Showing posts with label Jamelle Robinson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jamelle Robinson. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

New Route Theatre's BLACK VOICES MATTER Festival Starts Thursday


Inspired by the national #BlackLivesMatter movement, New Route Theatre has created a three-day theatre festival they're calling "Black Voices Matter: New Voices, New Plays, New Directions." "Black Voices Matter" showcases new work written, directed and performed by African-Americans from Bloomington-Normal and Chicago.

First up will be the play Shades written by Leola Bellamy, performed on Thursday, February 18th at 7:30 pm. That will be followed by Black, by Kamaya Thompson, scheduled for Friday, February 19th at 7:30 pm. Glass Half Black, by Matty Robinson, takes center stage on Saturday, February 21st, with a matinee at 2:30 pm and and an evening performance at 7:30 pm.

New Route will offer discussions following each performance to give audiences a chance to talk about what they've seen with the casts,  playwrights Leola Bellamy, Matty Robinson and Kamaya Thompson, and directors Jamelle Robinson and Gregory D. Hicks. Because there are three different plays and each post-play discussion will be different, New Route is encouraging audience members to attend every performance.

Although the shows are free, New Route suggests a $5 donation at the door. Performances will take place at the First Christian Church, 401 West Jefferson Street in Bloomington.

Here's the complete schedule:

SHADES
By Leola Bellamy
Thursday, February 18 at 7:30 pm

BLACK
By Kamaya Thompson
Friday, February 19 at 7:30 pm

GLASS HALF BLACK 
By Matty Robinson
Saturday, February 21 at 2:30 and 7:30 pm.

For more information about New Route Theatre or the "Black Voices Matter" project, please contact Don Shandrow, Artistic Director or Jamelle Robinson, Development Director at new.route.theatre@gmail.com or check them out on Facebook.

Thursday, January 21, 2016

New Route Theatre Offers Two New Festivals for Black and LGBTQ Playwrights


New Route Theatre has two exciting projects coming up, with a playwriting competition aimed at producing staged readings of winning works written by LGBTQ authors and a second program of fully staged works by African-American playwrights from Illinois under the banner "Black Voices Matter: New Voices, New Plays, New Directions."

As of January 14, New Route is looking for new plays by Lesbian, Gay, Bi-sexual, Transgender, or Queer playwrights for a LGBTQ festival of staged readings scheduled for April. New Route will select three plays to be presented in readings April 22 through 24 in Bloomington-Normal. They are asking for submissions to be in by February 20, 2016, and they'd like to see materials submitted by email at new.route.theatre@gmail.com.

Duane Boutté
If you're submitting, you are asked to include "Attention: Duane Boutté" on your email. Duane Boutté , who is acting as the curator of this series, is a member of the faculty at Illinois State University's School of Theatre and Dance. A performer, director and playwright, he has appeared on Broadway and off-Broadway, at theaters across the United States, including the Goodman in Chicago and Arena Stage in Washington DC, and in film and television, as well. In 2015, Boutté directed Cabaret and Fences at ISU.

This festival of LGBTQ voices is presented in partnership with Bloomington-Normal's Prairie Pride Coalition.

Also coming up in February for New Route is their "Black Voices Matter: New Voices, New Plays, New Directions" festival, which has been created to showcase brand-new work written, directed and performed by African-Americans from Bloomington-Normal and Chicago.

New Route's three-day event will feature original poetry and plays, intended to "give voice to the current #‎BlackLivesMatter‬ movement." The pieces that form the "Black Voices" festival are Shades by Leola Bellamy, Black by Kamaya Thompson, and Glass Half Black by Matty Robinson. Dates and times are:

SHADES
By Leola Bellamy
Thursday, February 18 at 7:30 pm

BLACK
By Kamaya Thompson
Friday, February 19 at 7:30 pm

GLASS HALF BLACK 
By Matty Robinson
Saturday, February 21 at 2:30 and 7:30 pm.

Performances will take place at the First Christian Church, 401 West Jefferson Street in Bloomington. Audiences will be offered an opportunity to interact with actors, playwrights and directors Jamelle Robinson and Gregory D. Hicks following each performance. New Route is encouraging audience members to attend all three shows to experience the full spectrum of voices. They're are presented free of charge, with a suggested donation of $5 at the door.

New Route Theatre’s mission -- to present "professional-quality theatre using a broad spectrum of artists who represent the community in all of its diversity" -- is clearly reflected in both festivals.

For more information about New Route Theatre or either of these projects, please contact Don Shandrow, Artistic Director or Jamelle Robinson, Development Director at new.route.theatre@gmail.com or check them out on Facebook.

Friday, May 11, 2012

New Route Broadens Its Horizons

New Route Theatre and Artistic Director Don Shandrow have created a niche for themselves in local theatrical pursuits as "a multi-racial and multi-cultural theater company that produces new as well as established works that explore the nature of the human spirit in the context of ethical, political, and social choices." The multi-racial and multi-cultural aspect has allowed them to use performers we might not otherwise see on area stages, and to produce works, like Lynn Nottage's "Fabulation; or the Re-Education of Undine," which New Route took on last year, that might get overlooked when local theater companies choose their seasons.

As New Route has so far pursued their goals, they've performed "One Shot Deal" performances -- one night only, in other words -- at the Eaton Gallery in downtown Bloomington. That has meant a very intimate space and limited resources in terms of sets and scenery, as well as where and how the audience fits into the picture.

But this year, New Route has expanded its horizons, moving into a new performance space at the Bloomington YWCA on Hershey Road. The first show in the new space began last week, and continues tonight through Sunday. That first production is Irene Taylor's "Suppos'd to," a one-woman show Taylor wrote to reflect on "the emotional toll of caring and care-giving."


Taylor performed the show as a "One Shot Deal" with New Route last year, and that workshopping aspect (going from the gallery to the "main stage," from one performance to six, spread out over two weeks) is part of the growth arc Shandrow is pursuing with his company.

To get a better idea of how this all came about, I posed a few questions to Don Shandrow.

 Hi, Don! Tell me about the space you're using at the YWCA. Have they done theater or performances there before?

The space at the YWCA is an approximately 1100 square foot room, with orange walls and hardwood floor, that was used as a fitness room. This is the first time that it will be used as a theater or performance space. Because it’s an open space with a ceiling grid, it will allow us to use the theater in different configurations. Eventually we'll paint the room and it will become a more neutral space.

The question you might be asking here is “why a partnership with the YWCA?” The answer to that question has to do with the mission statements and purposes of each organization. We mesh perfectly. I initially approached Jane Chamberlain, the CEO of the YWCA, about the possibility of some kind of joint project about a year ago and it was this summer that I presented her with a season for 2012-2013. We appreciate the encouragement we’ve received from Jane and the assistance from the staff. They’ve made us feel like part of the YWCA family.

New Route Theatre all comes down to our mission statement. I present the mission statement before each show, I remind the NRT Artistic Advisory Board (affectionately called the New Routers) at every meeting, and share the mission statement with anyone who’s interested. The mission statement is what makes us unique and compels us to present material by predominately minority and women playwrights.

My concern is to build an audience that reflects the diversity of this community. I’m attempting to do that by; first, bringing together an advisory board for NRT that reflects the community. Second, by bringing together a company of performers that believe in what we want to accomplish. Third, by presenting material that expresses, with a unique voice, the universal human condition and that we are all one.

We have an ambitious season this year and a committed core of people who share the vision of creating Central Illinois' only multi-racial and multi-cultural theater company. We are planning even more surprises for our 2013-2014 season.

Had you been looking for a more permanent space where you could do more than one night? And were you thinking when you did the One Shot Deals that they would function as sort of workshops for more fully staged performances? 

Our goal, from the first meeting I had with the advisory board, was to find a permanent space for multiple performances. I’m convinced that the timing of everything we are doing is right and everything seems to be falling into place.

The “One Shot Deal Series,” in 2011, served a slightly different purpose than it does now. When I met with Herb Eaton and we decided on the one show per month for 12 months…it was to serve four purposes. 1. To introduce people to NRT on a donation only basis. 2. To create talk in the community about the theater company that was doing a show a month (even if was just for them to say that we were crazy). 3. To create a body of work that people could look at and know that we were serious about meeting our mission statement. 4. To bring together a group of people, audience and theater artists, who felt a sense of ownership in NRT. The first year was to launch the company.

An unintended consequence that I saw early on was that it was also a workshop for trying out material, directors and actors. The “One Shot Deal Series” is a place where we could try out material to fully stage and it continues to serve that purpose. The “One Shot Deal Series” will continue to be held at the Eaton Gallery but will be limited to four productions a year.

The YWCA is now our home and the location of our Main Stage full run season. You have the 2012-2013 Season…it’s a set season and all of the rights have been secured.

Purely as an audience member, I'm hoping you'll do Lynn Nottage's "Ruined" or "Meet Vera Stark" sometime in the future. She's won a Guggenheim Fellowship, a MacArthur Genius Grant and a Pulitzer Prize (for "Ruined"), and yet your "Fabulation" was the only time I've seen Nottage performed in Bloomington-Normal.

Lynn Nottage’s works fit the NRT mission statement perfectly. For our 2013-2014 season we are considering “Ruined.” There is a Nigerian IWU theater major who is part of the NRT Company. She has performed in several of our productions in the past and would be a perfect choice to play Sophie. So I do see more Nottage in our future as well as many other playwrights whose works I’m excited about.

A Look at New Route's New Space

New Route's Main Stage season continues with "Suppos'd to" tonight, tomorrow night and Sunday at the YWCA, 1201 North Hershey Road, Bloomington. "Suppos'd to" stars Irene Taylor and is directed by Don Shandrow.

Next up will be "The Ladies: a Musical Love Letter," a musical revue featuring the songs of iconic African-American female vocalists. "The Ladies" was conceived and directed by Phil Shaw and features Jennifer Rusk singing with David Shields at the piano and Myles Singleton on trumpet. "The Ladies" will be performed June 15-17 and 22-24.

"Fabulation, or the Re-Education of Undine" comes back August 31, with performances continuing on September 1-2 and 7-9. "Fabulation," which deals with the downward spiral of a successful, snobby professional woman who has all but erased any memory of where she came from, is the work of award-winning playwright Lynn Nottage; it stars Jamelle Robinson and is directed by Gregory D. Hicks for New Route Theatre.

"Sunset Limited," a play by Cormac McCarthy, is next on the schedule, running October 5-7 and 12-14.  Phil Shaw will direct this story of a black man who saves the life of a white man who tried to end it all by throwing himself in front of a train. Guilt, responsibility, faith and humanity are just some of the issues these two men grapple with in this combination novel/play/rumination.

Ian Mairs' "Our David" fills the last slot in 2012, with performances November 30, December 1-2 and 7-9. Bridgette Richard directs "Our David" for World AIDS Day, as it involves a tense relationship between neighbors, one a widow who has lived in the same Florida home for absolute ever, and the other a gay man from New York who's moved to Florida in the wake of losing everyone he loved to AIDS. The David in the title is the nude statue by Michelangelo, and the object that brings these two bereaved neighbors together.

Opening 2013 for New Route is Katori Hall's "The Mountaintop," which traces the last night in the life of Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. Don Shandrow directs performances from February 1-3 and 8-10. The 2009 London production of "The Mountaintop" won Katori Hall the Olivier Award for Best New Play, making her the first black female playwright ever to win that award. "The Mountaintop" hit Broadway in September of last year, with Samuel L. Jackson as Reverend King and Angela Bassett as Camae.

Keep on eye on this page for all that's new with New Route.