Ensemble:
Arianne Ellison | Justine Cunningham |
Kathy McGregor | Jordan Scott |
Bill Rodgers | Caden Worley |
Tobias Wray | Cassie Self |
Erika Wilhite | Joseph Fletcher |
Emily Bohannon | Jonathan Perrodin |
Directed by Erika Wilhite and Joseph Fletcher
Created by Ensemble
A special thank you to:
Walton Arts Center, Lisa Mabrey, Carolyn Guinzio, Ozark Natural Foods, Rodney Wilhite, Josh Tillotson, Sabine Schmidt, Morgan Hicks, Jenny Grigsby, Annie MacCumber, Gina and Richard Berquist, Sonia Davis Gutierrez, Len Williams, John Haque, Sharon Gieb,Julie McQuade, John Elderidge, Washington County, and the City of Fayetteville.
"A fantastic and memorable performance tonight, theatre like we've never experienced it. We all loved it."
"I was transported last night. Thank you so much for being in this area! Looking forward to your next production very very much!"
" x 1000. Phenomenal."
"Hey! Alley 38 was incredible! I was mesmerized. Thank you for that adventure!!"
The Artist’s Laboratory Theatre performs Alley 38, a site-specific show in downtown Fayetteville May 21-27 at 7:30 P.M. The performance Alley 38 is a part of Artosphere 2012 presented by Walton Arts Center. Artosphere is a multi-week performing and visual arts festival where art, nature and sustainability come together. Tickets can be purchased for $12 at waltonartscenter.org or by calling (479) 443-5600.
5/21/12 Monday @ 7:30
5/22/12 Tuesday @ 7:30
5/23/12 Wednesday @7:30
5/24/12 Thursday @ 7:30
5/25/12 Friday @ 7:30
5/26/12 Saturday @7:30
5/27/12 Sunday@ 7:30
Alley 38 is an outdoor performance during which the audience walks to different locations within a four-block radius. The performance takes place throughout the corridor the city titled “Alley 38” on their planning maps. Led in small groups to spaces within and around Alley 38, audiences experience performances about place and identity while in the “natural” environment of an urban landscape.
The Artist’s Laboratory Theatre is an experimental theatre company interested in expanding the audience’s role in live theatre. In 2010, the company debuted in Fayetteville with Bombs, Babes, and Bingo, which was later presented at the New Orleans Fringe Festival. The company has since created performances in shop fronts, sheet forts, and a residential home. Alley 38 is part of a long term, multiple location performance project that examines how place affects identity and consciousness. Using a diverse range of stories—from true- life experiences to local legends re-imagined—the company performs vignettes in a series of performance installations.
Audiences will meet at the NE corner lot of Block St. and Spring St. (free parking available across the street).
For more information about the Place Project: artlabtheatre.com
Follow the creative process: theartistslaboratorytheatre.blogspot.com
For tickets and information about Artosphere: artospherefestival.org
Friends,
We are done with our first location of the Place Project. The Artist's Laboratory Theatre produced a performance lab in a residential home during June. Through collaboration, and throughout several weeks, we created several vignettes that focused on ideas and characters which we found related to Place.
Kasper Hauser - A boy without language, because he had no place in the world.
Myrtle Kindle - A weekly columnist for The Westville Reporter, a small town newspaper.
Len - A former resident of Picher, OK.
The Runner - Inspired by a Radiolab podcast titled the same.
The Debris - A video of Joplin debris projected on a familiar kitchen. "If you command the reality of Impermanence, you don't get attached- you don't get upset."
The House from erika wilhite on Vimeo.
Him and Her - your guides for the evening. "I will take you places. Will you take my hand?" Like paper children cut-outs, they led two groups of five down corridors, into rooms, and onto lawns in the shadows of dusk into night.
We discovered so many things, mostly useful for the Place Project. We know now how different it is to be that close to each other. And how much we like it . We used the performances as a means of asking questions. We started with basic ideas. They opened up more more questions that, I believe, will lead us to the next thing.
Also, we learned that we must eat together at the end. Breaking bread on the living room floor and talking for an hour afterward is the BEST WAY to end an experience.
The next thing. We dream and dialogue and ask more questions and find more places. We have a few locations in mind and heart, but let us know if you have any ideas.
Related Articles:
Houses Inside and Out
ALT’s Place Project brings theater home … literally
Photos Courtesy of Erika Wilhite
We begin a new performance lab in June, the Place Project, a long-term project with many short-term goals:
We started the Place project at the end of summer. We visited Picher, OK, the most toxic place in America- the first field trip in a series of several Superfund sites we will visit in the course of our project. We were lucky to sit on a porch with one of seven families that remain in Picher. We were pleased to learn that people will talk, but don't always give over personal information to strangers easily. We did record an interview with a current Picher resident woman. She shared her porch with us and patiently and pleasantly obliged us the list of ten or so questions I had prepared. We also got in touch with a man who hadn't lived in Picher since 1973 and he obliged us a recorded hour- long phone interview. He was lovely and full of stories. We talked of home and leaving home. And he talked of denial—what it's like when a community is infected with it.
We plan on Place Project lasting some time. Please follow our process so you can get there with us.
The Artist’s Laboratory Theatre cheerfully embraces the challenges of poverty. We agree totally that suffering builds character, and so we absolutely revel in our martyrdom -- but we could use some help if we are to continue to work.
Please, contact us if you can help in any of these ways:
The Artist’s Laboratory Theatre is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a nonprofit arts service organization. Contributions in behalf of The Artist’s Laboratory Theatre may be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.
Make checks payable to:
-and mail to-
217 W. Meadow St. #1
Fayetteville, AR 72701