Scott Capurro

December 10, 2009

A GLOWING review for She Stoops from the SF Guardian. I guess I’m in a hit!

Filed under: Blog Posts, Blogroll, reviews — Scott @ 2:44 am

And it’s about friggin’ time. It’s doing well cuz I didn’t write it. Anyway this is the third review I’m putting up here. Read below for the first two. It’s all happening at OUR theatre. Be there or be, I dunno, dead inside.

CHEERS!
She Stoops to Comedy raises the bar for holiday theater
BY ROBERT AVILA
Wednesday December 9, 2009

It’s hardly news, but holiday shows can be fairly dreary treats. Given such periods of seasonal affective disorder as the theater may present, it’s a genuine surprise and pleasure to discover the wit and wile strutting the boards at SF Playhouse — tucked into a far corner of Union Square somewhere just north-by-northwest of that big Christmas tree — where the season offering is a sparkling production of David Greenspan’s She Stoops to Comedy.
Mercifully, the plot has nothing to do with yuletide or smiling through a bad case of rickets. Instead, it concerns a lesbian stage actress named Alexandra Page (male actor Liam Vincent) who decides to disguise herself as a man and try out for Orlando in a summer stock production of Shakespeare’s As You Like It, in order to play opposite her estranged lover, Alison (Sally Clawson), in the part of Rosalind — another cross-dresser twice over since Shakespeare’s character is a woman disguised as a man in a part played, historically, by a boy.
Playing opposite, in short, is just what Alexandra does, convincing everyone she is a man — including a besotted middle-aged gay actor named Simon Lanquish (Scott Capurro) — while spying on and ultimately seducing, in seemingly old heterosexual fashion, her charmed lover and costar.
Meanwhile, other romances abound in ways at least as complicated: Alexandra’s ambitious young director Hal (Cole Alexander Smith) and creatively frustrated assistant-and-girlfriend Eve Addaman (Carly Cioffi) balance careers and romance in precarious turn. And a highly affected actress named Jayne Summerhouse (Amy Resnick) seeks to rekindle an old flame with her seeming-opposite of the same sex: the literally down-to-earth archeologist Kay Fein (Amy Resnick) — an encounter that promises sparks, not least because it features only one actor.
But gender, identity, and blocking aren’t the only challenges put forth by Greenspan’s play. In She Stoops to Comedy, even the script is up for grabs, rewriting itself as it goes along through the caprice of characters who are liable to speak to, as much as from, their respective roles. (Kay, for instance, changes decades and job titles with relative ease.) Cunningly employing Shakespeare and other literary touchstones — in particular a 1910 play by Ferenc Molnár called The Guardsman — She Stoops traipses over aesthetic and even philosophical ground after its carefree but astute fashion. It’s a self-consciously theatrical enterprise that gleefully eschews expectations, squirming pleasantly under the usual theatrical artifice as if looking to satisfy a really good itch.
A dazzling bit of low-key stagecraft, She Stoops is a tall order for any company. In director Mark Rucker’s staging, the action comes off as a pitch-perfect balance of wit and wonder, a loving riff on acting, connecting, and the role of the imagination in art and life. Heady and hilarious at once, it’s metatheater with a pulse, sporting plenty of fine opportunities for an exceptional cast — beginning with Liam Vincent, whose poise and subtlety in the lead are perfection — and including a couple of memorable scenes of actorly pyrotechnics exquisitely realized by Capurro and Resnick, respectively.

December 4, 2009

Hey Kids, it’s my new ish stand up show at the SF Playhouse. ONE NIGHT ONLY! Seriously.

Filed under: Blog Posts — Scott @ 1:20 am

Simply EVERYONE has been asking: When is your next gig? Only they’ve been asking me, not you. Follow me. Anyway, I wasn’t sure why they were so curious. Either they wanted to watch me being beaten; or they wanted to clear town before the shit hit the big gay fan.
Either way, here’s the info. Below, I mean.
Wait, is there a big gay fan? Meredith Baxter Birney I suppose. She’s HUGE. But they all plump up. I’m only quoting Cher’s dress designer.
Read on, ‘tards.

Stand Up Comedy with Scott Capurro

RESERVE EARLY!
We are thrilled to announce a special one-night only date with Scott Capurro.

Currently starring in She Stoops to Comedy, Scott makes his living as a stand up Comedian, and believe me, he is hilarious! Currently residing in London, this one night only event is a rare opportunity to see Scott in action.

Please note that Scott’s material is not for the faint at heart, you must be 18 or older to attend.
For tickets, buy online or call 415-677-9596

“It was like watching someone trying to commit suicide by lynching” London Guardian*****
“..accept the ferocious, corrosive material in the provocative spirit it’s intended, and it is brilliantly, shockingly funny……This is grade-A, pure hardcore comedy” Chortle *****
“Unbelievable, unstoppable and most definitely, unmissable!”
Scotsgay *****