A Timely, Gutsy Fringe

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COVER PHOTO: FRINGE NYC/ COVER DESIGN: MICHAEL SHIREY

The New York International Fringe Festival, now two decades old, is notorious for being a fount of frivolity. A quick perusal of this year’s nearly 200 offerings confirms this: “A Naked Brazilian,” “Humorously Horrendous Haunted Hideaway,” and “A Microwaved Burrito Filled with E. Coli.”

But over the years, FringeNYC has developed a taste for the topical, staging edgy shows seemingly ripped from the headlines. Soon after the economic meltdown in 2008, there were plays featuring greedy Wall Streeters. A few years ago, there was a profusion of marriage equality plays, and last year it was transgender issues.

This is the year of blacks, whites, cops, and guns. And more guns.

Not that anyone should be surprised; the nimble Fringe is expert at tackling current issues well ahead of mainstream theater. John Moore, author of “Waiting for Obama,” a biting dramedy about a Colorado family convinced the president is coming for their guns, asserts that the Fringe fosters a different kind of creative process where artists can explore what is happening in the moment, go with it, and have it presented much more rapidly.

Taking on tinderbox topics like blacks, whites, cops, guns, stage fest hasn’t forgotten the gays

“In the mainstream theater, it typically takes even a sure-fire new play at least two years to get read, liked, scheduled, developed, and finally staged,” he said. “As a result, live theater can often seem, well, two years behind the times.” There are only six months between submission and staging at FringeNYC, he explained.

Moore is outraged that in such a brief period, the issue of gun violence in America has grown only more numbingly topical.

“I keep hoping I’m done keeping my script up to date, but the insane fucking daily headlines keep sending me back to the keyboard to somehow incorporate the latest mass fucking tragedy,” he said.

The devastating loss of lives at the hands of deranged gunmen has been covered extensively in the media. What does his piece add to the conversation?

“None of those ongoing gun sprees is changing minds on the gun issue,” Moore said. “And if Sandy Hook didn’t change people’s minds on little issues like background checks, then why even talk about it at all? But I say if we can’t talk about these polarizing issues in our own living rooms for fear of a fight breaking out, then we must talk about them in a theater. That’s why theater exists.”

David Leeper in Leeper and Sean Chandler’s “At the Flash.” | FRINGENYC

David Leeper in Leeper and Sean Chandler’s “At the Flash.” | FRINGENYC

As a lifelong journalist, it would have been easy for Moore to churn out a data-heavy polemic on the gun issue. But he was also the Denver Post theater critic for more than a decade and knows how to engage audiences.

“No one gives a damn about statistics in a theater,” he said. “You have to make it real.”

Moore keeps it real in his play by portraying both sides of the issue in fresh ways. The protagonist is not a gun control advocate, but a Christian conservative who is a staunch defender of the Second Amendment. He’s the one waiting for Obama (any echoes of “Waiting for Godot” are purely intentional).

“I was not interested in writing a one-sided screed,” he said. “I wanted a fair fight.”

The Theater at the 14th Street Y (344 E. 14th St.); Fri., Aug. 12, 5 p.m.; Sat. Aug. 13, 2 p.m.; Sat., Aug. 13, 9:15 p.m.; Sun., Aug. 14, 8:30 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 15, 6:45 p.m.

Tony Jenkins, author of “Black Magic,” a drama based on spoken word poetry that explores the lives and souls of seven slain black men, is grateful for theater fests like FringeNYC.

“I believe that the Fringe accepts and supports work that otherwise wouldn’t be funded,” he said. “It’s easy to get behind a tried and tested family musical and totally disregard another race play. Another controversial play. A play with queer people or a play that redistributes power from the majority. A play we assume won’t make any money in the mainstream.”

As an openly gay playwright of color, Jenkins’ work has a highly distinctive bent rarely seen in theater, mainstream or otherwise.

“This play gives space for the voices that we never hear,” he explained. “These black men, after their deaths, are defined and criticized and picked apart by the news cycle and are never able to tell their own stories. Corpses aren’t available for comment.”

According to Jenkins, infusing queer themes into his work is “almost inescapable.” In “Black Magic,” two of the characters are gay, which adds a potent dimension to the Black Lives Matter movement.

“There was no way to travel to the world of this play without encountering some black men who happened to be gay,” Jenkins said, adding that the first scene he wrote was explicitly queer by accident. “I found myself writing about a different kind of black love. These stories of dead gay black men felt even more silenced and more difficult to unearth. There is an epidemic of homophobia in the black community that remains mostly unchallenged. It is a subtle and destructive force. I am attempting to fight back.”

The play wrestles with themes of forgiveness, sacrifice, loss of innocence, love, coming of age, self-discovery, reclamation, and equality. Yet Jenkins contends that the work is also a tribute to black love.

“Black men loving black men, specifically and fiercely. The brotherhood. I don’t think we hear nearly enough about that,” he said.

What does Jenkins hope audience members take away from “Black Magic?”

“The play argues that black lives are remarkable,” he said. “That violence in the world is not the solution that lasts. That we are more connected than we allow ourselves to be. That sometimes we are the ones holding the gun. The play argues that love is the way. The play looks the audience in the eye and dares them to say otherwise.”

SoHo Playhouse (15 Vandam St., btwn. Sixth Ave. & Varick St.); Fri., Aug. 12, 5 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 15, 2 p.m.; Wed., Aug. 17, 7 p.m.; Fri., Aug. 19, 7:15 p.m.; Sat., Aug. 20, 5:45 p.m.

Patrick Burns in his “From Foster Care to Fabulous.” | FRINGENYC

Patrick Burns in his “From Foster Care to Fabulous.” | FRINGENYC

With “Machine Gun America,” Joseph Huff-Hannon has taken a sharply different tack, crafting a scathing satire about the rise of gun violence in America. And it’s a campy, over-the-top, full-throated musical. Like most brilliant theater, the genesis of the piece was purely by chance.

“About a year-and-a-half ago, I was deeply struck by a bizarre and tragic news story out of Idaho,” he said. “A two-year-old shot his mother, with her own handgun, in an aisle of the Walmart shortly after Christmas. The gun was kept in a special pocket in her purse especially fitted for firearms — a Christmas present from her husband that year.”

Huff-Hannon was motivated to learn more. He found dozens of examples of parents and siblings being killed or maimed. And of kids shooting themselves. He discovered that last year more Americans were murdered by armed toddlers than terrorists.

“This is patently insane,” he said. “No other major nation has this kind of problem. But it’s also an inevitable byproduct of a country with more guns than citizens.”

According to Huff-Hannon, there are plenty of documentaries and news exposés about America’s gun violence epidemic, but there’s very little in the popular culture, especially in theater.

“There’s nothing that really explores the powerful mythos around gun ownership or the reasons that gun owners run one of the strongest lobbying groups in the US,” he said. “So the play came out of that, building up a bizarre reality on the stage, with original upbeat songs and tragicomic characters, with a very traditional boy-meets-girl plot arc that’s only one step removed from the national tragicomedy we already live in.”

“Machine Gun America” gets its title from a theme park of the same name in Florida that bills itself as a “fully automatic adrenaline attraction.” Appallingly, it’s a place where families (kids as young as 10 are allowed on premises) can learn to shoot firearms at fake zombies or terrorists, and it’s only a few minutes from the Pulse nightclub, where earlier this summer 49 young LGBT people were massacred in the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history.

“After the horrific Orlando killings, I didn’t see any news coverage noting the proximity of these two places, but that doesn’t particularly surprise me,” Huff-Hannon said. “There’s a lot of public hand-wringing about gun violence, but in this country we have more gun stores than Starbucks and grocery stores combined. And I think that shows us what our consumer priorities are as a nation. When we glorify weapons that can kill a massive amount of people in a short amount of time and make them available for sale almost everywhere, we can’t be surprised when people actually use those guns for what they’re intended to be used for.”

After the Orlando bloodbath, a sign appeared at the entrance of the grisly gun center that offered free shooting lessons so visitors could have the “ammunition they need to fight back.

“I seriously doubt the LGBTQ community in Florida has flocked to Machine Gun America to take them up on the offer,” he said.

Andrea Alton and Allen Warnock in their “A Microwaved Burrito Filled With E. Coli.” | FRINGENYC

Andrea Alton and Allen Warnock in their “A Microwaved Burrito Filled With E. Coli.” | FRINGENYC

As an out playwright (in fact, virtually the entire creative team of “Machine Gun America” happens to be gay), this outrageous juxtaposition cuts particularly close to the bone. Huff-Hannon is enthused that the queer community is taking a leadership position in the fight for sensible gun control, with new groups like Gays Against Guns organizing disruptive, ACT UP style protests.

Flamboyan Theater at The Clemente (107 Suffolk St., btwn. Rivington & Delancey Sts.); Sat., Aug. 13, 7:15 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 15, 9:45 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 22, 4:30 p.m.; Wed., Aug. 24, 4:45 p.m.; Sat., Aug. 27, 2 p.m.

To be sure, there are scads of other provocative shows about race, cops, and guns at the Fringe. You may also want to check out “Black & Blue,” “Not All Cops Are Bad,” “Colorblind’d,” Night of the Living N-Word!!,” “My White Wife, Or So I Married a Black Man,” and “Mother Emanuel” (about the tragic 2015 shooting at Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston).

In addition to the topical shows mentioned above, here’s our annual Top 10 list of must-see queer-themed shows:

At the Flash

Have you ever found yourself in an ancient gay bar and mused, “If these walls could talk.” Well, Sean Chandler and David Leeper have, and this heartfelt solo show, performed by Leeper, is the result. The dazzling, dizzying drama spans multiple decades from 1965 to the present, imagining an array of endearing denizens of the Flash, including the beleaguered owner, a married man struggling with his sexuality, an aging drag queen, a party boy facing the results of an HIV test, and a frustrated marriage equality activist. This ambitious production has received raves from Chicago to Dublin to Philly.

Under St. Marks (94 St. Marks Pl., btwn. First Ave. & Ave. A); Sat., Aug. 13, 8 p.m.; Thu., Aug. 18, 4:45 p.m.; Fri., Aug. 19, 4 p.m.; Sun., Aug. 21, 2:45 p.m.; Wed., Aug. 24, 9 p.m.

Johnny Darlin: In the Closet

According to playwright/ performer Michael Doshier, we’re all in the closet about something. Staged as a mashup of a Broadway musical and an arena pop-rock concert, Johnny Darlin takes center stage, recounting his coming-out tale from his first celebrity crush to sending his first nudie pic, revealing a few secret fetishes along the way. This multimedia extravaganza features live music, dance, video projection art, and home videos. Presented by the Queer South, the piece features electro-pop music by Johnny Darlin, Francis Steakknife, and Gandor Chorale. A riff on “Hedwig,” with a Southern Baptist bent.

drom (85 Ave. A, btwn. Fifth & Sixth Sts.); Sun., Aug. 14, 12:30 p.m.; Tue., Aug. 16, 7 p.m.; Wed., Aug. 17, 5:30 p.m.; Wed., Aug. 24, 6 p.m.; Fri., Aug. 26, 9 p.m.

Austin Jennings Boykin and Nicholas Cocchetto in Michael Bradley’s The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer.” | FRINGENYC

Austin Jennings Boykin and Nicholas Cocchetto in Michael Bradley’s The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer.” | FRINGENYC

The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer

Most modern updates at FringeNYC tend to be based on predictable, crowd-pleasing classics, but playwright Michael Bradley likes a challenge. He’s taken Ibsen’s 19th century poetic fantasy “Peer Gynt” and wholly reimagined it in a contemporary queer setting. This darkly comic journey of self-discovery finds Peer confronting a crisis of sexual identity, a mischievous guardian, and gluttonous trolls, and finally finding his true soul mate. Chris Goodrich directs a large, talented, and highly attractive ensemble. Presented by the Rhapsody Collective, with original music by Marc Giguere.

Teatro SEA at the Clemente, 107 Suffolk St., btwn. Rivington & Delancey Sts.); Sat., Aug. 13, 9:30 p.m.; Tue., Aug. 16, 5 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 22, 4:45 p.m.; Wed., Aug. 24, 7 p.m.; Sat., Aug. 27, 1:30 p.m.

The Cleaning Guy

Ever wonder what your maid really does all day in your home? And what she thinks of that dildo drawer under the bed? Well, Paul Adams, aka “the cleaning guy,” is more than happy to tell you. He’s been cleaning New York apartments since 1991, and he’s ready to dish the dirt. You’ll meet such quirky clients as an aging leather queen with an ancient vacuum cleaner and a proper English slob. FringeNYC veteran Melissa Attebery directs this witty solo show with original musical numbers by Adams and Matt Casarino. Presented by Emerging Artists Theatre (Adams is its longtime artistic director).

The Huron Club (15 Vandam St., btwn. Sixth Ave. & Varick St.); Sat., Aug. 13, 5:15 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 15, 7:15 p.m.; Thu., Aug. 18, 9:30 p.m.; Sun., Aug. 21, 4:30 p.m.; Wed., Aug. 24, 6:15 p.m.

That’s MISS FITS, to YOU!

Years ago, playwright Todd Tif Fernandez (book, music, lyrics) lived in Africa as a gay man in abject fear, and a human rights activist was born. This mystical poly-gender musical extravaganza channels that fierce spirit, tracing Miss Fits’ head-spinning journey to self-awareness, with an assist from Stonewall rioters, Rosa Parks, Judy Garland, and Radical Faeries. Directed by Jonathan Warman, the production features more than a dozen tour-de-force queer performers of every stripe.

SoHo Playhouse (15 Vandam St., btwn. Sixth Ave. & Varick St.); Sat., Aug. 13, noon; Mon., Aug. 15, 9 p.m.; Fri., Aug. 19, 8:45 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 22, 4 p.m.; Sat., Aug. 27, 2:30 p.m.

A Microwaved Burrito Filled With E. Coli

The zany, beloved character Molly “Equality” Dykeman is back at FringeNYC, and this time she’s trapped at a lesbian wedding reception at a Mexican restaurant with a blabbermouth waitress known as Angie Louise Angelone, somewhere in the outermost reaches of Brooklyn. After chowing down on some nasty nachos, she gets more than she bargained for. This cracked-out comedy, directed by Mark Finley, is created and performed by the comedic duo — and Fringe faves — Andrea Alton and Allen Warnock, in association with Emerging Artists Theatre.

The Huron Club (15 Vandam St., btwn. Sixth Ave. & Varick St.); Tue., Aug. 16, 5:15 p.m.; Fri., Aug. 19, 5 p.m.; Sat., Aug. 20, 7 p.m.; Wed., Aug. 24, 8 p.m.; Fri., Aug. 26, 3:45 p.m.

Sean Peter Drohan and Adam Roberts in Drohan’s “Cyrano: A Love Letter to a Friendship.” |FRINGENYC

Sean Peter Drohan and Adam Roberts in Drohan’s “Cyrano: A Love Letter to a Friendship.” |FRINGENYC

Cyrano: A Love Letter to a Friendship

This modern, homoerotic twist on the 1897 classic finds two best buds, Cyrano and Christian, living in present-day New York City. When one of them begins to date the impossibly hunky Rock, their world is turned upside down. Expect plenty of gyrations about insecurity, beauty, ugliness, and anal sex. Written by Sean Peter Drohan (who also plays Cyrano) and directed/ choreographed by Eamon Foley, this play is presented courtesy of the Princeton-based Grind Arts Company.

SoHo Playhouse (15 Vandam St., btwn. Sixth Ave. & Varick St.); Mon., Aug. 15, 7 p.m.; Thu., Aug. 18, 3:45 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 22, 2 p.m.; Thu., Aug. 25, 6:30 p.m.; Sat., Aug. 27, 9:30 p.m.

From Foster Care to Fabulous

To say that Patrick Burns hails from the school of hard knocks would be a major understatement. But he’s turned his bumpy journey growing up as a wayward teen trapped in the foster care system in Oakland, California, into an inspirational musical comedy. In this one-man show, Burns plays a late-night talk show host delivering jaw-dropping anecdotes and songs, chatting with a gaggle of deranged guests. This alternately heartwarming and heartwrenching musical, courtesy of Red House Arts Center, is directed by Richard Israel.

drom (85 Ave. A between Fifth and Sixth Sts.); Fri., Aug. 12, 7:45 p.m.; Sun., Aug. 14, 6 p.m.; Thu., Aug. 18, 3 p.m.; Tue., Aug. 23, 9 p.m.; Thu., Aug. 25, 5:15 p.m.

 

Kate Rigg and Lyris Hung in “Happy Lucky Golden Tofu Panda Dragon Good Time Fun Fun Show!” | FRINGENYC

Kate Rigg and Lyris Hung in “Happy Lucky Golden Tofu Panda Dragon Good Time Fun Fun Show!” | FRINGENYC

Happy Lucky Golden Tofu Panda Dragon Good Time Fun Fun Show!

Subversive Amerasian duo “Slanty Eyed Mama” (aka comedian/ actor/ MC Kate Rigg and electronic violinist Lyris Hung, both trained at Juilliard) will rock your world with outrageous characters, spoken word, and snappy stand-up. Come for the edgy, music-filled theatrical comedy, stay for the funky urban Asian stuff, like Hello Kitty.

drom (85 Ave. A, btwn., btwn. Fifth & Sixth Sts.); Sun., Aug. 14, 8 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 15, 9:15 p.m.; Sun., Aug. 21, 9:30 p.m.; Mon., Aug. 22, 7:15 p.m.

The Radicalization of Rolfe

Most men who watched “The Sound of Music” as teens lusted after Liesl. But I suspect Andrew Bergh was crushing on Rolfe. Because he wrote a play set in the waning golden days of the 1930s, where Rolfe, going on 18, is stuck delivering messages for the Third Reich in Salzburg, Austria. But he has an even bigger problem: reconciling his ambition with his same-sex urges. This dark dramedy, courtesy of M & R Productions in association with Glenn Krutoff, is directed by Abigail Zealey Bess. How do you solve a problem like Rolfe?

The Players Theatre (115 MacDougal St., btwn. W. Third & Bleecker Sts.); Fri., Aug. 12, 5 p.m.; Sun., Aug. 14, 9:45 p.m.; Fri., Aug. 19 p.m., 7; Sun., Aug. 21, noon; Wed., Aug. 24, 4:30 p.m.

FRINGENYC: 20th Annual New York International Fringe Festival | The Present Company | Various downtown venues | Aug. 12-28 | Performances are $18 at FringeNYC.org