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Matthew Smucker

Scenic Design for Live Performance

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Man of La Mancha sizzles at the 5th Avenue

 "This “La Mancha” places its outer story, ie “Cervantes in prison relaying the tale of Don Quixote” into a modern 21st century setting instead of its usual 17th century one. The show opens on one huge unit set, a terrifyingly modern and brutal looking prison populated by 21st century characters. Framing the story in this modern context certainly opens up the material to fresher contemplation as well as giving the design team something fresh to deal with. And, this modernistic take on “La Mancha” certainly offers up interesting parallels to events happening in the world today. It’s no accident that this prison might just recall the feeling/look of more contemporary institutions like Guantanamo or Abu Ghraib.

From a design perspective this Man of La Mancha is pretty stunning with superior work from scenic designer Matthew Smucker, costume designer Harmony Arnold, lighting designer L.B. Morse and sound designer Christopher Walker. This show looks and sounds exceptional… Hurrah for that!" - Seattle Gay Scene

"Director Allison Narver sets her Man of La Mancha in what looks like a contemporary black site crossed with a dungeon. A stories-high chain-link fence topped with razor wire reaches up to the rafters, recalling maximum-security prisons. Tall slabs of cement resembling the West Bank barrier form a wall across the stage. There's also medieval-looking, solitary jail cells the inmates wheel around, and every so often a guard disappears one of the prisoners. Scene designer Matthew Smucker's postmodern incarceration hodgepodge suggests that storytelling might transport you outside prison walls, but it's not enough to knock them down. That is, the prisoners in this show may find some comfort in Cervantes's yarn—and that comfort is real and valuable and necessary and worthy as an act of survival—but the words bounce off the dungeon's walls." - The Stranger

"The work is not, and does not pretend to be, a faithful rendition of either Cervantes’ life or of Don Quixote. Ironically, director Allison Narver’s nuanced, textually faithful, but scenically re-conceived version isn’t your Mama’s La Mancha as seen on Broadway, nor thankfully is it a ruinous, 1972 version with Peter O’Toole and Sophia Loren. It is however a production that doesn’t let its redone appearance (a bold Matthew Smucker designed neo-Nazi type concentration camp in a time/location unnamed) upstage a script and score that still ranks as one of the best of its era." - Jetspace Magazine

"And it just looks really, amazingly cool." - Madison Park Times

tags: 5th Ave, La Mancha
Monday 11.14.16
Posted by Matthew Smucker
Comments: 1
 

Previews Begin for ACT's "Mystery"

Bathsheba Doran's fantastic play, The Mystery of Love and Sex, begins its preview performances this weekend at Seattle's ACT, directed by Allison Narver and starring Ray Abruzzo, Emily Chishholm, Lorenzo Roberts, and Mary Kae Irvin. Tickets are available here, and a taste of the show's first day of rehearsal can be seen in the video below.

tags: ACT, Mystery of Love and Sex
Saturday 05.28.16
Posted by Matthew Smucker
 

Brooklyn Bridge opens at SCT

"Scenic designer Matthew Smucker has outdone himself," raves Seattle's Child, in the review of Seattle Children's Theatre's new production of Melissa James Gibson's play Brooklyn Bridge. "Uplifting, hopeful, charming and challenging, this show will stick with you long after the curtain closes. On the walk back to the car, my own daughter enjoyed making up her own versions of what happened next. Indeed, you can’t help but root for these characters and wish you had another glimpse into their apartment building to see how the events of that one night changed the relationships of its inhabitants. Beyond the characters, it may even leave you on a quest of your own to make more and stronger connections with your neighbors and to sift through all the facts that bombard us in our daily lives and find what’s left, what really matters."

The South Seattle Emerald writes "From the moment we saw the breathtakingly perfect set, inviting in its industrial, “real-world” complexity we were hooked: fascinated by this slightly dingy, somewhat broken-down, New York City apartment building. Before us stretched three floors complete with trash incinerator chute, mailboxes, door buzzers and an in-operational elevator. My daughter Mira’s eyes lit up and she breathed out, “Wow” her gazed fixed on the stage. All thoughts of parched throats were instantly forgotten."

"Brooklyn Bridge is the rare piece of children’s entertainment in which the adult characters don’t talk down to the kid protagonist. Melissa James Gibson’s play — a warm, melancholy and gently surreal depiction of community — doesn’t condescend to its audience either, making it an ideal piece of theater for adults and older kids to enjoy together." says the Seattle Times. "Matthew Smucker’s terrific set is equal parts magical and menacing, an off-kilter assemblage of canted hallways and oddly placed apartment doors."

Get your tickets here for performances through March 20th.

tags: Seattle Children's Theatre, SCT, Brooklyn Bridge
Tuesday 03.01.16
Posted by Matthew Smucker
 

Seattle Theatre Writers "Leak" Award Nominations

The Seattle Theatre Writers, a group of local critics, have begun releasing details about the 2015 Gypsy Award nominations in a slow trickle via their Facebook page. I'm pleased to be nominated for both Our Town and Cabaret in the category of Excellence in Scenic Design! Thanks Gypsies, and congratulations to all the other nominees!

Excellence in Set Design (Larger Theater Company) nominee:Matthew Smucker - Our Town (Strawberry Theatre Workshop)

Posted by Seattle Theater Writers on Thursday, January 7, 2016

Excellence in Set Design (Larger Theater Company) nominee:Matthew Smucker - Cabaret (Village Theatre)

Posted by Seattle Theater Writers on Thursday, January 7, 2016

To recap: All Five Nominees for the 2015 Gypsy Rose Lee Award for Excellence in Set Design (Larger Theater Company)...

Posted by Seattle Theater Writers on Thursday, January 7, 2016

See the entire slate of nominees across all categories here.

tags: Village, Cabaret, Strawshop, Our Town, Gypsy Awards
Saturday 01.09.16
Posted by Matthew Smucker
 

"Building Mr. Burns" in City Arts

City Arts Magazine previews the design for ACT's production of Anne Washburn's Mr. Burns, a Post-Electric Play:

"Creating the world of Anne Washburn's Mr. Burns, a Post-Electric Play was a complicated process. The three-act play, now running at ACT Theatre, is set first in the immediate aftermath of a nuclear catastrophe, where a group of survivors gathered around a campfire tries to recreate an episode of The Simpsons. Act two pushes seven years into the future, when these survivors are now performing Simpsons episodes as a touring theatre troupe; act three is set 75 years after that when the episode has taken on much, much greater cultural significance. Mr. Burns director (and ACT incoming artistic director) John Langs worked with scenic designer Matthew Smucker and costume designer Deb Trout (among many other talented designers and technicians) to bring this evolving, post-apocalyptic world to life."

See the full article by Gemma Wilson, with photos by Bruce Clayton Tom, here.

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tags: ACT, Mr. Burns, City Arts
Saturday 10.24.15
Posted by Matthew Smucker
 

"Touch Me Here" This Thursday and Friday at Velocity

GUEST ARTIST SERIES: PEGGY PIACENZA Touch Me Here Encore Performance SEPT 3 + 4 / 8PM Velocity Founders Theater 1621 12th Ave on Capitol Hill TICKETS + INFO // 206.325.8773 // velocitydancecenter.org

“Her work is frequently bold, challenging audiences to watch and think about dance out of traditional boxes, and this new solo extends that edginess.” – Melody Datz Hansen, Seattle Dances

Touch Me Here is multi-disciplinary movement memoir created and performed by Seattle-based choreographer Peggy Piacenza with an original live score performed by cellist Scott Bell. A luminary performer and a unique choreographic voice in Seattle’s dance community, Piacenza’s 25-year career includes her own evening length works as well as star turns with Pat Graney Company, 33 Fainting Spells, Deborah Hay, Dayna Hanson and others. A very personal departure from her past work, Touch Me Here is a movement memoir in which Piacenza excavates her own lived experience to connect with audiences human to human.


tags: Touch Me Here, Velocity, Peggy Piacenza
Tuesday 09.01.15
Posted by Matthew Smucker
 

And in more awards news...

Theatre Puget Sound's 2015 Gregory Award nominations were released bit by bit on Facebook in daily allotments over the past week. Strawberry Theatre Workshop's Our Town and ACT's The Invisible Hand are both up for "Outstanding Production", and The Village's Cabaret was nominated as "Outstanding Musical." The set for The Invisible Hand received a nomination as "Outstanding Scenic Design" as well!  Congratulations to all the nominees! Look here for the complete list for the 2015 Gregories.

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tags: Gregory Awards, ACT, Invisible Hand, Strawshop, Our Town, Cabaret, Village, TPS
Sunday 08.16.15
Posted by Matthew Smucker
 

2015 Stranger Genius Awards Nominations Announced

"Scenic designer Matt Smucker talks about objects as if they have rich inner lives. In his world, a cement block can "gesture," the corner of a room can be "aggressive," and a void can have "style." While many designers simply decorate their stages, Smucker conjures physical environments that seem to perform alongside their actors—they have a sense of movement, even when they're not moving."

Read more of Brendan Kiley's interview and profile in the Stranger's Arts and Performance Quarterly.

 Kelly O's photo from the Summer issue of A & P.

 Kelly O's photo from the Summer issue of A & P.


Source: http://www.thestranger.com/theater/feature...
tags: Stranger, Genius Awards
Thursday 06.11.15
Posted by Matthew Smucker
 
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