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Archive for January, 2009

Unknown Penguin Podcast 008: Wibbly Wobbly Timey Whimey

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Featuring: Resolutions! And Even More Confessions of a Jewish Bagel Shop Owner!

Listen. Subscribe. Repent.

Unknown Penguin Podcast 007: The Hildebrand Rarity

Friday, January 16th, 2009

Once upon a midnight dreary / While I pondered Denis Leary / Over a many dark and incurious bottle I had yet to pour / Whilst I podding, merely casting / A sketch show that should be outlasting / As if all you had to do was go to iTunes or unknownpenguin.podomatic.com to download and listen to our new podcast episode / Quoth the raven: “Eat my shorts.”

Featuring: A Supervillian’s New Machine! Mad Libs! Fraternity! Crepe Cookbook! Movie Pitch! And More Confessions of a Jewish Bagel Shop Owner!

Cheer in ‘TV Guide’

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

Keith Powell Directs a Play has received a “Cheer” from Bruce Fretts’s Cheers & Jeers column in TV Guide. Reprint below:

WEB CHEER. Keith Powell may not be getting as much screen time this season as witer Toofer on 30 Rock (blame those big guests), but that’s freed him up to launch his own Web series, Keith Powell Directs a Play. In it he hilariously lampoons himself as an egomaniacal thespian hired to helm a production of Uncle Vanya at a Connecticut theater. Powell, who cowrote the series, proves playing a gifted comedy scribe isn’t a stretch. poweltothepeople.net

Fretts, Bruce. “Cheers & Jeers: Web Cheer.” TV Guide 5-11 Jan. 2008: 18.

New ‘Keith Powell Directs a Play’ and Tiltzy.tv Review

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

Keith Powell Directs a Play: Act IV - “All is Lost” is available on YouTube and for free on iTunes.

Keith Powell Directs a Play got a nice write up on tiltzy.tv. Click here to read the article or you can just look below:

30 Rock’s Keith Powell Directs a Play
December 30th, 2008 | Written by: Michael Shaw

According to his appropriately humorous web bio, actor Keith Powell is an “unqualified genius” and “a rising star of American stage and screen.” In all likelihood, he’d probably attribute his being cast as a regular character on NBC’s 30 Rock—where he plays the writer, “Toofer”—to his spectacular performances in regional theatre, a Wendy’s commercial, and appearances in two out of the three Law & Order series.

Now, Keith Powell is making his name where it really counts: on the Internet.

PowelltothePeople.net is Keith’s website and it features the usual actors’ web necessities: personal news updates, photos and blog. As the man himself says, “I wanted to make a site that had original content, so everything you see here is made for the express purpose of entertaining you (i.e., showing you me).”

In addition to a growing collection of pet projects (intelligent observations of sexual behavior, race relations, homophobia and media coverage of politics among other topics, most of which are directed by and co-written with Patrick Flynn, a collaborator of Powell’s from the Contemporary Stage Theater of Wilmington, DE), the main attraction on PowelltothePeople.net is an ongoing series of video shorts, Keith Powell Directs a Play.

Co-written by Powell and Flynn (who also directs and features), the series begins as actor Keith Powell, playing actor “Keith Powell”, meets with his agent to discuss upcoming roles. However, Powell’s agent is having trouble finding him work because, since being cast on 30 Rock, Powell is “difficult to work with” and “fussy” about his roles. The only work his agent can find him is in Connecticut. For a repertory theater production of Chekov’s Uncle Vanya. As its director.

(Fun aside: Powell is also directing a real production of Whisper House for the Delaware Theatre Company that will debut in March 2009.)

In a similar vein to Michael Stahl-David’s Behind the Star, in this series the real actor, Keith Powell, utilizes his fictional self to explore the domineering pomposity of the self-important actor. A constant source of both laughs and uncomfortable awkwardness, Powell mines this peculiar brand of egotism and utter unawareness of self with the same aplomb that Ricky Gervais or Steve Carell do in their respective versions of The Office.

In perhaps my favorite line of the series so far, Powell the director expounds upon the importance of theater and his vision for the play. He states to his troupe, “People don’t go to the theatre to be entertained, they go to the theater to appear cultured.” And, thus, what better way to appear cultured than to sit through “a four act drama about family issues or something like that.”

Act III, the latest installment, features Powell “directing” his actors through a series of “improv games” that play out like twisted Freudian confessions. The troupe is bored with his lack of focus on the play itself and is clearly not amused by his antics. I was also less than amused by this act as it leans a bit too far towards painful social awkwardness than good comedy should. However, it still has its moments and I look forward to the next act to see where Powell and Flynn take this series.

I daresay as 2009 quickly approaches, we could be seeing the likes of Keith Powell more often (even if you don’t plan on seeing Night at the Museum II: Battle of the Smithsonian).