Thursday, September 28, 2006

Hicks/Bogosian REVIEW - Quad City Times

"Double Bill a great piece of theatre"

By Ruby Nancy, Quad City Times

The latest late-night production from My Verona Productions is called “The Non-Conformists Double Bill,” a pairing of two one-person shows that touch on a number of controversial subjects.

Tied together by a common format and by references to drug use and sex — but little else — “Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll,” by Eric Bogosian, and “It’s Just a Ride,” featuring material by Bill Hicks, are the shows presented on this bill.

The first stars Jason Conner in a series of short monologues, all of which center on the topics featured in its title, and the second showcases the talents of Adam Michael Lewis.

Conner’s delivery of each section of the “Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll” script is more than adequate, covering a range of accents and types of characters well. Simply dressed and often seated, Conner delivers bits that vary in length and relative obscenity, and — though the material is not as good as his performance — he applies himself throughout. Given the nature of the material, his lovely blond looks and gleaming smile are actually a distraction from his performance, and the result comes across more like an extended audition than a play.

In the case of “It’s Just a Ride,” which is described as “a tribute to a man who … never sold out, never compromised, and never backed down,” the text comes from an interwoven collection of standup material from Hicks’ comedy routines. Put together in a seamless way, they blend into a single standup performance that is broad in scope and riveting in its passion — and, true to Hicksian form, also absolutely hilarious.

Lewis is a stellar performer, and his work here is wonderfully done.

He captures the essence of true standup, which blends prepared jokes with audience interaction, and he also manages to channel quite a bit of Hicks as well. (For the uninitiated, Hicks was a passionate and articulate comic whose thoughtful, side-splitting rants had political and cultural insight as well as outrageous humor. His death in 1994, following a bout with pancreatic cancer, ended a varied, controversial, influential, below-the-radar career far too soon.)

Lewis is natural and nuanced in this performance. His delivery is so unaffected throughout that afterward I heard someone ask the person next to them if “Ride” was an all-improv show. Whether pacing the small stage or delivering a stream of jokes stockstill, Lewis (as Hicks) is full of energy and emotion. His complete immersion in the work is an amazing feat of top-notch acting that pays off in a major way, earning huge, gut-busting laughs and even mid-rant applause that is completely deserved.

While many may find something to challenge them in Hicks’ rather salty monologues — and, undoubtedly, a certain ultra-conservative segment of the population would find most of this material highly offensive — he had plenty to say about the state of the world. Sadly, much of his material concerning war, hatred, ignorance and hypocrisy is just as relevant in 2006 as it was when he first delivered it.

It is a show for adults, no doubt, and probably is not to be recommended for the faint of heart (regardless of age). Full of observations on hot-topic issues, it has plenty for audiences to get worked up about, but these are not caveats. Its words deserve to be heard by a larger audience than this production will probably get — and some who do hear them might become angry or uncomfortable.

“It’s Just a Ride” is, regardless, a great piece of theater.

Contact the features desk at (563) 383-2400 or newsroom@qctimes.com.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Hicks/Bogosian Double Bill: REVIEW - River Cities Reader

Half Crazy: "The Nonconformists Double Bill,"
at ComedySportz through September 30

Written by Mike Schulz, River Cities Reader
Wednesday- September 27, 2006

My Verona Productions' The Nonconformists Double Bill is composed of two comedic, one-man performance pieces; Jason Conner and Adam Lewis star, arranged the material, and serve as the show's directors. In the show's first half, Conner enacts a half-dozen vignettes from bohemian performance artist Eric Bogosian's Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll; in the second, It's Just a Ride: A Tribute to Bill Hicks, Lewis has fashioned a 40-minute monologue from the stand-up routines of the late comedian. And while the work is a local debut, I'm probably one of the few people in the area who initially caught the production when it opened out-of-town.

Conner and Lewis first presented this two-fer, in only slightly altered form, at Western Illinois University in 2003, and although I'm personal friends with both performers, I can't imagine that my enjoyment of 2003's The Nonconformists Double Bill (as it has been renamed for My Verona's presentation) was much more than slightly biased; both actors had - and have always had - sensational comic timing and terrific interpretive skills, and best of all, both seemed to really love Bogosian's and Hicks' work. Conner and Lewis attacked their comics' frequently hysterical, often explosive material not just with vigor, but with empathy, which grounded the laughs with a refreshing air of realism.

In the three-plus years since that WIU performance, Conner's and Lewis' talents haven't waned, and neither, it seems, has their affinity for the material; The Nonconformists Double Bill is a fine showcase for the pair's gifts. But for reasons that don't have much to do with acting ability, the presentation does feel a little lopsided, and the audience reactions on Saturday night appeared to back up that claim.

The Sex, Drugs act begins with Bogosian's monologue "Grace of God," in which Conner, entering from the back of the ComedySportz house, portrays a needy panhandler who matter-of-factly asks the audience for money. Yet the opening is a puzzler, and not because the audience is unaccustomed to being directly addressed, but because Conner doesn't look the least bit needy.

Conner performs all six Bogosian pieces in a basic black T-shirt and black jeans, but since the lights and Conner's character voices change with each new monologue, the wardrobe isn't what makes the sequence confusing, but rather the actor's physicality. Tall and thin, with a strong jaw and a spectacular mane of hair, Conner looks like the poster boy for physical health, and so - if you don't know the material, at any rate - it takes a while to glean that this introductory figure is supposed to be on the skids, and probably mentally disturbed. Conner's good looks and confident presence work against the character here, and unfortunately, not for the last time.

In the "Dirt" and "Bottleman" routines, Conner portrays very specific types of aggrieved, ranting New Yorkers, and his readings are vocally energetic and clever. But, again, we don't quite buy them, as Conner doesn't seem insane so much as he seems to be doing a fine job of acting insane. It takes quite some time, at the start of each new vignette, to get a mental picture of Conner's new character in our heads; the audience has to do perhaps too much work is determining what these comically wretched characters would look like if they weren't blessed with the actor's healthy presence.

The best thing about Conner here is that he doesn't condescend to his characters - if anything, he gives them more dignity than they deserve. Yet based on the nervous half-laughs among the crowd, I'm guessing that many of the show's attendees didn't quite understand what was going on, aside from a talented actor revealing his gifts for character comedy. (The travails of New Yorkers in the early '90s don't quite have the same impact with a Midwestern audience in the middle part of this decade.) Once Conner gets a rhythm going, he's fine and gets his laughs - especially when enacting an egocentric rock star on a talk show - but with too much time spent trying to determine whom we're dealing with in any given segment, and what relation the disassociated pieces have with one another, there's a lurching rhythm to the Nonconformists' first half; it's a fun acting exercise, but little more.

No such problem, though, plagues It's Just a Ride, which has the benefit of being one uninterrupted monologue, allowing Lewis to sustain a rhythm for the entire piece. Stitching together material from nearly a dozen Hicks routines, Lewis, as Hicks, gets to rail against American drug policy, evangelical Christians, right-wing blowhards, and other elements of society that were major bees in Hicks' bonnet, and Lewis' anger and comic exasperation appear deeply felt - he continually works himself into a state of high dudgeon, and then works himself into a higher one. (Twice, the climaxes of Lewis' rants were met with applause.)

Pacing with pent-up frustration, and performing outré physical gestures to underline the gags - the things that Lewis does to a water bottle ... - the actor's performance energy never wanes, and by the end, the material has been shaped so that it actually means something; unlike the Bogosian piece, It's Just a Ride feels like a full show, and not just a series of comedic highlights. The actors' talents are such that you wouldn't want to miss either half of The Nonconformists Double Bill, but I was delighted that they were performed in the order they are - Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll feels like a warm-up to a more satisfying Ride.



For tickets, call (309)786-7733 extension 2.

Friday, September 15, 2006

My Verona 2006/2007 Season Outlook

September 22-September 30
The Non-Conformists Double Bill
Featuring…
IT’S JUST A R IDE by Bill Hicks
SEX, DRUGS, ROCK & ROLL by Eric Bogosian
Comedy Sportz Theatre – Rock Island



October 7-15
In Conjunction with Ballet Quad Cities
BALLET ROCKS
Capitol Theatre – Davenport



November 16-November 27
Adam Michael Lewis returns for a holiday classic…
SANTALAND DIARIES
Comedy Sportz Theatre – Rock Island



January 26-February 3
David Mamet’s OLEANNA
Comedy Sportz Theatre – Rock Island



Late Winter/Early Spring 2007
Table Readings/Stage Readings/Pitch Parties for the film version of
YOUR FAVORITE BAND
By MVP Co-Founder Sean Leary



March/April – Dates TBA
World Premiere!
RED OVEN
By Quad City writer Devin Hansen



April 26-May 6
Jeffrey Hatcher’s adaptation of Mitch Albom’s
TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE
Comedy Sportz Theatre – Rock Island



Summer 2007
Principle photography for the film version of our 2004 debut production
YOUR FAVORITE BAND
By Sean Leary

My Verona fall season kicks off September 22

MY VERON PRODUCTIONS

presents

ADAM MICHAEL LEWIS
JASON CONNER

in

"IT'S JUST A RIDE" by Bill Hicks

"SEX, DRUGS, ROCK & ROLL" by Eric Bogosian

September 22-September 30
Friday and Saturday ONLY!
9:30 p.m.

Comedy Sportz Theatre
in the District of Rock Island

Tickets are available at the door 30 minutes before showtime.

seanleary.com/myverona