Category Archives: Holly Twyford

Interrogating circumstances

‘Contractions’
Through Jan. 27
The Studio Theatre (Studio 2ndstage)
1501 14th Street, NW
$30-$35
202-332-3300
studiotheatre.org

Holly Twyford, Alyssa Wilmoth Keegan, Contractions, Studio Theatre, theater, gay news, Washington Blade

Holly Twyford (left) and Alyssa Wilmoth Keegan in ‘Contractions.’ (Photo by Scott Suchmann; courtesy of Studio Theatre)

With “Contractions,” British playwright Mike Bartlett takes the horrors of corporate servitude to the nth degree.

Now making its American premiere at Studio 2ndStage, Bartlett’s workplace satire is laugh-out-loud funny and menacingly dark at once. It unfolds through a series of increasingly uncomfortable meetings in which Emma (Alyssa Wilmoth Keegan), a newly hired sales professional at an unnamed corporation, is relentlessly and methodically questioned by a bizarrely inquisitive manager (Holly Twyford). Both clad in sleek black suits (pants for the manager and skirts for Emma) and super-high heels, the pair review employee regulations giving special attention to the sections pertaining to romantic and sexual relationships among employees.

Any suspicions that the manager’s obsessive inquiry into the most minute details of Emma’s sex life is driven by prurient interests or perhaps her lustful designs on the new, younger employee are rather quickly put to rest when it becomes abundantly clear that her every move — even the most perverse — are done to benefit the company’s bottom line.

More and more, the manager’s inquiries and directives grow ludicrously outrageous. Initially Emma is her superior’s match, but not for long. Volleys build into one-sided brutal attacks and it’s soon evident that Emma can’t compete with a company-backed opponent. After being frequently reminded about the sluggish job market and that there are more than a hundred applicants ready and willing to fill her corporate position, Emma surrenders to HR’s demands. She devolves from confident and sexy to broken and bereft. At one point, Emma asks the heartless boss if she bleeds. And while we never get that answer, we do become acquainted with some of Emma’s bodily fluids. And no wonder with the battering she goes through.

British director Duncan Macmillan ably helms the top-notch production and Twyford and Wilmoth Keegan both deliver knockout performances. With a frozen smile, glazed eyes and hilariously placed pauses, Twyford (who is gay) is at the top of her game as the corporate automaton. Wilmoth Keegan is equally terrific and wonderfully natural as Emma.

“Contractions” is not the first time Twyford and Wilmoth Keegan have successfully joined forces. In the fall of 2011, Wilmoth Keegan played the victim of a brutal gay bashing in “Stop Kiss,” Diane Son’s play about women friends turned lovers. The well-received No Rules Theatre Company production marked Twyford’s directorial debut.

Bartlett, the playwright, is best known for “Cock,” his hit play (in London and New York) about a happily partnered gay man who falls in love with a woman.

“Contractions” is set entirely in the manager’s stark office. Designed by Luciana Stecconi, it’s a minimalist’s wet dream: white walls, white floors, white light (compliments of Colin K. Bills), and two white office chairs positioned at opposite ends of a long, white conference table. Discreetly built-in cabinets contain scarily detailed personnel files. No clutter. No art. No signs of life at all really. It’s a sterile space, perfectly suited for surgically excising what makes an employee human.

Helen Hayes noms announced

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The 2011 Helen Hayes Awards (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

Winning awards isn’t important, some say. It’s the work that counts. That may be so, but nonetheless most everyone loves a good horse race and local theater professionals and their fans are no exception.

On Monday night at the National Theatre, theatreWashington announced nominations for the 29th annual Helen Hayes Awards. D.C.’s equivalent to Broadway’s Tony awards, the prestigious prizes are given to reward excellence in professional theater in the greater Washington area. And similar to years past, quite a few gay theater folks are among those nominated.

Gathered in the theater’s cozy Helen Hayes gallery, guests listened attentively as theatreWashington CEO and president Linda Levy read off a long list of nominees (more than 150 in 26 categories) selected by 41 judges from 201 eligible productions that ran throughout 2012. Garnering the most nominations for outstanding resident musical was Toby’s Dinner Theatre’s production of “The Color Purple” followed closely by Signature’s Theatre “Dreamgirls.” For outstanding resident play Woolly Mammoth’s “The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity” (an exploration of wrestling and politics) and Folger Theatre’s wild west-set “The Taming of the Shrew” received the most nods.

Rather surprisingly, the movement-based Synetic Theatre that typically picks up heaps of nominations (and wins), received zero this time around.

Shakespeare Theater, gay news, Washington Blade

Michael Kahn (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Included among the many nominees were gay directors Michael Kahn (Shakespeare Theatre Company’s “The Government Inspector”), John Vreeke (Woolly Mammoth’s “Chad Deity”), Serge Seiden (MetroStage’s “Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris”), and Matthew Gardiner (Signature’s “Dreamgirls”). Talented gay musical director Jon Kalbfleisch was also nominated for his vital contributions to Signature’s “Dreamgirls.”

Nicholas Rodriguez, theater, actor, gay news, Washington Blade

Nicholas Rodriguez (Washington Blade photo by Pete Exis)

Gay actor Bobby Smith was nominated for both a lead (the title role in the musical revue “Jacques Brel,” and supporting performance (the sadistic dentist in Olney Theatre’s “Little Shop of Horrors”). Nicholas Rodriguez, also gay, was nominated for his supporting work Freddy Eynsford-Hill in Arena Stage’s “My Fair Lady.” Holly Twyford and Sarah Marshall are both gay and both nominated for supporting performances in Folger’s “Shrew.” Twyford was also nominated for her lead turn as the doomed Harper in Studio Theater’s “Dirt.”

The winner of the non-competitive John Aniello Award for Outstanding Emerging Theatre Company is Dizzy Miss Lizzie’s Roadside Review, a fun company that melds the classics, vaudeville and rock. The late Aniello was an avid Washington theatergoer as well as the longtime partner of theatreWashington’s chairman of the board Victor Shargai.

All winners will be announced at theatreWashington’s annual Helen Hayes Awards ceremony on April 8 at the Warner Theatre followed by a blowout after party just across the street at the J.W. Marriott Hotel.

For a complete list of nominations go to theatreWashington.org.