ArtHouse Live

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ArtHouse Live is a Maryland theater company based in Easton, Maryland which was formed in January of 2006. Created by Brandon Hesson, Mark Mangold and Tim Weigand, the group performs contemporary theater. The group performs their shows at the Avalon Theatre.

Biography
Hesson, Mangold and Weigand met at Mangold's father's pool hall, Easton Billiards, and started their own public access television show, What's Going On, with Erik Higgins in 1994. Mangold would later study film and television at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, where he graduated from in 1998. In an attempt to raise money for his senior thesis, Mangold asked Weigand, Hesson and Higgins to help him produce a play as a fundraiser. The group formed Cricket Theatre and performed their first show, Sam Shepard's Fool For Love at the Avalon Theatre in 1998.

Cricket Theatre
Finding a niche in Easton's arts scene (the town would be named one of the Top 100 Small Arts Communities in America) Cricket Theatre went on to produce eleven shows at the Avalon from 1998 to 2003. Mangold directed each of the shows, with Weigand acting in the majority of them and Hesson in charge of the plays' production. The group produced plays from playwrights they deemed important to modern American theatre, including Shepard, Woody Allen, Beth Henley and Christopher Durang. They also performed the Tony and Pulitzer award winning contemporary plays Side Man by Warren Leight and How I Learned to Drive by Paula Vogel, and a community oriented production of A Christmas Carol. After Mangold left the group in 2003 to focus on his career in the music business, Weigand and Hesson reformed the group with other Cricket actors as Cricket Theater Company. The group would go on to produce two more new productions before folding for good in 2005.

ArtHouse Live
Hesson, Mangold and Weigand started anew in 2006 with ArtHouse Live Productions. Their first show was Craig Pospisil's Life is Short, which ran from April 6 to April 8, 2006. Their first season will also include Eric Bogosian's Talk Radio and David Auburn's Proof. The group also participated in the National Film Challenge from Oct. 21-23, 2006. Produced by the highly recognized 48 Hour Film Project, the National Film Challenge asks teams to write, shoot and edit a six to eight minute film in one weekend.

[edit] References