Friday, May 3, 2024

Best of the BayBest of the Bay 2022 Editors' Pick: Charlie Gray

Best of the Bay 2022 Editors’ Pick: Charlie Gray

The actor-singer-musician-clown-fashion-icon brings delight to local stages and fights for LGBTQ+ rights

Our writers and editors are choosing some of their favorite people, places, and things that deserve plaudits for being the best in 2022. See who our readers chose in our Best of the Bay Readers’ Poll here.

As the looming loss of PianoFight stirs a flood of strong memories, I recall Sam Bertken’s 2016 adaptation of Lear, produced in the bar by the troupe of which I was part.

The penultimate night’s packed crowd unexpectedly included an adolescent girl with her mother, and Repo Men director Alex Cox (screening his latest film in PF’s main stage). They clearly weren’t expecting a show to happen around them, but they were utterly hypnotized by the performance of Edmund. In a slapstick-heavy adaptation, it was the brooding turn of the lusted-after bastard that captivated these PianoFight first-timers.

That wasn’t the first or last time Charlie Gray stole the scene. Hell, it’s practically become their calling card. Described by playwright Marissa Skudlarek as “actor-singer-musician-clown-fashion [icon]”, the Oakland-based multi-hyphenate can frequently be found mining for laughs with Killing My Lobster, operating Dave Haaz-Baroque’s beautiful monstrosities, or breaking hearts with any number of torch songs in their repertoire.

Anyone who saw Megan Cohen’s Free for Fall at Cutting Ball no doubt remembers Gray as one of the mostly-silent below-the-line workers for an affluent San Franciscan (played by Stacy Ross). Even without Cohen’s trademark bon mots, Gray’s razor-sharp side-eye spoke volumes about the characters’ “upstairs-downstairs” dynamic.

Yet, for all their on-stage personae, the off-stage Charlie is wholly assured of their identity, whether by advocating for LGBTQ+ rights—making for some often-sharp-tongued social media posts—or molding young minds as an educator. It was before a KML performance last year (at PianoFight, no less) when Gray told me that teaching fulfills them in a way no other job ever has.

That’s probably why the kid watching Lear stands out so much. In an increasingly digital world, it always warms my heart to see a young person genuinely take to live theatre, especially Shakespeare. I love knowing that was one of many kids having their worldview expanded by someone as diversely talented as they are untethered by traditional gender archetypes. It gives me hope for what those kids can do in the future.

And for us adults, a hopeful future means finding whatever unique performance Charlie Gray has planned next.

Charlie Gray can be found online at GrayCharlie.com .

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Charles Lewis III
Charles Lewis III
Charles Lewis III is a San Francisco-born journalist, theatre artist, and arts critic. You can find dodgy evidence of this at thethinkingmansidiot.wordpress.com

Featured

The alarming agenda of the big-money folks trying to take over SF

New report tracks the anti-union, anti-tax, pro-police program that a small number of very rich people want to impose on SF in the name of "moderate" politics.

How Irving Penn brought the world to his studio—and vice versa

de Young retrospective teases out sheer range of the photographer's lens.

Under the Stars: Bubbling up with foamboy, night-dubbing with Monty Luke…

BALTHVS rocks global vibes, Eris Drew runs the rave tape, Neutrals wish you were here, more music to support!

More by this author

In ‘Forever Plaid,’ a bit of light entertainment in the afterlife

A dead classic pop quartet has the pipes, if not the complex backstory, in 42nd Moon's family-friendly production.

Unbearable tension of ghosts past and present in ‘Returning to Haifa’

Palestinians come back home in the shadow of the Six-Day War, in Golden Thread's latest on Potrero Stage.

Revisiting the violent time when drag was illegal in ‘The Pride of Lions’

Risking it all in the 1920s to perform onstage and live authentically in Theatre Rhino's latest, by Roger Mason.
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED