding ‘doom and gloom’ conversations at gatherings with playwrights was impossible to escape no matter what refreshments are served.” Given “that the current situation poses both novel and more frequent obstacles to production especially of new work”, I thought it a good idea to reflect publicly on lessons learned so far from self-producing. The response by readers was gratifying and affirming, which has led our company to sponsor a Wednesday September 25th session on self-producing for any interested playwrights in the NYC area. (Others from far-flung places are welcome to join us but this will be strictly an in-person event.)

    Since our production of HONOR runs at the Gene Frankel Theatre in Manhattan, we decided to hold the session on playwrights self-producing after one of the performances. Attendance discussion is FREE and there is absolutely NO requirement or expectation that prospective attendees of the session will attend the play beforehand. HONOR has a 7:00 PM curtain and a running time of 65 minutes; Therefore, any playwright is welcome to show up at 8:30 PM to participate in this session on self producing. If you do wish to attend the play first, that’s fine. Go to our tickets website and enter the discount code ‘PLAYWRIGHT’ to get $10 off your ticket price. 

    If there’s no place to put on your play, you can’t learn to write a play, because you learn from the audience.

    David Mamet

    Why are we doing this? Three reasons: 1) The playwright community that has nourished us is important and gatherings can make us stronger 2) We don’t know everything and we’d like to benefit from and yet also contribute to ‘the wisdom of [playwright] crowds’ 3) We keep coming back to a David Mamet insight: “If there’s no place to put on your play, you can’t learn to write a play, because you learn from the audience.”  

    Sooooooo……

    Sign up for a discussion on Playwright Self-Producing taking place 8:30 PM Wednesday September 26th after the 7PM performance of HONOR at the Gene Frankel Theatre at 24 Bond Street in Manhattan

     

  • 13 Ways Of Looking At Self-Producing [First Four Posts Unrolled from Threads]

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  • All honor to Ed Altman in…HONOR: Link to Tix Below

    The character — Don Troy — that Ed Altman plays in HONOR is the first one to utter our play’s title word and the way in which Ed delivers its two syllables is like tossing a​ match Into​ a room full of Roman Candles. Explosions ensue yet Ed’s character never flinches. Indeed, this dynamism is just what the play requires: an incendiary presence who flicks and lunges verbally at his two colleagues in this debate about what honor means. The trio proceed to sizzle and sparkle along the way in their storytelling with revelations and accusations, but not apologies.

    Ed’s formidable array of acting experiences served him well in preparing for this role. Past work with Knowledge Workings Theater includes: The Oracle, Keeping Right, Grudges (Narrator). Other recent stage appearances had him in Two SwansNowhere Man, Victoria Woodhull (both at Theater for the New City). Also of late screens both big and small have benefited from Ed’s stalwart presence and straightforward style: TV/Streaming: The Good Cop (NTD/Epoch TV), The Vow (HBO), Food that Built America (History Channel), Dragon Meets Eagle(Amazon). His most recent film: The Dummy Detective  is in production right now but earlier efforts include, Biff & Me, Oatmelio’s, Thumbwrestler II, Jazz John, all making the international film festival circuit. Ed was a member of the comedy group Prom Night with whom he wrote and performed at the Westbank Café back in the days of Lewis Black and Rusty McGee. He is also a voiceover artist for commercial and corporate work, and has voiced several audio books. Get your tickets now for one of the three performances upcoming of HONOR at The Chain Theatre Winter One-Act Festival

  • THE JESTER’S WIFE “light-hearted characters, rhythmic & funny dialogue” ROCKED THE HOUSE!

    Xander Jackson as Stranger, Steve Weatherbee as Jester and Emma Taylor Miller as Wife


    Get to a great new comedy if you act now at this link. The Jester’s Wife runs only until October8th at 312 West 36th Street. Stage Whisper said our show was “Hilarious…Fantastic!”

    Theater Scene’s review noted, “The Jester’s Wife succeeds as a spirited experience due to the grand performances of Weatherbee, Miller, and Jackson, and their palpable rapport.” Forgotten Artist Productions stated, “Very clever writing and directing by T.J. Elliott. Beautifully acted by the cast. Very funny, entertaining, and thought provoking. A great piece of theatre. “

    TDF picked TJW as a top show!

    And Theatre Development Fund just picked The Jester’s Wife as one of “15 exciting, inexpensive, theatre, shows to see off off-broadway this September

    Jester (Steve Weatherbee) and Wife (Emma Taylor Miller) share a laugh despite the beheaders lurking outside

    Broadway World just welcomed Emma Taylor Miller , our marvelous WIFE, to THE JESTER’S WIFE  cast and now you can see her marvelous performance by going to our Eventbrite page at this link   and purchase seats for your chosen date; the promo code ‘Jester-Besties’ for a 25% discount is automatically applied. Our $20 ticket slides to 15 bucks, a value that is no jest.

    Emma Taylor Miller is The Jester’s Wife

    Buy Tix At This Link For All Performances

    Thursday           9/21/2023 7:00 PM
    Friday                 9/22/2023 7:00 PM
    Saturday            9/23/2023 7:00 PM
    Sunday               9/24/2023 3:00 P
    Wednesday       9/27/2023 7:00 PM
    Thursday           9/28/2023 7:00 PM,
    Friday                 9/29/2023 7:00 PM
    Saturday            9/30/2023 7:00 PM
    Sunday               10/1/2023 3:00 PM
    Wednesday       10/4/2023 7:00 PM
    Thursday           10/5/2023 7:00 PM
    Friday                  10/6/2023 7:00 PM
    Saturday             10/7/2023 7:00 PM
    Sunday                10/8/2023 1:00 PM

     

     

  • The Jester’s Wife: Readying for a Rollicking Reading this Evening April 20th

    Wife (Winnie Stack) ‘counsels’ Jester on his running away from the beheadings

    (All photos below courtesy of Associate Producer, Narrator, and General Blessing, Ed Altman)

    The ​J​ester’s ​W​ife ​by T.J. Elliott ​takes shape in a semi-staged reading tonight April 20 via…  ​

    the expert efforts of Xander Jackson, Steve Weatherb​ee, Winnie Stack, Ed Altman, Gifford Elliott, Thomas R. Elliott, and Marjorie Phillips Elliott.

    Thank you Orietta and Jenn at TheaterLab. This is the next step to our planned Autumn 2023 full scale production of the play.

    Wife watches as Jester and Stranger ‘dance’

    Last Night’s Fun: Rehearsing Our Reading

    T.J chats with Stranger (Xander Jackson) before the prologue: you do know what a prologue is?
    The Jester’s Wife ponders the wrecks men make
    Jester (Steve Weatherbee) stares in disbelief at suggest that he is not the Jester G.O.A.T. in the 7th Century
    Knowledge Workings’ Artistic & Technical Director Gifford Elliott conferring with our fine cast
    (l-r Xander Jackson – Stranger, Winnie Stack – Wife, Steve Weatherbee – Jester)
    T.J. pondering how he got so lucky to work with all these people who are bringing The Jester’s Wife to sprightly, witty, and wise life

    Stay Tuned For TJW News by following us on Instagram and Facebook

  • Two For One and One For All: World Theater Day & 4th Birthday of Knowledge Workings Theater Company

    We started with Alms four years ago, persevered through the pandemic with Grudges, Within the Context of No Context, and Keeping Right on Zoom, landed back on stage at Broom Street Theater in Madison, Wisconsin with Genealogy and then returned to Off-Broadway at THEATER FOR THE NEW CITY (they insist on all caps) with a fine run of The Oracle last May. And now we are pushing for a revival of Alms and the opening of The Jester’s Wife. All in four years and like any four-year old we can be a little hyperactive but also charming as long we get enough sleep. Thanks are owed to sooooo many for helping us keep on keeping on to #maketheaterlive:

    Next up? The Jester’s Wife. Stay Tuned.

  • You Must Meet The Jester’s Wife

    Saint Dymphna with head still attached informs our play but inspiration came from considering her companion, The Jester’s Wife

    Our Cast & Team for Thursday April 20th Reading at TheaterLab

    In Order of Appearance

    Xander Jackson (Stranger)

    Xander Jackson is an on stage & camera actor who recently began his journey with the Barrow Group. Past on stage productions include Proof (Greenwood Lake Theater), Sweat (Cultural Arts Playhouse), and Smartphone Love (The Tank). He has continued his training in the classroom, in front of the camera, and on stage throughout the tristate area.

    In his free time, he enjoys a multitude of activities including Baking, Snowboarding, Skydiving, and Martial Arts Training to name a few. 


    Steven Weatherbee (Jester)

    Steven Weatherbee (Jester) is making his off-Broadway debut in The Jester’s Wife. An MFA graduate from Texas Tech, Steve is an actor and educator who daily relishes the chance to learn from others — artistic craft, philosophy, and pedagogical approach all especially. Born and raised in California, he is thankful to his supportive and ever-inspiring friends and family. Steve is honored to take part with the talented people Knowledge Workings LLC have brought together to make vibrant this story.


    Winnie Stack (Wife)

    Winnie Stack moved from LA to NY in 2019 to pursue comedy and acting, and has found that subway rats are her best audience. Shortly after moving she was cast in the Upright Citizens Brigade Maude team “Peaches,” and now collaborates on two comedy sketch groups “One Bad Egg” and “Sleepover.” While she isn’t performing sketch comedy, she is performing her one woman show “@Jenna” to sold out crowds in NY and LA. Winnie is thrilled to be working on another T.J. Elliott play, and is eager to share this unique and hilarious story with audiences!


    Ed Altman (Narrator)

    With Workings Knowledge Theater: The Oracle, Keeping Right, Grunges (Narrator). Recent stage: Two Swans, Nowhere Man, Victoria Woodhull (both at Theater for the New City). TV/Streaming: The Good Cop (NTD/Epoch TV), The Vow (HBO), Food that Built America (History Channel), Dragon Meets Eagle(Amazon). Recent film: Biff & Me, Oatmelio’s, Thumbwrestler II, Jazz John, all making the international film festival circuit. Ed was a member of the comedy group Prom Night with whom he wrote and performed at the Westbank Café back in the days of Lewis Black and Rusty McGee. He is also a voiceover artist for commercial and corporate work, and has voiced several audio books.  (Ed is also our invaluable Associate Producer for The Jester’s Wife)


    T.J. Elliott (Playwright & Director)

    Wrote Alms, Grudges, Genealogy, & The Oracle w/ the Joe Queenan — directed the latter May 2022 at Theater for the New City; solo playwrighting: Keeping Right, Honor, The Jester’s Wife. His 2019 Alms SRO comeback ended a 35-year hiatus from Off-Off-Broadway. In those lost years, T.J. produced, directed, & performed among casts of 1000s a mélange of corporate telenovelas & tragicomic, melodramatic, & absurd organizational performance art. (VP Chief Learning Officer at ETS for half  that time.)


    Marjorie Phillips Elliott (Executive Producer)

    Marjorie’s work as Executive Producer & Co-founder of Knowledge Workings Theater arises from deep roots in the arts. A theater major at Skidmore College and grad student in photography at the Fashion Institute of Technology, Marjorie brings to producing a wide array of talents and experiences including her work in the film industry in the 1980s at New Line Cinema. Her support of our productions ranges from strategy to prop design to photo retouching to publicity consultation and beyond. Marjorie is also the Chair of the Board of Chamiza Foundation, a nonprofit helping to ensure the continuity & living preservation of Pueblo Indian culture and traditions, and serves on the Members Committee of the Phillips Collection in Washington, DC


    Gifford Elliott — Artistic & Technical Director

    A graduate of Cal Arts acting program, Gifford has served as Post-Production Coordinator on Bupkis, the 2023 Pete Davidson series, and The Best Man — Final Chapters, both streaming on Peacock. He was also on the postproduction teams for Queen’s Gambit on Netflix and Divorce (Season Three) on HBO. He has worked as a director of theater and film as well as the host of the very popular Srivia at Singers Bar in Brooklyn.

  • It’s not so much what you know sometimes, but who you know and whom they know: the good fortune of meeting Atticus Cain, our Mosiah Wilson in Genealogy

    Atticus Cain

    posted by T.J. Elliott

    In my own biography, allusions to 35 years away from active work in the theater receive comic treatment: “In those lost years, T.J. produced, directed, and performed among casts of thousands in a mélange of corporate telenovelas and tragic, comic, melodramatic, and semi-absurd organizational performance art.” But as Sigmund Freud pointed out jokes even self-deprecating ones like the above example can camouflage what is very serious in our lives. Freud noted in what had to be one of his lighter moments that “our enjoyment of a joke is based on a combined impression of its substance and of its effectiveness as a joke.” The effectiveness is not just getting people to laugh, but also at times a way for handling something that was uncomfortable or even painful.

    In my case, I missed theater terribly, and explaining more than three decades away from it remains slightly difficult. The good news is that all of that earlier theatrical career — writing, performing, producing, directing, pitching, — proved enormously useful in my succession of straight jobs. In a wonderful example of consilience, a concept first introduced to me by EO Wilson of Harvard, a great deal of what I learned in those years of ‘semi-absurd organizational performance art’ enriched my subsequent playwrighting and indeed my understanding (limited though it remains) of how the world works.

    I read and learned a great deal about the way the world works: everything from adult development to adult learning, from knowledge management to project management, from leadership to followership, from neural networks to social networks. From that latter domain, academic papers like this one about the concept known as the Strength of Weak Ties introduced by Mark Granovetter proved useful in those corporations and they prove useful today in trying to #maketheaterlive, which is our motto at Knowledge Workings.

    Atticus Cain, who plays Mosiah Wilson in our upcoming production of Genealogy at Broom Street Theater opening next Friday, November 5, could serve as a textbook illustration of Granovetter’s points about how the weak ties in our network, the friends of friends of friends if you will, may prove more valuable to us than our immediate circle in many circumstances.

    Ed Altman, who first worked with Knowledge Workings in Grudges when that Queenan-Elliott drama went up live on Zoom in May through July 2020, was in another streamed theater piece that summer, The Statement, hosted by Theater for the New City. Ed invited me to see the piece and that was where I first viewed Atticus. Thus, when I was casting my solo playwrighting effort, Keeping Right, for its live Zoom performances in December, Ed recommended Atticus to me for the part of Sven McManus. Perfect. This kind of connection happens all the time in every type of work, but in theater where the usual structures of workplaces are not available or do not apply being introduced to a powerful actor whom you otherwise would not know is a kind of mighty grace. You’re not sure how it works, but you’re awfully glad that it does work is often as evidenced. As Jeffrey Rush famously pronounced in Shakespeare In Love, “It’s a mystery.”

    And while we are offering quotes, this one that appeared at the end of Atticus’ bio seems also apt: “I am a series of small victories and large defeats and I am as amazed as any other that I have gotten from there to here” – Charles Bukowski. We are amazed as well and feeling very lucky yet again.

    And as to the getting “from there to here”: Atticus Cain was born in Memphis, Tennessee, raised in part in Kalamazoo, Michigan, with his loving grandparents. Atticus lived in a total of thirty-five states  while growing up. When he was recruited to substitute for a fellow student in a play, acting arrived in his life. After graduating, he advanced to local theater, appearing in plays ranging from Shakespeare to Guare until he moved to Pittsburgh in 1995. Cain resumed acting with a cameo role on the CBS series The Guardian (2002). Since then, he has performed stage and screen roles in multiple cities, including Chicago, Pittsburgh, and New York, Productions include the aforementioned Keeping Right (2020), Wrong Number (2003), and The Stranger (2004) and his own self-written short feature, Opposition.    Some of his favorite roles are Sgt. Waters in A Soldier’s Play by Charles Fuller, Dr. George Washington Carver, in Carver at Tuskegee  by Kyle Bass, Alan Beaumont in Deadline, and Dr. Jacob Carter in the original web series Dark Therapy, the story of a therapist who treats supernatural monsters…and a few human ones too. Atticus completed conservatory training in July 2017 at the acclaimed Atlantic Acting school. 

    Very soon, we will post the link to the November 19th live YouTube stream of Genealogy benefitting Broom Street Theater. With that welcome addition, everyone will get to see how strong our weak ties can be.

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