Buntport Theater

5 People in light blue and white 70's style formal ware pose standing in weeds in front of a yellow warehouse.

North Denver Tribune- Buntport Theater Looks Back for Show Revivals and Forward for Educational Outreach

Craig Williamson, North Denver Tribune- June 2010

Buntport Theater’s Tenth Season, a retrospective look back at productions from their short history, opens in September with Moby Dick Unread. Buntport is also adding the Buntport Educational Team, with Jessica Robblee and Mitch Slevc, part of the creative force behind the ongoing Trunks series, which is focusing on outreach to schools as well as productions and workshops for all ages. With three of this year’s Henry Awards in their pockets and expanded offerings, what started ten years ago as a group of kids fresh out of Colorado College has matured into a mainstay of Denver theatre, with a broad array of programming and continued excellent productions.

Buntport creates all of their productions from scratch. They start with a theme, an idea, or a concept, which can be an existing well-known work such as Moby Dick or The Three Musketeers, or could be something as unlikely as the Postal Service. Then they build a production around that idea. These are not simply spoofs, though in many cases they are very, very funny. They involve a whole new concept that uses the existing work or concept as a launching point and builds a story that is new and interesting, but also still tied to the original theme in sometimes unexpected ways.

The season opens with Moby Dick Unread from Buntport’s sixth season, opening September 3. This is followed by Buntport’s first musical, Seal. Stamp. Send. Bang. from their eighth season, and then Quixote, the very first production the group mounted. It also includes the Kafka on Ice, The 30 th of Baydak, and an evening of One-Acts. Scattered throughout the season will be staged readings of four other shows, Fin, The Mythical Brontosaurus, Winter in Graupel Bay, and Ward #6, making for an appropriate total of ten shows revisited. During this season Buntport will also continue work under a commission from the Denver Center Theatre Company on their thirtieth world premiere production, a multimedia play about Nikola Tesla.

How did Buntport choose from the twenty-nine unique and diverse shows of the last nine years? “They are shows that WE are excited to remount,” according to Buntport’s Evan Weissman, and include some audience favorites as well as some less popular shows that the Buntport folks really loved. Taken together, they present a broad picture of the history of Buntport. One notable omission is the wildly successful Titus Andronicus: The Musical. While this was one of the group’s most popular shows, it has been revived a few times already, and the group felt it had been done enough when they officially retired the show a couple of years ago.


In conjunction with their tenth season, Buntport announced the formation of the Buntport Educational Team, consisting of two new staff members, Jessica Robblee and Mitch Slevc. The team will continue the popular and entertaining family series Trunks, now in its sixth year, and will launch two touring shows for performance in schools. The first of these is Unbe-weave-able, an original production based on three well-known Greek myths, it is “as shape-changing as the myths it depicts, glorying in the sparking relationships among mortals, beasts, and their gods.” The show is intended for K-8 students, and study guides are available on request.

The Buntport Team will bring productions to schools for a negotiable fee, as well as perform them at Buntport Theater in special matinee performances as part of a school field trip. They also offer workshops for students on a variety of topics, including:
• Collaborative playwriting
• Creating a Stage Adaptation
• Writing your own comic
• Acting
• Puppeteering
• Superheroes and Storytelling
• Masks and Character
• Improvisation
The group also has other performance and workshop options for older kids, and plan to offer a second show about Poetry later in the year.

This new educational effort is a natural extension of both the work Robblee and Slevc have done on Trunks and the Buntport approach to theater creation. Teachers, principals, and others involved with schools can get more information or make arrangements for performances and workshops on the web at www.buntport.com/education/education.htm, by calling 720-946-1388, or emailing trunks@buntport.com.

The Buntport tenth season offers a unique opportunity to see a retrospective of “classic” Buntport brilliance, whether you missed it the first time or are going back for more. If you’ve never been to Buntport, this would be a great time to go and get hooked.

Buntport’s tenth season opens September 3 with Moby Dick Unread, running through September 25. Performances are Thursday-Saturday at 8:00 pm, and two Sunday matinees on the 12 th and 19 th at 3:00 pm. Tickets are $16, discounted to $13 for students and seniors, and $20 for September 3, which includes an opening night reception. Buntport is also presenting a staged reading of The Mythical Brontosaurus on Monday, September 13 for $5. The sixth season of the live comic book series Trunks opens on October 2, with a new episode every two weeks thereafter, with performances at 1:00 and 3:00. Tickets are $5, $6, or $7 at the door, depending on random chance, and are discounted if you wear a superhero costume. On the Third Tuesday of each month, Buntport will continue to offer The Great Debate, Teacher’s Pet, and Buntport Versus alternating throughout the year. Buntport Theater is located just off 6 th Avenue and Santa Fe at 717 Lipan Street. For tickets and more information about any of Buntport’s offerings, visit www.buntport.com or call 720-946-1388.


A woman in blond pigtails leans over blowing a raspberry in the face of Cinderella, who looks upset and holds a broom.

< Cinderella

A WORDLESS TALE

< Cinderella (can be read as Less than Cinderella, although we wouldn’t push the issue) is Buntport’s take on the age-old fairy story. (more…)

In the foreground is a woman’s face looking forward and frowning. In the distance a man sits looking concerned. He is seated at a very small desk that is suspended by wires to the ceiling. Behind the man is a large mural portrait of an imposing man on the wall.

The 30th of Baydak

WALKING IN TURKMENISTANLAND

An original production inspired by the goings-on of present day Turkmenistan and Bohumil Hrabal’s novel Too Loud a Solitude. (more…)

Close-up of an unhappy looking man in stark lighting. He has many pairs of ice skates draped over his shoulders.

Denver Post- Buntport at its best with “Kafka on Ice”

Even when Buntport repeats itself, it’s the most original theater company in town.

“Kafka on Ice,” first staged in 2004, takes the standard device of a stage biography – and a mighty depressing one at that – and presents it with artistry, intelligence and a wonderful kind of whimsy.

Buntport and Kafka go oddly well together – they’re both known for different kinds of metamorphoses. Kafka is the dour Czech master of despair who in 1912 famously turned a human drone into a big old bedbug – and no one even noticed the difference.

And Buntport, which last week won a 2010 Mayor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts, routinely transforms simple objects on a stage in ways that have us watching along like slack-jawed children taking in our first Ice Capades.

The ice has something to do with that. The synthetic ice, that is, that’s been laid down on Buntport’s warehouse floor. Guest artist Josh Hartwell, playing Kafka, is the only actor who does not wear figure skates. Instead he slips, slides and struggles to find his balance while the expert Buntport ensemble, playing all the important people in Kafka’s life, gracefully camel-spin and salchow all around him. A gimmick, to be sure. An absurd juxtaposition. But for a valid creative purpose.

The play opens with a young Kafka writing at his desk, an enhanced audio effect making his scribbling motion sound not unlike a bug scurrying from light.

Soon the figure-skating five dart to and fro at speeds that suggest Kafka is not living in the same rhythm and time as those around him. There’s Hannah Duggan as Kafka’s determined grandfather, schussing across the ice with a burlap sack in his teeth (just to show how tough he was!). Evan Weissman as a parasitic Kafka mentee who would later recycle their talks into a mangled libertarian dogma – for his own (capitalistic) profit. Later, Weissman again as a maid performing a curiously elegant (and risque!) Olympics-style skating routine.

As a doe-eyed Kafka, Hartwell’s portrayal is more Chaplin’s sad clown than an embodiment of the real Kafka. That’s by design, in keeping with a presentational style that figure-eights from vaudeville to slapstick to WWF (there’s an interspecies wrestling match that, well, you’ll just have to see). Hartwell has come to be Denver’s go-to Kafka, having played him in the LIDA Project experimental theater company’s considerably more paranoid and political “Joseph K” in 2009.

“Kafka on Ice” is more personal. It focuses on the writer’s many foiled, failed relationships – from his disapproving parents to the women he kept at a distance, to the opportunistic managers who profited from his words (such as Brian Colonna as best friend and leech Max Brod).

The story plays out with a stream-of-consciousness, dreamlike quality not unlike Kafka’s own works, which blurred the line between the real and the surreal. Comic snippets of “The Metamorphosis” are interspersed, further fogging the line between Kafka and his iconic human vermin, Gregor Samsa.

It’s ridiculous and lovely, while still elucidating the sad and melancholy story of an isolated writer who, ironically, lived one of the world’s most examined and misunderstood lives.

More than that, this musically infused play gleefully, but never too pointedly, raises questions that have been bandied for a century – and gently mocks them. The most absurd: Erik Edborg, as “Lolita” novelist Vladimir Nabokov, debating whether the insect in “The Metamorphosis” is in fact a beetle or a cockroach. As if that matters.

Later, Kafka finds himself sitting in a modern-day American college English class led by an overmatched teacher (a perfect Erin Rollman) hilariously bluffing her way through Kafka’s text with the help of an online lesson plan – and a cheat sheet.

In 2004, I called this scene tangential. But I’ve come to see it as the signature moment in the play. Because the lasting questions from “Kafka on Ice” are really those that tease the fabrications, exaggerations and ridiculous misinterpretations that have followed famous people into the afterlife since the Stone Age. It’s possible, Kafka might say of all this, that a bug is just a bug. In fact, that’s the point.

-John Moore, February 3, 2011, Denver Post

Looking down on a man in an orange spotlight. The man has many pairs of ice skates draped over his shoulders.

North Denver Tribune- Buntport Ices Kafka

Buntport Theater is presenting a revival of their look into the life of Franz Kafka, presented on ice (literally). While this would be inconceivable for any other company, for Buntport it makes perfect sense. While Kafka on Ice may sound like the latest beverage offering from Starbucks, it’s really a wonderful show that combines the meaning and depth of Kafka, extreme silliness, thoughtful humor, and surrealism.

Kafka on Ice creatively merges elements of Franz Kafka’s life and his most famous work, mixing in a lot of comedy, some thoughtful commentary, and a few invented details. Created collaboratively from scratch in 2004 by the then seven members of Buntport (Matt Petraglia has since moved on to other things) and local actor Gary Culig using their usual blend of research, brainstorming, and their intrinsic comic brilliance. The story follows Kafka through some important and some obscure times in his life, and parallels them with the characters in his Metamorphosis. And all the characters except Kafka himself perform the entire show on ice skates on an artificial skating surface. Buntport normally creates unusual situations for their productions, but this is probably the most appropriate, putting the whole thing in a context that Kafka would have appreciated, if he could have gotten past the fact that it was about him.

As with all things Buntport, the directing is collaborative, and works very well. Presented in the round, the action most often moves along the diagonals (at times quite quickly – they are on ice skates, after all), with scenes set center stage or in the corners, balancing the view from all sides. Another aspect of theater in the round that really fits this show well is that while watching the show, you also see the audience on the other sides, usually laughing heartily. You never forget you are in a theater. The show is chock full of clever and funny devices, including a prize fight between two bugs, a wonderful silent movie sequence, and several other surprises that I won’t reveal here. While the show is very funny, it is not just silliness – there is thought as well.

The acting is exception. Josh Hartwell takes on the role of Kafka, anchoring the show with genuine sympathy for his character. While he is certainly idiosyncratic, Hartwell does not ridicule the character, he elicits sympathy and understanding. And while very strange things happen around him, he never loses the sense of Kafka. The Buntport actors adopt a variety of rolls. Erin Rollman covers the range from the mother to incidental characters to a variety of love interests well, making each unique, but she is best as a modern teacher talking right at the audience. Erik Edborg is stern and domineering as the father, adding humor with his descriptions of how hard it was when he was young.

Brian Colonna is Kafka’s friend Max, sympathetic to a point, but also pragmatic – he is the one who disobeyed Kafka’s strict instructions to destroy his writings after his death. Hannah Duggan covers many small roles well, including compassionately playing the one woman that finally makes Kafka happy near the end of his life. Evan Weissman is fun as Janouch, the young man who allegedly remembered many conversations with Kafka long after the writer’s death.

The set is minimal by necessity, dominated by the large square of artificial ice. Kafka’s desk is an important element, changing at times to meet the needs of a scene, and the large almost cartoonish book of his writing is woven throughout in different and creative ways. The lighting works well, providing good illumination enhanced by the light-colored floor surface. The select use of projections was very effective, too. The costumes are creative and appropriate, ranging from figure-skating attire to historical fashion, all able to be changed with skates on. Sound is also an important element, with particularly effective bug noises integrated into several scenes.

Buntport’s brilliance is to take an idea or a concept, and tell a story around that idea or concept that is first and foremost true to itself, but also incredibly funny and thoughtful. Kafka on Ice is further proof of this brilliance, presenting Kafka’s life and work in a Kafkaesque way – on ice. This show is a must see for Kafka fans, for Buntport fans, for theater fans – okay, for just about anyone.

-Craig Williamson, February 3, 2011, North Denver Tribune

A man in stark lighting poses in the foreground while wearing ice skates. In the background, another man sits in a chair staring at him.

Westword- Kafka on Ice succeeds in this slick go-around by Buntport

How perfect that Buntport is reviving Kafka on Ice – first produced in 2004, and one of my favorite of the company’s many inventive works – as part of a citywide celebration of all things Czech. First, because Franz Kafka is the Czech author best known in this country, with legions of schoolkids guided every year through his novella, The Metamorphosis, in which the protagonist, Gregor Samsa, wakes up one morning to find himself transformed into a giant beetle. And second, because the Buntporters’ sensibility, humor, use of objects and puppets, bare-bones tech and ways of playing with physical size and perception are so very Czech. When, for instance, Kafka sends one of his stories to a woman he loves, in her hands it unfolds into the paper figure of a man, with which she then dances. “The work does well with her,” he observes. The beetle itself takes many forms in this show, from an elongated shadow to an actor in a big, huggy felt costume. In one frenetic scene, it morphs from a hand puppet into a plastic remote-controlled toy that skitters frantically around the stage.

There’s a brilliant mix of genres and parodies on show as well, from a flirty, meet-cute, silent-movie-style ice-skating scene (oh, yes, everyone except Kafka himself skates through this) to a high-stepping parody of the Yiddish theater the author attended with a friend.

The script of Kafka on Ice is unchanged from the first iteration, and yet the show felt different this time around – still intensely funny, yet sadder, too. Critics talk about how the plight of poor Gregor – trapped and isolated in his ugly carapace, terrified of his father and reliant on the intermittent kindness of his sister, slowly sickening until, to the relief of his family, he quietly expires – reflects Kafka’s despairing view of his own existence. Buntport intertwines this plot with pieces of Kafka’s other writings and events from his life, and while I remember some glimmers of transcendence last time, they now seem to have vanished. Perhaps in part because Josh Hartwell has taken over the role of Kafka from Gary Culig and makes him more baffled, gentle and unhappy; perhaps because the entire ensemble – all the other performers are the same – has matured and changed in indefinable ways.

But with this production, I was more aware of a parallel theme, one that carried a fragment of hope. An author’s work is never really his own, nor is his life. Kafka on Ice explores the transformations and permutations Kafka’s work and reputation went through in the years following his death – including this production itself. In one hilarious scene, Erin Rollman plays a somewhat dim teacher trying to explain symbolism with the aid of a soulless educational cheat sheet. In another, lepidopterist and major literary figure Vladimir Nabokov (Erik Edborg) gives his scholarly opinion on just what kind of creature Gregor Samsa transformed into. But there’s also a quietly powerful interlude in which a voice in the dark simply reads the beginning of the story. The lights come up, and we see a schoolboy walking slowly across the stage, book in hand. Every now and then Kafka/Gregor’s existential loneliness gets broken – by a sudden embrace from the charlady, for example, outrageously played by Evan Weissman in a maid’s outfit. (I took this as a manifestation of Weissman’s essential kindliness, since the charlady in the actual book is a pretty rough character.)

Before he died, Kafka asked his close friend and literary executor Max Brod to destroy all of his work. Brod didn’t – an obvious betrayal. But what I’d missed before and definitely noticed this time around was a certain depth to Brian Colonna’s Brod, and words that justified an action that not only preserved Kafka’s priceless literary legacy, but in some sense rescued his soul.

-Juliet Wittman, February 2, 2011, Westword

Close-up of an unhappy looking man in stark lighting. He has many pairs of ice skates draped over his shoulders.

Westword Blog- The Buntport Theater was looking good at Kafka on Ice’s reopening

More than once during the Buntport Theater’s Kafka on Ice, the character of Franz Kafka (played by Josh Hartwell) comments on how stupid it is to stage an ice-capade revolving around his life and work. “It’s inappropriate!” he protests. As justification, toward the end of the play, another character offers up an aphorism once penned by Kafka himself (most likely about himself): “He runs after facts like a beginner learning to skate, who, furthermore, practices somewhere where it is forbidden.”

It’s an interesting way to tie it together – but it’s telling, and pretty awesome, that the Buntport troupe didn’t dig up that quote until after they’d decided to put Kafka on ice.

The inspiration for the play, it’s fairly well known, was actually the ice itself. “We were teaching a class, Evan [Weissman], Erin [Rollman] and I,” says troupe member Hannah Duggan, who helped adapt the show an plays several characters in it, “and one of our students was like, ‘I have a skating rink in my back yard,’ and we’re like, ‘no you don’t.'”

As it turned out, that student’s father was a manufacturer of synthetic ice, which Duggan describes as “plastic with Armor-All sprayed on it,” and the Buntport decided they had to do something with it. “So we thought, well, what could we do on ice? And Kafka just seemed like the best choice. Just because it seems so not on ice. It really couldn’t be less.”

In a weird Buntport way, this makes perfect sense.

That was all back in 2004, when the production was first staged – soon after, the fake ice, along with all the production’s setpieces and costumes, was stolen, and the show was gone – but not forgotten by anyone that got to see it or even hear about it. For good reason: It’s bizarre, hilarious, heartbreaking, brilliant and silly; as Westword own Juliet Wittman wrote back when it was first staged, “It’s safe to say that no one else – anywhere – is doing theater like this.” And that’s still pretty much true. Now, with the help of some generous benefactors who helped the company acquire a new sheet of ice, it’s back. And you’re a fool if you don’t go see it.

A big part of what makes this play so striking and different is the way that it’s set up. The set design is bracingly minimalist: Just a room with the fake ice in the middle of it, a desk and a couple of creative props: Memorable ones include a tiny model of a bedroom, a remote-control cockroach (you really just have to see it to understand how great this is) and the startlingly beautiful use of a large sheet.

Like Kafka, the Bunport spends this show running after the facts of his life like beginners learning to skate – literally: When they decided to do this show, nobody could skate. “We still don’t really know how,” Duggan jokes, “but we do anyway.” Still, while it’s interesting, that quote is hardly a necessary justification. After all, Kafka had a famous penchant for the bizarre and the surreal, for placing straight-man characters in the middle of absurd insanity – and if the play’s underlying argument that Kafka’s characteristic straight-man character was really Kafka himself is true, then maybe Kafka would have appreciated these proceedings more than even the play itself admits.

-Jef Otte, January 31, 2011, Westword Blog

Close-up of an unhappy looking man in stark lighting. He has many pairs of ice skates draped over his shoulders.

Kafka on Ice

EVEN DESPAIR IS MAGICAL ON ICE

A play that is, in fact, what it sounds like: Kafka’s life and work set on ice…

(more…)

Close up of a man with a large goatee trying to speak with a woman who is wearing a small chalkboard mask. Drawn on the chalkboard mask is a nose and mouth. The woman seems to be smoking a long piece of chalk like a cigarette and is pushing the goateed man back with a large eraser.

Quixote

IMPOSSIBLE DREAMS

Quixote, the first show created by Buntport Theater, is a transformative action piece satirizing academic life. (more…)