Macha Theatre
The Macha Theatre is an intimate 99-seat theater in West Hollywood.
Macha Theatre (West Hollywood, CA)
The critically-acclaimed He Asked For It is the award-winning story about the complexities of gay relationships in the contemporary Internet-age society. Writer Erik Patterson and director Neil Weiss strike a balance between comedy and tragedy as the characters struggle to move beyond one-night stands to the difficult sacrifices of true love.
Event summary prepared by the Goldstar Editorial Team.
* Additional fees apply.
All offers for He Asked For It have expired.
Tell me when more tickets / dates are added
The last date listed for He Asked For It was Sunday July 26, 2009 / 7:00pm. (view all dates)
Currently at Macha Theatre:
Macha Theatre presents the hilarious revue, Naked Boys Singing, featuring eight male singers in the nude. With sixteen original songs including "Gratuitous Nudity" and "Bliss of a Bris," the original crowd-pleasing show has been a critically and audience favorite for over ten years. Learn More

Quickie review:
Stellar acting all around deserves high praise, while the tired, clichéd script deserves the wood-chipper treatment. Go if you have never seen a gay-themed play before and want to see talented actors make the most out a lame script. Do not go if you have seen a gay-themed play -- any gay-themed play -- in the past 30 years, since there’s nothing new here.
Long review:
Two words make this play watchable: Joe Egender. Rarely have I seen an actor bring so much natural warmth, vulnerability, and humanity to a character. He effortlessly makes the implausibility of his character’s actions believable and sympathetic. Egender is worth his weight in gold to this production. And then some. Sarah Foret makes the most of her age-inappropriate dialogue (and I’m not talking about her F-word spree), delivering a truly wonderful performance throughout. The brilliant Brian Unger manages to generate laughs where none should otherwise be. This is to his great credit, since his lamely written lines violate truth-of-scene (and reality) right and left. The rest of the cast performed admirably, and none stood out as wanting.
The sound design by Cricket S. Myers was incredible. By far, it was the best tech aspect of the show, and, thankfully, the good sound system in the theater did it justice. Sadly detracting was the theater itself: a poorly insulated shell of a building that let in every sound from fighting cats in a nearby alley to general traffic on Santa Monica Blvd.
Less successful, in my opinion, was Jeff McLaughlin's set design. I'm all for minimalist sets, but for some reason, this one rubbed me the wrong way. Built in a staggered, step-pyramid style with uneven ‘blocks’ of varying heights, depths, and widths, it created an awkwardness with the blocking. Because the steps were steep, actors could not effortlessly move up and down them. In fact, an actor even stumbled coming down one of the tall steps near the top of the play that made the audience gasp. We were a little nervous for the rest of the night that another actor or set changer would fall.
Tom Ontiveros’ projection design was sort of hit-and-miss in my opinion. Appropriately, his images that were projected onto the upstage wall were merely suggestive or evocative of their content, matching the approach of the set design. However, perhaps due to the width of the set, two projectors were used, each projecting the same image on opposite sides of the wall but with one flipped horizontally so that it was a mirror of the other. The projections, therefore, drew attention to themselves, which may not have been intended. I did like Ontiveros’ sequence in the overpass scene; his work really shined there.
Paul Ruddy’s casting was simply SUPERB! Absolutely perfect actors for the roles without exception.
I loved, loved, loved Neil H. Weiss’ direction. He took an inordinate amount of material and mined gold out of nearly every moment. There could have been a lot of hand-wringing, maudlin moments that he expertly avoided. I especially enjoyed his direction of Egender and Foret. One sequence, though, did bug the hell out of me. It’s the one where Weiss has an actor completely and utterly copy Christian Bale’s performance (down to exact gestures and expressions) from one of the sex scenes in American Psycho. While this happens to be the funniest scene in He Asked for It, it is still a total rip-off. The treadmill shtick in the very first scene of the play also didn’t work for me. Yeah, yeah: we know we’re in for a minimalist set when we’re taking our seats and looking right at it. But even then, an audience needs a chance to buy into the idea set pieces and props are going to be suggestive of their respective real things. Give us a scene or two to get used to it before starting the play with actors jogging in place as if they are on a treadmill -- especially if they’re not doing it convincingly. In fact, the scene came across as hokey and amateurish; it was like watching bad spacework improv. Later in the show, however, the second treadmill scene knocked it out of the park. What a difference being onboard made.
And now I get to the writing, which, for me, was the low-point of He Asked for It. Not only has Erik Patterson regurgitated the same, tired, clichéd ‘gay theater’ themes, he crams them all into one play. Plenty of hot guys in their underwear? Check. Tragic gay hero? Check. Struggling with coming out? Check. Grousing about HIV? Check. Dealing with hateful family members tempered with a plucky supportive one? Check and double check. The only thing missing was a bible-pounding loudmouth who eventually learns to accept gay people after being gingerly led down the path towards tolerance Afternoon Special-style.
No gay theme Patterson revisits has a new take or approach. Worse, though, Patterson takes his already dated material and dates it even more! The play centers around online dating on AOL. AOL? Seriously? What decade is he living in? I guess he could have gone for the gold and chosen Prodigy or CompuServe. And then there is a pseudo-funny, long-running analogy involving television being the career-death of film actors (I won’t give away the full context of the riff). The problem with it, though, is that it is entirely untrue nowadays. Film actors now cross over into television all the time. From D-list schlubs to A-list superstars. The play completely ignores this fact for the sake of the joke -- this dated, no-longer-relevant joke -- and it insults our intelligence and wastes our time. (Sure, Patterson has a character acknowledge this fatal flaw, saying “Some people tell me this isn’t true anymore, but I don’t believe them!” But that’s just an excuse to get the joke in, a joke Patterson probably worked on for years back when it was true and now just can’t let go.)
Which leads me to the worst of Patterson’s indulgences: the play’s length. He Asked for It is in desperate need of trimming. Having shoehorned three plays’ worth of actors and storylines into one, he has created a bloated mess. Entire characters can and should be cut from this play. And what makes the long scenes even longer is Patterson’s tendency to have many character’s philosophize with the same voice. Sure, some characters have their own quirks, but Act II is full of speechifying by characters using pretty much the same diction and eloquence. I felt like I was watching an episode of Dawson’s Creek with its absurdly sophisticated introspection by characters who should lack it. And it was boring in its seeming repetitiveness.
Overall, a quality production, saved mostly by Joe Egender and the rest of the cast.

The actors were all very good but the material was stale. I am not sure when this play was written and it may have been fresh at that time but this subject has been explored frequently in the media and theater and this play offered nothing new. It was just OK. The Macha theater is not the most comfortable venue - leg room is limited and the sight lines from many seats are interrupted by upright posts.

Amazing!! I was mesmerized throughout the entire play. I highly recommend it!

I really loved this play and it's definitely worth seeing! Some of the other reviews have suggested that some of the themes are outdated and/ or cliched, but I wholeheartedly disagree! With the current rise of HIV especially among the twenty-somethings who didn't experience the 80's when AIDS rapidly killed thousands in this country, they think that it's not such a big deal to have unsafe sex because "Hey, if I get it or pass it on there are drugs I can take and it's not a death sentence anymore. People don't die anymore from HIV, except in Africa." (as one character says) This kind of lazy and irresponsible attitude is exactly what is causing the rise in the disease and they don't have a clue as to how many daily drugs it will take to keep them healthy and their probably shorter life spans.
This is a cautionary tale of the tragedy of what lack of self esteem and loneliness can bring down. An innocent young man moves to LA from the midwest away from the security and love of his family that he once knew. After he comes out to his family, his only remaining ally is his younger sister who continues to love and support him through the long distance phone conversations they have. Like all of us, all he really wants is love and acceptance, but after arriving in LA to become an actor has trouble finding any love and acceptance there as well. The Internet age has brought perhaps more casual sex to more people, but the loneliness, absence of real lasting connection or love is severly lacking in these characters lives, which heightens any self destructive tendencies. The standout performances are from the two leads, Andrew Keegan and Joe Egender! Their protrayals make us feel for the confusion, emptiness, sadness and loneliness these characters feel and their inability to find love, comfort, fulfillment or meaning in the world. Congratulations to everybody involved in this outstanding production!
AMAZING acting from the true lead, Joe Egender. The play should end when he's no longer on stage. Admirable attempt to bring WeHo living to life, but suffers from a tendency towards melodramatic agit-prop, like so many gay plays. Judicious editing and some drastic dramaturgy could help immensely because Patterson has a terrific ear for dialogue and makes some strong points in his overly ambitious script. Glad I went, though, since so much of the acting was excellent.

Excellent production with superb acting. I was particularly impressed with Joe Egender's performance. He was stunning and made you care for the character he was portraying. After he leaves the play you really feel the void. I hope to see more from him.

The play covered the entire scope of emotion from joy to sadness. I laughed out loud and cried. It was well written, brilliantly casted, and hilariously accurate!
The theater is quaint and very atmospheric. There is ample parking and several great restaurants nearby!

This is a very well produced play with uniformly strong performances. The play itself could use a little editing; its 2.5 hour running time(exclusive of intermission) exposed some self-indulgences in the writing, but it is a sturdy, compelling piece nonetheless. There is a surprise twist in the second act that I didn't seem coming, and which was invigorating for its element of shock. The characters nicely criss-cross as the play progresses and those circularities in the plot are rewarding.
The set design was great--entirely abstract and yet perfectly evocative of any number of settings: apartment, bar, public restroom, talent agent office, etc. Sound design was top notch too.
I've lived in L.A. for the past nine years and this is easily one of the best plays I've seen in this city.

One of the best shows I've seen in a long time! The ensemble cast was outstanding, creating genuine, empathetic, and engaging characters who experienced the joys and pain of the gay dating scene in Weho complicated by a unique HIV storyline. Special praise to the 2 male leads, Joe Egender and Andrew Keegan, who conveyed an amazing range of emotions throughout the show. Credit should also go to the director Neil Weiss for eliciting these performances and for his simple, seamless, yet effective staging. Finally, Erik Patterson's story was highly compelling--smart & intense, but also offered up big doses of comic relief anyone familiar with the "Weho scenes" will find hysterical. Sorry for the cliche, but I really did laugh And cry.. and I will definitely bring back more friends to experience the show with me again. Don't miss it.

The playwright definitely had a lot of very personal things he wanted to get off his chest and while all of them are important topics I wish he wouldn’t have tried to put them all in a single play. The acting is uniformly good but the performances suffer from a script that is need of some serious editing (including the possible elimination of a character). The staging makes great use of a small space but the script includes a number of long blackouts and costume changes (all done on stage) the gives the impression that the material was originally written for film but was hastily adapted for the stage.
Of particular note are the strong performances of Jeremy Glazer as Henry and Joe Egender as Ted.

The first act is quite good. And the performances are uniformly good throughout the entire show. However, the second act is so didactic and over-written that I felt the entire show would have been severely condensed into a much stronger one-act show running 90 minutes.

Saw the show with the understudy cast and it was a really good show. Very thought provoking. Bravo!!!

Egender is terrific! The first act is really quite good and pretty well written. If it ended at the first act I would rate it a 3. However the second act is a total mess as far as the writting and plotting goes. Where two lines would suffice the audience is subjected to tedious monolgues by many of the characters. The set with it's visual projections is also somewhat distracting
but Egender does give a really wonderful performance.

Very happy I made it to closing night.

He Asked For It was AMAZING. It was such an interesting snapshot of the gay community. Joe Egender did a fabulous job of portraying a wide-eyed LA transplant with a distressing past. He was so real, you felt utter sympathy for him throughout the play. Andrew Keegan made a seamless transition from screen to stage. He was so comfortable on the stage. He did an incredible job of showing how tortured his character was. He took us on an magical journey that left me speechless. Sarah Foret was very cute and spunky. Jeremy Glazer did an awesome job of simply being truthful. Kyle Jordan was adorable and sympathetic. And Carter MacIntyre made for some hilarious comic relief. Brian Unger created the perfect blend of evilness and hopelessness. All in all it was an amazing performance. The writing was incredible. The play was so well thought out. The cast worked together beautifully. I would fully recommend this to all of my friends. I hope the Cast does an encore performance at some time.

Phenomenal acting and writing. It was an intense play - I cried throughout. I didn't even notice the time passing by (and it was long). Brilliant. If you can, sit up in the balcony - chairs are uncomfortable but you get better visibility.

The play started out very promising, but then took a dive (literally) near the end. The promiscuous portrayal of WeHo became tiresome. The storyline gives no hope to any gay man, either openly or closeted. Is life so worthless that one simply gives up trying when things don't go as planned? I find this play depressing and joyless. However, the superb acting took my breath away (kudos to everyone involved). Andrew Keegan might as well be the next Mario Lopez (minus dimples). His well-defined physique should make him the next Calvin Klein spokesperson.

This was a very intriguing play. It was very well cast, and the actors were amazing. They even came out in the lobby afterwards to meet friends/family/fans.
I do have to give a shout-out about my childhood crush, Andrew Keegan. He was amazing in this performance as Rigby, a HIV-positive man struggling with "hating his blood" and trying to find comfort and companionship, even with his disease.
The theater was small but nice. Mostly every seat is a good one, and the minimal props are used creatively to create scenes at the gym, bars, restaurants.
I definitely recommend this play!

This understudy performance was fantastic. A sort of "in your face" play about what is going on in the never ending world of HIV. We talked about this play for the entire hour of our ride home. Some moments take you by surprise and stay with you. The role of "Marcus" played by Alex Boling was hilarious!! "CHARACTER ACTOR" he's not, but "STAR" he will always be!! To the entire cast, THANK YOU!!!

The acting was great (especially the lead guy and the woman who played his sister)...the play itself had some great scenes and some scenes that went on too long. A lot of scenes between two characters get mired in one character monologuing for the longest time while the other character listens. Could have been sharper writing at times. The theatre itself is uncomfortable (too warm, obscured sightlines), but I am glad I saw it.

awesome actors, well written with ups and downs, and thought provoking. a stunning model of LA theater.

This play was great! The acting was amazing. I'm glad it's been extended by a week. You should go watch it. Plus, Andrew Keegan looks amazing shirtless. Yum.

Great performances, real and contemporary story line, definitely a MUST see. I still cannot get over the acting....GRADE A!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I was so impressed with the story line. The depth of the characters. Their acting abilities were stupendous. I literally got lost in the acting for a minute and forgot I was even at a show. The theatre was very intimate. I would say about a 75 seat theatre if that and every seat was good. I recommend this show to anyone in town. Very good. I can see why it is multi award winning.

It has been a long time since I have been so impressed with a theatre production. The writing was superb - relevant, engaging material, quick, sparkling dialogue and interesting characters - all strangely lovable despite their tragic flaws.
All the performaces were outstanding, but Joe Eggender in particular shone as Ted - a young man whose optimism is slowly eroded by his circumstances. Sarah Foret too brought a real heart and nuance of character to the role of Sophie, Ted's ever-passionate sister.
Go see it, go see it, go see it. It's so good.

The show I saw was a total understudy cast. They were amazing. Alex Boling as Marcus, was hilarious! I really enjoyed the play, but it was a little too long and tedious in a couple parts. Cutting out a couple of the very long conversations would help, but all in all, I would definitely recommend you see the show.

HE ASKED FOR IT was an edgy, thought-provoking drama. It was difficult to watch at moments and had me laughing out loud as well. The cast was excellent. Sarah Foret ("Sophie") is wonderful. She brought amazing energy to the role. Joe Egender ("Ted") embodied the character and made me think about the complexities of love and acceptance. All of the actors were extremely generous! I enjoyed it very much.

Amazing!!!!!

This edgy commentary on gay life in Los Angeles is both beautifully written and directed, and expertly performed by a hand-picked, cast of seasoned professional actors. Funny and delightfully paced, the darkness of the story is revealed through moments of daily life that are too familiar not to laugh along with.
Stirring performances make this a show not to be missed. It renews my faith that fine Los Angeles Theatre does exist.

It was pretty dark subject matter but it held my interest throughout the play. The main actors were great.

The acting was top notch. Each actor owned their character. One of the best performances i have seen. The writing is spot on.

Great play. Very edgy, provocative and symbolic.

I went to this event with my husband as my cousin, Jeremy, was one of the actors and we go often to support him in his art. With that said; I want to let it be known that even if he wasn't my cousin, the play was GREAT!
We arrived a little early after getting great priced tickets through Goldstar. We stepped up to the window, and with some trepidation as to whether my tickets will truly be there or not, I give my name to the cutie with the clipboard. He slowly scans the list, and sure enough our names were there! YES!
Since we had time to spare, and we knew it would be a late night, for us anyway, we decided to grab a coffee and dessert at Hugos. Yummy and convenient!
We made it back in time, and I was surprised to find the theater was so tiny. It was filling up fast and the only seats that appeared to be available were in the last row, behind a pole and in front of the sound/directors room. This couldn't be! I didn't want to stretch and shift to see my cousin act his heart out...I had to do something. We stepped passed the curtains of the theater and asked another cutie who worked there (lots of cuties up in Hollywood) if we could sit up in the balcony. While he hesitated slightly, he fell like a ton of bricks and escorted us upstairs where we took seats front and center!
The play itself; WOW, heavy content and intriguingly broken characters. The writing was well done as humor was splatter throughout some tough and gritty subject matter, but it was mostly the actors that made it come ALIVE. As I stated, the conflict that drives the play is weighty, the actors took on these characters; became entangle in their drama, shed tears, and even continued to shed tears after the scenes closed and the lights dimmed for the stage changes. I'm not "in the industry"; I'm actually a high school teacher originally from New York, but I believe what I witnessed was what they call true method acting!
All of these factors were great, as I said, my husband was with me; so it kept him interested and focused on the forward movement of the plot itself....I, on the other hand, was not only able to appreciate the dramatic aspects, but also the rock hard bodies of nearly naked men on stage. SCORE!! Not to mention the few make out scenes; BONUS!
Overall, the play was fantastic and our drive back down to Long Beach was filled with intellectual conversations surrounding the characters. Two thumbs up, or whatever it is that they say.

This is one of the best gay-themed plays I've seen. It mixed smart observations on the gay scene with plenty of laughs. The play is a little long--I could have done without the final scene. But overall it was very entertaining and thought-provoking.

A great show....fabulous cast...a must see!

i think that the show could have been edited down but it is topical and daring and i really enjoyed the acting. glad i saw it.

Not a fun subject but done really well. Great production, cast, & theatre.

Joe Egender and Sarah Foret were wonderful and the first act seemed to flow well enough (although sometimes it became a play about changing clothes for no apparent reason) and ended with a cliff hanger that had me looking forward to the second act....and then the whole thing fell apart.

Egender, Foret, and Glazer were very strong. Writing was inspired at times but second act could largely be cut and the play would be a true powerhouse.

The production was awesome. The entire cast did a yeomans job. Great balance of comedy and thought-provoking drama. Would highly recommend.

The acting is top-notch and the first act tightly written. The second act is predictable, some of the acting over the top, and it's a bit melodramatic.

This is, without a doubt, the BEST PLAY I have seen all year!
And I see a lot of theater.
Erik Patterson's writing is brilliant. So brilliant, in fact, I don't want to tell you anything about the plot. This is a show you just need to go in and see -- having only been told to see it.
The actors are at the top of their game ... and the eye candy quotient (for those who appreciate a mostly male cast) is high.
"He Asked For It" should be required viewing for every gay man. And straight man. And gay woman. And straight woman. Sincerely, this is an astonishing play that I have already seen twice (once with the main cast, once with the understudy cast), and I may very well see it again before it closes its run.
It's an emotional roller coaster of shocks and sadness, love and fear, laughs and heartache. And it will expand your awareness without being preachy. In other words -- it is why we go to the theater.
Get tickets. Now. For real. You will be glad you did.
And bring Kleenex.

play hits on a lot of things that are current with the state of gay culture. story was pretty good although some character transitions seemed abrupt. first act was solid, second act seemed a bit unbelievable at moments. script could be trimmed a good 20-30 mins to make it really rock. overall a good show to see. lots of weho references that add some fun to everything

The 2nd act was painful to sit through.
Tips are provided by Goldstar members and Eleven Eleven Productions. Goldstar is not responsible for their content or accuracy.
Website: http://www.heaskedforit.com/
He Asked For It, recognized by LA Weekly as “an AIDS play with a difference,” held its first production with a sold-out seven-week run at Theatre of NOTE in Hollywood, CA in 2008. Play earned 7 top theatre award nominations, including the GLAAD Media Award nomination for “Outstanding Theatre”, and recipient of a 2009 Garland Award. The second production’s red carpet premiere will be held on June 12th, 2009. The play will run through July 19th, 2009.
Led by actors Joe Egender (The Hamiltons) and Andrew Keegan (7th Heaven, Broken Hearts Club, 10 Things I Hate About You), He Asked For It tells the story of several gay men living and dating in Los Angeles. The play moves past the label of “living as a gay, HIV-positive man” by presenting the humanistic struggles that any single person can relate to: how to find love in a large, isolating city.
Writer Erik Patterson and director Neil Weiss strike a startling balance between comedy and tragedy as the characters struggle to get beyond the casual thrills of one-night stands and come to terms with the difficult sacrifices of true love. The play takes the audience on a dark ride through a world of Internet chat rooms, Hollywood back rooms and nightclub bathrooms. It exposes the complacency and recklessness that has resulted in a rise in HIV while striking a universal chord in its exploration of the search for love.
One of Frontiers Top Ten Plays of 2008, He Asked For It was praised by the magazine as a “timely and gripping portrait of gay relationships in the 21st century” that has “boundless potential as a watershed gay drama”, and singled out “a haunting lead performance by Joe Egender.”
Joining actors Joe Egender and Andrew Keegan in the cast are actors Sarah Foret (ABC’s Beautiful People), Brian Unger (The Daily Show), Carter MacIntyre (MyNetworkTV’s American Heiress), Jeremy Glazer (Save Me) and Kyle Jordan. The Macha Theater is located at 1107 N. Kings Road, in West Hollywood, CA.
Awards and nominations for the first production of He Asked For It include: