Performance Preview: The Southwest Irish Theater Festival

Irish Theater Fest Showcases Contemporary Offerings

Sam Adams
\
5 min read
Shades of Green
Share ::
UNM linguistics professor and actor Alan Hudson was sitting at El Pinto. It was March 2010, and he’d just seen a performance of The Diary of Anne Frank at The Filling Station. He was surrounded by people involved in the production. As theater talk filled the air, Hudson recalls prominent local actor and director Brian Hansen offhandedly proposing the idea of an Irish theater festival in Albuquerque.

"That kind of lit a fuse of some sort in my brain," says Hudson, who was born and raised in Dublin. He began doing research in the hope that local theater troupes would be interested in a collaboration. "I thought maybe I could come up with about 50 plays or so to suggest," he says. "By the time I was finished, I had a list of about 1,000."

After teaming up with Hansen and directors Frank Melcori and Vic Browder, Hudson began shopping his idea around to the theater companies. That list of a thousand was cut down to a handful, and Browder and Hansen ended up leaving the committee to work on producing and directing two of the selections.

This left Hudson—who’s working as a dialect coach on the plays—and Melcori with a large task. "It’s very much a shoestring affair," Melcori says. "We had no funding. It was just our pushing the idea. So it existed halfway between heaven and Earth, so to speak." But it took shape in early February with Martin McDonagh’s
The Cripple of Inishmaan , directed by Marty Epstein at The Vortex Theatre. It’s the first of five plays in the inaugural Southwest Irish Theater Festival.

Melcori says he traveled to Ireland 40 years ago and was inspired by the quest for freedom he saw in Irish writing and culture. "Their plays in a way are their declaration of independence," he says. "Not that all of them are political, but that’s where they found their voice—the identities of both the rural and the cultural elements of Ireland."

With the exception of one entry, all the plays are by contemporary playwrights. McDonagh is the most well-known name among them, making
Inishmaan a fitting introductory piece to the festival. It details the rise to fame of a young disabled man living on the Aran Islands—one the last outposts of the Gaelic language—as a documentary team comes to film this time-lost way of life. McDonagh’s works tend toward dark and devilish comedy. “His plays always strike me as feeling like really, really painful ingrown toenails,” Melcori says. “It’s stuff that comes from within that can’t get resolved when it finally pops out or puses out or whatever—there’s usually a lot of damage done by that time. At the same time, he has a way of characterization that the people are real and it’s not about formulaic violence."

Then there’s Marie Jones’
Stones in His Pockets . The comedy also centers around an American camera crew coming to rural Ireland to capture some perceived notion of "Irishness" on film. That one opens March 9 at Aux Dog and is directed by Terry Davis.

Also opening March 9 is Conor McPherson’s
The Seafarer , a story about a group of Dublin men sitting around a house on Christmas Eve, drinking and playing cards. While the play has its laughs, the tone turns ominous as a mysterious guest shows up to join the match. "It has a slightly Faustian kind of flavor to it," says Hudson. "There’s pretty clearly a character in there who’s the devil come back to claim his due." Mother Road Theatre Company takes this one on at The Filling Station, under the direction of Gil Lazier.

The final contemporary play is Marina Carr’s
Woman and Scarecrow , beginning March 16 at Desert Rose Playhouse, and directed by Georgia Athearn. This is perhaps the most downbeat of the festival’s offerings. It considers a dying woman who’s lived a cold and emotionally closeted life. In the spirit of rural Irish storytelling, questions of spiritual and mythical doom abound.

The last selection is Lennox Robinson’s comedy from 1933,
Is Life Worth Living? This one tells the story of a simple seaside town that’s caught off guard when a foreign troupe comes in and puts on plays by the likes of Chekhov and Ibsen. Brian Hansen will be directing at the Adobe Theater, starting March 23.

The entire undertaking of the festival seemed massive at first, but both Melcori and Hudson say they now see it becoming a recurring event. “The way it’s been accepted and implemented,” Hudson says, “leaves me at least some room to think that we might be able to do this every two years.” The co-producers of the fest hope to see mid-20
th century works by Brendan Behan and Seán O’Casey in a future iteration.

Performance Preview Southwest Irish Theater Festival

The Cripple of Inishmaan

Runs through March 4

The Vortex Theatre

2004 1/2 Central SE

Tickets: $15, $10 student rush

247-8600,
vortexabq.org

Stones in His Pockets

March 9 through 25

Aux Dog Theatre

3011 Monte Vista NE

Tickets: $16, $12 students, seniors, military and public safety officials

254-7716,
auxdog.com

The Seafarer

March 9 through April 1

The Filling Station

1024 Fourth Street SW

Tickets: $18, $12 students and seniors, $10 on Thursdays

243-0596,
motherroad.org

Woman and Scarecrow

March 16 through April 8

Desert Rose Playhouse

6921 Montgomery NE

Tickets: Call theater for info

881-0503,
desertroseplayhouse.com

Is Life Worth Living?

March 23 through April 15

Adobe Theater

9813 Fourth Street NW

Tickets: $15, $13 students and seniors

898-9222,
adobetheater.org
Shades of Green

Woman and Scarecrow at Desert Rose Playhouse

Photo courtesy of Christy Lopez

Shades of Green

Ed Chavez and Micah Linford in Stones in His Pockets

Photo by VJ Liberatori

1 2 3 234

Search