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Annex Theater (Capitol Hill)

1100 E Pike St
Seattle, WA 98122
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The Stranger's Reviews of Annex Theater

 
Upcoming Events at Annex Theater

Team of Heroes: No More Heroes

Thurs-Sat at 8 pm. Through May 25.
www.annextheatre.org
Writer Alexander Harris and director Jaime Roberts return with (almost all of) the original cast members for the final installment in the superhero trilogy about "the underbelly of doing good," which Paul Constant has described as "a superhero movie made on a tiny theater budget."
Annex Theater
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1100 E Pike St
Seattle (Capitol Hill)
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Murder Abbey

Wed at 8 pm. Through June 12.
www.annextheatre.org
Upright Citizens Brigade comedian Kate Hess parodies the BBC's Downton Abbey entirely on her own and with period costumes. The Daily Beast calls it one of the "six best Downton Abbey spoofs."
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1100 E Pike St
Seattle (Capitol Hill)
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Green star Weird and Awesome with Emmett Montgomery

First Sun of every month at 7:30 pm.
The comedy-variety show that staggers between pleasantly absurdist and creepily earnest.
Annex Theater
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1100 E Pike St
Seattle (Capitol Hill)
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Spin the Bottle

First Fri of every month at 11 pm.
www.annextheatre.org
Late-night variety show featuring theater, music, dance, spoken word, film, and more since 1997.
Annex Theater
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1100 E Pike St
Seattle (Capitol Hill)
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Mating Games: 9 Short Comedies about Love, Sex, and the Science of Desire

Fri-Sat at 8 pm. Through June 22.
www.annextheatre.org
An ensemble cast and team of directors and playwrights present nine new short plays about sex, romance, and attraction. Seattle Playwrights Collective at Annex Theater.
Annex Theater
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1100 E Pike St
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All Events at Annex Theater »


 

Average Rating:
  • 4.29000/5 Stars.
Reviews/Comments (7) RSS

Newest First Unregistered On Registered On Add a review of Annex Theater
7

my testimony

Last month, it was my birthday, the anniversary of my late husband’s death, and a time when I experienced another loss in my family. I was in total depression also because the gentleman I had been seeing for nearly a year decided to cut ties with me. All this happened at the same time, and my heart was broken. Then I found Ekaka email: ekakaspelltemple@yahoo.com and all my luck turned around – especially because the master did a wonderful spell of Love for me and my dearest companion, who decided he had made a terrible mistake by leaving me. We even took a much-needed vacation. It meant the world to me, and I have you to thank for it. I send you Prayers.
Posted by reena22 on May 20, 2013 at 2:22 PM · Report
6

Money Changes Everything

If there's any way you can go to see "Money Changes Everything" at the Annex Theatre on Cap. Hill on Friday and Sat nights through Nov. 20--Please DO! (The Annex Theatre is on 11th between Pike and Pine.)

It's fabulous! The quality of the production and cast is amazing, and it's only $15.

It will put a smile on your face--which we all need these days. I went as part of group of 8 and we all were happy to have spent our evening there.

You’d regret missing it.

Posted by SLM on November 9, 2010 at 10:53 PM · Report
CSpoke 5

Tweaking Pays Off

Streamlined since last weekend, “Money Changes Everything” is now a tighter show, and much more enjoyable. There is a real sense of inertia in the first act as the plotters of the poorly conceived Loomis Fargo “Hillbilly Heist” of 1997 go into overdrive to break the speed limit on bad planning. There is a fairly complex collision of personalities in Rachel Atkins’ script, and aspects that were somewhat hidden by clunkiness are now easier to appreciate.

The logic (if you could call it that) of Mitch Dewitt, the career criminal who makes everyone’s dreams a reality, particularly benefits. He is portrayed by Laurence Hughes with what seems to be autobiographical fluency, planning things (barely) with the same ease that he would put into stealing drugs from a Walgreens. His heedless can-do American spirit comes with a slouchy southern accent, but that spirit is essentially identical to the Wall Street criminality that produced the current recession. There is a coolly corporate efficiency in his willingness to hurt people in order to get the job done the right way, his way.

However, it is still Lisa Branham and Devin Rodger who provide the moments of deepest emotional transparency. They understand – much sooner than any of the guys – just how badly things are going to turn out.

Although the second act still suffers from unnecessary character asides (in the form of television interviews) it has gained a superior performance by Brandon Ryan. Kevin (the initiating schmuck) has moments of frustration and rage that are now more carefully modulated, grounded in a real human instead of a cartoon. His growing sense of fear in the second act is palpable.

So go see it! I have a feeling that “Money Changes Everything” will have a life far beyond Seattle, and you’ll be able to say that you saw it here first.
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Posted by CSpoke on October 30, 2010 at 5:23 PM · Report
4

Strong, yo

All the basic ingredients you want: interesting/unusual/true story, well-written characters and script, good casting followed by plenty of excellent acting.

"Money changes everything" pokes hard fun at people who aren't Cap Hill hipsters (or theater goers) but at least they have the guts to pull off a huge fucking robbery. And the motivations animating the whole project and their lives are of course fairly universal.

If you thought Ben Affleck's heist movie "The Town" was good, no. Come see this play.
Posted by BobF on October 29, 2010 at 10:21 AM · Report
3

VERY Engaging!

We were there on opening night, which is always a risk. One may experience the thrill, excitement and anxiety that the performers do when the curtain rises on a wonderful new show, and/or one might experience a play that needs a lot more work.

Our experience was that of excitement and engagement. It is really a great story. I am surprised that it's not yet been made into a movie! It is pretty easy to imagine it up on the big screen.

Annex Theatre doesn't have a "big screen", but they did a great job with this big story regardless.

It's not perfect, and maybe it's a little long, but it's a complicated story. Regardless, there are lots of very short scenes, some of which move the story along, and some of which don't and could probably be cut. But this is just a little quibble; not a big deal.

All in all, it was a very entertaining piece of theatre. We are going again next weekend.

Bravo to Annex and to the creators and cast!

Posted by pjane on October 25, 2010 at 6:08 PM · Report
2

correction

Let's get the disclaimer out there right at the start: I'm a member of the cast, so I'm not going to write a glowing review of my own show or argue with the criticisms in the first review posted. Actually I agree with some of the things CSpoke has written, both positive and negative, and I disagree with others - no surprise.

I will point out a factual error in the review ... our stage manager precisely times each act, and both performances this weekend came in at 1 hr 17 minutes for act 1. You may have thought it was 90 minutes long because the act ended around 9:30, but that was after holding the curtain until 8:15 because we were sold out (woohoo) and trying to fit everyone in. On the second night with a non-full-house we started the act at 8:08 and hit intermission at 9:25, so again 1hr 17min. Hey, at least we're consistent. (Both nights Act 2 came in around 50 minutes, so you overshot that number too.)

Having said that, on putting it in front of an audience we realized that Act 1 is in fact too long, so Rachel has scrambled to make some cuts and now the actors are scrambling to learn them.

So if anyone is scared off by the assertion that "the first act is a whopping 90 minutes, the second 60" ... please don't be, as both of those numbers are factually incorrect by a pretty wide margin. Act 1 was never 90 minutes and Act 2 was never 60, and as of our next performance the Act 1 time will be significantly leaner still.

This won't address all of the things CSpoke thinks are wrong with the production, but we hope it will address one of them, and that maybe some of the others will be in the eye of the beholder (of course all the compliments are spot-on).

CSpoke, thanks for the review (honestly). I may disagree with some of it, and I'm disputing the numbers you posted, but I still appreciate that you came to the show and took the time to write a thoughtful and intelligent review (and yeah, isn't Lisa fabulous?)

I hope you'll forgive a non-impartial chiming in, and I didn't quite know what to do about the Stars - obviously I think the show is better than CSpoke does, but giving my own show 5 stars seems a little cheesy, so I gave it 4. Add or subtract however many grains of salt you deem appropriate...

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Posted by DeSpicable on October 25, 2010 at 1:32 AM · Report
CSpoke 1

Parsimony Changes Everything

Somewhere inside Rachel Atkins’ “Money Changes Everything” there is either a pretty good stage play or a nice fat check for the option on a screenplay. Good luck on the option, but for now the focus should be on paring down an overlong, unwieldy script that’s trying way too hard to look like a fast-paced movie while largely neglecting the insightful patience of the stage.

I can give MCE a modest recommendation because of its inherently fascinating story, and, oddly enough, the fact that the production tries so hard to tell it in such a laboriously wrong-headed way. I’ve never seen a play with so many problems that was so much fun to watch.

The first half hour of the first act promises something out of the ordinary, a bank robbery story that centers on the criminals’ motivations instead of the mechanics of the job (the notorious Loomis Fargo “hillbilly heist” of 1997 in Charlotte, North Carolina). The two central plotters, Lou and Kevin, touchingly evoke the helplessness of people already imprisoned by lower class desperation. The phrase “eight dollars an hour” has never been more dismal. It’s heartbreaking to see the two almost instantly hand complete control of the scheme to a career criminal (Laurence Hughes as the loathsome Dewitt) who will confidently propel them to certain failure.

It’s also heartbreaking to listen to overblown Southern accents that are bad enough to make you hear the twanging of a jaw harp. (Yes, ma’am, I’m talking to you, Candy.) Director Dan Morris should rein in about half of the hillbilly hysterics.

Most of the early emotional inertia is quashed by a determination to explain every detail of the crime and its aftermath. Over the remaining two hours (the first act is a whopping 90 minutes, the second 60) there are many single-character asides framed as appearances on a “20/20”-type show called “Frontedge.” These post-prison interviews don’t contribute much beyond, “I sure wish I’d done things differently.” There are many disconnected scenes that could be coherently compressed into longer ones such that emotions could simmer instead of constantly boil over.

Brandon Ryan starts off well as Kevin, the Loomis Fargo inside man, showing the violence of thought that can lurk within a seemingly bland anonymity. But the shortness of the scenes force his character to set loose madness far too soon and far too often. Ryan sustains a fever pitch of flailing frustration that quickly becomes tiresome. Fortunately, in the very last scene Ryan somehow pulls a rabbit out of a hat and shows us a crippled soul who seems to be proud that he has so clumsily engineered his own doom.

Lisa Branham is the true standout as Lou, the scheming mastermind. She’s just clever enough to seduce one man, just dumb enough to let herself be controlled by another. Branham is always in complete control of the play’s most complex character, shifting quickly from self-pity to amorality. In her best scenes she embodies cruelty and fear simultaneously, quite a feat and a joy to watch. If Atkins had made Lou the true spine of the story Branham would have had the part that her talents deserved.

Many scenes involving two FBI agents could stand to be removed altogether. They only exist to remind us that a crime of legendary scale is being committed, but their many brief, overly similar chats continually deflate the tension. It’s more fun to hear about the overwhelming windfall from the yokels themselves, along with their mediocre vision of how to spend it: minivans, breast implants and jet skis. It’s also damaging that the demeanors of the FBI agents are wildly unrealistic. Nobody graduates from Quantico with a Boss Hogg bellow or a bebop beard.

The only essential FBI scenes involved Devin Rodger as Becky, Kevin’s hapless wife. Rodger is a real standout (also portraying two other minor characters), investing her short appearances as Becky with stunning emotional clarity in an otherwise underwritten part. I wanted to see a lot more of both the character and the actor.

A motion picture can produce flashbacks, flash forwards and multiple threads of parallel action with a snip of the scissors or click of the mouse. Watching stage actors attempt these effects by lugging their own furniture and props on and off the Annex stage – at least twenty times, I lost count – became grindingly tedious. A majority of scenes seemed to be in the two to three minute range, supplying bits of plot in dribs and drabs but with little emotional build up or consequence. The Annex stage is large enough for the FBI desk and that damned couch to remain onstage most of the time, and this alone would eliminate a few blackouts.

My hope is that the director will conspire with the author to edit and speed up this story considerably. A much better play is lurking in there, just like a big block of fifties inside a Loomis Fargo vault.
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Posted by CSpoke on October 24, 2010 at 6:11 PM · Report

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