A few months ago I attended a performance of a play presented by The Other Me Theater Company, the show served as a relaunch of sorts for the theatre company whose mission as their site suggests, is to present thought-provoking theater performances. With their latest production, playwright Jeff Baron’s NYC Drama League-nominated Visiting Mr. Green, The Other Me Theatre Company appears to be once again rising to the challenge. With Bowd Beal as director, Visiting Mr. Green opens Thursday, November 7 at Playhouse 615 (11920 Lebanon Road, Mt. Juliet, TN 37122) and continuing through Saturday, November 16. A two-person dramatic work examining the commonalities we share in spite of our initial perceived differences, Visiting Mr. Green features Bryan Kratoska and RJ Comer As the two actors readied for opening night, I recently had the chance to chat with them for the latest in my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire Q&A. What follows are those conversations.
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Rapid Fire Q&A with the stars of The Other Me Theater Company’s Visiting Mr. Green
Rapid Fire with Bryan Kratoska, Ross Gardiner in Visiting Mr. Green
JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Ross Gardiner, the character you play in Visiting Mr. Green?
BRYAN KRATOSKA: Ross is a young man learning to slow down and appreciate others, along with learning to be okay with himself along the way.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: While I had heard of the play, I gotta be honest, I was mostly unfamiliar with it prior to doing a little research in preparation of chatting with you and your costar. From what I’ve ascertained, in the broadest sense possible, it seems to be somewhere between Tuesdays with Morrie and The Odd Couple. Is that a fair assessment? AND…How might you more accurately describe what transpires during the play?
BRYAN KRATOSKA: While I don’t know Tuesdays With Morrie, I do know The Odd Couple. I would say it’s within reason to say this show is close/adjacent to The Odd Couple. This is a story of two men learning to live with both each other, and to learn to live with themselves and/or their mistakes.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: How did you come to be part of this production?
BRYAN KRATOSKA: I assistant directed Bowd Beal last year around this time in A Tuna Christmas over at Pull-Tight Players. He did a wonderful job and was a lot of fun to work with and learn from on my end. So when he called and asked if I would like to read the part with RJ, I had to at least give it a shot, and I am glad I did.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: Is there a line or a scene in the show that you particularly look forward to each time it comes up in the script?
BRYAN KRATOSKA: Act 2 Scene 1. It’s tough, and I can’t say more than that without spoilers!
JHPENTERTAINMENT: As mentioned, Bowd Beal is the show’s director. While I’ve known of him for a while, it was only recently that we met when he starred in The Other Me Theatre Company’s most recent production, The Sunset Limited. What’s been your favorite aspect of exploring these characters under Beal’s direction?
BRYAN KRATOSKA: Bowd is great at developing characters. Anyone who had the chance to see him and Chad Stem in A Tuna Christmas would know that. So combining his creative mind when it comes to building characters and the fact that he has played Ross in the past, it’s led to many in-depth conversations regarding Ross and this world. He’s also pushed me outside of my own box in a lot of ways. I typically act in musicals, so this has been a real treat to take part in and play/build Ross under his direction.
Rapid Fire with RJ Comer, Mr. Green in Visiting Mr. Green
JHPENTERTAINMENT: In researching to chat with you and your co-star, I discovered this play has not only been around since 1996, it has played in more than 50 countries world-wide. In spite of that popularity, the last time a Tennessee audience was privy to a production, was nearly fifteen years ago when a company just outside Memphis presented it. That said, The Other Me Theater Company’s presentation will undoubtedly mark many audience members’ introduction to the piece. Does being part of a show that is largely unfamiliar to the majority of its audience lend a certain freedom to the way you present the character and make it your own?
RJ COMER: First, thank you for your interest in our production of Visiting Mr. Green and for your editorial support for live theater in this area. When it comes to playing Mr. Green, the long shadow on any actor is Eli Wallach who originated the role. But I approach my responsibility as an actor the same whether the part (or the play) is new to the audience or is very familiar to them. My job, as an actor and interpretive artist, is to find the truth of the character as revealed in the script, consistent with the director’s vision, and inhabit that truth in every way. So no, doing a part or play that is unfamiliar to an audience is no more liberating than doing one they’ve seen many times. I will say this though: it is more fulfilling, more fun, and I think more worthwhile. Live theater is a unique and powerful way to communicate and illuminate through art. So I applaud any company that produces work that middle TN audiences have not seen before. I’m equally excited about Franklin Theatrical Fellowship’s upcoming production of Goodnight Oscar (the first production of this Tony-winner since it left Broadway) and was super pleased to see Bradley Moore bring the world premiere of Lithium and Xanax to this market at The Darkhorse.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: As I mentioned when I chatted with Bryan, I recently saw your director Bowd Beal appear onstage in The Other Me Theatre Company’s The Sunset Limited. That production marking the theatre company’s reemergence after a few years. How excited are you to be part of the rebirth of this thought-provoking theatre company?
RJ COMER: I’m stoked! I’m always excited to contribute to any company (new or established, professional or community) that seeks to elevate the offerings beyond the familiar, the safe, and the silly. Make no mistake, Mr. Green is full of LOL moments as well as charming and dramatic surprises – it isn’t an interpretive think-piece – but it transcends the identities and circumstances of the characters to address universally applicable questions about love, family, and identity. Yeah, I’m very pleased to be performing for a company committed to that kind of work.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand Bowd is not only directing, but also serves as the set designer for Visiting Mr. Green. Is there a detail in the set that you enjoy that you hope the audience might take note of?
RJ COMER: Our director, Bowd Beal, designed and built the set. It’s a typical middle-class apartment in New York, now a little run down, dim, and messy from neglect. But there are two seemingly inconsequential moments when more light appears. I hope the audience spots and appreciates the metaphor of the light in those moments. After all, this is a play about opening one’s heart, and I love it when the set in small ways does more than merely frame the action, but also helps tell the story in subtle ways.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: In 2018, two decades after Visiting Mr. Green’s debut, playwright Jeff Baron presented a sequel, So This is My Family: Mr. Green Part 2. IF The Other Me were to take on this sequel in the future, would you consider revisiting the role?
RJ COMER: Ha! Well, that depends on two things: first, whether I like the script – which I haven’t read; and second, whether our production of Visiting Mr. Green attracts and wins the hearts of this audience. I just encourage everyone to come to see this play. Then, if they like it as much as I think they will, we can talk about doing the sequel.
JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do you hope audiences will take with them long after Visiting Mr. Green?
RJ COMER: I hope the audience will be mindful that while strongly held beliefs and convictions provide structure and certainty – thereby providing security and comfort in an uncertain world – they can also lead to absurd and tragic results when not tempered by love. Love allows us to maintain the integrity of our beliefs while making room in our hearts for those who may not share them.
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The Other Me Theater Company’s Visiting Mr. Green debuts at Playhouse 615 with 7:30pm performances Thursdays-Saturdays November 7-9 & 14-16 and a 2:30pm matinee midway through the run on Sunday, November 10. Tickets are General Admission $17/Adults and $15/Seniors. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets. To keep up with what’s next as The Other Me Theater Company continues to emerge as one of the area’s theaters to watch, check them out at their Official Site where you can Subscribe to their email list for future updates. You can also follow them Facebook.
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