Horse Trade presents
The Stolen Chair Theatre Company Production:
The Man Who Laughs
-A live silent film for the stage-
A humorous and heartbreaking “silent
film for the stage” featuring live musical accompaniment,
freely inspired by Victor Hugo’s grotesque romance about
a man whose face has been carved into a permanent smile and
the women who yearn for him.
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85 East
4th Street
between 2nd and 3rd Avenues
3rd Floor, no wheelchair access |
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October 31– November 12, 2005
October 31 and November 1@ 8pm
November 8, 10, 11, 12 @ 8pm
Tickets Regular: $15 /
$10 Students & Seniors with ID
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After rave reviews for Commedia dell’Artemisia,
the company’s “dizzying and fun” (NYtheatre.com)
offering for the 2005 Stampede Festival, The Stolen Chair Theatre
Company returns to the East Village as guest artists of the
Horse Trade Theater Group, with the world-premiere of their
newest production, The Man Who Laughs, freely inspired by a
Victor Hugo novel of the same name. This horrific, comedic,
and romantic melodrama, which will open Stolen Chair’s
4th Season, represents the boldest project the company has taken
on to date. A band of gypsies kidnaps a gentle young boy and
surgically disfigures his face into a permanent smile. He finds
his way into the wagon of a lovably misanthropic itinerant performer
who adopts him and a blind foundling girl he has discovered
in his travels. As the children age, they fall in love and join
their father on stage, gaining fame and fortune in their roles
as clown and ingénue. They live happily together, but
when their performances command the attention of a debauched
Duchess, her lust for the deformed clown threatens to tear the
family apart.
Featuring the critically lauded SITI Company-trained
ensemble of Commedia dell’ Artemisia and live original
music composed and performed by Emily Otto, the production,
collectively created under the direction of Jon Stancato, evokes
the experience of seeing a silent film, including such details
as close-ups and projected intertitles—all with 6 live
actors performing only feet from the audience. Stolen Chair
picks up where Geoff Sobelle and Trey Lyford’s blockbuster
hit all wear bowlers left off—taking Lecoq-based physical
theatre and classic slapstick, and fusing them with the stylized
horror, romance, and melodrama of early film to create an unforgettable
theatrical experience.
The Man Who Laughs will open Halloween 2005
for a limited 6-performance run at The Red
Room.
The production is fully accessible for
deaf and hard-of-hearing audiences.
All audience members who come dressed in costume
opening night will get in at the discounted price of $10.
The production was created with the support
of an artistic residency
granted by the Swarthmore Project in Theatre.
About The Stolen Chair Theatre Company
The Stolen Chair Theatre Company, a member of the DISH community
of independent theatre companies, is a non-profit laboratory
theatre dedicated to the collective creation of imaginative
new work and original adaptations of classical texts. Fusing
high theatricality and playful dramaturgy with traditional storytelling,
Stolen Chair is committed to recycling the old to create the
new and to discovering a joyful space between irony and sincerity
Under the artistic direction of Kiran Rikhye and Jon Stancato,
the company has created eight original productions which have
played to critical acclaim and sold-out houses in New York and
Philadelphia. Always a success at the Philadelphia Fringe Festival,
the company’s last Fringe offering was one of the Citypaper’s
25 top picks. Recently, the company has been praised by Martin
Denton for “making an audience think about gender politics
in the middle of a raucous seduction scene” and by Fifth
Street Review for creating “one of the most elegantly
scripted ‘rapes’ in the history of theatre.”
Stolen Chair is a four-time recipient of support from the Swarthmore
Project in Theatre. |