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Making artful use of what’s at hand, Bricolage uses the distinctive resources of the Pittsburgh region to create theatrical events that stimulate a heightened sense of involvement for the audience.

Main Stage Productions
Spring 2002
Wild Signs by David Turkel - World Premiere
May 1-19 Wednesday-Sunday 8PM
The Post Gazette's pick for 2002's "most artistically ambitious" and "adventuresome" debut, the company utilized 14 actors, 2 live musicians, fire-eaters, belly dancers, snake charmers, and a modern dancer to tell this epic tale of Augustin Calmet, a French monk in the early eighteenth century who inadvertently introduced Western Europe to the legend of the vampire. The company installed the production in the empty sanctuary of a black stone gothic church in Highland Park (now the Union Project).
Fall 2003
Firebugs by Max Frisch
September 18-28 Wednesday-Sunday 8PM
Firebugs takes place in a town victimized by arsonists. In the middle of the neighborhood panic, local businessman Gottleib Biedermann houses two menacing strangers in his attic, thus allowing his active denial to become an accomplice to a town disaster. Though this dark, hilarious political parable is over 50 years old, its commentary on humankind's moral flaccidity and capacity for self-deception strikes at the heart of our time as well. The company installed the production at Engine House 25 a turn-of-the-century firehouse in the Strip District, now the photography studio of board member Duane Rieder.
Fall 2004
Holler by David Turkel - World Premiere
May 1-19 Wednesday-Sunday 8PM
Seventeen months and one ton of aluminum in the making, Holler tells the story of Bill, a morally compromised West Virginia mechanic and petty criminal whose only source of goodness lies in his younger, simpler brother, Joe. Bricolage turned the Brew House's IAC Performance Garage into an ominous West Virginia trailer park, complete with automobile skeletons, nosy neighbors, and an actual trailer, hauled in and cut up to fit the Brew House's raw, exciting performance area. Artistic Director Jeffrey Carpenter was named one of the Post Gazette's top performers of the year for his portrayal of Bill, and according to the PG's Chris Rawson Robert Hirst's set design was "the best (he's) seen in a long time."
2005 Staged Reading Performance Series
March 2005
The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams
In conjunction with The Frick Art Museum's retrospective exhibit, Artistry and Innovation in Pittsburgh Glass, 1808-1882, Bricolage presented an incisive look at this Tennessee William's classic directed by City Paper's Ted Hoover in the intimate setting of The Frick Art Museum auditorium.
May 2005
Blood of the Bear by Maureen McGranaghan
Directed by Rebecca Harris
With Jeffrey Carpenter, John Gresh, Terry Parshall, Greg Coughlin, Jarod Frye, Isaac Monroe
Wood Street Gallery
June 2005
Trojan Women by Euripides
Directed by Alice Jankell
With Mary Rawson, Bingo O'Malley, Melissa Martin, David Conrad, Elena Passerello, Jeffrey Carpenter, Rebecca Harris, Karen Baum, Tami Dixon, Jen Saffron and Theo Allyn.
911 Penn Avenue
July 2005
The Word by Ian McCullough
Directed by Jeffrey Carpenter
With Jason Planitzer, Liz Hammond, Chris Josephs, Nancy Bach, Tami Dixon, Patrick Jordan, Rebecca Harris, Dereck Walton. Music by Daryl Fleming.
937 Liberty Avenue
September 2005
Circumference of a Squirrel by John Walch
Directed by Tami Dixon
Featuring Jeffrey Carpenter
Wood Street Gallery - Gallery Crawl
September 30th
December 2005
B.U.S. Bricolage Urban Scrawl - One Day Play Series
This event challenged an incredible line-up of local theater artists to write, direct, perform, and present 6 new plays in one day. Each writer had 12 hours to write a 10-minute play inspired by a 90-minute journey on a city bus. The directors and actors took the next 12 hours to rehearse, memorize, stage and tech each play to debut that same evening exactly 24 hours after the first meeting.
937 Liberty Avenue 3rd floor
Featuring 40 of Pittsburgh's A-List artists
Mission: Delight - First Night (The Cultural Trust and Three Rivers Arts Festival)
A programmed group experiment in fun, Mission: Delight takes 20 people with 20 headphones on a 20-minute sensorial journey, complete with bubbles, high fives and a celebrity guest.
Building on Improv Everywhere's mission-based event programming, Bricolage designed Mission: Delight to be included in First Night 2006 for the sole purpose of making people smile. In it's subsequent incarnations Mission: Delight has grown to include group puzzle solving and mystery squares, among other youthful exercises designed to bring out your inner smirk.
937 Liberty Avenue 3rd floor
December 31st 2005
January 2006
Mission: Delight 2
A programmed group experiment in fun, Mission: Delight takes 20 people with 20 mp3 players on a 20-minute sensorial journey, complete with bubbles, high fives and a celebrity guest.
Building on Improv Everywhere's mission-based event programming, Bricolage designed Mission: Delight to be included in First Night 2006 for the sole purpose of making people smile. In it's subsequent incarnations Mission: Delight has grown to include group puzzle solving and mystery squares, among other youthful exercises designed to bring out your inner smirk.
The Cultural Trust Gallery Crawl
937 Liberty Avenue
Bricolage First Annual Staged Reading Performance Series
Committed to the vision of staging new works and re-imagined classics, we have assembled six dynamic plays for our First Annual Staged Reading Performance Series. From March through August, we will showcase a play a month featuring a total of over 90 actors, musicians, and directors, combined with minimal lighting, sound and set elements. The artists are given a week to rehearse and present, book-in-hand, their piece for two evenings. Each production is free and open to the public.
Pick Your Play
What makes Bricolage's Staged Reading Performance Series unique is the audience's participation. At the end of the six-month series, through an Internet survey, we will ask our audience for their evaluation. Whichever play receives the most enthusiastic response will become a future Bricolage full production. By engaging the audience as stakeholders in the creation of a play, the observer becomes participant, and the artistic connection between the audience and the play itself is deepened.
#1 MARCH 19th and 20th 2006
Don Juan Returns from the War (New Work)
By Odon Von Horvath, Adapted and Directed by David Maslow
A hauntingly beautifulÊadaptation, this 30's expressionist classicÊfeaturesÊDon Juan, literature's greatest romantic scoundrel, as he returns from the trenches searching for the true love he betrayed before the war. An ensemble of women play 35 roles opposite the one man trying desperately to escape the peril of his ways.
#2 APRIL 23rd and 24th 2006
Peace (Pittsburgh Premiere)
By Aristophanes Directed by Jeffrey Carpenter
ThisÊnew adaptation of Aristophanes'Êcomedy begins with Trygaeus, sick of war, flying to Olympus on a dung beetle to entreat the mighty Zeus to put an end to it. But Zeus has washed his hands of humanity, allowing the monster War (who has buried Peace in aÊcave) to have free rein.Ê
#3 MAY 21st and 22nd 2006
Phaedra's Love (Pittsburgh Premiere)
By Sarah Kane Directed by Melissa Martin
This dirty and dangerous retelling of the Seneca myth is a story of love and lust taken to violent extremes. Here Kane maps out the darkest and most unforgiving internal landscapes: violence, loneliness, power and love,Êin this shocking and perverseÊpolitical commentary.
#4 JUNE 25th and 26th 2006
Chicks with Dicks (Bad Girls on Bikes Doing Bad Things) - (Pittsburgh Premiere)
By Trista Baldwin Directed by Tami Dixon
This 60's B-movie parody with a twist is set in and around Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania's very own nuclear power plant. The irreverently absurd plot centers around Vespa de Amore, a prom queen runner-up ends up on the road with an all-girl biker gang. This wild ride features plenty of go-go dancing, hair pulling, mud wrestling, and kung-fu fighting as these good-girls-gone-bad get even worse!
#5 JULY 30th and 31st 2006
Key to the Field (New Work) - Winner of the 2006 SRPS - Audience Choice
A controversial schoolteacher wakes in the middle of the night to find a brick thrown through the picture window of his suburban home. Things get worse when a police officer arrives and, instead of investigating, takes him hostage. Written to mirror the work of Rene Magritte, Key to the Field is a surrealist thrill-ride through the twisted landscape of the American dream.
#6 AUGUST 20th and 21st 2006
SCarrie! The Musical (New Work)
Book by Joel Abbott, Kimmy Gatewood, Vince Gatton, Matt Morrow, and Nathan Phillips. Original Music by Joel Abbott. Directed by Matt Morrow.
A musical tale of love, menstruation, and telekinetic revenge, SCarrie is an unauthorized musical parmage (parody/homage) of the classic 70's horror film Carrie. Pigs blood, dirty pillows and gender bending run amuck while creepy Carrie suffers all the more in this warped musical romp through high school with a rockin' original 1970 score.
September 2006
Mission: Delight opening the New Hazlett Theatre
A programmed group experiment in fun, Mission: Delight takes 20 people with 20 headphones on a 20-minute sensorial journey, complete with bubbles, high fives and a celebrity guest.
Building on Improv Everywhere's mission-based event programming, Bricolage designed Mission: Delight to be included in First Night 2006 for the sole purpose of making people smile. In it's subsequent incarnations Mission: Delight has grown to include group puzzle solving and mystery squares, among other youthful exercises designed to bring out your inner smirk.
September 15th
December 2006
Mission: Delight First Night Pittsburgh
A programmed group experiment in fun, Mission: Delight takes 20 people with 20 headphones on a 20-minute sensorial journey, complete with bubbles, high fives and a celebrity guest.
Building on Improv Everywhere's mission-based event programming, Bricolage designed Mission: Delight to be included in First Night 2006 for the sole purpose of making people smile. In it's subsequent incarnations Mission: Delight has grown to include group puzzle solving and mystery squares, among other youthful exercises designed to bring out your inner smirk.
December 31st
January 2007
B.U.S. 2
Bricolage Urban Scrawl Fundraiser
This event challenged an incredible line-up of local theater artists to write, direct, perform, and present 6 new plays in one day. Each writer had 12 hours to write a 10-minute play inspired by a 90-minute journey on a city bus. The directors and actors took the next 12 hours to rehearse, memorize, stage and tech each play to debut that same evening exactly 24 hours after the first meeting.
937 Liberty Avenue 1st floor
Featuring 40 of Pittsburgh's A-List artists
January 14th 7PM
2007 Second Annual Staged Reading Performance Series
Committed to the vision of staging new works and re-imagined classics, we have assembled six dynamic plays for our First Annual Staged Reading Performance Series. From March through August, we will showcase a play a month featuring a total of over 90 actors, musicians, and directors, combined with minimal lighting, sound and set elements. The artists are given a week to rehearse and present, book-in-hand, their piece for two evenings. Each production is free and open to the public.
Pick Your Play
What makes Bricolage's Staged Reading Performance Series unique is the audience's participation. At the end of the six-month series, through an Internet survey, we will ask our audience for their evaluation. Whichever play receives the most enthusiastic response will become a future Bricolage full production. By engaging the audience as stakeholders in the creation of a play, the observer becomes participant, and the artistic connection between the audience and the play itself is deepened.
#1 March 18th and 19th 2007
Weightless by Christine Evens. Directed by Jason Nodler
Weightless explores the evolution of America where smoking is less dangerous than sunlight, the next generation of silicone is undetectable and the distinction between what is real and what can be purchased is terrifyingly distorted.
Bricolage
937 Liberty Avenue 1st Floor
8PM
Free
Spondored by B.U.S. 2
#2 April 29th and 30th 2007
Dutchman by Leroi Jones (also known as Amiri Imamu Baraka)
Directed by Mark Clayton Southers
This Obie Award winning classic turned the theatre world on its head when it premiered in NYC in 1964. Poet Amiri Baraka takes us deep into the "flying underbelly of the city" where there is no hope, no heroes and no future. Where the flaws of society are deeply rooted in the white man's oppression of the black man and disastrous results occur when everybody is looking.
Bricolage
937 Liberty Avenue 1st floor
8PM
Free
Sponsored by The Bricolage Board
#3 May 27th and 28th 2007
The Servant's Lament. Directed by Jeffrey Carpenter
From Bricolage's resident playwright, David Turkel, who brought you last years series winner, "Key To The Field" and other favorite works such as "Holler" and "Wildsigns", comes a brand new work commissioned especially for this year's series.
Bricolage
Wood Street Galleries
8PM
Free
Sponsored by Frank Vitale
#4 July 1st and 2nd 2007
A Dream Play by August Strindberg. Directed by Jorge Cousineau
Anything can happen. Free from the rules of time and space, the goddess daughter of Indra travels to earth to encounter the human experience. Sprawling and limitless, her journey defies traditional logic, transforming one thing into the next. Each image of humanity and each story of suffering melds with the next, allowing Strindberg to create a vast and beautiful universe inside a dream.
937 Liberty Avenue 1st Floor
8PM
Free
#5 July 29th and 30th 2007
Hamlet Up Close
Directed by Barbara MacKenzie-Wood
Conceived by Jim Neison and Barbara MacKenzie-Wood on an adaptation by Peter Brook
7 Actors, 142 minutes, 100 seats each night.
In the tradition of the "Chamber Shakespeare" of Trevor Nunn, Peter Brook and Mark Rylance.
Bricolage
937 Liberty Avenue 1st Floor
8PM
Free
#6 August 19th and 20th
Great White (World Premiere)
Libretto by Matt M. Morrow and Sean J. Palmer
Music and Lyrics by Sean J. Palmer
Directed by Matt M. Morrow
1973 America. Viscous shark attacks along the coast of Long Island put a seaside town in an economic stranglehold. This unconventional musicalization of a classic story of one man's struggle to save his marriage and community reveals the dark underbelly of capitalism and classism.
Briclolage
937 Liberty Avenue 1st Floor
8PM
Free
Sponsored by Bruce Crocker
September 19th-October 7th
Key To the Field (winner of the 2006 Staged Reading Performance Series)
Winner -#12 in the top 20 plays of 2007 - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By David Turkel
Directed by Jed Harris
Starring Tami Dixon, Sam Turich and Marty Giles
A controversial schoolteacher wakes in the middle of the night to find a brick thrown through the picture window of his suburban home. Things get worse when a police officer arrives and, instead of investigating, takes him hostage. Written to mirror the work of Rene Magritte, Key to the Field is a surrealist thrill-ride through the twisted landscape of the American dream.
937 Liberty Avenue 1st Floor
$15
Wed-Sun.8PM
October 4-Oct 21
In Service
Directed by Jeffrey Carpenter
We often speak of war in broad, geopolitical terms, but lost in this discourse is the simple fact that war is local and personal. In the heat of battle, the soldier spends more time thinking about the compatriot sitting next to him or her than about the political questions occupying the front page of the newspaper. War is the story of one individual, your fellow Pittsburgher perhaps living next door or working in the next office over. Their stories range from horrifying tales of tragedy to gripping accounts of peril and heroism. They deserve to be told, and we ought to listen.
Combining live performance, projected video, and still images, In Service presents first-hand experiences of local men and women serving in The Iraq War as soldiers, government officials, and war correspondents.
Harris Theatre
$20+
8pm Thursday-Sunday
Additional Programming
American Shorts Reading Series
Initially funded through a Sprout Grant, Bricolage was a founding partner with local artist Suzanne Pace in the development of this reading series where short works of American fiction are read by local community leaders, artists, actors, musicians, and community members in classic Pittsburgh locations. The series was so successful that it has been incorporated into the Pittsburgh Arts and Lectures series and has just completed its third full season.
Scenes From A Car
Designed to bring integrity to text-based performances presented in large gatherings, Bricolage used The Cultural Trust's Cosmopolitan Pittsburgh Rooftop Party as the inaugural setting for Scenes From A Car. Bricolage brought theatre to its most intimate level yet with this exciting and innovative theatrical experience. Staged inside Flex Car cars parked on the roof of The Theatre Square Parking Garage, audiences got an intimate viewing of famous car scenes from three popular movies, Thelma and Louise, Freeway and Carrie. Audiences in the back seats, actors performing in the front seats, there's no getting closer to the action without the audience becoming actors themselves. Hands down the hit of the Trust's event.




