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Subject: 'Red Herring'
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Username: acoustic
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Katharine Crazy
Katharine Crazy
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Member Since 7/18/2006

08/17/2006 10:31 PM Alert 
Any good reviews on 'Red Herring?'
Username: Gregoriancant
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Katharine Addict
Katharine Addict
Location: Oregon, USA


Member Since 5/26/2006

08/18/2006 2:02 AM Alert 
I was wondering that myself this last week. But I'm not sure if they give reviews to plays that are being done through a theatre festival. This wasn't being staged other than just for the public to be able to take in live theater that went beyond the usual conventions. Thank God for festivals like this--or we'd all be seeing plays and musicals based on bad movies and books.

Maybe someone like SirCritic (Eric) can give more insight here into whether a critic actually reviews plays at a festival. They do sometimes--because I see reviews for the Shakespearean Festival (and other live theater events) here in my state. Some critics gave up doing that, though, because they got too much criticism reviewing them when a festival is different from a normal staging.

Based on Kat's promotion of the play last month, I think we'd all be blown away by what the play tries to achieve in the end. It's obviously a cerebral play and staged differently than a normal one would be. How it maintains interest with just a prison wall and two men on death row having a friendship would be fascinating. Then again, I assume it does change scenes occasionally.

I appreciate plays that try to give us a new insight into the world...and even possibly outside our world. I'm glad Kat put her name on this to forward inventive writing in live theater. God knows a lot of that seems to be stuck in a tired place lately. And I hope this one goes to Broadway--because thoughful plays there have won boatloads of Tony Awards. Think 'Cophenhagen' if you've ever read or seen that play.

By the way, I still think of the fish red herring when I see the title.
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Katharine Crazy
Katharine Crazy
Location: Minas Gerais, BRAZIL


Member Since 7/14/2006

08/18/2006 8:18 AM Alert 
Posted By acoustic on 08/17/2006 10:31 PM
Any good reviews on 'Red Herring?'

I was wondering it too...
Username: ordinarilyamazing
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Katharine Obsessed
Katharine Obsessed
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08/18/2006 9:00 AM Alert 
I'm sure SirCritic would make the trip to review Kat's play for us!
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Katharine Addict
Katharine Addict
Location: Dayton, OH


Member Since 5/31/2006

08/19/2006 3:08 AM Alert 
I'm a little less familiar with theater than I am with movies, but I am pretty sure that reviews can be done in festival settings for plays. It happens all the time with movies because they often make their debuts at festivals like Sundance or Toronto ... and sometimes the cuts that play there are different than the ones that get released.

So following that line of logic, I'm reasonably certain plays can be reviwed from festivals, and I'd LOVE tgo do it. But seeing as how I write for a small daily community paper, the only way I could is if someone from our coverage area were connected with the play. But hey - ya never know! We find such connections ALL the time!

Thanks for thinking of me in this context, guys!
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Katharine Addict
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08/20/2006 5:06 AM Alert 
Hope the reviews are great!
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Katharine Addict
Katharine Addict
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Member Since 4/4/2006

08/20/2006 8:59 AM Alert 
nytheatre.com (I think)
New York International Fringe Festival Reviews p. 10

RED HERRING
reviewed by Debbie Hoodiman

Red Herring is a two-man play exploring the psychology of a prisoner on Death Row just before he is executed, and his friendship with the man in the cell next door, whom he cannot see but who may be his only friend. On a simple set (design not credited, but it may be the work of director Jonathan Silverstein) consisting of two triangular platforms that allow audience members to see the exact size of the two men's cells, and the simplicity of what they have to call their own (a few books, a bed to sleep on, Scrabble pieces), the two prisoners talk through an imaginary wall between them. The two actors, Thomas Jefferson Byrd and Shane McRae, successfully accomplish the difficult task of communicating with one another, showing a real, believable relationship—and also conveying that there is distance between them and that they cannot see one another.

Michael Albanese's script has the two men spending Scrap's last day alive largely passing the time. As I watched, I thought about how central the task of passing the time must be to a prisoner's life, and the play does offer somewhat of a glimpse into what it must be like. The two men do calisthenics to keep in shape, and they play Scrabble to keep their minds sharp. (They each have a game board and game pieces, and they each set up the same board so that they can play). Their bickering demonstrates that they know one another well and have formed a rapport, with inside jokes and routines. At more poignant moments, the audience sees what unhinges each man, or causes him to lose his temper.

We learn about how tough both men have become in prison, and it becomes clear that Montgomery, an older black man, wants Scrap, a white prisoner in his 30s, to consider life beyond prison and beyond life. Thus, in the tag line for the play("You never know who's on the other side..."), the other side refers to the afterlife as well as the other side of the wall they share.

Albanese's script is a little reminiscent of the famous movie The Shawshank Redemption, especially in Montgomery's clever lines and delightfully confident personality that charmed the audience the night I attended. There is also a twist at the end, which takes the subject matter beyond the immediate. Although the play sometimes feels a little predictable and a little preachy at times, I enjoyed both actors' performances and the exploration of some of the issues a Death Row inmate deals with. The play runs a little over an hour with no intermission.


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Username: Katsupfan
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Katharine Acquaintance
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08/20/2006 12:35 PM Alert 
I tried to get a review of the play on August 14 and got a reply from somone by the name of Nicholas Cokas and he referred me to someone named Brett. Never heard from Brett.
Username: groucho
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Katharine Addict
Katharine Addict
Location: Detroit area


Member Since 4/4/2006

08/20/2006 3:55 PM Alert 
A tad bit of information from the Fringe Festival site.

RED HERRING
Zenith Film Group, Nicholas Cokas & Robert Hawk
Writer: Michael Albanese
Director: Jonathan Silverstein
Death row. Two men. Separated by a wall. Desperate for hope. Can their unlikely friendship defy limitations while exploring fear, forgiveness and fate? Is there life after impending death? You never know who's on the other side…
1h 30m   New York  New York   Comedy Drama
VENUE #9: The Connelly Theater
www.redherringplay.com
Sat 12 @ 9:30
Fri 18 @ 3
Sat 19 @ 12
Wed 23 @ 7:45
Sat 26 @ 2:45



katpedia.com - watch and listen to Idol, pre-Idol, and post-Idol McPhee performances all in one convenient location

"And everything around her is a silver pool of light... She makes you calm, she holds you captivated in her palm"
Username: Gregoriancant
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Katharine Addict
Katharine Addict
Location: Oregon, USA


Member Since 5/26/2006

08/21/2006 2:14 AM Alert 
Posted By Katsupfan on 08/20/2006 12:35 PM
I tried to get a review of the play on August 14 and got a reply from somone by the name of Nicholas Cokas and he referred me to someone named Brett. Never heard from Brett.

Otherwise known as Katharine's acquaintance. I guess 'Nicholas' sounds more businesslike.

Too bad the person in charge of setting up reviews didn't reply. Do you work for a major newspaper or publication, Katsupfan? Maybe you need to explicitly specify who you work for in order to get a reply back.

Anyway, thanks to Groucho for finding that above review of the play. And it's a very fair review--plus giving some better insights into how this play works. Apparently my hunches were right that it's an overly basic set. The dialogue is what makes this thing work--and I also wondered about 'Shawshank Redemption' maybe being somewhat of an influence from the earlier description. Though this play obviously digs much deeper when it comes to issues of what happens after death and how someone on death row would prepare themselves for it.

One thing it also reminds me of is the old 'Plato's Cave' allegory that's always taught in Philosophy classes. You've probably heard about this allegory of prisoners being locked away in a cave who only perceive reality by the way they see it by shadows on a wall. In this play, the reality of what's going to happen to these prisoners pretty much exists in a different form from reality. The fact that the two prisoners can't see one another--yet create a bond through the whole play--pretty much plays up that concept. It shows that our own sense of perception can determine a lot in how we perceive things AND people/friendships.

The plot device of trying to tuck away some of the reality they do know about by playing Scrabble was a brilliant touch.

Wow, I hope Kat puts her name on more projects like this one. Though, unfortunately, I think it may be too avant-garde to go to Broadway.

I hope this will be published in a book anyway someday. It's probably worth studying to see how dialogue between two characters in one setting can hold interest for more than an hour.

Username: groucho
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Katharine Addict
Katharine Addict
Location: Detroit area


Member Since 4/4/2006

08/21/2006 12:29 PM Alert 
I think if you get interesting characters just interacting with each other, to me, that's better than a car chase. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy a good Tokyo Drift now and then too, but human interaction is where it's at. You have to pick moments where the characters are revealing themselves. When I write fiction it mostly hangs on the dialogue because i've never been much of a plotter. I just throw characters together and let them interact and see what happens. But to me, that's exciting, it's like using words like a can opener. What's in there?

PS also thought it was interesting they called it a comedy-drama. It doesn't sound like a fun situation.

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"And everything around her is a silver pool of light... She makes you calm, she holds you captivated in her palm"
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