"... a brisk and silly industrial-age comedy
that "exults in every cliché"
- NY Times
"Below the Belt is many things, and all of
them good!"
- New York Magazine critic John Simon

"Hilarious!"
- CATF, West Virginia
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Dreaming of promotions and going home, these three corporate
types play out a farcical game of shifting alliances as they try to "get
ahead" in a system where the predators, both real and imagined, seem
to lurk around every corner. Its funny, silly, fanciful, whimsical,
darkly amusing
well, lets just say we like it.. a lot!
Below the Belt is a play that addresses the quandary
we face in trying to preserve ourselves in the face of the forces we have
to bend to. It is a play that provides not only a window into an unnamed
corporation but a window into corporations everywhere, and the relationships
within them. It addresses men specifically, and the dynamics that exist
between them. It is both humorous and profoundly sad, and it touches a
place inside audience members that they may have long ceased being conscious
of.
Centenary College journalism
student, Julia Kimball, interviewed playwright Richard Dresser recently
in his home in Los Angeles. The following are excerpts from that interview:
Below the Belt is a humorous play - a "corporate comedy"
in which the characters vie for one-upmanship in a corporation that is
never named. Michael Sommers of the Star-Ledger called the play, "a
mean, keen comedy about a snarling trio of corporate number-crunchers
going for the groin." It is about three men in a work situation that
is not physically realistic, but that is starkly accurate emotionally.
And it is more than that. It came from something that moves and disturbs
Richard Dresser, the playwright - it came from "the deep loneliness
that separates men."
Dresser has been quoted as saying, "I've had occasion to work at
a series of jobs ranging from a plastics factory where I made GI Joes'
thighs. . . to Hollywood, where I wrote sitcoms. . . These two jobs were
remarkably similar - welcome to the workplace." Something that moved
Dresser in his work experience was how men work together and don't work
together, especially in the face of the rules that box them in - the issues
that are the meat of Below the Belt.
Dobbitt, the character who is the newcomer at the company, is the audience's
window to the meat of the play - the window to the ubiquitous corporation,
and the checkers' emotional responses to it. The corporation has a lot
of rules, and there are a lot of forces at work. Dobbitt has to figure
out those rules; and how to survive within the boundaries they set. Dresser
said that "A lot of what the play is about is how people have to
figure out how to be human when they have to conform. . .. how to be human
and an individual."
Dresser grew up in Holden, Massachusetts, and attended Brown University.
He has been interested in writing since college, and began writing plays
in his late twenties. The plays he writes stem from things that disturb
him or move him in some way.
"Plays really come out of very specific types of things," he
said, adding that he sometimes starts out not knowing how he feels, but
figures it out through the process of play writing. Dresser says that
his plays are personal. Not only do they grow from something very personal
in him, but they touch something very personal in their audiences. That
is why he says that he "doesn't even presume to speculate what people
should think" when they see them.
This applies to Below the Belt, a show that he says is especially
personal in that the subject matter encompasses profound things we all
deal with in terms of conformity and loneliness. Dresser says it is funny
"in the way that we look at the horrible things that we have to deal
with."
Cast:
CSC's production reunites funny-men Kevin Carolan, Alan
Lewis Rickman and Carl Wallnau, whose humorous escapades in the production
Laughter on the 23rd Floor at the Forum Theatre were a favorite
of New Jersey audiences.
Allen Lewis Rickman*
Off-Broadway: A Klezmer's Tale, Tony 'n Tina's Wedding,
Theda Bara and the Frontier Rabbi.
Regional: The Foreigner (Virginia Stage), Laughter on the 23rd
Floor (Charlotte Rep and Forum Theatre), his co-written farce Off
the Hook (Forum Theatre and Oldcastle Theatre), The 1940's Radio
Hour (Emelin Theatre), Arsenic and Old Lace (Blowing Rock Stage),
Kiss The Bride (Theatre Fest), Guys and Dolls (Flat Rock
Playhouse) and Funny Money (Pirate Playhouse)
Television: Michael Moore's "The Awful Truth", Buck Henry's
"Are We On?," " Law & Order," "Kwik Witz."
Mr. Rickman was an Artist-In-Residence with the lamented Manhattan Punch
Line Theatre, and is pleased to be making his Centenary Stage debut.
Terry Withers*
Terry is very pleased to be working with the Centenary Stage Company
for his first time. Most recently he was seen as Oliver in Purple Boulevard
Production's 13th Ave and as Floyd in The Baobab Groove's production
of I'm Okay. Terry is excited to be in a play of Mr. Dresser's
again. The last play he performed while in attendance at Penn State was
Mr. Dresser's one act At Home.
Carl Wallnau*
Carl Wallnau has just returned from the National Tour of the Broadway
musical, Titanic. He is the producing director of the Centenary
Performing Arts Guild, as well as an associate professor of Theatre Arts
for Centenary College.
His recent credits also include Noises Off and Death of a Salesman
at Paper Mill Playhouse, La Vatch in All's Well that Ends Well,
and Antipholes in the Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival's production of
Comedy of Errors, and Charlie Fox in CSC's production of Speed
The Plow. He has worked in numerous regional theatres, including Forum
Theatre, Second Stage, Pennsylvania Stage Company, Asolo theatre, Crossroads
and American Stage Company, as well as the Papermill Playhouse.
Directing credits include the CSC production of Scotland Road,
the NJ premiere of Marvin's Room, as well as critically acclaimed
productions of Pygmalion and Springtime for Henry. He has
also been featured in rip Torn's GHOST STORIES for the UPN network.
Carl received his MFA from Rutgers University Mason Gross School of the
Arts. He currently resides in Hoboken with his wife and favorite actress,
Colleen Smith Wallnau.
Directed by: Carl Wallnau*
About the Playwright: Richard Dresser
Richard Dresser is probably best known for the television series The
Days and Nights of Molly Dodd, where he served as a writer-producer,
HBO's Vietnam Stories, Bakersfield P.D. and more. His stage
plays include Below the Belt, produced in New York City in 1996,
starring Judd Hirsch and Robert Sean Leonard, and the plays Gun-shy,
Alone at the Beach, The Downside, Better Days, Bait
and Switch, The Road to Ruin, Bed & Breakfast, At
Home and Splittsville. Other work for television includes HBO's
Vietnam War Stories and Bakersfield P.D., Public Morals
and Smoldering Lust. He currently resides in Los Angeles, but has
his eyes on a home back East!
Behind the Scenes:
| Set
Design: |
Gordon Danieli |
| Light
Design: |
Ed
Matthews |
| Costume
Design: |
Julia
Sharp |
| Sound
Design: |
Scott O'Brien |
| Stage
Manager: |
Michelle Wargacki* |
* member of Actor's Guild
|