Three Theatres Riff on “Three’s Company”

Date: June 18, 2012

TDF Stages On Stage

By ERIC GRODE

It apparently takes three companies to take on Three’s Company.

Sharing producing credit with Rattlestick are two smaller companies, Rising Phoenix Repertory and Piece by Piece Productions. “They were certainly the instigators behind it,” Rattlestick artistic director David Van Asselt says of the other two organizations. “I mean, I may have done it without them, but when you’re thinking about all the plays you’re gonna do, it’s important to have these voices to say, ‘Pay attention to this.'”

The same trio joined forces in 2009 to produce Daniel Talbott’s play Slipping. To give a sense of the cross-pollination at work, Talbott, also happens to be the artistic director of Rising Phoenix and a literary manager at Rattlestick; Van Asselt, in turn, played a central role in coaxing that play into its final shape.

“There’s a synergy that feeds the process,” says Wendy Vanden Heuvel, the founder and artistic director of Piece by Piece. “Plus you’re not so alone.” (Or, as Talbott describes it, “I wouldn’t want to go through this and not be able to call Wendy and say, ‘What the f— should we do?'”)

Talbott and Adjmi were in Juilliard’s playwriting program at the same time, and so Rising Phoenix was a logical collaborator on 3C. Rising Phoenix and Piece by Piece also worked with Adjmi on his previous work, Elective Affinities, joining with Soho Rep to present the play in an Upper East Side townhouse.

As for 3C, Johnson says it fits neatly into all three presenters’ aesthetics precisely because the groups come fairly unencumbered with mission statements or defining aesthetics. “Rattlestick hasn’t crafted an identity around David, which makes it unusual, I think,” she says. “With all three of these companies, there’s a shared commitment to artist-driven work.”

Purely on a practical level, she says, “it helps that Rattlestick has a theatre.” And while its size makes it first among equals in many ways, Van Asselt is hardly throwing his weight around on the <i>3C</i>set. “My job,” he says, “is just to say yes to everything.”

Eric Grode is the author of the recently released “Hair: The Story of the Show That Defined a Generation” (Running Press).