If the final season of Game of Thrones left you with a bad taste in your mouth, take heart: At the very least, it planted the seed for a brave new series of entertaining, out-of-the-box theater productions in Reno that might help ease your pain.
โAs a company, we all watched Game of Thrones, and we were all equally devastated by how horrendous the final season was,โ laughed Christopher Daniels, executive director for Good Luck Macbeth Theatre Co. in Reno. โAnd then we thought, what a unique opportunity as artists to, instead of just complaining about it, do something about it, to put our own spin on it.โ
In a matter of weeks, Daniels had a script for GoT Thrones? Winter is Back, GLMโs redux of GoTโs disastrous (by some accounts) season eight. The show, capitalizing on the comedic and improv talents of Daniels and other members of GLM, will run for just one weekend, Feb. 7-8.
This loving parody promises stronger character arcs and new approaches to disappointing plot points, according to Daniels, while also being ridiculous and over the top. โItโll just be a really fun time, but itโll be closure for so many of us who are frustrated by it,โ he said. โI think itโll be really cathartic.โ
But other benefits of the show were clear right away: It provided something easy and fun to produce, requiring little preparation, during what would otherwise be a dark period between month-long productions. Doing more bite-sized shows also enables GLM to showcase a wider range of available talent with unconventional works, all while building audiencesโ anticipation for more and inciting their fear of missing out on these short-but-sweet productions.
Hence, the FOMO series.
โIn traditional theater, you put on a show and you rehearse for weeks, sometimes months, and then have runs that go anywhere from three to six weeks,โ Daniels said. โWhat we wanted to do was short bursts of really exciting, unique programming that would be appealing to a broad-based audience.โ
The FOMO series will feature two to three performances each of original or new works that havenโt been done in Reno, with very small windows in which to see them. โSo everyone would be like, โOh, you have to see it,โโ Daniels said, explaining that FOMO productions will take place year round, intermingled with GLMโs roster of traditional plays and musicals.
Room to improv
Following GoT Thrones?, FOMO returns at the end of February with Theatresports, a competition-style improv show originally developed in Alberta, Canada, by director Keith Johnstone, who observed techniques used in professional wrestling to generate audience excitement. Two teams are pitted against each other to compete in a series of improv games and theater scenes that are based on audience suggestions. A panel of judges score the teams, and a referee keeps participants in check. The challenges are bracket-style, with three different โshows,โ each featuring different teams competing, leading up to the final game.
โWeโre inviting all the local theater and production companies to form teams of four to six people to compete,โ Daniels said, adding that up to six to eight teams total could compete. Prompts vary from the dramatic to the downright silly and arenโt necessarily just for formally trained improv actors. Audiences can buy specially priced tickets for the entire tournament, so they can cheer their favorite teams on to victory.
Additionally, the show will raise funds for suicide prevention, which, as Daniels explained, is particularly relevant to those in the arts, where depression is often pervasive yet hidden.
Unscripted, a new series of improvised plays and musicals directed by Tim Mahoney of Reno Improv and the GLM Board, will roll out April 10-11 and take place throughout the year. These roughly 90-minute plays are all completely made up on the spot, based on audience suggestion. Costumes, props and sets are composed with whatโs available.
โImprovised plays are something that hasnโt been done in Reno before,โ Daniels said. โYou have all these improv groups doing these types of shows. The improv community is growing here, and we wanted to find that beautiful, harmonious blend between improv and theater, and this is it. The cast of about 12 to 16 people will cycle through depending on availability, but it is a true hodgepodge of theater and improvโpeople who may not have had the chance to work with each other before but are bringing different skill sets to the table to make an amazing show.โ
Next, on June 5-7, comes an exciting collaboration with Genaro Mendez, assistant professor of voice at the University of Kansas, who will bring two short operas to GLMโa medium, or short dramatic opera, and a soap opera, both in foreign languagesโin an effort to make opera more accessible and approachable to modern, uninitiated audiences and build the next generation of opera lovers. Formally trained operatic performers will be part of the shows, which give audiences a rare chance to see opera up close.
On June 13 and 14, the FOMO series presents The 10 10-Minute Play Festival, an idea that originated last year during the run of Greg Burdickโs new play, Monessen Falls. Burdick himself attended the show and led a workshop on how to write a 10-minute play. The participants in that workshop each wrote a 10-minute play that will be part of this festival.
How to End Poverty in 90 Minutes, running Sept. 7-8, is a unique, experimental show created by Sojourn Theatre out of Northwestern University in 2013 and has since been produced in major cities around the country. The idea, at its most basic, is what Daniels calls โa Choose Your Own Adventure theatrical experience.โ The audience and actors engage in a dialogue about how to end poverty in our communityโis it education, health care, local economic factors, or something else? As actors perform from a script that inserts audience participation and suggestions, audience members get to see their ideas played out before them. At the end, the audience votes on where to donate a cash bank of $1,000โwhich organization they feel, based on the show, best addresses poverty in the community.
โItโs a way to start the conversation, because we all know that when we go to see a show, weโre more open and receptive to hear messages and change perspectives on issues,โ Daniels says, explaining that the show was inspired by the Netflix film, Black Mirror: Bandersnatch, about a 1980s programmer adapting a fantasy novel into a video game and featuring multiple endings.
โSomeone might be adamant that doing this one thing is the way to handle it, but by seeing the play, we hope, they might think, โOh, I never saw that side of it before or even thought about how that plays into the issue of poverty.โโ
The FOMO series schedule is still in development, but GLMโs commitment to telling stories that havenโt been told, showcasing original work and making theater accessible to everybody will remain top priorities in that selection process.
โI think thereโs something really cool about showcasing local talent here across the spectrumโwriters, directors, actors, comedians, designersโand have them do something that no one has done before,โ Daniels said. โTheater is such an amalgamation of different things, so this is really an opportunity to highlight the different types of theater that are out there. Thereโs truly something for everybody.โ
