THEATRE
PREVIEW
THE BOWERY
THEATRE/RALPH ELIAS
Published
in KPBS On Air Magazine October 1990
Nightmare on
By
1989, he had turned the ship around.
The Bowery was in a brand new 88-seat venue, the Kingston Playhouse,
which was linked to the Kingston Hotel.
And the Bowery Theatre became the smallest professional, Equity house in
the country. There followed a
succession of hits: Italian-American Reconciliation, What the
In these troubled times for the arts, the
Bowery's mere continued existence is astonishing. Last year, the theater more than doubled its budget, and earned
65% of its revenue through box office take alone -- without any subscription
sales. Ralph Elias thinks he's
"walking the edge all the time."
Going Equity when the Bowery did was clearly a
risk. "There's no such thing as
stasis for any artist," says Elias in his earnest, intense manner. "That's what an acting teacher of mine
used to say. If you're not going
forward, you're going backward."
So go forward they did. And now,
they're opening Speed-the-Plow, by
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright David Mamet.
This will be the first
"We decided to go for the quality,"
Elias maintains. "We wanted to
compete for the rights to current plays.
Without Equity status, we'd never be doing Speed-the-Plow.""
Some critics of the Bowery would like to see
them put their money elsewhere. Like
into sound insulation. Three walls of
the theater, which was formerly a branch office of
Is there some sort of conspiracy of intrusion
working its insidious evil on
Elias has every intention of remediating his
theater's problem, whenever he has the spare cash. "It's at the top of the priority list for capital
improvements," he assures unnerved patrons. "But for now, the money goes toward high-level productions,
not production values." And, Elias
claims, "we do it all with mirrors.
We have 2 1/2 positions for the work of six. But our choice is to put our money and effort into the artistic
work and building a body of work, not building an organization."
At first, Elias and Managing Director Mickey
Mullany were the organization. In 1988, Allison Brennan, professional
actress and Elias's wife, was named Development Director. Since then, she has increased granted and
contributed income fivefold. Both are
actors by training; they met playing husband and wife, which they did again last
year, to hilarious effect, in What the
Butler Saw.
Elias was all set to direct Speed-the-Plow; then he decided to step
onstage and act in this controversial black comedy about the wacko
wheeling-dealing of
"The play deals with manipulation, both conscious
and unconscious," says Elias.
"Gould, the one who seems to be the most successful and cynical at
the beginning, is taken advantage of as a naïf. The woman who seems to be naive does the best job of
manipulation."
Elias plays Gould, and Dwyer thinks "this
will be a triumph for him. His
performance will reveal this play. He's
in an unusual group of American actors with classical understanding, American
energy and a British stillness. It will
be a very funny evening. If the
audience isn't killing itself laughing, we're not doing it right."
(Speed-the-Plow
runs from October 18 through December 9 at the Kingston Playhouse).
©1990 Patté
Productions Inc.