Tuesday, August 23, 2011

The New York Times, Big Vision on Infectious

Though it has more than a few reservations about the script and direction (it is, after all, what one would call a mixed review), The New York Times weighs in on Infectious Opportunity, ultimately giving lead actress Jessi Gotta a whole lotta love:

"Jessi Gotta [is] the best reason to see this drama about a high-flying screenwriter and the appalling secret he hides. … The script gives the best moments to Ms. Gotta, and she makes the most of them. … This story of a writer has several good moments, made all the better when his psyche steps onstage."





We also got a great deal of love from Big Vision Empty Wallet not once, but twice, with both write-ups from two different writers each giving the show an "A."

Anyway, the run's been going quite well, if I do say so myself. Big houses, overall positive reviews, and overall positive responses from audience members.

In short, yeah, I'm happy with how the run is going and want more people to come see what we've done.

We've got two performances left – this Friday at 2pm and this Saturday at 10:15pm – so you have until Thursday afternoon and Friday night respectively to buy your tickets.




Ready to make out with you in the lobby,

James "The Professional Face of Nosedive" Comtois

Photos by Daryl Lathon.

Labels: , , ,

Monday, August 15, 2011

First Round of Reviews for Infectious Opportunity

Hey, folks! With our first sold out performance of Infectious Opportunity down, some of the reviews are already in - with many being of the "Quite Positive" variety! Huzzah!


"An enjoyable, thought-provoking play brought to life by a very talented team."
-Theatre Is Easy

"A definite must see this FringeNYC."
-New York Theatre Review

"Uses artful storytelling to show ambition at its most twisted and ethics at its lowest level."
-nytheatre.com


Like I said, our opening night completely sold out, so get your tickets now. Our next show's this Thursday at 2 p.m.

Yes, this post is about the current show that's playing. I'll most likely write about the Other Big Thing that happened last week at a later date.

And yes, I know the photo is a bit much, but fuck it. I just couldn't resist. Your mamma.

Some chump who enjoys
validation from strangers,

James "Quietly Needy" Comtois

Labels: , ,

Friday, July 22, 2011

Tickets for Infectious Opportunity are Now On Sale!

Hey, gang! Your guardian from the gulag, Little Jimmy Comtois here, very pleased to let you know that tickets for our play, Infectious Opportunity, are NOW ON SALE!

You can get them by going here, and clicking on the performance you want to see.

It's like Fandango. Only, y'know, it's theatre.

This is a show we are incredibly proud of and ultra-thrilled to be remounting it. I think I can say with confidence that it's one of the best plays we here at Nosedive Central have done in our 11 years as a company. And we're very grateful to the NYC International Fringe Festival for letting us play in their (very large) backyard!

Since the show does indeed have a limited run, and the Fringe tends to be a madhouse, it's a good idea to get your tickets as soon as possible.

See you soon, my lovelies.

Cute as a freakin' button,

James "The Type of Button You Press, Not...Wear" Comtois

Labels: , , ,

Friday, July 08, 2011

Infectious Opportunity at the Fringe Festival!

Nosedive Productions Presents
in association with The Present Company


A play by James Comtois
Directed by Pete Boisvert

Featuring
Rebecca Comtois — Jessi Gotta* — DR Hanson — Daryl Lathon*
David Ian Lee* — Ingrid Nordstrom —Matthew Trumbull*

*Denotes member of the Actors Equity Association

As Part of
THE 2011 NEW YORK INTERNATIONAL FRINGE FESTIVAL (August 13-27)

@ THE LIVING THEATRE (VENUE #6)

Saturday, August 13 @ 5:30pm

Thursday, August 18 @ 2pm

Friday, August 19 @ 9pm

Friday, August 26 @ 2pm

Saturday, August 27 @ 10:15pm


Wes Farley, a screenwriter known for having HIV, is enjoying national attention with his latest film. There’s only one problem: he's faked his illness for the past 10 years to boost his career, and is beginning to comprehend the drawbacks of his plan. With the help of his friend Josie, Wes revisits his past and sees how an ill-advised white lie early in life ensnared him in his current situation.

After enjoying an extended sold-out run at the Brick Theater's Antidepressant Festival in 2009, getting nominated for a 2010 New York Innovative Theatre Award for Outstanding Original Full-Length Script and being published by Original Works Publishing, Nosedive is remounting its darkly comic Infectious Opportunity for this year's New York International Fringe Festival.

Infectious Opportunity will be performed at the Living Theatre (21 Clinton St. in New York) as part of The 2011 New York International Fringe Festival on Saturday, August 13 @ 5:30pm; Thursday, August 18 @ 2pm; Friday, August 19 @ 9pm; Friday, August 26 @ 2pm; and Saturday, August 27 @ 10:15pm. Subway: B D F or M train to 2nd Avenue or F J M Z train to Delancey Street. For tickets ($15 in advance, $18 at the door), visit http://www.fringenyc.org or call 866-468-7619.

Tickets will be on sale beginning Friday, July 22.

• • •

Labels: , ,

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Infectious Opportunity in the Fringe!

It's official. Pete just got the confirmation email. Infectious Opportunity is going to be rocking the 2011 New York International Fringe Festival this summer!

That's right: Nosedive's doing three shows in three months. Huzzah!

All theatre all summer,

James "Insane Idiot" Comtois

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Energy Man Review for nytheatre.com

My review of A Energy Man is now up on nytheatre.com.

* * *

From the title to the tagline ("A dramedy about wanting to rise up—Superhero Style") to the Marvel Comics-style program credits ("The Stupendous Stacie Perlman," "The Incredible Ramon Sanchez...") to the complementary mini-comic that comes with your ticket to the curtain speech, Energy Man leads its audience to believe... [keep reading]

Labels: , , ,

Monday, August 16, 2010

A Matter of Choice Review for nytheatre.com

My review of A Matter of Choice is now up on nytheatre.com.

* * *

Although it's a cliche to say that New York is constantly changing, it's a cliche all of us living here will expound upon. It doesn't matter if... [keep reading]

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Extensions and Transfers

Well, okay, enough of this tender, Getting To Know Your Comtois malarkey. I've still got a window of time before we start working on Entrenched for the Vampire Cowboys' Saturday Night Saloon and we start work on The Blood Brothers Present...The New Guignol, at which time Jamespeak resumes being a relentless self-promotionacopia.

So, I guess I should take this brief period of time to natter on a bit about some non-personal, non-plugging theatre stuff. Hey, why not?

I need to extend many congratulations to the cast and crew of Viral, which not only got extended (seriously, if you missed it the first time around, consider this your chance at redemption: and especially don't be the douchebag who missed Universal Robots and Viral twice), but just won a FringeNYC Overall Excellence Award for Outstanding Play. Seriously, Mac. Where do you store this growing collection of Fringe awards? You guys must have built an annex to Gideon Central.

Congratufuckinglations, guys. This is great news and well deserved.

You can find more information on the extended dates and get tickets here.

Another very enjoyable yet completely different show that's getting a well deserved extension is Piper McKenzie's production of Trav S.D.'s musical, Willy Nilly: A Musical Exploitation of the Most Far-Out Cult Murders of the Psychedelic Era, which will now be playing at a new venue (The Actors' Playhouse).

Willy Nilly, directed by Jeff Lewonczyk, is quite fun — it's description of being "Charles Manson meets Mad Magazine" is apt — AND (I really cannot stress this enough) features lots of naked pretty people, dudes and chicks alike, including the lovely and unclad co-artistic director of Piper McKenzie, Hope Cartelli. That's right. I ogled the director's wife. What? Hope's got nice knockers.

But enough about my leering at friends and colleagues; let's move on to other things that are unapologetically trashy and silly, such as Willy Nilly itself. Basically, it's a fictionalized musical account of Charles Manson's failed attempt to start a music career and successful attempt at forming a murderous cult. It evokes the psychedelic and campy aesthetic of the '60s without making me want to go on a berserk dick-punching spree. (What is it about hippies that make me want to indiscriminately punch people in the junk? Probably all that "Peace and Love" crap they always blather on about. Fucking hippies.)

The songs are good and amusing. The live band (The Four Hoarses) rocks. The cast (which, in addition to Ms. Cartelli and Mr. S.D., features Becky Byers, Maggie Cino, Michael Criscuolo, Betsy Head, Daryl Lathon, Rich Lovejoy, Mateo Moreno, Avery Pearson, Esther Silberstein, Adam Swiderski and Elizabeth Hope Williams) kicks ass. I laughed loudly many times. It also features the author in drag (though, damn, Trav, you sure do make one ugly-ass woman).

And did I mention it features boobies, wieners and butts? Well, it does. (Seriously, stop looking at me like that.)

So, really: what more could you want?

The same link applies: you can find out more information on the extended dates and get tickets here.

And, in non-Fringe extended news, but once again proving my theory that Boobies, Wieners And Butts = High Quality Theatre (okay, I really should stop at some point), it looks as though one of the best shows I've seen this year, the Amoralists' delightful and engrossing The Pied Pipers of the Lower East Side is moving to Off-Broadway!

This show has been playing like gangbusters for months at PS 122 and due to an insatiable demand is moving over to Theatre 80 St. Marks (at 80 St. Marks Place, the former home of The Pearl Theatre Company) from September 10 through October 5. I gushed about the show here. Congratulations to writer-director Derek Ahonen, the cast and the crew.

You can find out more information here.

So for folks who say that there's no good theatre in New York, here are three upcoming shows proving you way the hell wrong. If you haven't seen these shows, it's not too late. Go see them and show them the love.

But not in a hippie sorta way. 'Cuz seriously, fuck hippies.

Beating up pacifists,

James "Get a Haircut!" Comtois

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Viral

Obviously, because of my close personal ties with most of the people involved in this show, including my own sister, this is not a formal review. There's no way I can be fully objective. Still, I wanted to give some thoughts on this show, which I saw Sunday night.


The Internet has opened up a whole new array of personality disorders and fetishes. And I don't just mean that it's opened the door for mental disorders and fetishes. I mean that it's helped create them.

Gideon Productions' latest, Viral, written by Mac Rogers and directed by Jordana Williams, deals with characters that use the Internet to feed a peculiar and literally morbid fetish. Are there really people like this? Considering there's a website out there dedicated to a man who gets turned on by the sound of people brushing their teeth, I'm almost certain.

Viral focuses on a small group of people who get sexually aroused by watching people die of natural, nonviolent causes on video. After trying to lure someone on the Internet via a carefully worded website, this group finds a woman who is suicidal. They invite her to their home. They ask if they can videotape her committing suicide, then distribute the video online.

I wonder if the characters in Viral would have such a fetish if the Internet didn't exist. I mean, perhaps. But even if they did, how could they ever know that they got off on such stuff if they never had access to streaming video technology? Not only that, how would they ever be able to satisfy or cultivate such a fixation?

My suspicion is that they wouldn't. Even if they had such obsessions, the Internet has defined and cultivated them, and gives the characters comfort in the idea that there are other people out there "like them." They even refer to themselves on more than one occasion as a community.

But Viral isn't interested in being a treatise against the evils of the World Wide Web. It's interested in dealing with a very small, unique set of characters that happen to use the premise of the Internet to justify and enable a horrid mutual addiction.

Everyone in the cast, which includes Kid Sister Rebecca Comtois (who got props from folks after the performance I saw, saying they no longer see her as just "my kid sister"), Adventure Quest star The Kent Meister, Jonathan Pereira, Rattlers vet Amy Lynn Stewart and Infectious Opportunity vet Matthew Trumbull, is amazing. No one is afraid of portraying him or herself as weak or disgusting (since every character is, in his or her own unique way).

Plus, no one is a complete ghoul. Even a potential producer/presenter of the proposed film isn't so much a stereotypical sleaze (although he is sleazy) as he is a pragmatic businessman trying to explain to amateurs the reality of the market they're trying to enter. His argument is actually hard to counter.

I think what I find so amazing about Viral is that it's such a unique story for a premise that is very entrenched in our modern culture. Which is a very fancy and pretentious way of saying I find it amazing that no one's thought to write a play like this.

Okay, that's a bit disingenuous. I absolutely know why no one's decided to tackle this story and subject matter. It's very dark, and very disturbing, and not in a fun, "edgy New York theatre" way. Although it's certainly funny (and perhaps, judging from audience responses so far, funnier than the creators had expected), and even being billed in some circles as a dark comedy, it is most definitely not a comedy, dark or otherwise. It's a show that would be either a garish carnie geek show or a glib, tasteless and unfunny comedy in hands of less skilled, less experienced and less emotionally mature theatre-makers.

As it happens, Gideon & Co. manage to walk the razor-thin line of comedy and tragedy with this material, acknowledging the absurdity of its characters without mocking them, dealing with the horrific nature of its theme without being heavy-handed and maudlin.

Viral is a very good, very disturbing play about a subject matter that many may find amusing at first, but will get over such amusement as the play winds down to its nerve-wracking climax. Even though I've only seen 2% of its output this year, I'm pretty sure it'll be one of the highlights of the 2009 Fringe Festival.

Viral is playing at the SoHo Playhouse on 15 Vandam Street as part of the New York International Fringe Festival. For tickets go here.

Still looking for soft core material on YouTube,

James "Polite Reprobate" Comtois

Labels: , , ,

Friday, August 14, 2009

What? Oh, Right. The Fringe.

Okay. To quote Nathan Rabin, "But enough foolishness. On to more foolishness."

In all the talk about my Chicago trip, I’ve completely been blindsided by the fact that the New York International Fringe Festival has now descended upon our fair city like the Fat Man and Little Boy.

I figure, being a New York theatre blogger and playwright, I should at least mention the monstrosity big annual event.

Thought this may change, I think my Fringe-going may be a bit light this year. It’s likely I’ll only be seeing four of the 201 shows playing in the festival this year: these two tomorrow (to review for Martin), then these two as soon as possible.

Wait. That's not light at all. By my calculations, I saw only four shows last year, too. So I'm par for the course.

So happy Fringing, everyone. And have a good weekend, folks. I’m off like a prom dress.

Getting taken advantage of
by the homecoming king,

James "Drunken Slut" Comtois

Labels: ,

Monday, August 18, 2008

Fluency Review for nytheatre.com

My review of Fluency is now up on nytheatre.com.

* * *

In Fluency, which is aptly billed as a "meta-theatrical romantic comedy," Jack and Olivia appear on a stage occupied with nothing more than a couple chairs and a few theatre cubes. They have no idea why they're there, but they... [keep reading]

Labels: , ,

The Disappearance of Jonah Review for nytheatre.com

My review of The Disappearance of Jonah is now up on nytheatre.com.

* * *

When a person goes missing without any clue as to where or how, it leaves the friends and family members in limbo, since that question of "What happened?" will most likely never be answered. Also, the idea that... [keep reading]

Labels: , ,

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Panopticon Review for nytheatre.com

My review of Panopticon is now up on nytheatre.com.

* * *

A Panopticon is a type of prison designed to allow an observer to see all the prisoners without the prisoners being able to tell whether they are being watched, theoretically establishing good behavior through paranoia of being constantly visible... [keep reading]

Labels: , ,

Friday, August 15, 2008

Doppelganger Joe Review for nytheatre.com

My review of Doppelganger Joe is now up on nytheatre.com.

* * *

Doppelganger Joe is a 30-minute one-woman show written and performed by Caroline Lesley about, well... [keep reading]

Labels: , ,

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Returned

Well, after spending a week staring off at the ocean, eating like a total pig and drinking a substantial amount of blueberry beer (well, okay, so it wasn't that much, all things considered), I'm back. And now I'll be spending the bulk of this week reviewing Fringe shows, the first of which I'm off to see tonight.

When I'm done with the reviewing, I'll be blathering about a bunch of upcoming Nosedive projects, including our participation in this year's Saturday Night Saloon with the Vampire Cowboys and this October's Blood Brothers Present show.

Pissing in your pocket,

James "Bathroom Wingman" Comtois

Labels: , , , , ,

Friday, August 01, 2008

Away On Vacation


Not that I've been diligently posting entries on this site, but I'm off to Maine to bask in the sun and breath sea air and drink blueberry beer. I'll be back to vaguely blather about theatrical whatnots August 11, which is also the week I'll be reviewing the shit out of some Fringe shows.

Jesus, did I really sign up to review four plays the week I return?

Brilliant, Comtois, just brilliant.

Anyway, see you when I get back, my lovelies!

Easy...on the eyes,

James "Slutbag" Comtois

Labels: ,

Monday, August 20, 2007

Jimmy's Fringe Roundup

I've finished reviewing the Fringe plays I needed to review for Martin (...Double Vision, Len and Ernest and On Air Off!), so I spent this weekend seeing three plays by buds o' mine, all of which I found fun and enjoyable.

The first one was Mr. Mac Rogers's Hail Satan, a story about a cowardly milquetoast, Tom, who joins a company where all his co-workers are honest-to-gosh worshippers of the Cloven One. Through a series of truly bizarre events, Tom ends up being caretaker and surrogate father to the Devil Incarnate, a girl named Angie.

Hail Satan made my "Top Ten" list for 2004 when Gideon Productions staged it at ManhattanTheatreSource. This is the second time I've gone to see ostensibly the same production of a play after it's been remounted (the first being Vampire Cowboys's Living Dead in Denmark).

With only some slight variations on the casting (Mac passes the torch on acting duties as Tom to Matthew Kinney, who played a different role in the 2004 production) and to the show itself (this version is again directed by Jordana Williams), I still stand by my original assessment that this is an extremely well-crafted funny and scary play that offers its audience more "meat" than most Off-off shows. It assumes its audience consists of intelligent adults (honestly, I've found this trait within Off-off theatre to be more and more rare).

The show I saw had a slightly more flippant tone (Mac's girlfriend, Sandy, pointed out that this was even an anomaly for the current run), going a little more for the laughs than when I saw it in 2004. I'm not saying this is good or bad, nor am I saying this production didn't succeed in making me feel squeamish and queasy, it's just something I noticed seeing Hail Satan the second time around.

I'm also really pleased to see that Sean Williams and Laura Perloe have reprised their roles as Charlie, the boss and head of the cult and Angie respectively. They play their parts with pitch-perfect precision, at this point making me find it difficult to picture those roles played by anyone else.

Rather than get into the details of my thoughts and feelings on Hail Satan again, you can read my online dialogue with Mac about the first production online here (just to warn you: it's very long).

I think the script very much succeeds in tapping into fears (of parenthood, of responsibility, of sudden changes within people's personalities) that are common not only to Mac himself, but I'm sure with many people in the audience (myself included), hence me finding it a successful "horror" play.

* * *

On Saturday, I went to see Adam Szymkowicz's latest, Susan Gets Some Play, a very funny 40-minute meta-comedy play-within-a-play about, well, actress Susan Louise O'Connor trying to find a boyfriend (or at least a romp in the hey). It's as simple as that. Although...no, it's not really as simple as that.

Susan and her best friend Jay try to find Susan a boyfriend by holding auditions for an imaginary production in hopes of finding Mr. Right; or at the very least, a date or make-out session. They end up auditioning as many people as they can, including a "guest celebrity" and people from the audience. Hell, the usher even gave out raffle tickets for the chance to win a date with Susan (alas, I didn't win).

Ultimately, Susan isn't wild about this duplicitous process of finding a boyfriend (in one scene, she admits to having asked Szymkowicz to write this play for her, but now she feels cheap and on display), and is even less wild about all her co-stars milking their make-out scenes with her.

To quote Monty Python: It's silly.

There are multiple in-jokes with this show, including references to Szymkowicz's earlier work (there's a scene deliberately mimicking the New York production of Nerve), as well as jokes on insufferably self-referential New York theatre and the ignorance non-theatre-makers have on the process of putting on a play in the city (my molars would grind when a character would refer to the auditions as "play practice," which I'm sure was intended).

And oh yes, there's a cool non sequitur song and dance number to boot.

That Susan Gets Some Play doesn't take itself too seriously and doesn't alienate the audience with the numerous in-jokes (most of them are either fairly inclusive or not distracting enough to be jarring) makes it work. It's incredibly slight run-time (under an hour) doesn't hurt, either.

With the help of the cast Moritz von Stuelpnagel's direction, Susan Gets Some Play is thoroughly unapologetic with its simple yet whimsical premise, which is one of the main reasons why this show is so light and enjoyable.

* * *

Finally, Sunday was when I went to go see Nosedive Central member Anna Kull and Justin Perkins's show, Dressing Miss Julie, a campy riff on August Strindberg's play on class, gender warfare, and upward mobility (or the lack thereof), Miss Julie.

The premise for Dressing Miss Julie is this: while the two actors play Miss Julie (that's been rewritten to include modern references to other plays), there are two giant bells in the audience, that said audience has an opportunity to ring at any point in the show. Whenever an audience member rings one of the bells, the actors stop, remove their clothes, switch them, and resume the show where they left off, playing the opposite roles.

The idea for doing this is to play with the idea that not only is class interchangeable, but also gender. I'm not sure how seriously we in the audience are supposed to take this premise by watching Dressing Miss Julie, as the role-changing seems to be more of an entertaining device rather than a philosophical thinking point. But in the end it doesn't matter: this show is a whole lot of fun.

While watching Dressing Miss Julie, a funny thing happened. I realized I didn't care one bit for Jean or Miss Julie's problems, regardless of who was playing which part. I was paying attention to the differences in how Justin and Anna would play each role, watching how they would immediately dive into each part and pick up where they left off whenever the bell would ring. I noticed how much the two actors resembled paper dress-up dolls, smiling and dancing in their underwear, as they would change roles.

I also kept checking the time, not out of boredom or restlessness, but because at the beginning of the show, Anna and Justin point out that they have the space for 70 minutes, meaning that, whatever point they're at in the script, after 70 minutes, they would have to stop. They mention this because, although the audience is welcome to ring the bell as many times as it wants, any more chimes than 10 puts the show at risk of going over the 70 minute mark. Fortunately, the day I saw Dressing Miss Julie, they got all the way to the end.

* * *

Anyway, I'm still hoping to catch a few more shows at the Fringe this week, although looking at my schedule, it's pretty much a crapshoot.

Lurking on the Fringes,

James "Sexy Lecher" Comtois

Labels: , ,

Friday, August 17, 2007

On Air Off! Review for NYTheatre.com

My review of the play On Air Off! is now up on NYTheatre.com.

* * *

On Air Off! plays like a slightly incomplete episode of The Twilight Zone if Rod Serling was still alive to write it today. Although it ends very abruptly (as did many Twilight Zone episodes), this is... [keep reading]

Labels: , ,

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Len and Ernest Review For NYTheatre.com

My review of the play Len and Ernest is now up on NYTheatre.com.

* * *

Len and Ernest is a 50-minute two-person show that's ultimately all buildup and no payoff. This isn't necessarily a bad thing. This is not a play about revelations or conclusions: it's about... [keep reading]

Labels: , ,

...Double Vision Review For NYTheatre.com

My review of the play ...Double Vision is now up on NYTheatre.com.

* * *

Barbara Blumenthal-Ehrlich's new play ...Double Vision has flashes of moments where its characters reveal honest emotion and compassion, but constantly opts to bulldoze... [keep reading]

Labels: , ,

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 License.