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DESCRIPTION:Media Contacts: David Perry & Associates (415) 693-0583  
 news@davidperry.com    The San Francisco Mime Troupe  Takes on Dirty 
 Double-Crossing in Old Texas  in 2004 World Premiere  Showdown at Crawford 
 Gulch  - Spaghetti Western Musical Premieres July 4th Weekend with Free 
 Performances at San Francisco's Dolores Park -  Production will Tour to 
 Parks and Theaters in California through September 2004    28 May 2004 (SAN 
 FRANCISCO, CA) - The San Francisco Mime Troupe brings a new musical 
 "Spaghetti Western" to parks and theaters around the state this summer with 
 Showdown at Crawford Gulch, an original fable about lies, greed, and dirty 
 double-crossing in a dusty old Texas town where the Good go bad, the Bad 
 ain't pretty, and the Ugly get uglier. Tumbleweeds fly as peace-loving 
 citizens of 1886 Crawford Gulch, Texas, face perpetual war with the 
 neighboring Comanche, and townfolk fight to protect their liberties as they 
 are whupped into a frenzy of fear over reported Arrows of Mass Destruction. 
  Written by Michael Gene Sullivan, with music by Jason Sherbundy and lyrics 
 by Bruce Barthol, Showdown at Crawford Gulch will be staged in indoor 
 venues across Northern California and free in Bay Area parks from July 3rd 
 through the end of September. The world premiere is the July 4th weekend, 
 with shows on Saturday July 3rd, Sunday July 4th, and Monday July 5th at 
 Dolores Park in San Francisco. Curtain is at 2 pm, with live music starting 
 at 1:30 pm.  Sullivan says of the Texas-sized story, "Showdown at Crawford 
 Gulch takes a look into the not-too-distant past to see how xenophobia, 
 greed, and images of bloodthirsty terror were used to 'tame' another desert 
 land-and how those tools are just as powerful today." Showdown at Crawford 
 Gulch is directed by Keiko Shimosato, with Costume Design by Callie Floor, 
 and Scenic Design by John Lowe. The musical stars Mime Troupe Company 
 members Velina Brown, Michael Carreiro, Amos Glick, Ed Holmes, Lisa 
 Hori-Garcia, Michael Sullivan, and Victor Toman.  Sullivan sets the stage 
 for the story-  It is 1886, and a rust red sun rises on the sleepy frontier 
 town of Crawford Gulch, Texas, as its peaceloving citizens start a new day. 
 A silent tumbleweed rolls lazily across the prairie. A coyote cries out. 
 And then...in the distance...the sound of...Drums! Comanche drums, 
 announcing...danger! Crawford Gulch is in danger! Bloodthirsty savages are 
 on the warpath, and this innocent, isolated island of civilization is 
 threatened with horrible annihilation!  Or is it?  Well that¹s what Cyrus 
 T. Bogspavin wants everyone to believe! He's the robber baron from back 
 east who already owns most of the county, leaving only the Town of Crawford 
 Gulch, and the nearby Comanche tribal lands out of his grasp. ... once the 
 Comanche have been pacified out of existence Bogspavin will make a generous 
 offer for their worthless patch of prairie. What in tarnation could it be 
 about this out-of-the-way piece of land that caught the eye of a wealthy 
 man like Bogspavin? What could be on it? Or is it something under it....  
 Meanwhile, in town, Mayor Canem is the only protection the citizens have 
 from the savage hordes and their constant attacks. Sure, there were some 
 questions back when he was elected, but all that blew over once he and the 
 heroic Sheriff alerted the citizens of Crawford Gulch to the Red threat! 
 Yessiree, since then no one has questioned his legitimacy. Why, he's even 
 introduced a "Home Range Security" program....  But somehow things ain't 
 workin' as smoothly as the Mayor and Bogspavin would like. The townspeople 
 are complaining: Is all this security necessary? ...  Sullivan was a 
 contributing writer for the Mime Troupe's Mr. Smith Goes to Obscuristan and 
 many other shows, and head writer for Veronique of the Mounties in 
 Operation: Frozen Freedom, 1600 Transylvania Avenue, Eating It, and Escape 
 From Cyberia. He has performed leading and supporting roles in a number of 
 Mime Troupe productions, and directed Mr. Smith Goes to Obscuristan, 1600 
 Transylvania Avenue, I Ain't Yo Uncle, Knocked Up, Coast City Confidential, 
 Killing Time and Eating It.  The Mime Troupe's shows in local parks are 
 performed at a price everyone can afford - free - and are eagerly 
 anticipated by a local audience that often surpasses 40,000 people over the 
 course of the summer. Additional 2004 Bay Area performance dates and 
 locations include: July 3-4-5 and September 4-5-6 at Dolores Park in San 
 Francisco; July 10-11 at Cedar Rose Park in Berkeley; July 17-18 at 
 Mitchell Park, Palo Alto; July 28-29 at Lake Merritt's Lakeside Park, 
 Oakland; July 31 at Mosswood Park in Oakland; August 1 at Yerba Buena 
 Gardens in San Francisco; August 11 in Montclair; August 12 at Civic Park 
 in Walnut Creek; August 14- 15, Live Oak Park in Berkeley; August 21 at 
 Peacock Meadow, Golden Gate Park in San Francisco; August 22, Washington 
 Square Park in North Beach, San Francisco; August 25, Mill Valley Community 
 Center; August 28- 29, Willard Park/Ho Chi Minh in Berkeley; September 1 in 
 the Menlo College Quad, Atherton.  The production will tour Northern and 
 Central California with dates in Point Arena, July 21-22; Redway, July 23; 
 Arcata, July 25; Napa, August 4; Sebastopol, August 5; Santa Cruz, August 
 7-8; Bolinas, August 18; Ukiah, August 19; Sonoma, September 2; Davis, 
 September 11; Sacramento, September 12; Grass Valley, September 15-16; 
 Fresno, September 18-19; Merced, September 22; Modesto, September 23; and 
 Stockton, September 24; with the final performance on September 26 at the 
 Progressives Fair in Petaluma's Walnut Park.  The San Francisco Mime Troupe 
 creates and produces socially relevant theater of the highest professional 
 quality, staging plays that dramatize the operation of giant forces in 
 small, close-up stories that convey the impact of political events on 
 personal life. Founded by R.G. Davis in 1959, the company became the San 
 Francisco Mime Troupe in 1961 and began performing in local parks in the 
 classical Commedia dell'arte style, adapted and updated to satirize the 
 present. In 1963 the Park and Recreation Commission denied the Mime Troupe 
 a permit, and Davis was arrested for defying the ban. With the help of the 
 ACLU, the Company won the right to perform in the parks, beginning more 
 than four decades of free outdoor public performances. Original scripts 
 took their place next to Commedia beginning in 1965. Since 1970 the Mime 
 Troupe has created at least one new show a year. In 1970 the Mime Troupe 
 became an artist-governed collective, composed of permanent members on the 
 artistic side...actors, musicians, writers, composers, directors, designers 
 and technicians, who create shows, make policy, assign writers and 
 directors, and approve plans for tours, grant sources, expenditures, and 
 special projects. The Mime Troupe won its first OBIE Award in 1968 for 
 "uniting theater and revolution and grooving in the parks." Since then, two 
 more OBIEs, the coveted Tony Award (for Excellence in Regional Theater), 
 the Bay Area Media Alliance's Golden Gadfly Award for Lifetime Achievement, 
 and numerous Bay Area Theatre Critics' Circle Awards have been added to the 
 list of the company's many honors.  Performances of the San Francisco Mime 
 Troupe are made possible in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, 
 the City of San Francisco Grants for the Arts, James Irvine Foundation, 
 Bernard Osher Foundation, San Francisco Foundation, Zellerbach Family Fund, 
 William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and W. A. Gerbode Foundation.  For 
 more information about the San Francisco Mime Troupe call (415) 285-1717 or 
 visit http://www.sfmt.org  \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/07/03/41783.php
SUMMARY:SF Mime Troupe Performs 7/3-5 at Dolores Park
LOCATION:Dolores Park, at 18th and Dolores Streets
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/07/03/41783.php
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