Radiohole | Performance Space New York

Inflatable Frankenstein


Inflatable Frankenstein
Radiohole (USA)

Influenced by James Whale’s Frankenstein films, Radiohole explodes the tumultuous and tragic life of Mary Shelley. Blood chilling and completely strange, Inflatable Frankenstein is brimming with whims, technological absurdity, and bodily fluids. A larger-than-life, Radiohole gothic teen sex dream. With Maggie Hoffman, Eric Dyer, Erin Douglass, Joseph Silovsky, and Mark Jaynes. Also introducing The Creature Without Organs.
 
“Deliriously entertaining”
The New York Times
 
“The leading innovator in New York’s third wave of avant-garde theater”
Time Out New York
 
60 minutes


Co-commissioned & presented with The Kitchen

Jan 5 – 6, 10, 12, 17 – 19 8pm
Jan 11 10pm
Jan 13 – 14 6pm

The Kitchen: 512 W. 19th St., Manhattan

$20 / $16 students, seniors
Purchase Tickets
thekitchen.org

#COIL13
 

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Radiohole was birthed in a Brooklyn basement in 1998 by Erin Douglass, Eric Dyer, Maggie Hoffman and Scott Halverson Gillette. The company has produced ten original shows that have been presented at venues around New York City including PS122, the Kitchen and the Collapsable Hole (sic) and have toured nationally and internationally. Radiohole’s most recent show, “Whatever, Heaven Allows” was commissioned by PS122, The Walker Art Center and the Andy Warhol Museum through the Spaulding Gray Award. “Whatever, heaven Allows” had it’s European premiere in April 2012 at Katapult Teater at Godsbanen in Århus, Denmark. Over the years, Radiohole has earned a reputation as one of New York’s most tenacious and uncompromising ensembles.

 

Radiohole is a recipient of the Spalding Gray Award, and has appeared at PS122 with Whatever Heaven Allows and Fluke.

The Kitchen is a non-profit, interdisciplinary organization that provides innovative artists working in the media, literary, and performing arts with exhibition and performance opportunities to create and present new work. Using its own extensive history as a resource, the organization identifies, supports, and presents emerging and under-recognized artists who are making significant contributions to their respective fields as well as serves as a safe space for more established artists to take unusual creative risks.
 
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The Kitchen is located in Chelsea, Manhattan and is accessible by the A, C, E, L and 1 subways. This historic region on the west side of Manhattan is home to the High Line, the Chelsea Historic District, the Fashion Institute of Technology and is an international shopping and art gallery destination. The Kitchen sits one block from the Hudson River, close to 10th avenue where audiences can pick from a plethora of restaurants scattered between 15th and 19th streets. Chelsea Piers is also one block from the theater and is a waterfront sports village hosting an abundance of bars, restaurants and shopping.
 
More than 100 art galleries have sprouted in west Chelsea, a part of the neighborhood that was industrial until only a few years ago. A once-decrepit stretch of Ninth Avenue between 19th and 21st Streets now has a cozy French ambience, with La Bergamote patisserie, La Cafetiere housewares and Le Gamin Cafe. Since opening on Ninth Avenue in 1997, Chelsea Market’s fishmongers, butchers, bakers and greengrocers have been welcomed by area food shoppers. The New York Times
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Performed and Created by Maggie Hoffman, Eric Dyer, Erin Douglass, Joseph Silovsky, Aaron Harrow and Mark Jaynes
Video Design Aaron Harrow
Lighting Design Laura Mcoczkowski
Sound Design James L. McElhinney
Inflatable construction & co-design Romanie Harper
Programmer Ryan Holsopple


Co-commissioned with support from PS122, The Kitchen and the Jerome Foundation. This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in Partnership with the city council. Inflatable Frankenstein is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Additional production support and residency is provided by EMPAC (Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center).

Whatever, Heaven Allows


WINNER OF THE 2009 SPALDING GRAY AWARD
NY PREMIERE | THEATRE

“INSPIRED” – NY Times
“OUTRAGEOUS” – The New Yorker
“MARVELOUS” – Voice
“BOISTEROUS” – Flavorpill

Excerpts from Ben Brantley’s review in The New York Times:
I enjoyed it“… “‘Whatever’ includes some funny video sequences (love that chain-smoking deer!), clunky karaoke-style musical numbers (the Jane Wyman stand-in sings ‘I Am Woman’) and one inspired routine involving haka, a traditional Maori dance form…

But you have to admit that Radiohole is a great leveler. It makes Milton sound like a Brill Building songwriter, and Sirk seem as on-the-surface as ‘Melrose Place.’ Culture don’t get no respect from Radiohole, which may not be enlightening, but for a generation that’s so over postmodernism, it is kind of liberating.”
Enjoy the full review

” turns out effervescent, anarchic work… cultivates an eccentric acting style and makes familiar text creepily bizarre.” -Time Out

Known for its radical and reckless theatricality, avant-garde New York troupe Radiohole’s newest work is a star-spangled American meta-melodrama inspired by film director Douglas Sirk’s 1950s potboilers and Milton’s epic Paradise Lost. Our heroine is an all- American “Eve” who must save her home from an evil-doer while struggling to find fulfillment in a lasting relationship with a supposedly good man who looks like god. Radiohole’s newest synthesis of cultural flotsam is sure to be bawdy, silly, possibly transcendent, and a touch disturbed.

The Spalding Gray Award supports gifted writer/performers who fully realize both aspects of Spalding’s legacy, who are fearless innovators of theatrical form, who reach into daily experience and create resonant, transcendent work that makes us all bigger, wider, wiser and, somehow, more than we were when we entered the theater. The award is a special commission created in Spalding Gray’s honor by Performance Space 122 in New York , UCLA Live, University of California, Los Angeles’ public performing arts program,The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh.

This performance was supported by a Commission Grant from the Jerome Foundation

RADIOHOLE EXTENDED! Added shows!

Saturday, February 20 – Sunday, March 21
Thu – Sat at 8PM, Sun at 6PM
Late Shows: Saturdays at 10:30PM:
Feb 27/Mar 6/Mar 13/Mar 20
Spalding Gray Award Celebration + Thursday Night Social: Feb 25

Help PS122 Go Green by viewing your Whatever, Heaven Allows Program online!

FLUKE

FLUKEFLUKE

FLUKE

“…they keep the performance ahead of the art.” – Village Voice

“Never, under any circumstances, invite them to dinner.” – The New York Times

Recognized as one of the most unpredictable and adventurous forces in American theatre Radiohole revels in and reinvents both new and archaic technologies through unexpected and inexplicable applications. Created with proprietary PEEK-A-BOO™ technology, Fluke dives into an entire ocean on stage. This strange and thrilling tale atomizes reality, magnifies perception and is poised to usher in a new era of “Oceanic Times.”

Join us for a talkback with the artists after the performance Sunday April 30

Friday, April 21: Join us for The Underwater Party

So much to celebrate… Taylor Mac’s aquatic extravaganza… Opening Night of Radiohole’s Fluke… the announcement of the 2006 recipient of the Ethyl Eichelberger Award. Dive in – the party begins in the upstairs theatre immediately after both shows.

Member Exclusive: Underwater After-Party

PS122 Members will get complimentary admission to the new nightclub Element for their exclusive party Just Dance!

Benny Soto In Association With Robbi present…
JUST DANCE!
FRIDAY, APRIL 21ST!
MUSIC BY…ANTONIO OCASIO, FRANKIE FELICIANO, MR. V, MKL

element
225 East Houston St
@ Essex St / Avenue A
Directions: F and V Trains to Second Avenue
Info &Tables 212.254.2200 | reservations@elementny.com
Doors at 10pm, 21+
www.elementny.com

April 21 – May 7, 2006
Opens Friday, April 21
Wednesday-Saturday at 8:30 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday at 4:30 p.m.
$20($10 Members)

NONE OF IT: more or less Hudson’s Bay, again

On a dog sled loaded down with Pepsi and compressed medical gases, toxic twins, naked and high in Hudson’s Bay, fly across the frozen tundra through the endless night, chasing the Aurora Borealis on the icy road to Utopia.

PERFORMED:
P.S. 122, November-December 2002

REVIEWS:
Village Voice, Alexis Soloski Radiohole Pillages Mutes, Canada
“…Whether it’s drinking or farting or whatever it is”

Theater 2k, Brook StoweÊ Radiohole Pillages Mutes, Canada
“…Imagine, if you haven’t already tried it, watching “Ice Station Zebra” on some really good acid and witnessing stoic Rock Hudson melt into a pair of questing female twins/split psyches/fucked-up bitches as they swirl in a delirious downward spiral of murder, death, the possible second coming of Christ, Pepsi, and the swinging Hudson Bay club scene while up top behind them, a tattooed bald guy in red overalls spins syrupy vintage luau vinyl upon a really unsafe-looking swaying platform. ”

https://www.radiohole.com/show-noi.html

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