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The Official Raúl E. Esparza "Spread the Love" Thread, part two- Page 130

The Official Raúl E. Esparza "Spread the Love" Thread, part two

Mandi Moo Profile Photo
Mandi Moo
#3225To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 1:36pm

I feel bad just picking random people in the other catagories. Heh.

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#3226To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 1:40pm

I didn't vote in the other ones. It lets you leave them blank.


A work of art is an invitation to love.

Bohemian1232 Profile Photo
Bohemian1232
#3227To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 1:42pm

I only voted for Raul and for Ensemble Performance.


"Nothing's lost forever. In this world, there is a kind of painful progress. Longing for what we've left behind, and dreaming ahead."

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#3228To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 1:43pm

I voted for Heather Laws, too. I like her!


A work of art is an invitation to love.

Clayford27 Profile Photo
Clayford27
#3229To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 1:57pm

Aww yay Raul!! *votes* :)


There is only one you for all time. Fearlessly be yourself.

orangeskittles Profile Photo
orangeskittles
#3230To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 5:48pm

Don't vote for him if you didn't see Company. The man has Tony noms under his belt; he doesn't need people stuffing the ballot box in his favor to unfairly beat out a bunch of regional actors for an award when the show is transferring to Broadway.

The fact that someone was nominated for playing Jon in ttB in another category made me smile. To great talent...


Like a firework unexploded
Wanting life but never knowing how
Updated On: 7/8/06 at 05:48 PM

Zyla
#3231To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 9:58pm

Yay for Company and Raúl! If the show (along with its leading actor) is half as good as reviews (including your guys') have said, any awards will be well deserved. Still, I agree with skittles - Company will certainly have a chance at the Tonys.

Um, if no one minds, I have a completely stupid, off-topic question. Well, it does have to do with Raúl - it concerns Cabaret. Anyone mind if I ask?

sweetestsiren Profile Photo
sweetestsiren
#3232To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 10:01pm

Ask away, I say.

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#3233To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 10:10pm

Skittles, he's not competing with regional actors. His category is for visiting actors. To great talent...


A work of art is an invitation to love.

Zyla
#3234To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 10:18pm

Thanks, ss.

This is really, really silly, but, well, I was listening to "It Couldn't Please Me More (A Pineapple)". Since the infamous "pineapple dance" has been, in the past, a very hot topic among fans of Raúl and Adam, I have to wonder...if the song is performed by Fraulein Schneider and Herr Schultz, what is the Emcee doing with the pineapple?

Just curious.

orangeskittles Profile Photo
orangeskittles
#3235To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 10:24pm

The Emcee (not luvthe) is dancing around with the pineapple in the background in a robe.

Emcee, still. I feel bad for the other part. Even the other visiting actors don't have their own love threads. To great talent...


Like a firework unexploded
Wanting life but never knowing how

sweetestsiren Profile Photo
sweetestsiren
#3236To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 10:24pm

Fraulein Schneider and Herr Schultz sing the song, and the Emcee comes out quietly and stands on a chair between them and dances with the pineapple. He sort of presides over most of the action in the show without the other characters realizing he's there. I think someone might have a picture?

Zyla
#3237To great talent...
Posted: 7/8/06 at 10:32pm

Aah, thank you. I had thought the situation might be something like that; I know that the Emcee is supposed to preside over most of the action in the show, even that which doesn't take place in the Kit Kat Club. He's kind of a Prospero character; based on text alone, you never quite know the extent of his power or where his morals lie.

Damn, I wish I could have seen that production.

gillygalls Profile Photo
gillygalls
#3238To great talent...
Posted: 7/9/06 at 2:03pm

Here's some more info on the Sundance Theatre Lab from Variety.com:

Sundance jives to scribe vibe
Writer-friendly theater lab builds strong track record

By MARK BLANKENSHIP

They might get most of the press, but films aren't the only projects percolating at the Sundance Institute.
July marks the 25th edition of the Sundance Theater Laboratory, a three-week play development program that has nurtured idiosyncratic and critically successful works, including "Spring Awakening," "The Light in the Piazza," "Grey Gardens," "Well" and "I Am My Own Wife."

Known until 1997 as the Playwrights Lab, the Sundance stage offshoot's success rate is impressive -- since 1996, more than 60 of its projects, or about 80%, have gone on to full productions.

The Lab's opportunity for full immersion in a project is why better than 600 playwrights (often with directors attached) apply annually for the eight available slots.

Works being developed in July include Josh Kornbluth's improvisational solo piece "Citizen Josh"; Stephen Belber's story of an American reservist back from Iraq investigating his father's death, "Geometry of Fire"; Marcus Gardley's Civil War-set "And Jesus Moonwalks the Mississippi"; and "Kind Hearts and Coronets," a musical by Robert L. Freedman and Steven Lutvak, adapted from the 1949 Ealing black comedy starring Alec Guinness.

This year's playwright-in-residence, Tanya Barfield will work on "Equal Measure," which parallels storylines on President Woodrow Wilson and Jade Kingston, an African-American civil servant working in the White House.

Perhaps equally important to the goal of a commercial production is the Lab's dedication to the artistic process, which inspires participants to head to the Utah mountains as if on a religious pilgrimage.

When this year's creatives -- including playwrights Belber and David Grimm, directors Rebecca Taichman and Lucie Tiberghien and actors Anthony Rapp, Will Chase, Reg E. Cathey, Judy Kuhn and Raul Esparza -- arrive for the July 10-30 session at the Sundance Resort, they will enter a cloistered world of rehearsals in which talk of production is dissuaded.

Unlike most development programs, the Lab doesn't conclude with public readings. Instead, works may be witnessed only by participating artists.

Lab artistic director Philip Himberg says that guarding the shows from public view is crucial.

"For artists to do their best work, they need an incubation time when they're not pressured by the notion of audiences, critics and producers breathing down their necks. If the end goal is a public performance, the nature of the work suddenly changes," he explains.

Having developed Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater's tuner "Spring Awakening" at the Lab in 2000 before mounting its current Off Broadway run at the Atlantic, director Michael Mayer feels the members-only approach encourages risk-taking.

"I can't guarantee that the work gets better," he says. "But I can guarantee that the way you work on it is changed. There's something profoundly moving about a big group of artists telling their stories with each other and for each other."

Echoing Mayer, Grimm -- who attends this year with comedy "Steve and Idi" and developed "Measure for Pleasure" last summer before it bowed at the Public -- lauds the Lab's unique focus on community. Projects are run on an open-rehearsal policy that encourages fellow labbers to drop by. And since they also share meals and free time, participants are bound to start exchanging ideas.

"You learn from each other in a way that is noncompetitive and very enriching," Grimm notes. "It's so isolated (at the Institute) that the world of a project becomes the world you're ensconced in."

Artists at all stages of their careers have participated, with up-and-comers often working down the hall from the likes of "Piazza" composer Adam Guettel or "I Am My Own Wife" director Moises Kaufman.

Himberg says established talent is included by careful design.

"That grew out of an understanding that even very experienced playwrights need a place to develop their work," he explains. "Including (prominent artists) was not just something we did because we thought we should, but because they told us they needed it."

Tim Sanford -- artistic director of Playwrights Horizons, which has produced five Sundance grads, including next season's "Blue Door" by Barfield -- agrees that all theater artists need time to develop projects. However, he says, it's rare for them to get what they need in the rush of day-to-day city life.

"Generally, our development (in New York) tends to be more limited. It's difficult in this environment to get an actor's attention for a full week," Sanford quips.

Despite the high demand for Lab slots, one of this year's writers dropped out to accept a high-paying television gig. That exit points to Himberg's greatest concern for the future: keeping theatermakers in the theater.

"You wonder sometimes if people are still writing for the theater like they used to," he observes. "How can we keep these people writing for the stage?"

To that end, Sundance is focusing on additional means of support.

For starters, it introduced two smaller labs. Added in 2000, a writer's colony in Ucross, Wyo., has hosted early drafts of shows like "Piazza," while a lab in White Oak, Fla., was created in 2003 to host more experimental work like tuner "Grey Gardens," about eccentric mother-daughter pair Edith and Little Edie Bouvier Beale.The latter show has springboarded from a sell-out run at Playwrights to a Broadway transfer in the fall.

Himberg even admits to mulling the concept of production.

It may be time, he says, to start nurturing plays between their development in Utah and their appearance before an audience. "A lot of projects that leave Sundance get produced too early," he ventures. "They get received poorly and then close. We're talking a lot about a 'second stage' program to help give further polish to work before production."

Even if a second-tier project is introduced, however, it will still be privacy-as-usual for the playwrights in the mountains.

luvtheEmcee Profile Photo
luvtheEmcee
#3239To great talent...
Posted: 7/9/06 at 7:11pm

Well, it sounds cool! And they definitely turn out good work...

I bought the Company libretto today; I've been looking for it for a while.


A work of art is an invitation to love.

Bohemian1232 Profile Photo
Bohemian1232
#3240To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:05pm

I finally saw Raul's scenes in Find Me Guilty today. He is so, so amazing.


"Nothing's lost forever. In this world, there is a kind of painful progress. Longing for what we've left behind, and dreaming ahead."

CanadianSnowbird Profile Photo
CanadianSnowbird
#3241To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:13pm

Don't worry, the pineapple to the rescue!!

To great talent...

To great talent...

Mandi Moo Profile Photo
Mandi Moo
#3242To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:14pm

Pineapple!

xoxRogue Profile Photo
xoxRogue
#3243To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:20pm

Do do do DOOOOOOOOO!!!

*sad attempt at a cyber-trumpet*


Shari Lewis: Did you ever wish upon a star? Lamb Chop: I once asked Mr. Rogers for his autograph.

ElphieDefiesGravity Profile Photo
ElphieDefiesGravity
#3244To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:25pm

This has to be my least favorite picture of him ever:
To great talent...
:-/

Here, these are better! To great talent...
To great talent...
Awwwwww.

Serious Raul.
To great talent...


"Blow out the candles, Robert, and make a wish. Want something. Want something."

Wishes come true, not free.

Mandi Moo Profile Photo
Mandi Moo
#3245To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:26pm

He's looks sooooo goofy in the second one.

ElphieDefiesGravity Profile Photo
ElphieDefiesGravity
#3246To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:27pm

But he still looks adorable!


"Blow out the candles, Robert, and make a wish. Want something. Want something."

Wishes come true, not free.

Mandi Moo Profile Photo
Mandi Moo
#3247To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:29pm

Is the first one from his Cabaret days? His eyebrows are black.

xoxRogue Profile Photo
xoxRogue
#3248To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:30pm

Mandi, that's actually what I was thinking, but I'm not sure.


Shari Lewis: Did you ever wish upon a star? Lamb Chop: I once asked Mr. Rogers for his autograph.

ElphieDefiesGravity Profile Photo
ElphieDefiesGravity
#3249To great talent...
Posted: 7/11/06 at 11:30pm

I think it must be. He's all pasty, and his eyebrows are black.


"Blow out the candles, Robert, and make a wish. Want something. Want something."

Wishes come true, not free.

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