The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Books  |  Comedy  |  Dance  |  Museum And Gallery  |  Theater
Best of Boston 2009

Endurance act

Backstage at the Boston Theater Marathon
By LIZA WEISSTUCH  |  May 22, 2007
inside_rain
Robert D. Murphy and Kelly Lawman in Garry Garrison’s Storm on Storm

Playwright Janet Kenney was wearing a tiara and serving as a kind of royal den mother when I checked in at the Calderwood Pavilion Sunday for the Boston Theater Marathon, the ninth annual 10-hour assault of 10-minute plays. “There’s coffee, tea, water, and everything you need over there on the table, and if there’s anything you need that you don’t see, tell me and we’ll get it,” she said as she greeted actors throughout the day and collected and dispatched each hour’s batch of performers to the green room at the 50-minute mark. “Your majesty, I will go forth and conquer,” said Brian Quint of Way Theatre Artists, laying his hands on her tiara as he headed backstage with the flock of performers for the 2-to-3-pm slot.

Whether they’re actors or audience members, most folks come to the BTM — which is produced by Boston Playwrights’ Theatre as a fundraiser for the Theater Community Benevolent Fund — for just a short stretch. A few, though, are there all day: the tech folks, committed volunteers like Kenney, and BPT managing director Jacob Strautmann and artistic director Kate Snodgrass, who breezed into the check-in, grabbed a Double Stuff Oreo, and fled back to her announcer’s box in the theater. Around 1:15 pm, Strautmann dispatched a pizza order for the guys managing tech in secluded booths. “This is the most important thing we do all day. Some of those guys don’t leave the booth — except maybe for a few minutes on top of the hour for a bathroom break.”

Meanwhile, the upstairs green room — and subsequently, the stage — played host to a parade of hookers, hillbillies, hustlers, nuns, clowns, degenerates, and sundry lost, lonely souls. They carted boxes, trash bags, roller skates, rifles, faux chain mail, and tennis rackets. A few of the actors and directors delved into Kenney’s black-tie-banquet-inspired basket of moisturizers, pain relievers, and lozenges. They nibbled on Chips Ahoy and Cheez-Its and shared strategy.

“I have rules for doing the Marathon — virtually all of which I’ve broken,” confessed Vincent E. Siders, director of Ed Bullins’s Mitch’s Blues. “Two cast members, no props, and no cues. I’ve got five cast members and tons of food. I’ve only got two cues, though. I’m happy about that.”

Jeremiah Kissel was sporting Elizabethan threads and an artificially bloodstained eye. Someone nearby exclaimed, “You must be Shakespeare over there.” “Christopher Marlowe,” he corrected with a glower, clearly getting in character for his role in Robert Brustein’s Enter William Shakespeare.

While some rushed to greet old friends and colleagues, others showed up with spouses. “So often you get husband-and-wife teams because there’s not a lot of rehearsal time so they just rehearse at home,” said Kenney.

Indeed, Boston’s cornerstone theater couple, Paula Plum and Richard Snee, appeared together in Leslie Harrell Dillen’s The Red and the Blue, which was about a man and a woman meeting at their 40th high-school reunion in Dillen’s native Oklahoma City after not having seen each other since prom night. “I even did the nails,” Plum said to Dillen when they met in the audience after the show. “Did I get the accent?”

Outside, I ran into playwright John ADEkoje, who was taking a breather in the upper lobby. “I was in there for four shows in a row,” he said. “I’m doing a service out here because I don’t want to be blasé. I’ll go back in and be good and refreshed.”

Related: Love and war, Eternal questions, The Shakespeare mystery, More more >
  Topics: Theater , BOSTON THEATER MARATHON, Christopher Marlowe, Ed Bullins,  More more >
  • Share:
  • RSS feed Rss
  • Email this article to a friend Email
  • Print this article Print
Comments
Endurance act
Thanks for this piece Liza. I ran all the sound cues for the day, Jake was ordering pizza, in part, for me. This was my 5th marathon and I never know what it is like upstairs in other parts of the theater because we are back in the booth all day. Your article answered some of these questions. Thanks! When the BTM started I was a student at Berklee College of Music. I live in Atlanta now, but I'll fly back to Boston for the theater marathon every year if possible because it's one of the coolest theatrical events in our country at the moment. No other city has an event like this where virtually every theater company in a given area will come together for a creative project once a year. It's a thrill to be a part of it! Next year is the 10th Annual Theater Marathon. I already have it on my calendar!
By Haddon on 05/25/2007 at 12:00:05

ARTICLES BY LIZA WEISSTUCH
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   SPRING AWAKE  |  March 17, 2009
    Local stages bloom
  •   WINTER'S TALES  |  December 29, 2008
    The cold season heats up on Boston boards
  •   LONELY HEARTS NIGHT  |  February 19, 2008
    The Magnetic Fields at Somerville Theatre, February 14, 2008
  •   PRIMARY COLORS  |  December 26, 2007
    It’s the political season on area stages
  •   GLITTER BUT NO GLAM  |  December 10, 2007
    Electric Warriors Glamstravaganza at Great Scott, Decemebr 8, 2007

 See all articles by: LIZA WEISSTUCH

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



Featured Articles in Books:
  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group