Sunday, October 31, 2010

What? Fifteen Years of Outstanding Contribution to Theatre Arts!



Friends and Lovers!!
Rude Mechs is thrilled to announce an award from the Board of Directors of the Greater Austin Creative Alliance:
RUDE MECHS WILL RECEIVE SPECIAL RECOGNITION FOR OUR OUTSTANDING CONTRIBUTION TO AUSTIN THEATRE AND PERFORMING ARTS.

DONATE TO RUDE MECHS TODAY! We think this is the right time to ask because someone besides us - a really credible group of people - the Board of GACA - has told you we are worth the investment. So as you are considering your end-of-year or top-of-year donations, we hope you will keep Rude Mechs in mind. That's right - No sassy print mailing this winter asking for your fantastically reliable annual gifts (thank you!), just this simple email letting you know we are in it for the long haul and hoping you can pick up where the City of Austin hotel/motel bed tax fell short. (Every arts group in the city saw a dramatic cut. Our funding was cut by roughly $20,000 this year - that's one staff salary.)

You can make your tax-deductible contribution by clicking on the button below. The site will stay open through January 31, 2011, and we'll probably give you at least one more reminder between now and then.

Register for WHAT? FIFTEEN YEARS OF OUTSTANDING CONTRIBUTION TO THEATRE ARTS! in Austin, United States
on Eventbrite
ABOUT THE LAST FIFTEEN YEARS
We put together a little slideshow on flickr to remind you of many of the things we've done over the years. In addition to creating 21 original full-length works for the stage that saw 34,500 butts in seats, we have presented 21 touring productions, co-presented another 24 touring shows, co-produced 12 second-stage / Rude Fusion productions, taught close to 200 young women in Grrl Action, transformed a feed store into a modest black box theatre, created a shiny new classroom/rehearsal space, toured five productions to seventeen venues at home and abroad, and helped countless theatre, music and dance groups by providing our space at some of the cheapest rates in town.

ABOUT THE NEXT FIFTEEN YEARS
While you gawk at how young we all were in 1996, think about the Rude future. We recently were awarded (as one of six companies in the country) a prestigious play development award from the New England Foundation for the Arts for our new play, CL1000P (working title) - we will send an invitation for you to view our work-in-progress showing this December. We will present a full-length workshop version of I've Never Been So Happy at Arena Stage (D.C.), and then premiere it in Austin with our first-ever commissioning funding from Center Theatre Group (Los Angeles). We will continue our national tour of The Method Gun at Yale, Dance Theatre Workshop (NYC), and Center Theatre Group throughout the Spring/Summer. We are already planning Decameron Day 3: Revolution! so you can look forward to new episodes of our original soap opera Harbor Cove. We acquired more of the warehouse complex this year, and will soon begin planning our dream performance arts complex with two spaces, a bar/cafe, rehearsal space and room for everyone!

THANK YOU
We are lucky to live in Austin. We are lucky to live in a city where the press engages the arts in ways that are deep and supportive.

We are lucky to live in a community this creative and hard working and confident and intelligent. All this new work and all these open minds. We are lucky to live in a community where artists support one another, rather than compete with one another – where we lift each other up instead of trying to tear each other down. 

We are lucky to have so many amazing creative people that can make work with us, that are interested in making new work of their own, that understand failure is a symptom of working well and working hard and working right, not a predictor of future success.
We are lucky to live in a city where the audience is well-read and has a good sense of humor and brags on itself and yet somehow doesn’t take itself too seriously. We are lucky to have an audience that wants to participate in the creation of the play – that knows it isn’t finished until they show up and bring their own associations and dreams to the piece. And yet an audience that holds us accountable – with honesty but never dismissiveness.

We are lucky to live in a city that is full of bands and reads a lot of books and likes the outdoors and knows that a creative community isn’t just the money-generating ‘movers and shakers’ but also the teenage punk rockers and the quirky artist who builds spaces from trash and the hippies with their butterfly bicycles and the students making films and plays and music and their own new thing, whatever the new form will be.

We are always asked why we chose to live in Austin, so far from the artistic meccas on the coasts. Why would we have chosen anywhere else? Here we have friends and colleagues who know the value of a life lived making art with comrades and taking time to relax on the patio and share a beer and not get all het up about ‘making it’ because ‘making it’ isn’t how much money is in your bank account or how famous you are, or how ‘respected’ or ‘hot’. But how rich the hours in your day are, surrounded by people you love and admire, in a beautiful place that is both a safety net and the trapeze high above it.

We could never have made it without every single member of our Board of Directors and every single member of our company. We are deeply grateful that even when people leave the company and Board they remain a part of the family, and we all cheer each other on. And a special thanks goes to former Artistic Directors Kirsten Kern and Kathryn Blackbird, along with Gavin Mundy - all three of whom helped shape this company's identity from the get-go.

Rude Mechs Time at Arts Emerson and Wexner Center for the Arts

Again with the brief as possible recap. First - we had an excellent time. Second - the audiences had an excellent time. Third - the Boston critics think we are kinda silly and aren't really risking enough what with the industrial lights swinging at our heads. But that's cool - Time Out Chicago dug it, and probably someone in Columbus did - but we can't find any writing on the show.

This time we wholesale failed to take any pictures except these - which just kinda prove we actually went, and that Tiger made an appearance as well:
The Method Gun presented by Arts Emerson in Boston

Tiger monkeying with the light board, which explains so much!

Ohio State University - we were there!!

Ultimately good times were had by all. Some of us came away literally bruised and battered, but it was from the bars, not the theaters. We should send a round apology to that last bar we were in on Sunday night in Columbus, and probably the doorman at the hotel, and definitely to the very sweet volunteer drivers at the Wexner for grossing them out every single day. Sorry! We had a blast!

Here's some of the press and what some of the critics thought:

Favorite review of the Boston run was from Time Out Chicago.

We got a "slap/tickle" but overall kinda good kinda bad review in the Boston Herald, but we have to pay to get it, and that's too hard. And then anyone else in Boston that wrote about it (see Critics Circle and some blogger) totally copied the Herald review.

We were interviewed by The New York Times for the run we will do at Dance Theatre Workshop in March. Looking forward to that article because she was very cool.

Favorite review title: "The Rude Mechs Have a Nutty Method" by Ed Siegel of The Boston Phoenix. As you can guess, while he says it's "not to be dismissed", he didn't really dig it. He wrote this about the ending pendulum sequence: "The actors leave you with the sense that you're watching a riddle wrapped inside an enigma. Can the payoff be profound if there is no payoff? Can excellence be rewarding if no one (you included) sees the endeavor as anything but silly?" He also called us Austinians.

Shawn and Lana did a radio interview for Blast Magazine, and a 2-minute TV interview for Good Morning Emerson, which features the "Rude Mechanics" at around minute 18.5, shows (without crediting) a video montage of the show, and lasts for 2 minutes, but it's kinda worth taking in the whole episode. For reelz.

Okay - that's it. We'd like to thank Rob Orchard for opening his new space with The Method Gun, and Weston - thank you! And Chuck Helm, Andy, Scott, Sonia and all those driving volunteers - very fun week. We'd also like to thank the woman that owns Surly Girl, Betty's, Dirty Franks - awesome food. And Jeni's ice cream - well, Amy should worry if Jeni ever moves to Austin.

We're working on CL1000P (working title) for the month, then taking I've Never Been So Happy up to Arena Stage in DC in January for a full-length concert reading/staging. Then The Method Gun Yale and DTW are next in Feb/March! Bizzy good times.