Molly Adea

Jan 26, 2018

Molly Adea CAST in THE SKRIKER by Caryl Churchill, directed by Jon Reimer

Molly Adea has been cast as the Skriker in The Skriker by Caryl Churchill, directed by Jon Reimer! See her perform March 13-17 at the Arthur Wagner Theatre!

About the play

An ancient fairy that shapeshifts into various people as it pursues Lily and Josie, two teenage mothers whom it befriends, manipulates, seduces, and entraps. Blending naturalism, horror and magical realism, The Skriker is a fantastical story of love, loss, and revenge.

About the playwright

Caryl Churchill is a British playwright known for dramatizing the abuses of power, for her use of non-naturalistic techniques, and for her exploration of sexual politics and feminist themes. Her early work developed Bertolt Brecht's modernist dramatic and theatrical techniques of Epic theatre to explore issues of gender and sexuality. From 1986 onwards, she began to experiment with forms of dance-theatre, incorporating techniques developed from the performance tradition initiated by Antonin Artaud with his 'Theatre of Cruelty'. This move away from a clear Fabel dramaturgy towards increasingly fragmented and surrealistic narratives characterises her work as postmodernist.

About the Director

Jon Reimer is a fourth-year PhD candidate in the Joint PhD Program of UC San Diego and UC Irvine, as well as a director and theatre educator. His research is centered around the work of Japanese novelist and playwright Yukio Mishima, queer performance in post-WWII Japan, and pedagogical issues regarding ego and nostalgia. He received a BA in Theatre Arts with a minor in Asian Studies from Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pennsylvania. UC San Diego credits: Baby Teeth(Director, WNPF 2017), Scenes from an Execution (Director), Angels in America, Part Two: Perestroika (Director), Boston Marriage (Director), Borealis (AD/Dramaturg), Angels in America, Part One: Millennium Approaches (AD/Dramaturg), The Cherry Orchard (AD/Dramaturg), Golden Boy (Frank/Mickey). Other directing credits: Songs for a New World, The Insanity of Mary Girard, The Pillow of Kantan (world premiere), Pippin, Once Upon a Mattress, Into the Woods, A Kabuki Christmas Carol (world premiere).

Director's Statement

My first encounter with The Skriker by Caryl Churchill was at Muhlenberg College, where I did my undergraduate degree in Theatre. My mentors, Dr. Beth Schachter and Dr. Jim Peck, both UC San Diego MFA Directing alumni, used the play in their practicum courses, primarily because of its abundance of scenes with only female actors.
 

 

 
The Skriker was how many of us at Muhlenberg first encountered a play that made a performance of words, not in terms of their direct meaning but rather their musicality as sounds and rhythm makers. We didn’t venture into the Lacanian logic of the language structure, or how the story was existing in and around the words; we just knew it began with a five-page monologue which required WORK to understand.
 

 

 
As Churchill was greatly influenced by the theatre of Bertolt Brecht, her plays – in their grandure of imagery and language, with layer upon layer of content and meaning – acknowledge their theatre-ness. Only by the audience being reminded again and again that they are watching a stage show can they see the meaning of its content and (if successful) make them want to leave the theatre and do something to improve the state of our world.
 

 

 
For our production at UCSD, the Skriker is not just one actor but instead a Greek chorus of sorts, a phalanx from which individuals will emerge every time the creature shape-shifts. The group is an amorphous cluster, undulating as it speaks, changing form with sound and emotion. Bodies disappear and are replaced with shapes in the shadows for this magic-filled world that is scary, shocking, and bizarre. The audience in the Arthur Wagner Theatre will feel confined and claustrophobic, so that they feel like Lily and Josie feel from the Skriker and their circumstances of their world: surrounded, suffocated, trapped, hunted.
 

 

 
To me, The Skriker is a play about how the world chews women up, spits them out, and expects them to keep on going despite the trauma of having been devoured. The events of the play happen to Lily and Josie, are put upon them, rather than being about them or for them. So does that mean the Skriker, the creature of this story, should be seen as real or as an allegory? Should its words be taken as literal or metaphorical? The answer: the Skriker is whatever you think it is, and it is nothing that you think it is. I know what I think, but the brilliance of Churchill is that the Skriker is whatever we each think it to be, and also not.
 

The Creative Team

Director – Jon Reimer
 

 
Scenic Designer – Nancy Chao
 

 
Costume Designer – Samantha Englander
 

 
Lighting Designer – Michelle Yang Xiao
 

 
Sound Designer and Composer – James Reid
 

 
Dramaturg – Kristen Tregar
 

 
Music Director – James Forest Reid
 

 
Vocal Coach – Kristen Tregar
 

 
Assistant Director – Farah Dinga
 

 
Assistant Costume Designer – Isabele De Lima
 

 
Assistant Costume Designer – Tommy Goss
 

 
Assistant Costume Designer – Michael Romero
 

 
Assistant Lighting Designer – Valerie Lam
 

 
Production Stage Manager – Bryan P. Clements
 

 
Assistant Stage Managers – Hope Binfeng Ding
 

 
Assistant Stage Manager – Hazel Park
 

 
Scenic Crew – Elizabeth Blackwell
 

 
Scenic Crew – Jake Sutton
 

 
Costume Crew – Ally McGreevy
 

 
Costume Crew – Daniel Rivera
 

 
Costume Crew – Xuenig Yuen
 

 
Light Board Op – Farah Dinga
 

 
Sound Board Op – Naylen Feria
 

 
Projections Op – Regan Gerdes

The Cast

Josie – Cassandra Gutierrez
 

 
Lily – Yan Chen
 

 
Skriker - Old Woman/Hag – Olivia Torres
 

 
Skriker - Derelict Woman – Molly Adea
 

 
Skriker - American Woman – Ceres Trinh
 

 
Skriker - Party Girl – Sylvette Teman
 

 
Skriker - Little Girl – Jalani Blankenship
 

 
Skriker - Man – Ryan Martinez
 

 
Skriker - Marie – Erin Li
 

 
Depressed Girl/Josie Understudy – Isabele De Lima
 

 
Woman/Nelly Longarms – Sarah Gray
 

 
Dead Child – Alexandra King
 

 
Passerby/Radiant Boy – Levani Korganashvili
 

 
Green Lady – Emma Langton
 

 
Man with Bucket/Jimmy Squarefoot – Stephen Lightfoot
 

 
Girl with Telescope/Lily Understudy – Natalie Lin
 

 
Kelpie – Andrew Olson
 

 
Yallery Brown/Spriggan – August Robinson
 

 
Brownie/Skriker Understudy – Jamie Scangarella

Performances at the Arthur Wagner Theatre in the UC San Diego Theatre District

Tuesday March 13 7:30PM Opening

Wednesday March 14 7:30PM

Friday March 16 7:30PM

Saturday March 17 2:00PM

Saturday March 17 7:30PM Closing

(Information taken from the UC San Diego Theatre and Dance Website)

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