Kerry Gudjohnsen
is a local actor/filmmaker who has studied acting and directing with Dennis
Duggan, Stephen Drewes, Ann Fajilan, Amy Mueller, and Philip Bennett. Kerry
completed the Bennett TheatreLab's three-year Stanislavski-based training
program, and is currently a member of the improvisation film collective,
BareWitness. Kerry recently directed Spent,
her first short film with the group. Kerry's
film acting credits include the iFilm featured shorts, Beer
and Art and Cave People, directed
by James Mirarchi, and the upcoming feature
2400 Mission Street
, directed by Daniel Gamburg.
Her theater credits include Third Rail Power Trip’s production of
Harold Pinter’s Betrayal, directed
by Nancy Lawson, Benefactors by
Michael Frayn, directed by Philip Bennett, The
Laramie Project by Moises Kaufman, directed by Amy Mueller, and Walk
Like a Man by David Caggiano, directed by Nancy Lawson. Kerry is proud to be
a part of this year’s Fringe, and is grateful to work in
San Francisco
’s inspiring theater and film communities.
She starred in Bare Witness's IPO.
Mark Samuel has
studied with Phil Bennett, Ed Hooks, Amy Freed, and most recently with Full
Circles Productions. His credits include Looka in the Boar,
Lysander in Midsummer Night’s Dream,
Vinnie in Walk Like a Man, and as the
Innkeeper in the Tragedy of MacBush.
He is currently playing Mack in the film Phasing
Scruples being shot locally. He is very happy to be working in the system in
which he was taught and to be working with such a talented cast and crew.
Skyler Cooper is
originally from
Brooklyn
,
New York
. She is pleased to have her acting debut in
San Francisco
at the Fringe. She has trained at the Bennett Theater Lab, ACT, and has taken
private lessons with some of the Bay Area’s best. With her experience and a
little luck, she hopes to fool the world into thinking she is the real McCoy
tonight! And with even more luck and divine intervention she hopes to achieve
her dream of becoming the first woman to play Othello at a major renowned
repertory theatre. She would like to thank her supporters for gassing her head
up to think she could put her butt up here! HI MOM! She sends her biggest thanks
to Dyanthe.
Mark Rachel has
been acting for eight years, taking his first improv class at EastBayImprov in
1995. He took classes at Bay Area
Theatre Sports in
San Francisco
, became a member of the Hey You Theatre and Sunday Players improv groups and
married his improv coach. Mark
studied for three years at the Bennett TheatreLab, a Stanislavsky-based training
program. He is a founding member of
BareWitness Productions, a video improv film collective composed of fellow
Bennett Theatre Lab students. Mark’s
most recent credits include Angus in the film A Comic Book Story, Sam in the stage production of Too
Many Balls in the Air at the Jon Sims Center for the Arts, and Third Rail
Power Trip’s Betrayal, with Kerry Gudjohnsen, Matthew Gardner and directed by
Nancy Lawson. Mark is editing and
co-directing the film Crossroads Gallery with
Matthew Gardner.
Matthew Gardner
has lived in the Bay Area for the last 12 years, is a founding member of Third
Rail Power Trip, and appeared in their inaugural production in April as Jerry in
Harold Pinter's Betrayal. More
recently he originated the role of Georgie MacBush in The
Tragedy of MacBush at the Alice Arts Theater in
Oakland
. Other roles have included Alexander in Tom Stoppard's Every
Good Boy Deserves Favour at the Speakeasy Theatre in Berkeley, Peter in Prelude to a Kiss with the Actor's Ensemble of Berkeley,
Mother/Father in Stoppard's Albert's
Bridge at the Exit Stage Left, and various characters in Eugene Ionesco's The
Killing Game at the Exit Theatre, as well as previous productions for the
Fringe Festival and at San Francisco City College. Matthew is also a founding
and current member of BareWitness Films LLC, a group of Bay Area filmmakers
creating original improvisational films and has appeared in the short films, Telephone,
H-Tour, Comic Book Story and Spent
as well as the full-length feature,
2400 Mission Street
. He is currently in the editing process with Crossroads
Gallery in which he acted and co-directed. Other film credits include, Cave
People, directed by James Mirarchi and BAR,
directed by Kobie Lyons. He is a
graduate of the Bennett TheatreLab in
San Francisco
with extensive work in Stanislavski's Technique of Physical Action and has
studied Suzuki and character work with Jeffrey Bihr. He holds a B.A. in History
from
Miami
University
in
Oxford
,
Ohio
.
Nancy Lawson has
worked in Bay Area theatre since moving to San Francisco
from the deep south in 1976. She
studied Stanislavsky’s Technique of Physical Action with Philip Bennett and
later taught acting, performed, and directed projects at the Bennett Theatre
Lab.
Nancy
appeared in and directed productions as a member of the Noh Oratorio Society
for almost ten years and she wrote and performed her own material in Amy
Mueller’s Solo Performance Workshops at Bravo Studio. She helped establish an
Arts Committee at All Saints Episcopal Church in
San Francisco
where she directed a staged reading of Heather McDonald’s Dream of a Common Language in the spring of 2002.
Most recently, she directed Harold Pinter’s Betrayal
for Third Rail Power Trip at Venue 9 in April and co-directed Donald Margulies Dinner with Friends with Daniel Gamburg for the Theatre and Film Lab
of SF at the Traveling Jewish Theatre in August.
She is very pleased to be working with Jim, Rich, and the wonderful cast
of Corned Beef as part of the SF Fringe 2003.
Thanks, as always, to Fred.
Rich Watkins
has performed in the productions Pippin,
Pal Joey, You Can’t Take it With You, All American, The Crucible, Noises Off,
House of Blue Leaves, and Third Rail Power Trip’s Betrayal,
with Kerry Gudjohnsen, Mark Rachel, and Matthew Gardner and directed by Nancy
Lawson. Richard graduated from
San Francisco
State
with a Bachelor’s in English and creative writing and studied with the
advanced degree program Playwrights’ Theatre Workshop.
Richard has collaborated on VTV-Virtual Television and God Talk,
co-producing, co-writing, and starring in the latter.
Jim Strope
is a poet, philosopher, and software engineer. He wrote and produced Catchy
Name’s Something You Might Want for the 2002 Fringe Festival. He has worked
with the Playwright’s Lab, the San Francisco Playwright’s Center, Theatre
Artists’ Conspiracy, and Will Dunn’s Playwriting Workshop.
CatchyName