'He Wants to Run' Coming to S.F. International Arts Festival in June
"He Wants to Run" is David Kleinberg's story of a guy who hates running and dogs, and how he ended up running with his neighbor's dog for 13 years in Cloverdale and what Butler teaches David about living and dying.
The show, which has drawn great reviews in its limited exposure, completed a successful four-show run at the Marsh Theatre in San Francisco in February with two more shows at the Rogue Festival in Fresno this March.
Held up like most of the arts world for almost three years by the pandemic, "He Wants to Run" checks in with excellent critical reviews in its limited journey.
Doug Konecky, 16 years a theater critic for his San Francisco Theater Blog, wrote: "Don't expect fireworks. Do expect the kind of story you can't stop help thinking about afterwards. We love 'He Wants to Run'. You will too! . . . Seriously, this show is good enough to play anywhere in town."
The Edmonton (Canada) Journal wrote that the Edmonton Fringe Festival entry was “Well-written. Professionally performed. A tear-jerker. The hour flies by."
And award-winning solo performer Jill Vice called it,
“A great show. So much love and heart. (It) made me laugh and brought me to tears. Truly inspired.”
The work deals with David and Butler running the river and mountain trails of Sonoma country, and how, as they both get older together, David dealing with his best buddy aging six times faster than he is.
At one point, the two are running high above Sulphur Creek in Geysers Canyon, and David tells his friend, “Hey, Butler, we’ve been running together now for 12 years, and we don’t have one single picture of us.” And Butler seems to reply: “Dave, this relationship has never been about Instagram.”
The work is directed by Mark Kenward and developed with David Ford, both prominent directors of the Bay Area’s Theatre scene.
This is Kleinberg’s fourth solo theater work following his newspaper career. His last two one-man shows dealt with the Vietnam War. The first – “Hey, Hey, LBJ!” -- charted David’s duty as an army combat correspondent in Vietnam in 1966. And his last work -- “Return to the Scene of the Crime” – followed Kleinberg’s return to Vietnam for the first time in 50 years to visit where his buddies died and try to perform “LBJ” under threat of arrest from the communist government.
Subsequently both Kleinberg’s Vietnam works received major runs at San Francisco’s prestigious Marsh Theatre, and several strong reviews: The Washington Post wrote, ‘Hey, Hey, LBJ!’ is as polished and moving a piece of theater as the Capital Fringe is likely to see (out of 119 shows).” And ex-Rolling Stone senior writer Mike Goldberg called ‘LBJ’: “Powerful, moving, must see.”
Before turning to theater, Kleinberg spent 10 years as a stand-up comedian, and appeared with five of Comedy Central Top 100 Comedians of All-Time, including Robin Williams, “Curb Your Enthusiasm’s” Richard Lewis and “Saturday Night Live’s” Dana Carvey.
David also spent 34 years as an editor/writer at the San Francisco Chronicle from 1960 to 1994, the last 14 years as editor of the Sunday Datebook.
Reviews and Comments
Doug Konecky's, complete S.F. Theater Blog review: http://sf-theaterblog.blogspot.com/2023/02/he-wants-to-run-bang.html
“Well-written. Professionally performed. A tear-jerker. The hour flies by” –
Edmonton Journal
“A great show. So much love and heart. (It) made me laugh and brought me
to tears. Truly inspired.” – Award-winning solo performer Jill Vice
“The kind of performer that makes you believe every word -- a natural who
doesn't have a fake bone in his body." – San Francisco Theater Blog
"The best show I've ever seen!" -- Edmonton Traffic Cop. (David asked the traffic officer,
"Was that the first theater work you've ever attended?")
The show, which has drawn great reviews in its limited exposure, completed a successful four-show run at the Marsh Theatre in San Francisco in February with two more shows at the Rogue Festival in Fresno this March.
Held up like most of the arts world for almost three years by the pandemic, "He Wants to Run" checks in with excellent critical reviews in its limited journey.
Doug Konecky, 16 years a theater critic for his San Francisco Theater Blog, wrote: "Don't expect fireworks. Do expect the kind of story you can't stop help thinking about afterwards. We love 'He Wants to Run'. You will too! . . . Seriously, this show is good enough to play anywhere in town."
The Edmonton (Canada) Journal wrote that the Edmonton Fringe Festival entry was “Well-written. Professionally performed. A tear-jerker. The hour flies by."
And award-winning solo performer Jill Vice called it,
“A great show. So much love and heart. (It) made me laugh and brought me to tears. Truly inspired.”
The work deals with David and Butler running the river and mountain trails of Sonoma country, and how, as they both get older together, David dealing with his best buddy aging six times faster than he is.
At one point, the two are running high above Sulphur Creek in Geysers Canyon, and David tells his friend, “Hey, Butler, we’ve been running together now for 12 years, and we don’t have one single picture of us.” And Butler seems to reply: “Dave, this relationship has never been about Instagram.”
The work is directed by Mark Kenward and developed with David Ford, both prominent directors of the Bay Area’s Theatre scene.
This is Kleinberg’s fourth solo theater work following his newspaper career. His last two one-man shows dealt with the Vietnam War. The first – “Hey, Hey, LBJ!” -- charted David’s duty as an army combat correspondent in Vietnam in 1966. And his last work -- “Return to the Scene of the Crime” – followed Kleinberg’s return to Vietnam for the first time in 50 years to visit where his buddies died and try to perform “LBJ” under threat of arrest from the communist government.
Subsequently both Kleinberg’s Vietnam works received major runs at San Francisco’s prestigious Marsh Theatre, and several strong reviews: The Washington Post wrote, ‘Hey, Hey, LBJ!’ is as polished and moving a piece of theater as the Capital Fringe is likely to see (out of 119 shows).” And ex-Rolling Stone senior writer Mike Goldberg called ‘LBJ’: “Powerful, moving, must see.”
Before turning to theater, Kleinberg spent 10 years as a stand-up comedian, and appeared with five of Comedy Central Top 100 Comedians of All-Time, including Robin Williams, “Curb Your Enthusiasm’s” Richard Lewis and “Saturday Night Live’s” Dana Carvey.
David also spent 34 years as an editor/writer at the San Francisco Chronicle from 1960 to 1994, the last 14 years as editor of the Sunday Datebook.
Reviews and Comments
Doug Konecky's, complete S.F. Theater Blog review: http://sf-theaterblog.blogspot.com/2023/02/he-wants-to-run-bang.html
“Well-written. Professionally performed. A tear-jerker. The hour flies by” –
Edmonton Journal
“A great show. So much love and heart. (It) made me laugh and brought me
to tears. Truly inspired.” – Award-winning solo performer Jill Vice
“The kind of performer that makes you believe every word -- a natural who
doesn't have a fake bone in his body." – San Francisco Theater Blog
"The best show I've ever seen!" -- Edmonton Traffic Cop. (David asked the traffic officer,
"Was that the first theater work you've ever attended?")