Monday, March 17, 2008

Watch the play

ROGUE FESTIVAL: THE BLAH-BLAHS


PART 1: WELCOME TO MR. MARLOWE'S ENGLISH CLASS


PART 2: ROMEO AND JULIET


PART 3: HAMLET


PART 4: HAMLET CONCLUSION AND MACBETH


PART 5: OTHELLO


PART 6: JULIUS CAESAR ... ?


BONUS FEATURE: ALTERNATE ENDINGS

Friday, March 14, 2008

We got paid!

The actors each pocketed $40 per show. Sam worked that out to a dollar a minute of performance time. That's pretty good.

How cool is that? After expenses (Rogue application fee, props, costumes, marketing), there was enough left over to actually get paid for doing art.

I'm blown away at the financial and critical success of the show.

Thank you to all the people who supported us as we put this thing together, and to the audience members who took a chance on us.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Audience member's video found on YouTube

Check out edluv's video while you wait for the full-length version:



We're honored you took the time to put this together, Ed.

Positive reviews keep coming in

The Rogue is done, but people are still commenting on the site:

From Joy:

"I laughed so much I couldn’t catch my breath at points.

The accents, the parody of ‘highbrow’, the idiocy.

Loved the concept, loved the execution. I had a REALLY good time. This, I think was the intent.

So thanks, guys, for a good time!"

And Mia said: "I loved this show, and laughed so much my face hurt. I’m still laughing now - the irreverence, how the actors throw, no - hurl - themselves into the play with wild abandon, verbally and physically. And the four actors make a great ensemble - very well matched."

Monday, March 10, 2008

Rogue operation a success

The play's run on five performances in eight days has come to an end. With every seat in the house filled and a handful standing on closing night, we felt great with the show we gave them. Not as raucous a crowd as Thursday, we nonetheless gave them two alternate "Scooby Doo" endings, which included a Sumo duel with Hamlet, as well as a happy ending -- of sorts.

Mia gave us a great compliment by suggesting we consider taking this to other fringe festivals. The show may have life yet, with a possible performance at Fresno State and an encore or two during the Rogue Year Round series that the festival organizers are hoping to continue.

Check back for embedded videos if you'd like to see the full show. They should be posted some time this week.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Thursday's show

I had a really good feeling Wednesday night. It was after our "added" performance at The Starline. The audience was half-full, the venue was four times as large, and (while I felt good about my performance for the first time) Josh felt he and his fellow Shakespeare actors were loose.

With all that going against it, we still had a great reception from the audience. At each turn when I felt we were going to lose the energy into the ether (after all, the bar is built for bands, not an intimate play set it a classroom), our "students" were right there. While Sam says they laughed in "weird places," I think it was a testiment to the amount of overall humor in the play that they were laughing at all.

Which brings us to tonight's show. I predicted it would be our best one yet, and if we couldn't already tell from the coninuous laughter and half-standing ovation, our venue manager Robert Paul confirmed it.

Tonight was the reason I wanted to do a Rogue show. Despite a little cracking up from one of the performers midway through the Scottish sketch, we hit on all the proverbial cylinders and, well, we basically kicked ass.

I hope we have a sellout Saturday at 7. There'll be some surprises, maybe an alternate ending or two.

After all, if you think you've seen "Shakespeare Is an Idiot," you haven't seen it on closing night.

More reviews!

FROM THE ROGUE FESTIVAL SITE:

Fishstick says: "This show is as Fringe as a Fringe show gets in Fresno. The stupidest idea I’ve seen in a long time and pulled off brilliantly. My first standing ovation of the Rogue. I’ve been with the Rogue for all its years and this show proved the rule that the more outward you look and the less you care about safety and pleasing the audience the better you can do and the happier the audience is. Well done and I look forward to more."

Katie "almost peed."

Monday, March 3, 2008

Josh at RogueHop

Rogue week 2

What we look like on stage


Stolen from Victor DeRoches.

We got reviews!

After starting off the week with an official endorsement from The Fresnan, we actually starting doing performances. Two shows over the weekend, one sold out, the other came close. People laughed multiple times during each, and they clapped at the end. So, we couldn't ask for more right?

Wrong. Then a few people were kind enough to share their thoughts about our show with the WORLD WIDE interWEBs.

So, what are people saying about "Shakespeare Is an Idiot"?

FROM ROGUE FESTIVAL SITE:

Mystical Raisin calls it "brilliantly funny."

Steph says it "just needs a very good editor."

Jaguar remarks: "Certainly not a must-see, but an enjoyable hour."

Acoustic Highway reported that it "got some great laughs."

Blake Jones thought it was "nice."

Walrus Gumbo says "It’s a one joke idea beaten to death!"

FROM THE UNDERCURRENT:

Jessi writes: "It's clear that those who performed and contributed to the show actually know their Shakespeare quite well, and it's also clear that they're having a great time as they parody those who take Shakespeare too seriously (or not seriously enough)."

FROM THE BEEHIVE:

A reader named Chango writes, "It’s the type of show that you thank Rogue for: irreverent, homespun, fun even when not as funny."

(Note: The Beehive itself can't review the show because a colleague is in it, so feel free to email Donald Munro, or comment on Chango's post.)

Friday, February 29, 2008

We got a fifth show, yo

It's Wednesday night (March 5) at 8:30 p.m. at THE STARLINE (not Dianna's South).

So, our updated sked:

10 p.m. Saturday 3/1
2:30 p.m. Sunday 3/2
8:30 p.m. Wednesday 3/5
8:30 p.m. Thursday 3/6
7 p.m. Saturday 3/8

tell your friends :)

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Roguehoppin' to-nite!

6:00 at Veni Vidi Vici

9:40 at Full Circle Brewery

come by to see our cast members in various states of undress.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Monday, February 25, 2008

Friday, February 22, 2008

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Friday, February 15, 2008

We recorded a song







You can hear it by pressing play.

Working cover for the program

Cast bios

Samuel Frank (Sam, Romeo, Claudius, Othello, epiloguer) appeared in Fresno State's 2005 production of "Henry IV, Part 1" and Good Company Players' 2007 production of "Shakespeare in Hollywood." In 1997, Sam created a skit called "A Guy and his Dog," which he based on "The Taming of the Shrew."

Will Albritton (prologuer, Mr. Marlowe) appeared in the University of South Florida's 1998 production of "A Midsummer Night's Dream." In Spring 1999, he studied and workshopped Shakespeare's tragedies at Middlesex University in London, and he wrote a paper titled "Hamlet Is a Pussy; Macbeth Is Pussy-Whipped." Will received a C for the course.

Renee Newlove (Renee, Juliet, Ghost, Lady Macbeth, Desdemona, epiloguer) started reading the unabridged Complete Works of William Shakespeare in the ninth grade and finished by the time she was a junior. She studied at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival's summer seminar and has returned at least six times to see productions. Renee has also seen Shakespearean productions in Santa Cruz, San Diego, Glendale, San Francisco and, of course, Fresno. Three years ago, she appeared in the Woodward Shakespeare Festival's inaugural-season productions of "Romeo and Juliet" and "Much Ado About Nothing." She has also participated in numerous readings for WSF, as well as assisted with costumes for 2007's "Othello." Also last year, Renee appeared in Theatre Ventoux's "This Flattering Glass," an adaptation of "Richard II."

Joshua Tehee (Josh, Hamlet, Macbeth, Iago, epiloguer) thinks Shakespeare is an idiot.

Thursday, January 24, 2008