Decoder Ring Theatre

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Decoder Ring Theatre
File:DRTlogo.JPG
Decoder Ring Theatre Logo
Presentation
Hosted byGregg Taylor
GenreAudio drama Podcast
UpdatesReleased on the 1st and 15th of each month
Publication
Original releaseAugust 27, 2005 – present
Websitehttp://www.decoderringtheatre.com/

Decoder Ring Theatre is a Toronto-based theatre and audio production company that runs a Parsec Award and Podcast Award-winning podcast of the same name. It consists primarily of two series, Red Panda Adventures and Black Jack Justice, both of which are done in the style of old-time radio, and are released on alternating weeks.

History[edit | edit source]

The group was first formed in 1999 by the actor-writer Gregg Taylor for a six-part mini-series take on the adventure programs of 1940s radio. (See “Original Red Panda mini-series” below). The programs were created as a pilot project for traditional broadcast, and were quite broad and silly in the belief that a comic approach might broaden their commercial potential. They were never broadcast.

Taylor's next project returned to the theatre, and was also radio-based, leading him to keep using the “Decoder Ring” name. The original Black Jack Justice was a one-act farce about a very, very bad day in the life of an old-time detective radio series. The show was a great success at the 2001 Toronto Fringe Festival, and led Taylor to continue under the Decoder Ring Theatre title. The next year the company returned to the Fringe with Prometheus Unplugged, a comic take on the Promethean legends in which Mankind returns to Prometheus' mountain to inform God that he does not exist. Needless to say, God was less than thrilled.

The company was officially incorporated that year, and began a series of comic murder-mysteries to raise revenue for future projects. The series included Murder Most Deadly, Death on the Avon and The Case of the Cockeyed Cupid. It was at this point that the company launched the first version of its website, decoderringtheatre.com, and included MP3 versions of the almost-forgotten Red Panda mini-series. Soon it was receiving -email from all over the world[citation needed] asking for more, and Taylor began the long process of accumulating scripts, equipment and performers for an ongoing podcast audio drama series.

A new, completely re-invented Red Panda continuity was launched as The Red Panda Adventures, losing the parody and playing much straighter to the conventions of old-time radio and comic books. The eponymous play-within-a-play from Black Jack Justice was revived, with its battling central characters, and launched as a sister show. On October 15, 2005, Decoder Ring Theatre officially left behind the greasepaint and empty chairs of the theatre for the Internet.

In 2006, the podcast was nominated for a Parsec Awards for Best Audio Drama (short), specifically for The Red Panda Adventures,[1] and was also one of the final five nominees for the People's Choice Podcast Awards' "Cultural/Arts" category. On August 25, 2006, the first seasons of The Red Panda Adventures, and on September 12, 2006 Black Jack Justice, were made available on separate feeds at Podiobooks.com.[2] In 2007, the podcast was again one of the final nominees for the People's Choice Podcast Awards' "Cultural/Arts" category. In 2010, Decoder Ring Theatre won the Parsec Award for Best Audio Drama (Long Form)[3] and then the People's Choice Podcast Award in the Cultural/Arts Category[4]

Release schedule[edit | edit source]

Formerly, Decoder Ring Theatre released new episodes every other Saturday, running six episodes of the Red Panda, six Black Jack, six more Red Panda, and then six Showcase episodes.

The current[when?] release schedule is as follows:

  • Red Panda Adventures - A new episode on the 1st of each month. A 12 episode season runs from September to August.
  • Black Jack Justice - A new episode on the 15th of the month. A 6 episode season runs from September to February.
  • Showcase series - Replaces Black Jack Justice for the remainder of the year, a new episode is released on the 15th of the month from March to August.

The Decoder Ring Ensemble[edit | edit source]

  • Denise Anderson
  • Shannon Arnold
  • Michael Booth
  • Steven Burley
  • Niles Caulder
  • Gregory Z. Cooke
  • Monica Coté
  • Julie Florio
  • Peter Higginson
  • Evan Jones
  • M. John Kennedy
  • Dave Kynaston
  • Lesley Livingston
  • Jonathan Llyr
  • Christopher "Doc" Lockett
  • Crysta Luszczek
  • Andrea Lyons
  • Andrew Merzetti
  • Christopher Mott
  • Scott Moyle
  • Peter Nicol
  • Kevin Robinson
  • Ryan M. Sero
  • Clarissa Der Nederlanden Taylor
  • Gregg Taylor
  • Tim Vant
  • Brian Vaughan
  • Julie Cogger

Podcast series[edit | edit source]

Deck Gibson, Far Reach Commander[edit | edit source]

Old series
In summer 2007, Decoder Ring Theatre released the Summer Showcase, an anthology featuring six new podcasts showcasing stories by different writers. The most popular of these were two episodes of the space opera Deck Gibson, Far Reach Commander, written and created by Parsec Award-winning author Matt Wallace (The Failed Cities Monologues).

In summer 2008, six new episodes of Deck Gibson were introduced. The podcast chronicles the adventures of Deck Gibson as he follows the mission of the Far Reach Fleet: to explore, to discover, to defend. Now he soars beyond frontiers of the galaxy never before seen by human eyes.

On June 27, 2013, an ebook by Matt Wallace (creator) entitled Deck Gibson: The Complete Scripts was released on Amazon.com. As of April 2014, however, no more episodes of Deck Gibson have been produced.

Dramatis personae[edit | edit source]

  • Deck Gibson

Once an ace pilot and crack gunner for the feared Quasar Corps of Earth (call sign: Draco), Deck was lost in the depths of space after a brutal space battle, his damaged starfighter rescued by the alien Far Reach Fleet. He now pilots the Far Reach 1. He has a younger brother named Billy. His father piloted a Comet Tail starfighter for 20 years in the Quasar Corps under the call sign "Titan". Voiced by Jonathan Llyr.

  • Control

Little is known about the feminine voice that delivers mission orders to the Commanders of the Far Reach Fleet, not even her location at Far Reach Fleet Headquarters. Voiced by Lesley Livingston.

  • Rick Stringer

The only other human to ever join the Far Reach Fleet, Commander Stringer piloted the Far Reach 12 until he was killed in battle with the Sneg known as "Black Scales". Before joining the Far Reach Fleet, Stringer had led the dissident Earth group "Citizens of the Milky Way", advocates for open borders and integration with alien races.

  • Black Scales

Captain of the Sneg pirate barge, "The Slither". Voiced by Steven Burley. [Character DECEASED]

  • Entheriel

A ward of the Stardust Dancers who was prophesied to destroy Haznon, the ruler of the insectoid Dran Empire, at the end of the universe. She is the last known member of the Hylemna [sp?], a powerful race of beings now all but extinct. Voiced by Monica Coté.

  • Lt. Jason T. McDowell

Once a member of an elite Quasar Corps squadron (Call sign: Hercules) along with "Helix", "Craterface", "Blackeye", "Dumbbell", "Eight-burst", "California" and squadron leader Deck "Draco" Gibson. "Herc" was assigned to terminate his friend Deck under the belief that Gibson was a traitor giving Earth's secrets to the Far Reach Fleet. Voiced by Gregg Taylor.

Known alien races[edit | edit source]

  • The Sneg

A race of crocodile-men, brutal creatures only interested in plunder. Their thick, scaly hides can withstand the vacuum of space.

  • Sulkanians
  • Stardust Dancers
  • Hylemna
  • Abatians
  • Acroxians

A race of scientists and healers annihilated by the xenocidal Quasar Corps.

  • Metalonians

Known to Earthers as "Plutonium Men", these radioactive metallic beings generate intense amounts of energy and travel in bio-metallic starships.

  • Dran Empire

A race of insectoid conquerors.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. "Parsec Awards Website". Archived from the original on August 22, 2006. Retrieved September 24, 2006. 
  2. "Canada's Greatest Superhero Launches Second Season of Podcast Adventures". Archived from the original on November 7, 2006. Retrieved September 24, 2006. 
  3. "Parsec Awards Website". Archived from the original on September 7, 2010. Retrieved September 17, 2010. 
  4. Podcast Awards

External links[edit | edit source]