Skip to main content

Highlights from Lakeshore Players Theatre's "10-Minute Play Festival"

The best thing about a one-act festival is that, in one sitting, you can experience a whole variety of ideas and perspectives. Short plays are a great way to focus in on one moment, one conflict or decision, and zero in on the emotional impact that it creates. At Lakeshore Players Theatre’s 18th Annual 10-Minute Play Festival, subjects ranged from familial relationships to societal dangers to futuristic electronic scams. The festival included ten short plays, each with a different director and cast of 2-4 actors. Audience members were invited to cast their votes for their favorite play, and the winner will be named “Best 10-Minute Play of 2022.”

The most successful one-act plays for me are the ones with an interesting point of view and a strong focus throughout; they don’t need much exposition, or they have created a situation in which the exposition is realistic and unobtrusive. Some of the plays in this festival were a little unsubtle in getting their point across, but I thought there were plenty of interesting concepts throughout, and the performances were strong across the board.

Some of the plays that stood out to me as particularly successful were:

Play House, written by Sage Martin, directed by James Zappa, and performed by Josh Krauskopf and Nancy Lipinski. This play dropped into a very specific situation that was gradually revealed; the lack of exposition meant that the unsettling tone took forefront. Krauskopf and Lipinksi’s intense performances pushed the tension higher and higher as the play went on.

Checkout Line, written by James McLindon, directed by Brian Sherman, and performed by Anneliese Garner and Jeffrey Nolan. I enjoyed this play for its strong characters, played with charm by Garner and Nolan. The interplay of awkwardness, confidence, and connection made this play especially engaging.

Missed Disconnections, written by Samara Siskind, directed by Daniel Stock, and performed by Jesse Villarreal, Laura Trudell, and Alicia Ehleringer. The most playful of the festival, this one was also the only one-act to play at all with the form (using a kind of voiceover), which I’d love to see more of in future festivals. There was a moment in there that felt a bit cliched for me, but the ending brought me back around and overall it was just fun!

The 18th Annual 10-Minute Play Festival at Lakeshore Players Theatre runs through June 12.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Shrek: a Powerful Opener for Open Door

If you don’t like Shrek: the Musical , I have to wonder if you’ve even seen it.  Or maybe you have to see a community theater production to really get into it. I did see a professional version once and it wasn’t as good, but every community production I’ve been to or been in has been really enjoyable.  Maybe it’s that the show’s message is about embracing differences, but Shrek is better when it’s done by “real” people. This is not to insult professional actors or non-professional actors, but there is a difference between the performances that the audience can feel, and this time the advantage is definitely not with the professionals. Shrek , based on the animated film of the same name, is about a grumpy ogre who lives in a swamp.  When the short, title-hungry Lord Farquaad evicts all magical creatures from their homes and dumps them on Shrek’s swamp, the ogre ends up going on a quest with a talking donkey to rescue a princess in exchange for the deed to his swamp....

"Rent" Rocks at Inver Grove Heights Community Theatre

Rent is one of the most iconic shows in musical theater history. Based more or less on the opera La Boheme , it follows a group of young people in 1980s New York trying to find their purpose or just trying to live despite poverty, addiction, and illness. The show is propelled by a rock and roll score, bold characters, and the sense that time is limited and precious - primarily because  multiple characters are living with AIDs at a time when long-term survival still felt like a longshot. This show brought me for the first time to Inver Grove Heights Community Theatre, which performs at the Simley High School Performing Arts Center. Due to COVID concerns, some of the cast was masked for the performance I attended. One thing I appreciated from this theater group was the inclusion of cast and crew pronouns in the program. That's something I'd love to see catch on. It's certainly helpful for me as a reviewer to know that I'm referring to people correctly! Quinn Forrest Mas...

"The Spitfire Grill" Shines at Cross Community Players

After serving her time in prison, Percy Talbot dreams of starting over in a new place – specifically, in a small town she found in a travel book. But when she gets there, she finds a town hit by hard times, where people don’t often open up and don’t easily trust an outsider with a troubled past. The Spitfire Grill is a show about people who have lost hope in their communities, their families, and their own lives. Percy’s belief in what the town has to offer starts to turn things around, but is it too late for the other characters to change their ways? Cross Community Players picked an interesting space for their production of The Spitfire Grill ; the room they used at St. Joseph Catholic Community was not designed as a theater and was not even totally enclosed, but it worked surprisingly well for staging this show.   As a bonus, coinciding with the run of the show, the church had on display an exhibit featuring poetry by incarcerated people.   A church member told...