Directed by Bret Fetzer
Fri-Sat at 11 pm, Aug 6-26
$10 gen / $5 TPS/senior/student
PWYC Industry Nights: Mondays, August 15 & 22
End times are near in the final episode of Scot Augustsonʼs black-and-white comedy Penguins! The conflict of priests vs. nuns comes to a head, along with exorcisms, conspiracies, lesbian love, historical secrets revealed, and more of the caustic comedy thatʼs brought this late night serial acclaim and dismay! Directed by Bret Fetzer.
Daniel Christensen | Father Luke |
Chris Dietz | Father Jones & Hitchhiker |
Katie Driscoll | Adam |
Maggie Ferguson-Wagstaffe | Connie Sullivan |
Sophie Lowenstein | Sister Jenny Memphis |
Jenny Schmidt | Sister Mimi Coco |
Jillian Vashro | Sister Candy |
Lisa Viertel | Sister Bernadette |
Clayton Weller | Brother Placido |
CREW
Director | Bret Fetzer |
Technical Director/Photography/Graphic Design | Ian Johnston |
Stage Manager | Caitlin Gilman |
Lighting Design | Tess Malone |
Costume Design | Avery Reed & Meaghan Darling |
Sound Design | Kyle Thompson |
ABOUT PERFORMANCE TIMES, PUBLIC TICKETS AND PRESS TICKETS
PENGUINS 5: Mea Maxima Culpa, Baby August 6th through August 26th Annex Theatre 1100 Pike Street East / 2nd Floor The Performance Dates include: August 6th, 12th, 13th, 19th, 20th, 26th at 11pm August 15th and 22nd at 8pm for our Industry Pay-What-You-Will Nights $5 General Admission: Student/Senior/Military/TPS PRESS TICKETS / PRESS PACKETS If you are an editor or writer of any medium that would like to review this show, please contact our Marketing & Communications Director, Brian Peterson, at brian.peterson@annextheatre.org. You will receive two complimentary press tickets for opening night, a press packet and a link to our online press photo gallery – which includes all press photos taken, our video trailer for the show. |
Press Photos | Photo 1 Photo 2 |
“Augustson’s late-night serial comedy Penguins is a breath of fresh, filthy air…its balls-out devotion to depravity is executed by a talented, canny cast.”
– The Stranger
“Brawny, brogue-brandishing badass Sister Bernadette (Lisa Viertel) demands some basic rights for nuns, which triggers a priest/nun gang war that makes last year’s pitiless Cannes winner Gomorrah look like an afterschool special…We’re talking Doubt on Ecstasy, smack, and aerosol cheese…The hour-long show felt like half that, and I wished Penguins: Episode 2 would have begun immediately after.”
– Seattle Weekly
“Ultra-lowbrow, extreme Catholic camp…[director] Fetzer keeps his cast moving full-tilt…You wouldn’t think there’d be any thrill (perverse or otherwise) left in priest-and-nun exploitation, but [playwright] Augustson mines the veins of altar-boy molestation and convent lesbianism with such fervor, he might win you over.”
– SunBreak
“I thought it was absolutely fucking great…If all late-night theater were like this, it would devour prime-time theater, which would be fantastic.”
– Monologist Mike Daisey
The Tale of Jemima Canard
Directed by Carys Kresny
Fri-Sat at 8 pm, April 22-May 21
$15 general / $10 TPS, senior, military / $5 student
PWYC Industry Night: Monday, May 9
Only Potter can unlock the mysteries of this world. As she examines the hidden corners of her own past, layers of passion and regret weave themselves into a tale that blurs the lines between love and violence, food and sex, and ultimately, the artist and the art she creates.
Love! Whimsy! Terror!
The underbelly of Beatrix Potter comes to life in The Tale of Jemima Canard. A young innocent, capricious but willful, falls under the romantic sway of a predatory cad—but the characters are not Edwardian ladies and gentlemen; they are ducks, hounds, badgers, and foxes. As the author is interrogated by one of her own characters, layers of love, envy, jealousy, and much worse become revealed as the play delves into the deceptively whimsical lives of Jemima, her hard-as-nails sister Rebecca, the rugged but earnest St. Hubert brothers, the degenerate Tommy Brock, Miss Potter herself, and the elegant and alarming Tawny Whiskered Gentleman. Seattle actor Brandon J. Simmons makes his playwriting debut with this anthropomorphic dream-play, using Potterʼs The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck as a springboard to explore the nature of fate and time, blurring the lines between animal/human, love/violence, food/sex, and the artist and the art she creates. Directed by Carys Kresny, who previously dug her directorial fingers into dark and roiling emotions in The Changeling and Penetralia at Annex.
CAST
Mary Murfin Bayley | Potter |
Truman Buffett | TWG |
Danielle Daggerty | Rebecca |
James James | Leroy/Brock |
Martyn G. Krouse | Roland |
Jillian Vashro | Jemima |
CREW
Production Director | Meaghan Darling |
Stage Manager | Katie Driscoll |
Set Design | Emily Reitman |
Light Design | Tess Malone |
Costume Design | Hannah Schnabel |
Mask Maker/Props Design | Cole Hornaday |
Sound Design | Erin Paige |
Fight Choreographer | Ryan Spickard |
Dialect Coach | Pamala Mijatov |
Dramaturg | Bret Fetzer |
Technical Director | Ian Johnston |
When I Come to My Senses, I’m Alive!
written by Scotto Moore | directed by Kristina Sutherland
Apr 23 – May 22, 2010 | Fri-Sat at 8 pm
Industry Night: May 10 at 8pm
$15 gen | $5 stu
“When I Come To My Senses, I’m Alive!” is a near-future sci-fi story about a technological provocateur who invents a method for capturing emotions as digital information, as part of a project to “chart the emotional genome.” She develops a cult following of fans who download her very addictive “emoticlips” – each delivered with cryptic, poetic file names like “the surprise of an unfamiliar memory” – and play them back in hobby-built receiver helmets. The experience is not full blown virtual reality; instead, emotional responses & sensations are triggered, and each fan experiences something unique. A seedy television executive tries to coopt her technology to syndicate the emotions of TV stars, hiring an elite P.I. to figure out what her weaknesses are when she refuses to sell out… but in the meantime, publishing digital versions of her emotions to the internet has unexpected consequences amongst the botnets of the world.
Scotto Moore‘s new play, “When I Come to My Senses, I’m Alive!” is the best kind of science fiction, the kind where speculation about the future feels like something you could wake up to tomorrow morning. In this World Premiere production, director Kristina Sutherland has kept the ideas fresh and intriguing and the performances finely finished and compelling. The acting is brisk and, at least for the enthusiastic opening night audience, it’s premise and articulation is easily embraced by a generation for whom the globalization of information, media and personal experience meld into our shared online identities…. [The play] is a lot of fun, at least in part because it is so confident and thoroughly considered in its ideas and equally finished in its theatrical savvy for putting them on stage.
It’s not hard to be captivated by Moore’s provocative premise about a leap in information technology that makes human emotions a downloadable, vicarious experience. The story’s late turn toward suspense — with the spectral rise of freethinking, artificial intelligence on the Internet — certainly ups the ante in unexpected, spooky ways…. Director Kristina Sutherland keeps the action brisk and crisp, and knows how to nudge the audience’s imagination.
One wants to see more plays like this in Seattle—smart science fiction about the amazing world we have found ourselves heading toward.
Fun, fascinating, thoughtful and delightful.
[Note: omnipotent self-aware botnets click here]
CAST
Annique Farrar | Jennifer Pratt |
Micky Carter | Daniel Christensen |
Veronica Bilious | Jade Justad |
Aleister Rowland | Curtis Eastwood |
Cicely Bryce | Katie Beudert |
Monica/Emily March | LaChrista Borgers |
Whisper/Cody Charles | Jesse Keeter |
CREW
Stage Manager | Rob Bergquist |
Set Design | David Gignac |
Light Design | Dani Prados |
Costume Design Headgear Design |
Rebecca Grabman |
Props Design | J H Welch |
Sound Design | Scotto Moore |
Technical Consultant | Brett Wagner |
Technical Director | Max Reichlin |
Production Manager | Ellie McKay |
Build Team | Jillian Vashro Ian Johnston |
Poster Design | Miquela Suazo |
Trailer: Director of Photography/Editor |
Ben Laurance |
Trailer: Gaffer | Michael Hayes |
Trailer: Sound | Ian Johnston |
PRESS
Press Release | Senses_Press_Release.pdf |
Press Photos | Senses_Press_Photo_1.jpg Senses_Press_Photo_2.jpg Senses_Press_Photo_3.jpg |
Penguins 2: Roll Away the Rock
written by Scot Augustson, directed by Bret Fetzer
LATE NIGHT: Jan 29 – Feb 12, 2010, Fri-Sat at 11 pm
(no show Friday, Feb 6)
$10 gen / $5 stu
Episode 2 of Annex’s smash-hit Penguins, about a gang war between nuns and priests in the Catholic church that rocks the dioceses!
CAST
Father Luke/The Organist/Snake Eyes | Daniel Christensen |
Father Jones | Chris Dietz |
Sister Daphne George/Mother Gershwin/Connie Sullivan | Teri Lazzara |
Sister Jenny Memphis/June/Sister Peaches | Sophie Lowenstein |
Adam, the Organist’s son | David Roby |
Sister Mimi Coco/Marilyn/Sister Iddy Biddy | Jenny Schmidt |
Sister Candy/Young Susan/Widow Kilorin | Jillian Vashro |
Sister Bernadette/Gertrungkt | Lisa Viertel |
Brother Placido/Spencer/Monsignor Kittan | Clayton Weller |
CREW
Stage Manager | Maggie Ferguson-Wagstaffe |
Technical Director & Photographer | Ian Johnston |
Production Manager | Ellie McKay |
Postcard Design | Emily Harvey |
Design Team | Susannah Anderson Meaghan Darling John DeShazo Julia Evanovich Maggie Ferguson-Wagstaffe Ed Hawkins Ian Johnston |
SPECIAL THANKS
Lynn Jepson, Jen Moon, Deb Skorstad and the UW Costume Shop, Seattle Children’s Theatre, and Theater Schmeater.
Alecto Issue #1
written by Alexander Harris
directed by Jaime Roberts
Jan 22 – Feb 10, 2010
Friday and Saturday 8pm
$15 gen / $5 stu
A troubled heroine with an incredible power discovers that the popular superhero team she’s joined has questionable notions of good and evil. Alecto, Issue #1 translates the world of comic books to the stage, mixing social satire, physical spectacle, sly comedy, and an imaginary pig.
CAST
Jessica/Alecto | Maridee Slater |
Diana/Greta | Carrie McIntyre |
The Cap’n | Jason Sharp |
Madame Mayhem | Tracy Leigh |
Shock Wave | Nik Doner |
Piggy Pigg | Chris Bell |
Melody | Megan Ahiers |
Nathan/Nigel | Banton Foster |
Baz | William Hardyman |
Chaos Theory | Rachel Jackson |
CREW
Stage Manager | Noelle Wilcox |
Assistant Stage Manager/Fly Master | Mike Gilson |
Set Design | Ann Marie Caldwell |
Light Design | Allysa Thompson |
Costume Design | Afton Pilkington |
Props Design | Emily Sershon |
Sound Design | Michael Hayes |
Sound Board Operator | Regan MacStravic |
Technical Director/Fly Engineer | Ian Johnston |
Production Manager | Kristina Volkman |
Graphic Designer/Geek Consultant | Cole Hornaday |
Fight Choreographer | John Lynch |
Dialect Coach | Pamala Mijatov |
Seamstress | Meaghan Darling |
SPECIAL THANKS
Seattle Children’s Theatre, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Teri Lazzara and Theatre Schmeatre, Jodi Sauerbier, David Baum, Meghan Darling, Mark Siano and the Freedom Dancers, Ouchey, Balagan Theatre, All the actors who participated in the many readings, Austin Elston, Emily Gallagher, Sue and Dick Harris, Jennie Harris, Angela Cherry, Washington Lawyers for the Arts, Arya Bahrami, James L. Vana, Ed Sershon, Bret Fetzer, Scotto Moore, Ben Laurance, Nicolette Butler, Joel and Cora Caldwell, Craig Bradshaw, Michael LoSasso and Stone Soup Theatre Village Theater, Rick Miller, Jane Stratton and Tom Champoux, Marilyn Fox, Jolene Obertin, Marty Spiegel, Jesse Card