Showing posts with label Ray Dooley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ray Dooley. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Peter and the Starcatcher: Catch it Quick for 'An Awfully Big Adverture'

Peter and the Starcatcher's "awfully big adventure" has audiences, young and old, cheering. Here's what some of the reviews have said about this magical theatrical treat:

Left to Right: Ray Dooley as Lord Aster, Schuyler Scott Mastain as Captain Scott, Jeffrey Blair Cornell as Alf, and Mitchell Jarvis as Black Stache, Photo by Jon Gardiner


CVNC.org
“a moving and exhilarating production just in time for the holidays”

The News & Observer
“a deliriously fun ride”
“a wild romp full of vivid characterizations, clever technical tricks, hilarious puns”

Triangle Arts & Entertainment
“super fun, super-silly entertainment”
“incredible fun and funny”

The Daily Tar Heel
“a funny, bittersweet play that will make you want to never grow up”
“appeals to every member of the audience, both young and old"

Triangle Arts & Entertainment (Triangle Review)
“engaging and exciting, shedding new light on a familiar story”
“a winning production”

The Herald-Sun
“the ideal theatrical experience”
“humorous adventure with lively storytelling and delightful stagecraft.”

INDY Week
"an all ages origin story for Pan"
"tranport[s] the orphans - and us - to Neverland"

Evan Johnson as Peter and Arielle Yoder as Molly Aster. Photo by Jon Gardiner

Journey with us to Neverland before this ship sails away on December 12th.

Click here or call the Box Office at 919-962-7529 for tickets to Peter and the Starcatcher!

Monday, November 30, 2015

Holly Poe Durbin's Costumes Bring Magic to Life

In our last post, Holly Poe Durbin described her design process from research to working with the costume team. Now, take a look as her creations are brought to life in our production of Peter and the Starcatcher.

Holly's design for Black Stache, as worn by Michell Jarvis.
Photo by Jon Gardiner.

Holly's design for Lord Aster, as worn by Ray Dooley.
Photo by Jon Gardiner.

Holly's design for the Mollusks, worn by (L to R) John Allore, Myles Bullock, Schuyler Scott Mastain, Jeffrey Blair Cornell, William Hughes. Photo by Curtis Brown.

Holly's design for the Orphans, Ted, Prentiss and Peter, as worn by (L to R)
Evan Johnson, Daniel Bailin, and Jorge Donoso. Photo by Curtis Brown.

Holly's design for Slank, as worn by John Allore.
Photo by Curtis Brown.


Experience Peter and the Starcatcher! Onstage now through December 12.

Click here or call our Box Office 919-962-7529 for tickets.

Monday, October 26, 2015

Seminar Makes the Grade

The "brutally hilarious" Seminar has critics and audiences alike raving about this “bitingly funny” show.

Schuyler Scott Mastain as Douglas and Ray Dooley as Leonard
Indy Week: 4 1/2 Stars
"brilliant" “masterful”
“conveys razor-sharp lessons in a compelling master class”

The News & Observer:
“Ray Dooley in one of his most impressive roles … [shows] masterful artistry”
“highly satisfying”

The Five Points Star:
“lively entertainment”
“the ensemble sizzled”

Triangle Arts & Entertainment:
“an ideal show for a college campus”
Schuyler Scott Mastain as Douglas, Carey Cox as Kate, Ray Dooley as Leonard, Allison Altman as Izzy, and Myles Bullock as Martin
And audiences agree ...
"fun - lots of verbal fireworks"
"reminded me of my graduate school days"
“amazing actors …. such a talented company in our midst!”

Don't miss Seminar with a stellar cast led by Ray Dooley - onstage through November 1st.

Click here or call the Box Office at 919-962-7529 for tickets.

Friday, October 16, 2015

Jade Bettin Brings New York Style to Seminar


In our last post, PlayMakers resident costume designer Jade Bettin (A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Tempest, Metamorphoses, Clybourne Park, Mary’s Wedding) described the influences that inspired her in creating clothes for Leonard and the young writers-in-progress in Seminar.

Now take a look at some of Jade’s sketches for her New York-inspired designs paired with snapshots of how they “come to life” in the production onstage.

Jade's design for Douglas, as worn by
Schuyler Scott Mastain. Photo by Jon Gardiner
Jade's design for Izzy, as worn by Allison Altman.
Photo by Jon Gardiner.

Jade's design for Leonard, as worn by Ray Dooley.
Photo by Jon Gardiner
Jade's design for Kate, as worn by Carey Cox.
Photo by Jon Gardiner.
Jade's design for Martin, as worn by Myles Bullock.
Photo by Jon Gardiner.

Join us and see how clothing contributes to the characterizations in Seminar. Onstage now through November 1st.

For tickets, Click Here or call the Box Office at 919-962-7529.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Ray Dooley: Finding and Becoming Leonard in Seminar

Ray Dooley as Leonard
In Seminar, Ray Dooley plays the ruthless and frank character of Leonard, a writer/editor who conducts private seminars with young writers looking for both expert criticism and connections to the field of publishing. "Leonard's brain moves so quickly that one sentence can last the better part of a minute. His mind is continually turning over new images and thoughts, and new thoughts are pushing the previous thought out of the way as he strives to make his point the most effective way he can," says Ray, describing how Leonard's grammar is connective and that learning it requires intuitive leaps, one of the largest challenges of playing the role.

With a cast of five, the play "adheres to the unities of time, space and action" more closely than some other productions. The scenes lead to a final showdown, which creates a tighter and smaller canvas. Leonard is moving on a straight line towards an climactic encounter, which is easier to get one's mind around, "but just as a sonata or a quartet, it's not necessarily easier to play." Ray says that although it's different, it's more focused, and in some ways more demanding.

Through a series of metaphorical exercises led by director Michael Dove, Ray was able to uncover the underpinnings of each scene and the skeleton beneath the surface which provided structure to the action.
"Near the end of the play, I have a long speech where I am including one of the young writers in a pointed and emphatic critique of his life, my life and the writing profession. Myles [Bullock], the actor playing the young writer, in order to 'protect' himself, started building a wall around me with chairs. It became that he was putting me in a prison so that I couldn’t get to him with my critique and attack. At the end of the speech, what happens in the play is that my character leaves his character in a very exposed and bleak position. As I got near the end of that speech, I walked around, took him by the hand, walked him into the prison he had created, and as I finished the speech, I close the door on him. We had a visual metaphor of what my character had, in essence, done to his character, leaving him locked in a prison of his own creation. It was a beautiful visualization of that moment."
The four actors playing the writing students in PlayMakers' production are actually Ray's students in UNC's Professional Actor Training Program. "There's always extra pressure when you are working without a net with your own students." He describes the pressure to practice what he preaches, as they can see whether or not he's applying the things taught in the studio. "It's also a great joy when I see these early career professionals doing so well," says Ray.

When creating the wardrobe for Leonard, Ray and Jade Bettin, costume designer for Seminar, drew closely from real life models. "There's an actor in New York I admire greatly, who has some similarities to Leonard." To some degree, they based the wardrobe on that real life person's clothing choices, found in professional and candid photos. "When an actor is building belief in a character, it's a great help to know that these are looks that actually work in real life." The duo also considered where Leonard had just come from and where he is going. In doing that, Ray is able to build a backstory for the earlier portion of the day, which may or may not have gone well.

In terms of set, scenic designer Robin Vest has built a sunken living room downstage, close to the audience, where the first two seminar sessions take place. This allows for a more personal, intimate setting, whereas if the play were upstage, "we would have to try to open it out to the audience, almost as if we were playing in a proscenium house, and probably not able to play quite so intimately." Ray says that playing downstage allows the cast to "paint with fine brushes" rather than having to be sure the audience can hear and see them, allowing the cast more flexibility.

Ray feels it has been a rare privilege to be a part of PlayMakers for so long. Being at PlayMakers is the job Ray says he trained for in the 1970s at the American Conservatory Theatre in San Francisco. "Among the greatest joys are my colleagues." Ray describes the role of Leonard as a parting gift from former Producing Artistic Director Joseph Haj and calls working with director Michael Dove "a joy." "It's an extraordinary company of people, and in many ways, a family. We have become the fabric of each other's lives and it shows in the work on stage."

"I certainly get inspiration from the audience here; the audience and I have a 26-year relationship now-and that’s a great privilege. I try to live up to that every time I step on stage and try to live up to the responsibility and the implicit promise every time." 
- Ray Dooley

Seminar takes the stage October 14th through November 1st.

Click here or call our Box Office at 919-962-7529 for tickets.

Monday, October 5, 2015

What We Can Learn Through Seminar

Michael Dove, Director of Seminar

Michael Dove, founding Artistic Director of Forum Theatre in Washington, DC and winner of three Helen Hayes Awards, makes his PlayMakers debut directing Seminar. Michael says, "the thing I most often find myself thinking about in rehearsals for this play is how painfully difficult it is to know yourself."
 Life is complicated. People are complicated. If you can’t figure that out, you’ll never be much of a writer.
Seminar
"Isn't that the truth!" agrees Michael.

When he heard that neurologist and writer Oliver Sacks had died, Michael found himself obsessed with reading Sacks' writings, realizing that no new words would be coming from him again. Sacks' explorations and discoveries helped shape how Michael sees the world, and understanding the self became the soundtrack to his experience with the bitingly funny Seminar. "It's become a dramatization of Sacks' ideas and questions for me... a play about passion and discovering who you truly are."

In Seminar, four young writers enroll in a private class taught by Leonard, a renowned novelist/editor (played by Ray Dooley). Leonard only has time for the truth, unfiltered. His unorthodox methods put their fragile, developing egos on the cutting board and bring their ferocious envy to the forefront. "Here are four young writers all struggling with the ability to perceive themselves and to find their true voice coupled with a mentor whose tough exterior protects the wounded artistic soul inside," says Michael.
To me, the most compelling stories are the ones that are complicated. The brilliant writers are the ones that try to tackle all the contradictions ‪in our world, all the complexities of relationships, all the differings of opinions, all the nuances of a culture within the confines of the page. The best short stories, novels, plays take all that chaos and help you, the reader or watcher, better understand the human condition.
- Michael Dove
Michael says the beauty of Seminar is how it infuses toil and difficulty with humor. Actor Alan Rickman, who originated the role of Leonard on Broadway, described the play as a "comedy of very bad manners."

"Everyone struggles everyday to find their true self and purity," continues Michael, making Seminar a relatable comedy. "Insecurities, pain... how can we not laugh at that."

"Some of the richest stories of our lives are the traumatic academic experience or pangs of heartache that make it up. The characters [in Seminar] combat with 'such animalistic ferocity' that makes for wickedly funny and clever theatre."

"I have long admired the work at PlayMakers and can’t wait to share the pleasure of watching the amazing Ray Dooley with you all as he takes on the role of Leonard. This is one of the smartest comedies to come out of the American Theatre in the last five years, and I am thrilled to share it with this community."


Join director Michael Dove and his creative team for Seminar. Onstage Oct 14 - Nov 1.

Click here or call the Box Office at 919-962-7529 for tickets.

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Year in Review: PlayMakers in 2014

Here's a look back at some of our favorite PlayMakers memories from 2014.
(in no particular order)

1. Lisa Brescia's spirited ‘Last Midnight’ as The Witch in Into the Woods

Read more: “Becoming the Witch in Into the Woods“; Lisa Brescia, photo by Jon Gardiner

2. Roger Guenveur Smith in Rodney King, sparking community conversation during PRC² in the wake of the events in Ferguson, Missouri

Roger Guenveur Smith in Rodney King at PlayMakers

3. The elegant 1930s Café Society Supper Club set for Private Lives

Kristen Mengelkoch, Tom Coiner, Jeffrey Blair Cornell and Julie Fishell; photo Jon Gardiner

4. Ray Dooley’s Puck and Julie Fishell’s Nick Bottom as we’ve never seen them before in A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Read more: A Conversation with A Midsummer Night's Dream's Ray Dooley and Zachary Fine; photo by Jon Gardiner
Julie Fishell and Ray Dooley; photo by Jon Gardiner

5. Crazy, carefree, sometimes ‘clothes-free’ Spike in Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike
Read more: “Christian Daly makes his PlayMakers debut”; Christian Daly as Spike, photo by Curtis Brown

6. The beautiful healing and hope of Love Alone

Patrick McHugh and Jenny Wales. Photo by Jon Gardiner.

7. Associate Artistic Director Jeff Meanza trips the light fantastic in Assassins (and again as The Baker in Into the Woods!)

Jeffery Meanza; Photo by Jon Gardiner.

8. Joel de la Fuenta’s mesmerizing performance as Gordon Hirabayashi in Hold These Truths

Read more: “Meet Joel de la Fuente”; Joel de la Fuente, photo by Lia Chang

9. Mike Daisey explores America’s national obsession with guns in our commission and world premiere of The Story of the Gun

Mike Daisey, photo by Ursa Waz

10. The Summer Youth Conservatory’s Madison-dancing cast of Hairspray raises the roof of the Paul Green Theatre

"PlayMakers Summer Youth Conservatory presents: HAIRSPRAY"


And a 10 plus 1 we’ll never forget…

11. Adorable bovine Milky White stealing our hearts in Into the Woods!
Read more: “Working with Puppets” by Donovan Zimmerman, Puppeteer, Into the Woods




Thursday, December 4, 2014

A Conversation with A Midsummer Night's Dream's Ray Dooley and Zachary Fine



We sat in on a lively conversation between veteran company member Ray Dooley, featured in our previous post, and PlayMakers newcomer Zachary Fine. They are both starring in our current production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, onstage through Dec 7. (Buy Tickets Here) Read below to see what they have to say about the production and each other.

On Playing Theseus (Zach) and Philostrate (Ray):
Zach as Theseus, Ray as Philostrate and Arielle Yoder as Hermia.
Photo by Jenny Graham

ZACH
: With Theseus/Philsotrate, there is not a ton in the play in terms of their relationship, but much of the rest of the play, they serve as a mirror to Oberon/Puck. That's always fun to play with, or at least be conscious of in the playing of it. I feel like with both of those relationships, because Ray and I are in different stages of life, the status is unique to those relationships which allows for the comedy to come through even more. It's simple and direct.

RAY: Right, it's very straightforward. We're doing so much with the other side of it, with Puck and Oberon, that it's almost a pleasure to sit back and let the play do it for us. Look at each other, say the lines, talk and listen, and let the play do the work. (laughs) It's so beautifully done and so beautifully written that we can afford that.

ZACH: I think the simplicity and directness of the language there, particularly with Philostrate describing the Mechanicals, the pleasure of that relationship of who Philostrate is describing this play is, for me, one of the most satisfying moments to just sit back and watch, even though I'm onstage. It's such good writing, and so beautifully delivered by Ray. It's just pure comedy.

Arielle Yoder as Hermia, Schuyler Scott Mastain as Lysander, Zach as Theseus, Ray as Philostrate, Lisa Birnbaum as Hippolyta, William Hughes as Demetrius, and Allison Altman as Helena.
Photo by Jenny Graham

On Playing the Mechanicals

RAY: Oftentimes Oberon/Theseus and Philostrate/Puck are doubled, but the wild card is in the Mechanicals. I've seen Mechanicals doubled with fairies. That's not unusual in a smaller cast production, but to have the actor playing Theseus/Oberon and the actor playing Philostrate/Puck also playing Mechanicals presents logistical problems. Puck and Oberon both show up in Mechanicals scenes. So in our play, I'm absent from one scene and Zach is absent from one scene where the other character needs to be. We're only in one Mechanical scene together as Snug (Ray) and Snout (Zach), only in that first scene. Those Mechanicals scenes were built from the ground up with whatever we could each bring to it. Not just Zach and I, but all of us. Obviously Julie [Fishell] and Kathy [Hunter-Williams] have the heavy lifting in those scenes. We just try to support that.

Ray as Snug and Zach as Snout
Photo by Jenny Graham

On Playing Oberon (Zach) and Puck (Ray)

ZACH: Oberon sees Puck as an extension of his own body. As part and parcel of himself. He's his great friend, his comrade in mischief and mayhem. His confessor, and his servant. He is the extension of me. Puck is also my only friend other than my wife [Titania, Queen of the Fairies (Lisa Birnbaum)]. I worry that sometimes he likes to do things the way he likes to do them as opposed to the way I tell him to do them. In this production, Puck is a bit of a parental figure. Someone who I can process the world with and sometimes can get good advice from. Not always!

Zach as Oberon and Ray as Puck
Photo by Jon Gardiner

RAY
: Puck calls Oberon the Fairy Lord or Fairy King. He's clearly the leader. Each production has its own dynamic, and sometimes it can be very stern, austere, patrician almost. Oberon with a very juvenile Puck. This is a different dynamic because of who we are and our personal relationship outside of the play. We were able to bring that in. The director [Shana Cooper] encouraged that, in fact, which was one of the great joys of the rehearsal process. Puck thinks very much that Oberon is in charge. The way it has developed in performance and in rehearsal, Oberon can be inept sometimes. (laughs) Although he has his mischievous side, Puck is a bit long-suffering in our production. It's all done in great fun. I think it's part of the charm of our production. People have told me that they've never seen anything quite like this, like this dynamic.

Zach as Oberon, William Hughes as Demetrius and Ray as Puck
Photo by Jon Gardiner

ZACH
: I find that surprising.

RAY: I agree. It allows us to show a great contrast when we go back to Athens. The very formal, structured society and this catch-as-catch-can happening out in the woods where not all t's are crossed and i's dotted. If the characters are sure and in complete control, it's so much less interesting. Nothing is guaranteed here. This could all go very badly very quickly. Which raises the stakes and makes it much more fun, much more immediate. I think it's a lovely live dynamic not to have everything square and secure.

William Hughes as Demetrius, Arielle Yoder as Hermia, Ray as Puck and Zach as Oberon
Photo by Jon Gardiner

ZACH
: So often Oberon and Puck, particularly Oberon, are the order. He's the King of the Fairies. When I say things like do this then this, and "all things will be peace," if the approach to that is that I know that this is going to happen, it's already solved, then what the play philosophically is saying is that in this fairy world, it's figured out. There's order. There's control. As opposed to the way we're playing it, we're in the same type of chaos. This is in the play, but we're turning up the volume on all of us fumbling around in the dark. I like that we get to play with that a lot. That Oberon doesn't have to have it all figured out.

Ray as Puck and Zach as Oberon
Photo by Jon Gardiner

I was gently nudged in a direction with Oberon in my audition by the director Shana. She was interested in seeing an Oberon who was not as certain as other Oberons. The way she put it was an almost Woody Allen type neurosis. So I took that and said, yes, I can play with that and it fit in with my own playful neurosis.


On Working Together:

ZACH: The relationship Ray and I had immediately clicked around this playfulness we had in our rehearsal room from the start. So we both were saying "yes, and..." to each other immediately. That enabled me to go further with the choices I was making. Ray is a person that I look to for guidance and wisdom, so I can act that out in the play very easily.

Ray as Puck and Zach as Oberon
Photo by Jon Gardiner

RAY
: It's a joy when that happens, to be given the freedom to create that way. We were encouraged to do it that way by the director, who came in with some very strong ideas. She had just done the show. Maybe we were very much swimming in the river she already had envisioned, but certainly, she made way for the small, individual things we came up with and gave us a lot of license and encouragement.

In early rehearsals, we had something set up where I had big pillows, and Zach was practicing throwing balls at me. That insouciance that Zach was bringing while I was covering up for dear life! (laughs)

ZACH: There is a level of sadism to Oberon in his relationship to Puck.

RAY: Intentional and unintentional. (laughs)


William Hughes as Demetrius, Ray as Puck, Zach as Oberon and Arielle Yoder as Hermia
Photo by Jenny Graham

ZACH
: It is very rare that you get to work with an actor and you don't have to talk really. Our rehearsal was not spent talking about the play trying to understand it from some intellectual place. We just clicked. We just got into the rehearsal room and we kept throwing ideas out there, and both of us liked each others' ideas.

RAY: By throwing ideas out, that usually didn't come in the form of words. It came in physical ideas. Actions.


Ray as Puck and Zach as Oberon
Photo by Jon Gardiner

ZACH
: I've never had an experience like that, actually, when it's been so seamless.

RAY: Like Helena's [Arielle Yoder] line, "So we grow together, like to a double cherry, seeming parted, but yet an union in partition." The pure fun we had in rehearsal played out on stage, and the audience can sense that.


On Their Offstage Relationship:

ZACH: I'm not very fond of the man. It's a front. (laughs)

RAY: We had an opening [in the department] when our esteemed movement teacher Craig Turner went into semi-retirement. Based on meeting Zach twice, I called him and offered him the job. I knew that this was the right fit.

ZACH: It sounds scripted to say this, but it felt that way on the other side too. It was an enormous opportunity to step into something I had been hoping to step into in life. Since I've been here, Ray has been my guide, my shepherd, and my friend. It has been really special to have that relationship. To have begun what I think it's going to be a really long friendship. That's been the best part of it all.



L to R: Ray as Puck, William Hughes as Demetrius, Allison Altman as Hermia, Schuyler Scott Mastain as Lysander and Zach as Oberon
Photo by Jenny Graham

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

A Midsummer Night's Dream's Ray Dooley


Photo by Jon Gardiner
If you've been with us before, then you likely already know Ray Dooley's work. This season marks Ray's 25th anniversary as a company member of PlayMakers.

In our current production of William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, Ray plays three different parts, Philostrate, Snug, and the legendary Puck. Portrayed as Theseus's (Zachary Fine) chief-of-staff, Ray characterizes Philostrate as part muscle, part concierge.

Zachary Fine as Theseus, Arielle Yoder as Hermia and Ray Dooley as Philostrate
Photo by Jon Gardiner
Snug is a member of the mechanicals, amateur actors who present the unwittingly hilarious play-within-the-play. When Snug, who is prone to panic attacks, is cast as the lion, he ends up being more of the cowardly variety, "a gentle beast."

Photo by Jon Gardiner 
Of course, it is his Puck that drives the play and spins the rest of the characters into their dizzied states. Ray refers to him as "a country spirit," rooted deeply in the folklore of Shakespeare's time. Helpful or harmful, he embodies mystery and superstition to explain why things happen beyond our understanding when we step away from society into the wild unknown.

In developing his character, Ray drew inspiration from the John Milton poem L'Allegro. Filled with pastoral images of nymphs and goblins full of joy and mischief among the birds and trees and citing even Shakespeare himself, it is evident Milton had the very Puck in mind when writing it. We have all sides of him, from the unbridled and fanciful:
     Haste thee nymph, and bring with thee
     Jest and youthful Jollity,
     Quips and Cranks, and wonton Wiles,
     Nods, and Becks, and Wreathed Smiles
to the hard-working and dutiful:
     Tells how the drudging Goblin swet,
     To ern his Cream-bowle duly set,
     When in one night, ere glimps of morn,
     His shadowy Flale hath thresh'd the Corn
     That ten day-labourers could not end,
     Then lies him down the Lubbar Fend,
     And stretch'd out all the Chimney's length,
     Basks at the fire his hairy strength
Ray Dooley as Puck and Zachary Fine as Oberon
Photo by Jenny Graham
Among the most formative moments within the rehearsal process were "essence pieces" that director Shana Cooper employed. Actors were given a separate space to develop their own 10-15 minute scenes which gave them room to explore their characters more deeply as well as their relationships with others beyond Shakespeare's text. They used props, everything from ladders to flower petals to buckets of snow. What they came up with helped strengthen their understanding of their roles, and some bits even ended up on stage, such as Puck's playful ladder-balancing act to depict his transformative abilities.

Photo by Jon Gardiner
It is amusing to draw a parallel between Ray's description of Puck as a shape-shifter and Ray's own work on our stage during this production. Slipping in and out of three different roles with three different costumes is no easy feat. Some of his costume changes are so quick they need to happen onstage in mere seconds with the aid of carefully rehearsed lighting cues. In fact, there are times, such as during Bottom's (Julie Fishell) return, when he is actually wearing all three costumes at once. Don't look, but Snug has Philostrate's hat tucked under his arm!

Photo by Jon Gardiner
We'll explore more deeply Puck's devotion as servant to his master Oberon (Zachary Fine) in our next post later this week when we sit in on a conversation between Zach and Ray about their onstage and offstage relationship.

In the meantime, don't miss your last chance to catch A Midsummer Night's Dream! The show closes this Sunday, December 7, so Click Here get your tickets today.