Feb 072011
 

“… a truly unique night of theater…” – Ben Demers (dctheatrescene.com)

With Under the Shadow of Wings, Ambassador Theater has staged a double bill of dramatic visions so vivid and absorbing they feel almost like lucid dreams. …. a truly unique night of theater … Bondarewska’s gutsy performance and the arresting sights and sounds accompanying the action carry the day.

I, for one, had to collect my bearings after experiencing the dizzying blend of traditional morality play, esoteric performance art, and delirious monologue.

In a landscape of familiar dramatic tropes, it’s refreshing to be occasionally thrown for a loop.  www.dctheatrescene.com/

“Exciting…perfect performances… This is a highly recommended evening of theater” – Bob Anthony (allartsreview4u.com)

Ambassador Theater continues its mandate to present foreign plays and with “Under the Shadow of Wings” there is almost no obvious weakness in the playing and technicals. “Karna and Kunti” by Indian poet/playwright,Rabindranath Tagore, is strongly symbolic with godlike references as it is taken from the Indian epic, “The Mahabarata”, which in this playlet tells of a rejecting mother trying to come to terms with her son who is facing death at the hands of his brother. Gavin Whitt with his cat-like movements and Meera Narasimhan with her wonderful hand gestures give intriguing performances in staccato fashion expected of Indian portrayals. “Death of Tintagiles” tells the tale of two sisters who attempt to defeat the fates who are classically determined to capture their young brother…amazingly performed by young, relaxed Michael Ryjik. Hanna Bondawerska dominates the playing with superb Grecian-like style as she rants and raves particularly during the tragic ending. Others in this playlet are Paula Rich, Rob Weinzimer and the three servants (of fate), Mary Suib, Gavin Whitt and Meera Narasimhan. The technicals are most exciting and top rate in the hands of David Crandall (music, sound and visual design), Marianne Meadows (lights), Andrzej Pinkowski (set) and Caridel Cruz (costumes). Fine credit is given to David Willinger and Daniel Gerould who translated these stories by Tagore and Maeterlinck and especially to Mr. Willinger who managed to get perfect performances from his cast. This is a highly recommended evening of theater from the “new kid around the theatrical block”. (Reviewed by Bob Anthony) http://allartsreview4u.com/

“With interesting visual and sound effects, and sincere acting, Under the Shadow of Wings is an opportunity to experience an early symbolist play and a portion of the Sanskrit epic The Mahabarata.” – Laura & Mike Clark  (showbizradio.net)

Feb 022011
 

“… a truly unique night of theater…” – Ben Demers (dctheatrescene.com)

With Under the Shadow of Wings, Ambassador Theater has staged a double bill of dramatic visions so vivid and absorbing they feel almost like lucid dreams. …. a truly unique night of theater … Bondarewska’s gutsy performance and the arresting sights and sounds accompanying the action carry the day.

I, for one, had to collect my bearings after experiencing the dizzying blend of traditional morality play, esoteric performance art, and delirious monologue.

In a landscape of familiar dramatic tropes, it’s refreshing to be occasionally thrown for a loop.  www.dctheatrescene.com/

“Exciting…perfect performances… This is a highly recommended evening of theater” – Bob Anthony (allartsreview4u.com)

Ambassador Theater continues its mandate to present foreign plays and with “Under the Shadow of Wings” there is almost no obvious weakness in the playing and technicals. “Karna and Kunti” by Indian poet/playwright,Rabindranath Tagore, is strongly symbolic with godlike references as it is taken from the Indian epic, “The Mahabarata”, which in this playlet tells of a rejecting mother trying to come to terms with her son who is facing death at the hands of his brother. Gavin Whitt with his cat-like movements and Meera Narasimhan with her wonderful hand gestures give intriguing performances in staccato fashion expected of Indian portrayals. “Death of Tintagiles” tells the tale of two sisters who attempt to defeat the fates who are classically determined to capture their young brother…amazingly performed by young, relaxed Michael Ryjik. Hanna Bondawerska dominates the playing with superb Grecian-like style as she rants and raves particularly during the tragic ending. Others in this playlet are Paula Rich, Rob Weinzimer and the three servants (of fate), Mary Suib, Gavin Whitt and Meera Narasimhan. The technicals are most exciting and top rate in the hands of David Crandall (music, sound and visual design), Marianne Meadows (lights), Andrzej Pinkowski (set) and Caridel Cruz (costumes). Fine credit is given to David Willinger and Daniel Gerould who translated these stories by Tagore and Maeterlinck and especially to Mr. Willinger who managed to get perfect performances from his cast. This is a highly recommended evening of theater from the “new kid around the theatrical block”. (Reviewed by Bob Anthony) http://allartsreview4u.com/

“With interesting visual and sound effects, and sincere acting, Under the Shadow of Wings is an opportunity to experience an early symbolist play and a portion of the Sanskrit epic The Mahabarata.” – Laura & Mike Clark  (showbizradio.net)

 

Oct 192010
 

We Love Arts: The Little Prince

Ian Pedersen as the Little Prince and Alex Vernon as the Aviator in Ambassador Theater’s “The Little Prince” photo: magda pinkowska

Ian Pedersen as the Little Prince and Alex Vernon as the Aviator in Ambassador Theater’s “The Little Prince” photo: magda pinkowska

There are many delights in Ambassador Theater’s production of The Little Prince, but chief among them for me was watching the reactions of the children in the audience. “Who I am writing a review for?” I asked myself afterward. It’s unlikely any of those enraptured five-year-olds would care what I think. Their parents? Perhaps. Funny then that this push-pull between the world of adults and children is at the heart of the much-loved book by Antoine Saint-Exupery (or Saint-Ex, as he’s affectionately known in my neighborhood).

From the small set beautifully draped in tunneling parachutes to the whimsical shadow puppets helping transport the audience to outer space, this is an evening of both sweetness and sadness that held the attention of the children I saw there. One even may have fallen in love with the little prince herself. For adults, the play is a reminder that, “It is only with the heart that one can see rightly. The essential is invisible to the eyes.”

If you’ve never read the book, written by French aviator Antoine Saint-Exupery after surviving an almost-fatal plane crash in the Sahara, or haven’t read it to your child, don’t worry. This adaptation by Rick Cummins and John Scoullar is quite faithful but easy to navigate. Children rarely figeted and their attention was held throughout. This is in no small part due to director and designer Lilia Slavova, who ably guides the ensemble of four actors through a hypnotic world.

It’s also a testament to young Ian Pedersen, who embues the Little Prince with a stoic yet hopeful melancholy that’s engaging to watch. Though he has to deliver many lines with a dreamy air directed outward to the audience, he manages to make the usually mystical prince a very real boy. His interactions with his beloved and vain Rose, the dangerous Snake (both wonderfully performed by Ilana D. Naidamast), and the spirited Fox (Sarah Olmstead Thomas) highlight the lessons children have to learn in order to grow. Note I don’t say grow up. That pitfall is embodied in the woeful Aviator (Alex Vernon), whose inability to see with a child’s eye anymore has almost broken his will.

The Aviator’s struggle to regain his youthful hope may mainly resonate with the adults in the audience. It’s the one difficulty in this production, and however talented an actor Vernon is (his masked turn as a self-centered king is truly hilarious) those strident moments seem to deflate the magic. But that’s a flaw easily overlooked.

My inner child’s favorite moment was the meeting of the Little Prince and the Fox. Having just heard that scene read at the wedding of a dear friend, I was reminded of how it struck me as a child – sad, wistful, full of the inevitability of love lost. However, Slavova wisely pumps up the gleefulness of this meeting with an adorably funny dance between the two, and Olstead Thomas’s Fox is so friskily frantic that taming brings a necessary and lovely maturity rather than a heartbreaking sadness.

Parents with children easily frightened should note that the Little Prince’s scenes with the Snake are mysterious rather than obvious (his disappearance from earth is in blackout) and I didn’t notice anything other than normal apprehension followed by delight when the masked figures began to appear.

Truly, this is a lovely evening at the theater for children and especially for parents looking to introduce them to an almost surreal, magical theatrical experience. And if you yourself, adult, are looking for an escape and a reminder of what is essential, then rest here for a while.

Ambassador Theater’s The Little Prince runs through November 7 at Mead Theater Lab at Flashpoint at 916 G Street NW. Closest Metro: Gallery Place (Red/Green/Yellow lines).

Oct 192010
 
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The Little Prince

OCTOBER 20, 2010

BY LESLIE WEISMAN

“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.” These words, penned (in French) during the Second World War by aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, will immediately ring a bell with children of all ages and nationalities.

Ian Pedersen as The Little Prince (Photo: Valentin Radev, graphic design: Lukasz Pinkowski)

Ian Pedersen as The Little Prince (Photo: Valentin Radev, graphic design: Lukasz Pinkowski)

Like his book that made those words famous, Ambassador Theater’s The Little Princespeaks to and with the heart of a child in a way that is also accessible to adults. While the small, modest staging space of Flashpoint can sometimes be a drawback for productions that require elaborate costumes or changes in time and place, here the enforced simplicity becomes a virtue, its ostensible disadvantages transformed into opportunities for audiences to see the tale brought to life as a child of Saint-Exupéry’s time would have imagined it.

As the Pilot, the multi-talented Alex Vernon is forthright and earnest, an homme de bonne foi whose very grown-up occupation — and, as the play opens, preoccupation — make him seem an unlikely candidate for friendship with a melancholy interplanetary child. He seems, in fact, a man who would be hard pressed to remember even being a little boy. By turns amused, bemused, impatient, irritated and chagrined, he clearly wants to do the right thing by his mysterious little friend while remaining attentive to “serious things”: that is, his responsibility to his duty — and his downed aircraft. (Vernon is also the Businessman, the King, the Geographer, and a base for the Lamplighter, played movingly by Sarah Olmstead Thomas with a steadfast, uncompromising devotion to a task that he knows is both futile and irrevocable.)

In an economical but effective turn that acknowledges the limitations of time and space, the entire stage is draped in swaths of white cloth: the desert, on which the pilot’s plane has crash-landed, illuminated intermittently by shafts or sparks of light, or by large, cut-out stars (Gus Soudah). In an imaginatively layered exploitation of the theater’s physical, as the play opens, the theatre’s fourth wall falls away: Sketching on a pad, the Pilot addresses us directly, as Saint-Ex did his young readers, his drawings appearing on the white cloth backdrop behind him as he works. Sometimes they become animated, although always in black in white and in 1930s and 1940s style, again true to time and place.

The Little Prince (Ian Pedersen) makes a star entrance (pun intended) from behind the audience, limned by a halo of light that emphasizes the elegant, princely raiment of white, gold and royal blue familiar to readers of the book. As Tim Treanor observed in this space more than two years ago in his review of Shakespeare Theatre Company’s The Imaginary Invalid: “Do you need an adorable child who can deliver a line with punch and conviction? Why, just trot out Ian Pedersen, and watch him knock them dead.” Here you can watch the still adorable Ian do it not just with a line but with hundreds of them, coolly incarnating the character with skill and self-possession as he smoothly pivots from scolding the uncomprehending Pilot or megalomaniac monarch to musing with a wistful, suddenly adult sadness over his failure to understand his Rose.

The Rose (Ilana Naidamast), seen in flashbacks, is Valley Girl vain and childish, which makes her instantly recognizable as a human and contemporizes the character. (In another interesting bit of staging, the Pilot’s drawing of the Rose assumes human shape when she and the Little Prince speak to each other, their faces appearing silhouetted in miniature on the backdrop.) Naidamast also excels as the Conceited Man, and most memorably as the Snake, hissy and sensuous as she sinuously stretches out her body to the sound of a silky thread of sssssssses, her every arch of an eyebrow and alluring half-smile malevolent and deadly.

Sarah Olmstead Thomas incarnates a stereotype of another sort as a very foxy Fox, a beautiful redhead who plays hard to get as she patiently instructs the Prince on how to tame her, the ritual becoming a dance as her three-foot orange tail swishes and wraps around her. She also has a hilarious bit re-enacting for the puzzled Prince the food chain as she knows it, pantomiming all three parts: the startled but luckless — and pluckless — chicken; the wary but terrified fox; and the beady-eyed, single-minded hunter.

Vernon’s King is especially giggle-inducing as he blissfully insists that he rules “over everything,” grinning like a doofus as he sways his bulbous legs and feet, bopping to the beat of piped-in music. (So agile and almost rag-doll-like is Vernon in the role that I at first thought he was one of the puppets, created by Master Puppeteer and Designer Julia Tasheva and the play’s Director and Designer Lilia Slavova.)

The music is eclectic and nicely done throughout, much of it original (Georg Silver), illuminating the situation or the characters with creatively calibrated shifts from Renaissance to Beethoven, from jazz to pop to bossa nova. The masks (Vanya Vasileva) are richly hued, textured and stylized, seemingly (and successfully) combining Commedia dell’Arte with Bavarian Fasching.

All in all, a show you and your enfant will enjoy seeing together. If you don’t have one or can’t find any, take a grande personne. Although they may not remember it — or want to admit it — I have it on good faith: they were enfants once, too.

 Posted by at 10:52 am
Oct 192010
 

The Indie Daily


The world is your stage. The Indiestry is your spotlight.

http://blog.theindiestry.com/2010/10/18/review-the-little-prince-a-charming-play-for-children-and-adults.aspx

Review: “The Little Prince” –A Charming Play for Children and Adults

On Sunday, Oct. 17, Indiestry Exec Donisha A. attended a showing of “The Little Prince,” at Washington, D.C.’s Mead Theater Lab at Flashpoint. This Ambassador Theater International Cultural Center presentation is a feast for the eyes and the imagination that stays with you long after you have left the theater.

“The Little Prince” was written by Rick Cummins and John Scoullar. The play was adapted from the book by Antoine de Saint Exupery. It was directed and designed by Lilia Slavova, and produced by Hanna Bondarewska. The cast features Ian Pedersen (The Little Prince), IIana D. Naidamast, Sarah Olmsted Thomas, and Alex Vernon.
Antoine de Saint Exupery wrote: “It is only with the heart that one can see rightly. The essential is invisible to the eyes.” This quote represents an integral theme in the play. The story follows Pedersen (the little prince) as he guides Vernon’s character through a world full of talking roses and mythical creatures. Throughout the play, Pedersen attempts to spark Vernon’s imagination and help him remember what it was like to be a 10-year-old boy…what it was like to believe.

The masks and makeup transformed the actors into characters that you would only see in “Alice in Wonderland” or “The Neverending Story.” As I sat there, I remembered how much I loved “The Neverending Story” when I was a child. I remembered how much I enjoyed taking the journey with the characters and getting excited about the creatures that I would meet in the next scene. “In this way, while I was watching “The Little Prince” I was like Vernon’s character, regaining my child-like imagination.

“The Little Prince” is appropriate for children, but it also contains lessons about love and relationships with which a number of adults can identify.

The acting was superb and the setting was very intimate. However, don’t just take my word for it. “The Little Prince” runs for about an hour. Ticket pricesrange from $15 to $25. Go see it! Flashpoint is located at 916 G St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20001

 Posted by at 10:52 am
Oct 192010
 

Our Kids

Review of The Little Prince
October 18, 2010
by Beth Meyer

At the Mead Theater Lab at Flashpoint
916 G Street, NW
Washington, DC


The Little Prince, now playing at the Mead Theatre Lab through November 7, 2010

The Little Prince at the Mead Theater Lab at Flashpoint through November 7, 2010 isn’t your typical children’s show. It is philosophical and melancholy with good acting, artistic aspirations and an international crew. It’s staged in an intimate 40-seat theater adjoining an art gallery. The show is produced by the Ambassador Theater, under the patronage of the Embassy of France.

The Little Prince is very faithful to the novella by Antoine de Saint-Exupery, one of the most popular and frequently translated books in the world. I was pleasantly surprised by how much I liked the adaptation. In preparation for the experience, I read the book aloud to my six and ten year-old daughters. We thoroughly enjoyed the first two pages, where a drawing of a boa constrictor eating an elephant is mistaken for a hat by foolish adults, but we couldn’t get much further. On the subway to the show, my older daughter pronounced the book “incredibly boring.” I felt somewhat vindicated when I found out from the program that upon first reading the book, the director of the play also found it “incredibly boring.” Somehow, the director managed to convey the charm, humor, and spirit of the story without its redundancy.

In the first act, a pilot (Alex Vernon), who has crashed his plane at the Sahara Desert, meets the Little Prince (Ian Pedersen), an otherworldly little boy, who tells him about his own journeys. The Little Prince first describes his own tiny asteroid and his romance with a rose (charmingly told with the help of shadow puppets). Then, he tells of his adventures meeting the rulers of six other asteroids. My daughters’ favorite was the first one, a king, who foolishly orders everyone about. They found him hilarious. The other rulers, like the businessman and the geographer also represent aspects of adult stupidity and blindness. The second act focuses on the Little Prince’s experiences on earth especially his taming of a fox (Sarah Olmsted Thomas). When the fox described how humans hunted her, a little boy in the audience shouted out “this is pure comedy.” The fox tells the Little Prince the moral of his story. “It is only with the heart that one can see rightly. The essential is invisible to the eyes.”

As a warning, the ending is very sad and involves the death of a major character. My six year-old did not really understand the ending; my ten year-old did. The ending was handled similarly in Don’t Eat the Pictures, if you’re familiar with that Sesame Street DVD.

The play is very well acted. Accomplished eleven year-old actor Ian Pederson had previously played the son of Phedre with Helen Mirren as Phedre at the National Theatre of London. Alex Vernon did a fine job as the pilot and Sarah Olmsted Thomas and Ilana Naidamast were convincing as the fox and snake respectively.

The very effective set was just made up of draped white fabric. The costumes were clever, the masks and shadow puppets by Bulgarian artists were terrific, and the original music by Georg Silver from the Canary Islands was beautiful and evocative.

My daughters and I liked the show very much. Younger children in the audience enjoyed the show as well and there was no squirming or chatter. I spoke with the director afterwards and she thinks it is appropriate for ages 8 and up and is really an adult play.

 Posted by at 10:50 am
Oct 192010
 

AllArtsReview4You http://allartsreview4u.com/

October 17, 2010

Art makes the world go around…and we go around the world to review it!

CRITIC’S CHOICE:

Theater: “The Little Prince” (Ambassador), “King Arthur” (Synetic), “Cowardly Christopher Finds His Courage” (Synetic Family), “El caballero de Olmedo” (Gala),”Misalliance” (Olney), “Ovo” Cirque du Soleil, “Sink the Belgrano” (Scena), “Travels With My Aunt” (Rep Stage), “The Vibrator Play” (Woolly Mammoth), “Something You Did” (Theater J), “Dinner with Friends”

Musicals: “Bunnicula” (Imagination Stage), “Glimpses of the Moon” (Metro Stage), “Chess” (Signature), “Nunsense” (Toby’s), “Super Claudio Bros.” (Charlie Fink Productions), “Passing Strange” (Studio)

BestActing: Thomas Keegan “Women Beware Women” (Constellation), Full Cast “The Little Prince” (Ambassador),Full Cast “The Secret Marriage” (Opera) (Aurora Opera Theatre), Jiehae Park “Songs of the Dragons…” (Studio) Full cast (especially Monalisa Arias), “El caballero de Olmedo” (Gala), Drew Kopas “Misalliance” (Olney), Tia Shearere/Michael John Casey “Bunnicula” (Imagination), Karl Miller “The Talented Mr. Ripley (Round House), Lauren “Coco” Cohn, Gia Mora “Glimpses of the Moon” (Metro Stage), Full Cast especially Nana Ingvarsson, “Sink the Belgrano” (Scena),Full Cast “Travels With My Aunt” (Rep Stage), Full Cast “The Vibrator Play” (Woolly Mammoth), Full Cast, “Something You Did” (Theater J),Full Cast “Chess” (Signature), Julie-Ann Elliott, Paul Morella, Jeffries Thaiss, Peggy Yates “Dinner with Friends” (Olney)

Magic is created during the Ambassador Theater’s production of “THE LITTLE PRINCE” (To 11/7 ) that is described as “a fairy tale for adults or for the child that every grown up once was”. This lovely story based on the book by Antoine de Saint-Exupery’s little book about a prince from a faraway star who confronts a pilot whose plane crashes in the desert is totally endearing. This is mostly due to the fine performances of the leads…Ian Petersen as the prince and Alex Vernon as the pilot. They are wonderfully assisted by actresses, Sarah Olmsted Thomas and Liana D. Naidamast in the fairy tales being messaged. Director Lilia Slavova got wonderfully sensitive interpretations during all parts of the story and it was wonderful to see the many youngsters in the audience getting a full measure of pleasure as the story unfolded. The set by Alex Vernon was like a downed parachute with spaces for heads to pop-up around the stage. There was an audio visual upstage for some delightful puppet work and cartoons. The music by Georg Silver was ethereal yet it emphasized the drama on stage. Kudos for the fine masks by Vanya Vasileva. This is wonderful family fare which allows the adults to reenter the fantasies of their childhood as their children repeat theirs. It is a highly recommended production. (Reviewed by Bob Anthony)

Mar 162010
 

If you are accustomed to seeing paired down black box productions at the Flashpoint venue, the well-crafted nineteenth century salon will be a pleasant surprise.The fact that this production feels as polished as it does is a little short of amazing given the snow-related rehearsal difficulties and some late casting changes. Given the skill and enthusiasm that the fledgling Ambassador Theater team has shown with the little-known Summer at Nohant, I look forward to their future productions.

read the entire review by Steven McKnight at: http://dctheatrescene.com/2010/03/15/summer-at-nohant-2/

Jan 162010
 

NOT MY LABEL: A JOURNEY OF DISCOVERY

By Donisha A.  

 

Indiestry Exec Donisha A. interviewed writer and performer Rula before her first performance of a monologue titled “Not My Label: A Journey of Discovery.” During the interview Rula expressed her views on societal labels, taboo themes and performing on stage.

 

On Friday Jan. 15, excitement and nervous energy filled the air as writer and performer Rula stepped on stage at the Washington, D.C.-based Flashpoint’s Mead Theatre to perform “Not My Label: A Journey of Discovery”. This was the writer’s first time performing a monologue, but it was not evident in her performance.

 [Press Photo]

Presented by Ambassador Theatre International Cultural Center (ATICC), “Not My Label” is based on the true events surrounding the aftermath of an extramarital affair . This deeply-personal story unfolds as the main character is banished by her friends and family. She then, goes on an emotional journey to regain her power and integrity. 

“This piece that I am performing today started from a novel that I am writing,” Rula said “As I was writing ‘In the Box’ I said ‘this really happened to me.’”

After this realization, Rula embarked on a journey to bring her story to life on the stage.

“['Not My Label'] is an in-your-face portrayal of people being labeled,” Rula said. “And the subject matter is controversial. [“Not My Label”] is about what this woman goes through after a very interesting love affair takes place.”

Rula said that she focuses on taboo issues “because no one wants to speak about them.”

“My goal is to push the envelope of cultural taboo,” Rula said.  “[My stories] are pretty raw. I don’t care how people react because I write from fear…fear of failing. That’s what helps me overcome writer’s block. One of the catalysts for me to write really has been from fear and it keeps me going through personal problems, to put it out there.”

Although Rula has received accolades for her form of self-expression, she realizes that a number of people may not agree with the themes that she expresses in her short stories.

“[‘Not my Label’] is so controversial that people have threatened me,” the writer said. “It’s a very taboo subject.”

In “Not My Label” Rula proclaims: “There is right and wrong, and there is anomalies. I have never been in your box!”

ZOLOFT NATION

Another one of Rula’s deeply-personal stories, “Zoloft Nation” gives readers a glimpse into the life of a woman who is battling depression. 

When crying became my only means of expression; when fatigue was my partner in bed. I began family therapy because it seemed to be the appropriate choice of action. I was dubbed as mildly depressed after spewing the symptoms which included anger. I resisted the route of medication years prior, being the first to haughtily deem it as “an easy out”; I started to consider it as a last resort to regain sanity. Finally I merged with the others in the private confines of healing.

~Excerpt from “Zoloft Nation” (Rula, 2009)

In “Zoloft Nation” Rula proclaims: “The first thing to do is Realize, Recognize and Regain yourself.”

“It’s taboo to be considered depressed,” Rula said. “‘[Zoloft Nation]’ was about my situation at the time—humbly accepting help.”

Read the full text of “Zoloft Nation”.

THE HONOR CODE

 In “The Honor Code”  Rula tells the story of a father who is upset with his daughter for abandoning traditions and embarking into an interracial relationship.

He braced his foot a few inches from the gas pedal. This was the moment he had been waiting for, never contemplating the consequences. He could only imagine his father’s tired eyes and his family’s curled lips if they knew about Sabeen. Anil had boasted that his daughter was skilled in the Urdu language and that he had raised her to abide by their traditions, even oceans away from their native country.

~Excerpt from “The Honor Code” (Rula, 2010)

Read the full story at the bottom of the page, to find out how it ends!

RULA THE ACTOR

 Rula has endured a number of hardships due to her subject matter and honesty; however, she said that through it all, women have supported her journey.

“Women have been my anchor,” the performer said. “Every time I’m going somewhere, these ladies are coming with me, because in the end, we are nothing without each other. It’s the truth”

One of Rula’s supporters is her acting coach and mentor, Lilia Slavova. Slavova has been acting and directing for 35 years. Rula and Slavova met in December 2009. Since that time, they have been working to enhance Rula’s acting skills.  

“I believe in fate. Lilia and I hit it off and I told her about my story—the idea behind me pushing the envelope,” said Rula.

“[Rula] contacted me for her child who wanted to act,” Slavova said. “She asked if I could see her as an opportunity. I am on the board as a mentor [at ATICC], and once I heard her story I had to accept.”

 

 

 

 [Rula and acting coach/mentor Lilia Slavova]

[By Donisha A.]

ME, MYSELF AND THE OTHERS

Rula is self-publishing a book of short stories and poems titled “Me, Myself and the Others“.

“I’m looking for short-fiction stories, as well as moving poems from start-up writers,” Rula said. “Basically, I’m looking for bold, capturing pieces. Not too lengthy.  Short story fiction is my genre and the weirder, the better. This is a good way for artists to join me in my collection. They will receive the notoriety by being included in a publication and feel good about their work. No money is involved, but it is an attempt to spread the word of new artists.”

GAINING CLOSURE

The independent writer and performer hopes that one day, her work will be received on a larger scale—much like that of well-known writers who have a number of resources.  

“One of the things that anger me as a writer…I read a review of a short fiction writer and they said it was the best short story ever,” Rula said. “And I said ‘if they think that she is great then I have nothing to lose.’”

 

Rula said that although it is difficult to discuss deeply-personal issues, she gains closure every time she performs in front of people or writes a story.

“Through performing and writing…I call that the least expensive therapy,” Rula said. “And through the pain of characters, I get through my day. The more I perform [“Not My Label”], the more resolution I will come to.”

 

Contact Rula at rularealtor@mris.com if you would like to submit short stories or poems to be included in “Me, Myself and the Others.”

                                                                                                                                                                                   [By Donisha A.]

THE HONOR CODE (FULL TEXT)

By Rula

Anil Pujabi sat in his dusty grey SUV, his mangled face of contempt hidden by the tinted windows. The mix of hatred and rage morphed his face, causing his right eye to bulge and twitch sporadically. He could hear the leather seats squeal against the shift of his weight. Other than the hum of the cars drifting by, there was a heavy silence. He’d been in the confines of his car now for five hours; the heat of the day producing slick beads of sweat melting into his eyes. He sat staring through people, seeing them as pebbles bouncing by; meanwhile spied a curious couple across the street, oblivious to their surroundings. He watched them prancing between stores, smiling and inhaling the liberating breath of the day as he suffocated in his anguish.

Twenty five years ago Anil left his hometown, Islamabad. He had refused the expectation that he would be defined solely as the son of a shop owner, or settle for a prearranged marriage. He also objected to the rigorous religious teachings forced upon him. He saw himself as a prisoner of an oppressed regime and preferred the words of poetry to the brash dialogue of politics. He scrounged enough rupees from odd jobs and extra hours at his father’s shop, to buy him a ticket to freedom. Anil practiced everyday in front of his crooked mirror reciting one hundred times “I will go to America,” believing his words would make it possible. He prepared weeks in advance for his interview with the Embassy to show them that he was different than the others applying, that he was a believer of freedom, and thus worthy of entry into their Kingdom. He was granted entry avoiding a painful burial in a cocoon of rituals.  Anil caught himself snicker out loud at this recollection, thinking how he had not prospered as he thought, becoming a laborer instead of an entrepreneur. His aspirations had dwindled and his traditional thoughts managed to hold him back. Realizing that this Kingdom was only different from his hometown by virtue of the mixes of races, he felt defeated. Anil had entered a different type of ritual: The Rat Race. His flashbacks of what could or should have been kept taunting him making him feel like a failure.

It was her hair that caught his attention, causing him to sit erect. It glistened in the sun’s rays, and he could almost smell the Neem hair oil used to give it sheen. He was interrupted briefly from his passage back in time when he saw her. The couple he had seen earlier was now less then five feet in front of him. Anil never saw himself as racist, but the man’s tall athletic built and his eggplant polished skin repelled him. He was of the mindset that races do not mix.  She was familiar to him, yet not so familiar. Once he recalled he had helped her apply the oil to her strands, encouraging her to let it grow beneath her hips. Now, he imagined his fists pulling at her ends as he took a sharp knife, as he chopped of the long tresses. This could not be his precious Sabeen that he had raised for eighteen years, standing here against tradition and honor with a man that was not Pakistani, but black as midnight. She ridiculed him publicly, he thought. He had been lead to her deceit months earlier when he found a stash of love notes under her tattered mattress. A good girl did not date, and certainly a good Pakistani girl would not date outside her race.

He braced his foot a few inches from the gas pedal. This was the moment he had been waiting for, never contemplating the consequences. He could only imagine his father’s tired eyes and his family’s curled lips if they knew about Sabeen. Anil had boasted that his daughter was skilled in the Urdu language and that he had raised her to abide by their traditions, even oceans away from their native country. He saw the couple approaching his vehicle and he wanted to push the weight of his grief down on the pedal, ridding himself of his daughter’s betrayal. He had raised her to be honest, loving and traditional. He hated himself then, thinking of his hypocrisy, thinking of how he was no different than his predecessors. He fought back the bitter taste of vile rising from his parched throat, fighting with himself for what he was about to do. In the frozen moment that seemed to linger, he watched the couple cross the street in front of him. Sabeen’s sudden duck in the middle of the street, searching for a dropped ruby earring reminded him of her tender years of playing hide-and-seek. He had giggled freely with her and tumbled on the sprawling hill of the park, enjoying her youth with her. Suddenly, she bolted upright noticing the hum of the engine, meeting for the first time her father’s eyes. Her light speckled eyes widened with fear as she registered the man behind the wheel as her father. In an instant, Anil’s arm buckled to the Reverse button, his dead eyes staring as he reversed.

He would be proud as he drove away that day, leaving his daughter shaking in the street to have defied the brutal honor code he should have carried out. Although Sabeen was dead to him fro now on, he fought the urge to repeat the cycle of vengeance. Anil would only be doing this for the sake of the culture he had refuted. His honor was by turning away and dispelling the ignorant paradigm.

http://indiestry1-2.webs.com/rulanotmylabel.htm

Nov 032009
 

Washington Business Journal

Friday, October 2, 2009  |  Modified: Monday, October 5, 2009

The Arts

…As more than 70 local professional theater companies begin their fall season, they will be joined by at least five new ones, including The Hub, theHegira, Doorway Arts Ensemble, Ambassador Theater Company and Factory 449.

For most, their first productions came after months or even years of work behind the scenes — work that in many cases started before the economic woes really hit the nonprofit world.

Those theater organizations toil long and hard, away from the glitz of the  Kennedy Center,  Arena Stage or the  Signature Theatre. Although they are professional companies, they are nonprofits that struggle to make ends meet. They pay their actors from tight budgets, operate through donated space or their own homes and rely on tiny staffs — sometimes even a single person — to lead fundraising efforts and handle administrative duties. And this year, they’ve defied the recession by growing in number.

Here is a look at the five new companies.

Ambassador Theater Company.

Ambassador Theater had been cooking in the brain of Hanna Bondarewska for years. Bondarewska, a native of Poland, where she worked as an actress, first thought she would start a Polish company but feared it might be too narrow in scope. After coming into contact with many embassies and ambassadors during her time in D.C., she shifted focus toward a culturally oriented troupe.

But before Ambassador could stage a production, Bondarewska got a bit distracted when the wife of the Polish ambassador asked her to start an interactive learning program in D.C. schools, teaching children about Poland through performances.

0354462600HaniaAugust2008klasowespotShe traveled with the children to Poland in the summer of 2008, performing at the presidential palace among other sites, before returning to the U.S. and focusing on the company’s professional mission.

“I see our mission moving forward as twofold — a company of professional actors and a group which does educational programs,” Bondarewska said.

Ambassador produced its first show, the Polish work “Out at Sea,” this June.

And Bondarewska, whose next show “Hopa Tropa!” turns the attention to Bulgaria, wants to enlarge her company so it has the ability to put on shows in the $40,000 to $100,000 range, rather than with the $20,000 budget that “Out To Sea” had.

“In a recession it is a little harder to gather money to produce shows,” she said. “But I believe if you have a good mission and good people to work with, anything is possible.”