Showing posts with label Day Trader. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Day Trader. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Richard Shelton

Singer-songwriter and actor Richard Shelton in EastWest Recording Studios' Studio One

RICHARD SHELTON

At EastWest Recording Studios

6000 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles (Hollywood)


Ever since British crooner and actor Richard Shelton heard Frank Sinatra sing for the first time, he has felt a strong connection to the film and music legend.

"My father had a cassette of My Way, his album from 1969, and it just felt like a hand in a glove. I ended up listening to it more than my father did," Richard explains. "The first time I saw a childhood photograph of Frank Sinatra, I noticed a similarity between him and me when I was a child, and throughout my life, I keep having these incredible, inexplicable coincidences with him."

Not only do the two men share an affinity for jazz, a favorite color (orange) and the same body size, EastWest Recording Studios – where Richard asks me to meet him for our interview before the final recording session for the title track of his upcoming album, An Englishman in Love in L.A. – is the exact site where Sinatra recorded "My Way" over 45 years ago.

Relaxing in an EastWest studio lounge
Ol' Blue Eyes and Bing Crosby were instrumental in audio engineer Bill Putnam's opening of the studios that are now EastWest in 1957, and Sinatra also laid down tracks like "Strangers in the Night," "The Lady Is a Tramp" and "That's Life" within its walls. Through the years, music of every genre has been recorded at EastWest, from the Mamas & the Papas' "California Dreamin'" and the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds to the theme songs from The Godfather, "The Monkees" and "Hawaii Five-O."

In 2006, new owner Doug Rogers enlisted French designer Philippe Starck to give all the non-technical areas of the historic studios a facelift. The result is a chic yet laid back environment where artists such as Christina Aguilera, Green Day, Rage Against the Machine, Muse and now Richard Shelton have all come to create.

"'My Way' was recorded right in that room. It's amazing, right? I mean, none of this was originally planned. We had finished the album but decided that there was a bit that wasn't right, and the only way to do it was to get a string section in, so we decided to try EastWest. I didn't come here because of Frank Sinatra, it just happened," he says. "This is the last section of the album, and it's exciting to be here, literally where he recorded."

Richard has found the world of show business utterly thrilling since his days growing up in Wolverhampton, England. As we take a seat in one of the studio lounges, which is complete with flat-screen TV, mini-fridge and plush couches for artists to relax on between sessions, he tells me of an obsession he once had with a couple movie musicals.

"I would have been 7 when I saw the film version of Oliver! with Mark Lester playing Oliver. I just started at a new school, and I told everyone that I was Mark Lester, the star of the film. The head teacher called me in and said, 'There's a story going around that you are Mark Lester. You mustn't tell people that,' but I wanted to be him so much. I was also convinced I wanted to be in The Sound of Music film. I was fascinated by it all," he laughs. "When it's warm in the summer, there's a tradition in Britain to go to theater in the outdoors at a castle or a beautiful stately home, a house belonging to royalty or the aristocracy. They open up the grounds for people to come watch plays or listen to music . I remember going to see a Shakespeare play, 'Twelfth Night,' with my parents and thinking, 'I get this. I understand everything about this.' I was only a child so it wasn't the language, the actual words but the intention and energy of what everyone was doing on stage that I understood. So it was from a very young age that I wanted to pursue this. I was prevented from doing it for a while, but I found my way back."

As the son of a self-made builder's merchant, Richard was expected to take up a practical career, so he spent 13 years in hotel sales and marketing. As part of the job he was able to see the world, however, his interest in the performing arts never faded. He eventually helped set up Bridewell Theatre in Fleet Street and began acting in their first shows that included William Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Venice."

He went on to tour the UK in Agatha Christie's "A Murder Is Announced" and perform in productions like "Scrooge: The Musical," the popular "EastEnders" soap opera and several commercials. Around this time, Richard began a singing career, recording an album of 1980s pop songs in jazz and titling it Retro Spectrum. He also played Frank Sinatra in "Rat Pack Confidential" and was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role by Manchester Evening News. Additionally, Richard's first major film appearance was as the Chairman of the Board in 2003's I Capture the Castle.

"There is so much about Frank Sinatra that inspires me. I believe he always told the truth, and sometimes that made him both popular and unpopular. He told the truth when he sang, and if he liked you or didn't like you, he would express that. This honesty gives you permission to be truthful to yourself," he says. "For example, if I'm working on a piece of music or another project, it's easy to say, 'What the hell, we'll let it pass. That will be fine,' but, actually, it's never fine. You have to say, 'No, this isn't right. Let's make it right.' He was a determined, focused man who lived life to the fullest. I admire that greatly, because, what else is life for?"

When we take a walk into EastWest's Studio One, it's hard not to be overcome with emotion. There is so much history within the room, the sense of greatness is palpable. When "An Englishman in Love in L.A."'s composer, Alexander Rudd, informs Richard that the conductor's platform he's standing on is the same one that has been in the room since the Sinatra sessions, they are both giddy with excitement. This isn't Richard's only brush with Sinatra while recording his new swing- and jazz-influenced album, though.

"All the music was recorded at Capitol with some of his musicians: bass player Chuck Berghofer, Gregg Field his drummer (who is married to Monica Mancini the daughter of Henry Mancini – another tie-in) and trumpeter Wayne Bergeron. All these men played with Frank Sinatra at some stage," Richard informs. "The original tracks were recorded in his studio, using his microphone."

Sinatra recorded the first album in the studios of Hollywood's Capitol Records Tower in 1956, Frank Sinatra Conducts Tone Poems of Color. While Richard laid down the majority of An Englishman in Love in L.A. at Capitol, it isn't his first time working in a landmark studio. His first full-length album, 2006's Top Cat, was recorded with a 65-piece orchestra at the famed Abbey Road Studios in London.

"Abbey Road was slightly overwhelming. It was so impressive and big, like going into a cathedral where you just look around at the amazingness of it all. I enjoyed it, but I was very aware of the pressure," he admits. "Whereas at Capitol, I felt immediately at home. I found it more energizing at Capitol and preferred everything about it – the energy of the building, the history and the feel of it." 

While he covered a few Sinatra standards on Top Cat and there have been the recording studio locales in common with his, Richard stresses that his new album isn't a tribute to Sinatra at all.

"There are only two songs on the album that are a bow to him, the rest is original material. That's important because I can't be Frank Sinatra. It would be arrogant of me to think I could be as good as him because I can't, but he is an inspiration to me. When I'm an actor in a show associated with him, that's a different thing because I'm channeling his energy and what he was to tell a story. This record, it's me and very separate territory," he asserts. "The title track is all about Los Angeles, being in love with the city and all the things that it promises. Within that comes disappointment, heartbreak, joy success and adventure. That's what the album is about, having a go, coming to this fabulous city and embracing it. Not taking from it, but giving to it and participating in it. It's about hope."

As Richard's career continued to flourish both in the acting and singing fronts – on the daytime series "Emmerdale" for three years, on a tour of Europe as Harry Bright in "Mamma Mia!," in 2011's My Week with Marilyn and singing by private invitation for HRH Prince Charles and Sir Elton John – he decided to journey across the pond and take advantage of opportunities in Hollywood.

"I love the possibility of Los Angeles. I've been here just over a year, and I regard myself as nothing more than a first-generation immigrant. I came here with hope, just as everybody came to America with hope, and I really believe that America still offers that to the world," he says. "I love being British. I love London and am passionate about it, but I wanted to discover new things about myself and life. I felt that the place to try that was Los Angeles."

In his time here so far, Richard has come to have a few regular haunts throughout the city.

"I love going to Soho House because it's beautiful, glamorous and the view is spectacular. I'm lucky enough to be a member there because I was a member in London. I like hiking in Fryman Canyon and Runyon Canyon. I feel on top of the world when I go to those places. I love Los Feliz – going to Rockwell where Jeff Goldblum plays jazz on Wednesday nights, I've sat in with him and his jazz band [the Mildred Snitzer Orchestra] several times, and Marty and Elayne at the Dresden Room are sensational, show business legends."

As for places near his Laurel Canyon neighborhood, Richard likes going to the Studio City Farmers Market and a place that is his favorite shop in the whole of Los Angeles, Laurel Canyon Country Store.

"It sells everything, from newspapers to French bread. There's a British section of confectionary, jams, marmalade. I like it because you can buy fresh food or a coffee there, and it has a good atmosphere. When I first went in and the owner realized I was British, he showed me the section," Richard recalls. "Children in Britain grow up with a chocolate bar called Cadbury Flake, and the owner told me, 'This is where David Bowie buys his Cadbury Flake, and also James Bond.' I said, 'Oh really, which one?' 'All three,' he replied."

In addition to putting the finishing touches on An Englishman in Love in L.A., Richard currently has two films in post-production, the drama Brash Young Turks and the film adaptation of spy thriller Joker Game. He makes his U.S. television debut this weekend in the Showtime series "House of Lies," which stars Don Cheadle and Kristen Bell, and is part of a live radio reading of Eric Rudnick's "Day Trader."

"We had a table read with the rest of the cast, and they were tremendous. What I'm enjoying about being in Los Angeles is collaborating. I'm learning so much about the American way of doing things," he says. "There's a young girl in the play [Brighid Fleming] who is very good. I found myself watching her, amazed at how she was interpreting this role because she's American and the piece is American, so it works very well. It's a brilliant experience for me to be learning while I'm here in Los Angeles. It's exciting."

Richard Shelton embraces everything he does with excitement, whether he's acting or making music. His energy is infectious, and as he greets the team in the production booth led by sound engineer Steve Genewick, I can't help remembering words he said earlier in the lounge about the what he loves most about performing.

"For me, it's about giving. What I enjoy is creating. As an actor, I enjoy playing unattractive roles, difficult characters and possibly unsympathetic ones because there's more of a story to tell. It's easier perhaps to be likable or nice, but those characters are not as interesting as a ones who have an edge. You wonder why this person is like this, and I enjoy that sense of revealing, bit by bit, what this character is about to an audience," he utters. "With music, you're also giving, but it's a very different dynamic. It's instant, and you can influence people's moods. You can make them happy or sad, smile or dance, and that's a wonderful thing to do. It's all about what you give."

An Englishman in Love in L.A. will be available this summer. "House of Lies" airs Sundays at 10 p.m. on Showtime. The live reading of "Day Trader" will be broadcast via UBN Radio's Interweb Playhouse March 29 at 2 p.m. For more information, visit richardshelton.co.uk.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Eric Rudnick

Eric Rudnick at M Street Coffee & Gallery

 

ERIC RUDNICK

At M Street Coffee & Gallery

13251 Moorpark St., Sherman Oaks 818-907-1400


"Every bit of writing that I've done is meant to be spoken by actors. I've never written a novel or essays. It's all been for actors to say because that's what fascinates me, what an actor can do with what you write, whether it's a screenplay or TV pilot. My first responsibility as a writer is: An actor has to pick a script up and want to say those words. I'm not even talking to the audience, I'm talking to the actors through the words. So, if an actor picks it up and says, 'I want to do this,' then I've done my job. Then, it just doesn't belong to me, it belongs to the actor and director, and they take it to the audience," shares Eric Rudnick. "Carlos Santana once said something like, 'The music is the water, the band is the hose and the flowers are the audience. We're just a delivery system to get that music to that audience.' It's all a very collaborative process, which is another part that I like, you're not working in a vacuum."

The passion the playwright, screenwriter, actor and producer has for all forms of entertainment is evident throughout our conversation at his favorite place in Los Angeles, M Street Coffee & Gallery. It's impossible for Eric to stifle his enthusiasm and staunch the flow of his words whether we are discussing theater, film, television or music. This is a love that runs deep, and has for a long time. Growing up on Long Island, just an hour's train ride to the marquees of Broadway and music venues of the city, Eric's life has always been filled with art.

"My dad would take me to see music, really amazing artists, like saxophonist Phil Woods who is most known for renown playing on 'Just The Way You Are' by Billy Joel. I was 14 or 15, and somehow my dad got me into this nightclub where he was playing. He was very adamant about exposing us to what he liked so we would have an appreciation for it, from opera to a ton of baseball games," Eric remembers. "My mom and I would go see plays. After I moved into the city we would go to matinees on Wednesdays, then go out after and talk. She would pick the show one week, then the next week I would pick."

 Once Eric moved into the city, he was bit hard by the theater bug. He began studying acting, which led to discovering an ability and keenness to write

"New York is the most welcoming world you can step into because nobody's doing it for any other reason than because they love it. It's a place where you're allowed to experiment, which I did with writing, directing and acting," he says. "The acting training that I had in New York really helped my writing. If you've been on stage acting, reading somebody else's words and trying to figure them out, it really helps your writing because you understand it from an actor's point of view."

The strong foundation built from his experiences as an actor have definitely influenced Eric's writing and also came in handy when he had to step into the leading role of his play "Day Trader" for two shows during its premiere L.A. run at Bootleg Theater at the beginning of this year.

"I wasn't nervous, I was excited. I just had to remember my training from the Atlantic Theater Company and Neighborhood Playhouse, particularly from Richard Pinter, whom I studied with for two years," he recalls. "I didn't realize until getting on stage the first night how deep and far-reaching that training goes."

After perusing M Street Coffee's menu of organic, locally roasted coffee and display case full of scrumptious pastries, we decide on a couple of iced teas (Ginger Peach for me, and English Breakfast for Eric) and a peanut butter bar before grabbing a table at the back of the café. Our seats are next to a window, which fills the area with light so that we can admire all of the art pieces on the wall while we talk about "Day Trader," which was recently chosen for a live broadcast reading by UBN's Interweb Playhouse taking place March 29 at 2 p.m.

Since 2008, owner Andrea McClain has strived to create an inviting space for all in the neighborhood, especially writers and artists. Each month a different artist's work adorns M Street's walls; currently colorful paintings by Outi Harma decorate the space. There is also an area where you can purchase branded T-shirts, mugs and bags of their house blend.

"Sometimes it can get crowded, but there's always somebody willing to share their table with you. It's only a five-minute drive from where I live, so this is always my go-to and where I come to work. Because there are so many writers that come in here and other people doing creative stuff, I find that it's a less neurotic atmosphere than most places. If I'm going to be around other people and write, which I like to be, it's good if that energy is nice. It's a little bit of an oasis right in the middle of everything," Eric tells. "I brought postcards in here for 'Day Trader' and told them, 'You have to know that a lot of this show was written in this joint.'"

 There's undoubtedly a warm, inviting atmosphere at M Street, and it's no wonder Los Angeles Hot List named it the 'BEST Coffee Shop in LA' two years in a row. Great energy is something that Eric seeks out not only in places where he likes to work and hang out, but also in the entertainment that he seeks.

"There's always something to appreciate about live performance, you're always getting some type of energy from the performer whether you're watching stand-up, a play or spoken word. There's a Jerry Seinfeld quote that goes something like, 'It's not a monologue. I'm not talking to the audience. It's a dialogue with the audience.' That's why he's so good at what he does, because he understands it's a conversation. It's not a play if an audience isn't there, it's just actors talking. What makes it a play is the audience, what gives the room that energy is the electricity, the tension or empathy between the audience and the performer," he informs. "Every night of our 'Day Trader' run at Bootleg Theater was different. We had every response you can imagine. There are some surprises in the play, and one night the actors were backstage after the show saying, 'There were gasps tonight.' That made me so happy because a gasp is something you can't plan on. When you get one, it's a visceral response from an audience."

Eric continued to write, act in and mount his own productions in New York before deciding to pursue a writing career in Los Angeles. Unfortunately, he chose to make the leap out here right when reality television was blowing up and networks were scaling down on original programming.

"Not only was I looking for work, but all these writers who had credits were looking for work, too. But I got my first job writing out here on 'Hollywood Squares,' and in some ways it was my best job. It was a thrill to work on a show that I grew up watching," he confesses. "Then, I got into producing reality and this was how I made a living for 12 years."

But during this time, Eric was still working on his own original plays, teleplays and screenplays. His work has been presented by Playwrights Horizons, the Harold Clurman Theatre, the Met Theatre and Ensemble Studio Theatre/LA. His screenplay for Hot Potato was a finalist at Slamdance Film Festival, his script for Me the People was a second rounder at the Austin Film Festival and his sitcom pilot, "Circus/Maximus," was optioned by Fox.

"You just need that one story to hit that right person at the right time, not that that's easy. You just have to write all the time, eventually you'll have a body of work and something in that body of work will find its way to somebody," he says. "[Nic Pizzolatto, who] created 'True Detective' is a great example of a guy who wasn't in TV writing before he came out here. He had written collection of stories [and a novel], wrote for a TV show ["The Killing"] and then Matthew McConaughey said yes to his script and he was off to the races. I love stories like that."

Eric also developed one of his stage plays into a hilarious web series on FunnyOrDie.com, "The Edge of Allegiance," about the Mount Rushmore landmark moving to Los Angeles and anchoring a news show.

"You can wait for somebody to say yes to your idea, or you can just go do it. The web series is almost too weird but so fun to do and something that I'm really looking forward to getting back to. It comes from what started out as a midnight show at the Met Theatre that we would update according to what was going on politically at the time. I had 15 actors playing 47 different roles. One person played the Statue of Liberty, as well as Maya Angelou, Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice. The audience would get a little boozed up before the show, and one time a guy in the front row stood up and pointed at something happening on stage. That's what I want, for people to be engaged! There's no formula for it. You can't appeal to everybody, you just have to be as truthful as you can. And, in that truth, somebody's going to recognize himself, and you're going to take his heart out."

The characters of Eric's latest play, the comic thriller "Day Trader," are incredibly real and recognizable, specifically for Angelenos.

"The play was a finalist at a festival in St. Louis where I had a dramaturg named Liz Engelman help with it so much. We put it up in front of 100 people, but hardly anybody in the room was in the entertainment business, and that's one of the themes of this play. They enjoyed it from an outside-looking-in perspective, whereas the audience in Hollywood was laughing at certain spots because it was a laughter of recognition," he describes.

As far as bringing "Day Trader" to the stage in Los Angeles, Eric attributes much of it happening to fellow writer/producer Gary Lennon ("The Shield," "Justified," "Orange Is the New Black")

"I've known Gary since I was in New York, and when I went to see a play of his ["A Family Thing"] at the Echo he asked what was going on with my play. He told me to send it to the Echo and Bootleg, telling them he sent me, and that's what got them to say yes because Gary has a relationship with folks at Bootleg, and that goes a long way," he says.

After five years, "Day Trader" finally premiered at Bootleg Theater in January of this year. The story focuses on a comedy writer named Ron Barlow, who schemes to get his wealthy wife to divorce him while finding a way around their prenup, involving his best friend Phil, daughter Juliana and a cocktail waitress named Bridget in on the plan.

"The play is about a guy who has himself convinced that he's on the down side of life and needs to get back up. It's also about his friend whom he envisions to be up, so everything that his friend says about life is something that he latches onto. It's like when you have a friend who's successful in one area, say he's a fantastic furniture builder, so when he recommends this one wine you think it will be great. In our culture, it's usually a celebrity recommends this, well then, it's got to be good," Eric laughs. "So, Ron is down on his luck, and Phil is the alpha male. In some relationships, you're definitely the alpha person, and then sometimes you're not. Everybody's been one or the other, so I was just ping-ponging back and forth between the two sides that everybody has. I wanted people in the audience to recognize themselves in these two guys during the course of the play."

The director for "Day Trader"'s debut L.A. run was someone that Eric feels to be incredibly instrumental to its development, Steven Williford. While Williford had directed over 70 plays, the four-time Emmy nominee hadn't directed theater in six years, but as soon as he read Eric's script, he knew he wanted to do it. Eric felt especially grateful for his expertise when he had to assume the role of Ron in those two performances.

"I would go up to him after a rehearsal and ask him what I could do to make my performance better, and one time he said, 'Don't recite.' In my experience working with directors, the ones that I have worked with that have been effective will say a phrase or a sentence and it opens up a whole world for you to find the rest of the performance. Whereas a director might say a whole paragraph, and, at the end, you are more confused than you were when you started. It's too much information, and it's nothing that's actionable. You need actionable intelligence."

In addition to Williford and a stellar design team, including Jared A. Sayeg (lighting), Ivan Robles (sound) and Adam Flemming (projections), Eric feels that the venue was an integral key to the run's success.

"People go there and don't even realize that there's a theater in back because sometimes the bands are in the front. I saw Roger Guenveur Smith do his one-man show 'Rodney King' twice. They do Write Club there one Monday a month, which is a battle between writers. I always feel welcome at the Bootleg, like I'm in good hands, so when they said yes to the show, I was thrilled," he gushes. "As the presenters of the show, they did so in such a way that people felt taken care of. There are theaters that really take care of you where you walk in and just know they're happy to have you. Boston Court is like that, too."

Eric has lived all over the city, from Echo Park and Beachwood Canyon to Hancock Park and Chinatown, and has a few favorite restaurants in his current neighborhood that include Tuning Fork, Black Market Liquor and Sushi Dan. The copy shop where he has all of his programs and postcards made, Copyhub, is just across the street from M Street Coffee. And while he loves being outside, hiking in Fryman Canyon for instance, and going to the movies, if Eric has a free afternoon or evening, you will probably find him at the theater.

"I'm a movie fan, but I'll always go see a play because the play won't be there in six weeks. A play is there, and then it's gone. You'll probably never see that cast on that stage doing that material again. You either saw Elaine Stritch in 'A Delicate Balance' like I did, or you didn't. You saw Zoe Caldwell in 'Master Class,' or you didn't. You saw Eric Bogosian do one of his shows in New York when he was doing them, or not. I'm grateful that I got to see all that stuff. The movies that came out then, I can still see them somehow, but those performances are once-in-a-lifetime opportunities," he says. "In particular, Zoe Caldwell in Terrence McNally's 'Master Class.' It was one of those things where you don't even see it coming, it's like someone hits you on the head with a hammer, and I was crying at the end of Act I. If you're willing to meet what a play is on its terms, then it can blow you away. There have been times where I'm sitting there with my arms crossed watching a show, waiting for something to affect me instead of being open to the possibility of something affecting me. It's the difference between fully being immersed in the experience and just sticking your toe in the water."

Eric looks back on another production, "The Glass Menagerie" at Mark Taper Forum, as one that taught him a valuable lesson as well.

"I had never seen the play, I had only seen some of its scenes done in acting classes where people were not ready to dive into the material and never got a sense of what the play was. With Tennessee Williams plays in particular, you can't just jump into the middle of them and cut five minutes out. Judith Ivey was in it when I went and it was a strong presentation that made me glad I went because whatever preconceived notion I had of it from acting class, when people say 'The Glass Menagerie' to me now, I think about this show that I saw at the Taper," he admits. "It's another signpost in my experience where it's not just the material, it's the way you do the material."

Most of Eric's time lately is spent writing, though, and he is able to find inspiration in almost any place.

"I switched from how many hours to how many pages a day I'm going to write, and it's much more satisfying. I've gotten into that groove recently, so a lot of times when I'm off, I spend it writing. There are so many things that I grab inspiration from. I once heard a conversation in a Kim's Video Store in the East Village that nearly broke my heart. One guy is putting the videos away, but he's slamming them so you know he's angry, furious with the guy behind the counter. This goes on for a few minutes before he says, 'Why did you do it, if you knew it was going to hurt me?' The guy behind the counter replies, 'Because you hurt me.' I got the whole relationship in those two lines; they were so fantastically raw and brutally honest," he relays the scene with tears in his eyes. "That's another touchstone for me as a writer, try and come up with something as real as what happened spontaneously in front of you between two strangers, make people feel something. The thing that I like – whether it's plays, movies or TV – is a certain kind of not giving a rat's ass if somebody will like this or not, just putting it out there with its own idiosyncrasies. A Charlie Kaufman movie or Richard Foreman play work on their own terms, and that's why they are iconic and stand out from the rest. It's not just that they are good, it's that there's something about them that feel like this person had to tell this story."

As much as he loves New York, Los Angeles has proved to be exactly the right environment for Eric to be able to tell his own stories.

"Los Angeles is the kind of place that if you accept it on its terms, it's so much easier. It's a crazy group of little towns, each one has its own identity. It's like being in Europe, only instead of driving three hours to go from one culture to another, you drive 20 minutes. You go from Studio City to Echo Park or you go from Downtown to Culver City, and it's completely different. Each neighborhood has its own kind of flavor and vibe. I love how much outdoor art there is here and I still don't even mind driving, it's the parking that I don't like. It's nice to have your own car the freedom to just go to Palm Springs or San Francisco," he says. "Everyone has a way to express himself, whether it's through food, theater or music. Where I grew up in Long Island, most of the houses in my neighborhood looked the same. Driving down the street in Los Angeles, there's a Spanish-style house next to a Craftsman-style house next to a some kind of New Mexico-looking thing. It's fun that people express themselves through everything. The city allows for that more than people give it credit for. I like the ambition of this place that's constantly evolving and of the people that I meet here. Sometimes it can be exhausting because everybody wants that next big thing, but at least that next thing is possible."

The next thing up for "Day Trader" is a live reading of the play being broadcast by UBN Radio's Interweb Playhouse on March 29 at 2 p.m, with a cast that includes Eric as Ron and Ovation Award winner for "The Nether," Brighid Fleming, reprising the role of Juliana from the Bootleg Theater run.

"Brighid did such a great job, and I am so grateful that she's available again because she just knocked it out of the park. I would work with her doing anything because of her work ethic and the way that she approaches things. She's really intuitive. I wrote this part of a 15-year-old girl, and I've never been a 15-year-old girl and don't know many 15-year-old girls quite frankly, so I trusted Brighid. I said, 'If any of this sounds bogus, you've got to tell me.' She said, 'I don't know if I curse this much, but it's all working," he laughs. "It's hard, because you can find a 25-year-old to play a 15-year-old, but it's not the same. Kevin Kline said, 'Acting is being completely self-conscious and completely unconscious at exactly the same time' in an interview with Village Voice. You're aware of everything you're doing, but it's not you. To be able to do that with any kind of frequency, that's what I'm looking for. I got really lucky with the cast that I had and with the cast for the radio reading."

Eric is currently working on a screenplay for "Day Trader," and as he continues to write he keeps the words of an artist that he looks up to in mind.

"Andy Warhol once said something like, 'Don't worry if it's art, that's not your call to make. Just make stuff, put it out there then make some more stuff and put it out.' I never want to be the guy with a novel in the drawer who is just perfecting and perfecting it, then 40 years later, 'Here it is.' Make it, and you can only make it as good as you are right now, but then the next thing you make will be a little bit better because you've learned from that last experience," he concludes. "Hopefully you make 10, 20, 30 things, and that 30th thing you make might just be what people really respond to. You can't get there without putting your stuff out there and letting the public have its way with it whether you're a band, juggler or whatever. There's never going to be a 'right time.'"

The live reading of "Day Trader" will be broadcast at UBN Radio's Interweb Playhouse March 29 at 2 p.m. For more information, visit daytraderplay.com.