The Side Project has announced it will present The Kindness of Strangers: A Festival of Storytelling. Forty storytellers will converge in a three-week festival featuring first-time and experienced tellers nightly, accompanied by live multi-instrumentalist, Matt Wills. The Festival, kicking off today, October 20, will run Sunday through Wednesday eves at 7:30pm through November 6.
Experienced tellers
Kim Morris, Eric Warner, and Amy Sumpter will each headline a different week of the Festival, and perform a full-length solo piece in each of that week's four performances.
This is the side project's second Festival of Storytelling, following the success of Choosing to Be Here, produced in October 2012. This year's Festival welcomes back 16 of last year's tellers, with 24 performers new to the event.
This year's theme is The Kindness of Strangers. Through the intimate act of storytelling, these 40 artists will share heartwarming, heartbreaking, and powerful personal stories about how strangers have affected their lives. Each night, three to four different artists will take the stage to perform 5- to 12-minute pieces, prior to a full-length story offered by one of the three headliners.
The Festivals of Storytelling are one of the ways in which the side project is exploring alternative methods of dramatic art beyond traditional stage-bound theatre, according to Artistic Director Adam Webster. In August, the company commissioned a series of seven site-specific, seven-minute plays set and performed around the four corners of its Rogers Park sub-neighborhood called Jarvis Square. It was their second such site-specific series as well.
"We have always been about celebrating new voices, new talent for the stage, from playwrights to actors to directors," Webster said. "And we have also always been enamored of the short form. And thirdly, we love highlighting the immediacy of our space to connect the audience with the performer. So, our Festivals of Storytelling allow us to do all three of our goals, as well as promote the neighborhood, since a fair share of the tellers spotlight Rogers Park in their stories."
Kim Morris
(Performing October 20-23)
Kim Morris is a writer, actor, and editor. She has performed her stories at venues throughout Chicago, has been published in various publications, and has had the honor of having her work produced by theatre companies around Chicago. Please check www.power-love.blogspot.com for more information.
About Kim's Piece: A series of small, seemingly innocuous moments between strangers that inevitably have a profound cumulative effect.
Amy Sumpter
(Performing October 27-30)
Amy Sumpter is a comedic actress who has done stand up for the past six years. She is a regular performer with The Kates and Beast Women. She is also in an all female Beastie Boy Tribute band, She's Crafty. You can find her at
www.amysumpter.com
About Amy's Piece:
Amy Sumpter has a dream and that dream is being sabotaged by jobs, debt and maybe Amy Sumpter? Sumpter explores how you follow your dream, even when you feel like the world is falling apart.
Eric Warner
(Performing November 3-6)
Eric Warner has told stories with This Much is True, 2nd Story, Broken Nose Theatre andYou're Being Ridiculous. His monologues have been in Lifeline Theatre's Fillet of Solo Festivaland the St. Louis Fringe Festival, where a reviewer said he sounds like "
Ira Glass on fast forward." Check out
www.WhoIsEricWarner.tumblr.com for more.
About Eric's Piece: 'Your father was a monster.' Those words have stayed with Warner his entire life, as has his own question, 'Is that all he was?' Plateau Point is a story about a father and son who barely knew each other, and it is about choices. Which are more powerful, which shape us more, the stories that we create for ourselves, or those that we know to be true?
STORYTELLERS: In addition to Morris, Warner and Sumpter, the storytellers will include Taylor Bailey, Julia Borcherts, David Boyle, Jane deLaubenfels, Ellen DeSitter, Supie Dunbar, Susan Gidel, Kevin Gladish, Barbara Gregor, Don Hall, Harold Harris, Kate Healy, Jill Howe, Rachael Hudak, Darwyn Jones, Ben Kemper, Rob Koon, Colleen Marchlewski, Tom Martinez, Jonathan Mayo, Amy Merric, Clover Morrell, Paloma Nozicka, Kasey O'Brien, Jeremy Owens, Coya Paz, Francecsa Peppiatt, Antoinette Perfecto, Sheri Reda, Andrew Reilly, Michael Rychlewski, Jeremy Schaefer, Kendra Stevens, Jennifer Thom, Adam Webster, Gayle Ann Weinstein, Lali Zayas Del Rio.
DIRECTORS: Rebecca Butler, Alison Connelly, Jess Kadish, Rose Kruger, Toma Langston, Michael Manocchio, Dorothy Milne, John Ragir, Cassy Sanders
LISTING INFORMATION
The Kindness of Strangers: A Festival of Storytelling
the side project
1439 W. Jarvis Ave.
www.thesideproject.net
Tickets: $15 (Rogers Park rush $10 for all unsold tickets at the door with ID showing residence in ZIP Codes 60626 or 60645)
October 20 - November 6, 2013
Sundays through Wednesdays at 7:30 pm
To order visit
www.thesideproject.net
Phone 773-340-0140
ABOUT THE SIDE PROJECT'S 2013-14 SEASON
the side project will continue its mission of creating world premiere collaborations and presenting new voices throughout 2013-14 with an 8-show season. The Kindness of Strangers will be followed by a double-bill of two plays by F. X. Kroetz: Through the Leaves, directed by Andy Hager, running January 3 - February 2, 2014; and Request Concert, directed by
Mary Ellen O'Hara and running January 22 - February 2, 2014. Sandalwood, a world premiere by Dan Caffrey to be directed by Aaron Hendrickson, will run March 27 - April 20, 2014. This new "psycho-western" will be a co-production with Tympanic Theatre Company.
Another double-bill will open in June. The world premiere of What to Listen For by
Kathleen Tolan will be directed by
Adam Goldstein and run from June 1 - July 6, 2014. It will be paired with Hello Failure, a Midwest premiere by Kristin Kosmas to be directed by Adam Webster that will run June 15 - July 6, 2014. The season will conclude with the Midwest premiere of
Daniel Talbott's Mike and Seth, which will be directed by Webster and run in rep with the Chicago premiere of Christine Whitley's pool shark playMiles Away, directed by Scott Weinstein.
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