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Wolfe Bowart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wolfe Bowart.

Wolfe Bowart (born May 28, 1962) is a physical comedian, actor, director and playwright. He is the creator and performer of the physical theatre productions LaLaLuna, Letter's End and The Man the Sea Saw. Bowart is the son of writer Walter Bowart and Linda Dugmore, and grandson of the abstract expressionist artist Edward Dugmore.

LaLaLuna

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In 2006, Bowart premiered LaLaLuna, a surreal tale about the night the light went out in the moon, at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, the Adelaide Fringe Festival, and the Queensland Performing Arts Centre during the production’s first Australian tour. Written, directed and performed by Bowart, LaLaLuna contains a poetic narrative by Roscoe Lee Browne.[1] Critic Fergus Shiel of The Age proclaimed the show “luminously inventive and magically silly” and Ari Sharp of The Program wrote “Bowart is the ultimate physical performer. He has a breathtaking awareness of his own body, and glides effortlessly across the stage with balletic skill. His sleight-of-hand is magnificent and fits in so neatly that you sometimes barely notice that it’s there, which allows the audience to be swept away in the dreamy mystique that Bowart seeks to create.”[2]

In 2007, LaLaLuna made its UK premiere at the Royal Festival Hall as part of the London International Mime Festival (see review[3]). Bowart also undertook a 40-performance national tour of Australia, and presented LaLaLuna at the Volos International Festival in Greece.[4]

In 2008, Bowart performed LaLaLuna in Hong Kong, New Zealand, Greece and Brazil[5] and returned to Australia for seasons in Sydney (see review[6]), Hobart and in Melbourne at the Arts Centre Melbourne.

Bowart’s 2009 UK tour included performances at the Theatre Royal, Bath, where LaLaLuna headlined the inaugural Family Theatre Festival.

In 2010, Bowart premiered LaLaLuna in New Zealand[7] and Austria, and returned to the UK,[8] where the production was part of the Brighton Festival[9] (curated that year by Brian Eno), the Salisbury International Arts Festival, and completed seasons at the York Theatre Royal (see review[10]), The Lowry in Salford, and Newcastle's Northern Stage, among others.

Bowart continues to tour LaLaLuna internationally. Recent seasons include the Bahrain Summer Festival (2015),[11] Australia's 2015 Awesome Festival (see review[12]), and the 2016 Kuala Lumpur International Arts Festival[13][14] in Malaysia.

Letter's End

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Bowart’s production Letter's End, the story of a man inhabiting a magical lost-letter office, made its U.S. premiere in January 2009 in Tucson, Arizona.[15] Bowart's company SpoonTree Productions was awarded a grant from the Australian government to tour Letter's End nationally in 2009. The Australian tour spanned five and a half months and incorporated 43 venues and 91 performances (see reviews[16][17][18]). Reviewing for The Mercury, Robert Jarman noted "the show combines comedy and pathos, mime, magic and sleight of hand, shadow puppetry, film and sound in an exemplary and enchanting mix. The sheer amount of invention is staggering."[19]

In August 2010, Letter's End was nominated for a Helpmann Award for Best Regional Touring Production.[20]

In 2013, Bowart was again invited to participate at the London International Mime Festival. His season of Letter's End at the Southbank Centre marked the production's UK premiere. (see review[21]) The French premiere of "Letter's End" followed soon after,[22] during a tour that included dates at the 2013 Festival Effervescences alongside works by Philippe Genty, Daniele Finzi Pasca and James Thiérrée.[23]

The Man the Sea Saw

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Bowart's Australian premiere of The Man the Sea Saw took place in 2011. He undertook a 66-show national tour that spanned 27 venues and concluded with a season at His Majesty's Theatre in Perth, Western Australia, where The Man the Sea Saw headlined the 2011 Awesome Festival.[24]

The adventures of a man adrift at sea on a melting iceberg prompted Perth critic David Zampatti to write "Bowart acts wordlessly but with boundless expression, his silent movie-actor's face, acrobat's body and magician's hands telling us all we need to know."[25]

In 2012, The Man the Sea Saw was nominated for a Helpmann Award for Best Visual or Physical Theatre Production.[26]

In 2014, Bowart undertook a 7-city of China and South Korea[27] with The Man the Sea Saw. The tour marked Bowart's Chinese premiere.

The Shneedles

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As artistic director and co-creator of The Shneedles, Bowart, together with fellow clown Bill Robison, have performed in Japan, Singapore, Australia (see review[28]), Germany, Austria, Spain, Iceland and the U.S. The Shneedles most recently completed a 6-month season in Germany in 2007 for GOP-Varieté Theaters.[29]

Director/actor/writer/artist

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As a guest artist at the University of Arizona School of Theatre, Film & Television, Bowart directed From the Fishbowl, an original work co-devised with theatre students. Created during the COVID-19 pandemic, it streamed online for a global audience in April 2021.[30] The production features seven actors moving between stage and screen as they explore what it means to live in a world that has become both socially distant and yet somehow more personal. In a review for The Theatre Times, Michael Schweikardt wrote that From the Fishbowl "documents the moment of a young person struggling to come of age during the pandemic better than any oral history or written diary account ever could."[31]

As an artist, Bowart was commissioned to create the masks for the visual theatre production Bocon! by the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles.[32] As a playwright-performer, Bowart created Harold's Big Feat,[33] which was directed by Peter Brosius and produced by the Mark Taper Forum's P.L.A.Y. (Performing for Los Angeles Youth).

As an actor in the U.S., Bowart has guest-starred on TV programs on ABC, CNBC, the Disney Channel and PBS. On the stage, he has performed in such productions as Moon Over Madness[34] at the John Anson Ford Amphitheatre in Hollywood, and in The Joy of Going Somewhere Definite[35] at the Mark Taper Forum.

Bowart has also co-written several motion picture and television screenplays on assignment, including “eye-see-you.com,” the season finale episode of the television series The Net for the USA Network, which aired in March 1999.

Bowart is a Theater graduate of Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, Washington.

References

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  1. ^ Liz Arratoon, “LaLaLuna”, The Stage, January 29, 2007
  2. ^ Ari Sharp, “Melbourne International Comedy Festival: LaLaLuna”, The Program, April 24, 2006
  3. ^ Liz Arratoon, “LaLaLuna”, The Stage, January 29, 2007
  4. ^ Sandra Voulari, “International Volos Festival makes Comeback”, Kathimerini, December 7, 2007
  5. ^ Miguel Arcanjo Prado, "Norte-americano diverte crianças e adultos com "LaLaLuna" no FIT-BH", Folha Online, July 6, 2008
  6. ^ Brett Casben, "LaLaLuna", Australian Stage, April 16, 2008
  7. ^ Lindsay Clark, "Everyday objects made magic with extraordinary skill", Theatreview, July 18, 2010
  8. ^ "Physical Theatre Performer to Tour Internationally", Stage Whispers, April 6, 2010
  9. ^ Laura Gooch, "LaLaLuna, Theatre Royal Brighton", The Argus, May 6, 2010
  10. ^ Charles Hutchinson, "Review: Wolfe Bowart in LaLaLuna", York Press, June 10, 2010
  11. ^ "Bahrain Summer Festival 2015". Time Out Bahrain. Retrieved 2016-10-19.
  12. ^ Coram, Melanie (October 8, 2015). "Clowning Around". The West Australian. Retrieved 2016-10-19.
  13. ^ Maan, Daween. "Diversecity brings Kuala Lumpur's arts to life this September". Malaysia Tatler. Retrieved 2016-10-19.
  14. ^ "LaLaLuna". Time Out Kuala Lumpur. Retrieved 2016-10-19.
  15. ^ Rogelio Olivas, "Letter's End delivers physical theatre to Tucson", Tucson Citizen, January 21, 2009
  16. ^ Wendy Brazil, "Theatre Review - Letter's End", ArtSound FM, May 1, 2009
  17. ^ Marcus Bower, "Theatrical magic enthralling for young and old", The Examiner, June 30, 2009
  18. ^ Briony Kidd, "Review: Wolfe Bowart in Letter's End", Australian Stage, July 4, 2009
  19. ^ Robert Jarman, “Silent sentences in space”, The Mercury, June 26, 2009
  20. ^ “Nominations for 2010 Helpmann Awards Announced”, Australian Stage, August 3, 2010
  21. ^ Liz Arratoon, “Letter's End”, The Stage, January 28, 2013
  22. ^ Laura Warne, “Wolfe Bowart: Transcending Barriers with Physical Theatre”, Artery, September 12, 2013
  23. ^ “Arts visuels: dix jours d’Effervescences à Nevers et dans la Nièvre”, Le Journal du Centre, October 2, 2013
  24. ^ Stephen Bevis, “Clowning right at home”, The West Australian, November 15, 2011
  25. ^ David Zampatti, “Review: The Man the Sea Saw”, The West Australian, November 28, 2011
  26. ^ Ashleigh Wilson, "An Officer and a Gentleman nominated for five Helpmann Awards", The Australian, August 6, 2012
  27. ^ Park, Jin-hai (2014-07-24). "Mime makes people laugh and dream". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2016-10-19.
  28. ^ Alison Cotes, “Luggage, The Shneedles”, Stage Diary, June 22, 2005
  29. ^ "Die neue "Shneedles Show" im GOP - Ein Hauch von urkomischem Wahnsinn und purer Unglaublichkeit", Schaumberger Wochenblatt, September 12, 2007
  30. ^ ""From the Fishbowl": Devising Theatre in a World Interrupted". The Theatre Times. 2021-04-04. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
  31. ^ ""From the Fishbowl": A Play for Scoundrels and Scamps". The Theatre Times. 2021-04-18. Retrieved 2021-05-07.
  32. ^ Lynne Hefley, "Worth the trip", Los Angeles Times, February 20, 1997
  33. ^ Lynne Hefley, "Big Feat: a skilful comic performance", Los Angeles Times, March 23, 1994
  34. ^ Christopher Meeks, “Moon Over Madness”, Variety, June 20, 1994
  35. ^ Julio Martinez, “New Theatre for Now”, Variety, May 9, 1997
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