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ACT's ‘Co-Founders' asks who gets a seat at the globe's most elite table
ACT's ‘Co-Founders' asks who gets a seat at the globe's most elite table

San Francisco Chronicle​

time24-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

ACT's ‘Co-Founders' asks who gets a seat at the globe's most elite table

If 'Co-Founders' were pitching itself to you at a start-up accelerator for musical theater, you'd add your name to series A. The world-premiere musical has what the industry might call a compelling value proposition. Arena-ready voices, winsome actors, rhyme-stuffed hip-hop lyrics and eye-catching design fuse to tell the kind of Bay Area story that doesn't get much air time, written by Bay Area artists, to Bay Area audiences. You might have seen the hit TV show 'Silicon Valley' or films like 'The Internship' or 'The Social Network,' but you probably haven't seen a musical in which an Oakland Uber driver and his ride-or-die both have their own apps as part of a traveling salesman's wagon of side hustles. Or a tech story with Black coders at its center, one that acknowledges how 'global governments have missed the mark on AI for people of color.' If 'Co-Founders' is still in beta as of its Wednesday, June 11, opening night at American Conservatory Theater's Strand Theater, it represents exactly the kind of art San Francisco's flagship theater ought to be seeding. Adesha Adefela, Ryan Nicole Austin and Beau Lewis' show is new, hyperlocal and concerned with some of our era's foremost questions: Who gets a seat at the globe's most elite table, and when you're bursting with talent, whose agenda do you serve? In act one, 'Co-Founders' excels. As Oakland coder Esata (played by Aneesa Folds through June 22 and Angel Adedokun thereafter) struggles to get into Y Combinator knockoff the Xcelerator, the writers model how to use the tools of musical theater. Whenever Esata's in a moral dilemma, she decides what to do through song — and the lyrics don't explain what happens. Instead, director Jamil Jude shows us, with video (by David Richardson and Frédéric O. Boulay) that doesn't render the act of coding in that deadly manner of a person sitting statically in a chair in front of a monitor. There's one opaque projection screen behind Esata, and another, see-through one in front of her, at the lip of the stage. On the front one, little buttons for her to click and pop-up notifications for her to fret over, while her code, say, whooshes by behind her. For us in the audience, the overall effect is like watching a movie on a big screen while texting with your friends on a small screen — in a mesmerizing fashion. It's refreshing to see a work of theater not disdain or fight with modern entertainment consumption habits but embrace them. Meanwhile, Folds' tsunami-strong voice summons all the feeling of wailing into a pillow, but with the tender musicianship usually only orchestra players get credit for. And when she teams up with Conway (Roe Hamtrampf), who is just as white and nerdy as Michael Cera, his bright tenor could melt stone. When she and her mother (Adefela) duet, their voices amplify each other like rocket-boosters, their timbres resembling ice blankets, then balm, then redwoods. 'Co-Founders' turns more predictable in its second act. Conflicts between money and values follow well-trod paths, with superfluous characters and songs. There's an underdeveloped dead dad subplot, plus rifts and reconciliations so inevitable they might as well have highway mileage signs. Then there's a villain that could have been either interesting or campy but falls short of both. Still, magnetic performances make up for a lot. Austin, as Esata's cuz Kamaiyah, is one of those actors who can steal a scene as a waiter in a party's background. She looks at her watch, picks her nails, sniffs and reacts to what's in a wine glass, and it's a thousand times more interesting than anything else onstage because she's telling us about who Kamaiyah is and what kind of world she's a part of. This party is starchy, but Kamaiyah's at least going to get her jollies by either scoring some wine or judging attendees for their taste. That's just the Oakland hustle, Kamaiyah might say. The musical that contains her isn't a unicorn yet, but it has Kamaiyah's same scrappy spirit — an underdog or a bucking bronco busting into the ring on sheer chutzpah.

Why this theater leader is leaving one of the top arts jobs in S.F.
Why this theater leader is leaving one of the top arts jobs in S.F.

San Francisco Chronicle​

time24-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Why this theater leader is leaving one of the top arts jobs in S.F.

American Conservatory Theater Executive Director Jennifer Bielstein is leaving her role after seven years on the job, opening one of the top leadership positions in Bay Area theater as the industry continues to absorb pandemic aftershocks. A first-class professional with a sterling résumé, Bielstein is heading to the Alley Theatre in Houston, where she'll be managing director to another Bay Area expat — Artistic Director Rob Melrose, who co-founded the Tenderloin's now defunct Cutting Ball Theater. 'I remain a friend to and champion of ACT and the San Francisco Bay Area arts community and look forward to cheering you on from across the country,' Bielstein said in a statement. Melrose called Bielstein 'a legend' in the theater world — lauding her time at Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago, Actors Theatre of Louisville and the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis in addition to ACT — and emphasized the personal qualities he believes will guide the Texas company forward. 'I also feel that Jennifer's warmth, kindness, and collaborative spirit are just what we need as we chart our way to Alley Theatre's next era of success,' he said in a statement. That same spirit helped guide ACT through one of the most turbulent periods in its history, which ACT Board President Joaquín Torres (who's also the assessor-recorder for the City of San Francisco) acknowledged. 'Because of her contributions, ACT is better positioned to address the challenging times arts organizations are facing throughout the Bay Area and across the country,' he said in a statement. 'She will be deeply missed.' Bielstein's foremost accomplishment during her tenure was keeping San Francisco's flagship theater afloat through the COVID-19 pandemic as many other theaters in the region closed. She led the company through initial performance postponements; reopening schedules penciled, then scrapped; fitful government relief; Zoom and radio theater; wars among audience members with different masking and vaccine preferences; and the halting, ongoing challenge of re-engaging and retaining audience members who got out of the habit of going out to shows. With Artistic Director Pam MacKinnon, Bielstein presided over the historic night when ACT first reopened to post-pandemic audiences, for 'Freestyle Love Supreme,' and her term brought to the theater such notable productions as 'Hippest Trip — The Soul Train Musical,' 'Big Data,' 'The Wizard of Oz,' 'Fefu and Her Friends,' 'The Lehman Trilogy,' 'A Strange Loop' and 'The Headlands.' In 2022, she also oversaw an anonymous $35 million donation to the theater, the largest single gift the company had ever received from any source. Made in honor of Toni Rembe, a longtime ACT board member, it occasioned the renaming of the former Geary Theater in Rembe's honor. But Bielstein also had to make difficult decisions during her tenure. In 2020, the theater shuttered its storied costume shop, where thespians and members of the public alike could rent stage-quality attire for Halloween, immersive shows or themed parties. The following year, the theater announced plans to close its Master of Fine Arts acting program, a crown jewel of the Bay Area theater scene that had trained such celebrities as Denzel Washington, Anna Deavere Smith, Annette Bening and Elizabeth Banks and attracted generations of young talent to the Bay Area who might otherwise head straight to New York or Los Angeles. Bielstein departs at the end of August. David Schmitz, whose company Amplify Leadership Advisors specializes in interim leadership and consulting, will serve in Bielstein's stead until the board names a successor following a national search. Whoever takes the helm will inherit an organization with 60 years of history, a budget of $25 million; a year-round, full-time staff of 105 plus more than 500 seasonal or temporary workers; a six-show mainstage season across two prominent downtown venues, and a robust Young Conservatory program that's educated such talented alumni as 2025 Tony Award winner Darren Criss.

Hip hop collides with Silicon Valley in new SF musical "Co-Founders"
Hip hop collides with Silicon Valley in new SF musical "Co-Founders"

Axios

time04-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Axios

Hip hop collides with Silicon Valley in new SF musical "Co-Founders"

A new hip hop musical tells a uniquely Bay Area story: A young Oakland coder hacks her way into San Francisco's most competitive startup accelerator, intent on saving her home from gentrification. Driving the news: " Co-Founders" draws from the region's hip hop roots while incorporating traditions from soul, gospel, funk, jazz, R&B and more to pay homage to the people who make Silicon Valley what it is. Zoom in: The musical explores the tension underlying a Black woman trying to enter circles she's long been excluded from while investigating the perils of tech when it comes to grief. The brainchild of Ryan Nicole Austin, Beau Lewis and Adesha Adefela, "Co-Founders" is now playing at American Conservatory Theater's Strand Theater (1127 Market St.) through July 6. What they're saying: The fingerprint of historical figures like the Black Panthers is reflected in the music and parallels the grit needed to pave your way in the tech world, according to Austin. "That's where the synergy is with the spirit of the entrepreneur," she told the San Francisco Chronicle. "It's like, 'Hey, I gotta make something out of nothing, and even though everything around me says no, I know that I have it within me to say yes.'" My thought bubble: This musical tackles head-on the intersections of tech, race and class, reminding us that seemingly siloed corners of the Bay are never as disparate as they seem. Fun fact: The production includes interactions between on-stage actors and a holographic avatar controlled by an actor backstage via live-motion capture.

‘Co-Founders' is the musical to see with your start-up (or your hip-hop) buddies
‘Co-Founders' is the musical to see with your start-up (or your hip-hop) buddies

San Francisco Chronicle​

time28-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

‘Co-Founders' is the musical to see with your start-up (or your hip-hop) buddies

'Co-Founders' playwrights Beau Lewis, Adesha Adefela and Ryan Nicole Austin sit for a portrait during a technical rehearsal for the production at American Conservatory Theater's Strand Theater in San Francisco on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle Nine years ago, Beau Lewis created an unusual weekly therapy group for struggling tech founders. Instead of sitting in a circle of folding chairs, participants freestyled — as in hip-hop. 'There was a pressure for us to keep up an external veneer of success and not actually be open and vulnerable about all of the challenges and fears that we had,' recalled Lewis, who co-founded toy company GoldieBlox and serves as CEO of media company and would-be musical theater disruptor Rhyme Combinator. Those feelings, he continued, came out in 'whatever your subconscious brain bled out over this beat.' Choreographer Juel D. Lane works onstage during a technical rehearsal for 'Co-Founders' on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle All the angst released during those rap sessions has now evolved into 'Co-Founders,' a musical about Bay Area start-up culture whose world premiere begins performances Thursday, May 29, at American Conservatory Theater's Strand Theater. But it's no longer just Lewis' baby. Advertisement Article continues below this ad Co-playwrights Adesha Adefela and Ryan Nicole Austin, who also star in the show, pushed the production to ask broader questions. It investigates how tensions might multiply for a Black female coder from Oakland — someone who's never assumed part of, or invited into, tech's inner circle — and it explores how the Bay Area's inventive spirit extends beyond tech to rap and activism. The 'Co-Founders' production team tinkers with Dadvatar during a technical rehearsal on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle 'I consider myself a techie,' Adefela told the Chronicle during a group interview in the Strand Theater's lobby, which is outfitted with a grandma-style living room, complete with a twist-dial TV set and garish-print sofa, in an effort to help new audiences feel more at home. More Information 'Co-Founders': Written by Adesha Adefela, Ryan Nicole Austin and Beau Lewis. Directed by Jamil Jude. Performances begin Thursday, May 29. Through July 6. $25-$130, subject to change. ACT's Strand Theater, 1127 Market St., S.F. 415-749-2228. As an independent artist, Adefela produces her own music, records her own videos and builds her own website, she pointed out. And her relatives, too, might jury-rig a giant sound system from a couple of boombox speakers. 'I'm like, wow, that's engineering,' she said. 'How come that isn't seen as engineering? How come I don't see my cousins and the like in places like Apple?' Advertisement Article continues below this ad In the show, a song titled 'Valley to Vallejo' works to bridge that gap, thanks especially to lyrics by Austin that put La Raza and Black Panther Party activists as well as Oakland rappers Too Short and MC Hammer on par with Silicon Valley tech giants Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs. The number asks, as Lewis put it, 'Does it take the same hustle to sell a tape out of a trunk as it does to sell a computer out of a garage?' Aneesa Folds rehearses 'Co-Founders' on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle Austin points out that the drive of artists from San Francisco rapper JT the Bigga Figga to Vallejo Hyphy pioneer E-40 was 'inspired by the grit and the unapologetic nature of the Black Panthers.' 'That's where the synergy is with the spirit of the entrepreneur,' she continued. 'It's like, 'Hey, I gotta make something out of nothing, and even though everything around me says no, I know that I have it within me to say yes.'' Aneesa Folds, left, and Adesha Adefela rehearse 'Co-Founders' at the Strand Theater on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle In the show, Esata (played by 'Freestyle Love Supreme' star Aneesa Folds through June 22 and Angel Adedokun for the rest of the run through July 6) has an astonishing start-up idea that she's pitching to an elite accelerator: a 'Dadvatar' that creates a simulacrum of her dead father whom she's mourning. Advertisement Article continues below this ad 'If you are a technologist, what does that look like to deal with your loss?' Adefela explained. Choreographer Juel D. Lane works onstage while Dadvatar, an avatar controlled by live-motion capture from an actor backstage, is projected on a holographic scrim during a technical rehearsal for 'Co-Founders' on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle Onstage, Dadvatar appears as a hologram interacting with flesh-and-blood actors, and he's operated in real time by actor Tommy Soulati Shepherd, who stays in a backstage booth. ACT is billing this use of technology as the first of its kind, noting that previous stage interactions between humans and holograms, as when Celine Dion sang with Elvis on 'American Idol,' have been recordings. The show's projection wizards are David Richardson, of Los Angeles' famed theater-projection-pop music hybrid 'Cages,' and Frédéric O. Boulay, who splits his time between the East Bay and what the team jokingly calls 'the East East Bay,' or France. Dadvatar, a a hologram who can react spontaneously in real time next to onstage actors, is projected on a scrim during a technical rehearsal for 'Co-Founders' on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle 'I love the things that are not supposed to work,' Boulay said, of his attraction to the project. Advertisement Article continues below this ad Richardson casually whips out sentences such as 'We've built a MetaHuman in Unreal Engine,' referring to an avatar and computer program well known in the gaming world. The resulting Dadvatar, in yellow shirt and jeans, resembles a video game character. When he appears next to human actors onstage, the result scrambles the brain; your eyes keep darting from one to the other, trying to make sense of it. Actor Tommy Soulati Shepherd, who plays Dadvatar, demonstrates the live-motion capture technology that allows him to puppeteer an avatar with his facial reactions from backstage at 'Co-Founders' on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle Dadvatar gets projected onto an invisible screen, and to manipulate him, a motion-capture camera grabs and mirrors Shepherd's facial expressions: raised eyebrows and gaping jaws, micro-shifts in cheek muscles. 'I had to get contacts,' Shepherd revealed, noting that the camera can't read his eyes through glasses. New to the experience, it takes him an hour to get his contact lenses on every morning. Actor Tommy Soulati Shepherd, who plays Dadvatar, demonstrates the live-motion capture technology that allows him to puppeteer an avatar with his facial reactions from backstage at 'Co-Founders' on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle To control Dadvatar's body movements, Shepherd uses an Xbox controller. Thankfully, he was already familiar with the gaming console, so he said that helped. Advertisement Article continues below this ad Also of unlikely assistance: being a drummer. Shepherd has to keep one eye on a monitor displaying the Dadvatar, another on monitors displaying what's onstage, so he can react as if he's really there. He has to emote realistically with his face while operating with his hands a pressure-sensitive controller whose left-right movements don't correspond to Dadvatar's physical location but to gestural intensity. Actor Tommy Soulati Shepherd, who plays Dadvatar, demonstrates using an Xbox controller to manipulate a holographic character in real time for 'Co-Founders' on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle On his second day in the booth, he told the Chronicle, 'I'm going to get good at this.' But the bells and whistles aren't in your face, Boulay pointed out. 'The last thing you want is for audiences to walk out and say, 'That was a lot of cool technology,'' he said. Still, the show taps into debates about the supposed evils of tech that date back to 'Frankenstein' and Prometheus. Director Jamil Jude observes a scene during a technical rehearsal for 'Co-Founders' on Thursday, May 22, 2025. Jessica Christian/S.F. Chronicle '​​This show reminds us that it is not technology's fault. It is the way in which we are trying to use it,' said director Jamil Jude. Ryan echoed that sentiment. 'Technology is a tool, and that tool is imbued with the power and the personality of the people that use it,' she said. 'So do you use that hammer and nail to build a concentration camp, or do you use that hammer and nail to build a temple or a theater?'

How to have a hella Bay Area summer
How to have a hella Bay Area summer

San Francisco Chronicle​

time22-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

How to have a hella Bay Area summer

Like foggy summer days, there are certain things that are quintessentially San Francisco. Here are some uniquely Bay Area ways to soak up the season. BottleRock Napa Valley Memorial Day weekend will once again be marked with musical and culinary excellence as BottleRock Napa Valley gets underway in Wine Country. The three-day tradition, set for May 23-25, plans to welcome East Bay rockers Green Day, pop artist Justin Timberlake and singer-songwriter Noah Kahan as headliners at Napa Valley Expo. More than 80 additional acts are slated to take the stage over the course of the festival. — Zara Irshad 'Co-Founders' Since tech companies controlling our brains got started in garages, accelerators and hacker houses in our backyard, the Bay Area is the perfect place for new theater that explores the broader social ramifications of the industry: When you start up, who or what gets left behind? Enter 'Co-Founders,' a hip-hop musical written by locals Ryan Nicole Austin, Beau Lewis and Adesha Adefela making its world premiere at American Conservatory Theater's Strand Theater on May 29. The production runs through July 6. Ilana DeBare discusses 'Shaken Free' To hell and back. So travels the protagonist of 'Shaken Free,' the sequel to Oakland author Ilana DeBare's offbeat 2023 debut novel 'Shaken Loose,' which followed the high-temperature challenges facing a Bay Area woman who finds herself in the underworld. Along with San Francisco writer Audrey Ferber, she plans to talk about her protagonist's not necessarily eternal damnation when Green Apple Books hosts her book launch on June 4. — Kevin Canfield David Nayfeld discusses 'Dad, What's for Dinner?' David Nayfeld's new cookbook offers numerous answers to the question asked in its title. On June 5, the chef and co-owner of Che Fico in San Francisco comes to the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco to discuss 'Dad, What's for Dinner?' (written with Joshua David Stein; foreword by Gwyneth Paltrow). His kid-centric collection of recipes includes the Best Fricking Meatloaf in the World. It's not bragging if you can back it up. — Kevin Canfield SoSF A new Pride Month celebration is hitting San Francisco's Pier 80 this summer. Oakland R&B star Kehlani, 'Nasty' singer Tinashe and Grammy history-making trans pop artist Kim Petras are set to headline the event, dubbed SoSF. It is set to take place June 28, a day before the city's official Pride Parade, with a portion of proceeds benefiting the nonprofit organization Lyric Center for LGBTQ+ Youth. — Zara Irshad Outside Lands San Francisco's biggest musical tradition is returning to Golden Gate Park on Aug. 8-10, for its 17th edition. This year, rappers Doja Cat and Tyler, the Creator and alternative folk singer Hozier are slated to headline Outside Lands, which is also set to offer attendees unique experiences such as on-site weddings, a performance area dedicated to LGBTQ communities and more. — Zara Irshad

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