PHAMALY
Non-profit | |
Industry | Entertainment |
Genre | Theatre / Disability |
Founded | 1989 |
Headquarters | Denver, CO, United States |
Area served
|
Denver Metro |
Slogan | Theatre with possability |
Website | www.phamaly.org |
Phamaly Theatre Company (formerly the Physically Handicapped Actors & Musical Artists League or PHAMALy), also known as just Phamaly (as in "family"), is a theater group and touring company in Denver, Colorado formed entirely of people with disabilities from across the spectrum. Phamaly was founded in 1989 by a group of former students of the Boettcher School, a now-closed school for the disabled. The students were frustrated with the lack of theatrical opportunities for people with disabilities and wanted to create a theatre company that provided those individuals with the opportunity to perform.[1] Phamaly Theatre Company performs primarily at the Denver Performing Arts Complex and the Aurora Fox Theatre. The company's season also includes various touring and educational shows. Its recent seasons have seen productions tour outside the state of Colorado into neighboring Wyoming as well as Osaka, Japan.
Contents
Mission
The mission statement of Phamaly Theatre Company is: To inspire people to re-envision disability through professional theatre.[1]
The group strives to empower actors as they acquire and improve their acting skills and educate theater professionals in methods of adapting their own productions to the needs of people with disabilities. Phamaly works hand in hand with other professional theatre organizations such as the Denver Center Theatre Academy, the education wing of the Tony Award winning Denver Center for the Performing Arts.
Recognition
Phamaly Theatre Company has gained national attention and has received numerous local awards, including the Mayor's Award for Excellence in the Arts and Theatre Company of the Year from 5280 Magazine and the Alliance for Colorado Theatre. Phamaly's 2005 production was awarded two Ovation Awards from the Denver Post, including Best Musical and Best Director, was recognized by the Rocky Mountain News as one of ten best productions of the year, and was named top overall show by the Boulder Daily Camera. At the first annual Henry Awards (Denver's version of the Tonys), Phamaly was nominated for four awards and won one: Outstanding Direction of a Musical (Director Steve Wilson for Joseph...).
On August 29, 2006, Phamaly was featured in a lengthy segment of The News Hour with Jim Lehrer on PBS. This marked the company's first mainstream national publicity. Previous to that, Phamaly had also been the subject of a documentary short entitled "We Are PHAMALY" directed by Oscar winning filmmaker Daniel Junge. A feature-length documentary made by long-time company member Mark Dissette called "There's Still Hope for Dreams (A PHAMALy Story)" was also aired on Colorado PBS.
Phamaly was honored to receive grants for community impact from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2013 and 2014. Phamaly also continues to be recognized as one of the top theatre companies in the state of Colorado by The Denver Post's Lisa Kennedy and CultureWest.org founder and nationally recognized theatre critic John Moore. In addition, to honor its 25th Anniversary Gala, June 14, 2014 was officially declared "A Phamaly Affair Day" by Denver Mayor Michael Hancock.
Productions
Phamaly performs a musical every summer, usually in the Space Theatre at the Denver Performing Arts Complex.
In January 2007, the company opened the first non-musical production in its history at the Aurora Fox Theatre on historic Colfax Avenue. The company has performed at the Aurora Fox every winter since. In 2011 it expanded to the Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities as well.
Since the fall of 2008, Phamaly has also produced a series of sketch comedy productions entitled Vox Phamalia. These cabaret style shows consist of original comedic, dramatic, and musical material written in a workshop over several weeks before being performed. The 2011 version - Vox Phamalia: Quadrapalooza - received numerous awards and nominations from Denver theatre critics, including one for Best Director for Edith Weiss, who originated the Vox Phamalia series.
2012 saw the start of another original comedy series titled disLabled which marked the company's debut appearance in the city of Boulder, Colorado and recurred for two years in 2013 and 2014.
Throughout its history, Phamaly has also had a number of touring productions consisting of original and previously produced pieces. These productions have been performed at schools, corporate events, community gatherings, and resort venues. Since 2012, Phamaly has had a regular touring series of children's theatre productions that has traveled all over Colorado and Wyoming.
Phamaly Success Stories
Two members of Phamaly – Regan Linton and Jason Dorwart – have gone on to become the first ever full-time wheelchair users accepted into, respectively, a Master's of Acting program and a PhD for Theatre and Drama program, both through the University of California, San Diego. Linton went on to become the first wheelchair user to be cast as a company member of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. In addition, Laura Alsum, one of the original Vox Phamalia actors/writers completed the Masters program for screenwriting at UCLA where she won the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Student Grand Jury Prize for Screenwriting. In Fall 2015 longtime Phamaly actor, director, and writer Jeremy Palmer will begin working on his MFA in screenwriting at the University of Southern California. Long time Phamaly member Lucy Roucis was also featured doing her stand up comedy act about Parkinson's Disease in the 2010 romantic comedy Love & Other Drugs.
Many members have used their experience with Phamaly as a spring board into other theatre companies in and around the Denver area. Countless other people have discovered or rediscovered their passion for theatre through working with or watching Phamaly in spite of their physical, emotional, or developmental disabilities.
Production History 1989 - 2015
Previous productions have included:
- Guys and Dolls (1990)
- Oklahoma! (1991)
- Anything Goes (1992)
- Kiss Me, Kate (1993)
- Fiddler on the Roof (1994)
- How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1995)
- A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1996)
- Mame (1997)
- The Boy Friend (1998)
- Side Show (1999)
- Grand Hotel (2000)
- Damn Yankees (2001)
- Once Upon a Mattress (2002)
- The Pajama Game (2003)
- Guys and Dolls (2004)
- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (2005)
- The Wiz (2006)
- Our Town (2007)
- Urinetown: the Musical (2007)
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (2008)
- Side Show (2008)
- Vox Phamalia: Tales from the Crips (2008)
- Stand Up for Democracy (2008)
- Steel Magnolias (2009)
- Man of La Mancha (2009)
- Vox Phamalia: Redux (2009)
- Barefoot in the Park (2010)
- Beauty and the Beast (2010)
- Vox Phamalia: Triage (2010)
- The Diviners (2011)
- How to Succeed In Business Without Really Trying (2011)
- Vox Phamalia: Quadrapalooza (2011)
- The Elephant Man (2012)
- Cyrano, an adaptation by Joe Roets of Cyrano de Bergerac (2012 touring production)[2]
- disLabled (2012)
- Little Shop of Horrors (2012)
- Vox Phamalia: Cinco de Vox (2012)
- The Foreigner (2013)
- disLabled: Improvise, Adapt, & Overact (2013)
- Fiddler on the Roof (2013)
- Vox Phamalia: G.I.M.P. Nation (2013)
- It's a Wonderful Life (2013)
- The Velveteen Rabbit (2013 touring production)
- The Glass Menagerie (2014)
- disLabled: Disorderly Conduct (2014)
- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (2014)
- Vox Phamalia: Pity Pity Bang Bang (2014)
- Rapunzel (2014 touring production)
- The Fantasticks (2015) Toured to Osaka, Japan
- Cabaret (2015)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 http://www.phamaly.org/about/
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.