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 14th, Russ Bickerstaff interviewed Rex Winsome about Paint the Town.

Q&A With Rex Winsome

In the past couple of years, Insurgent Theatre co-founder Rex Winsome has become a bit controversial for his outspoken criticism of theatre, which fails to live up to its potential. His new show Paint The Town tells the story of a pair of revolutionaries in contemporary society. The show opens at the Alchemist Theatre on the tenth of this month. It's one of five shows to open in greater Milwaukee next week. At the end of the month, it packs up and moves out to our the east coast. Rex answered some questions about the show:

Paint The Town is a story about revolution. You have a beautiful revolutionary who is set free from an oppressively perfect family by a terrorist. Do I smell some sort of societal allegory here?


Societal allegory, maybe... I think I'd describe it as more of a hypothetical. If there were really fully committed revolutionaries living underground somewhere in america today, how would they do it, and what actions would they take? How would they interact with our society, down to the most basic unit of society, the family? What are the consequences of that interaction? Can we find options outside of the two obvious ones: dogmatic absolute rejection of society or compromise to a social order we know is flawed and destructive?

You've only got Kate Pleuss and Jason Hames listed for the cast. Am I to understand that the family in question is implied offstage, or are there others?


actually, i apparently failed to list myself on this cast list you are looking at. So much for my egomania, eh? Yes, I'm also in the play. Kate and I play the revolutionaries, and Hames plays her brother. So the family has a representative on stage. The action is also interrupted by frequent Brechtian narrations, which all three of us perform, that discuss the rest of the family in depth.

What's the deal with the red paint?


Well, there is a definitely a deal with the red paint, and it's a pretty big deal, but you'll have to come see the show if you want to get in on the deal.

Traveling on a budget doubtlessly requires you to keep things like set ad costuming to a minimum. What special considerations have you made in putting together a show designed to be performed on the road?

There are special considerations, but this isn't one of those minimal shows with no set and actors wearing all black or something, that'd be too easy. There will be a full set, costumes and props. The play is set in a cardboard shack, built in a subway. Kurt Hartwig (playwright, founder of Bad Soviet Habits, and former professor at UWM) is building this set for us, he's got ingenous ideas that allow us to fold up and fit his rather elaborate set into our touring van. The other advantage is any patching or repairs can be done on the road with duct tape and cardboard found in the alley behind the venue.
Costumes and other set peices will double as our own sleeping gear and clothing. It also helps that there are no light cues or sound effects, all transitions are handled in full light by the actors under the audience's watchful gaze (part of the brechtian aspect of the show). Peter J Woods is touring with us, performing a noise set as overture to the show. His amp will be used as a support for the stage. Lucky and Pozzo are also going on the tour, to keep more money and audience flowing in, and their stuff will double as set peices as well. Space is definitely a concern, but i think we can manage everything and the four of us in Peter's van, as long as we don't get pulled over and have to explain all the fake bomb-making material involved in the show.

Paint The Town runs July 10 - 27 at Alchemist Theatre