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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: Truckers

March 6, 2023 John Racioppo

We got to catch Truckers at INTAR Theatre this past week starring our friends Yadira Correa (Democra) and Christine Bruno (Comfort Pet) and so should you!

February 25 - March 26, 2023
INTAR Theatre
500 W 52nd St (4th floor)
New York, NY 10019

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A Little About The Show

Mayor, Lollipop, and Freckles don’t know when they’ll leave this truck stop with their unusual cargo, or where they’ll be directed to take it next, but what they DO know is that things are really starting to get weird tonight. Between unexpected guests, a strange rest stop clerk, and otherworldly energies, the less questions they ask the better. Right? Mariana Carreño’s darkly humorous new play expertly places madcap characters in a situation more bizarre than them in this World Premiere.

Cast:

  • Christine Bruno

  • Jesse Castellanos

  • Jorge Chapa

  • Yadira Correa

  • Jacqueline Guillén

Creative:

  • Written by Mariana Carreño King

  • Directed by Alfredo Narciso

  • Scenic Design: Raul Abrego

  • Costume Design: Harry Nadal

  • Lighting Design: Dalia Sevilla

  • Sound Design: Jimmy Kavetas

  • Production Manager: Alejandra Maldonado Morales

  • Production Stage Manager: Traci Bargen

  • Assistant Stage Manager: Joseph Distl

  • Technical Director: Christopher J Cancel-Pomales

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What We're Seeing: Sancocho

February 28, 2023 John Racioppo

Our friends at WP Theater are teaming up with the Latinx Playwrights Circle and The Sol Project to present Sancocho, written by Christin Eve Cato (End of the Line). We can't wait to see you uptown for this one!

March 11 - April 9, 2023
WP Theater
2162 Broadway (4th floor)
New York, NY 10024

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A Little About The Show

Simmering between two Puerto Rican sisters is a family tension that finally comes to a boil. Forced to confront the reality of their father’s rapidly declining health, Renata and Caridad clash over cultural divides, unearth old wounds, and reveal long-buried secrets. As Caridad’s sancocho bubbles on the stove, will the two sisters reconcile their past resentments to face their uncertain futures – together? A searing Off-Broadway Premiere play by Christin Eve Cato.

Cast:

  • Zuleyma Guevara

  • Shirley Rumierk

Creative:

  • Written by Christin Eve Cato

  • Directed by Rebecca Martínez

  • Set Design: Raul Abrego

  • Costume Design: Harry Nadal

  • Lighting Design: María-Cristina Fusté

  • Sound Design: Germán Martínez

  • Production Stage Manager: E Sara Barnes

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What We're Seeing: The Trees

January 30, 2023 John Racioppo

Our friends at Page 73 are teaming up with Playwrights Horizons to bring the World Premiere of The Trees to life next month and we couldn’t be more excited!

February 12 - March 19, 2023
Playwrights Horizons - Mainstage
416 West 42nd Street
New York, NY 10036

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A Little About The Show

We say we're all in it together — but are we, all in the same way? In a dinky park next to their father's house, a brother and sister unwittingly establish a queer kind of society that tries to sustain itself in a mercenary world. Agnes Borinsky's The Trees investigates our dreams of stability and asks — who is it for, and at what cost?

Cast:

  • Jess Barbagallo

  • Marcia DeBonis

  • Crystal A. Dickinson

  • Sean Donovan

  • Xander Fenyes

  • Nile Harris

  • Max Gordon Moore

  • Pauli Pontrelli

  • Ray Anthony Thomas

  • Danusia Trevino

  • Sam Breslin Wright

  • Becky Yamamoto

Creative:

  • Written by Agnes Borinsky

  • Directed by Tina Satter

  • Set Design: Parker Lutz

  • Costume Design: Enver Chakartash

  • Lighting Design: Thomas Dunn

  • Sound Design: Tei Blow

  • Puppet Design: Amanda Villalobos

  • Original Music: Nazareth Hassan

  • Production Stage Manager: Randi Rivera

  • Assistant Stage Manager:Kayla Owen

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Chris Hayes on Hindsight

October 17, 2021 John Racioppo

We were thrilled to welcome Chris Hayes to the theatre this past week and were so pleased to hear he loved the show! Check out his thoughts posted to Twitter:

Got to see Hindsight at @faultline_th today and it was stupendous. A brilliant and sophisticated treament of the topic but also somehow - improbably! - hilarious and entertaining and a joy to watch. Cannot recommend it enough. One week left!

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Hindsight Features: Broadway World

October 15, 2021 John Racioppo

Photo by Santiago Felipe

We’re excited to announce that we will be making our production of Alix Sobler’s Hindsight available to stream from Tuesday, October 19 through Sunday, October 24.

Fault Line Theatre to Stream World Premiere Production of HINDSIGHT

Audiences can enjoy Fault Line Theatre’s latest production from the comfort of their own home from Tuesday, October 19 through Sunday, October 24.

By Chloe Rabinowitz

Fault Line Theatre has announced that for one week only they will stream the world premiere production of Alix Sobler's play Hindsight directed by Founding Artistic Director Aaron Rossini from the Paradise Factory Theater in the East Village.

In cooperation with Actors' Equity Association, from Tuesday, October 19 through Sunday, October 24, audiences can enjoy Fault Line Theatre's latest production from the comfort of their own home.

Tickets ($20) are now available at: https://www.faultlinetheatre.org/hindsight-tickets/hindsight-digital

Once purchased viewers will receive a private link to watch Hindsight in a pre-recorded performance in front of a live audience.

"We know many of our most loyal supporters are unable to see the production in person," said Rossini. "We are grateful for the opportunity to share this work with a wider audience and it means so much to Fault Line Theater that many others will be able to join us for this show!"

Hindsight began performances Saturday, September 18 and continues Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8:00 PM and Sundays at 2:00 PM through October 23, 2021 at the Paradise Factory (64 East 4th Street, New York, NY 10003). Tickets ($26 - $36) are available for at: FaultLineTheatre.org

In the theater, there has always been a grey area between what is fact and what is fiction. Grey areas can lead to confusion, disaster, and violence - especially when it comes to the news and our politics. Where did it all begin? In Hindsight, an intrepid playwright traces the problem back to 1987 and the abolishment of the Fairness Doctrine. But as she builds her case, the facts, historical characters, and her own memories refuse to cooperate. Is it possible to trace our problems as a nation back to one decision made in the 80s? And if so, is a play really the right place to unpack this conversation? Like an episode of "John Oliver" crashing headfirst into a production of Our Town, Hindsight is a comedy that asks questions about how we communicate when we can't even get our facts straight.

The company of Hindsight features Andrea Abello, Craig Wesley Divino, Lynnette R. Freeman, Daniel Pearce, Alix Sobler, and Luis Vega.

The creative team includes Set Design by Tristan Jeffers, Costume Design by Dina El-Aziz, Lighting Design by Cha See, and Sound Design by Chad Raines. Clyde Voce serves as Associate Director, Shayna O'Neill is the Production Stage Manager, Addison Heeren is the Prop Supervisor, Zack Lobel is the Associate Lighting Designer / Master Electrician, Elis Cesar Jaime Arroyo is the Assistant Stage Manager, and Elizabeth Goodman is the Production Manager.

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Hindsight in Review: Theater Pizzazz

October 13, 2021 John Racioppo

Photo by Santiago Felipe

We’re so glad Theater Pizzazz enjoyed the show! Check out their glowing review of Alix Sobler’s Hindsight:

In All Fairness

By Marcina Zaccaria

When we have an opposing view, where is the possibility for free speech?  In Hindsight, Actress and Playwright Alix Sobler asks us to consider a post-World War II America where messages are thrown around so similarly that fairness was almost an impossibility.

The Playwright explains, in depth, that The Fairness Doctrine, publicized first by the Federal Communications Commission in 1949, provides Americans with opposing views or different sides of the truth.  Time traveling into 1987, we witness The Fairness Doctrine’s success and failure in the Reagan era.

Ronald Reagan, the Great Communicator, is loved in this throwback.  During his administration, charismatic figures run the FCC.  In 1987, Cosby was on TV and messages flowed fast and furious through cable into our homes.  Speaking past shoulder pads and fancy words like de-regulation, leaders impressed one another.  The Playwright reveals that the 80s were a pivotal decade where power lines began to shift.  Affluent lifestyles exhibited by Americans of every color were first presented, while Canadians touted that they have something better like universal healthcare.

Both a participant and an observer, the Playwright, bounds in and out of the worlds she creates, involving the live audience in something like a “continuous present”.  Looking throughout time, we consider whether there’s something unfathomable about a government that craves a broad, glossy, and dynamic world that re-invents traditional notions of family and home.  Meanwhile, moments of levity might occur at every family dinner.  So much can happen in sync over a simple meal at Thanksgiving.  Director Aaron Rossini builds connections, layering one image on top of another, asking us to appreciate a fine debate even through such grandiosity.

Beyond melodrama and propaganda, the members of Fault Line Theatre believe in inclusion.  They appreciate the indisputable fact that we have to look at the inadequacies of the past to find the present.  If we don’t look back, we might never discover what kernels of socialistic idealism were sparked when.  The earnest Playwright asks that we find magic to light up space.  We’ll draw the line at the heavens, so that we’re no longer in the dark.  If information can light up our world so that we are not excluded, then perhaps, we can find our true connection to each other after post-Capitalist glory.

If we include Washington, we might feel more like E.T., the Extra-Terrestrial, rather than an average New Yorker, living in Inwood, finding connection in the Village.  Socialism may have been a dirty word in the go-go 80s, yet we can’t help to still get that warm feeling when we connect.  Here’s to Fault Line Theatre for realizing that through the complexity of communication and information exchange, debate might continue to warm the heart-light.

Hindsight is running through October 23 at the Paradise Factory, 64 East 4th Street, New York, NY 10003. www.faultlinetheatre.org

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Hindsight Features: Time Out New York

October 6, 2021 John Racioppo

Photo by Santiago Felipe

Thank you for the shout out Time Out!

Time Out Says…

By Adam Feldman

In Alix Sobler's metatheatrical comedy, a playwright attempts to trace today's bonkers political divisions back to the 1987 abolishment of the Fairness Doctrine that once regulated the discourse surrounding controversial issues on broadcast media—only to find more confusion the deeper she digs into the question. The cast of six, which includes the writer herself, is directed by Aaron Rossini for Fault Line Theatre.

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Hindsight in Review: Lighting & Sound America

October 5, 2021 John Racioppo

Photo by Santiago Felipe

We love our Hindsight design team and we’re so happy Lighting & Sound America did to. Check out this lovely review of Hindsight by Alix Sobler.

Theatre in Review: Hindsight (Fault Line Theatre/Paradise Factory)

By David Barbour

In Hindsight, Alix Sobler stakes a claim on some of the most treacherous territory on the dramatic map, doing so with remarkable assurance and skill. It's a rule of thumb that the problems of writing a play are fascinating to audiences in the low single digits. But Sobler is armed with an inquiring mind and a sprightly wit, and her self-referential games are played in pursuit of a nagging question that should concern us all. Indeed, it should be keeping us up nights.

At center stage in Hindsight is Sobler, playing, yes, The Playwright, who is contacted by Aaron Rossini -- artistic director of Fault Line Theatre and the director of Hindsight -- offering her a commission. (Just to guide you in this hall of mirrors, Rossini is played by the actor Luis Vega, who deftly handles several roles.) Because the original production date is just before the election of 2020, Sobler seizes on a theme that couldn't be more of the moment: The fact that "everyone has an Unshakeable Belief."

Soon, she is working on a drama about the Federal Communications Commission's elimination of the Fairness Doctrine, the 1949 rule stating that "broadcast licensees were required to devote a reasonable amount of time to discussion of controversial issues of importance and give reasonable opportunity for the presentation of opposing viewpoints of those issues." Sound a little dry? Even the writer's mind wanders a little, shifting to Thanksgiving dinner with her family, an affair that descends into the now-familiar American holiday horror, with everyone scrapping, acrimoniously, over all matters Trumpian, including taxation, inequality, and immigration. Looking on, aghast, the playwright freezes the scene at its nadir, when a cousin invites Sobler's husband, a Canadian, to go back where he came from.

Nevertheless, Hindsight's then-and-now structure is the foundation on which she -- sometimes playfully, sometimes in deadly earnest -- builds her argument: that the elimination of the Fairness Doctrine in 1987 -- an act of Reagan-era exuberance -- put American society on the path to 2021, when people will believe anything, no matter how absurd or unprovable, if it supports their pre-existing prejudices. For example: that the presidential election was stolen by Chinese spies, the January 6 Capitol riot was a tourist trip, and that Ivermectin is a cure-all. Facts? We don't want no stinkin' facts.

The FCC scenes have plenty of crackle as an apparently minor decision becomes the basis for a furious battle. Committee chairman Dennis Patrick wants the rule dropped, believing as he does in the magical powers of the free market. Patricia Diaz Dennis, a conservative Democrat, is a free-speech absolutist, but she also wants to see advancement for underrepresented minorities on the business side. Mimi Weyforth Dawson, a Republican team player, will vote for elimination if it leads to more women on TV, modeling roles as cops and doctors for future generations. James H. Quello, a Nixon appointee, is alarmed by a certain California-based radio shock jock -- you get one guess -- whose constant fulminations about "feminazis" and other liberals is attracting a growing audience. Legal advisor Richard Bozzelli poses the possibility of a lunatic fringe organization -- say, the Flat Earth Society -- buying up the major media outlets in a market and flooding it with intellectual sludge. That this is even a possibility is because the FCC has relaxed "the cap," the rule limiting the number of radio and TV stations a single entity can own in any given market. 

Sobler bats around these arguments nimbly, aided by an articulate cast and Rossini's sharp direction. Things get even livelier when the characters rebel against their creator, accusing her of shading facts and omitting important truths. The FCC panel attacks her argument at its roots, citing other inflection points that have contributed to the dumbing-down of American discourse. Back at that Thanksgiving dinner, a cousin sullenly notes, "Well. I mean. We all saw your last play. It wasn't exactly...I don't know. It just seemed really problematic. I mean, you didn't account for the economic privilege, not to mention the gender dynamics, the implications of race...it was very...focused on making your point. You ignored a lot of other issues." Even around the holiday table, everyone's a critic. 

It's good to be back in a theatre again, experiencing a full-throated battle of ideas. It's equally good to make the acquaintance of Sobler, who isn't afraid to allow each character his or her say, even if she clearly disagrees. The arguments sound especially persuasive coming from a cast that includes Andrea Abello, charming yet tough-minded as Diaz; Craig Wesley Divino, oozing self-satisfaction as Patrick; Lynette R. Freeman, a deft intellectual poker player as Dawson; and Daniel Pearceas Quello, the committee's troubled conscience. 

The production features a fairly basic design scheme. Tristan Jeffers' scenic design is based around two different table gatherings, with Cha See's lighting using different color approaches to guide the action in and out of different realities. Dina El-Aziz's costumes are marked by a number of '80s-era power-wardrobe elements. Chad Raines' sound design channels a playlist of the decade's pop hits along with authentic-sounding excerpts from Rush Limbaugh broadcasts.

Among other things, Hindsight offers a hard-to-forget lesson in historical irony: As one of the characters notes, the elimination of the Fairness Doctrine was opposed by a united front that ranged from the ACLU to Phyllis Schlafly, proof positive that politics makes strange bedfellows. Clearly, we live in a universe of unintended consequences. Maybe this country isn't sliding into fascism, as Hindsight sometimes worries. And maybe a single comic drama can't explain the mess we're in. But it's good news that writers with Sobler's talent are willing to take on the challenge.

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Hindsight in Review: New York Magazine / Vulture

October 1, 2021 John Racioppo

Photo by Santiago Felipe

Vulture wrote about seeing a double bill of The Nosebleed is at the Japan Society along side our production of Alix Sobler’s Hindsight. Here’s an excerpt of the piece:

Figuring Out Failure in the First Person: The Nosebleed and Hindsight

By Helen Shaw

… Something similar is happening in Hindsight, though its aesthetic couldn’t be less like the spacious, quiet-filled Nosebleed. In a crowded little theater, jammed tight with props, a woman works at a messy desk. When the lights go down, she looks up. “Oh, hey, I’m the playwright,” she says. A little ripple of laughter moves through the tiny audience. “Weren’t expecting that, were you?” she laughs back. In fact, the flustered-seeming woman with the laptop will try to destabilize us repeatedly as we make our way through Alix Sobler’s autofictional attempt to grapple with the cause of our polarized politics. Even after an hour of explaining why she wrote the play we’re watching, the woman idly wonders if she might not actually be Sobler. Has she been fibbing all along? When a person promises you she’s telling the truth, every warning light on your instrument panel should glow red. If the last 30,000 years of human development have taught you nothing else, it’s taught you that.

Sobler (it’s really her) doesn’t go so far back, though — she’s pretty sure the crucial breaking point in public trust came about 30 years ago. Sobler’s convinced that the 1987 repeal of the Fairness Doctrine, a 1949 FCC regulation about “equitable” presentation of controversial issues on broadcast news, holds the key to our present troubles. Her actors compete, hammily, to define the Doctrine for us; Sobler manages to shut them up only by reading directly from the FCC rulebook. She introduces the four Reagan-appointed commissioners (including the touching Daniel Pearce as James H. Quello) who will vote on the rule, and they bicker spiritedly. Sobler keeps telling us that if she can adequately dramatize the meeting when the government opened the gate to alternative facts, she’ll have — what? As the show proceeds, Sobler deliberately reveals the weakness of her own project. At one point, forced by an actor (Craig Wesley Divino) to actually state the counterargument to her lefty position, she becomes suddenly persuasive.

Sobler is writing about the failure of good intentions, most compellingly her own. Whenever something goes wrong in a scene, she pops in from the side with her hand up to take the blame. The self-flagellation starts to affect the show’s structure, which keeps being interrupted by a repeated 2016 Thanksgiving dinner scene with Sobler’s quarreling, politically divided family. She would rather not see that awful Thanksgiving dinner again, but clearly the fight haunts her and thus the play. She admits to doing a bad job of imagining the commissioners’ discussions, which include facts they couldn’t possibly know and 21st-century retrospective reasoning. That failure she and director Aaron Rossini handle lightly, with cheesy ’80s needle-drops and behavioral exaggerations, abetted by a cast that gets up to velocity even with a tiny runway. Those 2016 scenes, though, ratchet tight that loose mood. The arguments are on a loop: The words don’t change, but as they repeat, the mood turns bitter, then violent.

The overall rhythm of the comedy sometimes falters — the recursive structure seems to travel the same ground too often; there are diversions (a discussion of equal opportunity employment) that distract rather than enrich. And, of course, there’s the fact that the play keeps persuading you of its own inability to find certainty or even a way forward. Still, is that really so bad? After a double bill of Hindsight and The Nosebleed, it’s increasingly difficult to see this mired-in-the-old-news quality as a flaw. In both plays, writer-performers demonstrate how to stretch out a hand to a father who will not ever understand, who is past hearing. Who cares if we don’t find the answers in the past? Isn’t it still worth looking backward? We have to learn somewhere how to reach out to things that aren’t capable of reaching back. That particular failure will be relevant, eventually, to us all.

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Hindsight in Review: The New Yorker

October 1, 2021 John Racioppo

Photo by Santiago Felipe

Don’t miss this glowing review of Hindsight in this week’s New Yorker magazine.

Now Playing: Hindsight

By Vinson Cunningham

How to write a political play? This show, presented by Fault Line Theatre, at the Paradise Factory, and written by Alix Sobler—who also stars, anxiously, as the Playwright—reveals just how fraught and difficult the job is, especially if you think politics depends on truth. The Playwright, laptop always in tow, frets through the composition of a play about the Fairness Doctrine, whose abolition, in 1987, may or may not have landed us in the hot epistemic water we’re wading through today. That “may or may not” is the uncertain axis on which Sobler brilliantly makes the audience swing. Those clichéd and much derided “both sides” multiply deviously. Under the direction of Aaron Rossini, a wonderfully versatile and antic ensemble—Andrea Abello, Craig Wesley Divino, Lynnette R. Freeman, Daniel Pearce, and Luis Vega—alternates roles impressively, playing the top brass of the F.C.C. as well as the Playwright’s news-poisoned family. See “Hindsight” to watch that pit in your stomach be turned into art.

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