Tag: DC Theater

  • In the Moment: Helen Murray, Artistic Director of The Hub Theatre Discusses Her Departure

    In the Moment: Helen Murray, Artistic Director of The Hub Theatre Discusses Her Departure

    The DC performing arts scene will be losing one of its visionary artistic directors this summer. Hub Theatre’s artistic director Helen Murray will be moving on to become the Executive Director of the Aurora, CO Fox Arts Center.

    Hub Artistic Director Helen R. Murray. Photo courtesy of Hub Theatre.

    Beyond being the Hub’s artistic director, Murray co-founded Hub about a decade ago with Marey Oakes and Maggie Ulmer. Murray has also been seen around town as an actor and director and has penned a number of plays. Under Murray’s artistic leadership, the Hub has received many Helen Hayes nominations and awards for DC-area professional theater excellence.

    The Hub also instituted annual theatrical features such as its Emerging Writers Festival and New Play Fest under Murray’s leadership. Since about 2010, The Hub has been producing its theatrical work in Fairfax County at the John Swayze Theatre, the New School of Northern Virginia. It should be noted that one of Murray’s plays, Redder Blood, won the 2016 Jewish Play Project playwriting contest. (Note: I have been a judge for the Jewish Play Project for the past three years).

    Now, before getting into my recent in-depth interview with Murray, let me provide this one quote from a previous chat when I asked Murray what kind of plays interested her. The response was quick in coming; one that says it all for the near decade she has been the Hub’s artistic director. Murray seeks out plays that can be “everything Hub is about – hope, love, family, music, comedy, and magical moments.” Now that is a wonderful goal-setting sentence to read, re-read and savor.

    So, having closely followed Murray’s DC area theatrical journey over the years, let’s get to the interview, shall we?

    David: What led you to co-found The Hub? What was missing in Northern Virginia at the time you co-founded The Hub?

    Helen: When The Hub was founded there was little professional theatre in Fairfax County [Fairfax County is the largest jurisdiction by population in the DC metro area and has one of the highest per capita incomes in the region]. Little did I know that Mark Krikstan was busy founding 1st Stage (Tysons) at the exact same time. It was wonderful that he was, we ended up doing our first show at 1st Stage. I started The Hub after working for years on DC stages and in particular with playwrights in development, or with artistic directors who would bring me in to read plays out loud for their potential season selections. I felt that there were writers that were being passed over, and wanted to give them a place to be heard. I also wanted to see more plays onstage that lifted our humanity rather than show the darkness in it – that could just be that I had been acting in a lot of dramas for a while, who knows. However, all those factors led me to found The Hub with my two counterparts.

    What were some of the challenges in founding the company and being the artistic director?

    Money. Money has always been the biggest challenge and will always be – for every AD, anywhere. But like anything that is a constant challenge, you just do your best and take it as it comes. What seems impossible can all of a sudden be eased by a helpful donor, a new grant, and in-kind donation. Speaking of, Season 10 could still use a boost – anyone want to help out? All joking aside, the community in DC/MD/VA that cares about art is a passionate one and they show up when really needed.

    What have been some of your greatest “happy moments” as The Hub’s Artistic Director?

    My happiest moments are watching the audience. Seeing them take in our work and go on the journeys that we put forth has always been one of my favorite things about my job. And the collaborations with exceptional artists. Putting together groups of artists to create something worthwhile is an incredible feeling. I have been fortunate to work with the artists that have come through The Hub and it what I will miss most.

    You seem to enjoy finding and producing theatrical gems about love and family? Why?

    There is no great secret to finding the work, I just keep reading until I stumble on something that feels like Hub. And now that literary directors and many writers know my penchant for certain types of work, the plays find me. I produce them because the longer I have been creating theatre, the more I have seen it as a service to the community. Artists should feel tasked with challenging an audience, deepening their understanding of a story, and allowing them to see inside themselves and each other, which in turn helps them connect to one another and the world. It sounds like a grand idea, but it really is a small one. Just me, trying to do my part, in whatever corner of the world I inhabit.

    If you could look back, would you do it again, co-found and become The Hub’s artistic director?

    Absolutely!

    Anything you want to say about your new job in Aurora, or who will become The Hub’s next artistic director, please feel free.

    I have only just started working with the Aurora Fox and am starting to meet this community. But I am genuinely excited to work with the Fox staff and to share the stories I care about. I am also excited to help Hub’s Board choose my successor and to help them get situated before I leave. It’s a wild ride to be sure, and I am so glad I am on it.

    For more information about The Hub Theatre, go online.

  • Enter the TodayTix Free First Preview Lottery for ‘Jefferson’s Garden’ at Ford’s Theatre

    Enter the TodayTix Free First Preview Lottery for ‘Jefferson’s Garden’ at Ford’s Theatre

    What is the TodayTix Free First Preview Lottery?

    There’s nothing better than seeing a great show for free. TodayTix and Ford’s Theatre are offering a mobile lottery for each first preview production during the 2017-2018 season. Sign up through the TodayTix app before 10 am on Friday, January 19th for the chance to win up to 2 FREE tickets for the preview production of Jefferson’s Garden on January 19th.

    In Jefferson’s Garden, Christian— a Quaker pacifist— defies his family to fight in the American Revolution. Susannah, an enslaved woman, is tempted to fight for the British when they promise her liberty. On their travels, Christian and Susannah cross paths with Thomas Jefferson, George Mason, and Sally Hemings. These encounters force them to confront the compromises America makes after the promise of equality. This show is also a participant in the Women’s Voices Theater Festival.

    How do I enter to win?

    Download

    Download TodayTix in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store.

    Please note: Lotteries can only be entered from the TodayTix app on your iPhone, iPad or Android device.

    Enter

    Wait to see if you win. Winners will be notified between 10 am and 2 pm on Friday, January 19th, by push notification and email. So keep an eye on your phone, and make sure notifications are enabled for TodayTix.

    Get lottery tix

    Claim your tickets. Winners have one hour to claim their tickets in-app. If unclaimed, tickets will be offered to other entrants.

  • Review: ‘Everything Is Illuminated’ at Theater J

    Review: ‘Everything Is Illuminated’ at Theater J

    A young Jewish American writer named Jonathan arrives by train in the Ukraine on a quest to find a woman named Augustine who helped his grandfather Safran escape the Nazis. He has only a faded photograph of them together and the name of a tiny town, Trachimbrod. But he must find her—he must—because she is the woman without whom he would not have been.

    “He has come a long way to seek his past,” says Alex, the amiable young Ukrainian whom Jonathan has hired as translator.

    “And I have gone a long way to escape mine,” says Alex’s gruff Grandfather, whom Jonathan has hired as driver. We know not yet what Alex’s Grandfather refers to, though we already have good reason to wonder what he did in the war. And the moment goes by fast—just one of countless breathtaking beats in an exquisitely written play.

    Everything Is Illuminated—adapted by British playwright Simon Block from Jonathan Safran Foer’s acclaimed debut novel—delves into the distance between Holocaust remembering and Holocaust forgetting. Between honoring the dead and disavowing why and how they died. Between the sorrow and the complicity. And incredibly, unforgettably, what comes shining through like literal light is a radiant emotional experience as heartrending as it is hilarious.

    Yes, hilarious—not a word one might associate with such resolute remembrance.

    Billy Finn, Alex Alferov, and Daven Ralston in Everything Is Illuminated. Photo by C. Stanley Photography.

    First off, Jonathan’s translator Alex is a randy dude with a nutty grasp of English, and as delivered in dialect by the commandingly comedic Alex Alferov, his not-quite-literate lines land laugh after laugh (“I implore you to forgive my speaking of English. I am not so premium with it”).

    Second, Alex’s Grandfather, Jonathan’s driver, wears dark glasses, hobbles with a white cane, and appears to be blind. He’s not really, but this serves to unnerve Jonathan, as does the Grandfather’s sudden burst of anger. The Grandfather is a character whose full complexity comes to a shocking boil in a flashback in the second act, but in the beginning, Eric Hissom has him simmer to fascinating and fearsome effect.

    The brainy, fish-out-of-water Jonathan is nicely played with earnest honesty by Billy Finn, who’s especially winning as the foil for the jokey setups. Notable among them is the horny, yapping, and flatulent dog (a puppet animated and voiced by Daven Ralston) that accompanies the threesome on their drive to Jonathan’s mystery destination.

    Daven Ralson and Billy Finn in Everything Is Illuminated. Photo by C. Stanley Photography.

    Ralson also appears in other supporting roles, including surly Waitress, crusty Hotel Keeper, sullen Petrol Attendant—each deftly individuated. But her immeasurable contribution to the magic of the play is as musician (playing lovely incidental interludes of her composition on stringed instruments) and as Brod, a maybe mythical muse to Jonathan when his writer’s imagination must fill in blanks that his journey cannot.

    Several timelines interweave in the play, as well as shifts from naturalism to magical realism; not all is always as it seems. So it is that Jonathan encounters an Old Woman who lives alone in a small house one room of which has shelves full of photographs and other mementos in labeled boxes. In Nancy Robinette’s magnificent portrayal, the Old Woman delivers a heart-stopping story recalling what happened to the shtetl of Trachimbrod.

    Old Woman: I am the only one remaining…
    They were all killed…
    Except for one or two who managed to escape…
    You should never have to be the one remaining.

    Billy Finn, Nancy Robinette, Alex Alferov, and Eric Hissom in Everything Is Illuminated. Photo by C. Stanley Photography.

    Is she Augustine, the woman who saved Jonathan’s grandfather? Maybe, maybe not. But upon seeing Jonathan’s photograph of them together, she remembers Safran was the first boy she kissed.

    Equally heart-stopping but even more horrifying is the story Hissom as Grandfather tells in which we learn what he did that he has tried to forget. “I am a good person who lived in a bad time,” he says to his grandson, trying to justify himself, trying to explain what, despite his intentions, got brutally passed down from father to son to son.

    Grandfather: I didn’t want your father to grow up close to so much death. I wanted so much for him to live a good life, without death and choices and shame and guilt. Without guilt, Alex. Oh, to live without guilt!…
    I wanted to remove your father from everything that was shameful. But I discovered that shame follows you like an infected dog…

    The play’s theatrical mix of realism and invention comes alive in language so amazing it washes over one like waves. The stage arts too combine to make this a spectacularly engaging production.

    Director Aaron Posner conducts each pulsebeat with an emotional reverence that resonates throughout the house. Scenic Designer Paige Hathaway enlarges upon the Old Woman’s shelves and makes of them a testament to the mind’s quest to retrieve meaning. Costume Designer Kendra Rai mixes rustic and real (for Alex, Grandfather, and others) with sublime and wished-for (the ethereal white gowns worn by Old Woman and Brod). Sound Designer Palmer Hefferan brings vibrant veracity to Jonathan’s arrival at the train station, and near the end Heffernan and Lighting Designer Jesse Belsky create cosmic effects with heart-stirring force.

    Special kudos to Dialect Coach Nancy Krebs for achieving an astonishing layering of languages. Alex, when addressing Jonathan or the audience in his funny, fractured English, speaks with a thick Slavic dialect; yet when Alex, his Grandfather, and others talk among themselves in their native tongue, they do so with standard American inflection. The result, an aural delight, intriguingly echoes the levels of perspective at play.

    Theater J Artistic Director Adam Immerwahr pursued the rights to stage Everything Is Illuminated with a determination that now pays off in a powerful production not to be missed. I know there will be many who will see it having read Foer’s book, but I came to the play cold. And with each plot surprise and poetically turned phrase, it swept me away. I absolutely loved it.

    Running Time: Two hours 25 minutes, including one intermission.

    Everything Is Illuminated plays through February 4, 2018, at Theater J at the Washington DC Jewish Community Center – 1529 16th Street, NW, in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 777-3210, or purchase them online.

  • Interview: Musical Improv Duo Tara and Rance Discuss their Critically-acclaimed Show ‘HERE’ Coming to Imagination Stage in Bethesda

    Interview: Musical Improv Duo Tara and Rance Discuss their Critically-acclaimed Show ‘HERE’ Coming to Imagination Stage in Bethesda

    Veteran Chicago improvisers Tara DeFrancisco and Rance Rizzutto have traveled together to 20 countries and more than 50 U.S. cities to perform their improvised musical, HERE, recently called “nothing short of genius” by NPR.

    Rance Rizzutto and Tara DeFrancisco. Photo courtesy of Tara and Rance.

    The format of the show is simple: get a one-word suggestion from the audience and use it as a springboard into the first song of the show to establish the overarching theme. “Once we have the theme it becomes more important than the word that was thrown out [and then] we follow the story where it leads us,” says Tara.

    The seasoned duo, who recently founded the Nest Theatre comedy club in Columbus, Ohio, have found comfort in the highly unpredictable nature of their format. According to Rance, “Our show is pretty low-tech, and in most of the cities we go to, we don’t know the person who’s going to play keys for us.” Their rehearsal time is purposefully short and mainly designed to clue the pianist into their format. The rest is left to be made up on the spot. No two shows are the same and each performance is a surprise to them as well as the audience.

    The title of the show is straight-forward yet symbolic of their views on life and performance. Rance explains, “HERE is wherever we are, we don’t always know where we’re going [next], but it’s also a reminder to stay present and in the moment – to not get ahead of ourselves – during our show.”

    Tara DeFrancisco and Rance Rizzutto. Photo courtesy of Tara and Rance.

    This philosophy helps them remain focused on the story that’s being woven together through their performance. The musical elements as described by Tara “elevate the emotion of a scene. It unlocks a different level of play and a beautiful moment between humans that isn’t always easy to capture.” It’s beyond just making people laugh; it’s about creating meaning and making people feel.

    Their upcoming show at Imagination Stage in Bethesda will be their first in that venue and in Maryland. This opportunity landed on their radar through Michael Zhuang, a resident of Bethesda, nicknamed “The Investment Scientist” for his founding of MZ Capital Management. Mr. Zhuang has traveled the world and spent countless hours researching, studying, and practicing his love of musical improv. In 2017, he began sponsoring up-and-coming talent from the improv-comedy meccas of New York City and Chicago to perform locally, with the goal to embed musical improv into the fabric of Bethesda’s growing arts and entertainment culture.

    “My vision is to see Bethesda’s performing arts scene flourish,” said Zhuang.

    Through his wealth management firm, he creates opportunities for emerging artists to showcase their talent to a broader audience and take a slice of Bethesda back with them to their cities. Tara and Rance is the second performance group from outside the DC metro area that he’s invited to perform locally. He sponsored the hip-hop improv group North Coast with a three-show run last year.

    When he saw Tara and Rance perform more than a year ago, he knew then that he wanted to find a way to bring them to Bethesda. “I was blown away by their beautiful voices and ability to bring characters to life.”

    Tara and Rance will perform HERE Friday, January 19, 2018, at 8:00 p.m. at Imagination Stage – 4908 Auburn Avenue, Bethesda, MD, 20814. For tickets, purchase them online.

  • Review: ‘Mamma Mia!’ at Riverside Center for the Performing Arts

    Review: ‘Mamma Mia!’ at Riverside Center for the Performing Arts

    Riverside Center for the Performing Arts presents  Mamma Mia!, with music and lyrics by Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus and book by Catherine Johnson, with some songs by Stig Andersson. Riverside Center is the first theater in the metropolitan area to be granted the rights to present this worldwide hit musical, and with their Broadway-quality productions, I couldn’t think of a better-deserved venue to handle its regional debut. Based on the hit songs written by ABBA, this fun-loving production is a must-see for musical lovers.

    Betsy Padamonsky as Donna. Photo courtesy of Riverside Performing Art Center.

    As always, the technical elements are reliably top-notch. Penny Ayn Maas directs and choreographs this production, with musical direction by Carson Eubank, who leads an impressive live orchestra. Sound designer and engineer Bethany Galyen ensures that the live music and vocals don’t overwhelm or cancel out each other (a tall order, and one I’ve seen a lot of venues struggle with). Scenic designer DT Willis uses painted backdrops and large mobile set pieces turn the stage into an idyllic Mediterranean taverna, and Michael Jarett sets the scene as lighting designer, matching the musical’s enthusiastic tone cue-to-cue. Costume designer Winfield Murdock has a lot of fun with her pieces, and her quirky, creative 70’s-inspired outfits get a lot of laughs and cheers from the crowd.

    It’s the eve of young Sophie’s (Makenzie Mercer Pusey) wedding, and unbeknownst to her harried mother, she has invited three unfamiliar men to the event–one of which is her father. Sophie is determined to find and meet her birth father before her wedding after she learns their names from her mother’s old diary, shown in the bubbly number “Honey, Honey.” One can only imagine how much chaos can come from this choice–which it does, and then some! While the plot can seem fanciful, it’s also fun, which is what this show is all about. This is not a show that you go to for a poignant, thought-provoking experience. However, if you’re looking to let loose with lively song-and-dance numbers and a lot of humor and heart, then this is where you need to be.

    The cast, overall, does a great job with the material. Betsy Padamonsky is a perfect fit for the role of Donna Sheridan and shows a mighty vocal range, particularly in her number “The Winner Takes It All.” Grey Garrett and Andrea Kahane get most of the laughs as Donna’s friends Tanya and Rosie. They share the fun, familiar back-and-forth of old friends, and both women really lean into physical humor, which the audience appreciates. The ladies’ highly anticipated number “Dancing Queen” was a fun, nostalgic highlight of the show. Kevin Perry, Gabe Belyeu, and Alan Hoffman lend their talents as the three prospective fathers Sam, Billy, and Harry. The actors all do a fine job in making their characters distinctive, both through mannerisms and accents. Together with Donna, their catchy number “Mamma Mia” (obviously) received eager applause. Andrea Kahane and Gabe Belyeu’s hilarious and hearty duet “Take a Chance on Me” stole the show as the audience favorite.

    However, my favorite numbers of the show were the ones that included the entire ensemble. Their energy was tangible and ranged from wild and cheeky to polished and poised. In “Lay All Your Love on Me,” the younger boys danced around in large rubber flippers, then pulled off difficult acrobatic stunts in “Does Your Mother Know?” Great team choreography is seen throughout the show, particularly with “Voulez Vous” and “I Do, I Do, I Do.” The joyful atmosphere here is contagious, and everyone left with giant grins.

    Riverside Center for the Performing Arts’  Mamma Mia! comes at a welcome time. In the anxious, uncertain nature of our current everyday lives, Riverside offers a refreshing reprieve. Let yourself have some fun and take in a showing while you can.

    Running Time: Two and a half hours, with one 15-minute intermission.

    Mamma Mia! plays through March 4, 2018, at Riverside Center for the Performing Arts — 95 Riverside Parkway in Fredericksburg, VA. For tickets, call (540) 370-4300 or order them online.

  • Review: ‘Morning’s at Seven’ at People’s Light

    Review: ‘Morning’s at Seven’ at People’s Light

    Morning’s at Seven fits the definition of “quaint.” With its elderly characters and its winsome setting – a Midwestern town in the 1930s, where everybody knows each other’s problems a little too well – Paul Osborn’s genial 1939 comedy is practically a Norman Rockwell painting come to life.

    Marcia Saunders, Peter DeLaurier, Teri Lamm, Pete Pryor, Janis Dardaris, Stephen Novelli, Alda Cortese, Carla Belver, and Graham Smith. Photo by Mark Garvin.
    Marcia Saunders, Peter DeLaurier, Teri Lamm, Pete Pryor, Janis Dardaris, Stephen Novelli, Alda Cortese, Carla Belver, and Graham Smith. Photo by Mark Garvin.

    But look closer at those houses onstage at People’s Light. The paint is scratched and peeling, worn from decades of neglect. Sure, the houses are nice to look at, but they’ve seen better days. The same might be said for the people living inside those houses, who are chafing at decades of constraint, starting to wonder if there’s more to life than what they’ve been settling for all these years. They’re starting to wonder if they deserve more.

    Morning’s at Seven has plenty of laughs, but in director Abigail Adams’ enchanting production, it’s the quiet moments that resonate the most. And it’s the balance between comedy and heartbreak that makes this production work so well.

    Osborn’s play follows the lives of four sisters, all now in their sixties or seventies. The house on the left is the home of sister Cora and her husband Theodore (Marcia Saunders and Peter DeLaurier), plus her sister Aaronetta (Janis Dardaris), who moved in “temporarily” four decades ago and never left. The house on the right is the home of sister Ida and her husband Carl (Alda Cortese and Stephen Novelli), plus their 40-year-old son Homer (Pete Pryor).

    Homer has been dating a woman for twelve years – and engaged to her for seven – yet nobody in his family has ever met her. (“Well, Homer’s shy,” says his uncle Theodore. “He can’t be rushed into anything.”) Now Homer has finally brought his fiancée Myrtle (Teri Lamm) – you just knew there’d be a character named Myrtle in a show like this, didn’t you? – home to meet everybody.

    And then there’s sister Esther (Carla Belver), who lives down the street with her husband David (Graham Smith), an arrogant academic who considers his wife’s family “morons.” She’s weary of her husband’s condescension and obstinacy. Meanwhile, Cora is tired of having to house Aaronetta, Carl is mourning his lost chances, and Homer is torn between his obligations to his mother and his fiancée. And so on. They’re all teeming with insecurities and quirks and complaints – yet the more they complain, the more charming they seem to get.

    The ensemble cast works together beautifully, though on opening night a few of the actors had a hard time keeping the characters’ names straight. Dardaris and Saunders are the standouts, bitterly opposed to each other yet both wholly sympathetic. Belver and Cortese score too, as women trying hard to cope with the change all around them. DeLaurier, Novelli and Smith add nice touches, although their characters have less depth than the women.

    The biggest laughs come from Pryor and Lamm as the young – well, younger – couple. Pryor is dripping with anxiety as the gutless Homer, while Lamm bubbles with nervous energy in her fumbled, insincere protestations of happiness. Her kooky vitality provides just the right contrast to the more sedate figures surrounding her.

    Luke Cantarella’s finely detailed set design, Christopher Colucci’s sound design (with snippets of popular songs of the era) and Marla Jurglanis’ vintage-style costumes set the right nostalgic atmosphere, while Dennis Parichy’s lighting gives everything the proper rosy glow.

    Peter DeLaurier, Marcia Saunders, and Janis Dardaris. Photo by Mark Garvin.
    Peter DeLaurier, Marcia Saunders, and Janis Dardaris. Photo by Mark Garvin.

    There’s nothing flashy about Adams’ production; its gentle tone wins you over as much as the funny lines. It’s utterly delightful.

    Running Time: Two hours and 20 minutes, including an intermission.

    Morning’s at Seven plays through Sunday, February 4, 2018, at the Steinbright Stage at People’s Light – 39 Conestoga Road, in Malvern, PA. For tickets, call (610) 644-3500, or purchase them online.

  • Review: ‘The Way of the World’ at Folger Theatre (Women’s Voices Theater Festival)

    Review: ‘The Way of the World’ at Folger Theatre (Women’s Voices Theater Festival)

    The Way of the World, a deft satire of the mating habits and financial vicissitudes of the 1%, arrived at the Folger Theatre last night. It was a hilarious evening. Theresa Rebeck’s comedy, very loosely based on William Congreve’s The Way of the World, reminds us that bad behavior, in Restoration England or 2018 New York, can be fascinating, gasp-inducing, and very, very funny. Rebeck, a prolific writer for theater, film, and television, was named one of the 150 Fearless Women of the World by Newsweek magazine. What better choice to celebrate Women’s Voices?

    Kristine Nielsen and Eliza Huberth in The Way of the World. Photo by Teresa Wood.

    The setting is the Hamptons, the playground of the 1%. As the play opens, Reg (Elan Zafir) and Charles (Brandon Espinoza) are razzing their buddy Henry (Luigi Sottile) for alienating Mae, his onetime love interest, who has beauty, an altruistic disposition, and incidentally a $600-million-dollar inheritance. Mae has never recovered from the shock and disappointment of learning that Henry slept with her Aunt Rene (Kristine Nielsen), a flamboyant, Auntie-Mame like older woman, who is for all intents and purposes Mae’s mother.

    Kristine Nielsen’s Aunt Rene is an astonishingly original creation, a combination of high spirits, rage, and good old feminine resourcefulness. I half expected her to burst into song like Ethel Merman any minute, and start belting out “You Can’t Get a Man with a Gun.” The Machiavellian brilliance of Rene, which is revealed gradually throughout the evening, is a refreshing take on Congreve’s Lady Wishfort, who spends most of her time trying to entrap uninterested men and watching her makeup flake off.

    Rebeck also transforms Millamant, here introduced as Mae. In Congreve’s work, Millamant is witty and assertive but never engages with the larger issues of her society. Rebeck’s Mae wants to give away all her money and help the people of Haiti, which makes her easily the most sympathetic person onstage. She receives little or no encouragement for her plan, but as Eliza Huberth enacts her, is a touchingly honest and thoughtful creature.

    Mae’s principal foil is Katrina (Erica Dorfler) who embodies the hard-edged approach to life favored by most of her friends. Dorfler captures every nuance of the role, from her let-them-eat-cake approach to the waitress to her mean-girl indignation when Henry fails to call after they spend the night together.

    Henry is a womanizer, but he is presented as sincerely in love with Mae. Sotille’s Henry successfully embodies these contradictions. He is a man at war with himself, even as he attempts to win Mae back. His friend Charles (Brandon Espinoza) is totally down with the Hamptons gossip and infighting, although he has some deeper longings of his own. Espinoza adroitly highlights Charles’ fierce determination to remain part of the scene, no matter how much it costs him.
    Henry’s other friend Reg, as played by Elan Zafir, has a kind of good-old-boy bonhomie which makes some of his retrograde remarks much more palatable. He displays surprising growth, and Zafir portrays his evolution with enthusiasm. Of course, as is to be expected, that new maturity has its limitations.

    Henry deploys Lyle (Daniel Morgan Shelley) who is just in from Nantucket, to keep Rene busy so he can be alone with Mae. Lyle, unlike the others, is a gracious fellow, and, like the outsider Sir Willful in Congreve’s play, is morally one cut above his surroundings. He is especially fine in his scenes with Rene, as he attempts to be gentlemanly in an awkward situation.

    Luigi Sottile and Eliza Huberth. Photo by Teresa Wood.

    The Waitress (Ashley Austin Morris) is the only “regular person” we get to know. At first, overawed by the glamor and money all around her, she gradually becomes disenchanted and ends up making a mistake that renders her vulnerable to Henry’s manipulations. I was reminded of my own visit to Naples, Florida a few years ago. There, a housekeeper told me in whispers, “The rich people live here now. The rest of us had to move out of the city. We can’t afford it.” As Rebeck says in her Playwright & Director notes: “The wealth gap in America is becoming so wide that we are losing sight of how to relate to each other in meaningful ways.”

    Congreve’s The Way of the World opened in 1700, towards the end of the dominance of Restoration drama in England. The commoditization of love, the emphasis on material wealth, and the shallow pursuit of fashionable people and things was in full force at that time. “Restoration” alludes to the fact that in 1660 Charles II was restored to the throne after years of exile. After over a decade of Puritanism (and no theater), England became a much more tolerant, fun-loving place. Charles, known as “the Merry Monarch” not only brought back the theater, but championed the introduction of women to the stage. He married the quiet, complaisant Catherine of Braganza, but was unable to produce a child with her. He had illegitimate offspring by many mistresses.

    One of his most famous was Nell Gwyn, an illiterate orange seller who became the most celebrated comic actress of her time. Nell is especially remembered for one incident, which captures the mood of the Restoration. One day, as Nell was passing through the streets of Oxford in her carriage, the mob mistook her for her rival, Louise de Kérouaille, the Catholic Duchess of Portsmouth. The crowd began hooting and hurling epithets. Putting her head out of the coach window, she addressed her tormentors. “Good people”, she said, “You are mistaken; I am the Protestant whore.”

    Charles, although he shared our current president’s womanizing ways, was far more likable. It is well known that during the Great Fire of London, Charles joined the firefighters himself, displaying great courage. As he lay dying, he gave thought to some of his former loves. “Let not poor Nelly starve,” he is reported to have said.

    Luigi Sottile and Brandon Espinoza. Photo by Teresa Wood.

    Although Charles was dead by the time The Way of the World opened, the spirit of the Restoration was still very much alive. In modernizing the script, Rebeck has excised some characters and changed the relationship between the leading couple considerably. Restoration drama features the convention of the “gay couple” who exchange witticisms as they travel the rocky road to love. The male was usually a rake, and the female was usually trying to maneuver him into marriage. There was a certain mystery to their courtship, which lent it elegance and romanticism. It’s hard to imagine such a pair today, when we all suffer from a surfeit of information.

    Unlike Mirabell in Congreve’s classic, Henry repeatedly lets himself and others down, while still proclaiming his love for Mae. The scene in which they come to terms (or not) is one of the most compelling of the evening. This is 2018’s battle of the sexes, and Rebeck is as always true to the integrity of her characters.

    The performances are first-rate, and the creative team full of innovative ideas. The set (Scenic Design is by Alexander Dodge) is largely white (very New York) and in a backdrop of white boxes we see a number of items; a purse, a necklace, drinks, even hats. This underlines the obsession with things which is at the heart of the production. Lighting, equally skilled, is by Donald Holder, a Helen Hayes nominee for Salome last year. Sound design (M.L. Dogg) includes some well-chosen contemporary hits. The costumes, by Linda Cho, are full of color and variety, and not at all naturalistic. Perhaps this is to emphasize the fable-like aspects of the story.

    Theresa Rebeck is one of those rare playwrights who can direct her own work successfully. With The Way of the World, she brings us a riotously entertaining evening.

    Running Time: Two hours, with one 15-minute intermission.

    The Way of the World plays through February 11, 2018, at Folger Theatre – 201 East Capitol Street, SE, in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 544-7077, or purchase them online.

    Way of the World

    Theresa Rebeck (Playwright and Director)
    Theresa Rebeck is best known for her plays Seminar and Mauritius, which both premiered on Broadway, as well as Spike Heels, Bad Dates and Omnium Gatherum, and her TV show Smash. Upcoming projects the world premiere of Downstairs, starring Tyne and Tim Daly. Theresa and composer Josh Schmidt are adapting the film Dance, Girl, Dance, as a stage musical, and she has created a stage adaptation of the fable Stone Soup with John Weidman. Theresa adapted and directed the film version of Poor Behavior and directed her original screenplay for Trouble, starring Anjelica Huston and Bill Pullman. Other films include Harriet the Spy, Gossip, Sunday on the Rocks and Seducing Charlie Barker, an adaptation of her play, The Scene.

  • Review: ‘Love is a Blue Tick Hound’ at Rapid Lemon Productions (Women’s Voices Theater Festival)

    Review: ‘Love is a Blue Tick Hound’ at Rapid Lemon Productions (Women’s Voices Theater Festival)

    No garden gnomes were injured in the writing of this review

    As part of the 2018 Women’s Voices Theater Festival, Rapid Lemon Productions is presenting the regional premiere of Love is a Blue Tick Hound, a collection of four award-winning 20-minute plays by Audrey Cefaly. The bifurcated run is playing in Baltimore through January 21 before moving to Washington DC for a two-weekend run in February. In his curtain speech, Rapid Lemon’s new artistic director –  theatrical polymath Lance Bankerd – noted that all four of the plays are directed by women who have not previously directed in Baltimore. The production provides an auspicious start to Baltimore’s participation in the DC-based Women’s Voices festival.

    Lauren Erica Jackson and Carolyn Koch. Photo by Rapid Lemon Productions.

    The first of the four plays, Fin and Euba, reminds me that the author, Audrey Cefaly, self-identifies as a “southern playwright.” Though it addresses arguably the biggest crisis of the human experience – the existential search for meaning, fraught with its attendant hopes and fears – this isn’t a Big Crisis southern play like Cat on a Hot Tin Roof or A Streetcar Named Desire. It’s small. Intimate. Understated. The pacing reminds me of summer trips to the South Carolina low country, sitting on the porch swing with an icy glass of sweet tea, languidly staring out at the ocean. Director Donna Ibale elicits fine performances from Carolyn Koch, as Fin, and Lauren Erica Jackson, as Euba. Sneaking a beer and a smoke behind the water’s-edge boarding house where they both room, the BFFs clash about whether the costs of escaping the familiar cage of their small-town, factory job world outweigh the potential rewards of going out into the unknown world at large.

    Betse Lyons and Justin Johnson. Photo by Rapid Lemon Productions.

    Lee Conderacci directs the next play, which is probably my favorite of the evening. An eye-opening conversation between two long-term restaurant workers, Clean continues the throughline of the quartet of one-acts: the tension between settling for the unfulfilling (and often self-imposed) prison of circumstance and striking out beyond our comfort zones in search of a life of greater purpose and (potentially) inner peace. Actors Betse Lyons, as world-weary server Lina and Justin Johnson, as optimistic dishwasher Roberto, have great onstage chemistry in this charming two-hander.

    Donna Ibale and Aladrian Crowder Wetzel. Photo by Rapid Lemon Productions.

    After a brief intermission, Betse Lyons goes from the stage to the director’s chair for The Gulf. Taking place entirely on a fishing boat, the third play in the Cefaly mini-marathon focuses on yet another pair of seemingly mismatched cohorts. Donna Ibale plays tough-talking Kendra who listens incredulously to her tenderhearted partner, Betty, sweetly portrayed by Aladrian C Wetzel. Betty, too squeamish to catch and clean fish, reads to Kendra from career self-help book What Color is Your Parachute? and makes numerous suggestions about potential career paths Kendra may follow. The dynamic between the two is similar to that of the women in Fin and Euba – one is anxious to embrace an unknown future in a new place and one is not sufficiently motivated to try for a better life. Drama ensues.

    Mike Smith and Lee Conderacci. Photo by Rapid Lemon Productions.

    The final offering in the series caps the evening on a high note. Easily the funniest and most upbeat of the plays, Stuck features Lee Conderacci as Maggie and Mike Smith as Bob – a couple on their first “real date” after meeting through a dating app and having a brief coffee meeting to check each other out. Hijinx abound as the pair, desperate to take themselves out of the dating pool, go to greater and greater lengths to impress each other. Conderacci’s Maggie is over-the-top, Overly Attached Girlfriend material as she excitedly entertains her suitor. Smith’s comic timing and physical reactions are spot-on, making Bob the source of huge laughs to end out the evening.

    The entire design team did a great job converting Theatre Project’s stage into distinct locations for each of the four plays. A couple are particularly noteworthy. Max Garner’s scene-setting soundscape, which layered multiple ambient sounds to create a rich aural tapestry, was particularly on point for Fin and Euba – the ocean waves, crickets, evening birds and more were presented in a subtle enough way to suggest all the elements of the environment without tripping over the easily-crossed line into “we get it, there are birds!” country. And Scenic Designer Reese Siedlecki created complex, movable set pieces that allowed the ensemble to quickly change from one world to another without sacrificing the little details that make a set realistic.

    The plays were a little inconsistent with how they landed with me, but all were well-conceived and well-executed, as one would expect from a Rapid Lemon production. Baltimoreans, make your way to midtown for this sampler of Audrey Cefaly duets; it’s a tasting menu of smart, funny, and thought-provoking theater, all in a one-stop shop at Baltimore Theatre Project. But do it this coming weekend or you’re going to have to drive to DC for it.

    Running Time: Two hours, with one intermission.

    Love is a Blue Tick Hound plays through Sunday, January 21, 2018 at Baltimore Theatre Project – 45 West Preston Street, in Baltimore, MD. For tickets, call the box office at (410) 752-8558, or purchase them online.

    Love is a Blue Tick Hound will subsequently play from February 9-17, 2018 at Logan Fringe Arts Space: Trinidad Theatre – 1358 Florida Avenue NE, in Washington, DC. For tickets to the DC performances, purchase them online here.

    Blue Tick Hound

  • Review: ‘The Skin of Our Teeth’ at Constellation Theatre Company

    Review: ‘The Skin of Our Teeth’ at Constellation Theatre Company

    Thornton Wilder’s allegorical paean to humanity’s survival “by the skin of our teeth” has itself become a marvel of endurance. First staged in 1942, when times were decidedly dire, the determinedly optimistic The Skin of Our Teeth was a Pulitzer Prize-winning hit on Broadway and has been steadily produced ever since.

    It’s a wackadoodle play, a kitchen sink of metatheatrical tricks. The actors break character and stop then restart the play, the chronology spans eons in three acts, comic bits accumulate with non-sequiturial chutzpah. Truth to tell, Wilder’s dramaturgical unorthodoxy has been matched if not surpassed by many of the very experimental playwrights he inspired. Yet this unclassifiable comedy-drama sticks around, an artifact from the past and a perennial audience pleaser—because crazily enough it’s got something to say that still needs hearing.

    Wilder believed the play “mostly comes alive under times of crisis.” And indeed, given the cynical mess in our government and the creeping cynicism that has ensued, the fresh and feisty version of The Skin of Our Teeth that comes alive in Constellation Theatre Company’s production proves Wilder’s point perfectly.

    Malinda Kathleen Reese (Gladys), Steven Carpenter (Mr. Antrobus), Lolita Marie (Mrs. Antrobus), and Dallas Tolentino (Henry) in The Skin of Our Teeth. Photo by Daniel Schwartz.

    The basic plot is by any measure screwy. A certain George and Maggie Antrobus (Steven Carpenter and Lolita Marie)—stand-ins for the human race—have been married for 5,000 years. They live simultaneously in 1942 Excelsior, New Jersey, and in time immemorial. Which means that a radio broadcaster can announce news of the day even as George invents the wheel and a pet dino and woolly mammoth wander in.

    Mr. and Mrs. Antrobus have two upstart teenagers—a daughter, Gladys (Malinda Kathleen Reese), and a son, Henry (Dallas Tolentino)—and an outspoken maid, Sabina (Tonya Beckman). A gritty if offbeat family, the Antrobuses survive before our eyes the Ice Age (in Act One), a global flood (in Act Two), and a devastating war (in Act Three). The upbeat ending celebrates humanity’s resilience and ability to make new beginnings.

    The fun is in the fast-paced farcical crises that beset this tenacious family, and Director Mary Hall Surface keeps up a winning momentum. Some of Wilder’s laugh lines land more mildly today than they surely did in 1942, yet a few are surprisingly contemporary zingers. And overall there’s an energetic pleasantness and cheerful inventiveness to the performances that well sustains the show’s two and a half hours.

    Tonya Beckman (Sabina) and Lilian Oben (Fortune Teller) in The Skin of Our Teeth. Photo by Daniel Schwartz.

    In particular, Lolita Marie plays Mrs. Antrobus with a persuasive gravitas that consistently grounds the play, and Tonya Beckman brings to Sabina a sassy sashay that brightens each scene she’s in.

    Also noteworthy in the big cast are Gerrad Alex Taylor (Telegraph Boy/Interviewer/Ensemble), Collin Connor (Frederick/Fred Bailey/Ensemble), Ben Lauer (Dolly/Broadcast Official/Ensemble), Billie Krishawn (Stage Manager/Ensemble), Lilian Oben (Fortune Teller/Ensemble), Mary Miller-Booker (Broadcast Official/Hester/Ensemble), Christopher Gillespie (Mr. Tremayne/Ensemble), and Natalie Cutcher (Ivy/Ensemble).

    The set by Scenic Designer A.J. Guban (who also did the lighting) is particularly clever. Inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright—with geometric earth tones on the floor, stacked-flagstone walls, mission furnishings—it winks at the fact that several of the great architect’s most famous houses have not withstood time well.

    Malinda Kathleen Reese (Gladys) in The Skin of Our Teeth. Photo by Daniel Schwartz.

    Costume Designer Frank Labovitz walks a fine funny line between couture and cartoon, especially in the colorful second-act scene on the Atlantic City Boardwalk (where we meet a flamboyant Fortune Teller who knows both future and past). Sound Designer Justin Schmitz besides providing some delightful 1940s music tracks also makes scenes of nearby disaster a chest-pounding experience. And Puppet Designer Matthew Aldwin McGee’s antediluvian critters are cute as buttons.

    The Skin of Our Teeth is a perfect pick-me-up for imperfect times. The play has been around and will likely be around longer, since its significance shelf life syncs with that of the human race. But hats off to Constellation Theatre Company for reminding us that despite current crises, we all have an important part to play in continuing what has to “go on and on for ages yet.”

    Running Time: Two hours 30 minutes, including a single intermission between Acts One and Two.

    The Skin of Our Teeth plays through February 11, 2018, at Constellation Theatre Company performing at Source Theatre – 1835 14th Street North West, in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 204-7741, or purchase them online.

  • ‘Women’s Voices Theater Festival’ and ‘Winterfest’ Present New Works in NYC from January through March

    ‘Women’s Voices Theater Festival’ and ‘Winterfest’ Present New Works in NYC from January through March

    New York City is ringing in the New Year with a full slate of new works presented in January, February, and March, including a one-day event with the Dramatists Guild Foundation in support of the Women’s Voices Theater Festival, and two months of offerings at the New York Theater Festival’s Winterfest. I had the opportunity to speak with a participant from each – writer/performer Ariana Johns and actor Scott Brieden – to cast a spotlight on their upcoming shows and to discuss the value of the festivals for artists, producers, and audiences.

    In response to the call of the Washington, DC-based National New Play Network for organizations across the country to participate in its second WVTF, the Dramatists Guild Foundation will celebrate plays being written by women in a full day of readings on January 20. Invited by Program Manager Tessa Raden, who curated the program in New York, three female writers – Lisa DeSpain, Christine Toy Johnson, and Johns – will present a selection of their works at 3:00, 5:00, and 7:00 PM, in the DGF’s Music Hall. The event, which includes light refreshments, is open to the public; it will also be live-streamed on the organization’s Facebook page.

    Among the 70 minutes of offerings by Johns (whose company Vampingo Productions focuses on helping and raising awareness for the environment through music, comedy, and grass-roots activism) are an original prose piece and highlights from her musical works with composer Darryl Curry. Those include excerpts from BUZZ, Son of a Bee, which follows the journey of eight musical theater artists inspired by a heroic bee; and the first reading of Act I of their latest work-in-progress A Stroll with Troll, a tale about balancing modern technology and virtual reality with elemental magic, nature, and spirit. Along with Johns and Curry, the cast features Ethan Hardy, Zoe Reed Helm, Evangeline Johns, Erik Jareth Ransom, Sierra Rein, and Francesca Shipsey.

    Darryl Curry and Ariana Johns. Photo by Bill Lynch.
    Darryl Curry and Ariana Johns. Photo by Bill Lynch.

    With its Winterfest, the New York Theater Festival, in addition to providing visibility for a range of new Short, One-Act, and Full-Length works, also offers cash prizes for Best Play, Actor and Actress, Director, Singer, Stage Manager, and Set Design. For this year’s festival, Brieden will appear in the short new Western Come & Take It by Annie R. Such. Set in Texas, it tells the story of the fictional Bailey Brothers (Jefferson, portrayed by Brieden, and Austin, played by Michael Coppola), who, faced with the loss of their ranch and the omnipresent spirit of their late alcoholic father, must come together to save the future of their family. The work, with a running time of under 20 minutes, will be presented February 1-4, at the Hudson Guild Theater, along with three other short plays (When the Doorbell Rings by Krista Piccotti; Tea Time by Kate McLeod; and Dog Girl by Megan Pinto), for one single admission price.

    Brieden became involved in Winterfest when Such told him she was submitting her piece to the 2018 festival, after having worked with her, about five years ago, on its early development. “I had a very personal connection with the character of Jefferson, resentful of his upbringing and determined to make more of his life,” he explains. “It’s not every day that you are handed a character so nuanced and emotionally challenging. I am very excited to dive back into it, now that I have more life experience under my belt, and to share it with audiences.” And while he acknowledges that cash awards are always an encouraging factor for participants, Brieden especially appreciates “that Winterfest is giving new artists and playwrights an opportunity to have their original plays seen and produced.”

    Scott Brieden. Photo by Michael Cinquino.
    Scott Brieden. Photo by Michael Cinquino.

    Johns is equally enthusiastic about her participation in the WVTF. “I’m looking forward to sharing my work and to being included this amazing festival of female writers and theater-makers. It’s empowering and gratifying to be a part of such a prestigious community, and to bring more attention to female playwrights,” she says. “By showcasing both new and established female writers, it gives audiences a taste of the variety and diverse creativity that women bring to the table. And having a forum to share my words and vision both in NYC and beyond, via live-stream, is a wonderful opportunity.”

    Ariana Johns. Photo by Eric Bandiero.
    Ariana Johns. Photo by Eric Bandiero.

    Women’s Voices Theater Festival plays Saturday, January 20, 2018, performing at the Music Hall at the Dramatists Guild Foundation – 356 West 40th Street, 2nd floor, NYC. For free admission to Ariana Johns’ presentation at 7 PM, RSVP to vampingo9@gmail.com.

    Come & Take It plays February 1-4, 2018, at Winterfest, performing at the Hudson Guild Theater – 441 West 26th Street, NYC. For tickets, call (800) 838-3006, or purchase them online.

  • Magic Time!: ‘Guilt’ at Scena Theatre

    Magic Time!: ‘Guilt’ at Scena Theatre

    Sex and guilt were linked in superstition before institutional Christianity came on the scene, but thanks to the medieval Catholic Church they got hooked up with theology too. It was in the runup to the church’s crackpot Inquisition that three senses of the word possession—as carnal, religious, and demonic—got all mushed together. And western civilization has not since quite got them sorted.

    This approximately is the historical and contemporary backdrop for John Shand’s Guilt, a dazzlingly literary play in verse based on the true story of Urbain Grandier, a womanizing 17th-century French Catholic priest who was burned at the stake for sorcery.

    Now having its world premiere in a penetrating Scena Theatre production directed by Artistic Director Robert McNamara, Guilt is rich with scintillating ideas and alive with vivid language. According to the author, Guilt “explores the overlays and collisions between sexual and spiritual rapture: how one might fuel the other, and how one might be misconstrued as the other.” The work also functions as an epic morality play about misplaced guilt, “reckoning” overreaction, and mistaken retribution.

    Oscar Ceville (Grandier) and Danielle Davy (Brigitte) in Guilt. Photo by Jae Yi Photography.

    Subtitled “an opera without music,” Shand’s script is rife with poetic arias that fuse ecstasy, eroticism, and doctrine. And sometimes flat-out lechery, as when we meet the vain Grandier (Oscar Ceville) admiring himself in a mirror:

    Grandier: What purpose lay in lavishing such looks
    as might threaten one’s humility,
    if not to snare the weaker sex?
    And, after all, by bedding them, do I
    not let them touch the very ladder to our Lord?
    So in a sense my seed anoints:
    a sort of sacrament.

    The local Magistrate De Brou (Ron Litman) brings his lovely 18-year-old daughter Brigitte (Danielle Davy) to Grandier for innocent lute lessons. Left alone with her, Grandier sets about seducing her.

    Meanwhile, he preaches a sermon extolling chastity in the unwed. Upon hearing his overheated homily, Jeanne (Nanna Ingvarsson), a sexually frustrated hunchbacked prioress, delivers a hilarious lyrical aside about her own prurient interest in him.

    Jeanne: I could eat his voice, and chew on every word;
    eat his voice and devour his lips;
    roll his voice around in my mouth,
    roll it around with my tongue;
    chew every word a hundred times…

    The historical Grandier was a propagandist against clerical celibacy, which pissed off the ecclesiastical power structure, and Guilt touches on some of his arguments. But the character is presented more as horndog than polemicist. And Brigitte his virgin conquest is depicted as quite coyly willing. Not yet having declared herself desirous of him, Brigitte delivers a passage purple with passion to Grandier in the confessional booth:

    Brigitte: I’ve gazed upon a man – a passer-by, no more –
    my eyes keen blades of lust;
    I’ve felt his fingers in my hair
    as he whispers words of love.
    His fiery breath has kissed my ear,
    as his arms, like rings of molten steel,
    encircled and entrapped me.
    I’ve lain sleepless through the nights,
    the bed drenched in my sweat
    as the ghost of his mouth –
    as real as sin – found out my own,
    and convulsed me with desire.
    I’ve felt myself melt when exposed
    to the furnace of his perfect mind.
    I’ve seen myself harbour him
    Amid his storms of passion.
    I have wept at the glimpse of ecstasy;
    I have ached with such longing for his lips –

    Grandier: Yes, I think I get the gist.

    Brigitte alludes of course to Grandier, he happily gets the hint—and there follows a classic scene of coital disappointment.

    Brigitte: Is that all?
    Pain, tears and violent violation
    from a man who sheds abruptly
    all wisdom, knowledge, beauty,
    to become a heaving mass?

    A few months later Brigitte lets Grandier know she’s pregnant, and he reacts like a misogynist dickhead.

    Grandier: Wretched girl. She has ever been a trial….
    And now, to be with child! The slut!
    I’ve been abused at every turn.

    Brigitte’s father, De Brou, browbeats her too.

    De Brou: You stupid girl! You hussy! How dare you shame me in this way!

    Topping things off, the unchivalrous Grandier, confronted by De Brou, totally denies having had sex with Brigitte.

    Grandier: It was not I, but a great black dog that tupped her.

    Ron Litman (De Brou), Oscar Ceville (Grandier), and Nanna Ingvarsson (Jeanne) in Guilt. Photo by Jae Yi Photography.

    Let us pause to take stock of where guilt might fairly and accurately be apportioned at this point. Perhaps the Church bears some, for enforcing celibacy on priests (presumably so there will be no heirs to its earthly treasures). But realistically, seen from the point of view of any audience member even dimly aware of how patriarchy operates, Grandier and DeBrou are due for a load of guilt by the ton.

    All of which makes the plot twists that follow both fascinating and effed up.

    Jeanne, still carrying a torch for Grandier—who, we learn, “has defiled half the women in the town”—schemes to recruit him as confessor in her priory, but he scoffs at her offer. Outraged by his “oceanic arrogance” and bestirred by revenge, Jeanne declares, “If I can’t have him no one shall.”

    Under increasing scrutiny for being “the man who preached ‘Be chaste’ while fucking women left and right,” Grandier goes grandiose:

    Grandier: Though hordes of De Brous
    seek to bring me down,
    they’ll not succeed without the Church;
    and the Church will never see besmirched
    its own good name.

    Grandier got that wrong though. The powers of the church come down upon him hard, first in the guise of a Jesuit exorcist, Surin (John Geoffrion), who reframes Grandier’s offense as witchcraft requiring a public exorcism. As he tells Jeanne and Brigitte,

    Surin: Grandier is a sorcerer, and you are all under his spell. Under his spell he has seen fit to have you possessed by devils. Devils!

    Grandier is imprisoned and tortured. Brigitte and Jeanne are put through excruciating exorcisms.  And steadily the play’s framing of Grandier shifts such that he becomes its centrally sympathetic character: “Surely I’ve done nothing so wrong to warrant this?” he pleads.

    Surin will have none of it:

    Surin: His trial must be a lesson to the world that we shall win this war against a foe that would destroy our God, our faith, our way of life. His death must give the people hope that we’ll prevail, while sowing the fear of God within their hearts of what befalls any who transgress.

    Oscar Ceville, Nanna Ingvarsson, John Geoffrion (Surin), Danielle Davy, Ron Litman in Guilt. Photo by Jae Yi Photography.

    Before Grandier is gruesomely burned alive, he mansplains an exoneration of himself:

    Grandier: What if I did no more than lavish love where there was need?…
    If I am guilty of any sin, it is the sin of love. Of loving too deeply the fairer sex. Of longing to satisfy their longings. Besides, the fault was not all mine. Often these women flung themselves at me, unable to contain their desires. Who could say “No!” when they threw off their clothes? Who could say “no” to their hungry tongues and honeyed thighs?

    And Brigitte has a dramatic change of heart.

    Brigitte: Until I saw the flames I thought –
    I thought I hated him enough
    to want to watch him die.
    But hate melted to a swirling pool
    of pity shored with desolation,
    aching and throbbing, aching and throbbing
    in my ears and in my breast;
    tearing and tearing and tearing at me
    with the thought I’ve killed the man I loved.
    I have helped to fuel
    the fire with an innocent man.

    Danielle Davy (Brigitte) and Nanna Ingvarsson (Jeanne) in Guilt. Photo by Jae Yi Photography.

    The play wants to sweep us into recognition that in the end Brigitte, as she tells us, is guilty too. Like a #MeToo victim with accuser’s remorse. This dramatic twist requires audience amnesia about how Grandier treated Brigitte earlier in the play when in classic blame-the-victim mode he rejects her as a slut for getting pregnant by him. For me that was too much a stretch, and I left the theater far more impressed with the playwright’s powers of poetic expression than with his powers of moral discernment.

    Running time: Two hours and 15 minutes with one 10-minute intermission.

    Guilt plays through February 4, 2018, at Scena Theatre performing at Atlas Performing Arts Center – 1333 H Street, NE, in Washington, DC. 20002, For tickets, buy them at the door or purchase them online.

    LINK: Review: ‘Guilt, an opera without music’ at Scena Theatre by David Siegel

  • Erika Rose Lights Up the Stage in ‘Queens Girl in Africa’ (Women’s Voices Theater Festival)

    Erika Rose Lights Up the Stage in ‘Queens Girl in Africa’ (Women’s Voices Theater Festival)

    It’s no coincidence that Queens Girl in AfricaCaleen Sinnette Jennings’ semi-autobiographical one-woman play now at Mosaic Theater Company of DC—was chosen to kick off the Women’s Voices Theater Festival earlier this week.

    The original play, Queens Girl in the World, was the hit of the first Women’s Voices Theater Festival in 2015. Produced by Theater J, the show, starring Dawn Ursula as the 12-year-old Jacqueline Marie Butler, was described by my colleague, John Stoltenberg, as “a breathtaking dramatization of the meaning of race consciousness in America.”

    Now at Mosaic, with Helen Hayes Award-winner Erika Rose in the title role, Queens Girl in Africa picks up precisely where the previous play ended.

    Erika Rose in Queens Girl in Africa. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    Jackie, now 15, has been yanked out of her progressive—and mostly white—private high school in Greenwich Village and is on her way to Nigeria. It is, as she soon discovers, a place where the toilet is a hole in the ground and where servants carry machetes.

    Why Nigeria? That’s because Jackie’s father, Charles—a gruff Caribbean-American doctor who witnessed the assassination of a fellow civil rights activist in Harlem—believes that Black people are better off in Africa. He has arranged for a job at a teaching hospital in Ibadan, a large and fairly cosmopolitan city in the western part of the country, 90 minutes from Lagos.

    Jackie is quickly enrolled at the International School, where she tries to fit in. It’s not easy. But her mother, Grace, is a teacher, whose love and wisdom will provide the support that she needs.

    Erika Rose plays all these roles—and a dozen more—in a bravura performance that is both a radiant portrayal of teenage angst and a scary documentation of a country on the verge of war.

    Her mastery of dialects and tone allow the audience to hear (and in some cases even see) the differences between Uncle George—the “colored” doctor who has fled Apartheid in South Africa—and his wife, the elegant Aunt Maggie; between the various classmates at school; between the teachers and the headmaster; and, most remarkably, between the 15-year-old “know-it-all” Jackie and the 18-year-old Jackie who knows, at last, what she doesn’t know.

    While Queens Girl in Africa is the second play in Jennings’cycle, it can easily stand on its own. The two plays, like Jackie—who is the alter ego or remembered self of the playwright—are very different.

    And while the earlier play saw race, clear and simple, as the issue, this one looks beyond features and color to find the more subtle—and devastating—differences created by tribal culture.

    One of the most glaring forms of culture shock comes when Jackie learns that the epithet thrown at her so often—which she thought meant “foreigner”—actually means “white foreigner.”

    When she finds out that the other girls at school think it would be “fun” to hold a mock slave auction as a fund-raiser, Jackie is outraged. But slavery, she learns, doesn’t mean the same thing to these girls, since their history is different. (They’ve been colonized, yes. But not enslaved, which they see as a different thing.)

    Similarly, there is a geography teacher—a white man from Arkansas—who believes that the push for integration in the U.S. may be going “too fast.”

    Astonishingly, his argument—that people are most comfortable when surrounded by others like them—is mirrored by Godfrey, the Nigerian servant, who believes that his tribe, the Igbo, cannot live with the Yoruba or the Hausa.

    In fact, it is this widespread belief among all the tribes that will lead to all-out war, with the Igbo driven out of the western part of the country.

    One of the most shocking scenes consists of a fight between Godfrey and Jackie’s father over a bicycle that the Igbo servant needs if he and his family are to get away.

    Charles, the American civil rights activist, cannot understand that the bike—which he paid for but gave to Godfrey—is no longer his.

    Grace, the heroine’s mother, is the most beautifully drawn character in the play. She is the one who lives outside polemics and who helps her daughter survive intact in a confusing world.

    Erika Rose. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    In the end, Jackie’s salvation, like that of her alter ego and creator, is theater. A role in a school play opens the door to a place where Jackie, like Jennings, will fit in.

    When I saw an early version of this play last fall, I wondered how the playwright and her dramaturg, Faedra Carpenter, were going to pull it off. I couldn’t imagine how the comic bits—many of them dealing with Jackie’s crush on her best friend’s brother—could possibly coexist with issues like genocide, assassination, and war, all on the same stage.

    But Paige Hernandez, who is both the director and the choreographer, has created a wonderful balance between the personal and the political.

    Much of that balance is achieved through timing and dance. Jackie’s breathtaking performance—whirling faster and faster to the beat of the drums in a village in the bush—is literally a showstopper. (Hernandez and Rose were students together at the University of Maryland in College Park, and their longtime collaboration shows.)

    There is another kind of collaboration at work here. Queens Girl in Africa was commissioned by Mosaic as part of what the theater calls its “Locally Grown Initiative.”

    Ari Roth, Mosaic’s Founder and Artistic Director, calls it “Locavore Theater,” meaning that all the ingredients—the writing, directing, acting and design—come from members of the DC artistic community. That’s a real investment in the Washington theater world.

    Running time: Two hours including one 15 minute intermission.

    Queens Girl in Africa plays through February 4, 2018 at Atlas Performing Arts Center – 1333 H Street, NE, in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 399-7993 ext. 2, or purchase them online.

    Playwright Caleen Sinnette Jennings.

    WVTF Playwright Spotlight: Caleen Sinnette Jennings 
    Caleen Sinnette Jennings is Professor of Theatre at American University in Washington, DC. She received the Heideman Award from Actor’s Theatre of Louisville for her play Classyass, which was produced at the 2002 Humana Festival and has been published in five anthologies. She is a two-time Helen Hayes Award nominee for Outstanding New Play. In 2003 she won the award for Outstanding Teaching of Playwriting from the Play Writing Forum of the Association of Theatre in Higher Education. In 1999 she received a $10,000 grant from the Kennedy Center’s Fund for New American Plays for her play Inns & Outs. Her play Playing Juliet/Casting Othellowas produced at the Folger Shakespeare Theatre in 1998. In 2012, Ms. Jennings’ play Hair, Nails & Dress, was produced by Uprooted Theatre Company of Milwaukee and by the DC Black Theatre Festival. Her most recent publication is Uncovered, in the 2011 Eric Lane and Nina Shengold anthology Shorter, Faster, Funnier. Dramatic Publishing Company has published: Chem MysteryElsewhere in Elsinore: the Unseen Women of HamletInns & OutsPlaying Juliet/Casting Othello, Sunday Dinner, A Lunch Line, and Same But Different. Ms. Jennings is also an actor and director. She received her BA in drama from Bennington College and her MFA in Acting from the NYU Tisch School of the Arts.

  • Review: ’45 Plays for 45 Presidents’ at NextStop Theatre Company

    Review: ’45 Plays for 45 Presidents’ at NextStop Theatre Company

    Throughout American history, the office of the president has served as the living embodiment of the American dream. The central tenet of our democracy, it demonstrates that any person can rise up and achieve the highest office in our nation. Our president should serve as the representative of the values of honor, truth, and justice.

    Too bad not all of them have been up to the task.

    The political pratfalls of our nation’s leaders are currently being put on humorous display at NextStop in their thoroughly engaging production of 45 Plays for 45 Presidents. Directed by Megan Behm and starring 5 fantastic women, it serves as both a hilarious and heartbreaking look at the men – and they have ALL been men – who have sat in the Oval Office.

    France and England fight for George Washington’s affections. Brittany Martz, Sarah Ann Sillers, and Mary Myers. Photo by Lock & Company.

    The brainchild of a quintet of playwrights, 45 Plays is a series of 2-minutes sketches that go far beyond what the textbooks will tell you. This particular iteration of the play is relatively new as the 45th sketch (which was a choose-your-own-ending during the 2016 election season) was officially added following Donald Trump’s victory in 2016. With NextStop presenting their 2017/18 season in a series of dramatic pairings, 45 Plays provides a wonderful complement to the company’s recent production of Assassins. However, where Assassins aimed to agitate, 45 Plays seeks to delight.

    Behm’s vision favors simplicity over style in the challenge to bring to life over 240 years of American history. Daniel Hobbs’ marble pylons and platforms evoke memories of seeing the monuments on the National Mall. Allison Samantha Johnson’s revolutionary style pants, vests, and cravats transition well through the centuries with their period and contemporary feel. Sean Cox as the lighting and projections designer wonderfully balances the ambiance to heighten any moment, whether it be comedic or dramatic. Reid May’s sound design is one of the highlights of the show with a distinct bell sound ringing every time a president’s actual words are used. It is on this canvas where the fun can really start.

    The five actresses who make up this production are a veritable cornucopia of talent. Able to change characters at a moment’s notice, they form one of the most satisfyingly cohesive ensembles in recent memory, with each performer getting a wealth of material with which to play. Brittany Martz is reminiscent of a woodland sprite and is sensational as the universally disliked Warren G. Harding. Chloe Mikala presents a debonair James K. Polk and delivers hysterical one-liners throughout her quest to discover just what exactly Millard Fillmore actually did. Carolyn Kashner is the sole voice of reason amongst a barrage of Theodore Roosevelts and has a wonderful musical bit as Calvin Coolidge. Sarah Anne Sillers is a hopelessly sappy Martin van Buren and is incredibly moving as the wife of Franklin Pierce. Mary Myers is a master of physicality as the gargantuan William Howard Taft and is full of witticisms as Benjamin Franklin roasting new president Thomas Jefferson.

    Mary Myers as President Donald Trump with the “Make America Great Again” jug band. Brittany Martz, Sarah Anne Sillers, Chloe Mikala. Photo by Lock & Company.

    While humor is essential to 45 Plays, the play strikes a surprising balance with moments of intense human drama. It does not shy away from the unpleasant moments of our history. It reminds us that these people were human and made many mistakes and tried to do what was best for a nation under an incredible amount of pressure. While there are plenty of things about our presidents we can poke fun at, we must acknowledge the immense responsibility and hardship that these people shouldered.

    45 Plays is an unflinching look at how our nation’s history brought us to where we are today. It is a reminder that while the president does hold a special place in our government, it is the people who have the power to choose who that person will be.

    As Benjamin Franklin once said, “either write something worth reading or do something worth writing.”

    Running Time: 1 hour and 45 minutes, with one 15-minute intermission.

    45 Plays for 45 Presidents plays through February 4th, 2018, at NextStop Theatre Company – 269 Sunset Park Drive in Herndon, Virginia. For tickets, call the box office at (866) 811-4111 or go online.

    45 Plays for 45 Presidents

  • In the Moment: Report on ‘Declassified’ with Ben Folds and Sara Bareilles at The Kennedy Center

    In the Moment: Report on ‘Declassified’ with Ben Folds and Sara Bareilles at The Kennedy Center

    Under the masterful, musical code-switching curation of National Symphony Orchestra (NSO) Artistic Advisor Ben Folds, the future for new audiences finding their way to the usually buttoned-up, High Arts atmosphere of a classical music venue was very clear at the most recent NSO Declassified concert.

    Ben Folds. Photo courtesy of the Kennedy Center.

    The one performance-only Declassified on Friday evening, January 12th, was a seamlessly unfolding musical evening of adventure. It spotlighted the fluently, musically multi-lingual talents of Folds. With his ten musical selection, the imaginative in-the-moment performances of special guests, pop vocalist and composer Sara Bareilles and composer, violinist, and vocalist Caroline Shaw along with the NSO conducted by Edwin Outwater the evening was a knock-out that subversively meshed the pop with the classical. (OK, I learned to appreciate the classics from watching cartoon shorts and long-form animated features at my small town movie house when I was growing up. And listened to Sgt. Pepper’s use of a major symphony orchestra through my own haze)

    Folds opened the evening as master-of-ceremony, with comments that quickly brought the audience to knowing attention, then applause and potent cheers. He spoke of how the beauty of music can be a way to protest and speak out against the oppressive and oppressor, that music and the human voice can speak out against injustice in their own dissident ways (my paraphrasing). The NSO immediately began to convey such sentiments with the almost mournful, string-dominated “Cantabile for Strings” by Peteris Vasks. The piece had almost impossible to explain, emotionally riveting long-held string notes that conductor Outwater expressively conveyed with his finger gestures.

    Composer Caroline Shaw. Photo by Kait Moreno.

    Next up were three modern compositions performed by Caroline Shaw, including: “Red, Red Rose” by Robert Burns/Caroline Shaw, “Entr’acte” composed and arranged by Shaw, and “Other Song” composed by Shaw with arrangements by Shaw and Dominic Mekky. Shaw’s composition and her singing were not merely polished, but otherworldly in their presentations of humanity. Her voice and that of an 8 member chorus (Kerry Marsh Singers) were uniquely spiritually rich presentations, as if in a timeless cathedral. There was such an ease in her manner, such comfort even with difficult vocal passages. Is it any wonder Shaw won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Music (at age 29 – the youngest ever as Folds told the audience) for her composition “Partita for 8 Voices,” an a capella work for the vocal ensemble Roomful Of Teeth and has worked with the likes of Kanye West.

    After Shaw’s three compositions, conductor Outwater introduced Shostakovich’s “Allegro from Symphony No.10 in E minor.” The piece, written during the height of Stalin’s power in the late 1930’s Soviet Union, was one of tremendous emotion and percussion, like a blow against tyranny (or as I came to recall driving home, with the visual power of the famous 1984 ad for Apple in its metaphoric strike against IBM).

    The evening then pivoted to Sara Bareilles. If you don’t know Bareilles, she is a multiple Grammy and Tony-nominated pop vocalist and composer. Her Tony nomination was for Best Original Score for her Broadway musical Waitress. Her book Sounds Like Me: My Life (So Far) In Song, was a New York Times bestseller. Bareilles was recently announced to play Mary Magdelene in the April 2018 NBC Live production of Jesus Christ Superstar with Alice Cooper and John Legend.

    Bareilles performed her pop hits and two songs from her musical Waitress, often accompanied by piano or a small band, but this time with new orchestration and arrangements and performed with the bigger sound accompaniment of the NSO. The numbers were “Used to Be Mine,” If I Dare,” “Love Song,” “Brave,” and “Once Upon Another Time.” I was willingly drowned in the sounds of Bareilles’ voice, the vulnerable emotions she expressed in her lyrics and the underlying NSO strings. The compositions were oh so smooth. The very knowing Concert Hall audience gave each Bareilles number a rousing reception including hoots and whoops.

    Sara Bareilles as seen in the musical Waitress. Photo by Josh Lehrer.

    Then came the final number of the evening. It was the Bareilles anthem “Brave.” It began with a hush, then Bareilles stood and sang as if in church, with Shaw and Folds surrounding her with heads bowed. Then Shaw, Folds and Bareilles became a beautiful trio of harmony. There were moments of a kind of stillness of voice and musical instruments as if the three, joined by The Kerry Marsh Singers and the NSO were reaching up to God through song about not letting an enemy stare you down.

    Finally, let me add that the Declassified evening’s casual atmosphere was enriched with pre and post-concert features. There was some free beer tasting from Alexandria’s Port City Brewery before the show a well as entertainment by the Faux Paz, a University of Maryland a Cappella group and Wes Swing, a singer and multi-instrumentalist. After Declassified concluded, on the Millennium stage was live band karaoke by Hari-Karaoke pumping out tunes with the audience totally energized and involved.

    Folds accomplished what he had set out to do for concert-goers and music-lovers of any age and taste at the Declassified concert. It was an event where all that was needed to experience and appreciate the music, was only “a pair of ears and a heart.” And folks, do stay tuned, additional Declassified performances are in the works for 2018.

    Running Time: 90 minutes with no intermission.

    National Symphony Orchestra’s Declassified was performed on January 12, 2018, at 9 p.m. in the Concert Hall at The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts – 2700 F Street, NW, in Washington, DC. For future NSO events go online.

  • Review: ‘The Humans’ National Tour at the Kennedy Center

    Review: ‘The Humans’ National Tour at the Kennedy Center

    Lights rise on The Humans and there, center stage, is Erik Blake (Richard Thomas), a fish out of water Pennsylvanian Dad in a New York apartment. What is he doing there? And why is he in an apartment alone listening to an extremely loud upstairs neighbor? The story soon unfolds. His adult daughter Brigid (Daisy Eagan) and her boyfriend Richard (Luis Vega) have just moved into the aging Chinatown pre-war duplex. It’s Thanksgiving. And Erik hasn’t slept a wink.

    Richard Thomas, Therese Plaehn, Pamela Reed, Lauren Klein, Daisy Eagan, and Luis Veda in the national tour of The Humans. Photo by Julieta Cervantes.

    The following 90 minutes unfold at a rapid pace. This family is in many ways “every” family in the United States: rocked by 9/11, a generational divide in approach to religion, struggling with personal finances, working to integrate adult children’s significant others into a “norm,” navigating aging parents and independent but struggling adult children, and then there’s the email forwards from Mom. The audience laughs knowingly—especially at that one joke about Philly.
    The Humans is the four-time Tony Award-winning play written by Stephen Karam and directed by Joe Mantello.

    Rounding out the cast is Therese Plaehn as Aimee, Pamela Reed as Dierdre, and Lauren Klein as Fiona “Momo” Blake. There is not an out of touch performance in the lot. Reed and Thomas’ turns as Dierdre and Erik are particularly nuanced, concurrently heart-wrenching and funny.

    Scenic design by David Zinn and costume design by Sarah Laux perfectly encompass the setting. We know these people and we know this apartment. Lighting by Justin Townsend sets the tone of the play (especially in the final ten minutes) and Sound Design by Fitz Patton is near perfect. The design is bright but intimate. One can’t help but wish this was being experienced in a smaller venue than the Eisenhower but the sound, scenic design, and lighting contribute in every way possible to make the audience feel like we are right there in the living room.

    The Humans is one of those plays that sparks conversation and analysis. We see ourselves in every funny and sad line of dialogue in this American play. How have we been changed by circumstances out of our control? Who are we without success? How can we best love people we disagree with and cannot change? The Humans isn’t so much commenting on what we should do, it’s more like a blistering mirror showing a culture what we are.

    Running Time: Approximately 90 minutes, with no intermission.

    The Humans plays through January 28, 2018, at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Eisenhower Theater – 2700 F Street, NW in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 628-6161, or purchase them online.

    The Humans Today Tix

  • Review: ‘Wit’ at Silver Spring Stage

    Review: ‘Wit’ at Silver Spring Stage

    Wit, the Pulitzer Prize-winning play written by Margaret Edson and directed at Silver Spring Stage by Jeff Mikoni, graces the stage with a darkly comedic tale of a strict university professor dying of ovarian cancer.

    Emily Morrison is Vivian Bearing, Ph.D, a stern scholar of John Donne’s poetry who has been stricken with metastatic ovarian cancer, which proceeds to kill her over the two hours in which this show takes place. The story itself is split into vignettes about Vivian’s life, interspersed with contrasting scenes of her enduring the humiliation and monotony of an experimental chemotherapy which leaves her hospitalized most of the time.

    Credit: Harvey Levine

    Emily Morrison breathes life into this dying character in a way that will stay with the audience for a long time. Morrison never overplays this role. She brings the exact right amount of levity and gravity to Vivian Bearing’s character.

    Gary Sullivan plays Vivian’s diagnosing oncologist and researcher Harvey Kelekian, M.D. with flair. He is joined by Sebastian Leighton as a nervous Jason Posner, M.D., who studies under Kelekian. Sebastian is particularly believable as a student treating a former professor. His performance shows his obsession with the idea of cancer, as well as his reticence in performing the day-to-day functions of treating patients instead of working in a lab.

    Katie Wicklund believably portrays nurse Susie Monahan. One of the more memorable scenes in this play takes place between her and the standoffish Vivian Bearing towards the end of Vivian’s life. These characters act as a sort of foil for each other. Vivian is an elitist who prides herself on being a scholar of an obscure subject, yet she finds she isn’t as able to reach out and connect to other humans as well as nurse Susie.

    Barbara O’Malley plays Vivian’s former professor E.M. Ashford, also a scholar of Donne. O’Malley carries the scene where we are first introduced to the core conflict that Vivian faces with aplomb. The role of Vivian’s father is believably played by Joshuah Laird. The fantastic ensemble, including Michael King, Brynn Krasney, Omar LaTiri, and Kristyn Lue, is also noteworthy.

    Credit: Harvey Levine

    Set Designer Jimmy Stubbs creates an adequately sparse hospital environment that switches from the pedestrian dealings between doctor and patient to Vivian’s sparse inner world where she explores the meaning of life. Lighting Designer Steve Deming also lends his talents to the somewhat shadowy world of Vivian’s subconscious.

    Wit is a play about control. Much like John Donne, Vivian finds herself questioning life and death and interrogating it with words, only to find that words are not always the only thing needed to endure. Emily Morrison turns in a stunning performance as a Vivian Bearing coming to grips with her increasing lack of control over the disease which is ravaging her body. With Emily Morrison as the lead, this Wit is sure to get a standing ovation.

    Silver Spring Stage’s Wit is a dark and humorous look at the forces of life and death which direct our destiny. Wit is must-see theater at its best.

    Running Time: Two hours, with no intermission.

    Wit plays through February 3, 2018, at Silver Spring Stage— 10145 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, Maryland 20901. Tickets can be purchased online.

  • Interview: La-Ti-Do Co-Founder Don Mike Mendoza Reflects on 6 Years of Cabaret

    Interview: La-Ti-Do Co-Founder Don Mike Mendoza Reflects on 6 Years of Cabaret

    DC Theater Arts had a chance to sit down with local producer Don Mike Mendoza to discuss the upcoming 6th anniversary of his company La-Ti-Do Productions. La-Ti-Do gives the DC scene a cutting-edge cabaret experience that highlights talented artists and performers from different backgrounds. For those who enjoy substance with their entertainment, their spoken word element adds that little something extra. We delve deeper to find out what Don Mike and La-Ti-Do have in store for us this year.

    I know that you finally got to see Hamilton yesterday. I’m curious to hear what your opinions and thoughts are?

    It blew my mind. I thought it would be ruined by the fact that I’ve listened to the cast recording and know it like the back of my hand, but it didn’t. The show is so visually stimulating. There’s just so much happening all over the place.

    I went on a Facebook rant yesterday because I left that show feeling inspired and angry. After seeing Hamilton on Broadway, along with the staging all of the touring productions, there’s no excuse not to find a handful of people of color to be in your show and beyond people of color, people of different orientations, different abilities. Saying you “can’t do it” in terms of having diversity in your show is not an excuse anymore, especially because Hamilton has done it four and five times over with one show. It’s unacceptable to say, “We couldn’t find X, Y, or Z.” You’re not trying hard enough.

    It was nice to see an actual color palette on that stage and also diversity in the leads, where it wasn’t just a classist show where all the leads are white and all the supporting characters are people of color, or where all the leads are men and the supporting characters are women. It was truly mixed and inclusive. I was just so floored by that. I think theaters and production companies and directors and writers just need to be more conscious of what they direct, who they cast, what kind of shows they produce. Unless it’s a show that calls for a specific ethnicity— Miss Saigon, for example—you don’t need to default to white people.

    There needs to be some consciousness in the casting.

    Right. It’s not just the idea that they have a brown person in the show. It’s about who they are, what role they’re playing, and what it looks like from the outside— not just the fact that you’ve checked off a box. Hamilton really drives that home.

    Let’s go ahead and talk about your company. Can you tell us a little bit about La-Ti-Do?

    La-Ti-Do came out of a friendship with my co-founder Regie Cabico. We played brothers in a play in a Filipino show in Capital Fringe in 2011 and we stayed in touch afterward. Regie told me that the only way to be happy as a person of color, and find a little more success is to create your own opportunities and have the things that you are cast in as secondary to creating your own space.

    We stewed on that for six months and decided to do a series that was spoken word and musical theater in the same space, since that didn’t exist that we were aware of, and also make it a cabaret setting. There was very little of that in DC at the time and we saw ourselves as really helping to restart the cabaret conversation within DC.

    Are there any other functioning cabaret companies right now, that you’re aware of?

    We started in January 2012 and January 2018 is our six-year milestone. It’s been a ride. We are at a point that I never thought we would be at, which is so exciting and so scary. In life, you dream about things and you want things to happen, but it’s always a shock when you actually get to the point of it actually happening with it being successful and something that makes change.

    Despite the changes we’ve gone through since we started, the main hallmarks of La-Ti-Do remain true: Creating a safe space for our performers to do what they love, do their art, do it for an audience, not feel judged, and not feel that it’s a job. We want them to feel like it’s a place they can come home to, that it’s a community that they can be a part of, and that it’s a group of friends and family that you see at each show. Once you’re hooked into this group, we take care of each other.

    The sub-goal to that is to feature under-represented communities in terms of marginalized individuals, in terms of LGBTQIA, and in terms of socio-economic class. We try to make sure that we really and truly are inclusive of who we bring in. We have raw talent and trained talent. We’ll see how that continues transforming in this new season.

    Tell us about your upcoming season. What are you most looking forward to this year?

    I’m looking forward to having a show once a month. For four years the show was weekly and that was cuckoo-bananas. Producing a different two-hour show every week, with different people every time…it was insanity.

    A lot of juggling?

    Yes! A lot of juggling and a lot of fun. We met so many people, which was just a fantastic launch point for us. I’m really looking forward to having a show once a month, that is through-the-roof high quality. We’re still welcoming as many people as we can to the space, but we’re going to have a four-piece band and we’re ordering a new sound system, which will make its debut in February. We’re rebranding and going in the direction of making things streamlined.

    Personally, what I’m looking forward to is working with a new group of monthly feature artists. It’s always so fun to see what these people bring to us and also to get to know these performers on a deeper level. The common experience with all of them is that they’ve all gone through our program from start to finish as a guest performer or audience member, then as mid-level features with a longer set. Now they’re monthly features and they really embody what La-Ti-Do is: Somebody who keeps coming back, someone who supports the organization and understands that we’re still very new. Even at six years, we’re still changing and learning and they also have changed and learned in their set and in what they bring to the table.

    I look forward to taking La-Ti-Do Productions into its next phase of life outside of the cabaret because we have events planned for this year that are outside of our cabaret brand. We’ve worked on other events before, but to foster those relationships and do more with them is really exciting.

    Can you tell us what the audience can expect at a La-Ti-Do show? Are there any surprises on the horizon?

    If a random person was just to stumble upon us one day, they would find a warm environment. It’s not a theater — our venue is red, it’s very bright — you walk in and it’s also a restaurant. When they come to the show they should expect to see artists doing what they enjoy doing, and being fearless with what they are bringing to the table.

    The audience may see a spoken word artist that’s trying a new poem or long form, even a comedian trying out a new set. The audience should expect to see enthusiasm for art, but also a safe space to see performers take risks and grow as an artist, right in front of them. We don’t make it a big deal if someone forgets their words.

    It all goes back to the main point of wanting to entertain people. As artists and actors and performers, that’s what we want to do. We just want to entertain people and have an audience. That’s what happens. From the performers, to the people that check you in, it’s just an entire experience of being entertained for an evening.

    Do you have any goals for La-Ti-Do looking beyond 2018?

    To check back into the “surprises” that you mentioned earlier. I would say that the surprises this season will be in the kind of material that people bring to the show. With many La-Ti-Do performers, you’ve only seen their public “brand,” what they do on a regular basis. What we’ve noticed is that these singers will come to the show and break it and do something different. You might see someone who is usually in Golden Age shows come and sing a pop song. You’ll see a spoken word artist come and sing, or a singer do a poem. That’s the truest surprise. You can see that “newness” at every show, and there’s always some “Easter egg” waiting to be hatched.

    In terms of goals, the La-Ti-Do Productions would like to do more in the community. Internal goals include connecting with our alumni in a stronger way. We’ve had at least a thousand artists come through in the last six years and we want to reconnect with our alumni, which is why our anniversary theme is “homecoming.” We’re bringing back a lot of monthly features since we started the monthly feature program in our first year. Without the people who have been a part of the 350 to 400 shows we’ve done, we wouldn’t exist.

    Thank you, Don Mike. I think we’re going to go ahead and conclude, is there anything you’d like to say as a closing statement?

    One thing that I also want to touch on is our New York show. Establishing the show in New York has always been interesting. I want to encourage people to follow our New York adventures and come check it out. Many of the performers are alumni that have come from DC, as well as performers that we’ve met up there.

    We have a partnership with The Duplex Piano Bar and Cabaret Theater this year. We’ve got a venue with full tech that’s all about cabaret and we get to bring in our programming. Our next show there is on January 27, 2018 and features two La-Ti-Do alumni from DC that have a duo called HEROINE that includes DC favorites Ines Nassara, who is going to be Dorothy in The Wiz that’s opening at Ford’s Theatre in March 2018, and Bridget Linsenmeyer.

    La-Ti-Do is not here to compete. We never have and we never will. La-Ti-Do is its own brand and its own community. We’ve always wanted to support the DC community. We’re not here to take down other cabaret series that are around us. Our biggest goal is collaboration and support. I think that’s why we and DC Theater Arts always get along so well, because that is a thread that we share— supporting the community that we are a part of.

    At the end of the day, it’s not about money for us. It’s about the presentation and what we put together. We’re people that are passionate about the art, not what we get for it. Come to La-Ti-Do to enjoy yourself, feel welcomed, and have a night that I know will make you want to come back.

     

    Homecoming: La Ti Do’s 6th Anniversary will take place on Monday, January 22, 2018 at Bistro Bistro DC— 1727 Connecticut Ave NW, Washington, DC 20009. Tickets can be purchased online.

    La Ti Do NYC: 2018 Kickoff feat. H E R O I N E & Emily Lowinger will take place on Saturday, January 27, 2018 at The Duplex Cabaret and Piano Bar— 61 Christopher St, New York, New York 10014. Tickets can be purchased online.

     

  • Magic Time!: “Claim All of Your Selves”: Caleen Sinnette Jennings on Her ‘Queens Girl’ Plays (Womens’ Voices Theater Festival Productions)

    Magic Time!: “Claim All of Your Selves”: Caleen Sinnette Jennings on Her ‘Queens Girl’ Plays (Womens’ Voices Theater Festival Productions)

    Erika Rose’s performance in Queens Girl in Africa is awesome to behold. She plays the playwright’s teenage self, named Jackie, plus her parents, school friends, and others, with an incandescence that won’t stop. The coming-of-age story tells of the time in the 1960s she and her family lived in Nigeria. It picks up the storyline that began in the playwright’s Queens Girl in the World, which took place in New York City and was performed three years ago by Dawn Ursula.

    Dawn Ursula in Queens Girl in the World at Theater J, directed by Eleanor Holdridge, Women’s Voices Theater Festival 2015. Photo by Teresa Wood.

    The first Queens Girl play was commissioned for the first Women’s Voices Theater Festival by Ari Roth when he was artistic director of Theater J. Now artistic director of Mosaic Theater Company, Roth commissioned the second Queens Girl play for the second Women’s Voices Theater Festival. So externally the plays are of a piece, but within them is an even deeper connection.

    Erika Rose in Queens Girl in Africa at Mosaic Theater Company, directed byPaige Hernandez, Women’s Voices Theater Festival 2018. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    Between my memory of seeing Ursula as Jackie and now seeing Rose as Jackie, it was as though I had witnessed a continuous self, or a transmogrification of the same soul, first in one exquisite embodiment then in another.

    Though Queens Girl in the World and Queens Girl in Africa each stand alone, taken together they are a beautifully theatricalized bildungsroman, a sweeping moral memoir of “How I came to know who I am” that makes the audience want to know Jackie too. Which is also to want to know the voice of the author.

    The life depicted onstage in the Queens Girl cycle was adapted by Caleen Sinnette Jennings from her own. Jennings, a professor of theater at American University, was a member of the original Welders, which produced her Not Enuf Lifetimes, a play I admired enormously. When I asked if I could interview her to know more about her writing of the Queens Girl plays, she generously agreed.

    Queens Girl cycle Playwright Caleen Sinnette Jennings.

    John: The storytelling in the Queens Girl cycle is personal and political at the same time.  How are the two plays connected for you?

    Caleen: When I wrote Queens Girl in the World, I considered that my one semi-autobiographical play. I had made up my mind I was not going to write anything like that again.

    Fortunately for us you changed your mind.

    It was Ari who convinced me. I told him, I said no I’m really not interested. And he took me to breakfast, so be careful if he invites you to breakfast.

    They say life is lived forward and understood looking backwards. That kind of looking back is very emotional, and I had never written anything like this before, so I had a tremendous amount to learn. Just going from narrative to dramatic writing was difficult. There are characters that I conflated and things that I omitted and that were cut for time’s sake.

    One of the things I always tell my playwriting students is: Don’t write anything autobiographical, because as you’re living your life, life happens to you, but in the theater, you have to have a protagonist that’s active and that does things. And really you’re not aware of what you’re doing when you’re living your life. You’re just having things happen to you and you sort of respond. So with Queens Girl in Africa, looking back and trying to answer the question that Ari, the director [Paige Hernandez], the dramaturg [Faedra Chatard Carpenter], and the actor [Erika Rose] kept asking me—But what did YOU DO?was difficult and intense and interesting.

    The thing Ari said that convinced me to write Queens Girl in Africa was: You’ve learned so much in the first process. Give yourself a chance to apply what you’ve learned a second time. And that’s really what happened.

    For me what’s so wonderful is what the main character Jackie learns about herself in the first play and then what she learns about herself in the second play. It’s from a teenager’s point of view but with the wisdom of an elder’s reflection and framing.

    I certainly did not feel wise at the time. If you had spoken to me in fall of 1968, I was still worrying about: my canines are crooked and my feet are too big. So in writing the play, it was tricky to balance and frame artistically what you now understand about what you were going through and experiencing at the time. I couldn’t have articulated any of this to you then, but I understand it now.

    All the teenage angst-y things about boyfriends and crushes and such is delightful, and both Dawn and Erika were wonderful playing that teenage self. And what for me was so rare is that the plays dramatize something very elusive, which is self-knowledge about oneself in the world politically. It was a continuous coming-of-age, coming-to-race-consciousness narrative, as I saw it. And I’ve never seen first-person theatrical storytelling quite so clearly frame a life in terms of the social-political landscape.

    Well, you know, my parents and my grandparents had a lot to do with my sense of self. Ours was a house where we read and debated and watched television and talked about it. I went to Elizabeth Irwin High School, where we read The New York Times in class and talked about what was in the news, and we were assigned community service that we had to do, so we were encouraged to think of ourselves as citizens who had responsibility.

    Erika Rose in Caleen Sinnette Jennings’ Queens Girl in Africa at Mosaic Theater Company, Women’s Voices Theater Festival 2018. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    I got the sense there were playwriting lessons that you built into both works and we might not be aware of them, but the playwriting teacher in you was leaving behind gems of information, and if anyone was going to write a story about themselves with as much political perspicacity as you’ve shown, these are the things to keep in mind.

    Well, any playwriting lessons in the play were not conscious because I was struggling to learn how to write it as I wrote it. So I don’t feel as if I left any hints or tips. Luckily I had an amazing dramaturg, Faedra, and Paige and Ari who encouraged me and helped me shape the piece.  I give great props to them. My original script was 150 some pages, and we cut it to around 60.

    In the first part, Jackie talks about writing as helping her “make peace between the Erickson Street Jackie and the Irwin School Jackie”—meaning who she is in the mostly black Queens neighborhood where she lives and who she is in the mostly white elementary school she goes to in Greenwich Village. Then in part two she goes with her parents to live in Nigeria and asks “Am I afraid of Africa? … Who will Africa Jackie be?” And there’s this shocking moment when she realizes that she—as an American not born in Africa—is being called a word that means “white foreigner.”

    Yeah.

    My heart just sank. And in that moment I saw this powerful arc you had created about who Jackie conceives herself to be and who she’s perceived as: which Jackie is she? It was the kind of storytelling that keeps you completely absorbed but also, if you step away, it stands out as emblematic: like, everyone should be able to have that kind of self-awareness of who one is and who one is in context. It became more than storytelling; it became a parable that we could all learn from.

    Well, you know, every teenager thinks something’s wrong with them, every teenager thinks: I don’t fit in because something is wrong with me, or: there are so many aspects of my personality, I’m not even sure which one is the real me. So if there’s one thing I would like people to take away with them it’s the moment Jackie discovers when she’s doing theater: Oh, my gosh, I can be three different Jackies in one body!

    I went through adolescence decades before we had the term code-switching. So at the time I just thought I was crazy. But everybody has to adapt depending on where they are, what they’re doing. And that was a revelation to me. So I hope one of the things people will take away is: no, you’re not crazy; you’re adapting to circumstances, many times circumstances that are very difficult, but it’s all part of who you are. Claim all of your multiple selves.

    One of the things that sets the Queens Girl plays apart from other coming-of-age stories is that the drama of Jackie’s self-understanding and emergence isn’t just about intra-family dynamics. There are historical events that crash into the storyline: the Baptist church bombing in Birmingham and the assassination of Malcolm X in part one; and in part two, the assassination of Dr. King, the race riots in America, and simultaneously the tribal war in Nigeria. At one point Jackie realizes, “The tribes don’t like each other.” I found that historical contexting of Jackie’s personal-growth narrative powerful: like a lesson for all.

    I always tell my students: tell your story with as much detail as possible, because the thing that you don’t expect other people to understand—and the things you think: this will be boring, nobody will get this—are sometimes the things that really resonate with people. If you had asked me a month ago: are people going to respond to these things? I would have said: I absolutely have no idea.

    Erika Rose in Caleen Sinnette Jennings’ Queens Girl in Africa at Mosaic Theater Company, Women’s Voices Theater Festival 2018. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    Most people don’t think of themselves as being impacted by historical events the way Jackie so clearly does. That’s what’s so beautiful about her story: it shows us how events in the world become part of us.

    I think that was also the flavor of the times. As boomers in the sixties, we were told we were special and we were going to change the world.  Also: Don’t trust anybody over 30. One of things that sometimes makes me sad is that students I teach often don’t have that sense of empowerment; they’re too worried about finances, they’re wrestling with health issues, they’re worried about their families who are paying for their education, they’re worried about things like insurance. I didn’t even know what insurance was when I was 18. I had time to be an idealistic wannabe activist.

    There’s another level of the plays, which is as a parable of exemplary parenting. Your parents saw a matinee of Queens Girl in Africa the day before it opened, and you were there in a talkback with them. What was their reaction?

    Well, I got a little emotional at one point during the post-show discussion, because somebody asked me: How does it feel to have your parents here? And I said: I hope this will be a tribute to the gift they gave me. They enabled me at age 18 to see myself as a citizen of the world. [Jackie’s mother] Grace keeps saying to Jackie: You’re strong, you are smart. When I look at the kinds of things they taught me, I’m so grateful. My parents are Depression-era babies. So a lot of what you see in the two parents in the play is a reflection of their upbringing. They’re 93 and 92 now. They came and were very appreciative. And wow, it was amazing.

    Near the end of Queens Girl in Africa, Jackie gets accepted into Bennington, which at that time was a very interesting place to be political. Will we find out what happens to Jackie there?

    I’m resisting, but Ari announced to the audience that he’s taking me to breakfast.

    Erika Rose in Caleen Sinnette Jennings’ Queens Girl in Africa at Mosaic Theater Company, Women’s Voices Theater Festival 2018. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    Lastly, I want to ask you something from your perspective and stature in the theater and the community as an esteemed elder—which I take to be a mark of honor and I hope it fits you that way too.

    I fear that’s a little hyperbolic, John. But it warms my heart to hear you say that.

    Well, I think a lot of people think of you that way, and I know some of them because I’ve met some of your students. And I can also sense the wisdom that suffuses the work of yours I’ve seen. So my question is: From that perspective, what do you see as the biggest challenges regarding representation in DC theater of the voices of women and people of color? And what would you like to see happen that hasn’t yet?

    Well, I think important things are happening. To go to the theater and see [my former student] Jonelle [Walker]’s play [TAME.] last year was just so incredibly exciting for me. We represent such a wonderful span of ages—from boomers, to millennials, to gen-x—and I see these young folks writing their own plays and forming their own companies and speaking out about how things need to change.

    They have these questions:  why do things have to be like this? what if we did this? what if we did that?

    DC embraced us Welders. In any other city it could have been: well, who do they think they are? And the established theaters could have said: well, let ’em go off and try; see how far they get without us. Instead, it was a full-on embrace and cheerleading that was unbelievable. And now to see Welders 2.0 come into its own, I think I see more movement than obstacles.

    I see an understanding of the fact that individual artists have to take more responsibility, and theater establishments when they open up and embrace the agency of young artists will only continue to grow, and audiences will reflect the generational differences. I think everybody is coming to the realization there are certain things that have to be done to make theater continue to be relevant. There are some really smart people here. And I think DC is way out front in terms of doing some of those things.

    Women’s Voices Theater Festival happened way before #MeToo. We’ve got all these fabulous universities. We have the Fringe Festival. We have Kennedy Center Page-to-Stage. DC is really an ideal place to examine what the key issues are and what people are doing to solve them, to get out ahead of some of the obstacles in the way of theater professionals.

    It is a very exciting place to be at this very exciting time.

    It is. I know of very few places where people would say: Yay, a new play that’s never been done; let me go and see a preview before it’s reviewed, on the coldest day of the year. It was astonishing to have 130 people come to a preview of Queens Girl in Africa on a night that was absolutely frigid for a play that nobody had any guarantee would be any good at all.  And people came and wanted to talk. That’s pretty special.

    Running Time: 100 minutes including a 15-minute intermission

    Queens Girl in Africa runs through Sunday, February 4, 2018, at the Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lang Theatre – 1333 H St NE, Washington, DC 20002. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 399-7993 ext 2 or purchase them online.

    WVTF Playwright Spotlight: Caleen Sinnette Jennings 
    Caleen Sinnette Jennings is Professor of Theatre at American University in Washington, DC. She received the Heideman Award from Actor’s Theatre of Louisville for her play Classyass, which was produced at the 2002 Humana Festival and has been published in five anthologies. She is a two-time Helen Hayes Award nominee for Outstanding New Play. In 2003 she won the award for Outstanding Teaching of Playwriting from the Play Writing Forum of the Association of Theatre in Higher Education. In 1999 she received a $10,000 grant from the Kennedy Center’s Fund for New American Plays for her play Inns & Outs. Her play Playing Juliet/Casting Othello was produced at the Folger Shakespeare Theatre in 1998. In 2012, Ms. Jennings’ play Hair, Nails & Dress, was produced by Uprooted Theatre Company of Milwaukee and by the DC Black Theatre Festival. Her most recent publication is Uncovered, in the 2011 Eric Lane and Nina Shengold anthology Shorter, Faster, Funnier. Dramatic Publishing Company has published: Chem Mystery, Elsewhere in Elsinore: the Unseen Women of Hamlet, Inns & Outs, Playing Juliet/Casting Othello, Sunday Dinner, A Lunch Line, and Same But Different. Ms. Jennings is also an actor and director. She received her BA in drama from Bennington College and her MFA in Acting from the NYU Tisch School of the Arts.

     

     

     

     

  • An Interview with ‘The Summer Club’ – Previewing ‘A Big Band Valentine’s Day’ at Philadelphia Theatre Company

    An Interview with ‘The Summer Club’ – Previewing ‘A Big Band Valentine’s Day’ at Philadelphia Theatre Company

    Since its premiere in the Jersey-shore town of Cape May in July 2014, The Summer Club has been bringing the retro sound of the Big Bands, the sophisticated stylings of the Swing era, and the tight-knit camaraderie for which the Rat Pack was known to audiences throughout the greater Philadelphia area. On Wednesday, February 14, the company – the brainchild of award-winning actor and singer Jeff Coon – will make its debut at the Suzanne Roberts Theatre with A Big Band Valentine’s Day, a spectacular one-night event for the Philadelphia Theatre Company, with a 22-song set list that promises to make you “fall in love all over again.”

    The Summer Club. Photo by Shifted Focus Photography.
    The Summer Club. Photo by Shifted Focus Photography.

    I spoke with The Summer Club crooners Jeff Coon (Founder and Executive Director), Fran Prisco (Creative Director), JP Dunphy, and Michael Philip O’Brien, and Special Guest singer Rebecca Robbins, in anticipation of next month’s big event. As it is on stage, the air of excitement, good-natured joking, and mutual respect was there throughout the conversation, as we discussed the music, the performers, the show, and the future.

    Deb: What is it about Swing, the Big Bands, and the Rat Pack?

    JP: I was introduced to all of it through my grandmother, and then reconnected when Jeff, my mother, and Joey [Abramowicz, The Summer Club’s General Manager], got together to talk about forming the company. For me, personally, I’m drawn to it because of the energy of Big Band music. That is so rare, you can’t find it anywhere else.

    Jeff: There’s something about this kind of music of the late ‘50s to early ‘60s that has always felt special. Going out in those days was an event; you got dressed up, you went out to dinner, you went to the show, you had cocktails. It was a big night out, and the bands were as big a part of it as the front vocalists. You would go to see Frank Sinatra, or Ella Fitzgerald, with the Count Basie Orchestra; the musicians were as much of a draw as the singers themselves. That’s what energizes me – the relationships, and also the fun, with each other and with the audience. We’re not trying to imitate the Rat Pack, but I’d like to think that we capture that spirit of fun in our own interactions and audience involvement.

    Fran Prisco and Jeff Coon. Photo by Shifted Focus Photography.
    Fran Prisco and Jeff Coon. Photo by Shifted Focus Photography.

    Yes, and Fran definitely has that Rat Pack sense of humor!

    Michael: [kidding] That’s ‘cause Fran’s old.

    Fran: We want to recreate the fun and the camaraderie. Who wouldn’t want to live like that? Though [kidding back] we made a mistake when we brought Michael in. When we started, we actually had scripts with “ribbing” written into them; it’s an important part of the show.

    When you began to think about forming the act, how did you decide on which of your colleagues to invite to become official ‘Summer Clubbers’ and what made those of you who were asked decide to accept the invitation?

    Jeff: It was mostly Frannie and Joey, and JP was part of the original discussion in February of 2014. Mike was part of the third show; he wasn’t available for the first two. My main consideration, though it might sound selfish, was, “Do I like being around these people? Who do I want to hang out with and drink cocktails?” And of course, “Who’s got a voice that will knock your socks off?”

    Fran: [still ribbing] Yeah, and we needed someone younger, so we ended up letting Mike in.

    Michael Philip O’Brien. Photo by Billy B Photography.
    Michael Philip O’Brien. Photo by Billy B Photography.

    Michael: We each bring something different to the table, either musically or personality-wise; it rounds out the show. I love this music, though I didn’t have as much of a connection to it as the others. But the opportunity as a singer to sing with this type of a band was amazing! When I first started, I was doing a lot of Fran’s material, so I had to bring my own style, to make the songs, and the show, a little different each time.

    What’s your first creative memory – the one that made you realize that the life of a performing artist, and specifically a career in musical theater, was for you?

    Fran: For me it was watching my family doing community theater. I grew up with that, and I was always singing around the house. I also really loved the applause I got, so that decided it!

    JP: When I was a kid, my parents got me four Disney Sing-Along Songs. They taped me singing Aladdin; they applauded, and I liked it!

    JP Dunphy. Photo by Paul Sirochman.
    JP Dunphy. Photo by Paul Sirochman.

    Rebecca: I watched Fiddler on the Roof on TV, and then my Mom took me to see it live. I was about six, and the difference between the two was obvious. Then I started taking voice lessons at seven.

    Jeff: At age four or five, we had a school project on the Greek gods and goddesses. I chose Hermes, because I had a cat named Herman. I took great joy in putting the costume together, with cardboard and tin-foil wings; it was fulfilling.

    Fran: You astonish me. I’ve known you for 25 years, and I’ve never heard that story. It’s going into the show!

    Michael: For me it was my first audition ever, at Huntingdon Valley dinner theater. I forgot all of my lyrics, I started crying, I ran off stage, and I hugged my Mom. I was so humiliated, I never would have gone back, but I guess they didn’t have any other little boys for the role, so they still asked me to do the show! So the fact that I was called back, even though I was traumatized and crying, is why I’m doing this today. I started voice lessons at nine or ten. My mother made me go; I resisted, but I’m grateful to her now.

    What are you most looking forward to about bringing The Summer Club to the Philadelphia Theatre Company?

    Jeff: There’s a ton of things, so I’ll just do a couple. First of all, the idea of Paige Price [Producing Artistic Director] and Emily Zeck [Managing Director] for this season – to do something different, to move forward, to bring a great new presence to the city – is genius. Secondly, because of them reaching out to new audiences, we’ll also have the opportunity to expand our reach to develop a new audience.

    Fran: I’m looking forward to drinking on stage! PTC has a liquor license, so there will be a bar on stage. The audience can also get drinks in the lobby, and bring them into the theater.

    Fran Prisco. Photo by Dan Olmstead.
    Fran Prisco. Photo by Dan Olmstead.

    In addition to the cocktails, will the venue have any other impact on the design and experience of the show?

    Jeff: The space is absolutely perfect! It’s big enough for our sound, but still intimate. It’s not a 20,000-seat arena, so we can retain that connection with our audience. I think we can do our show in lots of places. Our performance area at Parx Casino last year was tiny, we were behind the bar, but we did it. PTC allows us to do the show in the best possible way, with a main-stage theater space that’s just the right size for us.

    The Summer Club often includes special guest vocalists and stand-up comics, along with the regular ‘Clubbers.’ In addition to Rebecca’s appearance, will there be any other extra offerings for the PTC audience at the Valentine’s Day show?

    Jeff: Yes. As far as our guests, again we ask the selfish question, “Who do we like and who do we want to hang out with?” We also think about what artists we’d like to offer the opportunity they deserve to be featured. And we try to be inclusive; we want to have a variety in terms of gender and ethnicity. Rebecca has an outstanding voice, so we certainly want to feature her. This will be her debut with us, and I’m really excited; her voice should be on everyone’s bucket list. I feel like we’re doing our duty to humanity by having her in the show!

    Rebecca Robbins. Photo by Dane Wagner.
    Rebecca Robbins. Photo by Dane Wagner.

    Fran: Jeff can give you the full evening line-up.

    Jeff: At 6:00, Jackie Fisher, Executive Director of Take the Lead Dance Project, will offer free Swing dance lessons, which makes a great addition to what we already do. PTC will also have Happy Hour in the lobby from 6 to 7, with champagne cocktails and specials. The show starts at 7:00, with a 22-song set specifically designed for PTC and Valentine’s Day that caters to date night. There will be an intermission, so the audience can enjoy more cocktails at the lobby bar, and after the performance, we’ll stay to talk to the audience, and maybe have a few drinks. Plus everyone gets a yummy gift for coming! I also want to mention that there are a limited number of $25 tickets for industry members and students. The show includes champagne, dance lessons, and a gift, so even without the discount, it’s still a great deal at the regular admission price.

    How do you select the song list, which changes for each performance? Is it a group effort?

    Fran: It is a group effort, with Jeff, Joey, Larry [Lees, Musical Director], and me. We have a library of songs that we go through; for this one, I cut them into little pieces of paper and moved them around the board to create a fluid order. A lot of work goes into it. And we have a whole other wish list that someday will be a part of the show. But whenever JP asks to do a song, we say no (I’m just kidding).

    Larry Lees. Photo by Laura Boyd.
    Larry Lees. Photo by Laura Boyd.

    Jeff: We switch our songs around sometimes, and add some if time and budget allow us to do that, since Larry has to do all of the arrangements and orchestrations. Fran is great at putting the shows together, so we mostly defer to him.

    What are some of the favorite love songs we can expect each of you to perform for Valentine’s Day?

    Fran: Some of them don’t know yet, but I have the list right here in front of me, so I’ll give you a little sampling. I’ll be doing “Come Fly with Me” and Jeff will do the Nat King Cole hit “L-O-V-E.” Mike will sing “The Way You Look Tonight,” JP will do “It Had to Be You,” and Rebecca and I will sing the Frank and Nancy Sinatra duet “Something Stupid.”

    Rebecca: Oh, I’d love to do that!

    Fran: And there will be lots more, but we want the audience to be surprised.

    Beyond your regularly-scheduled dates at Venice Island Performing Arts and Recreation Center in Manayunk, you’ve also done some touring. What are the challenges of taking such a big show, with a live seventeen-piece orchestra, on the road?

    Jeff: All of the stuff – like the stands and the uniforms – Joey and I schlep. That’s the only real challenge.

    Joey Abramowicz. Photo by Billy B Photography.
    Joey Abramowicz. Photo by Billy B Photography.

    Fran: And the places we’ve gone have been so accommodating.

    Jeff: Venice Island is fantastic, they let us store our things there.

    Michael: Another challenge we needed to address has been the different schedules of all of the singers. That’s one of the benefits of Jeff getting multiple people involved, so if there’s an availability issue with one of us, we can tailor the shows and add guests. Also we do our Venice Island dates on Mondays, when theaters are generally dark. But I love doing The Summer Club so much, I wanted to be available for our trips to the Fulton Theatre in Lancaster last year!

    Jeff: We started in the summer, when theaters are usually dark, in July-August when it’s slow or dead for about six weeks. So that’s when we try to schedule our core group, and our out-of-town dates.

    Jeff Coon. Photo by Billy B Photography.
    Jeff Coon. Photo by Billy B Photography.

    What are your hopes and plans for the future of The Summer Club?

    Jeff: We’d like to record a CD; we’re trying to figure out how to put that together. It’s expensive.

    JP: I have a background in this because I used to write music in high school and college. I’ve done things on iTunes and other media apps, so once we get the songs recorded, I can get them up. The digital distribution just pays for itself to keep going.

    Jeff: Five years down the road, I’d also like to get a Summer Club bus and commit to a three-month tour. We continue to grow. We’ll be playing New Orleans in November, and we’re looking at Florida in 2019. Ideally, I’d like to be able to offer a three-month contract and pay, a reliable source of income, to our performers.

    Fran: That goes back to our first meeting – we can get our friends work. From the get-go, that was a goal.

    Many thanks to all of you for giving us an inside look at The Summer Club and the PTC show, and for offering Philadelphia audiences a fabulous way to spend Valentine’s Day this year! I can’t get enough of The Summer Club, and I know I’m not alone.

    Photo by Frank Scott.
    Photo by Frank Scott.

    The Summer Club: A Big Band Valentine’s Day plays Wednesday, February 14, 2018, at Philadelphia Theatre Company, performing at the Suzanne Roberts Theatre – 480 South Broad, Philadelphia, PA. For tickets, call (215) 985-0420, or purchase them online.

  • Review: ‘On Your Feet!’ National Tour at the Kennedy Center

    Review: ‘On Your Feet!’ National Tour at the Kennedy Center

    The rhythm is gonna get you! Expect to find yourself dancing in your seat, because the energy from this show is infectious. On Your Feet! at the Kennedy Center is electric, and audience members sitting on the aisle didn’t hesitate when they were invited to jump into a conga line before intermission.

    Christie Prades as Gloria Estefan and the cast of On Your Feet!. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

    The musical focuses on the career beginnings and family influences on Gloria and Emilio Estefan. Christie Prades and Mauricio Martinez are delightfully compelling in the parts and the Estefan’s building romance and sustained partnership are lovingly portrayed. Prades voices Gloria beautifully in both ballads and dance numbers, and Emilio is irresistibly charming, providing wit and humor with impeccable comedic timing. While the show is about a real couple, it has larger resonance as it reflects the shifting Latino experience with the American Dream in recent decades. It was not just the Latinos in the audience who roared approval when Emilio describes himself, saying, “This is what an American looks like.”

    Gloria Estefan has been called the greatest Latin cross-over artist of all time (by Oprah, no less), and Emilio has helped shape the careers of other stars such as Shakira, Ricky Martin, Jennifer Lopez, Marc Anthony, and Jon Secada. In 2015, the couple was honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and this December, Gloria was one of the five recipients of the Kennedy Center Honors. Last night, the diverse and multi-aged audience was a little celebrity-struck when Gloria and Emilio arrived to watch the performance.

    The casting team found a wealth of great voices, all of whom can also salsa and conga like nobody’s business. The cast of more than 30 is filled with lovely voices, and the ensemble is constantly moving, shifting from specific characters to backup singers and dancers.

    In supporting leads, Nancy Ticotin plays Gloria’s mother, a brilliant talent in her own right, but struggling with her daughter’s transition to a professional performer and megastar. Playing Gloria’s father in a flashback, Jason Martinez brings a glorious controlled tenor to his wistful ballad that hints at his disbelief in ever seeing his daughter’s success. A clear audience favorite is Alma Cuervo as Gloria’s wise and witty grandmother, Consuelo.

    Alma Cuervo as Consuelo, Claudia Yanez as Rebecca, Christie Prades as Gloria and Nancy Ticotin as Gloria Fajardo in On Your Feet! Photo by Matthew Murphy.

    As it first did in the 1980s, the music captivates you. Fans will recognize the hits, and the orchestra has many of the of original Miami Sound Machine members playing familiar percussion and horn licks. It is undeniably catchy. The show which ran on Broadway for almost 750 performances shares the design for the tour. Scenic design by David Rockwell shifts the stage from an intimate space to a concert venue as fast as the actors can do a quick change of costumes. And boy, do Emilio Sosa’s costumes look good. Well, so did everything about this production. It is a winner, well worth seeing before it leaves DC.

    Running Time: 2 hours 30 minutes including one 20-minute intermission.

    On Your Feet! plays through January 28, 2018, at The Kennedy Center’s Opera House – 2700 F Street, NW, in Washington, DC. For tickets, call (800) 444-1324 or go online.

    On Your Feet