WINNER! 2005 FRINGE FESTIVAL

August 29th, 2005

Last night was the best way we could have finally ended this fantastic run. With most of the cast and crew gathered together at Fringe Central, and after applauding along with all the other awards for all the other fantastic shows, the final award of the night “Overall Excellence - Musical” was announced, and Fleet Week won! It was such a joy to be surrounded by a cast of people, most of whom have all won individual awards both in and out of the Fringe, and their joy for the production was overwhelming. This award means so much more to us than an award for, say, music and lyrics or book, because the entire process has been completely collaborative, and this award honors everyone involved in the show.

We will continue updating as the show moves forward!

EXTENDED! EXTRA SHOW SATURDAY!

August 25th, 2005

ATTENTION ON DECK!

FLEET WEEK: The Musical HAS BEEN EXTENDED FOR ONE MORE PERFORMANCE AT THE LORTEL AS PART OF FRINGENYC!

Woo-hoo! And, what’s more, it’s in in a time slot that you neither have to miss work or screw up your sleep patterns to see!

Saturday, August 27th at 12PM Noon. Buy your tickets now!

That is all. As you were, Seamen.

(For those of you keeping score at home, we got another great review, in Broadwayworld.com, which has been added to yesterday’s entry)

The Reviews are In!

August 23rd, 2005

…and they’re really good! We got two out-n-out RAVES!

Here’s my favorite:

Rhys Southan, bless ‘im, raves in the New York Sun:

The Biggest Crowd-Pleaser of the Festival
New York International Fringe Festival
BY RHYS SOUTHAN

August 23, 2005

“Fleet Week: The Musical” might be the biggest crowd-pleaser at this year’s Fringe.

This campy production bills itself “a gay salute to the patriotic musicals of yesteryear,” so it’s no surprise that “Fleet Week” has a wonderfully jazzy score, about as many “seaman” puns as an audience can stand, and a silly plot in which the Statue of Liberty falls in love and Martiniquean terrorists attack New York. What you might not guess is that it’s also sweet, old-fashioned, and fun for straight people.

“Fleet Week” follows the lives of four sexually desperate (and confused) Coast Guard sailors on shore leave. They’d resigned themselves to the necessity of homosexuality while on the lonely seas, but what if their chummy songs and seductive jigs fail to woo the opposite sex on shore? Is it back to their old ways? Was it really just necessity that brought them together in the first place? As one song goes, “You’re only queer at the pier - or so all the sailors say.”

As “Fleet Week” opens, the gay story elements are so subtle that it seems the musical might hark back to the old days, when gay themes were merely a subtext for a knowing audience. But this is the sort of musical where the good guys overhear a dastardly plot, then put their hands to their ears while looking back and forth and up and down with shocked expressions. Only a few lines miss their mark, however, and the dialogue ranges from clever to forgivably pandering - one character calls the Statue of Liberty “You magnificent slut!”

A couple of subplots are amusing enough, even if they feel a little tacked-on. A romance between the Statue and the captain of the ship - who is rarely seen with his mates, alienating the story from the rest of the musical - provides the main straight love story. Anyone who has fallen in love in his golden years, or juggled his career with his relationship to a statue, will relate.

A far weaker story line involves terrorists from Martinique who have teamed up with a homophobic redneck named Tex to blow up the Statue. The terrorists’ French accents are incomprehensible, and their motivation isn’t clear until the end; it doesn’t really matter, though, because neither the writer nor the characters, who continue obsessing about their love problems while their lives are on the line, care much about what the terrorists are up to.

At least “Fleet Week” deftly avoids September 11 overtones. This is first plot relating to blasting a New York landmark I’ve seen in a comedy since the day irony died.

One of the best songs, “Sort of at Sea,” is sung by two men reasoning that the bathhouse they’re in resembles the salty air of the lonely ship, and makes it okay for them to stay together. Homophobes get their comeuppance when Tex, who blames homosexuality on the Statue of Liberty, has to suffer a gay kiss on the mouth and an untimely death. Hilariously, the play lets him redeem himself just before he dies.

“Fleet Week” succeeds in part because it refuses to trap itself with inside jokes directed solely at a gay audience. It is the sort of musical we don’t see much of anymore, unhindered by depth and darkness. Its has a modest innocence that it never subverts, even with bathhouse scenes and a save-the-day gay marriage.

Here are the links to other reviews:

Phoebe Hoban in the Times thinks that ALL 20 songs are well-written and that the cast (especially Melissa) can really belt ‘em. What’s more, she really likes Rob and Bruce, and writes that the “humorous tastelessness is the selling point of this show”. She calls it “‘On the Town’ meets ‘Queer as Folk’.”

Andy Probst, in Backstage, makes us all giddy when he writes that we’re a “giddy musical” with promise. He has especially nice things to say about Eric, Paulo, Bryon and Brian:

A “giddy musical . . . [with] a richly diverse score by Jordana Williams (lyrics) and Sean Williams (music)”

“Wonderful caricatures by Byron St. Cyr and Brian Karim”

“Director Eric Pliner’s staging keeps the show sailing swiftly, aided by Paulo Seixas’ effective and economical use of cutout set pieces . . .”

We’re a Voice Choice or whatever they call it when they like you and put you in the NYC Guide:

“Last year’s Fleet Week—that annual occasion during which sailors in tight white outfits invade our fair isle—featured navy submarine displays, ship parades, and a fleet blessing. It did not, however, include homoerotic dance numbers and singing lady cops. Leave that to this 20-song extravaganza, courtesy Sean Williams, Mac Rogers, and Jordana Williams”

Jena Tesse Fox, in BroadwayWorld.com saith, “We’re Not On the Town Any More“:

“Whether you prefer Urinetown or On The Town, Fleet Week is just post-modern enough to mildly shock, and retro enough to evoke the most cheesy of old musicals. For all the graphic sex talk, this is, ultimately, a love story, complete with weddings at the end. And really, can a musical comedy get more classic than that?”

“The sassy new musical Fleet Week, premiering at the Fringe, takes the basic premise of the Comden and Green classic [On the Town] and kicks it into the 21st century.”

- “inspired, gleeful, giddy silliness, the kind that, despite all logic, brings an idiotic grin to your face and a catchy song to your heart.”
- “Sean Williams, Jordana Williams, and Mac Rogers have created a thoroughly enjoyable loving send-up of classic musicals and modern politics.”
- “[FLEET WEEK] gives the delightful Broadway vet Melissa Hart a chance to sing a vampy torch song, which is always welcome . . . The cast performs with enough energy and joy to keep the Titanic afloat . . . Said cast is led by the inimitable and indomitable Rob Maitner as the ship’s sweetly fey chaplain . . . Micah Bucey plays the innocent Seaman Stayn (say it out loud, or better yet, don’t) with genuine aw-shucks charm, making Stayn’s naive farm-boy routine believable and sympathetic. Brian M. Golub and Christopher Guilmet have great chemistry as Seamen Sachs and Ravioli, and Laura Perloe is winsome and adorable as the conflicted Seaman Swallows . . . Byron St. Cyr, Brian Karim, and Bruce Sabath harmonize well and have great comic timing . . . And Marnie Klar and Renee Delio are wonderful chameleons as (more or less) the entire population of New York.”
- “Mac Rogers’ book is snappy and silly, reveling in its absurdities but still finding moments of poignancy to keep the show from floating completely away . . . Sean Williams’ music is appropriately light, and with enough variety to keep the songs interesting. First-time lyricist Jordana Williams makes a very nice debut . . . Eric Pliner’s direction . . . keeps the pace at an appropriate slapstick speed . . . and Paulo Seixas’ set is simple and versatile, easily conjuring a city’s worth of locales.”

The Seigels, writing for Theatermania have very nice things to say, too!

“…its strongest element is its score by Sean Williams, Jordana Williams, and Mac Rogers — particularly, its sparkling lyrics.”

“Rob Maitner, who plays [the] Chaplain, gives a standout musical comedy performance”

New York Magazine loves the Fleet Week-ers:

“An exceptional cast . . . Frequently delightful and occasionally outstanding!”

“Tony nominee Melissa Hart (Georgy), who delivers the show-stopper “Libby’s Torch Song,” is relentlessly entertaining”

“Byron St. Cyr, as the flamboyant bomber who would turn America into “the United States of Martinique” is superb.”

“Just as good and just as gay, Rob Maitner, a Fringe veteran, turns his potentially clichéd role as an effeminate chaplain into a true original, just as he did as with Mr. McQueen in the 1999 breakthrough Fringe production of Urinetown.”

Opening Weekend Update

August 22nd, 2005

What a great weekend for FLEET WEEK!

We sold out all three shows at the Lortel. Even better, we had really great responses from audiences, both during the show and choking the sidewalk–and at times, Christopher Street–afterwards. There was even an autograph-seeker!

Thanks to all who made this weekend so special: the cast and crew, the Fringe and Lortel staffs, and of course, everyone who came and clapped, laughed and hooted, and–in many cases–stood.

–Les Producers

This Week’s Press

August 15th, 2005

HX gives us a great preview, and
The New York Blade puts us at the top of the list

And Gay City News gives us our best quote yet.

Last, but certainly not least is this absorbing read in the New York Sun that prominently features our Dear Writers.

FLEET WEEK Podcast!

August 15th, 2005

Our friends at the wonderful new play OUT OF BODY AND OUT OF MIND have been running weekly podcasts about their show. It’s horribly funny, and so are the podcasts. They have now branched out from audio essays by the characters in their play and interviews with other characters, to interviewing characters in other plays. Very meta.

So, please check out “Gettin’ Manorexic with Chad”, as Chad interviews our very own Jim Ranchhand of the US Navy, from FLEET WEEK, who sounds suspiciously like playwright Mac Rogers.

And go see OUT OF BODY OUT OF MIND. It opened yesterday!

SOLD OUT Opening and Yet More Press!

August 8th, 2005

Ahoy, Sailors,

We’ve sold out the Lortel for opening night! And we’re zeroing in on a cast party spot for every ticket holder!

More exciting news: We are mentioned not only first, but twice, in the New York Magazine FringeNYC roundup.

Oh, yeah, we hope everyone had a nice Coast Guard Day last week.

More Press!

August 1st, 2005

So, we had a great opening weekend. Thanks to you guys, and other supporters, friends and family who responded to our PR Stunt invite, we are one of the best-selling shows at the Fringe this year! (It looks like we are the second-best selling musical, but we haven’t seen exact numbers).

And we got a nice mentions out of it in Playbill: FringeNYC 1st Day Ticket Sales Near $25,000; Silence! Bridezilla, Fleet Week, Fluffy Bunnies Lead

and Backstage: Fringe Advance Tix Sales Up 45%

But it’s not a race.

And we got a lil’ somethin’ in the New Yorker. As our good friend Dan, put it, it’s an “extremely brief but unmistakable mention”:

“Genres collide as the ninth NYIFF takes over downtown stages, with
everything from dramas about Ibsen, Richard Pryor, and Lynndie England
and a dance theatre piece about Emily Dickinson to musicals about
Fleet Week and Byzantium.”

Not bad to add to our collection of mentions in Newsweek, the Times, etc.

Fleet Week Coast Guard Incident (for real)

July 31st, 2005

Hey, guys,

If you missed last night’s deadline, don’t forget to buy tickets by Monday at midnight (see the PR stunt post below). In the meantime, enjoy reading the misadventures of another PR stunt we pulled. In this case, the misadventure may get better press than the original plan would’ve.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Ron Lasko
Spin CycleNYC
Press (212) 505-1700 ext. 11

“The Coast Guard finally gets some respect” –as an upcoming play’s tag line puts it — at least from the Fringe Festival.

Three thespians drifting in New York Harbor were saved by the Coast Guard yesterday, in real-world events that could have been taken right out of the plot of FLEET WEEK–the satirical new musical comedy where gay USGC sailors save the city–or even from the plot of Gilligan’s Island.

Two playwrights and a director from the New York International Fringe Festival put out to sea on Saturday, July 30th to advertise their plays, FLEET WEEK and PAYMENT, on a small fishing boat carrying huge banners and creative types dressed in sailor suits. However, their plans were set adrift when their boat ran out of gas in front of the Christopher Street Pier. The Fringe Festival participants had hoped to draw publicity to their shows, but when their boat began to float dangerously close to the pier, they got attention of a different kind: suspicious onlookers notified the Coast Guard.

The crew of Coast Guard boat CG25467 arrived on the scene and boarded the fishing boat. After determining that the playwrights were no threat to national security, they offered to tow the boat to the Liberty Marina in New Jersey.

The cast and crew on board the boat, including FLEET WEEK writer Mac Rogers and PAYMENT writer Donna Fiumano and director Amber Estes, were not discouraged by the setback. Rogers, whose play is billed as “a gay On the Town”, said “When they asked us if we had ‘ever been boarded by the US Coast Guard’, I knew that the line had to be worked into the script somehow”.

They intend to brave the waters once again on Sunday with the same enthusiasm, the same banners, the same sailor outfits, and, this time, a full tank of gas. There will be representatives at each pier to hand out promotional material and speak with the press. Coverage would be greatly appreciated. A tow rope wouldn’t hurt, either.

They will be sailing past the following piers:

SOUTH STREET SEAPORT: 2:00pm
CHRISTOPHER ST. PIER: 2:30pm
CHELSEA PIER: 3:00pm

Publicity Stunt Invite

July 30th, 2005

We’ve got a big favor to ask you, oh you big blog audience out there. We’ve got a publicity stunt we want to try.

Yes, we’d like you to come see the play, but that’s not the favor.

This past Monday we had our first readthrough and it was FANTASTIC. Before I go any further, you should know we’ve got Fringe Festival award winners. We’ve got OOBR award winners. We’ve got cabaret and downtown theater award winners. And we have a TONY NOMINEE. I don’t know how we got this lucky, but the cast is incredible. Even if you hate the show, you’re gonna love the cast, I’m sure of this. And we’re getting amazing support from the Festival itself. Their biggest gesture of faith in us is our venue assignment, the historic 299-seat Lucille Lortel Theater on Christopher Street.

Now, sure, that’s 299 seats to fill per show, but we’re actually kind of excited about the challenge. After watching a week of reahearsals,
we can see that the show will do most of the work selling itself once it’s opened, so we’re focusing our efforts on selling out the opening
night.

We REALLY need you to come on opening night, which is half of the favor. The other favor is to buy your tickets as soon as possible. Like Saturday, July 30th. RIGHT NOW, if you’re reading this on Saturday.

Fringe Festival tickets go on sale tomorrow. If you’re already planning to see FLEET WEEK, please, please make every effort to come opening night, Friday, August the 19th at 7pm. And if you buy your ticket this weekend, it helps us 10 times more than if you buy it later.

That’s the favor. Please come see our play, on Friday, August 19th, and by your tickets by Monday.

We know it’s a lot to ask. But it is a hell of a show. And we are currenly trying to sweeten the deal a bit:

We’d love to repay the festival, the cast, and the production team for all their hard work and support with a kick-ass opening to get
everyone talking about the show. And we’d like to reward everyone who helps us do it, too. Right now we’re working on getting an opening night party together for all opening ticket-holders, we’ll send more news on that as it develops.

For information on how to get tickets, go to:

tickets

Obviously, we’d love to see you guys on any night you can make it. We know how busy things get for all of us. But come check out opening
night if you can. We can pretty well guarantee that you won’t be disappointed.

Lindsay, Jordana, Sean & Mac