Mad Horse starts new midweek theater series

Darkness falls early
By MEGAN GRUMBLING  |  October 9, 2008

tji_darknight_026inside.jpg
TALKING POSITIVE: Peter Brown in
Mr. Happiness.

This month, Mad Horse Theater Company offers the inaugural installment of a new way to savor theater: in an array of small, piquant morsels, with no waiting until the weekend. It’s the first of the Dark Night Series, a line-up of midweek theatrical tapas in the Studio Theater at Portland Stage Company, featuring both Mad Horse Company members and visiting artists, and directed, variously, by Chris Horton and Brent Askari.

No politically sentient adult should miss Harold Pinter’s terrifying black comedy, One For the Road, featuring David Currier as a sadistic government interrogator, with Craig Bowden, Janice Gardner, and Eliot Nye as the unfortunate family under his inspection. Denis Nye’s live accompaniment underscores the surreal menace.

Another nod to dystopia comes with the world premiere of company member Askari’s Cloudhoppers, the story of two business travelers who connect during a modern airport nightmare. Askari directs Craig Bowden and Lisa Muller-Jones.

In a somewhat different tenor is the David Mamet short Mr. Happiness, about a New Deal-era radio host doling out common-sense, traditionalist advice about love, friendship, and community. Horton directs Peter Brown in the title role.

The series also includes a free, one-night-only staged reading of Alan Bennett’s The History Boys, on October 20, as a companion piece to Mad Horse’s main production, Lillian Hellman’s The Children’s Hour.

The Dark Night Series with Mad Horse Theater Company |Cloudhoppers by Brent Askari, One For the Road by Harold Pinter, and Mr. Happiness by David Mamet. October 13-15 and 21-22 at 7:30 pm |at the Studio Theater of Portland Stage Company, 25A Forest Ave, Portland | $10 suggested donation

Related: Perfect Tenn, Cry me a river, I sink, therefore I am, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Entertainment, Performing Arts, Alan Bennett,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY MEGAN GRUMBLING
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   HOW TO DRESS A WOUND  |  October 24, 2014
    Kayleen and Doug first meet when they’re both eight years old and in the school nurse’s office: She has a stomachache, and he has “broken his face” whilst riding his bike off the school roof. Their bond, though awkward and cantankerous, is thus immediately grounded in the grisly intimacy of trauma.
  •   TRAUMATIC IRONY  |  October 15, 2014
    A creaky old oceanfront Victorian. Three adult siblings who don’t like each other, plus a couple of spouses. A codicil to their father’s will that requires them to spend an excruciating week together in the house. And, of course, various ghosts.
  •   OVEREXTENDED FAMILY  |  October 11, 2014
    “I’m inclined to notice the ruins in things,” ponders Alfieri (Brent Askari). He’s recalling the downfall of a longshoreman who won’t give up a misplaced, misshapen love, a story that receives a superbly harrowing production at Mad Horse, under the direction of Christopher Price.   
  •   SOMETHING'S GOTTA FALL  |  October 11, 2014
    While it hasn’t rained on the Curry family’s 1920’s-era ranch in far too long, the drought is more than literal in The Rainmaker .
  •   SURPASSED MENAGERIE  |  October 03, 2014
    Do Buggeln and Vasta make a Glass Menagerie out of Brighton Beach Memoirs? Well, not exactly.

 See all articles by: MEGAN GRUMBLING