PRESS

July 22nd, 2008. Jaymee Sherman reviews Systems for Vital Source.

July 17th, 2008. Burt Wardall reviews Paint the Town for Vital Source.

July 15th, 2008. Russ Bickerstaff reviews Paint the Town for The Shepherd.

July 4th, 2008. Russ Bickerstaff blogs about Systems.

July 5th, 2008. Russ Bickerstaff interviews Rex Winsome.

July, 2008. Artsy Schmartzy previews Paint the Town.

June, 2008. Russ Bickerstaff previews Paint the Town.

June 18th, 2008. Artsy Schmartzy starts a debate!

May 20th, 2008. Unofficial PIAD 3 Review.

May 14th, 2008. Russ Bickerstaff reviews Play in a Day 3.

April 25, 2008. Russ Bickerstaff reviews Cracks in the Floor and 31.

April 24, 2008. MKE Magazine asks us to pitch our show.

April 16, 2008. Russ Bickertaff previews Cracks in the Floor and 31.

April 15, 2008. Russ Bickertaff interviews Wes Tank for Cracks in the Floor.

March 28, 2008. Bus Rickertaff runs into us, on the bus no less!

March, 2008. Jonathan West adapts Berzerk!!! script into short film.

March 27, 2008. Jonathan West interviews us for his Big Mouth Artsy Schmartsy Podcast.

March 2008. Russ Bickerstaff pre-views Ides of March Dance off on his blog.

March 2008. Rex Winsome quoted on Artsy Schmartzy

Jan 29 2008. Artsy Schmartzy muses about 8 1/2 x 11.

Jan 2008. Russ Bickerstaff discusses 8 1/2 x 11, on his Shepherd Express blog.

Jan 2008. Vital Source Online publishes this review of Berzerk!!!

Jan 10 2008. The Onion AV Club recommends Berzerk!!!

Jan 2008. Artsy Schmartzy participates in Berzerk!!!

Jan 10 2008. Russ Bickerstaff previews Berzerk!!! in the Shepherd Express.

Dec 13 2007. Russ Bickerstaff mentions Insurgent as a solution to stagnant local theatre.

Dec 6 2007. Russ Bickerstaff writes for 8 1/2 x 11.

Oct 18, 2007. MKE Magazine includes us in their cover article on Milwaukee Arts Collectives.

Oct, 2007. Artsy Schmartzy upstages us.

Sept 22nd, 2007. Rex Winsome rants against Shakespeare on the nightly news.

Aug 8, 2007. Artzy Schmartzy meets Lucky and Pozzo.

July 22, 2007. Vital Source Online reviews Play in a Day.

July 5, 2007. The Shepherd Express publishes a review of Made in the Mouth.

July 2007. Shepherd Express previews Made in the Mouth.

June 2007. MKE previews Made in the Mouth.

January 2007. Vital Source Online reviews Golden Apollo.

December, 2006. Vital Source Online reviews Gorilla Theatre: Berzerk.

October 14, 2006. Someone talks about Lucky and Pozzo in their blog.

September 23, 2006. VLAD!! Watch the slideshow, he's there!

August 24, 2006. Jonathan West (Bialystock and Bloom) tells MKE magazine that we want to take over the world.

June, 2006. OnMilwaukee says you should know us.

May 18, 2006. Mke Magazine publishes a profile of Ben and Tracy, regarding our efforts with INSURGENT THEATRE.

May 11, 2006. The Shepherd Express publishes a review of The Plight of the Ruling Class.

May 1, 2006. Vital Source Online publishes a review of The Plight of the Ruling Class.

April 27, 2006. The Shepherd Express publishes a preview of The Plight of the Ruling Class.

July 25, 2005. OnMilwaukee.com publishes an article about The Astor Theatre that includes an interview about None of These is Nothing.

January 2005. Riverwest Currents publishes a preview of Bring the War Home.

January 2005. The Shepherd Express publishes an interview about Bring the War Home.

January 19, 2005. OnMilwaukee.com publishes a piece on Bring the War Home.

September 1 2003. The Vital Source publishes a review of ReVerb.


May 18, 2006. Mke Magazine publishes this profile of Ben and Tracy, regarding our efforts with INSURGENT THEATRE.

Tracy Doyle and Ben Turk

A do-it-yourself theater partnership

By Nicole Sweeney
bsweeney@mkeonline.com
Posted: May 18, 2006

It's opening night for "The Plight of the Ruling Class," and the cast almost seems to outnumber the crowd watching in the darkened Astor Theatre, a tiny space in the back of the Brady Street Pharmacy.

As the evening's three short plays unfold, Tracy Doyle watches from the audience. Ben Turk pauses to observe from a side aisle, wincing when a prop window crashes down unexpectedly.

Ben and Tracy are the self-dubbed "boss man" and "boss lady" of Insurgent Theatre, a small group with a big dream: "To galvanize and politicize theatre from the ground up."

It's part of what some call Milwaukee's "underground" theater scene. Tracy and Ben think of it as "DIY theater."

They aren't affiliated with a college or organization; they don't qualify for the United Performing Arts Fund; they work with small budgets, hand-made props and novice actors. They produce only local, original scripts. They're not afraid to tackle topics in controversial and disturbing ways: In "The Plight of the Ruling Class," one play involves race and cannibalism, while another depicts a rape fantasy that gets out of control.

So far they've managed to survive, even thrive, without having to "kiss anyone's ass for big funds." A donation plea in their program goes like this, only without the swear words dashed out: "Give us your f-ing money! Put it in the bag, and - Hey! Don't look at me. Don't f-ing look at me, pig. Just give me the f-ing money. NOW! In other words, generous donations of money or materials are always appreciated."

Audience members buy $15 "bourgeois" tickets in advance or $8 "proletariat" tickets at the door. The goal is to compete with movie ticket prices.

"Everybody complains about how nobody's going to theater anymore...and it's a dying art or whatever," Ben said. "But I don't think it is. It just needs to shift to its audience. And we've successfully done that."

It started in 2001 when Ben launched S-MartKino with another friend. "It's nonsense," he said of the name. "It means nothing." S-MartKino's activities were just as random: Celebrating "Marxmas," a.k.a. Karl Marx's birthday; passing out communist T-shirts; stopping people on the street with survey questions along the lines of "Define 'beauty.'" "Draw 'truth.'"

When Tracy arrived and began helping with surveys, "There were a lot of philosophical, existential, high-falutin' questions," she recalled. "My surveys were a lot more low key - not as pretentious as some people's." She threw a look in Ben's direction, and the two erupted in laughter.

Both natives of Racine, the couple met through a mutual friend at an experimental movie screening at UWM a few years ago. Now they live together in Riverwest with their three cats and a whole lot of theater props.

It was Tracy's influence that brought S-MartKino from the street to the stage. She'd been involved in theater since middle school, but her passion was really ignited after working with Madison's Broom Street Theater, which performs edgy, original works. Soon, she and Ben were collaborating on ReVerb, a modern translation of Sartre's "No Exit" that starred a punk rock anarchist and a sorority girl.

They produce a show whenever they find a script that catches their eye, or when Ben writes one himself. He wrote about Iraq in "Bring the War Home" last year, and they'll restage a revised version this fall.

Tracy doesn't identify with a particular political camp. Ben, who majored in political science in college, calls himself an "entrepreneurial communist," which helps explain his approach to Insurgent. . "We're taking theater out of the hands of the rich and bourgeois people," he said, "and making it more available to see as an audience and more available to participate in."

Half of the theater's proceeds are split among the cast, while the other half helps fund the next production.

Ben's the writer; Tracy's the editor. She directs the actors; he handles the technical stuff.