Tag: Joy Wyne

  • Review #2: ‘An American Daughter’ at Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green

    Review #2: ‘An American Daughter’ at Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green

    Just when you thought that scandalous political agendas were restricted to CNN’s 24-hour news cycle, along comes An American Daughter, Wendy Wasserstein’s 1997 play about a woman’s nomination as surgeon general and the threats her past play on her potential political appointment. In our current culture of alternative facts, fake news, and spin doctors, this Tony Award-winning play is back in fashion 20 years after its debut. Fortunately for us, Wendy Wasserstein’s witty repartee, unlike leg warmers and jumpsuits, never go out of style.

    The show opens with Lyssa Dent Hughes (played with tight-wadded aplomb by Kiersten Harris) watching her own televised speech on TV. Immediately, I was impressed with Director Bruce Hirsch’s creative use of space. The stage at the Arts Barn is not suited for a bulky, 90s era television downstage; it would block sight lines in the first 2 rows. Hirsch made a simple adjustment, which had Harris holding a remote control while watching herself. This allows the audience to know exactly what Harris is doing without compromising his audience’s viewing pleasure. Sometimes, the simplest fix can solve a complexity of problems.

    This production is like a fine wine: it gets better with age and has a sophisticated palate. The energy level is a bit low at the start of the show, as if the actors are feeling each other out. It’s when Lyssa and her oldest friend, Dr. Judith (not Judy, don’t even try it) B. Kaufman, an African American Jew who casts her sins out into the Potomac, start singing together on the couch that the familiarity and history come alive.

    The cast of An American Daughter: Zack Walsh, Carole Preston, Alexis Amarante, Stuart Rick, Kiersten Harris, Michael Abendshein, Brandie Peterson, Bob Harbaum, and Tom Moore. Photo by Scott D’Vileskis.

    With each passing scene, the comfort level and backstory become more rich and layered, resulting in many warm moments in which the audience gets caught up in memories as if they were appearing on a slide show behind the actors’ heads.

    It’s harder than it looks to interestingly portray a character who’s deemed “boring” more than once in the show, but Harris does just that. Her inner tension is like a tightly wound ball of yarn that begins to unravel as characters come in and pull at her strings. Lyssa internalizes a lot of her feelings because she’s the good girl who stays contained and classy; she’s had a lot of practice with handshakes and smiles as a senator’s daughter. The audience can feel Harris trying to bury Lyssa’s inner voice, which is screaming at everyone to get their heads out of their keisters and leave her alone. She is classy, fierce, vulnerable, resigned, worried, caring, frigid and feisty.

    The other characters bring their own schtick with them, encircling Lyssa in a ring of agendas. Notably, Michael Abendshein’s Morrow is everything that Lyssa isn’t: blunt, flamboyant, right wing, gay, and a “last word” kind of guy. His utter loneliness lies underneath the wit, barbs, and flippant attitude about hanging out with his best friend, and Abendshien does not try to evoke reactions. Kudos go to Hirsch for casting against type, because Abendshein makes it work and it enhances our interest.

    Hirsch’s non-typecasting works well with Lyssa’s anti-establishment, agnostic Jewish husband, played with measured sincerity and repression by Bob Harbaum. His scene with Quincy Quince (portrayed by the fabulous Alexis Amarante) is ripe with sexual tension, confusion, and don’t forget, sexual tension. Amarante also crackles with Harris as she simultaneously shames and admires her.

    Another standout is Stuart Rick as Senator Alan Hughes, a conservative lifer who never crosses the line in either direction. He supports and loves his daughter unconditionally yet does not share her liberal political views. Again, Rick succeeds at keeping his character supremely watchable without one outburst, moment of catharsis, or sudden revelation. His marriage to Charlotte “Chubby” Hughes, played by the hilarious and slight Carole Preston, lends some great tension breakers. When they sing a Dinah Shore song to punctuate a story, it is reminiscent of every head in the hands moment when your parents make you want to sink into the floor.

    Brandie Peterson as Dr. Judith brings the audience an angry, brilliant, spiritual, and lonely woman who feels most at home with her oldest friend. Her characterization is grounded and likeable, and her tender relationship with Morrow has us wishing that the latter isn’t gay.

    Zack Walsh arrives with prepubescent, sycophantic flair as PR whiz kid Billy Robbins, garnering laughs with his extra wink-winks and “I got ya covered” air gun. Billy walks in an exaggerated strut, as if he is trying to act like a spin doctor rather than be one, which nails this character and makes this virtual cameo most memorable.

    Hirsch creates a wonderful climactic scene in which Timber Tucker (Tom Moore, who is most effective in his salacious, Bill O’Reilly interview scenes) interviews both Dr. Judith and Lyssa in the latter’s living room (beautifully constructed and accessorized by this talented production team). Members of the show’s crew come on stage as members of Tucker’s crew, with Walsh doubling as the young boom mic operator in a grungy wool hat. He joins lighting op Mark Shullenbarger and sound op Matthew Datcher as the two cameramen, with the three of them triangulating around the interview space.

    Admittedly, this is not Wasserstein’s tightest script. She missed some connections and created some confusion in ways that, likely, could have been avoided.

    Montgomery Playhouse, in partnership with the City of Gaithersburg’s Arts on the Green, brings An American Daughter successfully to the stage with a satisfying and dignified ending that would put CNN and other 24-hour news channels out of business. After all, as Timber Tucker would say, “Scandal is the nature of the business.”

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

    An American Daughter plays through May 28, 2017, at The Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green performing at The Gaithersburg Arts Barn – 311 Kent Square Road, in Gaithersburg, MD. For tickets, call the box office at (301) 258-6394, buy them at the door, or purchase them online.

    LINK:
    Review #1: ‘An American Daughter’ at Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green by Mark Ludder.

  • Review #1: ‘An American Daughter’ at Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green

    Review #1: ‘An American Daughter’ at Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green

    Humanity can never quite manage to get out of its own way. And that’s a good thing for the entertainment industry. Since “there is nothing new under the sun,” there is constant material for every next production. Certainly playwright Wendy Wasserstein capitalizes on this reality with her offering of An American Daughter. Written in the late 1990’s following her critically acclaimed The Sisters Rosensweig, all those whispered or repressed imaginings of life’s challenges and confusions are brought to the surface like a rash which no ointment can ease.

    The cast of An American Daughter: Zack Walsh, Carole Preston, Alexis Amarante, Stuart Rick, Kiersten Harris, Michael Abendshein, Brandie Peterson, Bob Harbaum, and Tom Moore. Photo by Scott D’Vileskis.

    Regrettable hiccups in everyday life can create insurmountable stumbling blocks as Lyssa Dent Hughes played by Kiersten Harris discovers when she is nominated for US Surgeon General. Under the artificial scrutiny of press coverage Lyssa is demonized by political reporter Timber Tucker (Tom Moore) who highlights her failure to respond to a Jury Duty summons against her mid-western “ice box cakes” and perfect soccer-mom persona. The cast is packed with dubious sinner/saint personalities: Lyssa’s dad – long time US Senator Alan Hughes (Stuart Rick) supports his daughter’s passion and idealism in spite of his opposing political views while touting the blessings of his fourth wife Charlotte “Chubby” Hughes (Carole Preston).

    Lyssa’s lecherous, foul-mouthed, self-aggrandizing husband and university professor Walter Abramson (Bob Harbaum) rests on the laurels of a 5-year-old book he wrote while ogling his prize student Quincy Quince (Alexis Amarante). Her life’s mission is to champion the struggle of every female with aspirations beyond domesticity even while undermining the sanctity of Lyssa’s marriage.

    Walter’s best friend – Morrow McCarthy (Michael Abendshein) stands on his Gay Conservative imperialist soap box while throwing Lyssa under the bus by reminding reporter Tucker of her Jury Duty neglect. Lyssa’s best friend Judith B. Kaufman (Brandie Peterson) is so wrapped up as an infertile, divorced, Black Jewish female medical professional that she can hardly be supportive when it seems Lyssa’s appointment is in jeopardy. Lyssa at one point laments to her father: “You never told me there was a price.” Even the Senator’s spin doctor – Billy Robbins (Zach Walsh) is of no help with his exuberant wordsmithing on Lyssa’s behalf.

    Scarce blanks left between the lines of the script are artfully filled on and off stage by Mark Shullenbarger, Andie Allison, Matthew Datcher, Elijah Fischer, Jack Husted, Susan Clic, and Roger Stone.

    My take on all this is “Let any one of us who is without sin be the first to throw a stone.”

    Beyond all the drama I must acknowledge the mastery of Director Bruce Hirsch who somehow managed to impart on his talented and energetic cast the ability to keep the pace moving forward, in spite of a storyline which hopped and skipped through life’s blemishes like a Labrador sighting a squirrel.

    Stage Managers Evelyn Renshaw and Cathy Clark manipulated every element of the immaculate set designed by David Jones, and built with the help of Steve Deming, Mark Shullenbarger, and Joy Wyne. The image captured and presented, with intimate & detailed properties gathered by Nancy Davis, was truly that of a living room in a Georgetown townhome complete with the perceived view from an elevated window down to a street buzzing with media activity.

    It seems life doesn’t come with instructions. But as Lyssa’s ancestor General Ulysses S. Grant wrote in a letter to his daughter “Our task is to rise & continue.”

    Running Time: Two hours and 30 minutes, with a 15-minute intermission.

    An American Daughter plays through May 28, 2017, at The Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green performing at The Gaithersburg Arts Barn – 311 Kent Square Road, in Gaithersburg, MD. For tickets, call the box office at (301) 258-6394, buy them at the door, or purchase them online.

    LINK:
    Review #2: ‘An American Daughter’ at Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green by Mara Bayewitz.

    Save

    Save

    Save

  • ‘The Little Dog Laughed’ at Silver Spring Stage by David Friscic

    FOUR STARS
    The Little Dog Laughed will make you smile with recognition at the hypocrisy and contradictions inherent in this game of day-to-day survival we call life. This acid-like portrait of the compromises one must make in order to get ahead in this “dog eat dog” world is all too relevant on an individual basis and on a societal basis. This light yet trenchant play by Douglas Carter Beane (author of the currently-running The Nance and the new revival of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella) compels us to sit raptly while the savage etiquette and personal political choices of this cast of four characters plays out on the intimate stage at Silver Spring Stage.

    Aspiring Hollywood actor Mitchell (Eric Jones) and lover Alex (Robert Littler). Photo by Harvey Levine.
    Aspiring Hollywood actor Mitchell (Eric Jones) and lover Alex (Robert Kittler). Photo by Harvey Levine.

    The scenario of the arrogant, sarcastic agent Diane (Leta Hall) who wants to make sure that her client-handsome actor Mitchell (Eric Jones) – can convincingly gain the lustful attentions of female audience members (when, in reality, he is a closeted gay male) makes for a darkly comic series of vignettes on themes of public persona, hidden identities and the quandaries of making moral and personal choices of real desire instead of settling for the easy answer. Complications ensue when rent-boy Alex (Robert Kittler) falls for Mitchell even though he is already involved with the delightful Ellen (Dana Medford).

    Under the Direction of Eric Scerbo, this energetic ensemble works valiantly to capture the verbal virtuosity of Beane’s writing and they are to be applauded for tackling such mature and complex fare. Overall, they are successful but the dualities in the characters of Jones and Hall need to be more fully developed and the production needs to move a bit more briskly. Jones captures the man in love but not the inner anguish. In the high-profile role of the bilious agent Diane, Hall is a shade too stolid and literal in her delivery in a part that calls out for quicksilver comic timing. Hall is best at breaking through the fourth wall and speaking directly to the audience. More successful is the drifting rent-boy Alex, played with just the right amount of loquacious languor the part demands by Kittler. Dana Mefdord’s portrayal of Ellen is a charming composite of this vulnerable yet tough character.

    Ellen (Dana Medford). Photo by Harvey Levine.
    Ellen (Dana Medford). Photo by Harvey Levine.

    Most successful and effective is Scerbo’s direction as he paces this piece with a succession of slow-dissolves and fade-outs that are almost cinematic in feel. Scerbo is aided here by the evocative Lighting Design of Bob Scott. The Set Design by Joy Wyne is serviceable but especially compelling is the design of a sliding screen that could be easily manipulated to show scenes and monologues in juxtaposition to the action center stage. Costume Design by Mark Hamberger is top-notch.After two hours of crisis alternating with hilarity, we can finally leave this “dog-eat-dog” world of Los Angeles and New York City show business hypocrisy and have the requisite happy ending where ‘The Little Dog Laughed.’

    If you are looking for fare that is offbeat, mature and darkly comic, look no further than Silver Spring Stage’s production of The Little Dog Laughed.

    Running Time: About two hours, with one intermission.

    The Little Dog Laughed plays though June 8, 2013 at Silver Spring Stage inn Woodmoor Shopping Center – 10145 Colesville Road, in Silver Spring, MD. For tickets, purchase them online, or call the box office at (301) 593-6036.