Tag Archives: Diogenes Theatre Company

LCT Review of THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD

LCT_VThis review has been reposted courtesy of the League of Cincinnati Theatres. For more LCT reviews click here to visit their reviews page.

What do you do when the world comes to an end?

This is the premise behind Diogenes Theatre Companies latest production, THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD.

Rob Jansen as The Tramp.

Rob Jansen as The Tramp.

This is a high quality performance, with a serious story involving being the last man standing after an atomic bomb explodes and kills everybody save for the lowly Tramp—the trademark character of silent screen legend Charlie Chaplin.

This story is based on a screenplay by James Agee, noted American author, journalist, poet, screenwriter (he wrote The African Queen), and film critic who died at the age of forty-five in 1955. Agee wanted Chaplin to star in the film, but Chaplin did not feel audiences would respond to the Tramp in the same way they did when he was in his heyday.

Chaplin has been proven wrong.

Rob Janson, who plays the Tramp, adapted the Agee screenplay to the stage. He does a marvelous job capturing the mixture of despair and anxiety that permeated the atomic age—and continues to permeate our own age.

While not trying to mimic Chaplin’s mannerisms, Jansen is an affecting mime who engages the audience – touching them, prompting applause, and even dancing with a patron.

Janson gives us a distilled version of the Tramp who tries to make a new life within the post-atomic wasteland. In the beginning of the play, Janson carts a bed across the theatrical space—a perfect symbol of tking the fragments of the old world to tell the story of the new.

This show had a tight lighting design by Sara Watson, with a strong sound & video Design by Doug Borntrager. Borntrager created some effective silent film clips which filled in some of the details of the story. Because the clips were being shown again a brown tarp, it took a little bit of effort to figure out what was written on some of the word cards.

Kudos to director Joseph Megal and stage manager Laura Karavitis, who kept the action and the technical crew in order.

At one hour in length, this was a play could have easily been part of the Cincinnati Fringe Festival. Yet it stands by itself as an outstanding example of what can be done with a solo actor and a great idea.

THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD is running at the Fifth-Third Theater at the Aronoff Center for the Arts June 3-7 and June 10-13 with shows starting at 7:30 pm, save for 2 pm Sunday matinee on June 7th.

For more information on the production, click here.

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THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD Review

Rob Jansen as The Tramp.

Rob Jansen.

Links to all reviews can be found using the REVIEWS link at the top of the page. Blog postings, links and more are available on my Facebook fan page. You can also receive updates on Twitter from @BTCincyRob.

THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD presented by Diogenes Theatre Company through June 13. Click here for more information on the production. I attended the opening Saturday performance.

It’s always exciting to see an actor come “home” to Cincinnati. Rob Jansen, a Cincinnati native, spent six seasons as a resident artist with the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company. During that time, he also performed with Know Theatre of Cincinnati (CORPUS CHRISTI, ANGELS IN AMERICA: PART I AND II) and the missed but not forgotten, New Stage Collective (DYING CITY).

Rob Jansen.

Rob Jansen.

Jansen, who also adapted and wrote the piece, is engrossing to watch. The comedy, energy and physicality he brings to the role does much to embody the iconic character. The endearing aspect of the character is there as well, but there were a few times when I felt his intensity in the performance overshadowed the childlike quality of the tramp.

I enjoyed the assortment of meager possessions the Tramp travels with. The audio/visual elements of the piece also worked well, especially the silent film. The intimacy of the seating also serves the show well.

I did feel that the show started off a bit sluggish, but once pass the “entrance,” the show enjoyed a nice, leisurely pace.

More of a performance piece than a performance, Jansen shines in this quirky and fun solo work.

My rating: 4.0 out of 5

I would enjoy hearing what you think about the show or my review. All I ask is that you express your opinion without attacking someone else’s opinion. You can post your comments below.

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Diogenes Theatre Company Presents New Adaptation of Lost Charlie Chaplin Screenplay THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD, June 3-13, 2015

Rob Jansen as The Tramp.

Rob Jansen as The Tramp.

(Cincinnati, OH) Diogenes Theatre Company presents THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD, a new work that adapts a lost, legendary, and never produced screenplay written for Charlie Chaplin.

In 1949, Pulitzer Prize winner James Agee wrote a tragicomic screenplay involving Charlie Chaplin’s “Tramp” character as the lone survivor of a super-atomic blast. In it, the internationally beloved childlike Tramp wanders through a crumbling world after the disastrous events of a super-atomic blast. While the screenplay was discussed between Chaplin and Agee, in the end it was never produced and remained “lost” for many years. Writer-performer Rob Jansen’s one-man show THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD brings the previously untold cinematic tale to the stage for the first time. This new multidisciplinary theatrical work combines projections, physical comedy, music, and silent film technique to tell the story of how after the world is destroyed, the Little Tramp attempts to create a new one.

THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD is created and performed by Rob Jansen and marks a return to his hometown for performances at the Fifth Third Bank Theater in the Aronoff Center for the Arts. “This play asks us how we respond when our world comes to an end,” says Jansen. “While Agee’s screenplay was a direct response to the dropping of the atomic bomb, the Tramp’s story of survival amidst ultimate destruction and his ability to find laughter in the darkest of places is universal in its relevance to any time.“

Director Joseph Megel says, “Given the volatility of the world we live in, Rob uses the poetry of Agee to connect us with our own humanity through the character of Chaplin’s Tramp. How we find what is worth saving, what is valuable about being human in the face of total annihilation”

The production is coming off a critically acclaimed run in Washington, DC, at Cultural DC’s Mead Theatre Lab:

“A complex, rich, interconnected performance…The Tramp’s New World offers moments of wonder, moments of joy, moments of sorrow…” -Robert Michael Oliver, DC Metro Theatre Arts.

Jansen is “always engaging and artful in his movements and audience interactions, conveying a heartfelt love for the deep humanity underlying Chaplin’s creation.” -Robert Steven Abelman, DC Theatre Scene.

Creative Team Created and Performed by Rob Jansen From the Screenplay Treatment by James Agee Directed by: Joseph Megel Set Design: Andrew Cohen Associate Set Design: Paige Hathaway Lighting Design: Sara Watson

Projection and Sound Design: Doug Borntrager

Prop Designer: Michael Redman

Performance Schedule
Performances run Wednesday through Saturday, JUNE 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12 & 13 at 7:30 p.m.

There will be a Sunday matinee JUNE 7 at 2:00 p.m.

All performances are held at the Aronoff Center for the Arts, Fifth Third Bank Theater, 650 Walnut Street, Cincinnati, Ohio (entrance on Main Street at the Corner of Seventh Street)

 Ticket Prices:

  • General Admission $22
  • CincyShakes Subscribers $15
  • Students $11

For tickets and general information:

www.CincinnatiArts.Org
(513 621-2787 [ARTS]
CAA Ticket Offices (Aronoff Center)

About the Artists
James Agee was an American author, journalist, poet, screenwriter and film critic. His autobiographical novel A Death in the Family won a posthumous Pulitzer Prize in 1958. An assignment for Fortune Magazine led to the writing of Let Us Know Praise Famous Men about the experiences of Alabama sharecroppers during the Dust Bowl. In the 1940s, he was one of the most influential film critics in the U.S., writing for both Time Magazine and The Nation. For Time he wrote the cover story op-ed after the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and followed this in 1949 with the screenplay treatment for The Tramp’s New World as an artistic response to the Atomic Age. Agee and Chaplin exchanged letters around the screenplay and developed a friendship, but Chaplin felt both silent film and the Tramp were no longer alive to audiences anymore. Other screenplays by Agee include The African Queen and The Night of the Hunter. His death of a heart attack in New York City on May 16, 1955, at the age of forty-five, ended the career of a unique American writer.

Rob Jansen (Writer/Adapter/Performer) is an actor, director, adapter, and teacher. As a resident artist at the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company for six seasons, he performed in 26 productions of classic plays. Favorite roles at CSC include Orlando in As You Like It, Troilus in Troilus and Cressida, and Edmund in Long Day’s Journey Into Night. Cincinnati theatregoers have also seen him at Know Theatre, New Stage Collective and Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park. Roles have included Joshua in Corpus Christi (Cincinnati Entertainment Award, Best Actor in a Lead Role), Prior in Angels in America: Part I and II, Craig/Peter in Dying City, among others. Regionally he has performed with the Seattle Shakespeare Company, St. Croix Festival Theatre, 1st Stage, Synetic Theater, Arena Stage, and the Tennessee Williams Centennial Festival at Georgetown University. His play Ah, Eugene O’Neill! Or, the Birth, Death, and (Impractical) Rebirth of American Theater was selected and performed as part of the Eugene O’Neill Festival at Arena Stage in Washington, DC. International work includes performing in Beijing, China, as Peter Quince in the bilingual production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream with the National Academy of Chinese Arts. He served as Assistant Director to South African writer and director Yael Farber during the development of her new work Nirbhaya in New Delhi, India, through the world premiere at the 2013 Edinburgh Fringe Festival (Amnesty International Freedom of Expression Award). He has taught at the University of Maryland School of Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies where he graduated with a MFA in Performance. Currently, he serves as the Associate Director for the Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics at Georgetown University.

Joseph Megel (Director) is artist in residence in Performance Studies at UNC’s Department of Communication Studies where he runs the Process Series: New Works in Development. He is also Artistic Director of StreetSigns Center for Literature and Performance. Directorial credits include: Guillermo Reyes’s Men on the Verge of a Hispanic Breakdown in its Off-Broadway production (Outer Critics Circle Award) and in Los Angeles (Best Director Ovation Award nomination, Best Production Award winner); Jennifer Maisel’s The Last Seder at EST West in Los Angeles, Theatre J in Washington, D.C., The Organic Theatre in Chicago (winner of the Kennedy Center’s Fund for New American Plays Grant); Elisabeth Lewis Corley’s adaptation of The Miser at Duke University; and Derek Goldman’s adaptation of Studs Terkel’s Will The Circle Be Unbroken in Chapel Hill, NC and Washington, D.C. (starring David Strathairn, Theodore Bikel, and Kathleen Chalfant). With Christine Evans and Jared Mezzocchi, he developed Christine Evans’s You Are Dead. You Are Here, directing its first workshop production at H.E.R.E. in NYC. For Manbites Dog, in Durham, NC, Megel directed The Best of Enemies, The Brothers Size, The Goat, and Nixon’s Nixon. Recent direction for StreetSigns includes: Blood Knot, Poetic Portraits of a Revolution, Dream Boy, White People, Trojan Barbie, and Freight: The Five Incarnations of Abel Green.

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THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD Runs June 3-13

DTC_The Tramps New World logoTHE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD
Presented by Diogenes Theatre
June 3-13
Downtown

Written, adapted by and featuring Rob Jansen

THE TRAMP’S NEW WORLD is a multi-disciplinary theatrical work combining projection, physical comedy, music, cinema and silent film technique. This one-man show adapts Pulitzer Prize Winner James Agee’s lost tragicomic screenplay following Charlie Chaplin’s “Tramp” character as the lone survivor of a super-atomic blast.

In his office atop the 50th floor of the Chrysler building, legendary Time Magazine writer Agee furiously writes a screenplay he hopes that Chaplin’s studios will finally accept. Struggling to write his epic film, we watch as Agee casts himself into the story, playing the childlike Tramp contending for survival amidst the backdrop of a ruined New York City.

  • Wed-Sat, June 3-6 at 7:30pm
  • Sun, June 7 at 2pm
  • Wed-Sat, June 10-13 at 7:30pm

Official page |

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LCT Review of DEATH AND THE MAIDEN

LCT_VThis review has been reposted courtesy of the League of Cincinnati Theatres. For more LCT reviews click here to visit their reviews page.

The more theatre I experience, the more I realize how important basic sound design is to a production.  If an audience cannot hear the actors during a performance, than the performance does not exist.

This is the case of DEATH AND THE MAIDEN, produced by the Diogenes Theatre Company at the Jarson-Kaplan Theater at the Aronoff.  I wish the playbill talked more about Diogenes, a new theatre company in town, but unfortunately the group seems indiscernable in the program despite highlighting the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company’s Brian Isaac Phillips and a back cover with the CSC Season 21 schedule.

Annie Fitzpatrick as Paulina Salas & Michael G. Bath as Gerardo Escobar. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

Annie Fitzpatrick as Paulina Salas & Michael G. Bath as Gerardo Escobar. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

DEATH AND THE MAIDEN is set in a beach house in Chile after a long period of dictatorship. The set design on the massive stage consisted of a few boxes to simulate furniture, a chair, a table set in front of several vertical, fan-blown, opaque, gauzy strips of cloth that filled in for the ocean.  An annoying ocean wave sound that got worse the farther you sat from the stage further interfered from hearing the un-miked action on stage.

Michael G. Bath plays Gerardo Escobar, who has just been assigned to a very important committee looking into human rights violations during the recent dictatorship. Anne Fitzpatrick is Paulina Salas, Gerardo’s wife, who happens to be a little insane and seriously off-kilter as she is suffering from a torture and rape experience by secret police working for the dictator. Giles Davies is Roberto Miranda, and he is the only cast member who remotely looks Chilean.

It so happens that Miranda rescues a stranded Escobar – he had a flat tire – and he ends up returning to Escobar’s later that night. He begins to ask very detailed questions about the commission (at least the ones I could hear). He stays the night by sleeping on the three boxes under a flimsy blanket—this is a bare-bones set.

In the morning, crazy Paulina is sure that Miranda is one of the dictator’s doctors who defiled her 15 years ago. She attacks the sleeping man, ties him to a chair, and in what is one of the best scenes I’ve experienced this year as an LCT panelist, removes her nylons, stuffs them in Miranda’s mouth, and then duct tapes it shut! Fitzpatrick plays her role in over-the-top fashion as she points a gun at the sniveling man.

She demands that Miranda confess to the crime and bullies her husband to assist. Unfortunately, much of the tense dialogue was reduced to whispers and turned-to-the-back-of-the-stage readings. Many plot points were lost. [As a further note, the audience is barred from sitting in the first four rows of this production, and the twelve or so ushers made sure of that.]

This production should have been in the Black Box space on the other side of the Aronoff. The big size of this little theater space swallowed the action on stage. These are great local actors, but their talent was not used to full effect. The high union cost to stage a show at the Aronoff apparently limited this production. The director, Lindsey A. Mercer, just didn’t get the basics done.

For more information on the production, click here.

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