“And the clock begins to wind down.”

It’s so hard to believe that we’re already in our last week of By the Dawn’s Early Light! While we will surely have more blog posts as we wrap up our run, our playwright Mel turned in his final, very contemplative, very heartwarming post last night. (Sigh.)

And the clock begins to wind down.

How is it possible that as I write this, we as a company are about to embark on our final week of performances? Six more shows and the theatre will go dark. Costumes and make-up removed for the final time. Props placed in a box for some other times, others given as remembrance of a joyous creative experience, and others discarded like so many unwanted toys.

It’s going to be tough, no doubt. It has been some ride for me. The journey from first phone call, to table read, run through and first performance – first laugh being heard from the audience, as well as the sniffle of a tear, will be always remembered.

As Arturo Castro said: “Dude, we’re on f**king Theatre Row, bro!” – Yes we were, and we done good.

I have sat in the back of the theatre on many a night marveling as I watch Walter, our director, hunched over the control panel, intensely watching the performance, smiling, shaking his head, cheering, wipe a tear away and still continue to take notes as if it were the first day of rehearsals.

I watch Kevin move deeper and deeper into Freddie’s journey with the ease of a great painter who knows just what strokes are needed to fill in the colors of his canvas.

I still find myself welling up when Karen says: “Victor, when you leave it’s going to be quiet. I don’t like that kind of quiet.”

This has been a truly rewarding collaboration. I have made new friends and have enriched others. The seeds of future collaborations have been planted with the work that we have done as a company.

How did we all get here? Hard work and trust are often good starts to any collaborative endeavor and this one was no exception to that rule, but I think there were other factors involved as well – factors that perhaps in a month or so, when I find myself at a quiet moment, glass of wine in hand, it will come to me.  But for now this will have to do: The Lebanese American artist, poet, and writer Kahlil Gibran once wrote, “You give but little when you give of your possessions. It is when you give of yourself that you truly give.”

To the ensemble cast: Kevin, Arturo, Gordon, Alicia, Wynn, Camilo, Karen, Mark, Gustavo, Flor, Damian and Jorge – thank you for truly giving of yourself and to your art to brings these stories so beautifully to life.

To Walter and Allison, you remind one constantly of why we do what we do with this life of ours in the theatre and the both of you do it inspirationally.

Yeah, I will be saying the same words as Angie does to Victor once the final curtain comes down  on Sunday  – “I don’t like that kind of quiet too.”

24 August 2011 ·

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… “Midnight Mass”!

Here are Joey Castillo’s photos of our second half of By the Dawn’s Early Light.

Remember: we’re only running through Sunday August 28th, and it’s only a 55-seat theater… so get your tickets soon at www.telecharge.com.

We hope to see you at Theatre Row!

16 August 2011 ·

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Our wonderful photographer Joey Castillo took these great photos of “Los Embrujados” in By the Dawn’s Early Light. And of course, he also took photos of…

16 August 2011 ·

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Hurray! We opened By the Dawn’s Early Light last night! And to a sold-out house no less. Thank you to the wonderful audience who came out to see the show. (And for those of you who haven’t gotten their tickets yet, be forewarned: it’s a 55-seat house and fills up FAST. So get your tickets soon!)

In honor of this momentous occasion, we thought we’d share with you a few of the photos that the remarkable Joey Castillo took during tech rehearsals, and a blog entry that Mel wrote after attending a tech rehearsal this week.

Waking up this morning I could not help, but feel it was going to be a special day.

I had several early morning appointments with various school representatives for possible positions as a theatre instructor this coming September, and along with my teaching credentials and artistic resumes I handed each school representative a postcard for my play, By the Dawn’s Early Light. They were rightfully impressed with the artwork by the gifted Katherine Miles Jones and with the subject matter that I was tackling. But most of all, they were impressed by the fact that the plays were being performed on Theatre Row, that cool block on mid-town Manhattan.

After I finished with my meet-and-greets I was to my other job of the moment and that is playwright for Apple Core Theatre Company. As I walked uptown from East Broadway (Yeah, I did say walk. I’m a big fan of walking.), and as I eventually turned the corner and headed to the stage door entrance, it suddenly dawned on me that I was in Theatre Row… but not as a theatre goer, but for lack of a better word, a “theatre-maker.”

As I entered the theatre space our crew — lighting designer, Jordan Acosta; set designer, Adam Kaynan; along with Allison (Producer), Barbra (Associate Producer)Walter (Director) and Farin (Stage manager) — were busy with setting things up on stage. It was really happening. Theatre was being created.

After a while as the actors started to come in they all had the same “this is cool” smile on their faces; I must tell you that as an actor in New York City I have performed in spaces that were barely more than a black box with three chairs in the middle of some block on the far reaches of the earth where even our beloved city rodents wouldn’t be caught hanging out in. Thus is the journey of the New York City actor, but every so often you get the chance to perform in a space that can truly be called nothing else but a “THEATRE,” and Theatre Row is such a space. You can feel the energy in the air. The pride in the actors as they take in their surroundings and what will be their “HOME” for the next three weeks.

It’s an awesome tribute to all the hard work that Walter and Allison and Barbara (the Apple Core Theatre Company Crew) have put into this production.  The actors feel it, and I most certainly do.

12 August 2011 ·

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Interview: Farin Rebecca Loeb

Thank goodness we have an awesome stage manager for By the Dawn’s Early Light. With twelve actors and two plays (and eight scenes in the second play), keeping track of what-props-were-supposed-to-be-where — and keeping our [wonderful] actors in line — was much too much for us to handle.

Please meet the wonder that is Farin Rebecca Loeb, who has a surprisingly varied background — from the performance side to the technical side, and from opera to theater.

Sir Thomas Allen singing Mozart's "Die Zauberflöte"

Why did you decide to pursue stage managing?

Well, my education was actually in opera performance. I wanted to be an opera singer when I was about 7, and even got a specialized high school degree, then a BM and MM.

And then, when I had a vocal health problem, I noticed all the other stuff I’d been doing the whole time: coaching (working on non-technique things with singers, like acting choices), assistant directing, supertitles (translating operas and projecting the translations), stage managing, and so on. So I started doing more of that! I starting stage managing at a few small theaters where I was living, and eventually started directing opera.

And it’s funny how things work out, because I’m much better suited to what I do now. My experience as a singer and actor allows me to connect with the folks on stage in a really useful way, and I can add way more to the arts of theater and opera by telling lots of performers what to do at once, or as an SM, supporting a really positive, effective, awesome environment, and technically excellent and fluid environment!

Was there a performance/play/actor who made you want to go into this business? Why?

guess I’ll finally admit it. For all my love of Mozart and Verdi, it was The Phantom of the Opera that made me decide to be a singer when I was little. I know.

Of course I also worshiped people like Kiri Te Kanawa, Kurt Moll, and Sir Thomas Allen (let’s pretend I totally kept my composure when I met the latter). As for what I do now, David McVicar really inspired me, as well as Francesca Zembello, and singers like John Relyea Gerald Finley- two of the greatest actors and singers working today, and some of the kindest people I’ve met. And singers like Nicholas Tamagna who made it clear to me that this was the type of work where I added the most to a production. And there are so many SMs, directors, and actors who have given me personal ideals of how to do things right!

How does working with the cast members of By the Dawn’s Early Light inform your process and performance?

We’ve really lucked out with an amazing group of talented folks and fabulous personalities. Having such creativity and lively but respectful attitudes makes my job way easier than it sometimes is, and allows us to creatively go that much farther.

Are there any other fields within theater/the arts in which you work?

I’m also really a director, as I’ve said. And I spend a lot of time and energy working on supertitles- one of my biggest passions since I was a teenager. I’m absolutely dedicated to accurate, well-timed translations, and will always fight for choices that make a big, if hopefully-not-consciously-noticed, difference. I also have done a lot of work with fight choreography and weapons.

Do you any great passions separate from theater/the arts?

The rest of my energy is generally consumed by fencing, social justice, and swing, blues, and tango dancing!

9 August 2011 ·

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Today we load our production of By the Dawn’s Early Light into Theatre Row! In honor of this momentous occasion — in which we will be painting platforms, focusing lights, and building set pieces from 9 AM to 11:30 PM — we thought we’d bring you a little taste of the technical theater process. Here, our producer Allison writes about creating the perfect, in-all-likelihood-unused prop.
People outside theater sometimes ask me what a producer does. My answer varies, depending upon the day, but often it means being a problem solver.
Much of “Midnight Mass” takes place in a church, and when the set designer Adam and director Walter and I sat down to talk about the design scheme for the show, there was never any question that candles would have to be involved somehow. But if you know anything about fire code laws here in New York City (and probably elsewhere), you know that lit flames in theaters is strictly prohibited without going through a series of nightmarish hoops. Not unlike these.

(SIDE NOTE: If you want me to talk at you in a solid 45 minute rant, you should buy me a drink and ask me about flame retardant curtains.)
But Adam, Walter, and our associate producer Barbara kept saying, “Oh don’t worry, we’ll get electric candles!” Yeah, electric candles! … What? You mean like the ones in the windows at Christmas time? Or on the menorah? What do you mean, electric candles? I had no idea what they were talking about, but had a lot of contracts to process and money to raise, so I put it on the back burner. (Those are also not allowed in NYC theaters.)
But then one day, I was in a 99 cent store (yes, producers shop in these to find props for their productions), and lo and behold, there were these strange little lavender candles, made out of real wax and with a little plastic wick at its core. There was a button on the bottom of each candle that made the little plastic wick light up. And flicker. And it looked really, really cool. ELECTRIC CANDLES! WHO KNEW? (Everyone but me.)
But it didn’t look very realistic because, well, the wax wasn’t melting.
And so, as you can see in the photograph, I spent a solid half hour at rehearsal shaving down the candles to make them look like the wax had melted. You can see the shavings in my cup (and all over the table… sorry, MTC!), as well as a before-candle, an “unlit” candle that had been shaved down, and the final “lit” candle after it had been shaved.
The best part is, I don’t even think that we’re going to use these candles. The color doesn’t really go with the design scheme, and we have much nicer red candles that we can use. Luckily, in a moment wherein I thought I broke one of the purple candles, I discovered that the base containing the plastic wick and button can come out of the wax. Thus, we’ll take that piece out of the purple candles and wedge them into the red ones.
As I was saying: producing is problem-solving.

Today we load our production of By the Dawn’s Early Light into Theatre Row! In honor of this momentous occasion — in which we will be painting platforms, focusing lights, and building set pieces from 9 AM to 11:30 PM — we thought we’d bring you a little taste of the technical theater process. Here, our producer Allison writes about creating the perfect, in-all-likelihood-unused prop.

People outside theater sometimes ask me what a producer does. My answer varies, depending upon the day, but often it means being a problem solver.

Much of “Midnight Mass” takes place in a church, and when the set designer Adam and director Walter and I sat down to talk about the design scheme for the show, there was never any question that candles would have to be involved somehow. But if you know anything about fire code laws here in New York City (and probably elsewhere), you know that lit flames in theaters is strictly prohibited without going through a series of nightmarish hoops. Not unlike these.

My nightmare in a theater.

(SIDE NOTE: If you want me to talk at you in a solid 45 minute rant, you should buy me a drink and ask me about flame retardant curtains.)

But Adam, Walter, and our associate producer Barbara kept saying, “Oh don’t worry, we’ll get electric candles!” Yeah, electric candles! … What? You mean like the ones in the windows at Christmas time? Or on the menorah? What do you mean, electric candles? I had no idea what they were talking about, but had a lot of contracts to process and money to raise, so I put it on the back burner. (Those are also not allowed in NYC theaters.)

But then one day, I was in a 99 cent store (yes, producers shop in these to find props for their productions), and lo and behold, there were these strange little lavender candles, made out of real wax and with a little plastic wick at its core. There was a button on the bottom of each candle that made the little plastic wick light up. And flicker. And it looked really, really cool. ELECTRIC CANDLES! WHO KNEW? (Everyone but me.)

But it didn’t look very realistic because, well, the wax wasn’t melting.

And so, as you can see in the photograph, I spent a solid half hour at rehearsal shaving down the candles to make them look like the wax had melted. You can see the shavings in my cup (and all over the table… sorry, MTC!), as well as a before-candle, an “unlit” candle that had been shaved down, and the final “lit” candle after it had been shaved.

The best part is, I don’t even think that we’re going to use these candles. The color doesn’t really go with the design scheme, and we have much nicer red candles that we can use. Luckily, in a moment wherein I thought I broke one of the purple candles, I discovered that the base containing the plastic wick and button can come out of the wax. Thus, we’ll take that piece out of the purple candles and wedge them into the red ones.

As I was saying: producing is problem-solving.

8 August 2011 ·

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We finished up our last rehearsal at MTC yesterday for By the Dawn’s Early Light, before we pack up everything we own and move it on into the theater. Mel took a moment to write down some observations about one of the last rehearsals.

The final rehearsals at MTC prior to our landing at Theatre Row have been fascinating their up and down nature.

Little things are starting to take shape. Nerves are popping here and there. You can feel the actors staking out their little areas of real estate as each tries to focus on the task at hand. At a recent rehearsal there was much buzzing going around and the space was filled with much activity. Farin Rebecca Loeb, our lovely stage manager, is as focused as ever, and Walter our director is on his knees measuring the stage dimensions. Our costume designer, David L. Zwiers has come with a truly wonderful bag of goodies and the actor’s behavior brings a smile to my face. They each remind me of a child visiting FAO Schwartz for the first time as they try on their costumes, play and become familiar with their props.

I sit there with an amused look on my face as I watch the actors walk around in costume, running lines with each other, or in a corner going over their scripts and suddenly for a brief moment I forget that I’m watching a group of wonderful, hard working actors, who have become my friends, but I no longer see them.

Who do I see? I see Richard talking with David. I see Nadia listening to Arturo and I see Victor teasing Angie and finally I see Freddie brooding. Yeah, what I’m seeing is the characters that I have created walking around and doing their thing in front of my eyes. Some glance at me and smile as if saying: “Yeah, here I am. What’s up?”

It’s quite a surreal feeling, but it’s also a wonderful feeling to see actors fully engaged in the work that you’ve created and I am humble by their compassion and commitment. T

he fantasy of seeing my characters come to life is broken by the sound of Farin’s voice commanding the troops to “Listen up people!” and as the actors stand at attention, Farin walks among them breaking down the “rules of the game.”  Meaning, “This is YOUR prop table. These are YOUR props and YOU are RESPONSIBLE for them” speech.  My brain suddenly begins to drift and I get visions of Lee Marvin addressing his “Dirty Dozen” crew.

As you can probably guess that at this point in the rehearsal process I am a watcher, an audience member, an encourager, a living playwright sitting behind a desk listening carefully to make sure his words (and ONLY his words) are being spoken… and finally and most importantly, a cheerleader and supportive voice, an arm around a shoulder for my actors, my director, stage manager, and finally to my dramaturgy/Producer.

It’s been a heck-of-journey. It’s going be tough to say goodbye to the rehearsal space at Manhattan Theatre Club, it’s been like another home, but our real home awaits us on Theatre Row, and there we shall be and there we shall shine. I have been reminded from time to time watching and listening to actors recite their lines, bringing these characters and their individual worlds to life, of a quote from Stella Adler, the legendary actor teacher and Group Theatre member: “The Theatre Is A Spiritual And Social X-Ray Of Its Time.”

I believe with our production of By The Dawn’s Early Light we are fulfilling Ms. Adler’s decree.

7 August 2011 ·

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“A person noted for feats of courage or nobility of purpose”

Mel writes about a subject matter close to his heart: the first responders of September 11.

It never ceases to amaze me that, whenever you are writing about a particular subject matter, the themes that you are exploring seems to jump out at you from every newscast you come across or any periodical your eyes happen to glance at. Case in point: the subject matter of those heroic, selfless first responders and their current emotional and physical struggles.

It has been ten years since that deeply wounding September morning and many events are being scheduled to commemorate the anniversary of those horrific attacks, some of those events will be celebratory in nature (yes, this is true), while still others will consist of somber remembrances of family, friends and the many loved ones known and unknown who lost their lives.  And as with any commemorating event many will border on the exploitative.  But the one thing and the only thing that has really struck me has been the recent loss of so many first responders.

Like FDNY Fire Marshall Steve Mosiello, who worked long hours at Ground Zero after the 9/11 attacks who died of esophageal cancer on 7/15 of this year… or Police officer, Robert Oswain, a Bronx cop who passed away in May of this year, who was only 42 and served in recovery efforts at Ground Zero who also died of cancer. There are others who were also first responders have also recently passed away from or are now struggling with a similar form of cancer.

Many first responders – as well as people who lived near the lower Manhattan site on September 11 – believe their cancer is connected to the cloud of toxins that bloomed from the destruction of the 110 story World Trade Center. But sadly, a federal review by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health determined that “very little” evidence had been reported on the link between the massive toxic cloud and cancer.

In my play “Midnight Mass,” when confronted with suggestions that his father, Richard a former fireman and first responder should exercise more, his son, David responds with: “Have you really looked at him lately? The man hardly’s got any wind left after what he’s sucked up, plus his back is for shit and on top of all that he’s got some unknown ground zero disease eating him up from the inside out like a school of piranha fish.”

What defines a hero? According to the American Heritage Dictionary, a hero is: “A person noted for feats of courage or nobility of purpose, especially one who has risked or sacrificed his or her life.”

I think this truly describes all of the first responders, police officers, fire fighters.  They must be honored and taken care of, and not discarded like yesterday’s news.

5 August 2011 ·

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And now: a word about technical design from Producer Allison Taylor.

One of the great challenges of putting together an off-off-Broadway production in New York City is figuring out how to make it look good.

Consider this: our production of By the Dawn’s Early Light will “load-in” to the theater next Monday. That means it’s the first time that our actors will rehearse in the space with all of the set pieces, props, and costumes. (That will also be the first time our lighting designer, Jordan Acosta, will get to focus the lights and create a design for the show.) While we do have all day at Theatre Row on that Monday, we only have Tuesday and Wednesday evening to rehearse on our stage… and then on Thursday, we open.

It’s a quick turn around, and not uncommon for most indie theater here in New York. And the only way to deal with this time crunch is to be amazingly organized. I can’t say I’m amazingly organized, but luckily, our set designer Adam Kaynan is.

As Is

We worked with Adam last year on our production of As Is — Adam created the remarkable artwork for the show. This year, he is taking on the set design for By the Dawn’s Early Light. When we asked him if he was interested in designing, without skipping a beat he smirked and remarked, “Yeah sure… I love a challenge.”

Perhaps the greatest challenge of the show is that it’s actually two shows… two different one-acts with no common scenic design overlap. The one saving grace is that “Los Embruajdos” takes place on one single set (in the Windows on the World restaurant). But the second one-act, “Midnight Mass,” includes multiple locations including two different apartments, a basement, and a church. To depict these multiple places, Adam went with a sleek and minimalist approach, employing furniture that could take on multiple uses. Another great challenge for Adam was our director Walter’s preference to build a raised platform.

In the photos above, you can check out the design scheme for By the Dawn’s Early Light. Needless to say, Adam is a remarkable artist in his preparedness and creativity. But in order to appreciate his talents best, we of COURSE hope you come see the show and see the set for yourself.

2 August 2011 ·

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When is a playwright done?

Now that our playwright Mel Nieves isn’t rewriting By the Dawn’s Early Light, he has time to reflect and write about about his writerly process. 

As the final weekend of July approaches, we (the casts and creative team) just finished a second run-through of both plays. The script for “Los Embrujados” has been locked-in (meaning, set in stone – no more re-writes) for about a week or so, except for a dash of some Spanish thrown in for flavoring here and there. It’s been pretty much sitting back and taking in the actors as they slowly-but-surely make the roles their own, and listening to Walter’s (Walter Hoffman our director) insightful guiding of the actors as they search for the proper tone for the story they are telling and experiencing. 

With “Miidnight Mass,” it’s been a bit a little different. For the most part, the script has been locked in for a about a week or so, but something was bothering me. In fact, it bothered me so much that I would wake up in the middle of the night with a single thought: “What was missing?” It wasn’t until watching a documentary about the war in Afghanistan on Netflix one late, late night that a light finally flickered into my brain.

Though the additional snippet of dialogue was not large in word count, it was large as to the impact it had for the scene and for the actors. It is always a satisfying feeling to have actors look at additional dialogue and not smile because it’s simply more lines, but to see them smile and say, “Thank you” for writing the note that they were struggling to reach and find. 

During this last run-through of both plays, I couldn’t properly listen to them in their entirety. My thoughts were with the new lines that I had added for a very important scene in “Midnight Mass” and that’s all I was waiting for. I had the new lines written on a piece of paper and as the scene approached and the sequence began I listened and hoped that these new words would work.  And with our wonderful actors, Alicia Fitzgerald and Kevin Prowse, the new lines hit the proper note and tone. Afterwards the actors in unison said: “That’s exactly what we needed. Thank you.”

So what happens now when all the re-writes have been completed and the scripts are now locked, so to speak… is the playwright still needed? Do I simply say: “See ya on opening night!” I don’t know about other playwrights, but this playwright isn’t going away anytime soon. And to be honest, it’s not a matter of protecting my work, but it’s a matter of helping the actors when they are stuck or in need of clarification regarding a moment in text or simply a line of dialogue. It’s funny the majority of the questions from the actors are along the lines of “What were you feeling when you work this?” rather than what the character I’m writing about is going through. It has also been interesting meeting with the set and sound designer as they ask me my thoughts regarding certain things that I describe in the script.Rehearsal Studio

It’s funny: a theatre rehearsal space is my favorite place to be at. I can spend hours and days in that room with actors and writers going over things in a text or just talking shop. In this space is where I feel more myself, more intellectually and spiritually confident. All writing I believe is to some extent autobiographical and there ‘s a lot of me in both scripts –only it’s been more so with “Midnight Mass” (not to take anything away from “Los Embrujados,” which I am most proud of).

It’s been a very interesting process with “Midnight Mass,” and I believe that reason is because it was a play that I originally wrote almost five years ago. I’m obviously not the same person or playwright that I was five years ago and it’s been an interesting and most fascinating of collaborations between the voice I had then, with the voice I have now. I think it’s been a good collaboration between the two voices. I can see the difference in my writing style between then and now and I believe both voices have blended well with each other.

I hope when you come see the plays, you yourself will think so too.

30 July 2011 ·

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Apple Core Theater Company produces emotional, entertaining plays by American writers. Valuing the immediacy and intimacy of theater, we strive to present plays that cut down to the core and go straight to the heart. Believing that theater should be accessible to all people, we are committed to providing affordable theater to New York City.

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