THE CUTTING BALL THEATER NEWSLETTER
June 1, 2005 Volume 1, Issue 2

Contents:
1. Announcing Extension of Macbeth
2. Feature Article: Designing Macbeth by Michael Locher, Set Designer
3. Macbeth Performance Information
4. Wish List

"Deliciously Brainy" - S.F. Weekly
"Inventively Staged" - S.F. Chronicle
"Visually Striking" - S.F. Bay Guardian

The Cutting Ball Theater is proud to announce the extension of
Macbeth, by William Shakespeare

New performances added Fridays and Saturdays June 24 – July 16. (Details below.)

Designing Macbeth
By Michael Locher, Set Designer

Rob Melrose approached me with typical directness last winter. He wanted to produce a Macbeth that was vibrant, deeply grounded, legitimately scary, and honestly tragic. He was armed with robust ideas about how the set would get the job done. Theatre is an indisputably visual medium but, even so, a surprising number of accomplished directors shy away from strong opinions about show aesthetics, something both liberating and frustrating for designers. What begins as artistic freedom easily becomes a source of detachment and the designer's work eventually materializes as an afterthought rather than an important facet of the vision. Having worked with Rob Melrose over a dozen times since 2001, I'm aware that the challenge with the Cutting Ball is often the opposite; carving one's own stake in a territory packed with talented visionaries and stratospheric (but specific) expectations. Like two of his favorite influences, Richard Foreman and Robert Wilson, Rob's production concepts revolve tightly around a comprehensive vision of how the piece will occupy audio, visual, and verbal realms together.

Here, the aesthetic cues appropriately draw from Rob's decade-long examination of Macbeth's text-presenting the story as an experience of mental illness, brought on by the grief of having lost a baby. Opting for a stark, institutional white, the set refers to the recent production of Sarah Kane's 4.48Psychosis (locally staged at Zellerbach Hall), using an asylum interior as much for literal effect as for its neutrality and quiet. Equally important, we discovered, was investing the space with a subtle aura of the recent past and familiar geography. Together with Raquel Barreto's beautiful gray military costumes and elegant ladies wear, small scenic flourishes (wainscoting, painted electrical conduit, spartan moldings) aim to evoke a vaguely European, mid-20th century locale. Disrupting the show's tight palette of color and texture is an aggressively painted wall of red, an unmistakable picture of turbulent, hellish evil. Hidden behind white doors, it's selectively revealed to inject appropriate moments with a surrealist shock of color.

Rob and I sought to mark the play's climactic moment, when converging armies arrive at Dunsinane to confront Macbeth, with a meditative hush, rather than the usual torrent of mud and battlefield horrors. In our production, Birnham Wood arrives at Macbeth's estate as a grove of tall saplings, like birch or poplar clustered in a snowy field (a landscape inspired by the melancholy scenery of the Netherland Opera's production of Eugene Onegin, recently staged at the War Memorial Opera House in San Francisco). It's a serene moment, aptly enveloping Macbeth in a place with graveyard-stillness. It's also an immensely difficult scenic trick to stage, particularly in as intimate a space as the EXIT Theatre on Taylor. A rich sound design, supplied by the always impressive Cliff Caruthers, completes the effect while masking the efforts of a capable backstage crew.

--Michael Locher, Set Designer

*The Cutting Ball is both sad and proud to say farewell to Michael as he departs this fall for Yale to pursue an MFA in Set Design.

The Cutting Ball Theater presents
Macbeth, by William Shakespeare

in a six-actor version
directed by Rob Melrose
May 6 – July 16
Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm
at the EXIT on Taylor
277 Taylor Street, San Francisco
Next Generation (under 30): $15 / Regular Admission: $25 / Seniors: $20
For tickets and information, visit www.cuttingball.com/tickets.php

Six actors enter the room to perform one of Shakespeare’s greatest tragedies. In a relentless, muscular adaptation, we find ourselves in a hall of mirrors in a Macbeth that lives in dreams, nightmares, and a surreal twentieth century landscape.

 

Featuring Keith C. Davis, Andrew Harkins, Daniel Krueger, Garth Petal, Paige Rogers, & Jack Sale
Produced by Adriana Baer
Set Design by Michael Locher
Costume Design by Raquel Barreto
Sound & Music Design by Cliff Caruthers
Lighting Design by Rob Melrose
Stage Manager Corinne Kane
Assistant Stage Manager Laura Davis
Graphic Design by Debra Singer

The Cutting Ball’s Production of Macbeth was made possible in part by a generous grant from The Mental Insight Foundation and support from the San Francisco Arts Commission.

The Wish List

The Cutting Ball Theater relies on donations from individuals to continue producing the high-quality, energetic work on which we pride ourselves. To make a tax-deductible donation, please visit: http://cuttingball.com/donate.php

We are also seeking the following in-kind donations:

  • A rehearsal space in San Francisco
  • An office space in San Francisco
  • A storage unit in San Francisco
  • Paper
  • Photo Paper
  • HP Ink cartridges for HP Officejet 4215
  • Large plastic storage bins

The 2005-2006 season has been announced! Please visit www.cuttingball.com/future.php to read about upcoming projects.

 

If you would not like to receive email announcements of events from The Cutting Ball, please send an email to newsletter@cuttingball.com with “Unsubscribe” in the subject line.