The Actors’ Gang, now in residence at the historic Ivy Substation in
Culver City, is celebrating its 25th anniversary. The substation,
constructed in 1907 by the Los Angeles Pacific Railroad, looks more
like a Spanish mission than an electric power facility, strangely
appropriate for The Actors’ Gang, which is both a theater troupe with a
strong sense of mission and a longtime source of power plays and
electric performances (and that’s as far as I’m willing to stretch this
metaphor).
Over the years, The Actors’ Gang has mounted more than 100 productions,
including interpretations of Molière, Ibsen, Brecht and Shakespeare
(last summer, they did a children’s version of “Titus Andronicus”
called “Titus the Clownicus” that was performed for free in Culver
City’s Media Park).
Recently, I spoke with several founding and longtime members of The
Actors’ Gang, including Tim Robbins, VJ Foster, Michael Schlitt and
Cynthia Ettinger as well as current managing director Greg Reiner,
about the past, present and future of the company.
As to the history of The Actors’ Gang, Robbins said, “It’s a long road,
filled with great joy, conflicts that have risen up, [people] who have
fallen out [and] egos.” That being said, Robbins said that the
challenge was “to create a safe environment where people can work.”
But first, let’s turn back the clock to 1979.
“The company started at UCLA,” Schlitt recalled in a phone interview. “A lot of guys bonded playing softball,” he explained.
There was an intramural softball league team that featured many future
members of The Actors’ Gang. Schlitt claimed that, at first, their
college major, theater arts, was mistaken for their team’s name, and
they bonded over the humiliation of so unmacho a moniker.
Robbins recalls it differently, insisting that the team’s name was
“Male Death Cult” and that its flag was a skull and crossed baseball
bats (Foster agreed, adding that they won the intramural championship).
Let’s start over: Between 1979 and 1981, there was once a bunch of guy
guys who were into theater at UCLA, including Robbins, Lee Arenberg,
Richard Olivier, Ron Campbell, Brett Hinckley, Foster, Ned Bellamy,
R.A. White and Schlitt.
Robbins was a transfer student, who although born in Los Angeles, had
grown up in New York and had been performing and directing plays since
he was a teenager. He had attended two years at the State University of
New York at Plattsburgh, then came to Los Angeles and spent a year
gaining residency before entering UCLA with the goal of performing
theater.
This was the dawn of the 1980s, and although President Ronald Reagan
and Peggy Noonan had declared it “Morning in America,” Robbins was
filled with the energy and anger of New Wave Punk Rock, whose
soundtrack was supplied by The Clash, X and Black Flag. In UCLA’s
theater department and on the intramural teams he found like-minded
souls.
In New York, Patti Smith had left theater to find rock and roll and
reached back to Arthur Rimbaud and the French Symbolists for
inspiration. Robbins decided to take Punk and bring it to Los Angeles
theater, and for inspiration, he turned to a French work that launched
the Theater of the Absurd, Alfred Jarry’s 1896 play, “Ubu the King.”
“Ubu was wild, funny stuff,” Robbins recalled.
As part of the theater program each semester, students staged a
production. Robbins’ 1981 production of “Ubu,” assisted by Olivier, was
so successful that Robbins and the assorted actors pledged to stage it
again.
Foster said the production was compelled by Robbins’ energy. Schlitt
spoke of “the power of Tim’s personality” that made people want to
“follow him into the breach.” Trying to explain it today, some 25 years
later, Schlitt said: “We were stupid twentysomethings.”
Robbins recalled that they made a deal with the now-razed Pilot Theater
to perform “Ubu” as a midnight show on Friday and Saturday nights. The
other production would end by 11, Robbins said, and then they would
have an hour to get the stage ready for their production, and they
would split the gate. The show ran for about six months.
“We got a great crowd; young people, tremendous reviews.” Robbins said.
That original production featured Olivier, Arenberg, and Campbell.
Campbell is the one who came up with the company’s name “The Actors’
Gang.”
The company continued working production to production for awhile.
Ettinger recalled meeting every few weeks to do workshops where they
improvised in commedia dell’arte style.
Over the next few years, The Actors’ Gang performed productions of “A
Midsummer’s Night Dream” in 1984, with Robbins as Oberon and Bellamy as
Bottom; “Methusalem” in 1985 with Campbell, Arenberg, Helen Hunt and
Ebbe Roe Smith, and the 1987 “Violence,” which Robbins directed and
co-wrote with Adam Simon and whose cast members included John Cusack
and Jeremy Piven (Cusack and Robbins had been in the movie,
“Tapeheads,” together).
In those early days, their performances could yield surprising
encounters. Schlitt recalled that for a while they performed in a
coffee house run by Schmitty, a character who bordered on the savant.
One night they heard that Laurence Olivier was coming to see a
production of his son, Richard, and there was much anticipation over
what would happen when Sir Laurence met Schmitty.
When Sir Lawrence arrived, Schmitty went up to him. Schmitty’s words to
the great actor?” He treated him like someone off the street: “$5 gets
you a cup of coffee and a seat,” Schmitty said. Sir Lawrence, somewhat
surprised, paid up.
The 1984 Olympics was, in its own way, a watershed event for the
troupe. As part of the events surrounding the Olympics, Los Angeles was
home to the Olympic Festival of the Arts, which brought the Theâtre du
Soleil and George Bigot (pronounced Bee-zO) to L.A.
“The plays were extraordinary, ‘Richard II’ and ‘Henry V,'” recalled Schlitt.
Several of the members of The Actors’ Gang, including Robbins, took
workshops with Bigot. “We said: ‘This is it.'” They had found the
technique they were looking for.
“We had all the energy and the passion, but we didn’t have the form or the discipline of how to get there,” Robbins said.
The techniques they learned from Bigot became known as “The Style.”
Some of those techniques involve a very in-your-face, very
confrontational form of acting that attempts to engage the audience and
is not afraid to have direct eye contact with those sitting in the
seats. It also involves focusing on the emotional content of a role as
one of four basic emotions: happy, sad, angry and afraid.
“It was a critical development,'” Schlitt said, echoing Robbins’ comments that they needed a way to channel their exuberance.
Ettinger, who joined the company early on, said The Style was highly
creative, yet afforded them a discipline. “There’s freedom within the
form,” she said.
Robbins also credits Bigot with teaching them never to take the
audience for granted — to regard each audience member as if he spent
his last $10 and walked 10 miles to see their performance — and to
never forget that the audience is there to be entertained, not lectured.
One of the signatures of The Actors’ Gang has been its ability to
workshop and develop plays through improvisational and other acting
exercises. Doing so has been a great benefit to actors and writers
alike — to be able to start from an idea or a character and develop it
into a play.
In 1987, Tim Robbins and Simon co-wrote “Carnage, a Comedy,” a play
about the rise of the religious right — televangelism with apocalyptic
consequences — which is currently being reprised through March 29. The
original cast included Arenberg, Bellamy, Ettinger, Foster, Lisa
Moncure, Kyle Gass and Dean Robinson. At the time, the religious right,
as embodied by Jimmy Swaggart and Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, appeared
to have more entertainment value than political muscle. But “Carnage”
was prescient in speaking to the power and delirium that apocalypse
promises.
“Carnage,” directed by Robbins, had its premiere as part of
Pipeline/MOCA’s 1987 Angel’s Flight series. It was so successful, that
in 1988, it opened at the Tiffany Theater on Sunset Boulevard and then
traveled in 1989 to the Edinburgh International Festival in Scotland
and the Public Theatre in New York.
During the time that “Carnage” was performed at the Tiffany, The
Actors’ Gang decided to perform another play with it, in repertory —
“Freaks,” written by Schlitt and White and directed by Schlitt. Every
night, the same actors would finish “Carnage,” a very demanding play,
and then suit up for “Freaks,” in which each actor was cast very much
against type. For example, Arenberg, very much the dramaturge of the
group (Schlitt called him “the playwright’s best friend”), played a
mute, and Foster, a very physical actor, played Zoltan, a Hungarian
gypsy with no body below the waist.
Robbins once told Rolling Stone that in marked contrast to the vanity
of most Hollywood actors, “in The Actors’ Gang, you find people who
want to play characters that are grotesque.”
Many of the actors I interviewed recalled the run of “Carnage” and
“Freaks” in repertory as one of the artistic highlights of The Actors’
Gang. “We were creating really good work,” Ettinger said. “Freaks”
became one of those talked-about remembered productions. “The results
were magical,” Schlitt said.
So much so, that this year for the 25th anniversary of The Actors’
Gang, when Robbins asked Schlitt if he would like to revive “Freaks,”
Schlitt declined, preferring to let the memory of “Freaks,” in his
words, “remain in the ether.” Instead Schlitt is directing a revival of
Mitch Watson’s “Klüb,” opening April 11, a play described as “A Chorus
Line” meets “No Exit.”
The run of “Carnage” is also worth a footnote for another Actors’ Gang
performer who appeared in one of its productions — I’ll let Schlitt
tell the story.
“One of the early productions, ‘Inside Eddie Bienstock,’ had a small
part for a young child,” Schlitt said. “His mom would bring him to the
theater.”
A few years later, White was teaching at Crossroads, and there was a
kid who, “rather than go home, used to hang out at White’s home,
reading. He was like a fixture.” He would sit there as Schlitt and
White worked on “The Big Show.” It turned out that kid was the same one
who appeared in “Eddie Bienstock.” “He was very quiet.” Schlitt said.
“R.A. White said we should cast him in something; he was really
talented. They made him an anonymous soldier in ‘The Big Show,'” then
one day, the kid got his chance to do a full-on role.
“Suddenly, this guy is really talented.” Schlitt recalled. “He’s got
some crazy juice. He has a charisma.” Turned out that kid was Jack
Black.
It was in “The Big Show” that Black met castmate Gass, who taught him
to play guitar and with whom Black would eventually form “Tenacious D.”
Black went on to appear in the traveling version of “Carnage.”
Schlitt recalled that one New Year’s Eve, he asked Black, “What’s your
goal for next year? What do you really want to do in life?”
Black answered, referencing The Style: “I really want to work on
sadness.” I guess he’s still working on it — and the rest is the
history of Black.
In 1992, The Actors’ Gang did a full season at the Second Stage in
Santa Monica and then settled in on a location at the El Centro Stage
in Hollywood, which they renovated for a year before launching there in
1994
Throughout the 1990s, The Actors’ Gang continued to mount challenging
productions, including reinterpreting such classics as Buchner’s
“Woyzeck,” Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt,” Molière’s “Imaginary Invalid” and
Wilde’s “Salome,” as well as such innovative original productions as
Tracy Young’s “Hysteria,” and her “Dreamplay”; “Bat Boy: The Musical”
and Cintra Wilson’s “XXX Love Act” to name but a few.
Nonetheless, the facts of these productions do not tell of the
complicated growing pains the company faced. In the 1990s, although
Robbins continued to be involved, he had moved to New York, was raising
his kids and pursuing a film acting career that included “The Player,”
“The Shawshank Redemption” and directing such films as “Bob Roberts,”
“Dead Man Walking” and “Cradle Will Rock.”
As Foster explained, once Robbins had resettled to New York, he was no
longer the artistic director. The company had its own
management/decision making committee. Robbins had provided funds to
renovate and occupy the El Centro space, but he left to them the job,
as Foster put it, “to pay the bills.”
“We went into survival mode,” Foster said.
In order to help pay for the space, they turned to outside rentals,
renting the space to other companies, such as David Schwimmer’s Looking
Glass Company and the Circle X company.
Both Foster and Robbins admitted that one of the problems was that
artistic people are not always the best people to run things. As a
result, the company had no paid professionals undertaking the job of
managing the company, maintaining the space and raising the funds
necessary to do so, each of which is a full-time job.
Mark Seldis, who was managing director at the time, told the LA Weekly
that he was torn as he found his time consumed by administration rather
than by creative work.
In 2001, Robbins returned to the company as artistic director. Several
members left, among them, Seldis, Young and Chris Wells, according to
the LA Weekly. Speaking today, Robbins said it was “very difficult to
get through that transition.”
In 2001, Robbins brought back Bigot to direct a production of Chekhov’s
“The Seagull” and to conduct workshops to re-introduce old and new
members of the company to The Style.
Robbins called Bigot’s technique “a liberating approach.”
“What you get,” Robbins said, “is these amazing discoveries from the
actors. It roots the performance in the actor’s discoveries.” The
performance is better, he said, because “they own it.”
A new generation of actors became part of The Actors’ Gang. Robbins
also credited “the new blood” with re-energizing the company. Without
singling out any one actor, one can point to Angela Berliner, Justin
Zwebe, Pierre Adeli, Stephanie Carrie, Chris Schultz and Matt Hoffman
as some of the newer members.
It was also around this time that Reiner joined The Actors’ Gang as
managing director — the company’s first paid professional staff
member. Reiner saw great potential in the depth of The Actors’ Gang’s
relationships and in the work it had created.
Productions such as “The Guys,” “The Exonerated,” “1984” and “Embedded”
have since gone on to national and international tours. Foster talked
about the exhilarating experience of performing in Hong Kong and
Melbourne in front of crowds that were almost 2,000 strong.
Robbins credited Reiner with helping him realize that The Actors’ Gang
was an institution. “We got very lucky with Greg,” he said.
As The Actors’ Gang found itself on stronger financial footing, it has
also expanded its outreach in several ways. The theater offers “pay
what you can nights” and student matinees and at least one night during
each run is presented for the hearing and visually impaired.
There is now a program for middle and high school students in Culver
City, a weeklong workshop at UCLA as well as a program that works in
the prisons. There are summer workshops for children and weeklong
acting day camps for children as young as 8.
“We are creating work that provokes and invites civic dialogue,” Reiner told me.
>From its inception, political speech has been part of The Actors’ Gang
creative energy. “Theater should be a reflection and a reaction to what
is happening,” Robbins told me. And that has been true for the company
since its first production of “Ubu.”
For Robbins, this has been particularly true, as he had the opportunity
to create works not only like “Carnage” but also, most recently,
“Embedded,” which Robbins created in only three weeks and staged three
months after the invasion of Iraq. “I don’t know a better place to do
something quick — to respond to a moment,” he said.
As he explained, “We get right up on stage and start working.” Yet, as
Robbins made clear in our interview, he is always thinking “how do we
make this funny?”
Robbins believes that he has a responsibility to the audience to make
them ask questions but not to berate them or supply answers. “If you
want answers,” Robbins said, “go to a lecture.”
As for this 25th anniversary season, attending a recent show of
“Carnage”, I was struck by the vitality of the performances — the
energy, the physicality.
Directed by Beth Milles, the show’s portrayal of televangelists with
dreams of power is now an accepted reality. At the same time, when the
second act turns surreal, “Carnage” takes on an experimental feel — a
combination that some audience members may find unsatisfying. Yet in
the end, it is the performances that stay with you — and that reaffirm
the vitality of The Actors’ Gang.
As part of the 25th anniversary, “Carnage” will be followed by “Klüb,”
directed by Schlitt. Irwin Shaw’s “Bury the Dead,” a World War I drama,
is being considered for the summer. In the fall, they are hoping to
stage “The Trial of The Catonsville 9.”
At the same time, Ettinger is creating an ensemble-based piece with
music about racism in America. And at year’s end, they will reprise
Berliner’s twisted take on Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol.”
For Robbins, The Actors’ Gang 25 years later continues to be, in his
words, “a unique situation — essentially a place where I can keep
challenging myself.”
Foster said that being part of the company “has a been a real joy.” For
actors, as Robbins pointed out, the danger is always down time. Being
able to work — having a place where one can perform — is what it’s
all about.
For audiences, knowing that there is a theater where we can find actors
performing classics and new material that reflect pop culture, even as
they challenge, is reason to wish The Actors’ Gang a happy 25th
anniversary — and many more.
For more information, visit www.theactorsgang.com
Tom Teicholz is a film producer in Los Angeles. Everywhere else,
he’s an author and journalist who has written for The New York Times
Sunday Magazine, Interview and The Forward. His column appears every
other week.