Beit Hillel Theater Workshop, Community, Encore, Khan Theatre, plays, Readings, Starcatcher, Streaming, Theater Vs. Virus, virtual, Year Review, Yom Hashoa

Theater vs. COVID – 19 A Year in Review

2020 has been a weird year for theater in the world and in the Jerusalem English Theater Community. We have seen new theater companies emerge and older companies move on. We have seeked new ways of doing theater when the old ways just couldn’t happen. COVID – 19 and lockdowns became a regular occurrence in our lives and what people knew as theater either stopped entirely or completely changed.

In 2018 I was in New York and met a few people at a bar celebrating the end of a successful New York New Works festival. I said I was from Israel and someone there started a conversation with me about what it could mean to do virtual theater where someone from one country joins someone from another country onstage. Another woman that I met there was involved in the conversation and unbeknownst to either of us we actually ended up making this happen in 2020.

Theater in general changed this year. Some say for the worse and some say for the better. But all I can say is that we saw new theater and a lot of creativity from new sources that has shown the resilience of theatermakers all over the world and especially in Jerusalem. 

While there were a few live productions in our community in the beginning of 2020 with Fiddler on the Roof produced by Beit Hillel ending right at the tail end of 2019 on December 29th, the COVID – 19 crisis and ensuing lockdowns of society eventually shut down most productions. But our community has been as resilient as ever and while theaters were closed there were still theatrical moments throughout. 

But let us first reflect on what has actually happened this past year.

In the beginning of January we had one of the older companies, Encore, produce Rothschild and Sons at Beit Shmuel, which happened to be the last of a triple header of Sheldon Harnick and Jerry Bock musicals done in the community since November with J-Town’s She Loves Me and Beit Hillel’s Fiddler on the Roof in December. Also in January, a new company called Theatre Zion produced an original production of The Trial of Uncle Charlie by Yehudit Shier Weisberg at the Khan Theatre. Theatre Zion is run by Arye Weisberg and his wife who have produced many productions in Canada before making aliyah and starting Theatre Zion. 

Then Israel Musicals produced Of Thee I Sing at Beit Shmuel. A musical about the ludicrousness of politics, which we saw a bit of in reality in 2020.

In February we were touched by J-Town Playhouse’s The Last Five Years by Jason Robert Brown which was J-Town Playhouse’s goodbye show to AACI. The AACI decided to close down their theatrical space that was used for dozens of different productions and hundreds of cultural events over the past eight years. Where J-Town Playhouse will end up in the future, who knows. But they also pivoted to virtual theater, which we will get to soon.

At the same time Theater in the Rough produced The God of Carnage by Yasmina Reza in people’s living rooms which was a big success.

In March we saw Starcatcher’s Chicago but unfortunately it only lasted a few performances due to the first COVID – 19 lockdown. It was a masterpiece and Starcatcher always challenges itself to be better. The hope is that when live theater can happen again they will continue to bring challenging theater at its best to the live stage.

And then theater spaces were shut down and what was the community to do?

Well the first foray into the virtual space was readings with Theater in the Rough’s King Lear, Jerusalem Public Theater’s Twelfth Night, and JET Community’s CB Davies reading Paradise with playwright Yasmine Beverly Rana. Theater in the Rough did another reading of The Rivals by Richard Brinsley Sheridan as well.

Then CBDB Productions produced a special virtual reading of Vilna by Ira Fuchs for Yom Hashoa.

After that JET Community launched JET Live! which saw many artists from the community in Jerusalem as well as artists from Broadway, the Philippines, and other places come together online in special interviews to talk about theater and keep each other positive and build a community feeling during the lockdowns.

And thanks to that, JET was able to have a workshop with Yael Silver, alumnus of the JET Community and producer on Broadway. She was able to speak with artists in our community about what it means to be a producer and her journey.

In July CBDB Productions produced The Fallen by Yasmine Beverly Rana which worked on making the virtual space more than just a reading. You can still view this play on Facebook. 

At some point during this time Aviella Trapido, producer and director of J-Town Playhouse and Yael Valier, producer and director of Theater and Theology met at a routine dentist appointment check up and went on to create and produce together Corona Monologues, a series of monologues of different perspectives about COVID – 19 and the period we are living in. It featured a talkback with Rabbi, psychologist, and artist Rabbi Dr. Krug.

Evan Kent did a virtual performance of his show Shards virtually.

Women’s Performance Community also branched out with special events on Zoom, creating GRIDVID’s every other month which speak to a holiday or events of the day and released a recording of their last production HIDDEN: The Secret Jews of Spain online.

A new theater initiative by Crossroads Jerusalem, a youth theater project called Crossroads Theater Shed, produced a virtual ten minute play festival with talkbacks with the playwrights and the youth.

The Shine/Markowitz Family produced a theatrical movie with the community of “Joseph and the Technicolor Dreamcoat” for their son Adin’s Bar Mitzvah celebration which was a huge hit.

And right at the end of the year after experimenting with virtual readings and productions CBDB Productions produced After Rome by Yasmine Beverly Rana on December 27th.

All of these projects featured something that may not have been possible in the past. People from all over the world were involved with these productions. Including playwrights themselves, other artists, and friends and family that would have never been able to be a part of the special community that is Jerusalem English Theater.

During all this time different companies did try to prepare for the inevitable time when live theater would happen again but the timeline of COVID – 19 did not allow this in 2020. We hope soon in 2021;

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang by Israel Musicals rehearsed with social distancing throughout the summer but ended up stopping without performing.

Henry IV: In Motion by Theater in the Rough rehearsed with social distancing in the summer, also without performing.

Aida by Beit Hillel is rehearsing currently with social distancing. This was the first year in 36 years that there was no show on Chanukah at Beit Hillel but rehearsals started in September and continue throughout with social distancing to prepare for the time when theaters will hopefully soon be open again.

Raise Your Spirits has been rehearsing their new show via Zoom and live with social distancing called “Rebecca! Mother of Two Dynasties”

And Theater in the Rough has planned a special event of Shakespeare Monologues with different artists in the community and beyond to perform in a park when it again becomes possible.

And to quote one of our community, Toby Greenwald, “Like all of the community theaters in Jerusalem and elsewhere, it is never just about “the show.” Whoever has tried to rehearse a show or put up a show even in these trying times the feeling of community that we create and the spirit that theater brings to our lives can never be taken away. Somehow we will see the end of COVID – 19 and the beginning of live theater, with a few virtual performances here and there. On to 2021!”

We’re entering 2021 with the actual vaccine. We will see the end of COVID – 19 and live theater will be renewed. But our hope is that everything that has happened in 2020 will continue to make us stronger as a community and as people and artists. And our new horizons have only just begun.

Beit Hillel Theater Workshop, Community, Set design, Starcatcher

Set Designers in Our Community

In 2019 JET Community’s Rivka Deray sat down with three of Jerusalem community theater’s finest set designers, namely Dooby Harvey, Roxanne Goodkin-Levy and Eli Kaplan Wildmann to discuss their artform and the theater community in Jerusalem. We were able to finish putting this together during this time and here it is. Enjoy!

What drove you to become a set designer? How did you first become interested in theater design?

Dooby:

About ten years ago I was studying at the Bezalel Arts school, and I saw a poster for auditions for My Fair Lady at Hebrew University. I auditioned and got a part. When the production began I heard about doing set design, and I helped the girl who was designing it at the time. It turned out to be a lot of fun!

Eli: 

I think the first time I designed a set was when I was little, like 5 or six. We had a magnet theater at home… A simple toy. I loved this toy, but there were only two sets. There was the forest and the castle. So I was like, “I can’t do a show like this;” and so I would draw things and put it in front of them. Then I made an entire new stage using those magnets. I made it bigger, and I needed more space. I think that was my first set design. And then when I was 12 and we moved to Israel I became involved with JEST (Jerusalem English Speaking Theater), and I rose in the ranks, doing backstage, chorus in a musical; but mostly offstage–doing sound, doing the lights, and eventually set design. My first set design was Pygmalion with Leah Stoller. It was really cool. 

Roxanne: 

When I was little there was a doll house that I always saw in a toy shop window that I always liked. I thought If I can’t get it, I’ll make it. I loved to build spaces and houses for dolls and stuffed animals. I guess that’s where it started. A model is everything; I studied art in Reading University and the first year they asked for people to help with set design for the drama society, so I actually did a couple of sets. It was great. I really enjoyed it. I used to stay until 1 a.m. doing these sets.

Credit: Brian Negin/Encore/Wizard of Oz/Design by Roxanne Goodkin-Levy

What was the first set you ever created and how do you feel about it now?

Dooby: 

Well my first one was Les Miserables in 2011 and it’s still one of my favorite sets. We had a little story with that particular show. I was originally cast in it to perform one of the parts, but due to a licensing issue every actor above the age of 20 had to leave the cast. I stayed on as a set designer. I was unemployed at the time so the only thing I had going on was doing the set of Les Miserables. 

That’s the only set I didn’t photograph. I didn’t realize that it would be destroyed at the end. So I never took a good photo of the backdrop. I came a week after the show and I said “Hey, Michael, do you mind if I take the backdrop?” It was like a six by three meter canvas. Michael was like “what, what are you talking about?” I said “Where is it?” He said I don’t know, we tore it down; probably threw it away. Since then I’ve been obsessively taking photos of my sets before they get destroyed. 

Eli: 

I worked on Pygmalion JEST. It’s still one of my favorite things that I’ve done. I think it’s really good. It holds up. It’s not like it’s my favorite because it was first. It’s my favorite because it was really good. I would do it a little differently now today, of course, but I’m still so proud of it. It was abstract in just the right way and it was still beautiful, and full, and I was so happy with it.

Roxanne: 

It was the Pirates of Penzance. I decided I wanted the rocks to look really three dimensional. We’d build them with paper mache, but I had no idea how to use paper mache. We used to make such a mess. It was crazy. The effect was quite good in the end. But I thought it was too much work. I’ve made it. I can paint the same thing with three dimensions without doing it. But it was – there is a difference when it actually is three dimensional.

Credit: Brian Negin/Encore/Oliver!/Design by Roxanne Goodkin-Levy

What is your set malfunction story?

Eli:

It was during a rehearsal. There’s a moment in this show where there’s a big set reveal. Usually the set doesn’t get to be such a prominent part of the show where it’s kind of the climax of the show. There’s a visual, scenic moment with a thing that has to sort of pop open and reveal itself. At the dress rehearsal, it opened and it completely fell apart. All the strips fell off. It’s this beautiful thing that I made that everyone loved and it was really cool. Then, like in a cartoon, it revealed itself and then “tak, tak, tak, pff.”  It did it like in a cartoon where it fell, and there was a part that was still hanging on a little bit and then it fell. Then, the next day, I came in and we had an idea for how to fasten them in a different way, and it was fine.

Roxanne:

When I was doing the student plays I designed the caucasion chalk circle. They used carpet. It’s Hessian hanging down. I used a row of carpets. Like these big tubes; kind of a circle with a carpet tube. Somehow, as I was hanging one of the Hessian pieces up–it was not long before the show–and the whole chalk circle fell down. We had to put it up at the last minute. You build it and you break it.

Dooby: 

I had one where I was both a set designer and an actor. This was in Cinderella. Cinderella’s house has an exterior and you turn it around and open it up and that’s the interior of the house. It was my job to do that and I completely forgot. I was also playing Sebastian the villain, and I was like: “oh my god I missed my scenery cue and now Cinderella and the sisters and the mother are sitting in the exterior of the house instead of inside with pumpkins and whatever.” I was freaking out because I forgot to change the scenery, and so I forgot my acting cue that I was supposed to go onstage. So Rivka, who played the evil stepmother, had to improvise for about two minutes, completely going to a monologue.

Credit: Shani Shalgi/Beit Hillel/Les Miserables/Design by Dooby Harvey

Could you tell us about the craziest set you’ve ever designed?

Eli:

Pippin for sure, it was crazy. Pippin is a show that can’t happen on just any set, it’s this meta-theatrical, metaphysical treatise on life, it needs a framework. It could have been anything! It was so hard to pin down what I should do. With other shows there’s a specific setting that the show needs to happen in, so there’s already something for you to work with, but with Pippin, there’s none of that, it’s totally open. We wanted none of it to look realistic, and there’s no reference photos for that! They have to be in a style of this kind of weird troupe of artists that we created. Not to mention needing to work with what we have as a community. I’m always trying to push and stretch our resources, see what can be multifunctional. Some of them didn’t work, but in the end it all worked out.

Roxanne:

Fiddler. We opened it up. It was Friday morning. This is a real happening. Its lovely because a lot of people came to help me. But then children came home from school and they all saw it from their windows and they all came down and I gave them – I had a few copies and I gave them a different house each. Each house was painted – it was not a made happening but it just became this community thing. It was great. That day was wonderful. I said to Ronnie because he was the set constructor. I said to him there’s a set and I want you to build the set. He said to me I can build anything for you as long as its 90 degrees. And then the Fiddler on the Roof – nothing is 90 degrees in it. Not 190 degrees anyway.

Credit: Anna Strelnikova/Beit Hillel/ Beauty and the Beast/Design by Dooby Harvey

Is there a dream set that you would love to design?

Dooby:

Chess. It was a musical that came out in the 80s and it takes place during the Cold War. It’s great: very ambitious music, and the set is actually usually based on a Chess board in some ways. 

Roxanne:

The Phantom of the Opera. I’d love to do the Phantom.

Credit: Aharon Manor/Starcatcher/Pippin/Design by Eli Kaplan-Wildmann

Here’s what they had to say about the community.

Eli:

I think, in terms of the English speaking community theater, it’s amazing to me that I’ve grown up in it and learned. I went to art school and studied design, but I learn so much from doing stuff here and it’s such a great community. I do certain things outside of the theater community and also in the theater community; everything here is always so much more fun, because people are just so much more supportive and committed. Professional stuff is not as fun. It’s just work. I’m a big fan of this community.

Roxanne:

I think when you go and see a professional show, you go and see something in London and it’s so far away, too sleek and you’re not part of it. You can’t get into it. Here when you see a show you really feel for the people. You can connect to all the different elements much more in the amateur theater. It’s very interesting. As long as it’s good, you know. 

Credit: Brian Negin/Encore/Guys and Dolls/Design by Roxanne Goodkin-Levy

The interview went on and transitioned from a traditional Q and A to a conversation and wound up touching on numerous things

  • Roxanne received a photo album when she finished “Fiddler on the Roof” with Encore
  • The sets we have designed in the community, they’re just as good if not better than those we’ve seen on Broadway or West End
  • Photos cannot do justice to sets, there’s so much depth with a set that pictures don’t capture. There’s so much texture and life in a set that can only be realized in person.
  • How important collaboration between cast and crew is on productions, everyone needs to work together in order for a production to be a success. All the way from the designers to the builders, and how the cast interacts with it all.
Credit: Brian Negin/Encore/My Fair Lady/Design by Roxanne Goodkin-Levy

Edited by: Aviva Solkowitz, CB Davies, Rivka Deray, and Tom Diamond