2015 Theatre Bay Area Awards

Our production of Ondine at Sutro received
7 nominations at Theatre Bay Area’s 2015 Awards!

Outstanding Production of a Play
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Principal Role: Ava Roy
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actors in a Featured Role: Jennie Brick
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Featured Role: Nathaniel Justiniano & Nick Medina.
Outstanding Performance by the Ensemble of a Play
Outstanding Costume Design: Brooke Jennings

We’re so pleased that the talent and passion of our actors and creative team – as well as the significance of site-integrated theatre – is being recognized by the Theater Bay Area Awards this year. Didn’t get to see Ondine at Sutro? Want to experience it again? We hope our video and photography highlights can help immerse you (again) into this fairy tale of enchantment and wonder…

Ondine (Ava Roy) and the King (Nick Medina) immersed in a serious discussion about LOVE

Ondine (Ava Roy) and the King (Nick Medina) immersed in a serious discussion about LOVE

On Monday eve November 16, we celebrated our shared commitment to impassioned storytelling with the larger Bay Area theatre community. We found ourselves on stage in an actual theatre for the first time…well…ever! And what a beautiful playhouse ACT’s Geary Theatre is. Ava and Cole Ferraiuolo, the young Artistic Director of Faultline Theatre, presented awards together and shared the stage with many other directors from around the region. Musical theatre folks shared song and dance routines and several important Legacy Awards were presented, including to the late, great Mark Rucker, whom we all honor and miss.

We’re especially pleased to celebrate Brooke Jennings and Nathaniel Justiniano, award recipients in their finalist categories. Three cheers!   

We Players performers and volunteers at the awards ceremony!

We Players performers and volunteers at the awards ceremony!

Announcing Brooke Jennings for Outstanding Costume Design!

Announcing Brooke Jennings for Outstanding Costume Design!

The Mead Hall and The Chapel

From the Studio to the Living Room, From The Mead Hall to The Chapel

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For We Players, Place performs as a character. Locations have distinct energies, personalities and even desires. In the Old English epic poem Beowulf, King Hrothgar’s great hall of Herot functions as an important cultural institution that provides light and warmth, food and drink – a place for singing, story-telling and safety. The mead-hall served as a place of refuge within a dangerous and precarious external world – a world continuously threatened by attack of neighboring peoples and wild beasts of the great northern forests. The mead-hall was also a place of community, where traditions were preserved and loyalty was rewarded. This is where legends were created and perpetuated, reputations were built, fame broadcast, and history written through the telling of it. By extension, we imagine the WWII era chapel at Fort Mason Center – a place of quiet for private contemplation as well as a community gathering place – as the hall of Herot. Herot, like the chapel, is a sanctuary, a refuge for the tired and a place for rituals that support community.

The Process

Artistic risk often comes in the form of working with new materials, unfamiliar tools, and experimenting with new techniques. HEROMONSTER is a very different type of project for We Players. Unlike our hallmark large-scale, site-integrated theatre projects, which employ somewhere between 30 and 60 performers, artisans, and stage crew, this project features only three performers: two actors and a musician. This is part of a larger experiment for We Players, an exploration in balancing the massive scale of our signature works with projects smaller in scope, though still rich with poetic imagery and inspired by classical texts of epic dimension. We aim to build powerful theatrical events that are more flexible than our large scale works, and can be adapted to a variety of spaces, including indoor environments.

With HEROMONSTER, we began with the actor/creator’s version of a blank canvas – a studio with four white walls and open floor, which we (Nathaniel Justiniano and I) promptly covered with images, phrases, an avalanche of ideas scrawled on giant pieces of paper.

(Music Director Charlie Gurke joins a rehearsal at Montalvo)

(Music Director Charlie Gurke joins a rehearsal at Montalvo)

The studio space we inhabited for the month of August was generously provided by the Montalvo Arts Center in Saratoga. The month-long immersion into the themes and imagery of heroism and monstrosity yielded the first version of HEROMONSTER, which we are currently performing in private homes throughout the greater Bay Area (ranging from San Jose to San Anselmo, with multiple stops in SF and the East Bay) while simultaneously continuing the development process while in residency at the Fort Mason Center Chapel. In this way, we learn by doing. New insights from each living room performance, and the charged conversations with audiences afterwards, inform and fuel rehearsals as we develop the show for the October performances in the Chapel.

This production is part of an even larger exploration and development process for We Players. Subsequent phases of this work will include collaborations with the renowned dance theatre company inkBoat and masters in the avant-garde music scene, the Rova saxophone quartet. Throughout, multiple translations of the ancient anglo-saxon poem Beowulf serve as a jumping off point, igniting inspiration and helping to inform our understanding of heroes and monsters, where they come from, and where and how they currently live among us all.


A Postscript: It is my honor and pleasure to collaborate with Nathaniel Justiniano and Charlie Gurke on the creation of this piece. Natty has worked with We Players as an actor since 2012, when he captivated audiences as Zeus on the Mount Olympus of Angel Island. Charlie Gurke has served as We Players’ Music Director since 2010, and written award-winning original scores for all of our site-integrated productions since Hamlet on Alcatraz. We are also graced with the musical talents of Steve Adams, who alternates performances with Charlie Gurke. Endless thanks to the ever-gracious Lauren Chavez, our producer and compass, the steadfast and insightful Britt Lauer, assistant producer, and Rowan Beasley, our intern from London, who shines her big green eyes, is quietly curious and attentive, and helps us remain calm.

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Together, along with you, we strive to shine light into the darker shadows of ourselves.

Journey with us into the darkness.