Getting Off: Lee Breuer on Performance

“Since the nineteen-sixties and seventies, New York’s experimental-theatre scene has toned down its wild-man character, but Lee Breuer is the grand old man of the movement.”—The New Yorker

Since he first arrived on the New York art/theatre/performance scene in 1970, Lee Breuer has been at the forefront of the American theatrical avant-garde, creating challenging works both independently and with Mabou Mines, the company he co-founded with JoAnne Akalaitis, Philip Glass, Ruth Maleczech and David Warrilow. Breuer’s work as a director has included celebrated stagings of Samuel Beckett, radical readings of classics including The Gospel at Colonuson Broadway in 1988, a gender-bending adaptation of King Learin 1990, and his revolutionary reinterpretation of Ibsen with Mabou Mines Dollhouse.

Theatre historian and journalist Stephen Nunns has assembled a unique look into one of American theatre’s most singular creative minds. Using interviews and excerpts from Breuer’s writings, with added historical commentary, the thrilling result is equal parts autobiography, artistic manifesto, and critical exploration. Beautifully illustrated with archival photographs, drawings, and sketches, this is a one-of-a-kind portrait of the artist and theatrical activist at work.

Biographies:

Lee Breuer

Lee Breuer is a founding co-artistic director of Mabou Mines Theater Company in New York City. His best-known work is The Gospel at Colonus, a Pentecostal Gospel rendering of Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus. He also authored/directed Mabou Mines’ trilogy, Animations, which included The B BeaverThe Red Horse, and The Shaggy Dog Animation (Obie Award for Best Play), as well as A Prelude to a Death in Venice (Obie Award for script and direction), and An Epidog, the winner of the President’s Commission Kennedy Center-American Express Award for Best New Work.

Stephen Nunns is a professor at Towson University. He is the author of Getting Off: The Work and Life of Lee Breuer, published by the Theatre Communications Group. His other book, Acting Up: Free Speech, Pragmatism, and American Performance in the 20th Centuryby LFB Publishers in 2010. He is the co-founder of The Acme Corporation, a Baltimore-based theatre ensemble, where he has directed and co-directed a number of award-winning and critically acclaimed productions. He has also directed plays at Single Carrot Theatre and Iron Crow Theatre. Before coming to Baltimore, Professor Nunns lived in New York City for fifteen years, directing, writing, and composing music for theatre pieces at a variety of off-off Broadway venues, including HERE, the 78th Street Theatre Lab, The Ontological-Hysteric Theater, and Dance Theater Workshop. He was an associate artist at the seminal avant-garde theatre company Mabou Mines, where he created theatre pieces, including the Obie Award-winning The Boys in the Basement. He was an associate editor at American Theatre Magazinefrom 1995 to 2000.

Release date: July 16, 2019 | Pre-order your copy on Amazon today: Getting Off: The Work and Life of Lee Breuer

Phase Change

Towson EMF Alumni and Baltimore-based artist Thomas Faison ’17 held an Artist Talk about his pop-up gallery mixed media piece Phase Change in Frederick, MD. Selected by the Frederick Arts Council and funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, Faison’s gallery piece will transform every four months as it follows a “three act visual story” and will remain in exhibition through 2019. Phase Change, “makes use of a variety of media from video art, sculpture, music, and more to explore questions surrounding climate change, cultural relationships with water, disasters, transformation, and how to survive” (http://frederickartscouncil.org/).  Act I of the exhibition closes May 4th, and reopens May 10th with Act II. If you are interested in sponsoring Act II or III please contact info@frederickartscouncil.org. Thomas can be reached at tomfaisonfilms@gmail.com if you have any more questions. 

Statement from the Artist: Thomas Faison

Phase Change is a living, evolving installation; a three act visual story of disaster, transformation, and hope. The story of water, steam, ice, and us articulated through a hybrid of video, sculpture, and music, hybrids of these mediums. It is in moments of transition where one can find true becoming. Liquid evaporating to gas, a city turning to moss, a person discovering shelter–examining these processes of change provides insights into the creative force of difference as we work towards not just individual transformation but the transformation of the collective Us.

The first step of Phase Change is a stream simulator presenting erosion, a macro process which existed longer before and will exist long after is, in a micro setting. Displayed alongside the simulator is a film with a loose, allegoric narrative, acting as a magnifying glass as the line between natural and societal processes grows thin. The voices within the film detail personal, cultural, and social relationships within the hydrosphere. The variance in these stories lends itself to insights into water as a multiplicity: something that is holy, political, nourishing, fearsome, essential.