“WAKE UP!”

The Harold Clurman Lab Theater and the Stella Adler Studio New York/Art of Acting Studio Los Angeles present the Los Angeles premiere of Jose Rivera’s landmark play Marisol, about identity, God, the apocalypse, credit card debt and the hope for a brighter future. the Show opens Friday February 3, 2012 at the Art of Acting Studio. “Oh god. What light. What possibilities. What hope.”

Posted in Featured

Help Bring Lefty Home

“The world is supposed to be for all of us.” Waiting for Lefty by Clifford Odets

We would like to bring Waiting for Lefty from Los Angeles to New York in March of 2012.

After presenting in New York for a decade, the Harold Clurman Laboratory Theater Company made its Los Angeles debut with Waiting for Lefty in October 2011. Directed by Don K. Williams, Lefty played to sold-out audiences and critical acclaim at the Art of Acting Studio. The run closed with an explosive, out-of-doors performance at Occupy Los Angeles. Now, led by the cast, the Lab would like to bring Lefty to New York in March 2012.

Funds raised through this Kickstarter campaign will support moving Lefty from Los Angeles to New York in March 2012 for a limited number of performances at the Stella Adler Studio of Acting and an out-of-doors performance at Occupy Wall Street.

Click here to donate

 

Posted in Featured

Lefty on the Right Coast

The Studio’s professional company, the Harold Clurman Laboratory Theater Company, recently made its West coast debut. The Lab presented Clifford Odets’ Waiting for Lefty at the Art of Acting Studio. This production was a landmark occasion for me. As the Artistic Director of this burgeoning company, it is a dream come true to see the Lab Theater present work in Los Angeles, and, at that, an important play directly related to our Group Theater roots.

To this day my mother still tells stories about being a little girl backstage at Group Theater rehearsals and opening nights. She was present for her step-father Harold Clurman’s impassioned speeches about the American theater. She remembers Clifford Odets with great affection. She was there – at the beginning of an exciting chapter in American theater history.

As I watched a performance of Lefty I felt the strength of Odets’ words and sensed that a long line of theater artists and others were peaking over our shoulders – Clifford Odets, Harold Clurman, Bobby and Sandy and Gadg; Stella and Phoebe and Ruth. It seemed crystal clear that the contribution that the twenty-one artists made to the Los Angeles Theatre scene would have made the Group Theatre proud. Perhaps more importantly, it made a difference to the audience in the here and now. Perhaps there was a young person in the audience, who, like my mother, would recall the theatrical exuberance and political courage and engagement of the artists. It occurred to me that our audience might include an emerging artist who, in five, ten, fifteen years will continue to carry the tradition forward.

That Odets play reverberates in important ways for a modern audience, seventy-five years after its debut in New York, is quite extraordinary. The run at Art of Acting Studio ended with a special performance. Under the leadership of director Don K. Williams, the company quickly rehearsed the show for a new space and played out-of-doors at the Occupy LA encampment. At the end of the show the audience joined in with the legendary final battle cry of “Strike! Strike! Strike!” In the subsequent weeks the studio received a foundation grant to continue to support more work like Lefty. The foundation requires that we match the grant dollar for dollar, a prospect that has me incredibly excited and inspired for the next phase of the Harold Clurman Lab Theater’s growth. The cast of Lefty, led by Katherine Brandt, is championing a Kickstarter campaign to raise an additional $10,000 to bring the show to New York for a limited run in 2012.

Reflecting on these past several weeks with Lefty, I’m filled with a sense of purpose and audacity. It feels to me that we are living in a very interesting time. Perhaps, like our theatrical ancestors, we are on the precipice of a great social movement, one that is specific to our time and to which we have something valuable to contribute. It feels important to remember that to remain vital as an arts organization with deep roots in the past, we must nourish the branches that extend far into the future and have a fierce engagement with the present.

As we go forward into this great unknown – keep the fire burning!

Posted in Tom's Blog

Winter Part-time Workshops Announced

We have released the schedule for the 2012 Winter Workshop Sessions. Classes include the Acting Technique Intensive, Script & Character Analysis, On Camera with Ron Burrus, and full line-up of Professional Actor’s Workshop Program. Enrollment has begun; to view a full listing of classes, click here.

Posted in Featured

Art of Acting in the LA Times for “Occupy LA” Event

The Harold Clurman Laboratory Theater Company’s Waiting for Lefty was presented at OccupyLA, Los Angeles’s version of the grass-roots movement started in NYC’s OccupyWallStreet. Read about the event here: LA Times

Posted in Featured, News

Art of Acting in the LA Times for "Occupy LA" Event

The Harold Clurman Laboratory Theater Company’s Waiting for Lefty was presented at OccupyLA, Los Angeles’s version of the grass-roots movement started in NYC’s OccupyWallStreet. Read about the event here: LA Times

Posted in Uncategorized

Backstage Magazine’s Critic’s Pick

The Harold Clurman Laboratory Theatre Company’s Waiting for Lefty by Clifford Odets has been named Backstage Magazine’s Critic’s Pick.
“Director Williams keeps the action dynamic and volatile, and his intentions are carried out with gusto by the large and able cast.” Check out the full review here: Backstage.com

Posted in Featured

Backstage Magazine’s Critic’s Pick

The Harold Clurman Laboratory Theatre Company’s Waiting for Lefty by Clifford Odets has been named Backstage Magazine’s Critic’s Pick.
“Director Williams keeps the action dynamic and volatile, and his intentions are carried out with gusto by the large and able cast.” Check out the full review here: Backstage.com

Posted in Featured

Something Captivating is Happening in Hollywood…

First Review of “Waiting for Lefty” –

Something captivating is happening in Hollywood about a half-block south of Santa Monica Boulevard on Orange Drive, almost midway back from the street along a nondescript business complex. It’s happening at the Art of Acting Studio, which until Saturday night had been unknown to me like so many of the scores upon scores of small theaters throughout greater Los Angeles that live so often under the radar hosting productions week in and week out.

Within the cozy theater on that sold-out night I was to see the Harold Clurman Laboratory Theater Company’s premiere staging of Clifford Odets’ landmark 1935 agit-prop drama “Waiting For Lefty,” directed by Don K. Williams. And what I saw was a brilliant embrace of a classic that was absolute magic.

Consisting of a series of vignettes threaded through the framework of meeting of cab drivers (with the title character being their absent and expected leader), Odets’ masterpiece is what launched the Group Theatre into the minds of the social conscience in the 1930s. “Waiting for Lefty” centers on union members meeting to discuss a possible strike while offering glimpses into their desperate lives as they search for a way out of poverty in a world where greed outweighs the value of human life and the only way to escape was to fight together.

Though written in the midst of the Great Depression, given the suffering of so many through the ongoing bleak economic conditions effecting the country today, “Waiting For Lefty” speaks just as clearly and powerfully and poignantly in building to its angry and defiant crescendo as it did to audiences more than three-quarters of a century ago.

It does so in this exquisitely staged production because it’s passionately delivered without restraint or reservation from every last committed member of the large ensemble cast (with a special nod to the entirely riveting Darren Keefe who holds nothing back in the role of Agate) — all of them no doubt skilfully guided by Williams’ adept direction and understanding of the enduring relevance of Odets’ creation.

In the program it states that the Harold Clurman Laboratory Theatre Company’s mission “is to produce theater committed to the standards and ideals set out by Stella Adler, Harold Clurman and the Group Theatre.” With “Waiting For Lefty” the company has completely and extraordinarily succeeded in that mission.

Where: Art of Acting Studio, 1017 North Orange Drive, Los Angeles, 90038
What: “Waiting For Lefty,” by Clifford Odets
When: Fridays & Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 3 p.m., through October 8
Tickets: $15 (available in advance through Brown Paper Tickets)

Review by Will Campbell for blogging.la

Posted in Featured, News

Now a member of LA Stage Alliance!

The Art of Acting Studio is proud to announce that we are now a member of LA Stage Alliance, the not-for-profit organization dedicated to building awareness, appreciation and support for the performing arts in Greater Los Angeles.

Posted in Featured

Donate

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Categories

Meta