"Anon" closes.
Friday, November 2, 2007
Back Stage West Pick of the Week!
Director Chris Fields has assembled a top-notch cast...
Pongetti and Weaver subtly segue from the early comic banter to growing sexual anguish and insecurity...
...Martin and Joshua play out the more grinding blue-collar version of dysfunction...
...the 10 other women are terrific.
Read the full review at:
http://www.backstage.com/bso/news_reviews/la/review_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003667442
Pongetti and Weaver subtly segue from the early comic banter to growing sexual anguish and insecurity...
...Martin and Joshua play out the more grinding blue-collar version of dysfunction...
...the 10 other women are terrific.
Read the full review at:
http://www.backstage.com/bso/news_reviews/la/review_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003667442
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
LA STAGE SCENE RAVES ABOUT "ANON"
"Chris Fields is an actor’s director, and has elicited fine performances from his entire ensemble."
"Anon is funny, raw, insightful, and involving entertainment, put together by a talented team."
"...Martin gives a moving and deeply layered performance..."
"With stardom-bound film actors like Weaver and Pongetti performing “live and in person” and a lauded TV scribe like Robin showing her playwriting chops, TV addicts would do well to turn off their sets for a night and attend a live production like Anon…for a stimulating change of pace."
Read the full review at: http://www.lastagescene.com/anon.html
Sunday, October 21, 2007
Opening Night Party Pics
Sarah Jane Morris, Chris Fields and Kit Pongetti

Loreni Delgado, Ginette Rhodes, Andrea Grano, Blayne Weaver, Tara Karsian, Alison Martin, Anna Simone Scott, Sarah Jane Morris and Kit Pongetti.

Kit Pongetti, Sarah Jane Morris, Loreni Delgado and Andrea Grano


Blayne Weaver and Kit Pongetti
Blayne Weaver, Sigute Miller, Andrea Grano and Tricia O'Kelley
Sigute Miller, Tara Karsian and Alison Martin

Blayne Weaver, Sigute Miller, Andrea Grano and Tricia O'Kelley
Sigute Miller, Tara Karsian and Alison Martin
Brandon Barrera and Lucas Fleischer

Friday, October 19, 2007
Los Angeles Times Review praises "Anon"
The Los Angeles Times recommends "Anon":
..."director Chris Fields and his actors tease dark humor out of the writing and unhesitatingly depict the story's raw reality."
..."a provocative discourse on the connection between individual behavior and global dysfunction."
..."This is visceral theater."
Check out the entire review at: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-stage19oct19,0,6307645.story?page=1&coll=la-headlines-calendar
..."director Chris Fields and his actors tease dark humor out of the writing and unhesitatingly depict the story's raw reality."
..."a provocative discourse on the connection between individual behavior and global dysfunction."
..."This is visceral theater."
Check out the entire review at: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-stage19oct19,0,6307645.story?page=1&coll=la-headlines-calendar
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Los Angeles Times
After working for several seasons on HBO's "Six Feet Under," a drama about a family-run mortuary, Emmy-nominated playwright Kate Robin has turned her attention to an equally curious subject in her new work, "Anon." Directed by Chris Fields, starring Kit Pongetti and Blayne Weaver (pictured) and presented by the Echo Theater Company at Culver City's Stage 52 Playhouse, the play explores a human relationship that grows out of pet therapy -- and offers a comedic look at how absurd love can be in the modern world. 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat., 7 p.m. Sun. $20;http://www.echotheatercompany.com./
Thursday, October 11, 2007
"Anon" opens on Friday!
Written by Emmy-nominated and WGA award-winning playwright Kate Robin (writer/supervising producer “Six Feet Under”). Directed by Chris Fields, the cast includes Kit Pongetti (“Scrubs”), Blayne Weaver ("Losing Lois Lane"), Alison Martin ("Mad About You"), and Larry Joshua (“NYPD Blue”), as well as a rotating ensemble of 20 women. Produced by Lauren Bass for the Echo Theater Company.http://www.lastagealliance.com/lastagetixcalendar.asp?ShowList=2910
Weaver interviewed about "Anon".
Blayne Weaver, one of the leads in The Echo Theater Company's production of Kate Robin's "Anon", sat down with LA Stage Scene. Check it out: http://www.lastagescene.com/anon1.html
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
"Anon" cast announced.
The Echo has announced the ensemble cast for the upcoming production of Kate Robin's "Anon".
Read the article at: http://www.playbill.com/news/article/111707.html
Kit Pongetti, Blayne Weaver, Alison Martin and Larry Joshua star in the play (and appear at every performance). The ensemble will feature a rotating cast of 20 women (filling in the 10 remaining roles) including Nancy Bell (Polish Joke), Elizabeth Bennett ("Point Pleasant"), Emy Coligado (Miss Saigon), Shawna Casey, Loreni Delgado, Andrea Grano, Marin Hinkle ("Two and a Half Men", Miss Julie), Sarah Hudson, Tara Karsian ("ER"), Emily Kosloski (Les Miserables), Misi L. Lecube, Melinda McGraw ("The Dark Knight"), Sarah Jane Morris ("Brothers & Sisters"), Sigute Miller, Ginette Rhodes, Anna Simone Scott, Mandy Siegfried ("Grey's Anatomy," Noises Off), Jeanne Syquia, Aloma Wright ("Scrubs") and Jacqueline Wright.
Read the article at: http://www.playbill.com/news/article/111707.html
Sunday, August 19, 2007
Echo's Abigail Deser "one to watch"
Clearly the problem isn't a shortage of blazing young directing talent, but the proper appreciation of the director's vital role. Abigail Deser, who extracted maximum quirky delight out of Adam Bock's capricious "Thursday," in the Echo Theater Company production last winter, strikes me as someone worth investing in every bit as much as the current flavor of the month in playwriting. ~ Charles McNulty, LA Times
Monday, April 23, 2007
LA Times Praises The Echo
"But would it surprise anyone to hear that many of the plays that have stayed with me in the last year were produced at postage-stamp-sized venues and filled with people who looked like they actually wanted to be there? The local groups responsible for these experiences — The Echo Theater Company,...— might not be able to ensure that their dramatists earn a living wage. But they nonetheless provide them with lifeblood: an engaged audience." ~ Charles McNulty
You can read the complete article here.
You can read the complete article here.









