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Impact
Theatre is a small nonprofit theatre company which
I founded in Berkeley, California in 1996. I was the Artistic Director
until 2000, when I moved to Seattle for grad school. Since then,
Melissa Hillman has taken the reigns and is taking the company to
the next level.
In
1996 I was fresh out of undergrad and filled with a lot of righteous
energy -- I wanted to make theatre that would appeal to my own generation.
Impact's mission was and is to fill an unmet need for community,
storytelling, and direct experience for young people in the Bay
Area. We did a lot of original plays and were blessed with a couple
of truly talented young writers.
Starting
with no budget, no space, and no reputation, we attracted an audience
of students, hipsters, young people, and curious traditional theatregoers
with an aesthetic that focused on actor over design, language over
spectacle, and immediacy over everything. We kept ticket prices
absurdly low and worked on the shows and the company for no financial
compensation. Company members came and went, we dealt with all kinds
of drama, and we kept on putting up about four shows a year. The
shows themselves were a supremely mixed bag -- sketch comedy, heavy
drama, experimental commedia, superheroes, and eventually Shakespeare.
Some fell flat, of course, but some of them fulfilled our mission
and, frankly, my own dreams. The highest praise I've ever received
was from a teenager moved to tears by a show, who said she had never
imagined that theatre could mean anything to her.
Below
you'll find information on a few Impact Theatre shows. Sweet
Self was a world premiere drama by Zay Amsbury, a close
friend and collaborator of mine for several years. Zay also wrote
The Wake-Up Crew, my
final show as Impact's Artistic Director. One of Impact's boldest
experiments was to create new commedia characters based on present-day
archetypes -- like the Soccer Mom, the Campus Activist, and the
Raver Kid -- and put them onstage with lazzi and a story structure
but no set script, in People's Parking:
A 90's Berkeley Commedia and Commedia
2000: Soccer Mom vs. Monster Bud. Impact's first Shakespeare
was a Henry IV Part One cut that I developed with
Melissa Hillman; we called it Henry IV:
The Impact Remix. Impact's biggest success was House
of Lucky, which premiered at a tiny space in Berkeley,
moved to San Francisco for an award-winning twice-extended run at
The Marsh, and was eventually picked up by The Magic.
Sweet
Self by Zay Amsbury
The
Wake-Up Crew by Zay Amsbury
Commedia
2000: Soccer Mom vs. Monster Bud
People's Parking: A 90's Berkeley Commedia
Henry
IV: The Impact Remix
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| The
cast of the Impact Theatre production of Sweet Self:
Frank Wortham, Rachel Schaffran, Curt Elfenbein, Marin Van Young,
Josh Boshnack, and Michael Davis |
Sweet Self is
an original play by Zay
Amsbury. The production I directed with Impact Theatre
in 1998 was probably the most moving piece of theatre I've ever
been involved with.
The story centers around a tightly knit group of friends in Santa
Cruz, friends that think of each other as family. The head
of this family is Eddie, a small-time pot dealer whose East Coast
mother and sister need his help. Annie is the youngest member
of the group, a sixteen-year-old runaway and budding alcoholic.
A pair of incidents give rise to the story: Eddie steals money from
his drug contacts to give to his mother, and Annie is raped after
blacking out while drunk. Eddie vows to find the rapist, and
his violent search threatens to tear the group of friends apart
even as the dangerous drug contacts seek revenge for their stolen
cash. Confronted by his girlfriend Jo, Eddie admits to sexually
abusing his sister as a child -- and that he too had blacked out
from alcohol the night Annie was raped. Finally, Eddie's guilt is
confirmed, and he makes a choice -- he gives the stolen money to
Annie and gives himself up to be killed by the drug dealers.
The Impact production had a small budget indeed, and we found a
way to make this work to our advantage. Due to the theater
space crunch in the Bay Area, we performed in the cafeteria of the
North Berkeley Senior Center under flourescent lights. The
audience, a few rows deep, formed three sides of a square on the
floor. The fourth side was a row of chairs for the actors
to sit in when not on stage. That's all that was needed, as
the reviews to the left can testify.
| "...if
there was ever a case for not judging a theater group by its
budget, Impact Theatre's Sweet Self is it... an intense, serious
drama... builds methodically towards its troubling emotional
climax... a decidedly contemporary play, and its language --
unlike some plays that try desperately to portray Gen X life
-- is honest and real... it succeeds at leaving its audience
thoroughly moved... the company has come under the leadership
of artistic director Josh Costello, and if Sweet Self is any
indication, the company is in good hands." |
| Benoit
Denizet-Lewis, Contra Costa Times |
| "an
ambitious foray into no-frills contemporary drama... authentic,
rough language... Costello directs with a sure hand, and before
long you forget about the limitations of the minimalist staging..."
|
Christopher
Hawthorne, East Bay Express |
| "...for
the last two years, under the leadership of artistic director
Josh Costello, Impact has emerged as a focused, productive troupe...
Sweet Self is a powerful, well-acted drama about a makeshift
family of twentysomethings entangled in the Santa Cruz drug
trade. This is no-frills theater at its best... Without all
the usual theatrical trappings -- like sets or props -- the
actors and the production team are free to create a world that
exists solely in the imagination of the viewers. This bare-bones
approach also is bolstered by intensely visceral performances
and a tight, well-paced script... The acting ensemble is outstanding.
These may not be experienced actors, but they connect with Amsbury's
play and give the naturalistic dialogue an easy, realistic rhythm
that hardly ever seems like self-conscious acting... at no time
is it condescending or gimmicky.. It remains to be seen whether
or not this ambitious company will achieve its mission and get
young people into the theater, but with quality work like Sweet
Self, they should." |
| Chad
Jones, Oakland Tribune |
The
Wake-Up Crew is an original play by Zay
Amsbury. It's about a young man who returns to Santa Cruz
to make nice with an old friend, only to discover that said friend
is trying to take over the world with his newly-discovered super
powers. What I love about the script is that it manages to combine
an emotional, moving story about friendship and sacrifice with my
favorite kind of comic-book craziness. The Impact Theatre
production won the SF Bay Guardian Award for Best Fight Choreography
of 2000.
Click
here to check out the set. Designed by Chris Hammer, the set
featured breakaway walls, a breakaway bookcase, and a breakaway
coffee table, and really captured that post-collegiate, three-guys-in-an-apartment
ambience.
Coming
soon: WokeUp.net
-- short films set in the Wake-Up Crew universe...
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"...there's
more punch to this thing than the entire Batman film series
put together... there are so many fun things about The
Wake-Up Crew that it's hard to know where to begin..."
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-Daily
Californian |
"...kicks some serious butt... director Josh Costello
has lots of surprises up his sleeve... eloquent... a funny,
energetic, and even intelligent show"
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-Oakland
Tribune |
| |
Proposal
The
Wake-Up Crew
by
Zay Amsbury
a play in one act
six characters: 2 women, 4 men
one set
originally produced by Impact Theatre
Synopsis: James returns for a visit to his college buddies
in Santa Cruz a year after graduation. His three
friends, Lorrimer, Jake, and Monk, have been "woken
up" by Amanda, a process that brings out an individual's
secret super power. Monk has become a warrior
with lightning reflexes, Jake a magician, and Lorrimer
a thief who steals other people's powers. Lorrimer,
broken by James' abandonment a year before, has a device
that will multiply his ability and allow him to steal
the hidden powers of everyone on Earth, and use them
to recreate his childhood world in which he and James
played superheroes in the playground. James tries
to prove to the distrustful Monk and Jake that he is
who he claims to be, while trying to figure out why
his friends are behaving so strangely. When Amanda
wakes James up and discovers that his power is healing,
the stage is set for a final confrontation between James
and Lorrimer. First James must get past the mysterious
Sherry, the secret boss of Monk and Jake's order who
may or may not be aiding Lorrimer's evil plan.
Then James must decide between holding on to the past
or moving in to an uncertain future.
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Impact Theatre
produced People's Parking: A 90's Berkeley Commedia
in 1997 and followed it up with Commedia 2000: Soccer Mom
vs. Monster Bud in 2000. These two shows, which I
co-directed with Jaron Hollander -- who's currently a clown with
Cirque Du Soleil -- were an attempt to bring the spirit of the commedia
dell'arte into the present day. Over an extended rehearsal
period, we developed new commedia-style characters based on present
day archetypes -- finding analogues in our own society for the Italian
commedia stock characters. Instead of the miserly masters
and mischevious servants, we had the soccer mom, the homeless man,
the raverboy, the cheerleader, the campus activist, and more, each
with a mask, lazzi, and characteristic physical and vocal stylizations
(though the two lovers in People's Parking were unmasked).
Following in the footsteps of the original commedia tradition, the
actors improvised all of the dialogue in performance each night,
working within a set plot structure.
These shows were raunchy, energetic, and fun. They weren't
high art, but they captured Peter Brook's "Rough Theatre"
like nothing else I've seen. Someday I'd like to return to
this form and develop it further.
 |
| Soccer
Mom, Street Punk
Raver Kid, Stoner, Cheerleader |
| "succeeds
in generating abundant laughter... this rollicking, somewhat
free-form theatrical exercise is an attempt to recreate the
broad, familiar style of 16th-century Italian commedia dell'arte
in which stock comic characters like Pantalone and Arlecchino
are replaced with more contemporary characters from the streets
of Berkeley..." |
Oakland
Tribune |
Henry
IV: The Impact Remix |
 |
| the
cast of the Impact Theatre production |
This has always
been one of my favorite Shakespeare plays; Prince Hal reminds me
so much of people in my generation. And then there's Falstaff.
And Hotspur. And the battles. I first directed
Henry IV with a group of teenagers at the California Shakespeare
Festival. In cutting the play for that production, it occurred
to me that this is a play about a young man without a positive male
role model: his father is an overly-ambitious backstabber, and his
friends are thieves and drunks. Hal's choice to join his father
in battle is a rejection of Falstaff, but it's also a commitment
to becoming a better king than Henry IV. It's also a play
that's deeply concerned with the concept of honor -- critiquing
honor as much as celebrating it.
My cut of the play, which I directed as a staged reading with the
Bay Shakespeare Marathon 2000 and which evolved into "The Impact
Remix" at Impact Theatre, is focused on Hal's choices -- between
his own father and his surrogate father, between honor and friendship,
between the tavern and the court. Because I wasn't concerned
with English history, or with holding anything back for Part Two,
I changed the ending: the king is mortally wounded in battle, and
speaks some lines from Henry IV Part Two to Hal before his death.
These three productions also incorporated modern dress and props
and Eastern fighting styles and weapons, as if taking place in a
future that has developed a new system of honor based on a combination
of chivalry and the Bushido code of the Samurai -- the Impact production
featured elaborately staged battles with katana.
| from
the Impact Theatre production:
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| Impact
delivers a mature, well-conceived, and emotionally searing product
while managing to hold onto the blend of boozing, fighting,
and sex that has been its trademark.... Smart, fast-paced, and
wholly engaging...a stunning, complete-in-itself Henry IV that
needs no introduction, sequel, or apology...[with] a much darker,
sadder, and to my mind more dramatic and contemporary ending.
While it will make those who demand to see Shakespeare delivered
exactly as written spin in their seats, it should thrill everyone
else." |
| East
Bay Express |
| Costello
and Hillman, who also directs, succeed in revitalizing Shakespeare
without compromising his art.... The sword battle...is definitely
action-movie Shakespeare, and it works. |
| Oakland
Tribune |
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