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REVIEWS
What
the critics said about the long version of the play, Gamers, when
it was presented in the New York Fringe International Theater Festival:
Quite
simply, Gamers, the new one-man play created and performed
by Brian Bielawski, is made of awesome, as his character Steve
might put it. In a pitch-perfect comedic performance that captures
the essence of computer-gaming geeks around the globe, Bielawski
(with co-writer Walter G. Meyer and director Wes Grantom) have
crafted a gem of a theatre piece that can speak to both to the
Internet-savvy technoratis and tap into the inner rage of any
office jockey. This is the kind of show that makes attending FringeNYC
totally worthwhile, and is a flat-out riot from start to finish.
In a blackout, the character of Steve begins with an epic description
of how his band of followers, the Knights of Albion, have too
long struggled underneath the rule of the elves, and today will
be his St. Crispin's Day-esque assault to reclaim the thieved
relic from their evil clutches. When the lights come up suddenly,
we see that Steve is a tech-support guru for the fictional Solvitech,
on a headset in a cubicle surrounded by Mountain Dew bottles and
wearing a deliciously funny Homestar Runner hoodie. Quickly the
situation is explained to an unseen co-worker that Steve is leading
a phalanx of knights, mages, gnomes and dwarves on a real-time
assault on the Elven region—this of course, in a video game
slang that mirrors the wildly popular Worlds of Warcraft online
role-playing. Steve has chosen a workday, a Tuesday morning, so
that the elves (technically, the gamers playing the elves) will
never see it coming (or be at work).
Of course all hell breaks loose on that day at the office (Steve
couldn't beg off work from his evil boss, Ms. Krakower). He can't
get the computer to work fast enough, he's interrupted by a zillion
idiotic tech support phone calls, his mother wants him to apply
to M.I.T., and it's his two-year anniversary with his girlfriend
Jenny, which he of course forgot to buy a gift for. And Krakower
wants to fire him at the first available opportunity. Steve winds
up juggling phone calls and instant messages while still leading
the real-time assault on the elves, and in the process, takes
himself on a revelatory journey of his own.
So why does the piece work on so many levels? For starters, Bielawski
absolutely inhabits the role of Steve, nailing every bit of Leet-speak
and geek-centric pop culture references imaginable (Star Trek:The
Next Generation, South Park, Borat, etc.) and with the right balance
of snark and pathos. The drama is heightened by the great direction
from Grantom, who keeps things ebbing and flowing for Steve—as
opposed to falling into that trap of having it at a high-strung
level throughout. There are so many jokes that work during the
show because Bielawski understands that while Steve is a definite
nerd for playing in a fantasy world, he's also human, which gives
him both character flaws and a heart.
There are several million hard-core gamers who will understand
both the nuances of the language and the joy of total immersion
in another world. Whether its sports, theatre, bridge club, or
everyday life, a person who is immersed in any subject makes that
perception his or her reality. And this lets Gamers achieve a
universality that many plays with weightier subject matter often
flop at. If this play isn't one of the hits of FringeNYC, I'll
order my orcs and mages to attack at once.
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Josh Sherman, nytheater.com |
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Bielawski
has a good sense of humor about the MMOG phenomenon and the people
caught up in it, and he makes the short play very entertaining
to watch...Gamers manages the neat trick of making the
isolated MMOG player’s world into something others can enjoy
watching.
– Mallory Jensen, Offoffonline.com |
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Indeed,
Brian Bielawski and Walter G. Meyer get so much right about the
life of a gaming geek, here embodied in the character Steve (played
believably by Bielawski), an MIT dropout who rules the universe
of an online role-playing game and works a real life tech support
job to support his virtual one, that the non-gaming members of
the audience which find his behavior so bizarrely funny would
probably be shocked to learn how accurate the portrayal actually
is. What's fun about this show is that it packs more inside gamer/techie/webhead
jokes into an hour than seems possible without leaving the "outsider"
part of the audience behind, and thus everyone gets to have a
good time….both gamers and non-gamers alike will enjoy its
humor is reason enough to recommend it.
– Gregory Wilson, curtainup.com |
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Easily
the best one-person show of the festival, this tour-de-force written
by Brian Bielawski and Walter G. Meyer, and performed perfectly
by Bielawski, involves a guy who makes a living doing tech support
but whose passion is an interactive game involving thousands of
online players…Highly recommended…3 ½ stars.
– Hy Bender, Hyreviews.com |
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| What
the critics said about the short version of the play, /out of
character, when it was part of Outroverted in the
Midtown International Theater Festival:
Brian Bielawski's /out of
character"/[sic] could hardly be improved upon. Reminiscent
of the pre-mime work of Steven Banks, Bielawski's solo features
a harried employee doing everything he can to avoid actually working.
In this case, he's a man in the tech-support division of a computer
firm who spends nearly all his time playing a complicated video
game. He (and a host of online buddies) are just about to storm
a fortress of elves - if only the phone would stop ringing and
his boss would stop pestering him. This keeps Bielawski frantically
switching from office phone to cell phone to keyboard to cubicle-mate
to boss, all with whizbang timing not a second, dare I say, out
of character.
–David
Lefkowitz, Theater News Online
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What
was said about Gamers when it was presented in San Diego:
Written
in San Diego by two pretty talented dudes, Brian Bielawski and
Walter G. Meyer, Gamers is a comedy about a tech-support operator
whose boredom turns into herodome when he takes on an evil army
of elves in an online roll-playing game that suddenly gets pretty
real.
–
San Diego CityBeat
There
have been a lot of shows, random videos, and shorts lately based
on or inspired by videogames, so it was with a weary and reluctant
heart that I watched Gamers, a freaking play of all things (Eww!
Gross! Culture!). But this little one-man show had something all
too many of the others don't. It was... God, what's that word
again? I haven't used it in so long... Oh yeah, "enjoyable."
And not just enjoyable and funny, but well-made, obviously by
a true gamer who cleverly wrote the play to work on two different
levels, much like Shrek appeals to kids and their parents in two
very antithetic ways. So even if you don't know the agony of wiping
in Molten Core because your priest ran out to the liquor store
for a pack of cigarettes, you will still laugh. A lot… I
guarantee this won't be the last time you hear of Gamers, so you
may want to become a fan now. That way in a year or two when everyone
is buying it on DVD so Fox will uncancel the sitcom version you
can say "Oh yeah, well I liked Gamers before anyone even
knew what it was, n00bz!"
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William Haley, Destructoid |
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