- opening date January 6, 2011
- Cast: Starring Drew Friedman, McKenna Kerrigan, Jeb Kreager, Mary McCool, Paul Schnabel, Adriano Shaplin and Stephanie Viola
The Portraits of Peter Sumner Walton Bellamy______ peter@peterbellamy.com_______ pswb©2024 ____written permission required for reproduction.____peterbellamyphoto.com
Pages
Thursday, December 25, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Adriano Shaplin, The Riot Group, The Connelly Theater , 2011
Friday, December 12, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Eliza Clark, Page 73 at 45 Walker Street, 2010
EDGEWISE
Monday, December 8, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Austin Pendleton, Newhouse Theater, Lincoln Center 2012
LYRICS BYJan Levy Tranen
BASED ON THE PLAY CANDIDA BYGeorge Bernard Shaw
CONCEIVED & DIRECTED BYMichael Halberstam
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Paul Weitz, Second Stage Theatre, 2012
Monday, November 24, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Dael Orlandersmith, Rattlestick Playwrights Theater, 2012
Sunday, November 23, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Richard Nelson, Tweed Courthouse, New York City, 2012
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Lemon Andersen, Red Hook, Brooklyn, 2012
Friday, November 14, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Gabe McKinley, Peter Norton Space, 2012
Monday, November 10, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Jose Rivera, The Rattlestick Theater, 2012
Sunday, November 9, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Rajiv Joseph, Second Stage, 2011
Film hand-developed by photographer
Saturday, November 1, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Emily Mann, McCarter Theatre, 2012
Film hand-developed by photographer
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Dan LeFranc, Playwrights Horizons, 2012
Film hand-developed by photographer
Monday, October 27, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Nick Jones, 2012
Peter and Lisa Bellamy, 13th Wedding Anniversary, October 27, 2001
After Wedding Ceremony
Sunday, October 19, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Samuel D. Hunter, Clubbed Thumb at The Ohio Theater, 2010
Film hand-developed by photographer
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Cynthia Hopkins, Soho Rep Theater, 2010
Film hand-developed by photographer
(pre-recorded) There’s a melancholy, folk quality, as of hand-made furniture out of wood. Before there were stereos, and when the idea of automobiles was novel and romantic. An old grey saltbox farmhouse with rolling hills and a small vegetable garden in back. There’s holes and tears in all clothing, and everything is old, used, possibly mended but always torn and dirty. There’s a stench of urine; but also some operatic, orchestral strains of music in the background. And there are long stretches of pause, where time is slowed way down. And then a bizarre comment inappropriate enough to make you laugh... tinkering around in the garage with ancient tools left over from the Stone Age. Before television. Vinyl records. Naval aircraft. And some items brought back from China by distant ancestors. Decay, in its terror and sadness and beauty. Oriental rugs, and multiple pairs of broken glasses. A lifelong teacher and volunteer, never celebrated. Anecdotes of drunk driving in the Navy, and the car wrapping itself around a tree on the front lawn of a motel, and love letters from a girl back home flying up into the air and fluttering around in a ballet. Haunted by the unfinished memoir. Quoting epic poetry on the hospital gurney, and the ridiculous, condescending language of medical professionals. A fool in a Shakespeare play. Real live piano. There lies the harbor, the ocean waves; there moves the sea, the vessel puffs her sail. The lights begin to twinkle from the rocks, the long day wanes, the slow moon climbs, the deep moans round with many voices. Come, my friends, ‘tis not too late to seek a newer world.
In Ancient Greece, they didn’t even have anxiety or depression or alcoholism, just plain old INSANITY which took the form of a Goddess who was liable to swoop down and randomly inhabit your mind, because some other God or Goddess had it in for you, in which case you were just TOTALLY FUCKED. So this modern invention of tragedy, Aristotle had no way of imagining at all. It’s not the moment right after someone has gouged his own eyes out because he realizes he had sex with his mother, or some mother about to slit the throats of her children. It’s me, it’s me, it’s me, years and years and years down the line, wasting away in some nursing home, on a multitude of an array of drugs, in a delerium haze, never having had children in the first place, and haunted by the notion that I SHOULD have had children and then realizing it’s entirely possible I DID have children and I DO have children, I just can’t remember what their names are or what they look like or where they live...
I like the theater, because everyone has
to sit down, and shut up. Ritual, repetition, reflection.
((Being a wildly energetic silent physical comedy routine resembling an ancient comic running through his material – all of it – at lightning speed, backstage in his imaginary dressing room, in manic preparation for his big moment on the big stage with footlights lighting him up and a giant scarlet curtain as his backdrop and a monumental crowd like an ocean roaring him on, a moment that will more than likely never actually occur.))
Oh I know a poem: “All experience... is a
crack... through which shines... the... the unknown
world.” And then later on in the poem he still thinks
there’s something to be gained from the unknown world.
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Jordan Harrison, Main Stage, Playwrights Horizons, 2011
Film hand-developed by photographer
2012-71-38-12_Harrisoncopyxxxx
Saturday, October 4, 2014
Portrait of Playwright Katori Hall, at Signature Theatre, 2011
Film hand-developed by photographer