NEWS ARCHIVE OCTOBER
1999
Back
in Force: Chi-Rho Double Feature
DIM News has been silent
for three months; but don’t think that DIM has been inactive in the
meantime. Far from it. As you may remember from the
July issue, the DIM writing team was to meet late that month to pen
the sequel to DIM’s popular January 1999
production, The Chi-Rho Files:
Investigations of the Unorthodox. The writing team attacked
the task enthusiastically.
The resulting script was
titled, The
Assignment. The
story follows Nico, after Perez has joined
Buck and the gang, and delves into the organization he and Perez
worked for: IU
Central. Nico has been assigned to the training unit, and
he runs across someone particularly useful to his
purposes.
Patty Cram, who played the
lead role of Perez in the first installment, has taken the reins as
director for the sequel.
And in a strange case of real life imitating art, Jenn Wright, Patty’s sister and the director of
the first installment, takes the lead as Trainee Tira in the sequel. Greg Wright reprises the
role of Nico.
And, in what may be a
first in contemporary Christian theatre history, these first two episodes of an
ongoing, serialized drama will appear on the same stage for three
nights running!!
“What really makes this a unique opportunity,” says Greg,
“is not just the opportunity to remount a tremendously successful
show, but the chance to take it to the next level with a sequel, and
to let the character development of the second script reshape the
performances of the first show.”
Audiences who saw Investigations of the
Unorthodox last January may be surprised at the added depth of
the remounted show.
Jenn Wright, armed with a new
surname after her August wedding to husband Greg, has retained the
same production design she used in January; and most of the cast has
returned to reprise their original roles. (Matt Meany, who appeared as Norfolk in A Man for All Seasons makes
a special appearance as Beno.) But the dynamics have
changed, and dramatically.
Coupled with the strength
of the new script, and the stark contrast of Bucky’s and Nico’s
worlds, DIM is set to open the new season with a powerhouse double
feature of Chi-Rho Files episodes. The two one-act plays run
back-to-back from 7-9
PM
on November 19, 20 and 21.
Call 206-241-6149 for more information.
The
Redwood Connection
DIM regular Mike Brunk was recruited in late July to direct Agatha Christie’s Ten Little Indians; at
Redmond’s Redwood Theatre. Redwood Board Members Judy
Schwanke and Michelle Tuck worked with
Mike on DIM’s 1997 production of Saint Joan.
They have been
subsequently impressed with the work Mike has done directing In the Presence of Mine
Enemies and This Rock
for DIM. Mike also
served on the judging panel for Redwood last
season.
DIM associate Lyla Moreland also appears in the production,
acting on the Redwood stage for the second time. Lyla also appeared in last winter’s Measure for Measure at
Redwood. The cast of
Ten Little Indians also features John Marx, who appeared as Roper in
DIM’s 1998 production of A Man for All
Seasons.
Ten Little
Indians
runs through November 6 at Redwood Theatre in
Redmond. Call 206-525-3493 for more
information.
Avant
Garde at the College
DIM founder is beginning
his second season on staff at
Puget
Sound
Christian
College in
Edmonds. This fall, Greg has opted to
mount a production of the modern classic one-act play, Christ in the Concrete
City. Written by a
young Anglican priest, the play is a bitter, surrealist attack on
modern complacency in the face of Christ’s
crucifixion.
The actors in the play
step in and out of several different characters while interacting
with and confronting the audience. Modern living-room
conversations mix with scenes of Christ’s trial and death, in an
attempt to confront the modern audience with the immediacy of those
events.
With the exception of
James Wilhoit, who appeared as Thomas More
in DIM’s 1998 production of A Man for All Seasons, the
cast of the play is made up entirely of enthusiastic college
freshmen. The talent is
sharp and quick, as is the dialog in this witty
satire.
There is also an
interesting family connection in the production: last year’s production of Who’ll Save the Plowboy
featured Linda Woltz as Helen; her son,
Evan, appears in Concrete!
What’s
more, both Linda and Dave Stark, who appeared opposite her in Plowboy, will appear on the
same stage in the second half of the PSCC double bill: DIM will be presenting
the remounted Investigations
of the Unorthodox as part of the offering.
Christ in the Concrete
City
opens November 5 and runs through November 13. All seats are five
dollars. Call
425-775-8686 for more information.
DIM and NCC Win Community
Award
The cast of the July DIM
production of King to
Knight’s Pawn appeared on behalf of Normandy Christian Church in
the Des Moines Waterland Parade. Director Lyla Moreland was pleasantly surprised, with the
rest of the DIM troupe, to learn that the cast was awarded the
community award for Best of the Parade.
DIM appeared in the parade
for the second year running.
Last year, the cast of Black Bart strolled up and
down the street staging gun fights and rescuing damsels in
distress. This year,
the group’s medieval garb
was a big hit with the children. Lyla’s costume designs were fabulous, and the
period armaments fascinated.
The favorite questions was, “Is that
a real sword?” The group is already
making plans for a follow-up appearance next
season.
(At
left, the cast of King to Knight’s Pawn, from left to
right: Dave Stark, Mike
Brunk, Jenn
Wright, Greg Wright, Marybeth Moreland,
Patty Cram, Brandon Brown.
Copyright (c) 2002 Greg
& Jenn
Wright |