Thursday, January 27, 2011

Utterly dark and absolutely hilarious!



Winnipeg's Urban journal the Uniter praises "Pariah"!!!


Independent theatre company presents short but exuberant Strindberg play about conflicting moral beliefs

by Catherine van Reenen (Culture Reporter)


The word “pariah” defines an outcast, someone who is rejected by society, often for failing to adhere to the common morality.

The play Pariah, written by Swedish playwright August Strindberg, takes this definition and flips it around, rapidly and unapologetically.

Perhaps there is another definition of a pariah: one who ostracizes himself by creating his own separate morality.

The folks at Fancy Bred Theatre seem to think so.

Rod Beilfuss and Suzie Martin, both University of Winnipeg theatre grads, are the co-directors of Pariah, a production by Fancy Bred Theatre that is part of Strindberg Fest 2011, this year’s Master Playwright Festival held by MTC.

The pair, originally actors, have developed a taste for directing over the past few years and used their thespian talents as an effective directing tool for this project when they began working on it in July.

Pariah, like many of Strindberg’s plays, takes place in the twilight of uncertainty, in between realism and a psychological dream world

Pariah is a short but exuberant play about conflicting moral beliefs.

Mr. X, an anthropologist played by Chris Sabel, begins questioning Mr. Y, a traveler from America played by Glen Thompson, about his personal beliefs. In turn, Mr. Y begins the exact same passionate questioning about his own morals.

The result is something nervously funny, vaguely Nietzschean and satirically familiar. Without their beliefs, people become excruciatingly uncomfortable, regardless of the validity or basis of those beliefs.

Pariah, like many of Strindberg’s plays, takes place in the twilight of uncertainty, in between realism and a psychological dream world.

This grey area that Strindberg so frequently explores is embraced by the collaboration of Beilfuss and Martin’s direction.

Martin found the play utterly dark upon first reading it, while Beilfuss initially found Pariah absolutely hilarious.

“The fact that the play is hilarious would have never occurred to me without Rod,” Martin admitted.

Strindberg excels at making audiences feel uncomfortable and isolated, something that the directors ensured by staging their play in the cozy venue of Ragpickers (not to mention by effectively capitalizing on awkward silences).

One of the major changes that the directors made to Strindberg’s original text was to set the play in Africa instead of Sweden in order to emphasize the isolation of the characters.

Martin and Beilfuss also made religion play a more central part in the conflict between Mr. X and Mr. Y, using Christianity as a tool to connect the characters.

“When desperation settles in, they have to cling on to something else to survive,” said Beilfuss.

Pariah kicked off Strindberg Fest with a delightfully dark debate over morality and encourages audiences to embrace the weird, enjoy the uncomfortable and find humour in the absurd.

Pariah plays at Ragpickers Theatre (2nd floor, 216 McDermot Ave.) Jan. 28-29 and Feb. 4-5 at 7 p.m, and Feb. 6 at 1:30 p.m. Phone 477-6407 for reservations and more info.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

CBC gives PARIAH the thumbs up!!




Strindberg has never been called a "comedian," but in their production of his short play Pariah, Fancy Bred Theatre make an admirable effort to find some humour (dark though it may be) in Strindberg's writing.

This story of two men, both exiled in Africa and harbouring their own dark secrets, does indeed mine some laughs, although the themes are pure Strindberg grimness: the duality of hypocrites, the haunting nature of our pasts, the capacity of men to commit - and justify - evil. As Mr. X and Mr. Y (Chris Sabel and Glen Thompson) engage in verbal (and eventually physical) sparring, each tries to gain the upper hand on the other by prying at his weakness, exposing his dark past.

Sabel and Thompson's performances make the production sing - the two create full characters, who truly do seem to be hiding something from us; and much of the black humour of the production comes from their character quirks (the somehow sinister friendliness Sabel gives Mr. X; the awkward politness of Thompson's Mr. Y). Credit is due, too, to co-directors Rod Beilfuss and Suzie Martin for finding comedy in a script that seems to leave little room for it, in carefully-measured pacing and the judicious use of long, uncomfortable silences.

But one of the interesting things about the Master Playwright Festival is seeing the more "formative" works of a master writer, and the production of Pariah outshines the material in this case, which feels more like a unfinished Strindberg sketch than a fully-realized script.

Joff Schmidt

Sunday, January 16, 2011

OPENING Week!!




Thursday, Jan 20th, is upon us!!

The company is already installed at the picturesque Ragpipckers Theatre, in the lovely Exchange District of Winnipeg! We can't wait to share this special creation with you folks...

"PARIAH"

Thursday, January 13, 2011

ONE Week Away!



Opening night is fast approaching!

Make sure you reserve your tickets, as Mr. Thompson and Mr. Sabel are absolutely and mischievously fantastic in this show!

"Pariah" opens on January 20th, at 7:00pm, @ Ragpickers Theatre!

Reservations: 477-6407

Monday, January 3, 2011

2 Weeks Away...

Woah, time flies!

We are basically two weeks away from our opening night!

"Pariah" will open the 2011 MTC StrindbergFest at 7:00pm on January 20th!
That's right, we are the very first show of the festival! You gotta be there!

Here are some rehearsal shots for your "delightment":








See you there!

FOR RESERVATIONS =
PHONE: (204) 477-6407 (MON-FRI: 9am - 5pm, please leave a message!)
EMAIL: rfcbeilfuss@hotmail.com

Sunday, October 31, 2010

FBT presents Strindberg's "PARIAH"




Two un-saintly moralists go head-to-head in this psychological game of chess.

Mr. Y and Mr. X are stuck in an isolated mission in early 20th century Africa. One is a seemingly innocent traveller, the other a self-righteous anthropologist. Each is guarding a secret and sordid past.

Both are guilty, yet both claim the moral higher ground in an intellectual wrestling match of the finest Scandinavian kind. And it's funny. Seriously.

After the hits "Enter a Free Man", "Duck Variations" and "Resurrection Blues", Fancy Bred Theatre returns with a BANG: "Pariah" - directed by Rod Beilfuss & Suzie Martin!! It is August Strindberg presented freshly and lively, just in time to warm your bones through another Winnipeg winter.

TICKETS:

Either by PHONE: (204) 477-6407 (MON-FRI: 9am - 5pm, please leave a message!)
or via EMAIL: rfcbeilfuss@hotmail.com

VENUE:

Ragpickers Theatre
216 McDermot Ave (2nd Floor)

SHOWTIMES:

January 20, 21, 22, 23(matinee), 24, 28, 29
Feb 4, 5, 6(matinee)

Evening times: 7:00pm
Matinee times: 1:30pm

Play running time: 40 MINUTES



**GET YOUR TICKETS!!**