This is from a shoot Scott and I did last January.
The Jamestown Chronicles
Lightning strikes a symbol cloud. Suddenly everything we've ever known as truth falls to the ground. It seeps in and slowly begins to regenerate fresh ideas. Such things has only the immortal Redwood seen time after time after time after time after time after time -Jen Meharg '06
This is from a shoot Scott and I did last January.
Props for ’Henry Moss’
Our RTD Review
Dark 'Henry Moss' a thing of beauty
Cast, crew expertly capture intensity of family's troubles
Saturday, Feb 23, 2008 - 12:08 AM
By SUSAN HAUBENSTOCK
SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
Playwright Sam Shepard has been the quintessential off-Broadway playwright since the mid-1960s. His plays are oblique, disturbing, raw; he often examines family secrets, violence, characters who are in extremis.
Shepard's works can be confusing, but "The Late Henry Moss," which premiered in 2000, is a bit more accessible. And Firehouse Theatre's new production, directed by Morrie Piersol, illuminates the three-act play in a blazing mix of comedy and pain.
From the first fast-talking moments, Piersol sets up the relationship between brothers Earl and Ray Moss, who are seeing each other for the first time in years. They've come to the
Layering one brilliant performance on top of another, Piersol highlights the comedy in this disturbing situation while exposing its raw tension and pain. Bill Patton is Henry, brought down at last by booze and a lifetime of shameless behavior. He careens around his grimy shack (designed and lit for maximum squalor by Maury Hancock) like an impotent old bull, but he's not unsympathetic as he contemplates his own death. Jen Meharg portrays his last girlfriend, the luscious Conchalla Lupina, who met him in the local drunk tank. Meharg's fearless portrayal sets her up as both life force and angel of death.
Jeff Clevenger and Scott Wichmann are perfect in their supporting roles. Clevenger is Esteban, the sweet-but-creepy neighbor who enabled Henry for 30 years by supplying him with soup as he drank and raved. Wichmann is panicky as the hapless taxi driver who accompanied Henry on his last binge.
They're good punching bags for Earl and Ray, but the brothers prefer to save their best licks for each other. Daniel Moore is forceful and shifty as older brother Earl; he's the kind of guy who likes to weasel out of blame. Justin Dray is scarier, a decade young for the role but powerful and relentless, trying to reclaim his history by staking out bits of his father's small territory and shabby possessions.
Except for an unruly door that refuses to stay closed, the production is beautiful in every detail.