Part of the Minnesota Fringe Festival. Stranded on the tarmac, Greg Tollefson contemplates the worst mistake of his career and wishes he had an air sickness bag. Substituting in a seventh-grade classroom, Greg’s wife Michelle teaches vocabulary items from Lord of the Flies and summons the great god Dionysus. Produced by Theatre Unbound.
Tag: For Worse
Theatre Unbound’s 2016 Fringe show, two linked monologues for Stacey Poirier and Edward Linder.
agon
For Worse: Michelle has reached the last word in the vocabulary lesson: antagonism.
backstory
For Worse: Now I know how Greg and Michelle met. As Greg puts it in the course of making the case that Michelle would not suffer in silence if she were upset with him, I met her at a party freshman year, she was reaming out my roommate for putting the plastic from a six-pack...
management
For Worse: Scheduling phone interviews with stage managers.
coalescing
For Worse: When I make a decision about one thing, it sometimes cascades. Michelle (Stacey’s character) is substitute teaching. The lesson plan she’s been given includes a list of vocabulary items. The list as I first drafted it didn’t seem to be organized in any way. I make a decision about how to organize it....
ending is better than mending, Mr. Darcy
For Worse: Working on Stacey’s monologue. Thanks to an article by James R. Baker, learned the startling fact that the screenplays for the 1940 Pride and Prejudice and the 1943 Jane Eyre were written by Aldous Huxley. Got a live lead on a great stage manager. Fingers crossed.
tell them what you’re gonna tell them
For Worse: Watched this video of a 2006 University of Kansas production of The Bacchae. The performances strike me as uneven, but nonetheless it is compelling to watch. A good reminder that theatre does not require elaborate stage machinery or even suspense in the plot. Dionysus tells you what he’s going to do and does...
whom gods destroy
For Worse: Reading The Bacchae.
bacchanalia – not
For Worse: Started reading The Bacchae. Or, let’s be real, started reading the introduction to the Penguin edition of The Bacchae.
first thought best thought
For Worse: It’s official – this is the Fringe show title.