Rachel Florence BrilesBorn and raised in Alabama the Beautiful, I attended the Alabama School of Fine Arts for Creative Writing.  It didn’t even occur to me to apply to the theater program at ASFA (even though I had itched to act in the 8th grade play all through junior high…and, frankly, acted out all of my daydreams when know one was watching…I saved the world many times in my parent’s living room…I still do sometimes), and you know what, I’m glad I didn’t apply to the theater program!!-my life would be incomplete without creative writing. When I was 18, I moved to Austin where I knew no one to attend the the University of Texas.  There I met Geography, Spanish, Teaching (well, I met that in Brownsville), and a really great guy whom I’ve kept.  I even figured out how outgoing I could be, and daring!-I started a UT organization with my friends and was a leader…who knew that would happen…and I think I learned more from that experience than any single course I paid for.  Now I’m a teacher, and sometimes I wonder what would have happened to me if I didn’t come to Texas…what would I be doing now?…would I be this happy?  I spend all day in the school year hanging out with the best personalities that could ever grace this Earth-and they’re only 10 and 11 years old!  By the end of the year what I think about the most is not what I’ve taught them but that I actually got to meet these kids and I wouldn’t have met them if I did something else with my life.  Above is who I am.  Theater, while I love it so much and thrive on how invigorating and even cleansing it is, is only me in the summers.  I always come back…I will always come back.  The Weirds are a special gift that no one should overlook.
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The following is excerpted from www.AustinLiveTheater.com, in a review dated June 23, 2010 penned by Michael Meigs. Read the full review here >

Susan Gayle Todd, a founding member of the six-year-old Weird Sisters Theater Collective, rolled Shakespeare’s canvas back, locating a wide, almost blank panel.  It was barely touched with the outline of Sycorax, a hint of Ariel’s service to the witch, and an unelaborated event in Algiers that resulted in banishment, since “for one thing she did/ They would not take her life.”   Todd tells the imagined story of Sycorax as a woman healer, an African woman in Arabic Algiers.

The David Mark Cohen New Play Festival at the University of Texas featured the first production of this script two years ago. The Sisters’  staging of Todd’s story is an audacious undertaking. Their aim is both artistic and didactic, in keeping with the collective’s 2004 manifesto, which reads, in part “we celebrate women—female artists, and even fictitious female characters who shape our understanding of real-live women—who have been silenced or vilified as a result of pervading, institutionalized sexism.”  As rendered, this new panel of canvas is dark but touched with vivid incident and accompanied by Chris Humphrey’s music, rhythmic and evocative  both of north Africa and of the sub-Sahara.

Sycorax’s healing powers are evident but mysterious even to herself.  The ghost of her deceased mother visits and assists her, as does the spirit Ariel, who in this telling is by turns conniving, malevolent and devilish.  Sycorax acquires an apprentice, Clare, an abused teenage woman who has refused her family’s command to marry, and the two carry on twenty years of successful healing.  Theirs is a relationship of intimacy and trust, incomprehensible and scandalous to the folk of Algiers.

Todd, a Shakespeare scholar and teacher with a recent Ph.D. from the University of Texas, opens the play with a lengthy extract from the exposition in Act I, Scene 2, before moving back in time to Algiers.  The narrative switches forward and back in time, with the voyage to banishment interrupted by scenes of Sycorax’s apprenticeship, her healing career, a duplicitous success in treating the sterility of the governor of Algiers, witch-hunting by the populace seeking a scapegoat for the ravages of a tempest, a lively mocking puppet show, and her arrival on the island accompanied by Ariel.

Central both visually and in terms of plot is the enigmatic relationship between the lithe, dancing, precise and sparkling Ariel (Feliz Dia McDonald) and the Sycorax generations.  Azure D. Osborne-Lee plays both Sycorax the healer and her offspring Caliban.  Osborne-Lee is strong of bone and body, assertive and yet uncertain of her gifts.

Playwright Todd moves these characters between the realm of the physical and that of the spiritual.  We do not know whether Ariel is a mere fevered imagining for Sycorax or a familiar spirit with powers.  The rabble of Algiers burn Clare as a witch but Clare continues as a living presence in the life and misfortunes of Sycorax.

In Todd’s story the grateful governor of Algiers commissions a full-size onyx statue of Sycorax.  It’s a handy symbol and a vivid image but highly unlikely, given the severe Koranic prohibition of portraits and representational images. (Curiously,the ban doesn’t apply to puppetry, and shadow puppetry is a tradition in the Arabic Middle East.)  Swallowing hard and indulging the author, one might imagine that the clueless governor’s commission of a statue was a last, unacceptable folly that drove the crowds to fury.

By Weird Sister tradition, women perform all roles, including sailors who are saltier dogs than you’ll ever find in Shakespeare.  Those navvies circle Sycorax in her circle on deck as she glowers at them.  One tells a long, grotesque tall tale about a man whose private parts were witched away.  Another turns away from the audience and mimes urinating in a corner.

We witness as Sycorax confines Ariel in a cloven pine, a scene that’s deftly conceived, beautifully directed and rich with a symbolism that the playwright is perceptive and delicate enough not to comment upon.

The final scene shows Caliban, young and full of hope, recounting a lengthy mythic tale of his ancestors and himself to a worshipful Miranda (Rachel Florence Briles).  She huddles at his side in hypnotised adoration, eyes fastened upon him, hands brushing his side, her legs posed upon his.   Caliban’s attention is upward, toward the moon overhead.   He  reaches the moment of apotheosis in his tale just as Vicky Yoder as Prospero materializes in the depth of the stage and stops to take in the scene.

Todd’s language is a rich prose.  Some of Ariel’s incantatory passages have the rhythm of verse.

The Weird Sisters have no fixed venue, and this year they chose to use a new performance space.  The Gemini Playhouse is a tidy, new-painted studio at the back of a single-story complex of offices and workspaces at 5214 Burleson Road, south of 71/Ben White Boulevard and east of I-35. Driving east, you’ll take the Montopolis exit, then right immediately onto Chapman and left onto Burleson.  It’s on the north side of the road, just past a sizable tree and back behind the now-closed workshop of Camino Azul Custom Tattoo.  They’re friendly folk.  They’ll welcome you, take your voluntary contribution and provide you with refreshments and an evening of thought and entertainment.

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Jun

14

2010

Chris Humphrey

Chris HumphreyChris Humphrey (original score/sound design for Sycorax) has been involved with the Weird Sisters since 2008, but she’s been pretty weird most of her life.  A classically trained composer, she has written everything from musical theater (for puppets, no less!) to sacred choral works to film scores to abstract electronica.  She plays traditional instruments like bassoon and recorder in Heralds and Minstrels (a renaissance/baroque ensemble) and not-so-traditional instruments like didgeridoo and kinoor in the Annoying Instrument Orchestra (world ethnic ensemble).  When she’s not making music, she acts in theater and film, creates costumes and props, choreographs dance numbers, and generally tries her hand at whatever creative opportunity catches her imagination.

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Azure D. Osborne-Lee is an interdisciplinary performer, writer, and teacher. Born and raised below the Mason-Dixon Line, Azure has lived and worked in New York City for the past year. In 2005 Azure earned her B.A. in English & Spanish from The University of Texas at Austin and studied abroad at the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba in Córdoba, Argentina. Before returning to school for a graduate degree in 2006, Azure worked as an actress with Zachary Scott Theatre. In 2008 Azure earned an M.A. in Women’s & Gender Studies, also from The University of Texas at Austin.  Azure has been accepted to the M.A. Advanced Theatre Practice program at Central School of Speech & Drama, University of London for fall 2010.

Azure’s recent acting credits include The Seer in the world premiere of Sharon Bridgforth’s DELTA DANDI, Librarian 1 in Daniel Alexander Jones’s THE BOOK OF DANIEL, and The Porter in Wura-Natasha Ogunji’s INCIDENTS AT THE TWO TWO HOTEL. Azure is currently a resident playwright at Freedom Train Productions in Brooklyn, NY. Her one act play CROOKED PARTS was featured at Brooklyn Arts Exchange in January and will be coming to the University of Texas at Austin in the early fall. You can follow Azure’s work by visiting her website at http://azureosborne-lee.com.

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Susan Gayle ToddSusan Gayle Todd founded the Weird Sisters Women’s Theater Collective in 2004 as part of her overall quest to centralize female characters in Shakespeare and to accommodate women who want to play Shakespeare. Her MA thesis in Women’s and Gender Studies, The Weird Sisters, Hand in Hand (2005), included an adaptation of Macbeth, which was produced and performed by an unwieldy crew of about thirty other women. The collective grew as Susan continued her work of confronting the canon through feminist adaptation and exploring women’s issues in theater. While earning a PhD in Theater and Performance Studies, Susan directed the Weirds in their productions of Michelle Lee’s Angels of the House (2006); Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night (2007)and The Merry Wives of Windsor (2008); and Ann-Marie MacDonald’s Good Night Desdemona Good Morning Juliet (2009). During this time, Susan also wrote Sycorax, a feminist re-examination of the mother of Caliban in Shakespeare’s The Tempest. The play was selected for production in the 2007 Cohen New Works Festival at the University of Texas and was directed by Fadi Skeiker. Now in their sixth season, The Weird Sisters are re-launching Sycorax under the direction of Susan Gayle Todd and Christa French.

Susan has immersed herself in directing, performing, teaching, and studying theater since her first brush with UT’s Shakespeare at Winedale program in 1992 where she has played and worked for many years. She has, over time, taught Shakespeare at the Huntington Library in California, the University of Texas, and Leander High School, where she has also directed innumerable students in scenes and plays. She currently teaches rhetoric at the University of Texas and St. Edward’s University, where she is director of the Shakespeare Club. Susan is dedicated to building community through theater while tackling tough social issues. Her greatest joys are her family and friends, and creating theater in Austin, Texas.

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