TheatreStorm says LITTLE BROTHER is “the best kind of political theatre”!

TheatreStorm says LITTLE BROTHER is “the best kind of political theatre”!

Charles Kruger wins the non-preview review race with this take on Little Brother, and it is a great review!

This is the best kind of political theatre. Thought provoking, suspenseful, emotionally real, uncomfortably close to the hard truth… This is an important production that is not to be missed. It is likely, I think, to remain a highlight of the 2012-2013 season. Very highly recommended!
Read more here!

i09 Little Brother preview review

i09 Little Brother preview review

The site i09 gave us our first review today, and it is a total rave!

“it is a total marvel. Somehow, writer/director Josh Costello managed to condense the novel down to a two-hour play, without losing any of the impact. If anything, the staged version hits a bit harder than the book, because of the intense, but not overstated, performances.”

read the full review at https://io9.com/5876730/cory-doctorows-little-brother-becomes-a-must+see-stage-play

 

SFWeekly Featurette

SFWeekly Featurette

nice write-up for Little Brother in the SF Weekly’s Voice Places

Technological Difficulty By : Keith Bowers Marcus is a 17-year-old hacker – er, high school student – living in San Francisco in the near future. And like any smart hacker – uh, teenager – he lives for technological challenges such as bypassing, disabling, and otherwise eluding his school’s surveillance network. Marcus, who may or may not go by the name w1n5t0n, also believes (like any good teenager) that he has the system all figured out, and he knows how to work it.

Read more at:

https://www.voiceplaces.com/little-brother-san-francisco-bay-area-2909873-e/

 

Thinking about technology

Thinking about technology

Computers, projectors and theatre

Last night I saw the new projector in motion for the first time.  Holy multi-media, batman.  It’s really beautiful and exciting.  It is going to make Little Brother as cool as it needs to be, as it is a show that depends on the audience understanding the technology in the book to get the most out of the story.  This is not fluff, this is as
essential to the play as, let’s say,  the costumes.

That is not always the case.

I looked up to our SM booth and saw three staff members (SM, ASM and video
engineer) clicking away furiously.  Four more laptops were lighting the center
audience.   At one moment there was a serious search for an open outlet. It reminded me of my first few apartments – way too many plugs, no where left to go.

Another flashback – CMTC’s first show in Boston.  At the incredible Boston Center
for the Arts  where we were able to  rent cheap, and use their small, unheated
space.  Our sound was on CDs, I think, but it could have been a tape player. Our
lights were basically their wash.  I directed, and also performed on the light
board.   I totally mean that, performed, as there was no X to Y switch, and I was
spending the 2-hour show desperately trying to hold steady and not twitch too
much when we had to go to the next cue.  Sometimes I would flash a light if I felt
the show needed a little excitement.   It was Stein’s Dr. Faustus Lights the Lights so
it seemed somewhat appropriate.

We’ve come a long way, baby.  I guess.  But on the other hand, at what cost?
Having this much power on stage is incredible, but it is also dangerous.
As I am thinking thru design choices for A Bright Room Called Day, which will
also use video, I am reminded that the storytelling has to come first.  Everything
on the screen is gravy.  People come to the theatre to see themselves in 3-D, in
real life, and because theatre is dangerous.  One of my professors, Ray Munro,
says the only reason people go to the theatre is that someone can die.  I totally
get that.  And this technology, no matter how pretty, is already dead.  It is canned.
It is, in some ways, the opposite of what we do.

Josh Costello, our incredible Little Brother  director and adapter knows this.  I
overheard a discussion where he wondered if one video moment was distracting
from the storytelling.  The tech crew argued against it, first I think because of how
beautiful and cool it was, but then Josh reminded everyone that the actors on stage
have to be the focus.  Always.  That cue may remain in, or they might adjust, but I was
thrilled at the process that was examining THE WHY of all the computer magic we
can  create, in a medium that in its essence is about two live humans, on stage,
bearing their souls for us.

No computer required for that.  Just flesh and blood.

-bk

LITTLE BROTHER named Editor’s Pick

LITTLE BROTHER named Editor’s Pick

Little Brother, which opens Jan 17th, was named an editor’s pick in this month’s Theatre Bay Area Magazine.  Caroline Anderson writes 

When I first saw the title “Little Brother,” my first thought was of an endearing little boy in plaid pajamas. My second thought was, like Big Brother? Turns out it’s the second one. Custom Made is not doing a heartwarming story about a freckled young boy, but a terrifying thriller based on the bestselling novel by Cory Doctorow, adapted for the stage by Josh Costello. True to its name, “Little Brother” is a tip of the hat to George Orwell’s classic “Nineteen Eighty-Four,” in which the government becomes an omnipotent police agency. Orwell’s novel introduced the phrase “Big Brother” into the lexicon to describe this type of governmental abuse of power. There is nothing little about this brother, however; Doctorow’s tale of the Department of Homeland Security torturing and interrogating citizens in the name of their safety after a terrorist attack on the Bay Bridge and BART sounds uncomfortably familiar

Read more about the other great shows TBA picked on their website