Skip to main content

Quantum Theatre Stages Hamlet at Historic Pittsburgh Landmark - Want to Know More? Check out the Following Q&A with Artistic Director Karla Boos

Hamlet (Treasure Treasure) Credit all Photos Courtesy of Quantum

          Known for producing plays that challenges its audiences, Quantum Theatre is doubly famous for staging them in some of the most unlikely spaces all over the city.

        Like a frog jumping from lily pad to lily pad, the theater without a permanent home has set up shop at places as varied as the Recycling Building in Pittsburgh’s Strip District, the Mellon Park Rose Garden, Trinity Cathedral, Temple Rodef Shalom, the Schenley Park Ice Skating Rink and the Frick Park Lawn Bowling Green.

        Currently, the adventurous, peripatetic company is in Rankin, where much of Pittsburgh steel making prowess was once located, in the historic and massive Carrie Furnace. The monstrous industrial remnant is the backdrop for Elsinore, the Danish castle once home to Prince Hamlet. The setting provides an atmospheric. moody experience unlike any previous Hamlet you might ever have seen.

        Artistic director Karla Boos has edited Shakespeare’s longest play to allow for a manageable 2 hour and 15-minute outdoor performance with a 20-minute intermission between acts. Adding to the unique ambiance is lighting designer C. Todd Brown’s soothing hues of violet and azure along with brilliant white spotlighting that showcases costume designer, Susan Tsu’s glorious costumes, graced by a skillfully proficient cast of actors.

        Quantum’s exceptional staging of Hamlet runs through August 27. Tickets can be had by phoning 412-362-1713 or www.quantumtheatre.com/hamlet. If you’d like to know more about the production, check out the following Q&A with Quantum’s artistic director, Karla Boos.

        Q: I assume not having a permanent home does create extra challenges for your artistic and creative team, but what other issues are involved in moving from venue to venue with each new production? Are there any advantages that come with this arrangement, and do you often wish for a permanent stable place to perform?

        A: While I often wish it was a little easier, I don’t wish for a permanent home, we long ago fell in love with the freedom to choose audience configuration, proportions, texture (old and gritty, slick and new?) By we, I mean all the artists, designers, directors, and even all Quantum’s administrative people who communicate about our mission and sell the tickets – for example we can choose Rodef Shalom for The Flying Lovers of Vitebsk (about Marc and Bella Chagall) because it’s a place of such meaning – not just for Jewish people but all people of Pittsburgh. Can’t say enough about what a site may contribute to the experience of the play.

Laertes (Brenden Peifer) and Ophelia (Saige Smith)

        Q: Hamlet is the second Shakespearean tragedy you’ve staged at the Carrie Furnace. Are there any attributes about the site that complement the bard’s narrative or your staging and production designs? And, just curious, I’m wondering if you considered doing Hamlet elsewhere and what other sites may have been under consideration?

        A: We chose to do Hamlet and do Hamlet at Carrie Furnace together. It is, in a sense, a follow-up to King Lear, with Jeffrey directing it, who played Lear. Of course, we’re using a different part of the vast site, and design is very different, but we expect people to remember and that adds a layer to their experience. Carrie Furnace is always going to be about power, isn’t it? Power that wasn’t going to last forever.

        Q: Naturally, the title character is always of crucial interest. How did you come about to choose multidisciplinary transgender artist Treasure Treasure for the role?

        A: An easy question to answer. When Treasure spoke Hamlet’s text in an audition for me and Jeffrey, though we had marvelous contenders, there was a special, riveting connection. We hadn’t thought about a transgendered person in the role. But she was it, and I think anyone who sees her will feel as we did.

        Q: I understand that you originally planned to stage Hamlet inside the site’s Power House building, but subsequently made a decision to move everything outdoors, even though the set construction was finished or nearly completed. Why did you decide to go outdoors, how soon before opening night did you decide to make the change and how much reconfiguration and extra effort was required?

        A: It was a herculean effort to move it, and we’re all so grateful to Quantum’s amazing staff and crew for accomplishing it! One week into rehearsals, the inside space was finished enough to start working on the set and after a day or two of that we just concluded it wasn’t best. Everyone moved super quickly – Rivers of Steel in letting us explore an alternative, and then as I say, the crew on speed drive. Theater is a live art; Quantum has an extra dose of ‘liveness.' We face the unknown pretty fearlessly and sometimes the reward is great. This was worth the work.

        Q: Despite of the venue’s industrial, blue-collar setting, I see that the costumer created some interesting, colorful and, in some cases, regal outfits. Did you and she ever consider going modern or at least to some design motif that ties in with the post-industrial ambiance?

Claudius (Sam Turich), Polonius (Thom Delventhal), and Gertrude (Robin Walsh)

        A: We talked a lot about the fact that this is a ghost story, and a timeless one at that. We believe we’re built a show that feels very contemporary in its relevance. Susan Tsu is so sophisticated an artist, it’s not about ‘period’ or ‘modern’ for her – it’s much more complex, and I think you feel her great experience and complexity in the results. We’re blessed in her, Tony Ferrieri (scenic), C. Todd Brown (lighting), and Sartje Picket (composition and sound) – and they all work together and with the director to end where they do.

        Q: I was most impressed with Saige Smith’s rock-laden rendition of her Act Two lament. Not only did it come as a complete surprise, but the composition by Sartje Pickett provided an entirely new dimension to the narrative flow. I’m curious to know how much input you and director Jeffrey Carpenter might have given to the composer.

        A: Jeffrey and Sartje were talking for months and months, a dissonant, rock-laden score was an influence on the whole project’s development. Saige is a dream to realize those songs as Sartje arranged them, and we have Dave Mansueto, Treasure herself – lots of musicians in the cast!

        Q: Something that completely surprised me is the excellence of the fight scene at the end of the play. Compliments are in order for the realism fight director, Thom Delventhal, elicited from Treasure and Brenden Peifer as Laertes. Would you happen to know how quickly Treasure picked up this particular skill?

        A: I’m like you, full of admiration for the fight, thank you for complimenting it and I’ll pass it to Thom, Treasure, Brenden, and also Brett Mack, who is the repiteur, helps them really get it into their bodies, sees it from all the angles, etc. These are accomplished, physical people, but they had to work very hard to make the fight this good – among other things like figuring out Hamlet and Laertes!

        Q: You were responsible for editing the text. What was your main modus operandi, your goal, and how challenging was the process for you?

        A:    I’m very proud of my edit. I wanted a bit more than two hours running time and that meant cutting about half the play. There are a few speeches I didn’t touch, and I wanted all the marvelous things people know to be in there, so my edits are minute, it was very hard. It had to make great sense, preserve meter, and feel comfortable in the actors’ mouths. It took me a solid 6 months, speaking it aloud the whole time. It was what I wanted to contribute, as an artist, to this Hamlet.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Welcome to Fairyland - The Pittsburgh Savoyards Stage an Enchanting Iolanthe or The Peer and the Peri

      Peter Pan has one, Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream has a slew and Gilbert and Sullivan’s Iolanthe, as staged by the Pittsburgh Savoyards, has at least ten - before I stopped counting. Fairies, that is.     Just after the opening overture, performed by the 30-plus orchestra, possibly as best as I ever heard it under the baton of Guy Russo, a bevy of maiden fairies dressed in pastel gossamer fairy garb with wings, frolicked across the stage gleefully singing in full-voiced and stunning harmony ”Tripping hither, tripping thither.”     There was little to no tripping, however, as they danced nimbly to the spirited song, then segued into expressing their discomfort at the loss of Iolanthe (Savannah Simeone), the one fairy who brought such happy song and spirit to their fairy circle.     For such a blissful group there were some draconian laws that govern their behavior, namely, if one were to marry a mortal, they should be put to death. Alas, poor Iolanthe.     Due t

A Poignant Docudrama about a Valiant Steeler Hall of Famer

Ernesto Mario Sanchez as Mike Webster Credit: Pittsburgh Playwrights Theatre Company           Guys who rarely (or never) attend live theater but are often tempted to do so, might want to consider a visit to the Madison Arts Center in Pittsburgh. There, Pittsburgh Playwrights Theatre Company is currently staging a docudrama about a popular Steeler Hall of Famer.     12:52 The Mike Webster Story is a look at the final years of “Iron Mike,” as he was affectionately called, following his retirement from football in 1990. In his 17 years in the sport, he played in 245 games, 217 of which he started. All this longevity, however, took its toll as too-numerous-to-count head collisions with other players left him with Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE).     The play opens with Webster (Ernesto Mario Sanchez) chewing the fat with close friend, quarterback, Terry Bradshaw (Paul Guggenheimer) just after Webster’s retirement from football. Paul Guggenheimer as Terry Bradshaw and Ernesto Mario

Merrily We Roll Along - A Children’s Ditty No More

Marnie Quick as Beth, Dan Mayhak as Frank, Catherine Kolos as Mary, NathanielYost as Charley and David leong as Joe Credit: Deana Muro     Judging by the full and rich sound of the first notes music director, Douglas Levine gets from his eight-piece orchestra, you have to assume Front Porch Theatricals is giving its audience a exemplary production of Merrily We Roll Along. And you’d be right.     Off to a good start musically, the show goes on to feature some fine vocal and acting skills from its cast of, would you believe, 19.     Talk about a challenge. In her directorial debut no less, actor and educator, Daina Michelle Griffith, corrals this expansive cast with the skill a Catholic nun herding a group of grade schoolers to daily mass. Only this is no throng of pre-teenagers but a horde of professionals with talent galore up to the task of bringing Broadway‘s legendary Stephen Sondheim‘s work to life.     The musical, based on a play by Kaufman and Hart, opens during a party