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Fault Line Theatre

520 8th Avenue, Suite 318
New York, NY, 10018
646-801-1085

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What We're Seeing: Black Fly Spring

December 4, 2014 Fault Line Theatre
Image courtesy of Xavier University Theatre Department.

Image courtesy of Xavier University Theatre Department.

In October, Fault Line Theatre workshopped Nick Gandiello’s newest play The Wedge Horse. Now, this month, his magnificent play Black Fly Spring will be performed at Xavier University. You may remember that last year, co-Artistic Director Craig Wesley Divino directed the university premiere of our show From White Plains at Xavier. Break a leg to everyone involved in this production! And if you happen to find yourself in Cincinnati this weekend, here’s some more info:

December 4 – 7, 2014 @ 7:30 pm
Gallagher Student Center Theatre
3800 Victory Pkwy
Cincinnati, OH 45207

Buy Tickets

A LITTLE ABOUT THE PLAY

A year after her sister is killed while working as a war photographer, a young woman is set to present the photographs at a memorial. When she and her fiancé retreat to a lakeside mountain town to reflect and prepare, they find themselves at odds over their secrets, desires and their place in the world. A new play from a daring young playwright, Black Fly Spring explores how we move forward during times of despair.

CAST:

  • Tatum Hunter
  • Mac Blais
  • Annelise Moloney
  • Alex Roberts

PRODUCTION TEAM:

  • Director - Regina Pugh
  • Playwright – Nick Gandiello
  • Stage Manager - Nicole Santiago
  • Set/Lighting Design - Dave Zlatic
  • Costume Design - Kathleen Rossmann
  • Props Design - Kathleen Licht
  • Dramaturge - Griff Bludworth
  • Sound Design - Brian Griffin
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The Science of Storytelling

November 21, 2014 Fault Line Theatre
Molly Thomas and Shannon Sullivan in Breathing Time (photo by Jacob J. Goldberg)

Molly Thomas and Shannon Sullivan in Breathing Time (photo by Jacob J. Goldberg)

One of the reasons Fault Line Theatre does what it does is that we believe stories are an essential part of society. Sure, a good story/a good play/a good film can be fun or entertaining, but at their core, stories teach us empathy. Last month, The Harvard Business Review published a fantastic article called “Why Your Brain Loves Good Storytelling” by Paul J. Zak. Though it focuses primarily on the human response to filmed stories, I think the results are universal to all stories, including those told on the stage.

It is quiet and dark. The theater is hushed. James Bond skirts along the edge of a building as his enemy takes aim. Here in the audience, heart rates increase and palms sweat.  I know this to be true because instead of enjoying the movie myself, I am measuring the brain activity of a dozen viewers. For me, excitement has a different source: I am watching an amazing neural ballet in which a story line changes the activity of people’s brains.

Many business people have already discovered the power of storytelling in a practical sense – they have observed how compelling a well-constructed narrative can be. But recent scientific work is putting a much finer point on just how stories change our attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors.

As social creatures, we depend on others for our survival and happiness. A decade ago, my lab discovered that a neurochemical called oxytocin is a key “it’s safe to approach others” signal in the brain. Oxytocin is produced when we are trusted or shown a kindness, and it motivates cooperation with others. It does this by enhancing the sense of empathy, our ability to experience others’ emotions. Empathy is important for social creatures because it allows us to understand how others are likely to react to a situation, including those with whom we work.

More recently my lab wondered if we could “hack” the oxytocin system to motivate people to engage in cooperative behaviors. To do this, we tested if narratives shot on video, rather than face-to-face interactions, would cause the brain to make oxytocin. By taking blood draws before and after the narrative, we found that character-driven stories do consistently cause oxytocin synthesis. Further, the amount of oxytocin released by the brain predicted how much people were willing to help others; for example, donating money to a charity associated with the narrative.

In subsequent studies we have been able to deepen our understanding of why stories motivate voluntary cooperation. (This research was given a boost when, with funding from the U.S. Department of Defense, we developed ways to measure oxytocin release noninvasively at up to one thousand times per second.) We discovered that, in order to motivate a desire to help others, a story must first sustain attention – a scarce resource in the brain – by developing tension during the narrative. If the story is able to create that tension then it is likely that attentive viewers/listeners will come to share the emotions of the characters in it, and after it ends, likely to continue mimicking the feelings and behaviors of those characters. This explains the feeling of dominance you have after James Bond saves the world, and your motivation to work out after watching the Spartans fight in 300.

These findings on the neurobiology of storytelling are relevant to business settings. For example, my experiments show that character-driven stories with emotional content result in a better understanding of the key points a speaker wishes to make and enable better recall of these points weeks later. In terms of making impact, this blows the standard PowerPoint presentation to bits. I advise business people to begin every presentation with a compelling, human-scale story. Why should customers or a person on the street care about the project you are proposing? How does it change the world or improve lives? How will people feel when it is complete? These are the components that make information persuasive and memorable.

My research has also shown that stories are useful inside organizations. We know that people are substantially more motivated by their organization’s transcendent purpose (how it improves lives) than by its transactional purpose (how it sells goods and services).  Transcendent purpose is effectively communicated through stories – for example, by describing the pitiable situations of actual, named customers and how their problems were solved by your efforts. Make your people empathize with the pain the customer experiened and they will also feel the pleasure of its resolution – all the more if some heroics went in to reducing suffering or struggle, or producing joy. Many of us know from Joseph Campbell’s work that enduring stories tend to share a dramatic arc in which a character struggles and eventually finds heretofore unknown abilities and uses these to triumph over adversity; my work shows that the brain is highly attracted to this story style.

Finally, don’t forget that your organization has its own story – its founding myth. An effective way to communicate transcendent purpose is by sharing that tale. What passion led the founder(s) to risk health and wealth to start the enterprise? Why was it so important, and what barriers had to be overcome? These are the stories that, repeated over and over, stay core to the organization’s DNA. They provide guidance for daily decision-making as well as the motivation that comes with the conviction that the organization’s work must go on, and needs everyone’s full engagement to make a difference in people’s lives.

When you want to motivate, persuade, or be remembered, start with a story of human struggle and eventual triumph. It will capture people’s hearts – by first attracting their brains.

What We're Seeing: Richard III

October 28, 2014 Fault Line Theatre
Image courtesy of Tennessee Shakespeare Co.

Image courtesy of Tennessee Shakespeare Co.

Co-Artistic director of Fault Line Theatre, Craig Wesley Divino (pictured second from the right), has been down in Memphis, TN for the last few weeks gearing up for a production of Shakespeare’s earliest plays Richard III with the Tennessee Shakespeare Company. Though we miss Craig in New York, we’re thrilled to hear about this exciting production that looks to be a perfect fit for this Halloweekend. If you find yourself in Tennessee, here’s some more info:

October 30 – November 1, 2014 @ 7:00pm
GPAC/Duncan-Williams Performance Hall
1801 Exeter Rd.
Germantown, TN 38138

Tickets as Low as $15

“Free Will Kids’ Night is in effect for all performances: Children 17 years and younger will be admitted FREE when accompanied by a paying, attending guardian.  Limit: four children per guardian.  Seating is general admission.”

A LITTLE ABOUT THE PLAY

TSC’s production of William Shakespeare’s early Morality Play raises history from the dead to put the notorious King Richard III on trial before you and the spirit world.

Unearthed from a buried Friary just two years ago in Leicester, England, the painfully deformed 1485 skeleton of Richard now is brought to frightening life in a cadaver synod during which his murderous actions to the throne are reconsidered during the reverence of All Hallow’s Eve.  A soul still wandering between this life and the next, history’s notorious “bottled spider” has much more he would like for you to consider before passing final judgment on his actions that gained him the throne but have haunted him ever since.

CAST:

  • Rachel Brun
  • Crash Buist
  • MaConnia Chesser*
  • Johnny Lee Davenport*
  • Craig Wesley Divino*
  • Paul Kiernan*
  • Dan McCleary*
  • Caley Milliken*

Production Team:

  • Director – David Demke
  •  Costume Designer – Bruce Bui
  • Scenic Designer – Brian Ruggaber
  • Lighting Designer – Jeremy Fisher
  • Stage Manager – Melissa A. Nathan*
  • Assistant Stage Manager – Blakely Saucier
  • 2nd Asst. Stage Manager/Swing - Oliver Crawford
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What We're Seeing: The Rules

October 7, 2014 Fault Line Theatre

Co-Artistic director of Fault Line Theatre, Aaron Rossini, is traveling to Nantucket for the weekend to workshop a new play by our friend Dipika Guha called The Rules with the White Heron Theatre Company’s Playwrights’ Workshop. The play will be read by Caitlin Clouthier, Liam Craig, Laura Gragtmans, and Melissa Hale Woodman at the tent theatre behind the Whaling Museum in downtown Nantucket.

What’s really exciting about this whole event is that much of the process is open to the public. From Lynne Bolton, artistic director of White Heron:

“The Playwrights’ Workshop is designed to develop plays by emerging playwrights. It is particularly unique for audiences to have the chance to sit in on rehearsals and see how a play is developed,” said Bolton. “ When the actors and director begin to make the play come alive, it becomes apparent what works and what doesn’t. It is exciting for the audience to be part of the process. And the final reading allows participants to see the progress of the play.”

All events are FREE!

Whaling Museum
13 Broad St.
Nantucket, MA 02554

Open Rehearsals
Friday, October 10 from 1-3 p.m.
Saturday, October 11 from 1-3 pm.

Open Reading
Sunday, October 12 at 3 p.m.

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What We're Seeing: Bones in the Basket

October 4, 2014 Fault Line Theatre
Image courtesy of Bones in the Basket

Image courtesy of Bones in the Basket

Back in September, I mentioned that our buddy and Fault Line Theatre actor, Blake Segal (Frogs), was developing an evening of Russian Fairy Tales with a team of artists from the Yale School of Drama. Well, the time has finally come! Tickets are now available for Bones in the Basket which will be produced by The Araca Project.

October 8 – 12, 2014
American Theaters of Actors
314 W. 54th St.
New York, NY 10019

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A LITTLE ABOUT THE PLAY

A motley troupe of storytellers burst onto a makeshift stage with a riotous performance of seven classic Russian fairy tales. These wild misfits will act, sing, dance, flirt, beg, borrow, steal; whatever it takes to fill their empty bellies. And they have no interest in stories that end in “happily ever after…” So raise up your glass in a toast and your voice in song, asBones in the Basket invites you to a world of tales filled with startling plot twists, morbid spectacles, and biting humor.

Originally developed for the Yale Cabaret,Bones in the Basket was conceived of by Alexandra Henrikson, directed by Devin Brain, and devised by the company based on Aleksandr Afanas’ev’s collection of Russian fairy tales.

ENSEMBLE:

  • Daniel Binstock
  • Stephanie Hayes
  • Alexandra Henrikson
  • Michael McQuilken
  • Blake Segal
  • Jillian Taylor

PRODUCTION TEAM:

  • Director/Producer - Devin Brain
  • Producer - Lindsey Turteltaub
  • Producer - Tara Kayton
  • Creator/Producer - Alexandra Henrikson
  • Dramaturg - Tanya Dean
  • Composer - Michael McQuilken
  • Scenic Designer - Meredith Ries
  • Costume Designer - Valérie T. Bart
  • Lighting Designer - Alan Edwards
  • Sound Designer - Ken Goodwin
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What We're Seeing: Scenes From A Marriage

September 29, 2014 Fault Line Theatre
Image from Sara Krulwich / The New York Times

Image from Sara Krulwich / The New York Times

Susannah Flood (Love and Information), our friend, former classmate, and frequent Fault Line Theatre collaborator, is in a new show at New York Theatre Workshop called Scenes From A Marriage. This new stage adaptation of Ingmar Bergman’s 1974 film dramatically transforms the space at New York Theatre Workshop and audience members are led to different sections of the stage by actors as the play goes on. It’s tough to summarize the unique way this play has been staged, so you’ll just have to go see it.

Fun Bonus: Check out co-Artistic Directors Aaron Rossini and Craig Wesley Divino in the upper left-hand side of the publicity image!

September 3 – October 26, 2014
New York Theatre Workshop
79 E. 4th St.
New York, NY 10003

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A LITTLE ABOUT THE PLAY

Internationally renowned Flemish director Ivo van Hove, returns to the city for his seventh collaboration with New York Theatre Workshop.  Van Hove has received critical acclaim for his fresh interpretations of familiar dramatic works including, most recently, Roman Tragediesat BAM, as well as productions of The Little Foxes, A Street Car Named Desire and Hedda Gabler at NYTW. In Emily Mann’s highly theatrical adaptation of Ingmar Bergman‘s popular 1974 film Scenes from a Marriage, an ensemble of virtuosic actors invite audiences into an intimate space to experience collectively the human dynamics of a relationship through all the stages of a life—from youth, to middle age to maturity.. Van Hove’s interpretation illuminates the universal themes of love, identity and vulnerability that are at the heart of Bergman’s timeless film.

CAST:

  • Tina Benko
  • Dallas Roberts
  • Roslyn Ruff
  • Susannah Flood
  • Erin Gann
  • Arliss Howard
  • Alex Hurt
  • Mia Katigbak
  • Emma Ramos
  • Carmen Zilles

PRODUCTION TEAM:

  • Originally Written by Ingmar Bergman
  • Adapted by Emily Mann
  • Directed by Ivo van Hove
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What We're Seeing: Team Higgins

September 23, 2014 Fault Line Theatre
Photo by Julia Cawley.

Photo by Julia Cawley.

Fault Line Theatre actor, Molly Thomas (of Breathing Time fame), is performing long-form improv tonight with her troupe Team Higgins at UCB Chelsea.  Show starts at 7:30 pm and tickets are only $5! Go!

UCB Chelsea
307 W 26th St (between 8th & 9th Ave’s)
New York, NY 10001

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The Wedge Horse workshop

September 22, 2014 Fault Line Theatre

This week, Fault Line Theatre and a group of talented actors and designers will be workshopping a brand new play by the ultra-talented Nick Gandiello called The Wedge Horse. We’ve been a huge fan of Nick’s work for a long time now and we can’t wait to get in the room with him and work through one of his scripts. The workshop will be directed by our co-artistic director Aaron Rossini and includes actors Charlie Thurston, Alejandro Rodriguez, and Megan Hughes.

What’s more, many of our artistic associates will also be stopping by to attack the script from a design perspective. We’ve always believed that plays not only come alive in the mouths and bodies of actors, but also in the creative work of designers. It’s extremely exciting to approach the story from this multi-disciplinary angle while the playwright is still working through the script.

Tags The Wedge Horse

The Walk-Up

September 20, 2014 Fault Line Theatre

Congratulations to Fault Line Theatre Honor Roll member (and lovely wife of co-founder Tristan Jeffers) Julia Brownell! NBC has put her show The Walk-Up into development. The project is described as “… a first-person narrative about two 30-something couples — one with a baby on the way — who decide to buy and live in a Brooklyn brownstone together, creating their own version of the modern urban family.” It is being produced by Jason Katim’s True Jack Productions (Parenthood, About A Boy). More info about the project can be found here.

Congrats Julia!

What We're Seeing: Our Town

September 16, 2014 Fault Line Theatre
Image courtesy of Kansas City Repertory Theatre

Image courtesy of Kansas City Repertory Theatre

One of Fault Line Theatre’s fearless stage managers, Brooke Redler (From White Plains, The Faire, Breathing Time), is back in her home town of Kansas City where she is Assistant Stage Manager at Kansas City Repertory Theatre‘s production of Thornton Wilder’s Our Town. The Wall Street Journal has said ”You’ll never see a better Our Town - or anything else – as long as you live.” If you find yourself in the Midwest, you know where to go!

September 5 – 28, 2014
Kansas City Repertory Theatre
4949 Cherry St.
Kansas City, MO 64110

Buy Tickets

A LITTLE ABOUT THE PLAY

Experience a young woman’s journey to discover the magical and often simple moments that knit together a well-lived life. Acclaimed Broadway director and MacArthur Fellow David Cromer presents his innovative and electrifying new production of Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize-winning classic. The New York Times calls David Cromer’s new version “wonderfully intimate…a highly rewarding production.”

Appropriate for ages 9 & up.

CAST:

  • Doc Gibbs - Craig Benton
  • Prof. Willard - Logan Black
  • Mrs. Webb - Kati Brazda
  • Farmer McCarty - Richard C. Brown
  • Rebecca Gibbs - Mariem Diaz
  • Simon Stimson - Patrick Du Laney
  • Sam Craig - Jamie Dufault
  • Citizen - Alisha Espinoza
  • Mrs. Soames - Peggy Friesen
  • Editor Webb - Charles Fugate
  • Constable Warren - Jerry Genochio
  • Irma - Nicole Greenberg
  • Si Crowell - Brian Huther
  • Joe Stoddard - Gary Neal Johnson
  • Howie Newsome - Todd Lanker
  • Joe Crowell, Jr. - Seth Macchi
  • Emily - Linsey Page Morton
  • Citizen - Emily Phillips
  • Mrs. Gibbs - Stephanie Rae Roberts
  • Stage Manager - Jeff Still
  • Wally Webb - Andrew Stout
  • Citizen - Michael Thayer
  • George - Derrick Trumbly

PRODUCTION TEAM:

  • Writer - Thornton Wilder
  • Director - David Cromer
  • Stage Manager - Mary Honour
  • Asst. Stage Manager - Brooke Redler
  • Scenic Designer - Stephen Dobay
  • Costume Designer - Alison Stiple
  • Lighting Designer - Heather Gilbert
  • Sound Designer/Music Director - Jonathon Mastro
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