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Core Performance Manufactory

 

It's genuinely chilling...

...like seeing the Venus de Milo come to life...

Lawson Taitte, Dallas Morning News

 

 

Reveling in the Chill

Watching Core Performance Manufactory's production of "Freakshow" by ... Carson Kreitzer evokes ... mesmerized awe and visceral revulsion. Can't stand to watch but can't tear the eyes away.

Alexandra Bonifield
Lakewood-Now.net

 

 

Guide Pick:

Core Performance Manufactory has developed a solid reputation as the
edgiest of Dallas' fringe theater companies.

 Lawson Taitte, Dallas Morning News Guide

 

 

 Listen to PegasusNews' interview with Morgana Shaw.

 

 Lawson calls us "swell!"

 

The Advocate put us on "The A List."

 

Elaine Liner is disappointed that Freakshow isn't escapist entertainment.
Her opinion of Freakshow follows her review of a jukebox musical
here.

 

 

QuickDFW made us a Best Bet

 

 

At PegasusNews & North Dallas Gazette:


 
Core Performance Manufactory’s production of Freakshow, by Carson Kreitzer, is quite simply a remarkable performance by an extremely talented and accomplished cast....

Freakshow is one of those rare gems of the theatre that, though lacking in plot, makes up for this forgivable shortcoming through its depth of character development. And these characters are memorable. They are lovable. They will stay with you long after the show is over. But great characters require great actors, and Freakshow delivers on both counts, under the solid direction of Elizabeth Ware....

Rick Elina, North Dallas Gazette & PegasusNews

See the PegasusNews review here.

Or see it at North Dallas Gazette site.

 

 

 

It’s potent.

It’s gut-wrenching.

It’s powerful theater.

Alexandra Bonifield,
Lakewood-Now.net

 

 

Even if you don't care a hoot about theater, go see Core Performance Manufactory... 


Lawson Taitte,
Dallas Morning News

 

 


 

Morgana Shaw & Kent Williams in Freakshow by Carson Kreitzer - photo by E. WareFreakshow

by

Carson Kreitzer

 

 

April 30 - May 17 

Thursdays, Fridays & Saturdays

All Shows at 8pm

 

 

For Mature Audiences Only

 

Buy Tickets

 

 
 

 

 

 

A traveling Freakshow finds itself at a crossroads.

Things are changing.

The line between “normal” and “outcast” is blurring.

The family they have created may be dissolving.

 

 

Will the Dog Faced Woman break from the show?

Can the jaded Ringmaster find redemption through love?

Does the Pinhead take solace in Jesus,

or burn the place down?

 

  

 


 

 


 
Amalia, a woman with no arms or legs, perches atop her pedestal, a coy smile playing upon her face.

"You are wondering," she purrs, "if I've ever had sexual intercourse."

Playwright Carson Kreitzer gets Freakshow off to a ripping start. She plunges the audience immediately into the intrigues of a turn-of-the-century sideshow— tales of freaks born and made, of the genuine article and gaff, of the "shame of exhibition" and the terrible need to be seen. She sketches the liaisons among Amalia; her muck-covered lover Matthew; the idiot Pinhead; Aquaboy, the human salamander; the Girl, a pert runaway; Judith, the dog-faced woman; and Mr. Flip, the operation's unctuous barker, promoter, and paterfamilias.

Kreitzer can create complex characters, such as the lordly, dirty-talking Amalia, and write tender, clever dialogue— as when the runaway goes to kiss the begilled, beguiled Aquaboy, and he warns her, quite sadly, "I don't turn into a prince."

— Alexis Soloski, Village Voice

 

 

 


 

 

 
Freakshow uses the conventions of the midway and the carnival to explore sexuality and identity, combining theory and narrative in a more imaginative fashion than anything save perhaps for the work of artist/novelist Shelley Jackson.
-Jason Grote, The Brooklyn Rail

 

 

Copyright 2008 by Core Performance Manufactory