Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Help Us to Continue Bringing Good Cheer in the New Year!



Dear Friend,

We had a great season this past year, producing four different shows. Plus, we're doing our best to reach audiences outside of New York City, as well. In January, we're performing at the Asheville Fringe Festival. So, if you live in or near NC, now's your chance to check us out live and in person!

For the upcoming 2017 season, the IRTE elves have opened their workshop, and are hard at work making plans for four new improvised shows. They're hoping to bring entertainment and laughter to all, and give everyone some relief from the past year.

We can't do this without contributions from people like you who want to share terrific, zany, live comedy and who want to make sure it's affordable for everybody.

If you weren't able to take part in our 2016 Indiegogo fundraiser, and would like to see  small, independent theatre thrive, there is still time to make a tax deductible gift to IRTE in 2016 through our fiscal sponsor, Fractured Atlas. To give a gift to IRTE during this charitable time of year, please go to the Fractured Atlas IRTE page and make a tax deductible donation on-line. If you prefer, you can also donate by check. Please send contributions to IRTE c/o Robert Baumgardner, 10 W 66 St, #19-H, New York, NY 10023. Checks should be made payable to Fractured Atlas, with IRTE in the memo line. IRTE is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the charitable purposes of IRTE must be made payable to “Fractured Atlas” and are taxdeductible to the extent permitted by law. We greatly appreciate it.

We at IRTE would like to wish all of you a happy holiday season and a wonderful new year! We'd also like to thank you from the bottom of our hearts for all your support over the past five years. Our 2016 fundraising efforts helped us pay for over a third of our overall costs. Our biggest expense, by far, is rent on theatre and rehearsal spaces. This year we spent over $3,400 on that alone. Donations weren't the only way you supported us. We had a blast seeing so many of you in the audience for multiple shows in our season.
 

Happy Holidays from all of us at IRTE, and we look forward to seeing you for our excit
ing new 2017 season (announcement coming soon)!

Nannette Deasy, Artistic Director
Robert Baumgardner
Curt Dixon
Jamie Maloney
Bill Berg


Monday, July 25, 2016

Ravening Mummies, Fascist Elephants, and a Fearless Lady Archaeologist


Meet IRTE’s New Jersey Nora

"New Jersey" Nora. Photo Courtesy of Roberto Tobar

by Jeff O'Leary


Back by popular demand, IRTE’s archaeological adventure show, ‘Dig,’ will be making a very special appearance at the Midtown International Theater Festival -- featuring New Jersey Nora, a very special lady archaeologist.  Guest star Jeff O’Leary interviewed our heroine to learn what makes this brilliant and intrepid adventuress tick.  Read on!

How did you get your start as an archaeologist/explorer? Any mentors, people you pattern you career after?
Mummies are fun on dates but they have commitment issues
My passion for archaeology began as a small child. I traveled the globe with my parents Norman and Noelle Netless who were famous aerialists for Giggling Brothers World of Wonders Circus. They were the headliners until tragically murdered by a Nazi elephant. Spending my earliest years under the big top, I learned many skills invaluable to a budding archaeologist - knife throwing, whip wielding, sharp-shooting, horseback riding, flying aircraft, and Sanskrit. After my parents untimely demise, I was sent to live with my great uncle Alpheus Leakey Fawcett, an Egyptopaleoanthroapologist at Camden, New Jersey's renowned University of University. It was he who instilled in me a great respect for rescuing ancient antiquities from moldering ruins and indifferent governments and placing them where they belong - IN A MUSEUM! (preferably a Western one).

Batman has his Robin, Obama has his Biden -- any sidekicks that you have fond feelings for?

I've gone through TA's like a hot knife through butter. A TA's career in my class is often short-lived (literally). The "field research" can be a bit...fraught...  Sadly, I can barely remember the faces of many of my teachers assistants. It's a blur ('cause they've usually been ripped off by some mummy).

Book of the Dead -- not appropriate bedtime reading
New Jersey Nora in action! Photo Courtesy of Roberto Tobar
However, there was one companion who will always have a special place in my heart. Her name was Rags, an orphan who stowed away in my steamer trunk while I was lecturing on the dangers of reading aloud from the Book of the Dead at the British Museum in London. I'm pretty sure Rags wasn't her family name, but it seemed appropriate given her deplorable fashion sense. I taught her so many things during our many adventures together - how to drive a stick shift, how to remove blood stains from khaki, hiding in wicker baskets, dusting, and that monkeys are not your friends...


It can get pretty lonely out there in the jungle. Is there are special someone in your life that keeps you company when you are on the trail of a rare artifact?

I'm a romantic. I've been married countless times and never divorced (usually because of mummies).

Indiana Jones is famously afraid of snakes. What sort of things give you the creeps?

Elephants with Fascist leanings.


Do you have a "bucket list" of archaeological discoveries?

I've been hot on the trail of unearthing Jesus' Yearbook. Fingers crossed!





Want to see more of New Jersey Nora?  Then don't miss this special performance of IRTE’s Dig:

Midtown International Theater Festival
Saturday, July 30 at 9 PM - 9:45 PM
WorkShop Theater's Jewel Box Theater,
312 West 36th Street, Fourth Floor,
New York, NY 10018
Tickets: $20

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

The Two Davids, a Dueling Interview

David E. Johnston

Mr. David Jay












By Jamie Maloney

I had the rare opportunity to talk to both David Johnston AND Mr David Jay, long time IRTE collaborators, about their experiences with IRTE and the upcoming production Last Resort.


Jamie: How did you come to be involved with IRTE?

David Johnston
: I worked with Brad Barton, who is an improv comic and friends with IRTE. He knew I was starting a band called “Gift of Tongues” and that IRTE was looking for musical guests for their shows.

Nannette Deasy "Jay" declined to comment
on this interview

Mr. David Jay: When Gift of Tongues bowed out, my ex girlfriend/wife Nannette asked me to come perform at the last minute

Jamie: How long have you been a GIRTE? In which IRTE productions have you appeared?

David Johnston
: I have been a GIRTE for about 4 years. Gift of Tongues appeared in the 2013 season and in one show in 2014:

Interludes 2063, vIRTEgo Circus, and Space Probe. The 2014 show was The Scary

Mr. David Jay: Seems like forever. I started in the 2014 season with vIRTE Go-Go. In Magic Zoo I did an excerpt of my upcoming one-man show “Zoo-sical- Behind the Bars of the Human Zoo”. Then I headlined The League of Extraordinary Blondes .In 2015 I performed in every goddamn show of the season

Jamie: Do you have a favorite memory of your experiences with IRTE? What do you like most about performing in IRTE shows?

David Johnston: One of my favorite Gift of Tongues experiences was for Space Probe, when I wanted to do music that combined 70’s space funk with songs about clones. And I had Matt Dallow on theremin- which I think is one of the coolest instruments.

Mr David Jay: My favorite memory was at DIG!, when I made 4 audience feel like they had to leave the theater. I was just doing a simple monologue about suppositories and my mother’s French manicures. What’s the big deal?

Jamie: Do you have any interesting talents or abilities that people might be surprised to know about?


Mr David Jay: No. Everything you need to know is right on stage

David Johnston: For about 5 years I had a company called “The Bubble Roome” which made personal care products like soap and body butter and things like that. I started in my tiny Brooklyn kitchen and then was able to have someone else manufacture my recipes as the products got into over 100 stores.

Jamie: The current IRTE show, “Last Resort” is all about wish fulfillment. Do you have a secret wish you’d like to share with everyone?


David Johnston:
Gift of Tongues doing a huge spectacle show at the BAM Opera House

Mr David Jay: My secret wish: to always have a follow-spot, and a fresh glass of Maker’s Mark on stage at all times

Jamie: So what will you be doing for the show this time around?


Mr David Jay: Breaking the rules, bridging gaps, and bringing people of different colors together under a rainbow of glitter.

Jamie: Do you have anything else happening that you’d like people to know about?

David Johnston: We’re working on a video for one of our songs from our last CD, which is called Dahmeresque. It will like a bloody valentine.

Mr David Jay: I’m currently very constipated.

Jamie: Thanks David and David, I’ll see you at showtime.


Don't miss 
LAST RESORT

Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m.
June 10, 11, 17 & 18
The Producer’s Club
358 W 44th St, New York, NY
Tickets: $12

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Aged Wisdom: 21 Pieces of Advice from Some Old Fart

Actual photo
By Lane Brickmason, Curmudgeon
(...as told to William Berg)

  1. Work is overrated. If I could do it all over again I’d retire in my twenties and work shit jobs in my sixties.
  2. Never hold a grudge or a fart. You’ll feel much better if you let it all go. Some say true freedom is the freedom to fart whenever and wherever you need to.
  3. Always have sex with a woman who wants to have sex with you. Whatever mess it may make in the moment, you’ll regret it later if you don’t do it.
  4. Free yourself from guilt. If no one saw you do it and you didn’t get caught, stop worrying about it.
  5. Always sign a pre-nup. Trust me on this.
  6. Never trust a politician, a lawyer, or your in-laws. In the end, they’re all out to get you.
  7. Learn to play a musical instrument. It’ll help get you laid when you’re young and keep you company when you’re old.
  8. Don’t concern yourself with fashion. Wear whatever the hell you like wearing.
  9. Learn how to handle a firearm. Even if you don’t ever own a gun, it’s a good skill to have and you just never know when you might need it.
  10. Learn how to get your own food, whether it’s hunting, fishing, or gardening. Again, you never know.
  11. Keep fit and learn how to work with your hands. If you don’t build your own house, at least you can dig your own grave.
  12. Do your goddamn dishes! It’s inconsiderate and disgusting, and nothing pleases a woman more than a man doing a simple chore.
  13. Always keep your driver’s license and your library card current. There’s more than one way to get away!
  14. Don’t get caught up in always having the latest technological gadget. Learn how to do things the old ways and you’ll be doing just fine.
  15. Learn how to ride a horse or a motorcycle. Do I need to explain why?
  16. Learn to fly a plane, pilot a boat, or drive a train. Good for when the shit really hits the fan.
  17. Avoid doctors unless absolutely necessary. They’re like car mechanics but not as honest.
  18. On the subject of perfume: when ladies wear just a little bit it adds a nice flavor to their already alluring scent. Men, on the other hand, should NEVER wear perfume. That garbage just stinks! I’d rather smell my own farts.
  19. If you ever get the chance to go up in a UFO - DON’T F*CKING DO IT!!!
  20. Always have a smile ready. It’s good for charming a lady or sticking it to someone who’s trying to get you down.
  21. Make sure you make out a will and give clear instructions for after your death. Don’t be a pain in the ass from the grave!


The most important piece of advice..?
Don't miss
LAST RESORT

Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m.
June 10, 11, 17 & 18
The Producer’s Club
358 W 44th St, New York, NY
Tickets: $12

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Meet GIRTE Extraordinaire, Evie Aronson

As with all IRTE productions, Happy Birthday, Stupid Kid! (opening May 13) features some pretty amazing guest performers. Evie Aronson (Snooty Wilcox) has been a long-time GIRTE (Guest-Of-IRTE, rhymes with "purty") and one of our all-time favorites!

IRTE Ensemble member Jamie Maloney, sat down with Evie after a recent rehearsal...


Jamie: So... how did you come to be involved with IRTE?

Evie: I know the founders and members of IRTE from back in the day when we studied and performed together at Gotham City Improv. I was delighted to be invited to perform with them as a "GIRTE."



Jamie: How long have you been a GIRTE? In which IRTE productions have you appeared?

Evie: I've been a GIRTE since 2013 and I have had the privilege of performing the shows in NYC as well as across the country in various festivals!...

That Kick Ass Time Jump Show @ New Orleans Improv Festival
vIRTEgo Circus @ Tampa Improv Festival
Space Probe @ New York Improv Festival
Evie in vIRTEgo Circus. Photo courtesy of Tampa Improv Festival
The Scary @ Boston Comedy Arts Festival
vIRTE Go-Go!
The Magic Zoo @ Philadelphia Improv Festival
Wow Wee!
Adrift
Late Night News
Camp Fitness
Calamity!
Big, Rich & Powerful


Jamie: Do you have a favorite memory of your experiences with IRTE? What do you like most about performing in IRTE shows?

I love performing in  IRTE shows because they are character based and very theatrical.  We use wigs and props to add an extra element of theatricity (is that a word?).... The IRTE ensemble is very well trained and easy to work with - we have a lot of fun while at the same time being "serious" about the work.  They are also very good about the "business" side of show business.... everyone helps out with promoting the show and working to get an audience in the seats.

My favorite IRTE moments were when my character Charlene Nelson Reilly jumped off the cruise ship in Adrift chasing after something shiney in the water - and there was a long drowning scene using the prop of a blue sheet. 
Adrift (Evie Aronson and Nannette Deasy. Photo: Roberto Tobar)

My next favorite was at the Tampa Improv Festival when we were acting out one of the audience member's days.... and there was a fantastic Starbucks freak out started by you, Jamie   -it was so much fun!!! (If you want to see it, it starts around minute 44:00 here)


Jamie: Do you have any interesting talents or abilities that people might be surprised to know about?

The Magic Zoo, (Evie Aronson, Jeff O'Leary, Alena Acker and Marcia Sofley. 
Photo: Roberto Tobar)
I love to wear wigs on stage it really helps me with a character. My interesting talents have been showcased in some IRTE shows such as in The Magic Zoo where I played Twitty the Bird and I played by piccolo.

I am also a licensed Zumba Instructor!   http://evelyn11.zumba.com/


Jamie: "Happy Birthday, Stupid Kid!” takes place during a child's 12th Birthday party. Has the rehearsal process brought back any cherished childhood memories (or traumatizing flashbacks?)

Evie: Working on HBSK has made me reminisce about lots of Birthdays past....it is funny what stays in your memory. One of my favorite birthday cakes was when I was 10 or 11 - a vanilla cake with white icing and blue and pink icing flowers, and it had a plastic ballerina in "attitude" stuck in the top  - she had silver toe shoes and I remember how weird it was that the leg that was sticking in the cake had a freakishly long foot/toe on it so that it could stick pretty deep into the top of the cake, but still look like the toe was resting on the top of the cake.  I probably still have her somewhere in a box of stuff.  
Zoltar (Photo Courtesy of  zoltarmachine.com)

My family spent our summers at a cottage in Upstate NY (Cayuga Lake) so the big birthday party for us and our "lake" friends was a trip to Roseland Amusement Park - my favorite ride was the Haunted House and I always had to get my fortune told by the gypsy in the machine similar to Zoltar in the movie "Big" - or maybe it was actually Zoltar...I'm old and can't remember.  After the amusement Park we would stop off at the local Firehouse or Church that was having a Chicken BBQ that night with Biscuits, coleslaw, corn on the cob.  That was the life.  These days my birthday consists of a shot of tequila and crying in the bathroom for about 30 minutes till my mascara is running down my face - maybe this year I will just focus on my memories of Birthdays at the Finger Lakes :)


Jamie: Do you have anything else happening that you’d like people to know about?

Evie: Look for me in stand up shows in the future around NYC.... ( I started on stage in stand up and then started in Improv around 2001).

My favorite project I've ever done was a parody short of Apocalypse Now - watch it (in 2 parts ) on YouTube:

A PUCKER LIPS NOW


Thank you for the opportunity to share my GIRTE stories!!!! :)

Jamie: No, thank YOU!

To see Evie in action, join us at IRTE’s production of  

Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m. 
May 13, 14, 20 & 21
The Producer’s Club
358 W 44th St, New York, NY

Sunday, April 10, 2016

From the files of IRTE’s Dirt Digger, Amateur Boner...



Dirt Digger.jpeg
Dirt Digger, amateur Bone Buff
For IRTE’s upcoming archaeological adventure show, ‘Dig’, IRTE’s own amateur bone buff, Dirt Digger, sat down with real-life archaeologist and all around good guy, Dr. Geoffrey Undergrass, to pick his brain about the science and faith of archaeology and to sift through the lies and real facts about those who dig human remains.

Here’s part of that conversation…

DD: So, first and foremost, I think I have to ask the obvious question, “what’s the difference between archaeology and anthropology?”

JeffasCupid.jpg
Dr. Geoffrey Undergrass

Dr. GU: (laughs) Ok, well, uh, anthropology is the broad discipline of the study of human beings, and archaeology is a sub-discipline underneath anthropology where you look at the material remains of human culture. Some of us get tired of being asked at parties what we do and when we say “I’m an archaeologist” see the person go off on some wild tangent about dinosaurs. That’s paleontology! Archaeologist’s don’t do dinosaurs.

DD: Are all archaeologists atheists? Or do you believe that God scattered all those dinosaur bones to test our faith?
Dr. GU: (clears his throat to answer)

DD: Or, OR -- that aliens buried all those artifacts to mess with us?

Dr. GU: I think that God is an alien and that in His Infinite Wisdom did try to hide artifacts to test our faith - it all will be revealed during judgment day. So, yeah, I think we’ll find out for sure.

DD: ARE all archaeologists atheists?

11737981_10204513665822670_1560191318479786851_n.jpgDr. GU: (chuckles) I think most tend to be, uh, and I think it’s typical of what goes along with most sciences. I think people that generally have chosen a worldview that relies more on empirical evidence and employing the scientific method tend to not be more, sort of, faith-based in their belief system. So that tends to lend itself to a more atheist worldview. Most people that tend to have a strong Christian worldview, you know, look at archaeology and tend to see their faith reflected in that, either seeing Noah’s flood or uh, you know, the whole idea of a six-thousand year old world and trying to find justification for that...instead of relying on the scientific method and trusting in things like radiocarbon dating as a legitimate dating technique.




DD: Ooh, yeah! Tell us about carbon dating! And is there an app for that?


Dr. GU: Ha - no. There’s no app for that. There should be! But, no. Carbon dating is a good way that archaeologists tend to use to find out an absolute age of anything that’s organic that you would find, so whether it be a piece of wood or bone or a piece of clothing, perhaps, or something of that nature. Everything alive today is made mostly of carbon, and there’s a small amount of that carbon that is radioactive. And, as you live you take in carbon, and when you die the carbon is sort of frozen in time, uh, the moment that you die because you’re not taking in any new carbon. So that little bit of radioactive carbon that’s in your body decays at a very steady rate and however much of that carbon is left at the time that you date it you can tell how long ago that organic thing died. So it’s a very reliable technique if you do things properly to find out how old something is. But because of the rate of the decay, the time period that you can get a reliable date is somewhere between, you know, several hundred and up to about 50,000 years ago...

2435.jpg
Indiana Jones, Not a REAL archaeologist
DD: Sounds like about how long it’s been since I was last dating...

DD: ...Uh. Ok. Um. So, is Indiana Jones the most famous archaeologist or what?

Dr. GU: Haha! Certainly the most famous fictional archaeologist. When you talk about REAL archaeologists, somebody like Louis and Mary Leakey come to mind as maybe some people that most folks may have heard of. And their son, Richard Leakey.

DD: Oh yeah, I know Richard!

Dr. GU: Yeah, uh...So the Leakeys were, you know, sort of the First Family of archaeologists in Africa, that discovered a lot of really significant early human ancestors.

DD: Including “Lucy”?

Dr. GU: Um, no. It was actually a guy named Tim White and a couple other researchers from California, Berkley, that found Lucy. But they were certainly inspired by the Leakeys to go over and do the work over there.            
     
DD: Have you ever been on a dig where you had to avoid booby traps.

Dr. GU: (big laugh) Not so much booby traps, but sometimes we have to avoid a lot of cowpies.

DD: So not booby traps, but doody traps.

Dr. GU: Haha -- yeah, doody traps. Yeah. And you also want to avoid any anti-government types. You know you want to make sure you avoid those folks.

DD: Has anyone ever died on a dig you were on? And was it from booby traps?

Dr. GU: No. No one has ever died from a booby trap on a dig.

DD: Ok.
_49137806_dig.jpg

Dr. GU: But a friend of mine was on a dig where a guy died from heat stroke or maybe a heart attack, so it’s definitely possible.

DD: Ok. Good. Um…

Dr. GU: (clears his throat)

DD: Oh! What’s the most important thing you’ve ever dug up?


Dr. GU: The thing that comes to mind is I was working on a dig in Austin, Texas. And it was a very early archaeological site - probably about 12,000 years old, and while we were there we found an inscribed tablet that appeared to be very early artwork from these folks that they’d left behind. And it was pretty significant because up until this find there’d only been one other artifact like this from this general area from that time period, so this was only the second of such examples of this very early artwork. So, that was pretty cool.

DD: Yeah. Cool.


QUESTIONS, ANSWERS and OBSERVATIONS from REAL ARCHAEOLOGISTS


Several Stupid Questions

"Why did the Indians bury their stuff under so much dirt?"
“Why did they build so far from the road?”
"How did you know to dig here to find those square holes?"
"But why did the Indians bury the bones in these square holes?"
"Did these bison die in Noah's flood?"
"Now these bison, were they dinosaurs?"


6 Misconceptions Corrected

1.  Most people think archaeologists "dig" dinosaurs.  They don't.  Those are paleontologists.  Archaeologists don't do dinosaurs.

2.  Archaeologists are often thought of in two disparate groups:  professor/adventurers (Indiana Jones), and avocational hobbyists who go out on weekends to collect cool shit.  Neither is particularly accurate.

3.  When people volunteer to go out and actually do archaeology, they are horrified by how boring and tedious it is.  The actual digging is very slow, and the paperwork and documentation is enormous.

4.  Religious people always ask questions that try to validate their preconceptions.  "So that dirt there looks like it came from Noah's Flood, eh?"

5.  People are terribly disappointed to find out that archaeology does not usually involve monumental ruins, secret passages, and burial curses.  Instead it most commonly involves tiny pieces of broken stone tools and pottery.

6.  Archaeologists' biggest secret:  if we don't know the purpose of some artifact or structure, it is "ceremonial."

Dig2 small.jpeg

For more exciting and hilarious archaeological artifacts unearthed, join us at IRTE’s production of Dig




Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m.
April 15 & 16, 22 & 23
The Producer’s Club
358 W 44th St, New York, NY



Special thanks to Jeff Overturf, REAL Archaeologist, Brewer, and all around good guy! And thanks, as well, to all of Jeff’s archaeologist friends and colleagues who contributed to the writing of this article.
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