Success!

20 11 2009

My head, my heart, and my soul are all still swimming from it all.

About a year ago, I created some short, cute scenes involving dating and break-ups with a sock monkey playing the other character.  They were entertaining and well-received.  An audience member came up to me after one of my performances and asked if it was part of a bigger project–if I had any intentions of creating an entire show out of the idea.  I didn’t think that would be possible.  I mean, I had thought and dreamed about doing a one-woman show.  But based on talking with sock monkeys?  No way.   It’s a unique idea, but I didn’t think something like that could sustain itself for a whole show.

Months passed and I couldn’t get it out of my head.  I wrote a couple of more scenes and was really liking what I wrote.  After performing some more of these vignettes in front of audiences, I was starting to become convinced that maybe it was possible.  I approached Jen Ellison, a theatre artist who I greatly admire, and asked her if she would be willing to direct me in this weird project.  Thankfully, she accepted and after a summer of rehearsing with her, I had a show!  A show when an actor is on stage talking to sock monkeys–under someone else’s direction–could’ve been disastrous.  But Jen is a master.  She understood my vision for the show from the beginning and fostered the depth it needed to sustain itself.

It’s still amazing to me that I did it–that I wrote a one-woman show and did a whole run in Chicago.  The irony about doing a solo show, is that you can’t do it alone.  I had a fabulous director, a wonderful producer, and a fantastic crew of people who made the show possible each Thursday for seven whole weeks.  And, of course, the show STILL wouldn’t have been possible without an audience each night.

In my show, I say to one of the monkeys, “I can’t do that.  I can’t promote myself.  I don’t know how to market myself–it’s just weird.”  In the scene, I’m referring to online-dating.  But I can easily apply it to being an artist.  I felt weird about sending out the countless emails–practically begging folks to come–not to mention the abundance of facebook invites, messages, and postings I sent out on weekly basis.  But I did it.  And I’m glad I did it.  Because people did come (even when the weather was super crappy).

So, I want to thank everybody.  Thanks of course to Jen, Don, Dominique, Speedy, Jessica, and Sophie for helping make this run possible.  But thank you also to everyone who supported me during the creative process (you know you you are) and to everyone who came out to the show and told people about the show, and came again and brought others!  (Again, you know who you are)!  Thank you, thank you from the bottom of my heart.

I am proud of the show and will definitely perform it again.  But in this post-run, hazy time, I can’t even begin to wrap my head around booking shows and filling out applications.  For now,  I will just don my comfy pants and have a good rest.





Last chance to see this show in Chicago!

18 11 2009

Looking for something fun to do this Thursday?  Please come check out The Good, the Bad, and the Monkey before it closes its Chicago run!

“Rountree is amusingly unafraid…[her] quirky approach has considerable charm and appeal.” ~The Chicago Tribune

“Amanda’s energetic and light performance style is the real anchor of the show…her sense of comedic timing is in full display.”  ~An Angry White Guy in Chicago

The Good, The Bad, and The Monkey
Singlehood, Dating, and the Search for Something Real
Amanda Rountree takes a hilarious–and at times, heartbreaking–look at the cycles of relationships and the myths that we tell ourselves about finding a soul mate…..using sock monkeys.

Written and Performed by Amanda Rountree
Directed by Jen Ellison

Get your tickets at the door–just $10 (cash only)

Chemically Imbalanced Theater
1420 Irving Park Road
Chicago, IL

Thursday at 8pm ~ November 19

Please click here for more info about the show!





May cause excitability…

18 11 2009

I love sleep.  I am a good sleeper.  Well okay, I am not one of those people that can fall asleep anywhere or anytime.  In fact, in that regard, I’m probably considered a picky sleeper.  It has to be dark and it has to be quiet.   I don’t do night-lights.  I don’t do tick-tocking clocks.  I love those dark curtains in hotel rooms.  I love absolute silence.

I haven’t slept all that well the last few evenings.  This fact, coupled with having a very stuffy nose last night, urged me to take some cold medicine.  It was just some over-the-counter-stuff–you know, the kind that will make one pleasantly drowsy.  I should mention here that with both alcohol and drugs, a little goes a long way with me.  So typically when I take cold-medicine, I forgo the two capsule recommended dosage and just take one.  But last night was different.  I don’t know what brought on the devil-may-care attitude.  Maybe it was my comfy, fuzzy Kermit pants.  Maybe it was the noisy neighbors across the way.  Or perhaps it was just the lateness of the hour.  Whatever it was, it was sufficient enough for me to “go wild” and take the recommended two Alka-Seltzer nighttime cold capsules.

At first, nothing out of the ordinary happened.  I took my turn on a couple of Scrabble games on facebook, spread my quilt upon my bed, and contently settled in for the expected restful night of sleep.  And I did sleep.  For a little bit.  Then, my sleepy train curved around the bend and entered Freaky-ville.  I woke up instantly out of dream sensing that something was wrong.  My legs were upset.  “It must be my blanket,” I thought.  So I sat up and took off the quilt.  While I was sitting up, it occurred to me that the idea of upset legs was silly, so I returned my quilt and laid back down.  But my legs were still perturbed.  I’m not sure how else to describe it.  They wanted to do something–anything–as long as they didn’t have to just lie there.  But my head had other plans.  The top half of me was super drowsy.  But the bottom half?  My bottom half wanted to laugh and jump and pretend to be popcorn on a trampoline.  My legs wanted to be unscrewed from my kill-joy body so that they could do cartwheels in a field of sand, pebbles, or those squishy stress-balls.  My arms wanted to see how far they could stretch between wrist and shoulder.  Across the street?  Around the building?  Up to the sky?  I remember repeating the cycle of “my legs do not like this blanket,” remove blanket, “that was nonsensical,” return blanket, lie back down, “my legs do not like this blanket,”…and so on for a considerable amount of time.  I also remember trying to massage and stretch my legs (and my arms for the times they seemed fairly vexed).  I even got up and walked around.  But my top half was so tired.  Both sides resented each other.

I don’t recall when or how I was able to finally quiet my legs.  But I woke up around 11:00 this morning with my Kermit pants missing, the closet light on, and confusion of how the sun the could rise in the west.  I had an abundant supply of mucous (much more than before) and only a vague recollection of what happened over the course of night.  I went to my medicine cabinet and pulled out the Alka-Seltzer box, covered in warnings and directions to make sure I hadn’t taken too much.  I hadn’t.  “May cause excitability, especially in children” looked back at me.

When I hear the word “excitable,” I think of emotional excitability.  It seems like an innocuous (and subjective) symptom to have.  But physiological excitability is something else all together.  And it’s not nearly as enjoyable.

PS:  Alka-Seltzer, give me back my pants.





One more chance! The Good, the Bad, and the Monkey closes on Nov. 19th!

13 11 2009

Looking for something fun to do next Thursday?  Please come check out The Good, the Bad, and the Monkey before it closes its Chicago run!

“Rountree is amusingly unafraid…[her] quirky approach has considerable charm and appeal.” ~The Chicago Tribune

“Amanda’s energetic and light performance style is the real anchor of the show…her sense of comedic timing is in full display.”  ~An Angry White Guy in Chicagomonkey poster square

The Good, The Bad, and The Monkey
Singlehood, Dating, and the Search for Something Real
Amanda Rountree takes a hilarious–and at times, heartbreaking–look at the cycles of relationships and the myths that we tell ourselves about finding a soul mate…..using sock monkeys.

Written and Performed by Amanda Rountree
Directed by Jen Ellison

Get your tickets at the door–just $10 (cash only)

Chemically Imbalanced Theater
1420 Irving Park Road
Chicago, IL

Thursday at 8pm ~ November 19

Please click here for more info about the show!








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 33 other followers