designed
& Produced by Michael Sturtz of The
Crucible
Choreographed by Corinne Blum of The San Francisco Ballet
with music by Sergei Prokofiev
I collaborated
with an amazing group of people, including a choreographer from
the San Francisco Ballet, a
bboy troupe (the top breakdancer on the west coast played Mercutio),
a wushu martial
arts troupe, fire
dancers, a troupe of aerialists,
a whirling dervish with a flaming kilt as the Prince, a metalsmith
pouring molten bronze wedding rings as Friar Lawrence, swordsmiths
making propane-powered flaming swords for the Mercutio/Tybalt fight,
and on and on and on.
|
| The sound and video in this clip are from Romeo & Juliet; the text is advertising The Crucible's next production. |
So what exactly
was my job on this production? My title was"Stage Director";
I worked with Michael Sturtz, who is the head of The Crucible and
the creator of the show. I was responsible for integrating the work
being done by the ballet choreographer, the fight choreographer,
the Wushu choreographer, the breakdancing choreographer, the fire
dancing choreographer, the fire artists, the DJ, the designers,
and the dancers themselves. There was some creative input -- staging
bits and pieces where necessary, offering ideas to choreographers
and designers, giving notes to designers and dancers -- and a lot
of communication and management and organization. It was a blast,
and the show was absolutely incredible.
| "It's
all fun and fabulous, but it's also -- thanks to solid acting
from the entire ensemble -- surprisingly dramatically effective."
|
-SF
Chronicle |

from the East
Bay Express:
O for
a Muse of Fire
By Sam Hurwitt
One thing they
neglected to teach you in shop class was how welding could be combined
with an operatic aria or a ballet pas de deux, but fortunately the
Crucible is here to fill in the interdisciplinary gaps. The Oakland
foundry, sculpture studio, metal shop, and educational crafts lab
also knows how to throw a hell of a party, from its summer Fire
Arts Festival to its winter anniversary bashes, the eighth of which
starts now. When you look over the classes the Crucible offers,
you may notice fire dancing, fire eating, and stilt walking alongside
blacksmithing, jewelry making, and woodworking, and get an inkling
of the crossover possibilities, but the studio itself is way ahead
of you. In recent years its anniversary bashes have featured spectacular
fire operas combining the cultured pleasures of Purcell’s
Dido and Aeneas (2005) and Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill’s
The Seven Deadly Sins (2006), with the more universal ones of flying
flames and molten metal.
This year —
Wednesday, in fact — the Crucible debuts its first fire ballet,
The Most Excellent and Lamentable Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet: A
Fire Ballet, combining Sergei Prokofiev’s classic score with
a variety of fire performers, contributions from multidisciplinary
SF arts combo the Flavor Group and Chinese martial arts studio Wushu
West, ballet dancers, Crucible craftspeople, aerial dancers Flyaway
Productions, a plot by some guy named Shakespeare, and choreography
by Corrine Blum, late of the San Francisco Ballet. And you know
what they say: If music be the food of love, it’s time to
fire up the grill. All that sound and fury is designed and produced
by Crucible executive director Michael Sturtz, with Impact Theatre
founding artistic director Josh Costello serving as stage director
and Mark Jan Wlodarkiewicz (DJ Vordo) as musical director. A fund-raiser
for the Crucible, the show goes on Wednesdays through Saturdays
through January 20. Doors 7 p.m., show 8:30. Tickets $25-$120. Info:
TheCrucible.org or 510-444-0919. |
SF
Chronicle review
Oakland
Tribune review
SF
Chronicle Culture Blog
East
Bay Express review
SF
Examiner review
Bay
Area Reporter review
|