Imagine having a voice in selecting the cast of a play. As an audience member of Eat the Runt, which will run for three consecutive weekends at the Arts Collective (AC) at Howard Community College (HCC), you will have the opportunity to do just that. #hocoarts
The casts of 'Eat the Runt': Photo by JilliAnne McCarty |
The rules of the voting as
well as the incentives to participate are shown on the Arts Collective website.
According to Kramer, the play by
Avery Croszier includes a stellar cast of eight actors poised to take on the
challenge each performance (in various roles) featuring HCC students, alumni
and guest artists, as well as the work of the best professional designers in
the area.
Eat the Runt is
billed as “an outrageous, delicious
comic satire that can go in countless, mind-blowing directions. A seemingly innocent job interview slowly
spirals into chaos as jealousy, desire, and deception collide. When the truth
is revealed, only the strongest will survive.”
Kramer noted, “The central
relationships among the cast of characters could include lesbian, gay, or
heterosexual entanglements depending on the cast chosen... some combinations
will make sense, while others may plunge the play into the absurd. To quote the
playwright, Avery Crozier, ‘but sometimes the greatest discoveries are
accidents. This one's waiting to happen. Every night..”
“Casting nightmares drove me to
write Eat the Runt, a play that’s recast every night,” explains Crozier.
“Quite often, playwrights write fascinating and specific physical descriptions
of characters that make the play impossible to cast - especially if it is going
to first be presented in a small theater.
“So I’ve stopped writing plays
like that. In Eat the Runt, I decided to create roles that any talented
actor could play, regardless of age, ethnicity, or gender. This is not a play
in which appearance doesn't matter. It is, in fact, almost entirely about
appearance and identity, but is designed to give the director flexibility to
cast the best actors available without regard to physical type. Or to choose
physical types that heighten the excitement of the situations on stage.”
Crozier adds, “The play is set in an art museum, a wonderful
arena for exploring ethnicity, gender, and cultural issues of representation.
It’s based on a series of interviews I had for a job at a large encyclopedic
museum, a job I was pretty certain I did not want.
“On the
airplane I fantasized about sabotaging myself with each interviewer so that
they'd reject me before I was put in the embarrassing position of rejecting the
job. Ultimately, I opted to behave myself, but on stage I could be much bolder
than in real life. In the play, the character Merritt lives out my fantasy, and
manifests increasingly strange and contradictory behavior with each interview.
My challenge was to figure out why Merritt would go to such extremes, which
pushed the play into the realm of impersonation and lying. So it became
meta-theatre, a play about acting.”
Eat the Runt runs three
weekends: April 17 - May 3 in HCC’s Studio Theatre, with performances on
Fridays, and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 3 p.m. The theater is located at HCC, Horowitz
Center Studio Theatre, 10901 Little Patuxent Parkway, Columbia, MD 21044.
Seating is limited so that purchasing tickets early is encouraged. Individual tickets are $15 for general admission, $12 for seniors (60+) and military, and $10 for all students with identification. The play is not recommended for children under age 14. Tickets may be purchased through the Box Office at 443-518-1500 or online.
Seating is limited so that purchasing tickets early is encouraged. Individual tickets are $15 for general admission, $12 for seniors (60+) and military, and $10 for all students with identification. The play is not recommended for children under age 14. Tickets may be purchased through the Box Office at 443-518-1500 or online.
Come early so you can play the
part of an actual casting director.
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